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Written in the Scars(80)

By:Adriana Locke


He looks at me over his shoulder. “Calm the fuck down, Whitt.”

“No!” I shout, laying down my hammer and starting towards him. If he keeps at that angle, the ceiling will give and land right on Cord.

Pettis’ laugh drifts over the sound of the machines and I realize that’s exactly what he’s trying to do.

“Stop, Shane!” I scream.

He turns to go back to the mining machine but realizes what I meant. He pulls back but it’s just a moment too late.

The entire cavity we’re in starts to shake—the walls, the floor, the ceiling overhead—knocking me off my feet.

“Run!” I scream, my voice drowned out by the sound of chunks of black carbon toppling out of the seam and crashing in. “Get out!”

The noise of the equipment stops. The shouts of my crew melting away. The lights go out as my vision goes black as the walls literally close in on me.

I try to move my legs. I look behind me, where my body should be, but my head won’t turn fully and the light won’t make it through the dust anyway. I can’t see them.

“Fuck,” I mutter, my head not sure what in the hell is happening. There is no pain, or I can’t feel it if there is. Struggling to make it to my elbows, my legs pressed to the ground, Cord’s voice sounds from somewhere through the silt.

“Anyone hear me?” His voice is ragged and his words break as he begins to cough, undoubtedly expelling the debris floating in the air.

“Over here, Cord,” I say, moving the air out of my face with my hand. Particles dance in the light, swaying to a song I don’t hear.

I can’t remember where everyone was when the walls gave way.

Where was Jiggs?

Combing through my memory bank, I have him placed to my far left. By the shaft leading out.

Please, let him have gotten out of here.

I rack my brain for our location underground, thinking back to the map in my packet before we descended a few hours ago. We weren’t incredibly deep, which would’ve given some of the guys a fighting chance to get out if they got a jump on it.

The odds are decent Jiggs made it.

What are the odds we’ll get out?

Panic begins to set in, constricting around my chest. They aren’t good, pretty fucking slim, but I have to stay calm. See who else is in here. Figure out how to stay alive.

Kicking my feet, I feel the weight moving until they’re free. They’re tight and sore and feel like dead weight, but they’ll move. Yet with each swing, there’s more pain.

“I can’t move,” Cord groans.

I roll over, wincing as my back and legs scream in pain. Blocking it out, I look around as I stand.

The dust is beginning to settle, the pungent smell of coal ripping away at my nostrils. The only sound is Cord struggling somewhere in front of me and water trickling to my right.

My headlamp shines in a circle as I turn, illuminating the destruction at my feet.

The wall to the right, the one we were mining into, has collapsed. I shine my light in front of it, to the last place I saw Pettis as he mined into an area that hadn’t been bolted and secured. There’s nothing but a heap of rubble about ten yards in from where he stood.

Gagging, I bend over at the waist and dry heave into the abyss.

“Shit.” Cord barks from the other side of the little cavity formed by the cave-in and I stand, shining my light towards him.

“You over there?” I ask, my boots slopping through the mud as I stumble over lumps of coal and broken ceiling timbers.

“Yeah.”

I see movement along the far wall, a few yards from me, and finally spot his face. It’s as black as the coal on top of him, just the whites of his eyes poking out from the heap.

I clear his body from the debris and help him to his feet. His eyes are wide, a trickle of blood mixed with the soot running down his cheek.

“We’re fucked, aren’t we?” he asks.

A stillness settles over us. He feels it too because he looks away.

Instead of answering him, I take a deep breath. “Anyone hear me?” I call out.

Silence.

“Can anyone hear me?” I say again, moving my light to the front of the room.

The slope leading out of the hole is completely blocked, sealing us off from the rest of the world.

As I start to feel the weight of what that means, I see movement beneath a pile of broken black rock.

“Shit,” I say, moving that way. Cord is behind me, his hand on my shoulder, as I guide us both.

We knock the rubble away, Cord focusing on the guy’s legs as I work on the torso. Once the face is clear, I wipe frantically at the face to identify him.

The chest starts to move more quickly, and the man begins to cough and wheeze. Whoever he is, he’s alive.

His eyes open and when they lock on me, a weak version of my favorite smile in the word flashes at me.