A Tyrannosaurus on my Doorstep, Chapter 15

Still by Nicholas Driscoll.

Art by Sam Messerly.

Click here to read from the beginning.

Before I could even react, without a word Warbell lunged forward and scooped the kid into his mouth. Inn the delirium of the moment I yelled at the old lizard and pounded on his leg, all a panic that he was trying to eat the boy, but Warb gave me a look that stopped me in my tracks. In that one glance there was something that shocked me to silence, a fierceness and earnestness that nearly stopped my heart. Warbell held the boy tenderly with his head out so that the kid could breathe, then grabbed me with his two-fingered hands, and in the next moment we were running full speed down the street.

Final Pumpkin is not a very large city, and the traffic is usually not very busy, though many people were on the commute to their work at that time, and none of them were expecting to see a rampaging dinosaur during their morning routine. Warbell’s incredibly long legs pounded and cracked the pavement as he picked up speed and dodged cars. Most of the drivers didn’t even have the presence of mind to hit their horns. I had the presence of mind to yell and scream, though, as my feet bounced and grazed the blacktop at upwards of twenty miles an hour.

“What are you doing?” I bellowed. “Where are we going?”

And despite the very logical nature of my questions, of course Warbell did not answer. Probably because he had a dying kid in his mouth. Instead, he picked up speed, hurdling a sedan, sideswiping an SUV, then crouching into the next turn, my footwear burning against the concrete.

“Yeow!” I said with some emotion, using a few other additional choice words which I won’t repeat here.

We shot through a red light, and I wondered if it really counted as a traffic violation since Warbell isn’t really an automobile. The police seemed to think so as a patrol car pulled out behind us and started flashing and howling. By this time I realized where we were going, though, and a thrill shot up my (already much too-thrilled) spine.

“It’s pedestrian right of way, coppers!” I shouted.

In any case, Warbell didn’t stop. Instead, he took a detour through an alleyway, startling some workers on their way to the dumpster and stumbling over a garbage bin. Several stray cats shrieked and scampered away, fur flared, tails pointing skyward accusingly. Warbell just continued to barrel forward, but the police car had to detour around as the bin had blocked the alley.

As we came out the other side, Warbell crossed the street in one long stretching stride, then half-hopped over a row of shrubs into the Final Pumpkin General Hospital parking lot, where he then made a beeline (or perhaps a “t-line”?) for the emergency room entrance, the hoot of the sirens like exclamation points as we reached out destination.

Read the next chapter.

A Tyrannosaurus on my Doorstep, Chapter 14

By Nicholas Driscoll (obviously).

Art by Sam Messerly.

Click here to start at the beginning.

I sat on a bench in front of Six Degrees of Bacon next to a statue of a wild boar wearing a cheap plastic graduation gown. I took a sip of my hickory-smoked bacon flavored coffee and adjusted my new hat. The hat grunted and squealed whenever I touched it, but I was too tired to throw it to the ground of the parking lot and stomp the electronics to bits. And anyway, bizarrely, some part of me found the entire situation really funny.

It was a pretty small part of me, though. A big part of me resented this whole ridiculous outing. Also, I didn’t know what to make of this bizarre talking prehistoric monster in jeans. I just kept wondering if I could trust this old lizard, why he was here, if he was really going to eat all of humanity. But it seemed like a good thing that someone careful and reasonably intelligent like me was keeping a watch on him.

“You don’t have to wear the hat,” said the dinosaur after swallowing down the Heaven Bacon in two huge chomps. “It does look good on you, though.

“Thanks,” I said. “By the way, as long as we are doing this whole ambassador thing, well… what should I call you? Do you have an actual name? I don’t want to call you King T-Rex—it sounds ridiculous.”

The old lizard popped a trotter in his mouth, crunched it noisily.

“You can call me ‘your majesty’ if you like,” he said.

“Absolutely not,” I said.

The dinosaur grinned.

“I do have a name, but it’s not really an English name,” he said. “Not like Mike or Billy or Sue or something like that.”

“Well?” I said. “What is it?”

