We consider the role of the reconstruction of the initial state in the
deviation from exponential decay at short and long times. The long time decay
can be attributed to a wave that was, in a classical-like, probabilistic sense,
fully outside the initial state or the inner region at intermediate times,
i.e., to a completely reconstructed state, whereas the decay during the
exponential regime is due instead to a non-reconstructed wave. At short times
quantum interference between regenerated and non-regenerated paths is
responsible for the deviation from the exponential decay. We may thus conclude
that state reconstruction is a ``consistent history'' for long time deviations
but not for short ones.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure