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                   "We    
  Are Still Alive!"   
                    
                  by Malcolm McConnell   
                        
                          
                           In July, 1990, an earthquake occurred in a resort city in     
                    the Philippines. After one week's     
                    hard work, International Rescue Corps abandoned hope and left.     
                    Yet several people were still alive, buried in the ruins of     
                    the building. Did they survive in the end?      
                        
                       Spread across pine-covered     
                    ridges in the northern Luzon highlands, the Philippine resort     
                    city of Baguio was quiet on the afternoon of July 16, 1990.     
                    At around 4:30 p.m. Pedrito Dy, a cook at the luxurious Hyatt     
                    Terraces Hotel complex, was resting on a chair in the hotel's     
                    gym.      
                      The gym was in the basement     
                    of an 11-story flat.Adjacent to the tower were seven floors     
                    of rooms that rose like steps.     
                      At 26, Pedrito was strong,     
                    with a quietly confident manner. Beginning as a kitchen helper     
                    while still a teenager, he had advanced to second cook. He     
                    and his wife, Adela, had a two-year-old son, and Pedrito was     
                    proud that his success had brought the family modest prosperity.     
                         
                      Three floors above, caretaker     
                    Luisa "Jingjing" Mallorca, 20, waited for an elevator. Her     
                    friend William Tan, 32, joined her. Behind them security man     
                    Arnel Calabia, 26, had just taken up his post at the guard-station     
                    table. Arnel and William were like protective older brothers     
                    to Jingjing.      
                      Suddenly the carpeted floor     
                    swayed violently.  
                  The overhead lights went out and the hall was enveloped in  
                  blackness.     
                      "Earthquake!" shouted Arnel.     
                    "Stay where you are." He had experienced      
                    before.      
                      In the basement gym, Pedrito     
                    Dy was rising from the chair to get his coat when the floor     
                    began to shift. He staggered through the darkness toward the     
                    corridor. Others crowded behind him as a second violent tremor     
                    hit. Through a distant door Pedrito saw the tower of the flat     
                    twist and collapse. Above the crashing roar, he could hear     
                    co-workers crying and gasping for breath.      
                      His lungs filled with dust     
                    as thousands of tons of rubble smashed through the floors     
                    above. Then he felt something large and soft pressing across     
                    his back. A mattress stored in the corridor forced him down     
                    onto his hands and knees miraculously shielding him.  
                  Pedrito arched his back against the mattress, desperately  
                  trying to form an air space.      
                     Jingjing Mallorca tripped     
                    over the debris.Finally she was forced into a pocket formed     
                    by broken concrete .     
                    William lay beneath the table, his legs near Jingjing, his     
                    head and one shoulder against Arnel's chest.      
                      "Are you all right?" Jingjing     
                    asked.      
                      "I'm hurt," William answered     
                    painfully. "My stomach. My chest."      
                      Jingjing twisted to her     
                    side, struggling to shift the debris from William's body,     
                    but she could not budge the heaviest chunks. She heard Arnel     
                    trying to reach under the table to free William.      
                      "I've got only my left     
                    arm free," Arnel said. "My right hand is jammed under the     
                    beam. I can't move it."      
                      Jingjing could hear the     
                    despair in Arnel's voice.      
                      Engineer Andres Marzan,     
                    safety manager of a gold mine at Balatoc, ten miles southeast     
                    of Baguio, struggled from his company toward mine headquarters.     
                    He went to the office of the mine's operation's vice president,     
                    Dominador Valencia, who said, "We must send rescue teams to     
                    Baguio. The two big hotels are down."      
                      Marzan jotted notes as     
                    Valencia organized the rescue force. "Get our best volunteers,"     
                    Valencia said, "men with experience." Marzan shuddered as     
                    the image of high-rise hotels collapsed into rubble filled     
                    his mind. He knew he faced a terrifying challenge.      
                      Day Two. Pedrito Dy tried     
                    to move the debris pressing him. After a long time, he felt     
                    a sharp chunk shift, and he was able to roll over onto his     
                    shoulder. He was desperately thirsty. He forced his thoughts     
                    toward his wife's warm smile, to his small son's bright eyes.     
                    He had to live for them.      
                      Arnel     
                    Calabia bit his lip,trying to dull the pain from his trapped     
                    right hand. Groaning, William twisted against the debris inside     
                    the guard table. "Listen," suddenly Jingjing cried. "There     
                    are people up there!"      
                      They heard the engines     
                    work, then echoes of words. "Please help us," Arnel shouted.     
                    "We're still alive." But no reply was heard.      
                      Day Three. The miners arrived.     
                    They used hammers to chop through the concrete chunks.      
                      The victims' anxious relatives     
                    gathered at the rescue site, tearfully pleading with the miners     
                    to work faster.      
                      Day Four. Pedrito tried once more to picture     
                    his wife and small son, his parents and his relatives, all     
                    of whom he felt certain were standing outside. But his mind     
                    kept returning to the thirst. Please, Lord, send me water,     
                    he prayed.      
                      Moments later, a trickle     
                    of bitter, rainwater dripped from the rubble above. He opened     
                    his mouth like a baby bird to catch the precious drops. I     
                    will live, he vowed.      
                      At the same time, Arnel     
                    was screaming hoarsely for help. Jingjing, meanwhile, tried     
                    to comfort William.His internal injuries were dragging him     
                    relentlessly toward death.     
                      Day Seven. Jingjing listened     
                    to the steady tapping as Arnel thumped a piece of pipe against     
                    the thick beam above their heads. But the rescuers’ voices     
                    and sounds of their excavations seemed to grow distant. Then     
                    they were gone altogether.      
                      "We're here." Jingjing     
                    shouted weakly. "We're still alive."      
                      "William," Arnel whispered.     
                    William did not answer.      
                      "Feel his     
                    pulse," Jingjing said.      
                      After a long silence Arnel     
                    said, "He's gone."      
                      Lauren Marzo, Marzan's     
                    colleague, watched British and Japanese members of the International     
                    Rescue Corps climb down the rubble to the parking lot. For     
                    several hours they had probed the ruins, listening for the     
                    tapping that the miners had reported, but they had not heard     
                    any.      
                      "Is there any hope?" Lauren     
                    asked a bone-tired volunteer. The man shook his head.      
                      That afternoon the foreign     
                    teams packed their equipment and left.      
                      Day Nine. When miners tunneled     
                    toward the gym, they used a cutting torch that accidentally     
                    ignited the barrier. Choking smoke filled the tunnel.      
                      "Do you smell smoke?" Jingjing     
                    asked.      
                      The smoke grew thicker.     
                    Arnel coughed until his ribs felt broken. Gradually, Arnel     
                    felt his consciousness fade, and he floated like a child's     
                    balloon into a bright sky. He felt the sunlight fade as he     
                    shuddered awake.      
                      "Arnel, where are you?"     
                         