The old lizard snuffled and kind of made a deep belching wheeze, then slurped his Bacon Pho Sure. I waited.

“Are you going to tell me?” I asked again.

“I just did,” said the dinosaur. “But it changes depending on whether the name is in the subject position, or if it is in the object position in the sentence. And it changes depending on who is speaking.”

“Wait, wait, that gaseous explosion is your name?” I said.

The dinosaur speared a bacon-wrapped dumpling on one claw, then flicked it expertly into his maw.

“Only in the subject position,” he said. “In the object position in the sentence, you add this warble, and the tone of the growl is different. It kind of has a rising tone.”

And the dinosaur let out a shimmering belch-wheeze-whoop that about broke my eardrums.

“I’ll just call you Warbell, okay?” I said.

“And your name is Walter Finneson,” said Warbell. “That is the full name on all of your mail. I will call you Wal as I did before.”

“Not Wally?” I said. “Not even Walt?”

“I think ‘Wal’ suits you better.”

A number of unflattering explanations for why “wall” might ‘suit me better’ in the eyes of this ridiculous reptile bubbled up in my mind, but I brushed them aside with a long sip of bacony coffee and then stood up.

“Well, ‘Wal’ needs to get to work,” I said. “Because ‘Wal’ has better things to do than sit and make up terrible nicknames all day.”

I turned and tossed my empty cup into a pig-shaped trash can and saw the kid from the drive-through coming out the front of the restaurant with an anxious expression.

“How is the food tasting?” he asked. “I hope the Heaven Bacon doesn’t taste like asphalt. It’s supposed to be served over a fire in the main building, but—”

And here the kid choked, his hand grasping at his chest. A blotch of red appeared on his shirt, spreading rapidly, and he fell flat on the ground, twitching and screaming in pain.

Read the next chapter.

A Tyrannosaurus on my Doorstep, Chapter 13

By Nicholas Driscoll.

Art by Sam Messerly.

Click here to read from the beginning.

We decided on Six Degrees of Bacon, a restaurant specializing in innovative bacon-related dishes, and I biked on down with the lizard jogging at my side. The name of the restaurant comes from its six signature dishes from six “schools” of cooking. So, for example, they have Best Wurst Bacon, which is a German dish, as well as Bacon Pho Sure, a Vietnamese bacon breakfast soup. If you try all six of the signature dishes on your scratch-and-sniff Bacon Report Card (each item has a corresponding pig sticker that goes on the card), you get a special graduation hat. It’s pink, of course, with a pig-tail instead of the usual string tassel.

“I want to get the hat,” said the tyrannosaurus as we walked up to the drive-in window. “Get me all six signature dishes.”

“One of the six dishes is an entire pig cooked on a skewer,” I said. “Wrapped in three flavors of bacon. It’s called the Heaven Bacon.”

“I think I can eat an entire pig,” he said.

“Ah, yeah, I suppose you can,” I said, and I took out my dinosaur ambassador card. “King T-Rex” gets special discounts after all.

The kid at the drive-through window in his pig-ear hat didn’t look too surprised to see a man in his pajamas on a bike in the street, but then he noticed Rexy and his jaw dropped.

“Can we get an order of all six degrees?” I asked. “He wants the hat.”

The old lizard smiled down at the kid.

“You want a Heaven Bacon for breakfast?” asked the kid. “I can’t sell that through the drive-up window.”

“I can walk inside,” I said. “I understand an enterprising individual can get a “wee wee wee wee all the way home” box even for the full Heaven Bacon, right?”

“It’s more like a crate,” said the kid.

“Just skip the crate,” I said. “Roll the pig out on the sidewalk. It would be easier for the dinosaur here to eat it that way.”

The old lizard nodded, and the kid nodded back blankly.

“I need to check with my manager quick,” he burbled.

“Alright,” I said. “Go for it.”

“What are you ordering?” the dinosaur asked me as the kid babbled excitedly with a baffled-looking Hispanic dude wearing the manager badge.

“Nothing,” I said. “Lost my appetite when I nearly got ate myself.”

