Ludlam kept searching, night after night, week after week.
And finally, on a rainy April night a little after 1:00 a.m., he encountered another piezoelectric phenomenon.
The green light shimmered before his eyes.
It grew brighter.
And then—and then—an outline started to appear.
Something big.
Reptilian.
Three meters long, with a horizontally held back, and a stiff tail sticking out to the rear.
Ludlam could see through it—see right through it to the slick wall beyond.
Growing more solid now…
The chest was smooth. The tiling lacked arms, just as Kowalski had said. But that wasn’t what startled Ludlam most.
The head was definitely tyrannosaurid—loaf-shaped, with ridges of bone above the eyes. But the top of the head rose up in a high dome.
Tyrannosaurs hadn’t just lost their arms over tens of millions of years of additional evolution. They’d apparently also become more intelligent. The domed skull could have housed a sizable brain.
The creature looked at Ludlam with round pupils. Ludlam’s flashlight was shaking violently in his hand, causing mad shadows to dance behind the dinosaur.
The dinosaur had
What if the dinosaurs hadn’t become extinct? It was a question Ludlam had pondered for years. Yes, in this reality, they had succumbed to—to something, no one knew exactly what. But in another reality—in another
And here, in the sewers of New York, piezoelectric discharges were causing the timelines to merge.
The creature began moving. It was clearly solid now, clearly
Ludlam froze. His head wanted to move forward, to approach the creature. His heart wanted to run as fast as he possibly could in the other direction.
His head won.