The Last Dinosaur -1977- -
But 1977 was a year of strange hungers. Punk was screaming out of London, Voyager was preparing to leave Earth, and Jimmy Carter spoke of a crisis of confidence from the Oval Office. Mallory felt it too. The fossil record was a graveyard of certainties. What if one certainty had refused to die?
It turned its head. It saw them.
“It will follow us to the boat,” he said softly. “It has no fear of men. Because it has never seen one.” The Last Dinosaur -1977-
It was a theropod . A predator. Bipedal, low-slung, its spine a ridge of jagged osteoderms. Its head was too large for its body, and its eyes—amber, vertical-slit—held no ancient wisdom. Only hunger. It was small, perhaps four meters from snout to tail, but every muscle was wound cord-tight. A living Majungasaurus , or something older. A ghost from the late Cretaceous, misplaced by seventy million years. But 1977 was a year of strange hungers
There, pressed into the mud, was a print. Not a hippo’s—too three-toed, too massive. The botanist measured it. Seventy centimeters across. Fresh. The rain had not yet washed away the dew in its center. The fossil record was a graveyard of certainties
The boat, a rusted trawler named Lingenda , took her and a crew of five—two Bantu trackers, a botanist from Lyon, and a teenage pygmy hunter named Efombi who claimed to have seen “the tree-walker” three moons ago—into the Sangha tributary. The air smelled of orchids and rot. On the third day, Efombi pointed to a bank of ferns.