Island -1994-: Dinosaur
Low and deep, felt more than heard, it vibrated through the floor and into her ribs. It went on for fifteen seconds, twenty—longer than any animal had a right to. Then the wave crested, and the world turned upside down.
Lena froze. The rustling stopped. Five seconds. Ten. Then a dozen small heads poked out of the undergrowth, eyes like black beads, mouths full of needle teeth. They chirped at her—a sound like a nest of baby birds, but sharper. Hungrier.
The raptor was smaller than she’d expected—no more than six feet from snout to tail, its feathers a mottled pattern of brown and gold. It tilted its head, watching her with the same intelligent golden eyes as the tyrannosaur. Its claws clicked against the floor. Its mouth opened slightly, revealing rows of serrated teeth. Dinosaur Island -1994-
She found the pen on the second day.
“So you killed him.”
The compound was a ghost town. Wind blew through broken windows. Doors hung open. In the cafeteria, plates of fossilized food still sat on tables—eggs, bacon, coffee mugs half-full of something that had long since turned to sludge. She found a calendar on the wall, flipped to March 1989. The fifteenth had been circled in red ink. EVACUATION DAY was written in the margin.
The jungle swallowed her immediately. Vines like ship’s cables hung from trees she didn’t recognize—ferns the size of houses, flowers with petals like raw meat. The ground was soft, volcanic, and crisscrossed with tracks. Not deer tracks. Not bear tracks. Three-toed, each print the size of a dinner plate, sunk deep into the mud as if the animal that made them weighed as much as a car. Low and deep, felt more than heard, it
She ran. They ran faster.