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Chapter 15: The Washout & The Meeting
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The sky didn’t just break; it unhinged, dumping a week’s worth of the Atlantic onto the red clay of Cypress Bend in a single, deafening hour.
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Elias stood on the edge of the bluff, the heels of his boots sinking into the saturated earth as he watched the perimeter road dissolve. This wasn't just a storm. It was a systematic erasure of the progress they had made over the last six months. The culvert—the one Miller had sworn was rated for a fifty-year flood—was currently somersaulting down the ravine in three jagged pieces of corrugated steel. Below it, the primary access road to the south quadrant looked like a flayed vein, spilling gravel and silt into the churning brown froth of the creek.
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He adjusted his hood, but it was a useless gesture. The rain was coming sideways, stinging his eyes and tasting of minerals and diesel. He pulled his radio from his belt, shielding it with his body.
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"Miller, tell me you’re seeing the telemetry on the South Gate sensors," Elias shouted over the roar of the water.
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Static crackled, a rhythmic, dying sound, before Miller’s voice punched through, tight and frantic. "I’m seeing them, boss. They’re blinking red because they’re currently floating toward the county line. The whole shelf gave way. We’ve lost the primary conduit for the fiber optic line. The site is officially dark."
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Elias looked at the blacked-out windows of the temporary operations trailer. "Get the backup generators on the hillsides. If we lose the cooling system for the server racks in the bunker, we’re not just looking at a construction delay. We’re looking at a meltdown."
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"I'm on it, but Elias—the creek is still rising. If the bridge at the old mill goes, we’re trapped here."
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"Then don't let it go," Elias snapped. He clipped the radio back to his belt. His hands were shaking, not from the cold, but from the realization that the timeline was now a fiction. The investors were arriving tomorrow for the site walkthrough. They expected a gleaming skeletal structure of the most advanced data center in the Southeast. Instead, they were going to find a muddy graveyard of expensive equipment and broken promises.
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He turned back toward his truck, his boots heavy with pounds of clinging clay. Every step felt like the earth was trying to pull him under, to reclaim the land he’d spent millions trying to domesticate. He reached the cab of the Ford F-150, the interior smelling of stale coffee and damp upholstery. He didn't turn the engine on immediately. He sat, watching the wipers struggle against the deluge, the rhythm like a frantic heartbeat.
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His phone buzzed in the cup holder. A text from Sarah: *The bridge is closed. I’m stuck at the diner. Are you safe?*
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He didn’t answer. He couldn't. If he told her the truth—that the project was sliding into the river—she’d tell him to come home. And if he went home now, he’d never be able to look at this ridge again without seeing his own failure.
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By the time Elias made it to the site office, a low-slung modular building anchored to a concrete pad that felt increasingly precarious, the air inside was thick with the scent of wet wool and desperation. Miller was there, hunched over a topographical map, his hair plastered to his forehead. Beside him stood Silas Vance, the local contractor whose family had been moving dirt in Cypress Bend for three generations. Silas looked significantly less stressed than Miller; he looked like a man who knew exactly how much he was about to charge in overtime.
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"It’s a washout, Mr. Thorne," Silas said, tapping a calloused finger on the map near the creek’s bend. "The drainage wasn't designed for this kind of volume. You can't fight gravity when the dirt turns to soup."
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"I don't want a physics lesson, Silas," Elias said, stripping off his soaked jacket and hanging it on a peg. "I want a solution. How long to stabilize the slope?"
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Silas rubbed his jaw, the sound of his stubble audible in the quiet moments between thunderclaps. "In this rain? You can’t. You try to move a dozer out there now, you’re just going to bury it. We wait for the rain to stop, give it forty-eight hours to drain, then we start hauling in riprap and surge stone. Six days. Maybe seven."
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"We have eighteen hours," Elias said.
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Miller looked up, his eyes wide. "The Board meeting. Elias, you have to reschedule. Look at it out there. They can't even get the SUVs up the drive."
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"The Board doesn't reschedule for weather," Elias said, stepping toward the map. "The Chairman is flying in from London. The Vice Chair is coming from Palo Alto. They don't care about rain. They care about the fact that we are forty million dollars deep into a hole that is currently filling with water. If they see this, they pull the plug. We’ll be dismantled before the first rack is even powered on."
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"Then what are we doing?" Miller asked.
