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Caitlin D.'s avatar

OK, this is a bit long, but I've watched too many diving disaster documentaries to resist!

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The S.S. Donna Pax was the deadliest shipwreck in the area. Not from the initial sinking, though that was terrible in itself - a passenger ship full to the brim, lost with all aboard. No, the Donna Pax was notorious for continuing to take lives from the moment it floundered onward.

It began with the very day after the wreck. Rescue divers had been called in, hoping to find someone alive in an air pocket. They could even hear the faint sounds of desperate banging which they followed through the murky waters. But none alive were found and three divers lost their lives before the search was called off. The bodies would remain in their tomb. Salvagers were the next to fall to the wreck. The Donna Pax was a prize, known to have carried a wealth of gold along with her passengers. But then the rigging collapsed onto a worker, divers were crushed by shifting metal, and an unseen oil leak caught fire and nearly blew up the salvage ship. The Donna Pax was deemed unsalvageable and left to rot.

That did not stop the recreation divers. The lure of a haunted ship and missing gold was too much for many, and the death toll rose. The last divers to reach the wreck were Chuck Peterson and Dave Meador, the last before the government stepped in. 

Exploration was the goal, mapping not treasure. Chuck entered first, followed by Dave, making sure to attach guide lines along their path. For all the superstition, it was an easy dive - halls less cramped than many of their previous experiences. Chuck carried the bigger light and Dave the line knife.

It was supposed to be a limited penetration dive, so when Chuck began heading further into the wreck, Dave began feeling uneasy. When Chuck's swimming became more erratic, Dave tugged on the buddy line, trying to get Chuck's attention so he could ask what was going on, so he could see if Chuck was experiencing disorientation. Chuck kept moving forward and Dave had to maneuver to keep the lines from getting tangled. 

Suddenly, Chuck stopped and thrust his hand into a small hole in a sheet of plexiglass. Starting to get disoriented himself, Dave couldn't be sure where they even were. But Chuck had grabbed something and was trying to pull it out, to no avail as the hole was too small for his fist, for what he seemed desperate to take. Dave struggled to see what he was holding, but all he could tell was that it was something sparkling. Confused, Dave wrote on the underwater slate to ask what was going on, but Chuck would not even turn his head to look at Dave, so intent was he on his prize. 

Dave began tugging on his friend's arm, frantically enough that it should have shaken Chuck. It did not. The light on Chuck's lamp began flickering, then went out entirely, leaving only Dave's helmet light for illumination. Groaning creaked through the wreck, a sign Dave knew meant no good. They needed to get out. They needed to get out now. It was as if a voice screamed urgency into Dave's brain and he began trying to pull Chuck's hand out of the hole, but his friend refused to release his hold. 

By then Dave was hearing screaming, wailing and he had no time. He took the line knife and rammed it into the back of Chuck's hand, the impact forcing it to spasm and release, allowing Dave to pull his friend away. Dave grabbed him in a lifeguard carry and began a desperate swim out of the creaking halls as Chuck struggled. Reaching the exit, Dave didn't have a free hand to grab the reserve tanks that awaited them. They would have to decompress too early, but between Chuck's mindless struggles and his bleeding hand, Dave would have to risk decompression sickness for them both. 

As he swum away, Dave continued to hear groaning and screaming, felt phantom hands on his fins tugging him backwards. He kicked and prayed and only the sight of their boat's shadow returned his heartbeat to somewhat normal, even as his joints began aching and his head grew dizzy. He remembered little after that - of being pulled from the water, of the race to the hospital, the recompression chamber. He only remembered begging to be taken away from the Donna Pax, to never return.

The government heeded his words, heeded the blood and death already spent. The site was buried beneath a dome of concrete, to prevent any further incursions. And so the Donna Pax rested.

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