At the last second, Jack yanked the wheel left. The Carnotaurus lunged, its jaws snapping shut on empty air where the driver’s door had been. The Caddy’s bumper clipped its ankle, sending the beast into a skidding, furious tumble.
The sun was setting now, painting the ruins in shades of gold and deep purple. Somewhere beyond the city limits, a pack of raptors began to shriek. Another tanker had probably gone missing. Another job.
“Easy, girl,” Jack whispered to the Caddy, cutting the engine. He climbed onto the hood, balancing the harpoon gun on the roof. The Carnotaurus ’s head snapped up. A vertical pupil narrowed. It let out a guttural hiss that smelled of primordial swamp and petrochemicals.
“Mechanic,” said Hannah, Dundee’s voice crackling from the dashboard radio. “We got a trail. Fresh. Something big pulled a tanker off the road near the old refinery.” Cadillacs And Dinosaurs
Jack fired.
It recovered quickly, whipping around with a tail that smashed a lamppost to scrap. Jack didn’t wait. He circled the plaza, kicking up a dust storm. The dinosaur lunged again, and this time Jack let it come. At the apex of its charge, he hit the nitrous. The Cadillac leaped forward like a launched rocket, swerved under the beast’s snapping jaws, and sent the trailing harpoon cable wrapping around a concrete pylon.
Jack followed the trail into the rusting skeleton of the city. The skyscrapers leaned together, their windows long since shattered, vines and ferns bursting from every crevice. A humid, prehistoric stink hung in the air. At the last second, Jack yanked the wheel left
“One hell of a tow bill, Mechanic,” Hannah said, nodding at the Caddy. The car’s side panel was dented, the paint scratched down to bare metal.
Jack stepped out, dusting off his jacket. He lit a cigarette, watching the beast thrash. “Big, dumb, and thirsty,” he said. “Aren’t we all.”
Jack grunted. “Big” in 22nd-century North America meant one thing: a saurian leftover from the Great Death, when the earthquakes freed the underground caverns and the monsters came crawling back up the food chain. The sun was setting now, painting the ruins
Jack climbed back into the Cadillac, shut the door with a solid, vault-like thunk, and let the engine idle. The dashboard glowed green. The fins caught the last light. In a world of teeth and claws, he had a V8 engine, a full tank of gas, and the only law that mattered: the one written in tire tracks and harpoon scars. He put the car in gear and drove toward the sound of screaming, the future melting away behind him like a bad dream.
Jack dove back into the driver’s seat. The Caddy’s V8 roared to life, a sound the dinosaur had never heard but instinctively hated. He slammed the gas. The rear wheels spun, kicking up gravel, then caught. The Cadillac shot forward, straight at the charging monster.
By the time Hannah arrived with the recovery crew—a rattling convoy of salvaged flatbeds and armed ranchers—the Carnotaurus had tired itself into a sullen, breathing mountain of muscle. They’d haul it to the containment pens. In a week, its hide would be boots, its teeth would be knives, and its roar would be a memory.
He found the wreck. The tanker lay on its side, its steel hide peeled back like a tin of sardines. The tracks were unmistakable—three-toed, each print the size of a manhole cover, dragging a heavy tail. A Carnotaurus . Fast, mean, and stupid enough to mistake a fuel truck for a sleeping herbivore.
He found the beast in a collapsed plaza, snout deep in the ruptured tanker, lapping up the last dregs of synthetic gasoline. Its hide was a mosaic of leathery brown and angry red. Twin horns jutted above its eyes. It was beautiful, in the way a hurricane is beautiful.