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‘Yes, Mrs Baskin,’ Dr Bivelli replied, turning his attention toward her. ‘Your husband’s body was brutally thrashed around by the rough waters. It was hurled against rocks and crunched against the surf. It was splattered against jagged coral and sliced up very badly. Fish probably gnawed on it.’

Laura’s face blanched.

‘I’m sorry, Mrs Baskin,’ he added quickly. ‘I’m a pathologist. I never had much use for proper bedside manner.’

Laura swallowed. ‘That’s okay. Please continue.’

‘What I’m trying to say is that the body was in horrible shape when we found it. Could someone have knocked him on the head and dumped his body out to sea? Very doubtful but yes.’

‘Why do you say very doubtful?’ Laura asked.

‘Because most of the time that’s not how it works. Sometimes a man is murdered and his body is dumped in the water to make it look like an accidental drowning. Sometimes a man is killed and a large weight is tied to his body so that it won’t be found for a while. But like I said before, David Baskin drowned and rarely is a man knocked out and then left in the water in the hopes he will end up dead. It’s too risky. He may survive the ordeal by being rescued by a boat or by waking up or whatever.’

Graham nodded. ‘You say Mr Baskin’s body was in bad shape?’

‘Yes.’

‘Beyond recognition?’

Dr Bivelli eyed Laura. ‘Pretty close.’

‘How did you get a positive identification then?’

Dr Bivelli coughed into a fist. ‘Two ways. First, that American policeman who was a friend of his’ – he slipped on a pair of reading glasses and opened the file – ‘an Officer Terry Conroy, was able to recognize certain features. More important, his medical records were sent to me via a fax machine. The dental x-rays arrived the next day and confirmed what we already knew.’ Bivelli looked down at the file again. ‘According to Officer Conroy, Mr Baskin should have been wearing a 1989 NBA championship ring, but we couldn’t use that to i.d. him because his right hand… he wore the ring on his right hand, right, Mrs Baskin?’

She nodded. The ring. She had forgotten all about the last championship ring that had adorned David’s hand. And that was the only piece of jewelry that he liked to wear – that and the wedding band they intended to buy when they returned from their honeymoon.

Bivelli cleared his throat again. ‘Yes, well, his right hand was gone.’

‘Gone?’ Laura repeated.

Bivelli lowered his head. ‘As I said, many parts of the deceased were badly damaged.’

‘I see,’ Graham replied. ‘Let me ask you this, Doctor. How exact was the estimated time of death?’

‘For a drowning like this, it’s never more than guess-work, ’ Dr Bivelli continued. ‘I could have been off by as much as twelve to fifteen hours.’

‘You estimated the time of death to have been around seven p.m.,’ Graham reminded him. ‘Would it shock you to hear that we have an eyewitness who saw Mr Baskin at midnight?’

‘Not at all, Sheriff,’ Bivelli replied casually. ‘Like I said earlier, dissecting a drowning victim with a battered body is not going to produce exact, scientific results. I wish it did. My time estimate was influenced in large part by statements made by Mrs Baskin. She said her husband went for a swim at around four or five in the afternoon. It would certainly be more logical to assume that he died within a few hours of that time than after midnight.’

Graham scratched at his beard. ‘One last question and then we’ll be out of your way. Why were you called in on this case? Why wasn’t the local coroner used?’

Bivelli shrugged. ‘I can’t say for sure, but I can make a guess.’

‘Please do.’

‘First off, Mr Baskin was a foreigner and a rather famous personality,’ Bivelli began. ‘When a death of that magnitude occurs, the Aussie government usually gets involved and I have done quite a bit of work for them in the past. They feel comfortable with me. Townsville is only about an hour flight from Cairns, so they probably thought I would be the better man for this particular situation.’

‘Then Officer Terry Conroy of Boston didn’t contact you?’

‘No, he did not.’

Graham rose. Laura did the same. ‘Thank you, Doctor Bivelli. You’ve been very helpful.’

‘Anytime, Sheriff,’ he replied with a firm handshake. ‘And again, Mrs Baskin, please accept my most sincere condolences.’

They headed down the hall and into the elevator. When the door slid closed and the lift started to move upward, Laura turned to Graham. ‘He’s lying.’

Graham nodded. ‘Like a rug.’

Judy stared at the photograph.

Tears welled in her eyes as she stared at the all-too-familiar images. How many years would this go on? How long would this black-and-white photograph be able to jab painfully into her heart? God, how she had loved him. She had loved him like no other man before or since. Had he ever felt the same? Judy thought the answer was yes. She remembered a time when they were both deliriously happy, a time when they were so in love that nothing else mattered…

… until something took him away. Until something blinded him like a great flash of light.

I killed him. My jealousy pushed that gun against his head and pulled the trigger.

She had been so foolish, so impatient, so damn young. Why couldn’t she just sit back and wait. Eventually, he would have realized his mistake and come back to her.

Why did I do it? Why couldn’t I have just let it be?

But these were questions that had haunted her for thirty years, and still she had no answers. If only she could have it to do all over again. If only she hadn’t acted so stupidly. She folded the photograph and put it back in her purse.

‘Miss Simmons?’

She looked up. Her safety deposit box rested on the bank clerk’s forearm. ‘Would you like to follow me, please?’ The bank clerk led Judy into a private room. ‘When you’re finished, just let me know.’

‘Thank you.’

The bank clerk smiled and left. Judy turned toward her box. Her hand reached down and pulled back the top. The first thing she saw were some old treasury bonds her parents had left her. Her father had died suddenly years ago when he was only fifty-seven; her mother had passed away just last year. She missed them both terribly. So few people in this world love you unconditionally.

She thumbed past her birth certificate, the old warranties, the useless financial statements. Then she spotted it. Her fingers reached down, gripped the leather cover and pulled. The small booklet came out. With shaking hands, Judy placed it on the table in front of her. She read the fading cover:

Diary 1960.

Since 1955, Judy had kept yearly diaries. All the events of her seemingly average life were kept safely tucked away on these blue-lined pages. And for the most part, average the words were – gibberish about the loss of her virginity, her first time experimenting with marijuana, her secret fantasies. In a phrase, her yearly journals contained nothing beyond the standard diary drivel.

But not 1960.

Judy kept all her diaries stacked neatly in a closet at home; all, that is, except for the one she now held in her hand. 1960 – the one year she wished she could pull out of her life as she had pulled its diary away from the others. She had never mentioned anything about 1960 in her subsequent diaries. As far as her other writings were concerned, 1960 never existed. She had tried to keep the whole horrible incident locked in this one journal in some bizarre attempt to keep the rest of her life uncontaminated by that year.

It had not worked.

1960 had spread. It had poisoned them all. It occasionally disappeared from view for as much as a decade or two, but it was still there, always there, always waiting to rear its ugly head when they least expected it to.

Judy slowly flipped open the diary. She skimmed through the writings of January and February. Her teary eyes gazed upon the handwriting of the college-age Judy – so blithe and carefree with large, elaborate lettering that flowed smoothly from one end of the page to the other. Hard to believe the same person who was reading this diary had also written it: