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Crevice

By Janice Boekhoff

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Like prairie dogs popping from their burrows, men in zippered jumpsuits went in and out of the Hearst Stone mine entrance. Dust swirled around their feet as they headed for tunnels A and B, searching for a modicum of gold ore.
Standing near the entrance, Elery Hearst stared at the hillside opening where test tunnel C branched off from the other tunnels. No one had come out of there yet. She pressed the talk button on her walkie-talkie to interrupt the static--the signal for the supervisor to check in. A few seconds later, the static buzzed out, then immediately returned--Ron's way of telling her to be patient. What was he still doing in there? He'd been in the mine for hours with no report.
She walked through the parking lot and kicked the rear tire on her old Jeep, letting out a frustrated growl. There had to be something in tunnel C, and hopefully it was gold. If Ron and the other workers found nothing, she'd have to shut down Hearst Stone mine for good.
Leaning on the bumper, she turned away from the entrance and gazed out at the mountains in the distance, a shadowed backdrop for the desert. She'd spent her whole life with these mountains, never once thinking of them as anything other than big hunks of rock. But today, as her crew struggled to find the ore that would keep her mine open, the mountains seemed to challenge her, as if expecting her to fail. Maybe the Spaniards had it right when they named the area Superstition.
She jumped at a tap on her shoulder. Pushing off the Jeep, she turned around, hoping to find Ron. Instead she looked up into her brother's chocolate brown eyes. She smiled to hide her disappointment. "Garrick, aren't you supposed to be at school? It's almost midterms."
He shrugged and gave her a crooked grin. "I'll manage."
Of course, he would. College for Garrick was no different than high school. He had a habit of skipping class, yet somehow he managed to ace the tests and charm his teachers into letting him make up the written work. No doubt he was going for the record of lowest attendance while still graduating. At least, she hoped he'd graduate. "Why are you here?"
He opened his mouth to speak, but nothing came out. Pressing his lips together, he gave her a desperate look as if she could wrestle the words out for him. He ran a hand through his jet-black hair, inherited, along with his dark eyes, from their dad's Native American roots. She would have gladly traded with him. Instead of exotic beauty, she got tawny brown curls and eyes that couldn't decide if they were blue or green, both from her mother's Polish side.
She watched him struggle in curious silence. A hint of sadness, or was it guilt, crept into his eyes for a second. But then it fled, replaced by a familiar glint. Obsession. She'd seen that look before. It meant trouble.
Garrick tapped his boot in the dirt. "There's this girl. I met her in class."
This was about a girl? Since when did he chase after girls? In his own words, he found most of them to be too pushy--Elery included. She kept her mouth shut, waiting for him to continue.
"This girl is a descendant." He opened his arms wide, as the words finally poured out. "An actual descendant, El. She's related to Julia Thomas Schaffer. The woman who was with Waltz when he died."
There it was. The connection to Jacob Waltz and the Lost Dutchman mine. For Garrick, it was always about gold. If she tried, she could almost see a hint of yellow hiding deep in his eyes. "I'm dealing with real world problems here. I don't have time to waste on Dad's old bedtime stories."
"Her name is Angela Harmon. Of course, she's related through marriage, not by blood. She's the great-great-great-granddaughter of Joseph Schaffer, Julia's brother-in-law."
Elery rolled her eyes. "Why are you telling me this?"
"Just listen, please."
"Garrick, you've been down this rabbit hole before. How many times? Let it go."
"Angela has a real lead. I'm close to finding it this time."
Like he was the last time. And the time before that. The search never ended. But Elery didn't have the patience for this. Not when she was needed at the mine. Her thoughts returning to tunnel C, she leaned around Garrick to glance at the arched entrance. Still nothing.
Turning back to Garrick, she opened her mouth to speak, but he cut her off.
"Please, try to understand. I'm doing this for Dad."
She rubbed a hand over her tightening chest. Dad's medical bills were piling up, and she didn't have the money to pay them. Neither of them did. "I know you want to help Dad, but searching for lost treasure isn't the answer."
"This is different."
"How do you know Angela's not lying? People are always trying to make money off the Dutchman legend."
"This information is real." His voice hitched. "I can find it this time. And when I do, I can pay off all of Dad's bills."
She pursed her lips. "If it's real, why would Angela want to search for it with you instead of someone in her family?"
"Her family is in Texas. She needs my help, which means I need yours." He twisted his body to tap a hand on the vehicle behind her. "Can I borrow your Jeep so we can go farther into the desert?"
Her back stiffened and anger bubbled up inside her. "That's what you want? You came to ask if I'd give you my vehicle to support your fantasy?"
He grimaced. "I..."
Over Garrick's shoulder, she caught a glimpse of Chad Milner, one of her newest miners, coming out of the entrance. Her heart raced. He'd been in tunnel C.
Leaving a stammering Garrick behind, she charged toward Chad. "Where's Ron?"
"He said he'd be out in a minute." Chad grinned, grabbed her arm and gave it a playful squeeze. "Don't be so nervous."
She pulled away, glaring at him. Couldn't Chad take a hint? She'd been brushing him off for the last month. "Professional behavior, please."
He shrugged, still grinning at her.
Her disinterest certainly wasn't about his looks. His unruly golden brown hair and matching amber eyes gave him the carefree look of a surfer, but she didn't date employees. And even if he weren't an employee, he had two strikes against him. First, everything amused him. Life was a big joke, and he refused to take anything seriously. Second, he had the same gleam in his eyes that spoke of a sickness she knew all too well--gold fever.
Chad moved closer, dusted off one of his dirty hands and reached toward her face. Whatever he planned to do would likely be inappropriate. She took a giant step to the side.
"Hey, Romeo." Ron's voice boomed from behind Chad.
She turned away from Chad to face the supervisor, her heart pounding in her chest. Finally, she'd get some answers.
Ron trudged over, his dark, slightly-too-long hair swaying as he walked. Streaks of black dirt striped his tan face. He stopped next to Chad, standing a few inches taller. His eyes narrowed. He gestured at Chad with his thumb, pointing over his shoulder. "Your drool break is over. Get back to work."
A flush crept up Elery's neck. Winking at her, Chad took off for the mine entrance. She cleared her throat and pushed aside a curl that had escaped her ponytail. She waited until Chad was out of earshot to speak. "How are things in tunnel C?"
Ron thrust his bottom lip out, then looked down at his feet. "Barren mostly."
Her shoulders dropped. They had started digging in the tunnel two days ago, hoping to intersect the original gold vein farther into the mountain. "No sign of ore or evidence of alteration by hot fluids?"
"None."
Her hands trembled as disappointment drowned her. If the mine failed, she failed too. Only a year after her father had retired and given her the reins.
Ron shuffled his feet, causing red dust to circle around their boots. "I'm sorry."
Swallowing hard, she lifted her chin. This wasn't Ron's fault. "Keep pushing through. Maybe we'll find something."
He kicked her boot with his and gave a wry smile. "If you'd only pray to the Thunder god, then maybe..."
"Not this time." Although she had taken a chance and prayed, it looked like God's answer was no. She forced a weak smile. No way would she let the other miners know how bad this was for the mine. This was a burden she and Ron would bear alone.
She started to turn away from Ron, then froze. The ground under her feet shook. A piercing whine shrieked from the loud speakers--the alarm.
Her gaze shot up to meet Ron's. His wide eyes mirrored the panic rising in her chest.
A cave in.
She sprinted toward the entrance with Ron following close behind. Men in jumpsuits flooded from of the opening, a cloud of dust pushing out with them. Several miners ran past her, gasping for breath. One held his arm tight against his side. Another wiped at a bleeding gash on his cheek. Her assistant foreman dashed out, seemingly unhurt, but covered in dirt from head to toe.
She grabbed Art around the shoulders. "What happened?"
Art caught his breath before answering. "Part of tunnel C collapsed."
A wave of dread washed over her. Collapsed? They had equipment to guard against this. "Was the ceiling anchor in place?"
Art wiped dust from his weathered face. "Yes, but it tipped over with the cave in."
She tried to swallow past the lump forming in her throat. "Is anyone still in there?"
"Don't know." Art blinked and rubbed at his bloodshot eyes. "I was running for my life."
She looked back at Ron. "Get a head count."
Miners continued to pour from each tunnel. Those from tunnels A and B looked around in confusion at first, then shock. The ones from tunnel C came out open-mouthed, smudged and smeared in black, many with wounds from falling rocks.
The mine had a strict rule of no more than twenty miners in a particular tunnel at one time. A head count wouldn't take long. Maybe everyone had already made it out. Elery gaped at the scene as Ron made the rounds. What happened? The machine was an older model and in need of replacement, but her mechanic checked it each night. And as soon as tunnel C had become profitable, she would have replaced it. The tight knot in her throat grew. Now, it was too late.
A long moment later, Ron approached her, his face a mask of distress. "The only miner unaccounted for is Chad."
All of the air rushed out of her lungs. She doubled over, putting her hands on her knees. This couldn't be happening. She sucked in shallow breaths. Chad had just been out here, talking to her.
The alarm continued to whine, reminding her of her responsibility. She didn't have time to fall apart. With a sharp intake of breath, she stood upright and steeled herself for what came next. Ron had moved closer to the entrance to help those with minor injuries. She swiveled to face Art. "Check the seismometer. See if the mine has settled."
Nodding his head, Art turned to go, then turned back. "And if it has?"
Elery fought against the moisture burning her eyes. "Start digging. We have to find Chad."
For a second, she stood frozen, overwhelmed by the chaos. The alarm would have automatically alerted emergency personnel so the one fire truck and ambulance in Quartz Creek should already be on their way. They would tend to the wounded. She had to find a way to get to Chad. Heavy equipment would make it easier, but she'd have to borrow the machines from nearby mines. She dashed to her office trailer to make the calls.
Half an hour later, she joined her crew as they dug through the enormous pile of basalt blocking the way to Chad. In the center of the tunnel, a grinding machine worked to chew through the bigger chunks of rock, generating a grainy silt that covered everything. Sweat and black grime formed a cocoon-like paste over her exposed skin.
A ceiling stabilizer, that she had borrowed from a copper mine, kept its massive metal plate secured against the roof of the tunnel. It crept along behind their slow progress. This one was the same model as the one now buried in the tunnel, only much newer.
Hour after hour passed, every second a grain of sand dropping through the hourglass of Chad's life--if he was alive. Her crew rotated through as some men took breaks to eat or rest. She refused to leave, not wanting to waste even a moment that she could be digging.
Scooping up another shovelful of crushed rock, she tossed it in a rolling cart behind her. Had he been crushed by the initial collapse? Or was he buried alive and waiting for rescue? Twelve hours later, they still didn't know.
As she returned for another scoop, she paused with her shovel in the air. A loud clunking noise sounded through the tunnel. The motor on the digging machine revved out of control. The drill bit had hit something.
Elery sliced her hand across her throat to tell Ron to cut the engine. She took her shovel and poked at the obstruction. A layer of dark basalt fell away, revealing shiny metal--the failed ceiling stabilizer. The machine had collapsed halfway onto itself, and then fallen sideways, drilling the flat support plate into the floor of the tunnel.
Despite the heat of the enclosed space, goose bumps rose on her arms. They had to be close to Chad. Now that the machine noise had stopped, she listened for a brief second. No voice calling for help. Was he unconscious? Or dead? The thought spiked her blood pressure.
"Hand digging with shovels only. Be careful, guys." She speared a chunk of rock with her shovel, scraped it away and tossed it backward into a cart. Repeating the same motion over and over, she and the other men scraped away the confining material.
