She ran. They ran faster.
And then, from deep in the jungle, a new sound: a scream, high and human, cut short. Dinosaur Island -1994-
Dawn revealed a beach the color of bone. She ran
She reached into her pocket and pulled out the photograph. The little compy. The smile. The miracle. Dawn revealed a beach the color of bone
She reached the beach just as the first one sank its teeth into her boot. She kicked it off, scrambled up a pile of driftwood, and watched as the little dinosaurs swarmed the shore below her, snapping at the air, their chirps rising to a frenzied shriek. Then, as suddenly as they’d appeared, they stopped. Turned as one. And fled back into the trees.
Kellerman shook her head. “I tried to save him. But Mercer—Vincent Mercer, head of security—he had other ideas. He saw the island as an asset. Live dinosaurs, off the books. He made a deal with a cartel out of San José. They’d pay him for eggs, embryos, blood samples. In return, they’d help him disappear.”
The bunker was half-buried in a hillside, its steel door crusted with rust and vines. Lena had found it by following a drainage pipe from the livestock pens—a last resort, after the tyrannosaur had driven her inland. The door wasn’t locked. The handle turned with a shriek that echoed through the jungle.