Chloe grabbed Lena’s arm. “Is someone there? A survivor?”
“You can model,” Lena said, getting out of the jeep. Her boots squelched into the mud. “I’ll make sure you don’t step on a landmine.” Chloe grabbed Lena’s arm
Lena laughed, a dry, humorless sound. “No, doctor. A cage. Thirty years ago, this valley was a war zone. Cartels, paramilitaries, the army—they all dug in here. They say the ground is more bullet than soil. After the peace accords, the government declared the whole valley a URAP. They cordoned it off. No logging, no farming, no mining.” Her boots squelched into the mud
The lullaby continued, sweet and horrifying, as the team stood frozen in the tomb of drums. Lena looked at the mural one last time. The condor-woman seemed to be watching them, her scale forever unbalanced. A cage
Lena pointed through the streaked windshield. The jungle was reclaiming everything: crumbling concrete bunkers swallowed by vines, the rusted skeletons of armored trucks, and half a mile up the slope, the dark maw of a tunnel. “Because the URAP isn’t just about nature. The cartel had a lab in that tunnel. Not for cocaine. For mercury. They used it to process ore from illegal mines upstream. When the army finally took the valley, the cartel didn’t have time to clean up. They just… left.”
They found the tunnel easily. The entrance was a black rectangle belching cold air that smelled of rust and old chemicals. Lena went in first with a flashlight. The beam swept over drums, hundreds of them, stacked and toppled, some split open, their contents long since leached into the soil. A fine, grey dust coated everything.
Hartman’s eyes lit up with academic greed. “Mercury contamination. The river downstream has had off-the-chart levels for years. If we can locate the source barrels, we can model the dispersion.”