Little by little, they exposed the back wheels of the machine, hanging in the air. A large mound of rock had fallen underneath. Elery speared another shovel of dirt. Twisted to throw it in the cart. Turned back.
She thrust the shovel in once again, then stopped. Something brown stuck out from the pile. The toe of a work boot.
Her stomach lurched. She fought down the nausea, sucking in short breaths full of dust. "He's here!"
Dropping to her knees, she frantically brushed away loose rock with her gloved hands. Several of the men used their shovels to move the rock surrounding Chad. Once exposed, his legs lay perfectly still. Come on, Chad. Please, be alive.
They continued chipping away at the mass of confining debris. Up to his knees, then his thighs. At his waist, the rock fell away in one slump, revealing a cavity. The collapsing roof slab had hit the machine, which acted as a break. The rest of his body lay in this small space, his eyes closed, his hands fisted over his chest.
"Chad." Elery scooted into the narrow space beside him. Leaning down, she pressed the tips of her fingers into his neck. He had a pulse. She let out a relieved breath and turned to Ron. "Get Doctor Sallow and a stretcher."
Before she could turn back, Chad's hand clamped down hard on her arm. "Boss." His voice came out in a hoarse whisper.
She pulled the glove off her other hand and placed her hand on his. "I'm here. We'll get you out."
"I'm ... already ... out."
He didn't know where he was. She squeezed his hand. "You're still in the mine, but the doc is coming. Don't give up."
Another whisper came from his lips, too soft to hear clearly, but it sounded like gone.
"No, you're not gone. Hang in there."
His eyes flew open, and his gaze shot everywhere at once, as if he just realized he was in the mine. He settled on her, focusing intently on her face. "You have to find it."
"Find what?"
He licked his bottom lip, moistening a layer of dirt. "The mine."
"You're in the mine. But we're getting you out. I promise."
"No..." His hands traveled up her arm, pulling her closer. "It's in the shell."
The shell? He was fading, delusional even. She cupped his face in her hands. "Snap out of it. You're going to be okay." The lie felt foreign on her lips. One look at the rest of him and anyone could see he wouldn't be okay. The rocks had smashed his body from the pelvis down. He'd never walk again. But he had a chance to live.
A shower of marble-sized debris rained down. She covered her head with her arms and hovered over Chad to protect him. When the rock-slide subsided, she leaned back and looked down. His hands had flopped to the ground and his eyes had closed. She picked up one of his arms. It hung limp. "Chad!" She patted him lightly on the cheeks. "Wake up!"
Dr. Sallow pushed past her. She scooted out and moved to the opposite wall to make room for him, accidentally kicking Chad's legs in the process. His eyes never opened. The doctor placed his fingers on Chad's neck as he waved at two men carrying a stretcher. After a few seconds, Dr. Sallow glanced around, found her and gave a slight shake of his head. "I'm sorry, Elery. He's gone."
Her mind went numb for a second before kicking into overdrive. No, this can't be happening. Chad had spoken to her seconds ago. He couldn't die here. Not like this. He was so young. She clutched her arms to her chest.
The men lifted Chad's body onto the stretcher. His head lolled back, and his arm slid off the canvas material. Dr. Sallow placed Chad's arm back beside his body.
She coughed as she tried to swallow past her nausea. Tears rimmed her eyes. The men stared at her, waiting for direction.
"Go home, everyone. We got our man out." Only the man was dead.
She should probably pray or give some words of wisdom, but everything inside her had shut down. Her core had solidified into granite.
The men followed her orders and filed out with their shovels. Everyone left, except for Ron. Elery slid down the wall and sank to the floor of the tunnel, pressing her fists against her temples.
Ron crouched down in a squat in front of her. "Death is a reality in mining. Chad knew the risks." He dropped one knee to the ground and touched her leg. "At the end there, what did he say to you?"
A lone tear escaped to wind its way down her cheek. She shook her head. "He wasn't making any sense."
