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fingers found the numbers flashing in his mind. He tapped them in.

      A click. He opened his eyes and pushed the door. It yawned into the stairwell.

      “Okay, let’s hurry.”

      Diego stepped through the doorway, then looked back to find Petey, Lucy, and Paige staring at him.

      “That was weird,” Lucy said. “What did you just do?”

      “Nothing, I just had the numbers reversed in my head.”

      “You did it with your eyes closed,” Paige said.

      “I had to remember them from the other day. So are you coming or what?” He held the door and motioned for them to go by.

      They filed through, and Diego pushed the door shut but paused. “Ah,” he said, studying the door controls.

      “What is it?” Petey asked.

      “There’s no lock on this side. We have to leave it open if we want to get back up this way.”

      “But if someone notices the door open . . . ,” Lucy said.

      “It will be fine,” Petey said. “Won’t it, D?”

      “It’s no problem,” Diego said. He closed his eyes again, tried to clear everything and see the door. There had to be a way to make this work—

      The comment distracted him. Diego breathed deep, trying to shut out the world again.

      “I knew this was rubbish,” Lucy said.

      Diego lost it again. He spun around. “What are you all afraid of? No one comes down here during the day, and the door will look like it’s closed. I’m going anyway.” He brushed past them and started down the stairs, stopping after a few steps. He turned back to see the three looking from one to the other.

      “I’m not letting him call me a coward,” Paige said. She took Lucy by the arm and started down the stairs.

      Petey glanced at Diego, then shoved his hands in his pockets and followed.

      “I feel like they’re watching us,” Lucy said, glancing from side to side.

      Diego felt like there were eyes in the dark too, but Lucy sounded terrified. As if she thought one of these creatures would come alive and devour them all on the spot.

      “Hang tough, girl,” Paige said, squeezing Lucy’s arm. “You got this. Remember, these things are dead and stuffed.”

      Lucy nodded. “Of course they are.”

      They passed through the hall and out into a wide rotunda. It was brighter in here, the morning sunlight casting angular beams through round windows in the domed ceiling. In the center of the room stood the giant T. rex.

      “Whoa,” Paige said. “Now that’s a carnivore.”

      “Largest tyrannosaurus ever recorded in the wild lands,” Petey said.

      “He’s majestic,” Lucy said, but she stopped a few feet from the felt ropes that ringed the specimen.

      Paige jumped right over them and stepped around one of the dinosaur’s thick legs. She moved under the creature’s chest, running her hand along its skin. “Wait, what,” she said, “this thing has feathers?” She brushed her fingers over soft, scalelike feathers around the creature’s leg. The pattern extended up around the underside of its neck.

      “That’s going to be Wendell’s big surprise to the world,” Diego said. “She’s a species of T. rex never before seen.”

      “She?” Lucy said. “But . . . her name’s Wendell.”

      “She’s actually named after Wendy Dykstra,” Petey said, “the game warden who found the body out beyond the perimeter wall. She knew how important a specimen this was, so she hot-wired a class-four loader robot to get her over the wall before scavengers could.”

      “But Wendell is a boy’s name,” Paige said.

      “The museum wanted the dinosaur to have a boy name since the skeleton upstairs is Sue, so they changed Wendy to Wendell.”

      “That’s how they reward her for her heroics?” Lucy said.

      “There’s going to be a plaque by her that explains it,” Diego said. “Everyone will still know about her and what she did.”

      “You got that right,” Paige said.

      “Actually, Diego’s mom was part of it, too,” Petey said.

      “Yeah,” Diego said, “she caught a glimpse of her on a training flight. She didn’t quite know what she’d seen, but she gave the coordinates to Wendy.”

      “Your mom’s a pilot?” Lucy asked, turning away from Wendell. “Is she an explorer, or a bush pilot, or what?”

      “She flies search and rescue for the air corps, but she used to be a fighter pilot. She fought against the Aeternum in their raids against New Chicago.”

      “A famous fighter pilot,” Petey added.

      “You—” Lucy’s mouth fell open. “You’re not talking about Siobhan Quinlan, are you? Not the famous fighter pilot, the hero of Dusable Harbor?”

      Diego couldn’t help a wide grin. “Quinlan-Ribera now, but yeah. One and the same.”

      “That’s—” Lucy shook her head. “Your mother is my hero. A woman who went well beyond her station in the Victorian world. But hold on . . . did you say Ribera? Like Santiago Ribera?” Suddenly her eyes narrowed. “You’re messing with me, aren’t you?”

      “No,” Diego said. “Those are my parents. What’s it to you?”

      “What do you know about my father?” Diego said.

      “Your father is the entire reason we’re here,” Lucy said. “It’s his inadequate steam converter that’s the reason I’m stuck in New Chicago for half a year. So that my father can save your city.”

      “Wait,” Diego said. “You’re saying that your father is that Emerson guy my dad was talking about?”

      “He’s not some guy; he’s George Emerson, the world’s preeminent steam engineer, who will be knighted by the queen herself, I’ll have you know.”

      “Right, him,” Diego said. “We’re only using his old-fashioned steam tech out of pity.”

      “Pity?” Lucy nearly shouted. “How dare you? My father is a genius. His converter design is superior to your city’s. Everyone says so.”

      “Who’s everyone?” Diego said. “Everybody still living with gas lamps and locomotives? Maybe that’s nice by your standards, but you should open your eyes around town. My dad is a visionary.”

      “How much of a visionary could he be if his son is such an arrogant fool?”

      “You tell that wannabe,” Paige said.

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