“Yeah, I almost lost my appetite, too,” said the dinosaur. “But we all need to eat, you know.”

I was thinking darkly that I should get a bonus for enduring insults to my tastiness when the kid came back.

“Alright, we can wheel out the Heaven Bacon for you,” he said. “Do you want footloose trotters on the side?”

I looked at the dinosaur expectantly and raised an eyebrow.

“I don’t know what those are,” he said.

“Pig trotters,” said the kid. “Uh, that means pig feet. You can get them in six different flavors—salt, BBQ, Szechuan spicy, teriyaki, blue cheese, or cracked pepper. Small, medium, large. The art on the box is really cute. It’s dancing pigs dressed up in funny costumes.”

“I want a large of each flavor,” said the dinosaur.

“Wow,” said the kid.

I wondered just how far the royal food budget was going to take us.

We then had a brief conversation about drinks, but I convinced the old lizard and the kid that even the super jumbo Whole Hog size drink would only just dampen the tip of the dinosaur’s tongue. When the rex asked me if I wanted something to drink myself, I finally relented and got myself a hickory smoked bacon flavored coffee.

“About the hat,” said the kid. “Uh, we definitely don’t carry your size, I’m afraid, Mr. Dinosaur, sir.”

“Oh,” said the tyrannosaurus. “It’s not for me. I want my ambassador to wear it as part of his official uniform.”

I made a note to demand that insult bonus system from Mayor Pilky next I saw her. Maybe the price of a full Six Degrees.

I glanced at the dinosaur and his irritating smile.

Two of them. The price of two “Six Degrees” sets.

Read the next chapter.

A Tyrannosaurus on my Doorstep, Chapter 12

By Nicholas Driscoll, NOT a super genius.

Art by Sam Messerly.

Click here to read from the beginning.

Now on the one hand, I didn’t really have much of an appetite for breakfast after having just been eaten myself by the tyrannosaurus who was staying in my garage. But on the other hand, it is also very difficult to say “no” to a tyrannosaurus after he has just demonstrated that he is fully capable of swallowing you whole.

“Don’t ever do that again,” I said, starting to put on my pants. “You asked to eat a breakfast WITH me, not eat a breakfast OF me.”

“I wasn’t asking,” said the tyrannosaurus. “I was commanding. Also, your right leg. It’s fake. Why?”

Charlie was peering out the window of his house at me with a horrified expression. I couldn’t blame him. I wouldn’t have wanted to see him on the lawn in his underwear, either. I hastily buttoned my trousers.

“I lost my right leg,” I said. “And I never found it again.”

“What do you mean?” said the tyrannosaurus.

“Maybe I cut it off myself,” I said. “Maybe a dinosaur ate it with a side of BBQ sauce. Maybe Charlie borrowed my leg and never gave it back. Who knows? Let’s get breakfast.”

“I command that you tell me what happened to your leg,” the tyrannosaurus said.

That was enough for one morning. Sometimes a time comes in life when you have to stand up for yourself, or else the next time you get bullied you won’t have one leg left to stand on. This was one of those times, almost literally.

“It is none of your business!” I exclaimed. “You may be the king of the dinosaurs and you may be living in my garage and I may be your official ambassador, but we aren’t close buddies and I don’t owe you an explanation of every private story from my life! So zip it and go eat a drumstick at the local Chicken Chunks Restaurant if you are that interested in legs all of a sudden!”

The dinosaur looked at me with an expression of lizardly contemplation. Well, I don’t know what the emotion was really. I can’t read dinosaur feelings well, and from what I was learning, dinosaurs don’t have much of a variety of facial expressions.

“I respect you,” said the tyrannosaurus. “I expected that you would do everything I said after I almost ate you alive.”

“I am stubborn,” I said. “Also, there has to be a law against trying to eat someone like that.”

“I think you will find that there is no law against a tyrannosaurus chomping on a human being. Especially if that tyrannosaurus happens to be the king of the local lands. Peasant.”

The tyrannosaurus gave me some kind of incredibly patronizing grin, and those enormous ivories glimmered in the morning sunlight. I wondered about the feasibility of locking up a socially inept extinct monster in the local hoosegow.

