Evolution

Read Online Evolution by Stephen Baxter - Free Book Online Page A

Book: Evolution by Stephen Baxter Read Free Book Online
Authors: Stephen Baxter
Tags: Science-Fiction
Ads: Link
Giant didn’t care why. And he didn’t care about the warm scrap she held in her hands.
    His attack was fast, silent, and utterly savage, a single bite to her neck. Wounding Tooth had time for a moment of shock, of unbelievable pain— and then, as whiteness enfolded her, a peculiar relief.
    Her hands opened. A ball of fur tumbled through the air.
    Before Wounding Tooth’s body fell Giant had renewed his attack. Briskly he slit open the belly cavity and began pulling out entrails. He expelled their contents by shaking them from side to side; bloody, half-digested food showered the area.
    Soon his two brothers came racing across the clearing. Giganotosaurs hunted together, but their society was fragile at the best of times. Giant knew he couldn’t defend his kill, but he was determined not to lose it all. Even as he chewed on the liver of Wounding Tooth, he turned to kick and bite.
    Purga found herself on the ground. Above her, mountains battled with ferocious savagery. A rain of blood and saliva fell all around her. She had no idea what had happened. She had been ready for death. Now here she was in the dirt, free again.
    And the light in the sky grew stranger yet.

    • • •
    The comet nucleus could have passed through the volume of space occupied by Earth in just ten minutes.
    In the great boiling it had endured the comet had lost a great deal of mass, but not a catastrophic amount. If it had been able to complete its skim around the sun, it would have soared back out to the cometary cloud, quickly cooling, the lovely coma and tail dispersing into the dark, to resume its aeonic dreaming.
    If.
    For days, weeks, the great comet had worked its way across the sky— but slowly, its hour-by-hour motion imperceptible to any creature who glanced up at it, uncomprehending. But now the bright-glowing head was sliding : sliding down the sky like a setting sun, sinking toward the southern horizon.
    All across the daylit side of the planet, silence fell. Around the drying lakes the crowding duckbills looked up. Raptors ceased their stalking and pursuit, just for a moment, their clever brains struggling to interpret this unprecedented spectacle. Birds and pterosaurs flew from their nests and roosting places, already startled by a threat they could not understand, seeking the comfort of the air.
    Even the warring giganotosaurs paused in their brutal feeding.
    Purga bolted for the darkness of her burrow. The disembodied head of the troodon fell behind her, lodging in the burrow’s entrance, following Purga with a grotesque, empty stare as the light continued to shift.

CHAPTER 2

    The Hunters of Pangaea
    Pangaea. Circa 145 million years before present.
    Eighty million years before Purga was born, an ornitholestes stalked through the dense Jurassic forest, hunting diplodocus.
    This ornith was an active, carnivorous dinosaur. She was about the height of an adult human, but her lithe body was less than half the weight. She had powerful hind legs, a long, balancing tail, and sharp conical teeth. She was coated in brown, downy feathers, a useful camouflage in the forest fringes where her kind had evolved as hunters of carrion and eggs. She was like a large, sparsely feathered bird.
    But her forehead might almost have been human, with a high skullcap that sat incongruously over a sharp, almost crocodilian face. Around her waist was a belt and a coiled whip. In her long, grasping hands she carried a tool, a kind of spear.
    And she had a name. It would have translated as something like Listener— for, although she was yet young, it had already become clear that her hearing was exceptional.

    • • •
    Listener was a dinosaur: a big-brained dinosaur who made tools and who had a name.
    For all their destructiveness, the great herds of duckbills and armored dinosaurs of Purga’s day were but a memory of the giants of the past. In the Jurassic era had walked the greatest land animals that had ever lived. And they had been stalked by

Similar Books

Weep for Me

John D. MacDonald

Count Belisarius

Robert Graves

The Power of One

Bryce Courtenay

The Bone Thief

V. M. Whitworth

Sing to Me

Michelle Pennington

Crazy Horse

Larry McMurtry