Dr. Filth was working as an anthropologist excavating a Clovis 
settlement outside Metro City when he uncovered a bone that didn't 
belong. It lay across a crude altar and was surrounded by a ring of charcoal that was deposited over centuries. The bone was bigger than any he'd previously uncovered, or anyone else had 
uncovered on the site. Vaguely resembling a bird bone, this was about 
four feet too long to be a Thanksgiving turkey. Dr. Filth immediately 
thought dinosaur, but his professors did not agree. No radiocarbon was 
needed to see this bone was still bone and could not be a dinosaur.
Time
 and pressure and rock slowly replace bone with rock. This 
'fossilization' takes millions of years, but is inescapable for any bone
 buried long enough. A ten thousand year old
 bone is virtually indistinguishable from a ten day old bone, fossilly 
speaking.This bone was not stone, it was bone, like it had 
dropped out of an animal only a few days or a few thousand years before. 
Dr. Filth believed he'd grace the covers of archaeology
 magazines worldwide, from "Bone-Digger" to "Ancient Man." In his hands 
was proof-positive a dinosaur had escaped the  Great Extinction that 
supposedly wiped the world clean of dinosauria.  The night before his 
team was to airlift out, the bone disappeared from Dr. Filth's tent. 
Science was not warm to the idea of admitting something it didn't know, 
especially without proof.
Dr. Filth presented his photographs to 
the National Convention of Science, an army of bureaucrats that decide what information makes 
it to the textbooks each year.  He concluded the bone could only be from
 a lineage of dinosaur whose members included T-Rex, Spinosaurus, and 
all birds alive today. The response was fast and brutal. The nice 
professors called the theory a mistake. The not-so-nice called his bone a
 fake. Others took the opportunity to point out his doctoral credentials
 were largely anecdotal and more of a nickname. One even decreed no 
respectable scientist would have dredlocks. To Dr. Filth, that hurt the 
most.
Vindication came with an Anasazi outpost in Colorado with a
 collection of tiny clay figurines. Dr. Filth read everything he could 
on the story, e-mailing request after request for permission for the 
museum to fly him in. Repeatedly denied, he was left only with photos 
carrying clear implication, that Native Americans had been in direct 
contact with beasts modern man assumed extinct. No living animal these 
people would encounter even resembled a brachiosaurus, and the clay 
lizards depicted the dinosaurs carrying their tails, a fact known to science only a few decades. Dr. Filth was considered a 
fringe scientist taken serious only on the Internet.
This put 
the kaibash on the theory of a meteor striking the Yucatan.  It was only one of a million extinction theories. Dr. Filth believed his childhood hero, who postulated the continental drift theory mixing 
populations and diseases. Others pointed out that continents moved very 
slowly, and the extinction was very abrupt, like a magic marker line 
across the sedimentary deposit. Dr. Filth would not hear a word of it. A
 very small section of the Earth had been dug up, and he believed vast 
amounts of information waited to be discovered.
While visiting 
friends, he found his next piece of evidence in a Seattle museum, 
private collection of Brigadier General Throatwarbler Mangrove Smith 
Smythe Smith (Missus, deceased). The bottom head of an Chipawatchee 
totem pole was none other than a blue lizard head, complete with exact 
dentition of a velociraptor, dredged from the Green River 100 years 
before the popularization of that animal. Had the savages been giving 
eyes and mouth to their own imagined demons, or had they been 
representing a creature more concrete and dangerous? If the last 
dinosaurs were wiped out by advancing tribes, it would explain the bone 
on the alter at the Clovis site, for such a foe would surely be worshiped after its defeat. Science already all but universally accepted that even a T-Rex 
would fall prey to enough spears. Dr. Filth wondered publicly aloud what
 T-Rex meat would taste like.The scientific community felt he was 
grasping at straws.