“Shall we go eat breakfast now?” asked the dinosaur.

“Okay,” I sighed.

Some fights just aren’t worth it.

Read the next chapter.

A Tyrannosaurus on my Doorstep, Chapter 11

By Nicholas Driscoll.

Art by Sam Messerly.

Click here to read from the beginning.

I thought about a lot of things inside the mouth of that old lizard as he shook me back and forth. I thought it was really slippery and slimy inside a dinosaur. I thought about the latest TV dramas I would probably miss that night as I was being digested in the stomach of an overgrown reptile. And I thought, yep. The old lizard, “King T-Rex” really is a tyrannosaurus.

You might think I would be screaming my head off, but such was strangely not the case. I was numb and scared and mute instead. Maybe when you are actually eaten by a dinosaur, you figure you really have nothing left to lose and there is just nothing to say. And, I mean, if you have to die anyway, it’s hard to imagine a more dramatic way to go than down the gullet of a previously extinct super predator, and you kinda just gotta accept it.

However, it smells very bad inside a dinosaur’s mouth. I don’t recommend the experience.

And the old lizard seemed determined to make the experience as unpleasant as possible, accomplishing said goal by physically turning me over and over with his enormous tongue, or nibbling at my sides with his ghastly blunt chompers. It was kind of freaky to be honest. I think I finally yelled at some point—I can’t remember clearly, but somehow I ended up with rex saliva in my mouth. My head clocked against the beast’s incisors and I blurted out some colorful profanities. At one point I believe that I accidentally belted the dinosaur’s uvula because the big shmuck choked and grunted and jerked in a way that I might have found funny if I hadn’t been inside his mouth. Then by some miracle of maneuvering I felt the beast tickling my armpit with the tip of his tongue, which might be the grossest thing that has ever happened to me.

And it was then, through the fog of fear and the crackling of panic, that I realized the old lizard wasn’t going to eat me.

A few moments later the mouth opened, light streamed in with a flash and a rush of air, a shock of cool assaulted my damp body, and then I was falling and waggling and spitting and gagging all at once before whomping to the sidewalk. The fall was abrupt and short, and I only had time for one burst of expletives before I crumpled in a pile, thankful and slimed, outside the dinosaur again.

 “Well,” said the tyrannosaur, staring down at me. “What do you think? Am I really a tyrannosaurus?”

That grin on that lizard’s face was the biggest I had ever seen it. I crawled away from him in as dignified a manner as I could muster.

“Well,” I said, gulping for air. “Well. Well. Uh, well. You have a very convincing tongue. Very realistic. Still not sure what to think of your teeth, though.”

The tyrannosaurus cleared its throat.

“I have a very convincing stomach as well,” he said. “At least it’s been convincing enough for me as long as I have been alive. It reminds me regularly of its existence—but I never want to put YOU inside of it, no matter how hungry I might get.”

“Oh?” I said. “Because you are so fond of me, I suppose?”

The tyrannosaurs somehow raised a scaly eyebrow.

“You look terribly unappetizing now that I have seen you without your pants on,” he said.

I looked down. Sure enough, I had been completely depantsed at some point whilst inside the mouth of the monster. Somehow I had missed that minor detail in the process of savoring the unique experience of being vomited out onto my own lawn. I rather awkwardly flopped my hands about in a vain search for my misplaced trousers.

The tyrannosaurus coughed once, and my trousers came flying out of his open maw directly into my face.

“There you go,” said the tyrannosaurus. “Off to breakfast, then?”

Read the next chapter.

A Tyrannosaurus on my Doorstep, Chapter 10

by Nicholas Driscoll.

Art by Sam Messerly.

Click here to read from the beginning.

“Good morning.”

I opened my eyes. The head of a dinosaur was in my window. I leapt a full four feet out of my bed, hitting my head on the ceiling and crying out at the top of my lungs.

“Shh, you will wake the neighbors,” said the tyrannosaur.

“What are you doing?” I said. “What time is it?”

The tyrannosaur smiled his big, toothy smile.

