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T.C.’s voice jolted Laura away from her thoughts and back into the darkened hallway in Boston Garden. His voice was low. She moved closer and tried to listen.

‘It’s okay,’ he said. ‘I got you.’

She cocked her head to the side. What was T.C. doing out here? Laura peered around the corner and spotted him right away. Her eyes grew puzzled. T.C. half dragged, half carried Mark Seidman down the hallway. Mark’s legs were not functioning. His hands gripped his head as if it were about to split open. A scream was cut off when T.C. clamped his hand over Mark’s mouth.

‘Hang in there, old buddy. Just lean on me. I’ll have you home soon.’

Mark’s reply began with another muffled cry. ‘I didn’t want to see her, T.C. I didn’t want to go near her.’

‘I know, Mark. I know.’

Laura stood in frozen horror as the two men disappeared around the corner, remembering that T.C. had told her just a few hours ago that he had never met Mark Seidman.

22

Judy paced the living room of her one-level home. She had lived in campus housing for over a decade now and she liked it well enough. It was small but there was still a bedroom, a living room, a kitchen, and an office – plenty of space for her. More rooms would have just meant more places to store mess.

Her mind kept racing through the events of the previous night at the Boston Garden. She would think it over, mentally rewind, review what she had seen and heard, try to draw conclusions. Mark Seidman’s first jumpshot had set her mind in a whirling, terrifying spin and now it would not stop. Could it be? Could Mark Seidman have pulled it off? It seemed incredible to her but when she thought the whole scenario through, only one conclusion made sense.

Judy reached into her wallet and grabbed out the familiar old photograph. The picture trembled in her hand. She stared at the image of a young, glowing Judy in an embrace with a somewhat older man. The black-and-white photograph had been taken after a faculty softball game on a bright, beautiful Chicago afternoon in 1960. The older man still held the bat in his free hand. His baseball cap was tilted to the side, a smile plastered across his handsome face.

The older man was David’s father.

Judy continued to stare, remembering the very moment the photograph had been snapped. She and Sinclair had known each other for about two months on that sunny day and both of them were in love. Neither one of them planned it to happen that way. Neither one of them wanted to hurt anybody. But there had been an instant chemistry there, the kind of reaction that could make a level-headed, proper young woman like Judy fall for a married man.

Yes, Judy heard about Sinclair’s reputation as a major womanizer. Yes, she knew that this was not his first experience with adultery, but all the others had been nothing more than empty-headed campus beauties whom he could have fun with and dispense with quickly. Judy was different. While attractive enough, she was certainly no head-turner and, more to the point, their affair was now four months old. Sinclair Baskin loved her, she knew, and he was going to get divorced. Yes, it would be messy. No, her parents would not understand or be supportive at first. But love conquers all, right? What could be stronger than love?

As it turned out, love proved no match for jealousy, beauty, deceit and rage.

The affair had been tough on Sinclair too. He had a ten-year-old boy and an infant son, both of whom he loved dearly. Judy smiled sadly. Little, mischievous Stan was now forty years old. The little baby boy named David had grown up to be a wonderful young man and a sport’s hero. How proud Sinclair would have been of David. How crushed he would have been when David drowned…

But of course, that would never have happened. If Sinclair were here, David would be too.

Judy continued to gaze at the familiar photograph. Her thoughts glided easily from the past to the present. Such a thin line separated Boston in 1990 from Chicago in 1960. Her beautiful niece had also loved a Baskin man. David Baskin. Sinclair’s baby boy. Laura had put her whole life into loving him. Her dreams, her hopes, her love, her life – all gone now. Gone.

But there were major differences between Judy’s tragedy and Laura’s. For one, David had loved Laura with everything he had, no questions asked. In the end, Judy could not say the same thing about Sinclair. But more important, Laura was completely blameless in the death of the man she loved.

Judy was not.

Damn you, Sinclair Baskin. Why did you make that one dreaded mistake? And why was I so stupid? Why did I react so impulsively and strike without thinking? Everything was perfect, you idiot. Perfect.

Gone. Dead. Over. For Judy, there was nothing left. But what about Laura?

Her hand reached for the telephone. There still might be hope for Laura. She grabbed the receiver, picked it up, dialed.

Her decision was made.

When practice ended, Mark Seidman silently showered and dressed. The locker room was quiet, the players still somber from last night’s ceremony. No tape deck blasted the latest long-play single from Chaka Khan or Samantha Fox. There was little conversation going on, which made it easier for Mark to avoid conversing with his teammates. In the past, Mark had always enjoyed the camaraderie of his teammates. He recognized that there was a direct correlation between winning basketball games and having fun. When basketball became merely a job, the level of play always dropped off.

All that being said, Mark could not get himself to warm up to his teammates, nor did they accept him with open arms. It bothered him, and yet he knew that getting friendly with any of them could be catastrophic. Earl was not stupid. Neither was Timmy, Mac or Johnny. While he doubted that they could ever put the whole thing together, the risk was still too great.

He grabbed his gym bag and headed toward the exit. As he passed by Earl’s locker, he heard, ‘See you tomorrow, Mark.’

Earl had barely spoken a word to him all season. ‘Yeah,’ Mark said unsurely, ‘see you tomorrow, Earl.’

‘Nice game last night.’

Mark swallowed. ‘You too.’

They both stood uncomfortably. With an uneasy smile Mark turned away. He pushed the door open and vanished into the lobby.

One of the towel boys ran after him. ‘Mark?’

He turned. ‘Yes?’

‘There’s a telephone call for you.’

‘Tell whoever it is I’m not here.’

‘She said it’s urgent.’

‘She?’

The boy nodded. ‘She said you would know her. Judy Simmons.’

Mark felt something rip through his stomach.

‘You all right, Mark?’

He nodded, his body numb. ‘I’m fine,’ he said. ‘I’ll take the call in room five.’

Mark tried to remain calm, composed, unruffled. He reached room five, closed the door for privacy, and picked up the phone.

‘Hello?’

‘Mr Seidman?’

‘Yes?’

‘This is Judy Simmons. We met last night.’

His mouth felt incredibly dry. ‘Yes, of course. Is there something I can do for you, Miss Simmons?’

‘How do you know I’m not married?’

‘Excuse me?’

‘You just called me “Miss”. How do you know I’m not married?’

Mark closed his eyes. Every word had to be watched before it passed his lips. ‘I… I noticed last night that you weren’t wearing a wedding band.’

She paused as if she were mulling over his explanation. ‘I see.’

‘You said it was urgent.’

‘It is,’ she said. ‘Do you mind if I call you Mark?’

‘Please do.’

‘Good,’ Judy replied. She hesitated for a brief moment before speaking again. ‘Do you mind if I call you David?’

Her words hit him like a powerful blow. Just keep cool, Mark. Just keep cool. ‘Is this some kind of joke?’

‘No.’