Still, Dr. Filth held his conviction. During 
long empty evenings working at Old Gil's Bookstore in downtown Metro 
City, he pored over dusty volumes in search of any reference to giant 
reptiles or dinosaur detestation and disaster that may have occurred in 
Pre-Columbian North America. One intriguing story told of a band of 
cast-aways trapped on a plateau that escaped the ravages of time. Dr. 
Filth was excited until he discovered the story was fiction from the 
hand that penned Sherlock Holmes.
Distraught as he was, Dr. Filth
 kept digging. There had to be some evidence that would prove to the 
rest of the world that at least a small population of dinosaurs had 
survived to reasonably modern times and interacted with existing human 
cultures. The Seattle Museum burned to the ground before he could 
convince any respected scientist to let him examine the totem pole.
Scrimping
 and saving the pennies he earned at the bookshop and other odd jobs 
around Metro City, Dr. Filth planned to visit worldwide sites where 
dinosaur activity had been reported or rumored. There was the infamous 
Loch Ness, the mokele m'bembe living in the Congo River, and at least 
half a dozen similar locations Dr. Filth thought may have promise. Old 
Gil thought Dr. Filth was crazy.
"How can you question an 
archaeological record showing no evidence to support your claim?" Old 
Gil asked one night when they were working late, stacking shelves for 
the first-semester-rush. "If one of those things made it this far, it 
would have to leave more than one bone."
Dr. Filth shook his 
head. "That implies sediment was laid down at a constant rate, which we 
know isn't true. One bed of rock could be laid down in a month, where 
another of equal size could take 100 years!" He pulled several random 
books off the 'Science' shelf and flipped through in hopes of jumping 
evidence to support his claims. "All we know is dinosaurs didn't die in 
the spots we've looked. What if they buried their dead, or burned them!"
"You think dinosaurs burned their dead?"
"Humans mastered the use of fire in less than 7 million years. Imagine what dinosaurs could have figured out in that time."
"Cities?"
"Who knows?"
"Not
 you," Old Gil said, returning to a stack of antique Charles Dickins 
books he hoped would fetch a fine price at the top of the shelves.
"I'll find out," Dr. Filth said. "Then I'll be the talk of Metro City."
Dinosaur
 cities? Such an idea never crossed Dr. Filth's mind, but now he was 
almost certain it was true. The oldest human cities were barely a few 
thousand years old, and most had been beaten to dust and reclaimed by 
vegetation. What condition would a million year old city be in? He saw 
not only possibilities of dinosaur cities, but lost metropoli from any 
number of man's ancestors as well. Did sieges play out between Homo 
Sapiens and his distant cousin Homo Heidelbergensis?
As a boy, 
Dr. Filth had lived in fear of a modeled creature representing a 
dinosaur allowed by  evolution to survive to modern times. The animal 
had continued to evolve, and resembled a human with no tail, long, 
skinny fingers, and giant yellow eyes. Otherwise, it looked like a human
  in a bondage outfit. To this day, Dr. Filth could not go to sleep if 
he knew the picture was in his bedroom. Later, he found birds were the 
inheritors of the dinosaur throne. A chickadee was much less imposing 
than the dino-human, and even an ostrich would never be as cool as an 
Allosaurus. Dr. Filth found out the hard way that an ostrich can still 
kick ass.
The scientific community had all but given Dr. Filth a 
pass when he saw a tabloid television program reporting sightings of a 
scaly man stalking the swamps around an archipalagio in the Indonesian 
Ocean. Old Gil poked fun as Dr. Filth recorded himself purchasing 
airline tickets to Indonesia. "You expect to find a Brontosaurus in the 
swamps?"
"Everyone knows Brontosaurus doesn't exist," Dr. Filth said, turning 
off the video camera. "The bone I found was from a theropod, like a 
Tyrannosaurus."
Old Gil closed the cash register for the night. 
"Let's assume the bone you found was real. Just because there was a 
dinosaur, or dinosaur-like-creature alive at that time, what's to say it
 hasn't met with extinction since?"
