Skip to content

Dinosaur Island -1994- -

Tents, collapsed and moldering. A field kitchen overgrown with orchids. A generator, rusted into a cube of iron. And in the center of it all, a wooden sign nailed to a post, the letters carved deep and painted red:

“The evacuation was supposed to happen on the fifteenth,” Kellerman said. “Helicopters at dawn. We were told to destroy the specimens, wipe the databases, leave nothing behind. But your father refused. He said the animals deserved to live. He said we had no right to play God and then walk away.” Dinosaur Island -1994-

She found the second camp at dawn.

The article ran on the front page of National Geographic . The headline was simple: Below it, a photograph of Lena Flores, standing on a beach, a feathered raptor at her side. Tents, collapsed and moldering

Third floor. The door was open.

She heard the footsteps again. Not the tyrannosaur this time—smaller, quicker, deliberate. She ducked behind a vending machine, machete ready, and watched as a figure emerged from the stairwell at the far end of the cafeteria. And in the center of it all, a

It was newer than the first—no more than a few months old. A satellite phone, shattered. A cooler, overturned, its contents scattered: MREs, water bottles, a first-aid kit. And a body, face-down in the mud, the back of its skull caved in by something heavy and blunt.