Contents
* * *
Title Page
Contents
Copyright
Dedication
Today
Legacy
Footprints in the Stone
Once Upon a Time . . .
And the Rest Is Prehistory . . .
On the Move
In the Forests of the Night . . .
Night Watch
On the Edge
Stranger on a Plain
Messages
Night Moves
Sunny-Side Up
Bad Dinosaur
Errand of Mercy
Dogtrot
Stalked
Launched
Author’s Note
Acknowledgments
Sample Chapter from BORROWED TIME
Buy the Book
About the Author
Clarion Books
215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003
Copyright © 2012 by Greg H. Leitich
Illustrations copyright © 2012 by Blake Henry
All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.
Clarion Books is an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
www.hmhco.com
The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:
Smith, Greg Leitich.
Chronal Engine / by Greg Leitich Smith ; illustrated by Blake Henry.
p. cm.
Summary: Eighth-grader Max, his older brother Kyle, and new friend Petra travel in time to the Cretaceous period to rescue Kyle’s twin, Emma, who was kidnapped from their grandfather’s Texas ranch.
Includes author’s notes about the facts behind the story.
Includes bibliographical references.
[1. Time travel—Fiction. 2. Dinosaurs—Fiction. 3. Brothers and sisters—Fiction. 4. Twins—Fiction. 5. Kidnapping—Fiction. 6. Paleontology—Fiction. 7. Grandfathers—Fiction. 8. Texas—Fiction. 9. Science fiction.] I. Henry, Blake, ill. II. Title.
PZ7.S6488Chr 2012
[Fic]-dc23
2011027483
ISBN 978-0-547-60849-5 hardcover
ISBN 978-0-544-02277-5 paperback
eISBN 978-0-547-82247-1
v2.0915
To Ginger
Chapter I
Today
“JUST HOW MUCH OF A CREEPY OLD HERMIT MAN IS HE, AGAIN?” my sister, Emma, asked as Mom drove us up the hill to my grandfather’s ranch house.
It wasn’t a ranch-style house, but a house that sat on a five-thousand-acre ranch with cattle and everything.
The building itself was a three-story 1890s Texas Victorian mansion built into the side of a hill. It had a cupola, a raised wraparound porch with outside ceiling fans, and burgundy and purple trim around the windows and eaves.
“Because this doesn’t look that bad,” Emma went on, glancing at us in the back seat. “What do you think, guys?”
My brother, Kyle—Emma’s twin—just grunted.
“Max?” Mom prompted.
“It’s, um, freshly painted,” I said, which, okay, wasn’t much better than Kyle’s grunt, but still.
“It’s exactly as I remember it,” Mom said as she brought the Tahoe to a halt.
Kyle grunted again. It had been two weeks, and he still hadn’t forgiven Mom for springing the news on us that she’d been offered a position (and a fast-track grant and visa) to go to some remote corner of Mongolia on a dig for feathered dinosaurs that were supposed to be even more spectacular than the ones from Liaoning Province, China. It was very last minute, but the paleontological institute over there had asked for Mom—Dr. Ernestine Pierson-Takahashi—“by name,” she’d said. It was apparently an enormous compliment, a terrific opportunity, and one of those things you couldn’t say no to.
With our dad having died five years ago in Afghanistan and my uncle (Mom’s brother) working in London, that left my grandfather as the only one who could realistically have taken us in. And so, in an act of extreme desperation, Mom had asked her father if he’d do it, and, to her enormous surprise, he’d said yes.
The thing was, despite the fact that the ranch was only thirty minutes from where we lived in west Austin, Mom had seen Grandpa only once in nearly fifteen years, and the three of us had met him only on that same occasion, at Dad’s funeral.
Supposedly, Grandpa just decided one day that he’d had enough of people and family, and people like family, and since then had left the ranch just that one time. The only humans he talked to were his ranch foreman and the lady who cooked and cleaned for him.
From what I understood, this sort of thing wasn’t completely unusual in our family: the guy who’d built the house—my grandfather’s grandfather—was nicknamed “Mad Jack” Pierson because he’d spent most of his fortune to build what he’d claimed was a time machine, which he called the “Chronal Engine.”
Not surprisingly, he’d died a recluse.
So Kyle, Emma, and I weren’t exactly thrilled to be trapped all summer in the middle of nowhere on a ranch with a complete stranger. Probably I was most looking forward to it, because I was the only one of the three of us who’d picked up what Mom called the family “dinosaur gene.” She had it, she’d said, from having grown up here. (This isn’t how genetics works, of course, but sometimes my mother is ironic.)
Anyway, the ranch was home to the famous Loblolly Dinosaur Tracks, sets of fossilized Late Cretaceous footprints attributed to Tyrannosaurus rex, among others, in one of the Colorado River tributary creeks that ran on the ranch.
I’d never seen the tracks, of course, and neither had an entire generation of paleontologists—my grandfather had caused something of an uproar when he’d stopped allowing them onto the ranch, too. My mother was still hearing about this from unhappy colleagues and the occasional frustrated PhD candidate.