“I don’t know how to read your clocks,” he said. “I just got up with the sun. And I am hungry.”

I looked at the clock.

“It’s barely five o’clock!” I exclaimed. “I can’t get up now! This is my favorite time to sleep!”

“We need to go get breakfast,” said the tyrannosaur. “I assume you are a man of your word. You said you would have breakfast with me.”

“I said, and I quote, ‘I have work tomorrow,’” I retorted.

“Yes,” said the tyrannosaur. “It’s your first official day as my guide. That is what you meant, right?”

“No!” I said. “I am an electrician! You should see the pile of electronics I need to fix scattered all over my house, not to mention the buildings around town with wiring problems! How did you think I could afford this house? And that garage that you slept in last night?”

The tyrannosaur smiled blankly at me.

“So are you ready for breakfast?” he said.

“Let me sleep for another hour!” I yelled.

I pulled the blankets over my head and tried to sleep. However, the image of a tyrannosaur watching me through the window kept barging into my head. That image was not conducive for sleep. Neither was the loud crunching sound coming from outside. I think I may have lain there a full thirty seconds before I threw the blankets off and dashed to the window. I leaned out, and my eyes bulged when I saw him.

The tyrannosaur was still standing next to my house, but now he was eating my bushes very noisily.

“Those are my bushes!” I bleated. “They aren’t food! Are you really a tyrannosaurus? You aren’t, are you?”

Hearing that, the tyrannosaur stood up straighter and taller than I had ever seen him before and he gave me what I think was an indignant scowl.

“I am indeed a tyrannosaurus,” said the old lizard.

“Oh, yeah?” I said. “Since when do tyrannosaurs eat bushes? Prove to me that you are a tyrannosaur!”

“You want me to prove it?” said the tyrannosaur, a light in his eye.

“Yes!” I shouted stubbornly.

And with that as his signal, the tyrannosaur pounced forward and snapped me up in his jaws.

Suffice it to say… it wasn’t pleasant.

Read the next chapter.

A Tyrannosaurus on my Doorstep, Chapter 9

By Nicholas Driscoll.

Art by Sam Messerly.

Click here to read from the beginning.

Before the old lizard moved into my garage, the city of Final Pumpkin was making all kinds of plans to spruce up the joint with a bed and dinosaur-sized shower and a variety of other accoutrements. Basically they wanted to make my humble two-car garage into a five-star dino hotel. Well, they wanted to until they saw the incredible bill from the architect, designers, and plumbers.

“Don’t worry,” said the old lizard. “I am a dinosaur. I am used to sleeping on hard floors.”

Frankly, I had been looking forward to the dinosaur-sized jacuzzi that Mayor Pilky had proposed. I figured the dinosaur wouldn’t be using it ALL the time, after all, so whenever he was out with his fans… well, who wouldn’t want to take a dunk in a jacuzzi the size of most public pools?

Actually, it seemed like once I agreed to house the old lizard, all the promises from the mayor kind ofdried up. The enormous paycheck lost a few zeroes now that I was the officially sponsored t-rex ambassador. After some meetings and an interview with the local newspaper and a limited amount of celebrity, I ended up a schmuck with a dinosaur holding a pillow on my front lawn.

“You’re the ambassador,” said the old lizard. “Guide me.”

I showed him the remote control for the garage.

“Push this button to open the garage,” I said. “Push this button to close.”

Somehow the tyrannosaur managed to hold the remote control in one claw, the pillow in the other. I turned to go.

“What’s for breakfast in the morning?” the dinosaur asked.

“I’m not your cook,” I said. “I’m not getting paid enough for that. The food bills alone would bankrupt me.”

“But you are my guide, right?” the dinosaur said.

“Yes,” I said. “I can guide you to a tree in the morning, or walk you to a nice restaurant.”

I wasn’t really serious.

“Okay, then let’s have breakfast together tomorrow morning,” said the dinosaur.

The old lizard must have thought I had been serious.

“I have work tomorrow,” I said.

“Yes, your new job as my guide,” the dinosaur said. “I am looking forward to breakfast tomorrow.”