What did it matter anyway? Chad was dead. Killed by a machine she should have replaced. Her chin quivered, and more tears raced from her eyes. She couldn't apologize. She couldn't take it back. The weight of his death would rest on her shoulders forever.

###
"Jesus asks us for one simple thing." Pastor Arroyo held up one finger for dramatic effect.
Every church member, even her dad, held their eyes riveted to the man. Elery looked down at her feet. Normally, she tried to pay attention, but there wasn't anything normal in her life anymore.
"Belief," Pastor Arroyo continued. "That's all Jesus wants. Give him your belief, and He'll take care of the rest. But that's harder to do than it is to say."
Several members of the congregation nodded. Elery looked up at the tall cross fastened to the wall. Had Chad believed? She didn't know him well enough to say.
The door to the sanctuary swung open, letting in a warm breeze. She looked up as Garrick slid into the seat next to her. What was he doing here? He usually attended church on campus and she hadn't seen him since Friday, the day of the accident. It seemed like two years, but it had only been two days. Had Garrick stayed in town during that time or had he driven back from Phoenix just for today?
Ignoring her questioning glance, Garrick focused on the pulpit where Pastor Arroyo had turned the floor over to Michael, who bowed in front of the crowd. Elery, along with all the other regular members, had heard Michael's story before. Once a year, he described how the doctors diagnosed him with permanent paralysis of the legs and how God had healed him after the pastor and elders had prayed over him. Should she have prayed over Chad that night? Could she have saved him?
At the end of his short speech, Michael ran a victory lap around the church, giving high-fives as he went. She clapped politely, as did the rest of the congregation.
"You have not..." Pastor Arroyo's voice echoed through the sanctuary as he paused for emphasis. "Because you ask not." He walked down the three steps to the ground and gave Michael a high-five on the way. "Jesus said nothing is impossible for he who believes." The pastor pointed to the crowd, but he might as well have been pointing straight at her. "Do you believe with an unshakable faith?"
"Unshakable" would not be the word to describe her faith recently. More like the broken and crumbled tailings left behind at an abandoned mine.
"Some of you in here have problems because you're not trusting God. He wants to take away what ails you. He can cure you, even of disease. The Bible says He wants to bless us more abundantly than we can imagine. Do you believe He will do that?"
At the word "disease," Elery glanced at her father. He sat straight-backed, staring at the pulpit. The thin, cotton shirt he wore hid the gauze from the bandages covering his back. He'd gone to Phoenix on Friday where the doctor had removed more spots of malignant melanoma. How was he feeling? She hadn't even asked him today.
On the other side of her, Garrick shifted in his seat, but didn't glance her way. A shock of hair hid his eyes.
"Whoever has ailments, let him be healed." Pastor Arroyo gestured wide with his arms. "Come and the elders and I will pray for you. You can experience healing, if you ask."
Again, she looked at her father. Had he asked God for healing? He certainly wouldn't ask the pastor or the elders. It was a pride thing for him.
The band played a slow song for the altar call. They all stood and sang, but no one made their way to the front. Pastor Arroyo and the elders formed a circle, praying amongst themselves.
After the song, the pastor dismissed them and the congregation filed out like ants from a hill. She stepped out into the warm February day. Garrick ran down the steps past her, then stopped in the parking lot and reached for her arm. "Can we talk?"
She hid her surprise at the request. After her refusal the other day, she'd expected him to hold a grudge for a while. "Sure. Let's walk." She pressed the car keys into her father's hand. "I'll meet you at home."
After their father left, she led Garrick in a stroll down Main Street. They passed establishments with names like Gold Rush Saloon and Wild Bill's Grocery with the placard of fake wood to mimic an old western town. The underlying buildings were from the late 1800s, but tourists didn't want original western towns. They preferred fake movie versions.
Garrick folded his hands in front. "I wanted to talk to you about Angela again. I thought now would be a better time."
In other words, he hadn't like her answer from before or perhaps he hadn't had enough time to convince her because of the mine collapse. Where had he gone after the cave in anyway?