As we got out of the car in front of the house, though, it was hard not to be impressed. The mansion was situated on a hill above the Colorado River and had an incredible view. We could see for miles in every direction: the river snaking its way, eventually, to the Gulf; the pines and live oaks; the hills of McKinney Roughs rising in the distance; and the gathering rain clouds.
“Little Buddy Creek is down that way.” Mom gestured vaguely toward the woods off to the left, where the dinosaur tracks were.
As Kyle and I pulled our suitcases out of the back of the Tahoe, the front door of the house opened and a seventy-ish man, leaning heavily on a black lacquered cane, strode across the porch to stand at the top of the steps. He was tall—taller than I’d expected—had bushy white hair, and was wearing boots, jeans, and a red, long-sleeved Western shirt.
He paused, peering down the flight of stairs.
“Hold on a second, kids,” Mom said, then ran up to greet him. She and her father hugged for a long moment.
After they talked for a while, she gestured for us to come up.
Up close, I thought our grandfather looked more like the twins than me. He had Emma’s dark eyes and good posture, but Kyle’s straight nose and unruly hair.
He gave each of us a long, appraising look.
“High school?” he asked the twins.
“Freshman year,” Emma answered. “In the fall.”
“You’re the one who plays football?” he asked Kyle.
My brother nodded. “Hoping to make varsity this year.”
It was one of the reasons Kyle was so angry about having to come here. He and his friend Jordan had had great plans for “off-season conditioning” this summer, which, so far as I could tell, involved a lot of running and the repe
titive lifting of metal plates. Mom had told him that Uncle Nate’s old weight set was probably gathering dust in the basement here, but Kyle was still mad.
Personally, I didn’t think the two of them had much of a chance at varsity, anyway, but I wasn’t going to say that aloud.
“And you’re the flutist?” Grandpa asked Emma.
“And the swimmer and the lifeguard trainee and the math geek and the hospice volunteer and the sister,” Emma said with a bright smile that had kind of an edge to it. “I’m a lot of things.”
Everything she’d said was true, and she did them all well, which was occasionally irritating, especially when people asked me what I did.
When they bothered to, anyway.
“Dinosaurs?” they’d repeat, and give me kind of a funny look.
“And you’re Max?” Grandpa said to me.
I nodded.
He stared at me for a moment. “Eighth grade?”
I nodded again. “In the fall.”
He just squinted at me, but had no more questions. “Y’all can have the run of the place,” he said finally, “so long as y’all don’t stampede the cattle and don’t bother me none, either.”
“See? It’s not so bad,” said Emma, who is almost always optimistic but not annoying about it.
After Mom had left (with that pinched look and the line between her eyebrows), the three of us had been introduced to Mrs. Castillo, Grandpa’s assistant/nurse/cook.
Then we moved our things into our respective rooms on the second floor. Kyle and I were in rooms with a connecting door, and Emma was across the hall.
Once I’d dumped my clothes into the dresser drawers and plugged my laptop in to charge, I headed downstairs to the parlor to look around. (I knew it would take Emma and Kyle a lot longer to unpack because they believed in hanging up and folding their clothes.)
Like all the rooms in the house, the parlor was centered around a fireplace. This one was built of some green tile and was topped with a black granite mantel. A seating area—including a cowhide sofa and leather pillows, a pair of wing chairs, and a coffee table—faced the fireplace. To the side stood a five-shelf leaded-glass barrister’s bookcase filled with books about the Loblolly Tracks.
When it began to rain, I flicked on a reading lamp, pulled one of the books off the shelf, and stretched out on the sofa to read, careful of the volume’s yellowing pages. The book had been published in the early 1940s, about fifteen years after the discovery of the tracks themselves, so its discussion of dinosaurs was mostly out-of-date. Tyrannosaurus rex did not drag its tail, and the sauropods probably weren’t swimming.
I was deep in the details of how James R. Wainwright, a prospector for Humboldt Oil, had stumbled upon the footprints, when I felt hands drumming my head.
“Kyle,” I said, turning around, to see him and Emma. “You’re such a—”
He snatched the book from my hands.
“Hey!” I tried to grab it back, but not too hard, because I didn’t want to tear the pages.
“Don’t be such a big giant dork,” Kyle said, tossing the book onto the wing chair next to him. “Let’s go explore!”
“I was reading, you troglodyte.” I did wonder about Kyle’s sudden enthusiasm for the place. Maybe Emma had talked to him. Or maybe he was just bored. “It’s raining, or, believe me, I’d’ve already been out to see the tracks myself by now.”
We were interrupted by the sound of someone clearing his throat. Without a word, Grandpa strode from the arched entryway, around the front of the coffee table, to stand by the wing chair. He picked up the book, leafed through it once. “Boy your age should be outside in the summertime.”
I began,“But—”
“Out! All of you, out!” he said, waving the volume in the air.
Emma opened the front door and led the way onto the porch. As I looked back, Grandpa made another shooing motion.
I closed the door behind us and stepped across the porch to look at the view.
Emma sat cross-legged on a wicker patio chair. “What was that all about?”
“Boy your age shouldn’t be sitting around reading,” Kyle said, in a passable imitation of our grandfather. He paused. “What was the book?”