And then the tyrannosaur ducked into my garage. His tail disappeared inside, and I stood there watching as the garage door slowly squealed shut in front of me. I wasn’t too sure about this arrangement, but I was glad I could keep an eye on that suspicious lizard at least.

And I kept thinking about those strange stones I had found under the house. What could they be?

I was almost scared to find out.

Read the next chapter.

A Tyrannosaurus on my Doorstep, Chapter 8

Story by Nicholas Driscoll.

Art by Sam Messerly.

Start from the beginning.

I thought about what to do all week. For me, the old lizard was a really big mystery—a mystery that a lot of people just seemed to accept and celebrate. Of course I didn’t understand how a tyrannosaur could still be alive today. I wondered why he could talk. I wondered why he didn’t have sharp teeth, why he was eating plants, and why he didn’t just eat everything that moved instead. But most of all I wondered why he wanted to live in my garage. Maybe it’s because the question was about my stuff. It’s hard to give up things that you paid good money for. Especially when you can’t even figure out a good reason for the sacrifice.

I wandered out back to the hole where the tyrannosaurus had apparently slept for many years. It had already become a tourist spot, and a fence had been erected around the area. There were some tourists taking pictures of just about every dirt clod in sight. I simply stood, staring at the hole, trying to imagine what it would be like to sleep in a dark cave for hundreds, thousands, maybe millions of years.

I thought the old lizard must have had a really bad crick in his neck when he woke up.

I thought about the tyrannosaur footprints we found around this area as well. There were a few in scattered places, and some were not particularly hidden. I wondered how no one had found them before. Maybe there could be more underneath my house or garage, like where I was living literally was his old stomping grounds. There was a crawlspace that led underneath the garage, so it might be worth checking out. I got down in the dirt and crawled inside.

I don’t know what I expected to find. Mostly I just founddirt, spider webs, and a few snakes. The dirt was too loose to have fossilized dinosaur footprints in it—of course. But that didn’t mean that the old lizard didn’t used to walk around right where my garage was now.

I found a few unusual rocks underneath the garage that seemed somehow… organically shaped in some way. I decided to take them out with me. I didn’t want to come away empty-handed from crawling around in the dirt for a good thirty minutes, even if all I came out with were a few ugly rocks.

As I stood up and dusted myself off, I saw Charlie standing a few feet away.

“Oh, there you are,” Charlie said. “I was looking for you. Man, am I glad that dinosaur isn’t here. Anyway, I was just wondering if I could borrow your truck for a week.”

“A week?” I said.

“Yeah,” Charlie said. “I figure it’s better if I ask you to borrow it for a week rather than come over and ask every evening, haha.”

“Haha,” I said.

I didn’t laugh. I just said, “haha.”

“So what do you say?” asked Charlie.

I don’t know why, but I said, “Okay, Charlie. You can borrow my truck.”

Why on earth did I always let him borrow my stuff?

“Thanks, my man,” said Charlie. “Again, really glad I caught you when that t-rex wasn’t around. That guy scares me to death. If he was here all the time, I don’t think I could ever come over. So, uh, can I have the keys?”

I didn’t reply, but I did smile as I handed over the keychain.

I had finally made my decision.

A Tyrannosaurus on my Doorstep, Chapter 7

Story by Nicholas Driscoll (natch).

Art by Sam Messerly.

Click here to read from the beginning.

I asked Mayor Pilky to wait a week for my decision. She agreed on the condition that “King T-Rex” was willing to wait that long as well. To my surprise, he was.

“I’ve never lived in a garage before,” said the tyrannosaurus. “I don’t mind living under the stars for another week. But it’s kind of uncomfortable in this society if you don’t have a place to call home.”

I was glad he didn’t ask me why I wanted a week to think things over. Of course I wanted to think about where to put my vehicles if a big old lizard moved into my garage (the street or the driveway or the backyard were my big choices—if the latter, I would need to make sure I didn’t park them too close to that big boulder out back). But there were other issues I was thinking about, too.

Why did the tyrannosaurus want to live in my garage so much?

