I had a scarf tied around my mouth to keep out the dust but I could barely get a lungful of air in the dank, sweltering atmosphere, 50 metres below the earth.
I was hunched over in the narrow tunnel, which had fallen in here and there where the timber supports had collapsed, every muscle aching and panic rising with every step deeper into the pitch-black cavern.
My boyfriend turned around to ensure I was still behind him and we locked eyes. I saw my terror mirrored in his eyes, which were all I could see of his face before his head-lamp temporarily blinded me.
He later told me that he’d turned to look at me for reassurance, maybe a thumbs up, but my eyes were so wide with alarm that he’d immediately thought better of it.
We were in a 500-year-old silver mine in the highest-altitude town in Bolivia, Potosi. The Spanish had funded much of their empire-building with its spoils and by the time Ed and I got there it was riddled with holes and had claimed xxxxxxx lives.
The day before we got there, two young miners had died when they hit a pocket of poisoned gas.
Yeah, we paid cash to risk our lives in a co-op mine where if you discover a seam of metal, it’s yours. Which means miners frequently dynamite straight into another miner’s turf. More deadly than awkward, really.
The worst part was when the miners set off a stick of dynamite in a cavern. The dull thud almost made my heart stop, then we all had to scramble over a single thin log that was suspended over what looked like an endless drop to get away from the dust that followed the blast.