“Why?” I asked, suspicious and still annoyed with him. I sat up on the porch railing and grabbed the column to balance myself.
“He took it with him,” Kyle noted, as he eased himself into a wooden rocking chair. “He didn’t put it back on the shelf.”
I didn’t know why Grandpa would’ve wanted it. “It was just about the history of the place.”
After a while the rain stopped, and as we sat watching a pair of hawks circle overhead, a girl about our age came marching up the driveway.
She caught my attention for a couple reasons.
First, she was really attractive. She was a little shorter than me and lightly freckled. Her dark hair had been pulled back in a ponytail.
Second, she was carrying a recurve hunting bow in one hand and a game bag over her shoulder. She clomped up the steps in her hiking boots and dropped the bag onto the porch.
“Y’all like rabbit?” she asked, lifting an eyebrow.
“Tastes like chicken,” Emma replied, although not from any personal experience that I knew of.
“Good,” the girl answered, “then you can help me dress ’em.”
“What about us?” Kyle asked. He put on his most winning smile, so I could tell he thought she was cute too.
She gave him a long look and me a shorter one. “Y’all can catch your own.”
At Emma’s laugh, the girl picked up the game bag and led my sister around the wraparound porch to the back.
Turning the corner, she looked over her shoulder. “My name’s Petra. My mother works here. Pleased to meet you.”
She didn’t wait for us to introduce ourselves.
When I figured the two were out of earshot, I told Kyle, “I don’t think you’re her type.”
He grinned. “Maybe it won’t be so bad here, after all.”
Chapter II
Legacy
DESPITE ITS WILD BEGINNING, THE HASENPFEFFER FOR DINNER that night was excellently prepared by Mrs. Castillo according to an old family recipe and was served on white china with sterling silverware in the formal dining room.
My grandfather, framed by the leaded-glass windows behind him, sat at the head of the heavy antique table, and, for the occasion, Mrs. Castillo sat opposite him. Kyle and I were on one side. Emma and Petra, who had become fast friends over skinning and disemboweling our main course, were across from us.
The table could’ve easily seated twelve. An enormous carved oak fireplace covered the wall behind Kyle and me. To Petra’s and Emma’s backs stood a built-in buffet and china cabinet with a pass-through to a butler’s pantry beyond.
Hanging from the twelve-foot ceiling above was a crystal chandelier, which, according to my grandfather, had made the trip from Ireland at the turn of the century unscathed but now, for some reason he’d been unclear about, had at least a half-dozen cracked crystals.
Grandpa spent most of the meal concentrating on his “mastication,” which required effort since he would chew each mouthful a particular number of times depending on whether it was animal or vegetable. It was for his health, he’d said, and had named various portions of his gastrointestinal tract this supposedly helped.
It did make eating stew sort of a challenge, which was why I think Mrs. Castillo made it.
It turned out that she and Mom had been friends back in high school and had kept in touch, at least through Christmas cards.
The rest of us were having kind of a fun time, discussing whether Mom would ever actually drink yak’s milk and whether the stuff was really pink, when my grandfather took a sip of wine and put down his napkin. “It is time.”
The room went silent, except for the ticking of the mantel clock.
“It is time,” Grandpa began again, and looked at Emma, Kyle, and me in turn, “for you
to see the family legacy. Downstairs. In the workshop. Petra, this concerns you as well.”
“You don’t want dessert?” Mrs. Castillo asked, setting her napkin beside her plate and looking vaguely alarmed. “The pecan pie will be ready in a moment.”
Grandpa stood. “Perhaps the children would like some when we’re done. As for me . . .” He hesitated. “Thank you, no. In fifteen minutes the ambulance will be here to take me to the hospital after my massive heart attack.”
I stared. “What did you just say?”
Grandpa raised his hand. “We don’t have much time.”
Mrs. Castillo nodded. “Go on, then.”
Neither Mrs. Castillo nor Grandpa seemed to be reacting like anything unusual was happening. But when I glanced across the table, Emma shrugged and gave me what I interpreted as a “he’s probably not dangerous and he is our grandfather” look, so I just swallowed my qualms, put down my fork, and decided to go with it, too.
At least for the moment.
Grandpa led us to the basement stairs, flicking on the lights as he opened the door. “Max,” he said, and put a hand on my shoulder, “promise me that tomorrow morning at eight, before it gets too hot, you and the others will go out to the fossil track way.”
By now I was starting to kind of freak out. “Me? Why? I was planning to—”
“Promise!” He stepped closer. “Be there at eight!”
“All right,” I said, glancing back at Kyle and Emma, who both nodded. “I will. We will.” Like I’d tried to tell him, I’d been planning to go, anyway, but why was he so insistent? He hadn’t seemed at all interested in what I did earlier today.
We followed Grandpa down the curving staircase. Crystal sconces lit the way, although we couldn’t see what lay beyond the curve.
At the bottom, Grandpa handed me an envelope. It felt heavy, expensive. “Open this later.”
He waited until I told him I would, and I slipped the envelope into a pocket of my cargo shorts. Then he gestured with his cane, presenting the room.
Chronal Engine Page 1