"I know you don't trust my judgment when it comes to the Lost Mine."
He had that part right. Garrick had driven out into the desert to chase every rumor about the Dutchman posted on the Internet, he'd searched every archive in five surrounding towns, and scoured countless auctions for anything Jacob Waltz might have possessed.
"I don't blame you. At times, I haven't exercised the most caution in my zeal to find the mine."
She kept walking, hoping he'd get to the point.
"So, I find myself in the position of the boy who cried wolf. Why would you believe I've actually found something?"
Coming to the end of Main Street, she turned left on Oak Street, making a loop back to the home she shared with her dad. "I'm with you so far."
Garrick gave a short laugh. "Angela is the real deal."
The earnest tone in his voice broke her heart. She held her tongue rather than continue a futile argument.
"I need you to believe in her like I do."
There was that word again--believe. It only mattered to him what she believed because he wanted her to change her belief. She glanced over at him. His head hung low, his back hunched over as he focused on the ground. "Okay, what do you think this girl has found?"
He looked up, and a tentative smile crossed his face, the look of a school kid who couldn't wait to share what he'd learned. "When Jacob Waltz died, most of his stuff was kept by Julia, the owner of the boarding house."
It was a name Elery had heard over and over again. Julia had cared for Jacob Waltz, the Dutchman, when he was dying in 1891. Waltz had told Julia about his gold mine and supposedly how to find it.
Garrick shifted on his feet. "I found documents in the university archives about a package sent to Joseph Schaffer in Kansas, items owned by his brother, Albert."
"What does that mean?"
He spoke faster, diving into the rabbit hole with fervor. "Come on, think about it. When Waltz died, Julia kept his belongings. Then when she died, her husband, Albert, would have kept them. After Albert's death, a large package was sent to his brother, Joseph. It could have been Waltz's final possessions."
Not very likely, but the small possibility was all Garrick would need to start the chase again. She slowly shook her head. Garrick's obsession had started when they were kids. At bedtime, Dad used to tell stories of the Lost Dutchman's gold mine. His way of distracting them from their mother's absence at night. Many times they had tried to tease out fact from fiction, but the legends folded in upon themselves like some sort of origami art.
Garrick tugged on the hem of his t-shirt. "That parcel went to Angela's family. She has an original map. It could lead us to the mine."
He slowed and took an awkward sidestep toward Elery, his pronounced limp pricking her conscience like a sharp needle. She pushed the shame deep inside. No way would she fall down her own rabbit hole into the dark abyss of guilt. She took a deep breath. "And if it doesn't?"
His arms gestured wildly. "It will ... because she has everything ... all the stuff Waltz had when he died." Garrick tilted his head. "Well, almost everything. Some stuff went to Waltz's own sister."
She cleared her throat to stop his rambling. "You don't understand, Garrick. Our family's mine is in trouble. That's a little more important than a phantom one."
He put a finger to his chin.
"Dad thinks I might have to sell it." Voicing the words made them more real. She reached up to tighten her ponytail. "I don't know what to do or even if anyone would buy it."
Their house was just ahead. A two-story Victorian painted pale green with old brown shaker shingles. It was the house they grew up in and where she and her dad still lived. Would they have to sell it, too? She stepped into the street to cross.
Garrick hung back a step. "Come meet Angela this afternoon. She'll convince you."
Elery turned and let out a soft grunt. Her brother's persistence was both admirable and frustrating. In that way, at least, they were alike.
"Really, El. This could save the mine." He tapped his chest. "Or you could start a new one with me as your partner."
She stopped in the middle of the street and stared at her younger brother. His body had filled out in college and now he stood before her with the broad shouldered form of a man, but in his eyes shone the innocent light of a dreamer. He'd always believed he'd find the mine.
"Fine. I'll meet her." Eventually, she'd have to try to reason with Garrick again, to try to take his dreams away. But for now, it wouldn't hurt to meet the girl.

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