                      It was Jingjing's voice.     
                    He raised his free hand stiffly to his face. His flesh was     
                    cold. I was dead, he realized. But it was not my time.      
                      Day Ten. When they reached     
                    the third floor, one of the miners heard faint cries from     
                    below. "If anyone's alive," he shouted, "answer so we can     
                    follow your voice."      
                      A man replied with surprising     
                    strength, "There are two of us, and we're still alive. I have     
                    a woman with me."      
                      The miner shook with excitement     
                    and yelled, "We'll do our best to get you out."      
                      Day Eleven. Jingjing lay     
                    in the dark, listening and expecting. Then, with a      
                    sound of cracking, dazzling light flooded the cave. Her dust-caked     
                    face was bathed with a sweet, cool draft. Men's voices were     
                    calling her. Suddenly she comprehended. She crawled beneath     
                    the      
                    and into the strong, muddy hands of the miners. She was thin     
                    and weak, but her voice was clear and strong. "Help Arnel,"     
                    she begged. "His hand is pinned."      
                      Arnel clenched his jaw     
                    against the pain as the miners sawed through a wooden frame     
                    to free him. His face flooded with tears. As the miners carried     
                    him through the parking lot, he reached out with his uninjured     
                    hand to touch the men who had saved him.      
                      Day Thirteen. Pedrito Dy     
                    had heard the noise of hammers on concrete so clearly for     
                    so long that he was certain rescue was near. He had found     
                    a length of pipe and had begun to hit it against nearby pipes,     
                    but the only response was random grinding as the rubble shifted.     
                         
                      Slowly the realization     
                    came that he would never be found. He knew what had to be     
                    done. Twisting in the dark, he found a knob of concrete behind     
                    his head. He slammed his shoulders back and began to smash     
                    his head into the concrete, again and again, each below bringing     
                    him closer to the final sleep of death.      
                      Then he felt invisible     
                    hands holding him back. He tried to move, but they gripped     
                    him firmly. He understood. I don't have to die.      
                      For the first time in days,     
                    he slept well. Then, as he dozed off again, he heard men's     
                    voices close by. He shouted, "I'm here. Please help me." But     
                    there was no answer.      
                      Day Fourteen. The miners     
                    snaked through the basement rubble and prepared to strike     
                    a concrete beam with their hammers. As they shifted their     
                    tools, they heard a man call out weakly through the concrete.     
                         
                      Stunned, one miner yelled,     
                    "Relax! We'll get you out."      
                      With a final beat, and     
                    Pedrito's cave burst with hot light. The miners slid a wooden     
                    backboard through the narrow hole, and Pedrito lay down on     
                    it. He was alive.      
                      (1 422 words) 
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