Page 39 of The Inheritance
“Were you the first to the gate?”
“Yes. I was scared.”
“Who came out after you?”
“Wagner.”
Middle-aged Wagner with arthritic knees somehow overtook both Melissa and London, who sprinted faster than most Olympic athletes. If Melissa and London wanted to get their story straight without being overheard, the only time to do so would be just inside the breach, after Drishya and Wagner exited.
“Why was the cart with the spare parts in the tunnel and not at the site?” Elias asked.
“It didn’t fit. The site sloped to the stream and there wasn’t a lot of flat ground, so we could only get three of the four carts in.” Drishya counted off on her fingers. “Cart One had the generator, lights, and first aid, so it had to come in. Carts Two and Three were for the ore. Adamantite is heavy, so we didn’t want to carry it too far. Cart Four with the spare parts had to live outside.”
“So there was adamantite at the site?” He’d read Leo’s notes of Melissa’s interview, but it seemed almost unbelievable that so much adamantite could exist in one place.
“Oh yes. That’s how my drill broke. Chipped off a chunk this big.” Drishya held her hands out as if lifting an invisible basketball.
“Was the adamantite in plain view?”
The miner shook her head. “No. Buried, and half of it underwater. It took the DeBRA about ten minutes to find it. She had to mark it with paint for us.”
Was this why they were attacked? Was something protecting the ore?
Drishya sighed. “It’s awful, isn’t it? Everyone is dead.”
“It is, and they are,” Elias confirmed.
“I knew we would get a big bonus when we found the gold, and then the DeBRA came up with adamantite. I was so excited. I thought I could finally put a deposit on the house. My mom isn’t doing so well. I’ve got to get us out of the apartment, and I’m the only one working.”
Gold? What gold? “I’m sorry your mother is in bad health, and that you had to go through this trauma. You may want to see Dr. Choi. He has a room set up downstairs.”
“I’m okay. I didn’t see any of it,” Drishya said. “I’ve only been working for six months. I didn’t even know people that well…”
He’d seen this before. Some people grieved when faced with death, others got angry, and some tried to disconnect themselves from what happened.
“I understand,” he said. “Still, it might be a good idea. You’ve lost colleagues in a sudden traumatic way. Things like that can fester.”
“I’ll think about it,” she said.
“So how much gold was there?”
“A lot. It was everywhere in the water, like rocks. We weren’t even drilling; we were pulling it out by hand. Nuggets the size of walnuts. I ended up dumping like fifty pounds of it to make room for adamantite, and we’d been only gathering it for a few minutes.”
“I see. I appreciate your help, Ms. Chandran. The guild is grateful for your assistance. Please get some rest.”
She got up and paused. “You are a lot less scary than I thought you would be.”
“That’s good to hear.”
“Just so you know, Wagner told me not to talk to you.”
Elias raised his eyebrows. “Oh?”
“He said that miners don’t go into the breaches with guildmasters. They go with escort captains. He said it was something to keep in mind.”
“Thank you for your honesty.”
She nodded and walked out.
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