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"We’re redirecting," Elias said. "Silas, I need your boys to clear the debris from the north access road. It’s steeper, but the bedrock is higher. It won't wash. We give them the 'scenic' tour. We avoid the south quadrant entirely."
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"That’s where the main hub is," Silas pointed out. "They’re gonna want to see the hub."
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"They'll see the hub from a distance, through the mist," Elias said, his voice dropping into that low, persuasive register that had won him the contract in the first place. "We tell them we’ve restricted access for safety due to the 'unprecedented weather event.' We focus on the core infrastructure. We show them the bunker. That's reinforced concrete. It’ll be the only dry place on the mountain."
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"It’s a gamble," Miller whispered.
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"It’s the only hand we have," Elias replied.
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The night was a blur of caffeine and the grinding sound of heavy machinery. Elias stayed on the radio, directing the crews like a general in a losing trench war. He watched from the office window as the yellow lights of the excavators flickered through the trees on the north ridge. They were fighting the mountain, and the mountain was winning. Every time they cleared a slide, another one sloughed off the shoulder.
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Around 3:00 AM, the rain finally tapered off to a dismal, heavy mist. The silence that followed was worse than the storm. It allowed the sounds of the mountain to come through—the roar of the creek, the sickening *thwack* of falling trees, the groan of shifting soil.
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Elias grabbed a flashlight and headed out. He needed to see the bunker.
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The bunker was the heart of the Cypress Bend project—a massive, subterranean vault designed to hold the world’s most sensitive data. To the locals, it was just a big hole in the ground. To Elias, it was a cathedral. He descended the temporary metal stairs, his flashlight beam cutting through the damp air.
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The floor was dry.
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He let out a breath he felt he’d been holding for twelve hours. The waterproofing held. The massive steel doors, though not yet fully automated, stood like sentinels at the end of the hall. This was what he would show them. This was the proof of concept.
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He sat down on a crate of electrical components, his head in his hands. He was exhausted to the marrow. He’d sacrificed everything for this project—his marriage, his reputation in the city, his sleep. He looked at his hands; they were stained with the red clay of the Bend, the color of dried blood.
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"You look like hell," a voice echoed through the concrete chamber.
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Elias didn't look up. He knew the gait. It was Julian Vane, the project's chief architect and the man who should have been in bed three hours ago.
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"The south road is gone, Julian," Elias said to the floor.
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"I heard. I also heard you’re planning on lying to the Board tomorrow." Julian stepped into the light, looking remarkably dry in a high-end technical shell.
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"I’m not lying. I’m curating the experience."
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"Curating," Julian scoffed. "If they find out the integrity of the south slope is compromised, they’ll lock the gates. They won't just stop the funding, Elias. Pierre will sue us into the middle of the next century for negligence."
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Elias stood up, his height giving him an edge in the cramped hallway. "Pierre wants results. He wants a secure facility that can survive a blackout. We’re giving him that. The slope can be fixed. The funding cannot be replaced."
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"And if the shift continues? If the foundation of the hub starts to migrate toward the water?"
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"Then we’ll pin it to the bedrock with sixty-foot piles. We’ll do whatever it takes. But tomorrow, they see a success. Are we clear?"
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Julian stared at him for a long beat, his eyes searching Elias’s face for a glimmer of the man who used to care about ethics more than optics. He found nothing. "Perfectly clear, Elias. I’ll make sure the blueprints in the presentation room don't show the revised drainage plans. The ones that failed."
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"Thank you."
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"Don't thank me. Just remember that when this mountain decides to move again—and it will—concrete doesn't stop it. It just hitches a ride."
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Julian turned and walked back up the stairs, his footsteps echoing like hammer blows.
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---
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The morning brought a cruel, bright sun that made the mud steam. The humidity was an physical weight, pressing down on the valley. At 9:00 AM, three black Suburbans crested the north ridge, their tires caked in red filth.
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Elias stood in front of the makeshift visitor center, his suit pressed, his face a mask of calm composure. Beside him, Miller looked like he was about to have a stroke, his tie slightly crooked despite Elias’s three attempts to straighten it.
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The doors of the lead vehicle opened, and Pierre Sterling stepped out.
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Pierre was a man who seemed constructed of sharp angles and expensive wool. He looked at the mud on his boots with a grimace that suggested he was considering burning them the moment he got back to the city. Behind him came the rest of the Board—four men and two women who controlled more capital than the GDP of most small nations.
