Another link with an interview with Masters:
http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051028/NEWS01/510280527/1006
Just a few snips
The boat's engine gave out, the anchor broke, the radio malfunctioned and the dive master didn't have a compass.
Almost everything that could have gone wrong did, said Nancy Masters, one of four divers on a fatal scuba diving excursion off the Caribbean coast of Belize.
Rather than stay on the drifting boat -- as tourism officials said the divers had been advised to do -- Masters and the other divers thought they could swim below the rough water back to South Silk Caye, which was still in sight.
"(But) the waves were much greater than what we thought," she said. "And we tried to find our way from the sun, but visibility was poor."
The two men had on partial wetsuits. Masters had clothing on over a swimsuit, and Brinkman wore a two-piece bathing suit. All had oxygen tanks.
At times, Masters became delirious.
"I would hallucinate buoys and land," she said. "But my mind created different scenarios to help me deal."
She didn't worry about sharks until fish began nipping at her legs.
Masters kicked her legs and fanned her arms to keep them away. "I didn't know if they wanted to bite me, but I figured if they drew blood, sharks would become a problem and that would be my end."
On Monday afternoon, the third day of their ordeal, Masters was rescued by a Belize Defense Force search team, which also picked up Maeda and found Brinkman's body. Recreational boaters rescued Bain.
"You take for granted the ability to put your feet on something solid," Masters said. "Land is a nice thing."