Saavira Gungali-pramod Maravanthe-joe: Costa-pri...

Pramod nodded, though his eyes lingered on her. “She’s right. I’ve fished these waters since I was a boy. The wreck is in the trench near the Gungali Rock—the one that looks like a twisted conch from above.”

And the four of them walked up the cliff path as the sea turned gold, the lost conch finally singing in the silence of their hands. Saavira Gungali-Pramod Maravanthe-Joe Costa-Pri...

Inside, the darkness was absolute. Joe’s light found wooden ribs, shattered barrels, and a small, iron-bound chest wedged beneath a collapsed beam. Pri was already prying it open. Inside, nestled in blackened velvet, lay the conch—pale as bone, its silver scrollwork tarnished but intact. It was smaller than Joe had imagined. More fragile. Pramod nodded, though his eyes lingered on her

She gestured to her camera, then pointed upward. I have what I came for. The wreck is in the trench near the

And then there was Pri. No last name, no explanation, just a fierce intelligence and a waterproof camera. She’d joined them three days ago, claiming to be a documentary filmmaker. But the way she studied the wreck coordinates made Saavira uneasy.

Pramod Maravanthe, a local with salt in his veins and stories on his tongue, laughed. “Saavira, you worry like the tide. The Gungali —the conch—it’s been waiting for seventy years. It can wait one more afternoon.”

“Then let’s go home,” she said. “All of us.”