Deadly Lode (Trace Brandon Book 1) (25 page)

BOOK: Deadly Lode (Trace Brandon Book 1)
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C
hapter
14

R
ed motioned from the drilling rig for Troutman to come over
to the rig.


Something

s not right, Fish.


What

s the problem, Red?


We should be in vein
,
but
I can tell by the way the bit is cutting
.
we

re still in granite.


Finish this run, then trip out. Let

s be sure.

Red finished the core run and pulled the tubing from inside the core barrel.


Here she comes,

Red said.

The drill helpers emptied the contents of the core liner into a core box.


Damn—
you

re right, Red. Nothing but granodiorite.


What do you want me to do?

Red asked.


Cut another five feet of core. If we

re still in granodiorite, I

ll call Trace and get him up here.

An hour later
my
office phone rang.


Trace, it

s Fish. We

ve got a problem.


What

s wrong, Fish?


The vein is gone.
It

s e
ither pinched out or been displaced by a fault.


Holy shit
—n
o vein at all?


None. We cored
ten feet
in granodiorite
,
where the vein should have been. I had Red
pull
out of the hole and go back in with the
down
-
hole
hammer
,
and drill until we hit the footwall schist. We grabbed samples
every two feet, just to be sure.
N
o vein.


Okay, move the rig to the next location and start drilling. Drill down to where we would normally start coring.
I
f I

m not there by then, put the rig on standby. I

m on my way.

I called Will
and
Wally
, and
e
-
mailed
Jim
Lee
,
and filled them in on the situation.
I decided to wait to call Malcolm until I got on-site and reviewed the situation
in person
. I knew he

d be on the phone to Cyrus the minute we hung up.
I packed my gear and headed for the Sullivan Mine.

 

 

Cyrus refueled
the Lear
in Houston, skirted some thunderstorms
,
and made Grand Cayman by
8:00
p.m. Lisa Miller was waiting in the terminal. Cyrus had longstanding arrangements with Cayman customs officers
,
and he breezed through with no luggage check.


Thanks for meeting me, Lisa,

Cyrus said, giving her a hug and kiss on the cheek.


No problem, Cyrus. What

s up?


I

ve got eight hundred thousand U
.
S
.
in this briefcase
that
I need to get it into Carib

s account.
And
,
I want to strategize a bit on our plan of attack now that Malcolm
is
on Montana Creek Mining

s board.


Anything else?

Lisa said
,
with a seductive smile.


Well
,
maybe just one or two other items,

Cyrus replied, a grin spreading across his face.

 

 

 

 

 

C
hapter
15


C
hief Constable Rand? This is David Osgood
,
with the
Ministry of Public Safety
here in Vancouver
.


Yes, Mr. Osgood
. W
hat can I do for you today?


It

s actually more what I can do for you,
sir
. We

ve got a cause of death on Richard Rosenburg
, a
nd you

re not going to believe it.


Really? Not your run
-
of
-
the
-
mill heart attack or stroke?


Only if you call VX a run
-
of
-
the
-
mill nerve agent.


Come again?


Rosenburg was killed by percutaneous exposure
,
that is
,
skin contact
,
with the nerve agent known as VX.


How is that possible? I thought only the military had access to VX
.


VX is a derivative of a
1950

s
pesticide called
OPP-D
. It

s possible not all of the
pesticide
on the market was collected or destroyed. A good chemist could upgrade the
pesticide
to
a
weapons
-
grade nerve agent.


Absolutely sure on this?


We nearly lost one of our
paramedics
getting Rosenburg out of his car. Only the fast decontamination of her exposed skin and an injection of Atropine saved her.
So, yes
,
I

m sure.


I see.


Whoever killed Rosenburg applied liquid VX to the steering wheel of his Jag. The
poor
bastard died
one horrible death.


A terrorist hit?


I shouldn

t think so. They wouldn

t waste something as valuable as VX on
Rosenburg
. T
hey

d just cut his throat.


Okay, thanks
,
David. We

ll check with RCMP, the military
,
and I

ll contact the FBI down in Washington.


Good luck,
sir
. And be careful
. T
his is one of the worst nerve agents on the planet.

Rand shook his head in disbelief
.

B
etter living through chemistry, eh?

 

 

I arrived at the mine
-
site around noon and immediately checked the core. Red had moved the
rig
and was drilling down to the projected coring interval. He still had about seventy
-
five feet to go.


