The deeper they dig, the harder the island pushes back. This time, it wasn’t just equipment failure or bad conditions—it was personal. When Dave Blankenship was injured during a brutal excavation at the Money Pit, the moment didn’t feel random. It felt like a warning.
The Incident That Felt Too Precise
The conditions were already unforgiving.

Water pressure surged. The ground shifted unpredictably. Then, in the middle of the operation, something went wrong—and David Blankenship paid the price.
The injury forced the team to stop immediately.
At first, it looked like another accident caused by flooding and unstable terrain. However, the timing raised questions. The deeper the excavation pushed into the Money Pit, the more aggressive the environment became.
This wasn’t just difficult.
It felt targeted.
A Pattern the Team Can’t Ignore

This wasn’t the first time something like this happened.
Over the years, the Money Pit has resisted every major attempt to reach its core. Flood tunnels activate. Walls collapse. Equipment fails at critical moments. Now, injuries enter the equation again.
For Rick Lagina and Marty Lagina, the pattern is becoming impossible to dismiss.
Because it doesn’t behave like chance.
It behaves like design.
Moreover, the consistency of these setbacks suggests something deeper—something engineered to respond under pressure. A system that doesn’t just exist… but reacts when disturbed.
And if that’s true, then every step forward triggers resistance.
The Cost of Going Deeper

Now, the consequences feel real—and irreversible.
What began as a dangerous excavation has already changed the team. After the incident, Dave Blankenship was forced to step away from the operation. The injury didn’t just pause his involvement—it removed him from the field entirely.
And so far, there are no signs of a return.
For the team, that absence carries weight. Because this isn’t just about setbacks anymore—it’s about losing people along the way. The deeper they push, the higher the cost becomes.
For Rick Lagina and the Fellowship, the question is no longer just what lies beneath.
It’s whether reaching it is worth what the island continues to take.
Because if this really is a system—or something that reacts when threatened—then they’re not just digging deeper.
They’re pushing against something that refuses to let them win.