"In the 19th century, the 
explorer ship Challenger had dredged up Charcarodon Megalodon teeth that were less than 10,000
 years old. Many scientists believed  that if Megalodon was swimming the
 oceans 10,000 years ago, not enough has changed that it shouldn't still
 be swimming now. Ten thousand years is not a long time in the life of 
the planet. If a dinosaur was alive then, why wouldn't it be alive now?"
Unfortunately
 for Dr. Filth, the Challenger's discovery had been recently debunked on
 an episode of Shark Week he'd forgotten to download.  With plane 
tickets ordered, he recalled a crack team to help him investigate the 
mystery for his video blog, "The Unnatural."
After a long flight 
and twelve hours on a rickety truck that threatened to explode at the 
slightest nudge, Dr. Filth led his team through the jungle to the thatch
 village at a bend in the river where the lizard man supposedly lived.
Dr.
 Filth's producer, Tommy Guilt postulated to the camera, "If man is 
descended from apes which are descended from monkeys, which come from 
some kind of squirrel evolved from a rat that started as a mouse which 
evolved from some kind of lizard, wouldn't that make us some kind of 
dinosaur?"
The answer was no. Mammals evolved from a lineage of 
creatures known as pelyocasaurs which ruled the world until the Permian 
Extinction paved the way for the rise of dinosaurs. This line survived as tiny creatures that resumed their mastery of Earth once the dinosaurs were gone. Dr. Filth had no 
time for philosophy, there was a job to do. At first light, they hiked 
into the jungle along the edge of a gorge that locals insisted was a 
favored hunting ground of the monsters. Shannon Donahue, the 
photographer, heard crashing in the underbrush as she ascended the 
slope.
"Probably a panther," said the sound guy, Kurt Vance. "Or 
some kind of bear. Even the pigs are dangerous here, so don't pick 
anything up. I'm not sucking out any venom." Kurt was also the medic. The team camped in a nook 
between a rocky outcropping, and with some persuasion, Dr. Filth allowed
 them to build a cooking fire. "There's no animal out there that won't 
be afraid of our fire," Kurt assured.
At night, the team heard 
shrieks in the woods, but Tommy Guilt, the producer, couldn't get his 
nightvision equipment in proper working order. Dr. Filth convinced 
himself a scaly, man-sized creature was slinking just outside the light 
of their lanterns. Grabbing a flashlight and a hand-held video camera, 
he gave chase. Leaves and branches smashed as the unidentified creature 
loped ahead, staying just out of reach and just out of sight. Dr. Filth 
ran until he could run no more. He took a seat on a fallen log on the 
edge of a deep ravine to catch his breath. As he sat doubled over with 
his fist over his racing heart, he checked his cell phone, but there was
 no service in the jungle, and his shouts were answered only by bird 
calls.
Expecting to lose the creature as it continued running, 
Dr. Filth was surprised to hear its heavy crash of it's footfalls stop 
only a few meters down the new trail. He tried to find it with his 
flashlight beam, but the animal stayed in the shadows.  Dr. Filth was no
 longer so convinced he could overpower whatever animal he'd discovered.
"I should tear you from your very limbs," hissed a voice in the darkness.
"You speak English?" Dr. Filth asked. "Are you a man?"
"Your
 fore-fathers were soft-bodied amphibians, creatures torn open by branch
 and twig.  I am not like you in any way. My people wear our armor from 
the sea."
"Show yourself!" Dr. Filth yelled.
"You dare 
order me?" asked the creature, jumping from the trees and knocking the 
handicam from Dr. Filth's hand, smashing it on a jagged rock. It stood 
eight feet tall, balanced on powerful hind legs and a stiff tail. It's 
long mouth was filled with sharp, broken teeth, and a ropy tongue fell 
around them limply as it talked. "I am the master you monkeys have 
forgotten."
"You're a dinosaur!" Dr. Filth cried. "A velociraptor!"
"A
 Deinonychus," the monster snarled and snapped its jaws at Dr. Filth. He
 had to dance about to avoid the nasty teeth. "Pathetic little man, how 
I've desired the chance to eat your flesh and break your bones."