Well, you

re sure as hell right about the vein, Fish,

I said, looking at the last core runs.

The vein

s either pinched out in this area
,
or she

s been offset by faulting.


Have you been to the working face at the end of level one?

Fish asked.


No, we

d need to bridge a winze to get all the way to the back.


I think we should get a crew up here and get some planking across the winze
. We need to
get a look at the vein where they stopped mining. If it is faulted off, we may be able to tell the direction of offset.


Agreed. I

ll get Bob Malott to put the timber together and get up here with a crew. In the meantime, we

ll see if Red intersects the vein
from the new location.

I called Malott
and
explained what we needed. He said he

d have everything together and be on-site around ten in the morning.
I hung up
,
and F
ish and I went up the new drilling location.


How

s it look, Red?

I asked.


We

re in granite but should be at the projected vein intersection in another couple of feet.

Fish and I went over to the sample splitter where the driller

s helpers were catching samples. I grabbed a handful of the drill cuttings and showed it to fish.


Granodiorite,

Fish said, looking at the small cuttings with his ten
-
power hand lens.

Red yelled down
from the rig
.

We s
hould be in vein now, but it

s cutting like granite
.

We drilled another twenty
-
five feet of granodiorite and then hit the footwall schist.


Damn, she

s not here,

Fish said.


No
,
she

s not,

I replied
,
in disgust.


What do you want to do, Trace?

Fish asked.


Only one thing to do, Fish.
Have the rig stand by while we put together some cross sections and maps.
Maybe we

ll
be able to figure out what

s going on
after we get to the working face on level one.

Fish nodded and waved his hand at Red. When he got Red

s attention,
Fish
drew his index finger across his throat
.


S
hut her down
,

h
e yelled.

 

Paying rig time while a drill stands idle
is a worst
-
case scenario for a project
geologist
. B
ut in this cas
e, I could see no alternative.

Fish and I went back to our storage warehouse at Malott

s yard in Winthrop. We cranked up a couple of space heaters and went to work. While Fish worked on cross sections, I made a call I didn

t want to make.


Malc
olm
, it

s Trace. Got a sec?


Sure, Trace, what

s up?


We

ve lost the vein. We drilled two holes along the projected strike of the vein. When we hit the vein interval, she wasn

t there. Tom Troutman, the IUC geo
logist
, and I are working up cross sections of the drilling to see if we can figure out what

s going on.


Any guesses?


Well it

s either a pinch out, which could be just a local event, or not. Or
a fault has cut the vein and displaced it in some manner. We

re going to do some work in the main adit in order to get back to the working face and see if the vein is still in sight. If it

s not, we may get some indications from fault striations as to the direction of movement.


Okay, Trace, I know you

re on top of it. Thanks for calling me
,
and please keep me informed a
s work progresses.

Malcolm hung up and hit Cyrus

s number on speed dial.


This better be good, Malcolm. I

m in the Cayman
’s
and dead center in the middle of a piece of work.

Malcolm could hear
a
muffled female giggle in the background.


I just go
t
off the phone with Trace. There

s a problem at the Sullivan Mine.

Cyrus focused immediately
.

W
hat kind of problem?


The last two core holes did not intercept the vein.


Who
knows about this?


Just the directors and the drillers.


Okay, I

m going to make a few calls in the morning. We

re going to short the stock. When news of this gets out, the shares
price will drop
. We

ll take some profits now
, and i
f they relocate the vein, we

ll know ahead of time
,
and we

ll cover our short position. And Malcolm, not a
damn
word to anyone,
c
lear?


Understood,
sir
.

 

 

Al
Pantelli
was on his second Bloody Mary of the morning. It

d been a hell of a party last night
,
and he was paying the price.
His cell phone rang and he picked it up.


Al, Cyrus here. Are you in Vegas or New Orleans?


I

m back in the Big Easy
. W
hat

s up?


Listen, Al. There

s a problem at Montana Creek

s
mine in Washington.


What kind of problem
?

Al asked, taking a healthy pull on his
Bloody Mary
.


I don

t know how much you know about drilling out an orebody.


Not a hell of a lot, so educate me.


Well, they

re drilling along the trend, called strike, of the vein
,
and the vein has disappeared.


What the hell you mean
,
disappeared?


It means it could have petered out
,
or it could have been cut by a fault and displaced, moved laterally or vertically
, or both
.

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