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"Thorne," Pierre said, his voice a gravelly baritone. "I assume you have a reason for bringing us up the goat path. My driver thought we were going to end up in the ravine."
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"A precaution, Pierre," Elias said, stepping forward with an easy smile and an outstretched hand. "The storm last night was significant. We’ve restricted the main access road to heavy equipment only to expedite the clearing of some minor debris. The north road gave you a better view of the site’s natural elevation anyway."
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Pierre took his hand, his grip like a vise. "It looks like a swamp, Elias. I was told I was investing in a fortress."
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"A fortress in progress," Elias countered. "If you’ll follow me, the interior of the primary vault is where you’ll see the real return on your investment. We managed to keep the core entirely dry during a record-breaking rainfall. That’s the engineering you’re paying for."
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He led them toward the bunker. He kept the pace brisk, pointing out the reinforcement of the retaining walls—the ones that hadn't collapsed—and talking loudly about the redundant power systems. He was a magician, directing their eyes away from the scarred hillside where Silas’s crews were desperately trying to bury the evidence of the washout under layers of fresh gravel.
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They entered the bunker. The transition from the oppressive heat outside to the climate-controlled, filtered air of the vault was a tactical move. He saw the tension leave the Board members' shoulders. The humming of the temporary ventilation system sounded like money.
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"This," Elias said, gesturing to the vast, empty hall of the main server room, "is the future of secure data storage. Three hundred feet of granite above us. Ten feet of reinforced concrete around us. Even with the storm of the century raging outside, not a drop of moisture has entered this space. We are ahead of schedule on the structural phase, and the hardware installation is set to begin next month."
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One of the women, a venture capitalist named Marcus who was known for her "blood-hound" instinct for bullshit, walked over to the wall. She ran her hand over the concrete, then looked at the floor.
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"What’s that sound?" she asked.
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Elias froze. "The ventilation, Jean."
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"No," she said, tilting her head. "Underneath. Like a... rushing."
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The room went silent. In the stillness, Elias heard it. A low, rhythmic thrumming. It wasn't the air. It was the sound of the creek, amplified by the hollow earth, vibrating through the very foundation of the bunker. The washout hadn't just taken the road; it had carved a new subterranean path closer to the facility’s base than the geological surveys had ever predicted.
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Pierre stepped toward the center of the room. He looked at Elias, his eyes narrowing. "You said the site was stable, Elias."
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"It is stable," Elias said, his heart hammering against his ribs. "You’re hearing the runoff in the drainage channels. We designed them to divert water away from the structure. The fact that you can hear it proves the system is working. It’s moving the water *away*."
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"It sounds very close," Pierre remarked.
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"Because we’re inside a concrete drum," Elias said, his voice steady even as his skin itched with sweat. "Sound carries differently down here. If there were any structural risk, our sensors would have flagged it hours ago. Miller, show them the latest stability readings on the tablet."
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Miller fumbled with his iPad, his fingers slick. He pulled up a graph—one Elias knew was from three days ago, cached and ready for just such an emergency. He’d told Miller to have it ready "as a baseline," but they both knew it was a lie of omission.
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Pierre glanced at the screen. The lines were flat, green, and reassuring. "I see."
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"We have a lot to cover," Elias said, steering them back toward the exit. "I’d like to show you the power substation next. We’ve implemented a new cooling array that’s going to shave fifteen percent off our energy overhead."
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He ushered them out, his hand on Pierre’s elbow, guiding him toward the sunlight. He felt like he was walking on glass.
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As they stepped back outside, the heat hit them like a physical blow. Elias led them toward the substation, carefully avoiding the ridge line. But as they rounded the corner of the admin building, the sound of a heavy engine roared to life.
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A massive dump truck, loaded with jagged surge stone, came barreling around the bend from the south access road. It shouldn't have been there. It was supposed to be working the lower ravine, out of sight.
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The driver, seeing the group of suits, slammed on the brakes. The truck skidded on the slick mud, the back end fishtailing. With a sickening, wet crunch, the rear tires slid off the edge of the newly narrowed road. The truck tilted, its load of stone shifting with a thunderous roar.
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"Watch out!" Elias shouted, lunging forward to pull Jean Marcus back.
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The truck didn't flip, but it settled deep into the soft earth, the back tires spinning uselessly and throwing a plume of red mud twenty feet into the air. One of the plumes landed squarely across the front of Pierre’s white dress shirt.
