The raptors snarled. Ellie backed away, moving to the far end of the roof. She took a breath, and then began to sprint toward the edge. As she raced toward the edge, she saw the swimming pool, and she knew it was too far away but she thought, What the hell, and leapt into space.
And fell.
And with a stinging shock, she felt herself enveloped in coldness. She was underwater. She had done it! She came to the surface and looked up at the roof, and saw the raptors looking down at her. And she knew that, if she could do it, the raptors could do it, too. She splashed in the water and thought, Can raptors swim? But she was sure they could. They could probably swim like crocodiles.
The raptors turned away from the edge of the roof. And then she heard Harding calling "Sattler?" and she realized he had opened the roof door. The raptors were going toward him.
Hurriedly, she climbed out of the pool and ran toward the lodge.
Harding had gone up the steps to the roof two at a time, and he had flung open the door without thinking. "Sattler!" he shouted. And then he stopped. Mist blew among the pyramids on the roof. The raptors were not in sight.
"Sattler!"
He was so preoccupied with Sattler that it was a moment before he realized his mistake. He should be able to see the animals, he thought. In the next instant the clawed forearm smashed around the side of the door, catching him in the chest with a tearing pain, and it took all of his effort to pull himself backward and close the door on the arm, and from downstairs he heard Muldoon sbouting, "She's here, she's already inside."
From the other side of the door, the raptor snarled, and Harding slammed the door again, and the claws pulled back, and he closed the door with a metallic clang and sank coughing to the floor.
"Where are we going?" Lex said. They were on the second floor of the visitor center. A glass-walled corridor ran the length of the building.
"To the control room, Tim said.
"Where's that?"
"Down here someplace." Tim looked at the names stenciled on the doors as he went past them. These seemed to be offices: PARK WARDEN GUEST SERVICES… GENERAL MANAGER… COMPTROLLER…
They came to a glass partition marked with a sign:
CLOSED AREA
AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY
BEYOND THIS POINT
There was a slot for a security card, but Tim just pushed the door open.
"How come it opened?"
"The power is out," Tim said.
"Why're we going to the control room?" she asked.
"To find a radio. We need to call somebody."
Beyond the glass door the hallway continued. Tim remembered this area; he had seen it earlier, during the tour. Lex trotted along at his side. In the distance, they heard the snarling of raptors. The animals seemed to be approaching. Then Tim heard them slamming against the glass downstairs.
"They're out there…" Lex whispered.
"Don't worry."
"What are they doing here?" Lex said.
"Never mind now."
PARK SUPERVISOR… OPERATIONS… MAIN CONTROL…
"Here," Tim said. He pushed open the door. The main control room was as he had seen it before. In the center of the room was a console with four chairs and four computer monitors. The room was entirely dark except for the monitors, which all showed a series of colored rectangles.
"So where's a radio?" Lex said.
But Tim had forgotten all about a radio. He moved forward, staring at the computer screens. The screens were on! That could only mean-
"The power must be back on…"
"Ick," Lex said, shifting her body.
"What."
"I was standing on somebody's ear, " she said.
Tim hadn't seen a body when they came in. He looked back and saw there was just an ear, lying on the floor.
"That is really disgusting," Lex said.
"Never mind." He turned to the monitors.
"Where's the rest of him?" she said.
"Never mind that now."
He peered closely at the monitor. There were rows of colored labels on the screen:
[picture]
"You better not fool around with that, Timmy," she said.
"Don't worry, I won't."
He had seen complicated computers before, like the ones that were installed in the buildings his father worked on. Those computers controlled everything from the elevators and security to the heating and cooling systems. They looked basically like this-a lot of colored labels-but they were usually simpler to understand. And almost always there was a help label, if you needed to learn about the system. But he saw no help label here. He looked again, to be sure.
But then he saw something else: numerals clicking in the upper left corner of the screen. They read 10:47:22. Then Tim realized it was the time. There were only thirteen minutes left for the boat-but he was more worried about the people in the lodge.
There was a static crackle. He turned, and saw Lex holding a radio. She was twisting the knobs and dials. "How does it work?" she said. "I can't make it work."
"Give me that!"
"It's mine! I found it!"
"Give it to me, Lex!"
"I get to use it first!"
"Lex!"
Suddenly, the radio crackled. "What the hell is going on!" said Muldoon's voice.
Surprised, Lex dropped the radio on the floor.
Grant ducked back, crouching among the palm trees. Through the mist ahead he could see the raptors hopping and snarling and butting their heads against the glass of the visitor center. But, between snarls, they would fall silent and cock their heads, as if listening to something distant. And then they would make little whimpering sounds.
"What're they doing?" Gennaro said.
"It looks like they're trying to get into the cafeteria," Grant said. "What's in the cafeteria?"
"I left the kids there…" Grant said.
"Can they break through that glass?"
"I don't think so, no."
Grant watched, and now he heard the crackle of a distant radio, and the raptors began hopping in a more agitated way. One after another, they began jumping higher and higher, until finally he saw the first of them leap lightly onto the second-floor balcony, and from there move inside the second floor of the visitor center.
In the control room on the second floor, Tim snatched up the radio which Lex had dropped. He pressed the button. "Hello? Hello?"
"-s that you, Tim?" It was Muldoon's voice.
"It's me, yes."
"Where are you?"
"In the control room. The power is on!"
"That's great, Tim," Muldoon said.
"If someone will tell me how to turn the computer on, I'll do it." There was a silence.
"Hello?" Tim said. "Did you hear me?"
"Ah, we have a problem about that," Muldoon said. "Nobody, ah, who is here knows how to do that. How to turn the computer on."
Tim said, "What, are you kidding? Nobody knows?" It seemed incredible.
"No." A pause. "I think it's something about the main grid. Turning on the main grid… You know anything about computers, Tim?"
Tim stared at the screen. Lex nudged him. "Tell him no, Timmy," she said.
"Yes, some. I know something," Tim said.
"Might as well try," Muldoon said. "Nobody here knows what to do. And Grant doesn't know about computers."
"Okay," Tim said. "I'll try." He clicked off the radio and stared at the screen, studying it.
"Timmy," Lex said. "You don't know what to do."
"Yes I do."
"If you know, then do it," Lex said.
"Just a minute." As a way to get started, he pulled the chair close to the keyboard and pressed the cursor keys. Those were the keys that moved the cursor around on the screen. But nothing happened. Then he pushed other keys. The screen remained unchanged.
"Well?" she said.
"Something's wrong," Tim said, frowning.
"You just don't know, Timmy," she said.
He examined the computer again, looking at it carefully. The keyboard had a row of function keys at the top, just like a regular PC keyboard, and the monitor was big and in color. But the monitor housing was sort of unusual. Tim looked at the edges of the screen and saw lots of faint pinpoints of red light.
Red light, all around the borders of the screen… What could that be? He moved his finger toward the light and saw the soft red glow on his skin.