Dr. Filth took refuge behind a stump. "I'm good, I'm on your side! I love dinosaurs!"
"You are no friend of mine, Dr. Filth," snarled the monster, pouncing on the stump and snapping at Dr. Filth's head.
"How do you know me?" Dr. Filth asked, rolling to cover beneath a large rock.
"My
 people are gone. I am the last of the Dein, and with me ends a legacy 
of great theropods that dominated by tooth and claw. Your kind were no 
more than rats and moles. You had your chance with this planet. Your 
kind failed once. If you deserve a second chance, why don't we?"
"You're
 a unique specimen!" Dr. Filth gasped. "Dude, I can take you places. 
There has to be more of your people somewhere. Let me help you!"
"You
 should be stamped beneath our feet!" the dinosaur snarled, slashing at 
Dr. Filth with it's powerful forearms. "There are no more like me. Maybe
 a brontosaurus. Can I do more than eat it?"
"Brontosaurus 
doesn't exist," snarled Dr. Filth, driving back the creature with a sudden 
lunge, wrapping his thick arms around it's neck, and forcing the beast to the 
ground while he crawled on it's back to avoid the razor-sharp claws.
"Get off me, Dr. Filth!" the dinosaur wailed.
"How do you know my name?!" Dr. Filth yelled, choking the monster with it's biceps until it lay complacent on the ground.
Dr.
 Filth backed away defensively as the dinosaur choked and clawed at its 
neck. "I have failed, and my bloodline will cease," said the 
Deinonychus.
"How do you know me?" Dr. Filth demanded, picking up a length of wood.
"Years
 I've labored to keep my people a secret," the dinosaur says. "But you 
keep digging us up." The Deinonychus swiped it's killing claw at Dr. 
Filth's stomach but was still dazed and slow, missing him by a hair, 
driving Dr. Filth against a slimy rock. "My people lived in secret for 
thousands of years, not strong enough to engage you. We swore we'd 
return, but I know it will never happen. Your death will be the only 
vengeance I take with me. The dinosaur loomed over him, clacking its 
claws and licking its teeth and lips. "Now I have you here, where 
nothing can save you. Prepare to disappear forever, Dr. Filth!" The 
monster leaped, claws spread, prepared to disembowel. Dr. Filth bashed 
the creature in the head with his branch, knocking it down, and hitting 
the dinosaur a second time while it was stunned. The dinosaur was back 
up in a moment, still too shocked to block the rock Dr. Filth hurled at 
its head.
The Deinonychus rolled to the edge of the ravine, 
unprepared for Dr. Filth standing over the beast, poised for the kill. 
The Deinonychus looked up with pleading in its eyes. "Here falls the 
last of my kind into the abyss of time," the creature hissed. "Long I 
have kept our secrets, I ask only that you let me pass in quiet dignity.
 Do not tell anyone what you found here. Plunge your weapon and let me 
rest.  Make it quick."
Dr. Filth hesitated a moment, but he 
wasn't swayed. He convinced himself he'd heard this all before in TV and
 movies, and the deceptive look in the dinosaur's eye revealed its true 
intention. It's a well-known fact that lizards are unable to mask their 
emotions. Dr. Filth was waiting for the Deinonychus to make its move.
When
 it leapt, or attempted to leap, the edge of the ravine collapsed 
beneath it, sending the beast fumbling for its grip on the loose gravel.
 It caught its self  for a moment when it pulled out a root and reached 
out for Dr. Filth, catching his shirt with its long, spindly fingers. 
The fabric ripped and the root broke, and the monster found itself 
falling in free space, not even lingering a moment before plummeting 
into darkness and on to the river rushing below.  The camera was 
smashed, and Dr. Filth was left with no evidence but his torn shirt and 
the three long scratches along his chest.
The scientific community wouldn't believe this story either.
END
 

 
 
Great! It's good to read another Dr. Filth story.
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