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Silence fell over the ridge, broken only by the frantic spinning of the truck’s tires.
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The driver climbed out of the cab, his face pale. "Sorry! The shoulder just... it gave way! I was trying to get the stone to the washout at the hub!"
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Elias wanted to strangle the man. He wanted to scream. Instead, he reached into his pocket and pulled out a silk handkerchief. "Pierre, I am so sorry. The drivers are a bit over-eager today trying to get the site back to pristine condition."
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Pierre didn't take the handkerchief. He looked at the truck, buried to its axle in what was supposed to be a primary roadway. Then he looked slowly toward the south ridge, where the mist was finally clearing, revealing the jagged red scar of the massive landslide that had taken out the conduit.
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"That’s more than 'minor debris,' Elias," Pierre said quietly.
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"It’s a localized slope failure," Elias said, his voice tight. "We’re already remediating it. By Monday, you won’t even know it happened."
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Pierre turned to the rest of the Board. "Go back to the cars. I want to speak with Mr. Thorne alone."
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The others didn't argue. They practically bolted for the Suburbans, leaving Elias and Pierre standing in the mud.
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Pierre waited until the car doors clicked shut. He looked out over the valley, the beauty of the Blue Ridge Mountains a stark contrast to the industrial carnage at their feet.
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"I didn't hire you because you were the best engineer, Elias," Pierre said. "I hired you because you were the best salesman. You could sell a drowning man a glass of water. But here’s the thing about water—you can’t talk your way out of it."
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"Pierre, I can fix this. The core structure is sound. The delay will be minimal."
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"It’s not the delay I’m worried about," Pierre said, turning to look him in the eye. "It’s the foundation. Not the concrete one. Yours. You lied to me five minutes ago about those sensors. I saw Miller’s hand shaking. I saw the date on the corner of the screen when he swiped too fast."
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Elias felt the air leave his lungs. "I did what I had to do to protect the project. If you pull out now, everyone loses. The town, the investors, you."
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"I don't lose," Pierre said. "I have insurance for incompetence. But you? You have this." He gestured to the mud-choked valley. "I’m giving you forty-eight hours. I want a full, honest report from an independent surveyor—not your friend Silas, and not Julian. I want to know exactly how much of this mountain is currently inside my bunker. If I don't like the report, or if I find out you’ve hidden one more cracked pipe or shifted pile, I’m not just pulling the funding. I’m going to make sure you never even build a Lego set in this state again."
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Pierre stepped closer, the smell of his expensive cologne clashing with the scent of wet earth. "Fix it, Elias. Or be buried by it."
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Pierre turned and walked toward the Suburbans. He didn't look back as the convoy turned and descended the north road, leaving Elias standing alone on the edge of the bluff.
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Elias watched the tail lights disappear into the trees. He felt a drop of rain hit his forehead. Then another.
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He reached for his radio. "Miller?"
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"Yeah, Elias? Are they gone?"
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"They're gone. Get Silas back up here. And get the lights set up on the south slope. We’re working through the night."
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"The crews are exhausted, Elias. They’ve been at it for twenty hours."
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"I don't care," Elias said, his voice cracking like the earth beneath him. "I don't care if they have to hold the mountain up with their bare hands. We’re not losing this."
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He looked down at his shoes. The red mud had worked its way into the seams of the leather, staining them forever. He walked toward the edge of the washout, where the ground was still soft and treacherous.
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The creek below was a churning monster, a brown snake eating the land. He looked at the place where the main hub was supposed to stand. The ground there was slumped, a subtle but undeniable tilt that hadn't been there yesterday.
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He knelt down, pressing his palm into the mud. It was cold and slick. He could feel the vibration again—the deep, rhythmic thrumming of the water. It wasn't just in the bunker. It was in the rock. The whole ridge was humming.
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Elias closed his eyes and prayed for the rain to stop, but the sky was already turning a bruised, heavy purple, and the first true crack of thunder shook the mountain to its very bones.
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His phone buzzed. He pulled it out with a muddy hand. A new message from an unknown number.
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*I saw what happened at the south gate. You're building on a graveyard, Elias. Not just trees.*
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Elias stared at the screen, the light reflecting in his eyes as a massive section of the bluff thirty yards away gave out, sliding into the darkness with a sound like a dying god.
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