On a bright October morning, Suzanne’s text sounded like the start of a long-awaited adventure: she had reached Lizard Island and was heading out for a hike. When she fell unwell, she reportedly stopped to rest, told she could make her own way back. The group moved on. The ship later departed, apparently without a proper passenger count, while Suzanne remained alone on the island.
By the time her absence was recognized and the Coral Adventurer turned back, it was too late. Police knocking at her daughter Katherine’s door were the first sign that something was terribly wrong. Grief soon turned to disbelief: other passengers were offered refunds, but Suzanne’s family had to request hers. Katherine now calls it a “failure of care and common sense,” a preventable tragedy that turned a dream voyage into a permanent, aching question of how no one noticed she was gone.
