August• 2017 | 35
READER’S DIGEST
The excavator was still running,
spewing hydraulic oil and diesel into
the water. Eventually the oil would
flood the engine and the noise would
stop. Then who would notice?
No-one else was on the property.
Saimaa was 300 kilometres away in
Sydney, and Mel, the next-door neigh-
bour, about 500 metres away, would
be at the swimming carnival. He
cursed himself for cancelling the guy
who was supposed to come and mow
the grass that day.Maybe he would
turn up anyway? Were there any cou-
rier deliveries due?he wondered.
Most likely, the first people to miss
him would be his son’s teachers when
he didn’t show for school pick-up. They
wouldn’t come to the property to look
for him; they would just send Kalan
to after-school care, and the alarm
wouldn’t be raised until after 6pm. It
was the same with Leilani’s preschool.
It was now just past 11.30am.That
meant he would have to stay alive for
six or more hours,he thought.
Mel might come home around 3pm.
Could he hold on till then?
The weight of the roll bar didn’t
seem to be evenly distributed along
Daniel’s back and he didn’t feel like
he was carrying the full weight of the
excavator. That might mean he could
dig himself out. As he propped his
Below: The yoga position
Daniel assumed for hours
to allow himself to breathe
was the upward dog, as
demonstrated below
Above: The scene that greeted emergency workers was of
Daniel submerged, with his nose just above the waterline
PHOTO: (DANIEL) CHANNEL NINE; (YOGA POSE) iSTOCK