I performed some garage-reconnaissance over the next few days, and quickly found out that while my garage was pretty sizable, there were much bigger ones in town. And some of the bigger garages were not very far away from my own. Why didn’t the tyrannosaurus consider those garages? My garage didn’t have the biggest square footage inside. Nor did it have the biggest doors. Nor did it have the most windows, or the most comfortable flooring, or any other rubric I could think of that might affect the lizard’s decision to want to take over my stuff.

Now, many of the garages, like many of the buildings in town, were under repair. For whatever reason, a number of buildings in Final Pumpkin had fallen apart recently, some unexpectedly collapsing under their own weight, and so every building was being inspected and rebuilt or reinforced around town with new materials. Mine was not an exception in this regard. I had just had the place redone a few months prior.

Anyway, meanwhile, within that week the big old lizard had become a huge celebrity. Hundreds, thousands of people were visiting Final Pumpkin City just to catch a glimpse of the dinosaur. Famous rock stars, actors, even the President of the United States came personally to talk with him. I guess it was a gesture of international relations, in a manner of speaking.

And “King T-Rex” was eating up all the attention. That winning smile was plastered across his face at all times now. He had even started giving out autographs, written in sometimes stuttering, uneven letters by gripping a fountain pen between his two fingers. Sometimes I saw him pinch the pen between his incisors. I understand that he broke the fountainpen he was using on several occasions, but his fans were just as delighted to have a blotch of ink as his often surprisingly legible autograph.

Which is all to say it took me a long time before I could talk with the lizard one-on-one again. I caught him by climbing one of his favorite munching trees (yes, he ate vegetation, believe it or not) and waiting for him to stick his head inside for a big bite. When he did so, even though there were crowds around his feet, I was able to talk with him in relative privacy… though I think I startled him, as he hit his head on a large limb.

“Oh, ow,” he said. “What are you doing in here?”

I was clinging to the trunk of the tree like a slightly overweight ape. I didn’t say that, though.

“I want to know why you are all hot to live in my garage specifically,” I said. “What’s the big deal? There are many other garages that are as good as mine, if not better.”

The tyrannosaurus picked at his teeth with a twig.

“Because it’s mine,” he said. “As I told you before.”

“But now you are a king,” I said. “You can choose any garage!”

“Excuse me,” said the old lizard, pulling his head out without taking one bite. “My public awaits.”

Immediately he started talking with someone I couldn’t see from where I was awkwardly hanging in the branches.

“Yes, what’s that?” he said. “Oh, you want me to sign your beer belly? Certainly.”

I frowned and climbed down as the tyrannosaur chattered on, slathering ink across some idiot’s hairy navel.

My frown deepened.

I still did not have my answer.

Read the next chapter.

A Tyrannosaurus on my Doorstep, Chapter 6

Story by Nicholas Driscoll–that’s me!

Art by Sam Messerly.

Click here to read from the beginning.

“The tyrannosaurus truly and sincerely wants to live in your garage.”

Mayor Pilky was sitting in my house, looking at me with pleading eyes. I crossed my arms and glared at her.

“I won’t force you, Walter,” said the mayor. “But the tyrannosaur has really taken a shine to you. And he is our king now, after all. You really should consider—”

“That old lizard is not a king,” I said.

“Well, he is more like a figurehead,” said Pilky. “Like the royalty in Japan or in England. He doesn’t have complete power over everyone in Final Pumpkin in the same way a king of old would have. But still, he is a king under the modern definition.”

“It’s ridiculous,” I said. “Why would I want a dinosaur living in my garage?”

Mayor Pilky uncrossed her legs and leaned forward placatingly.

“Please understand,” she said. “Any upgrades to the garage that might be installed for our new king’s comfort will be covered by the royal fund. You won’t have to pay a dime.”

“That lizard is a meat-eater!” I said. “He might eat me in my sleep!”

“So far King T-Rex has just been nibbling on the local trees. He doesn’t even have sharp teeth.”

“Yeah, what is up with that anyway?” I said. “Since when do tyrannosaurs not have sharp teeth?”

Pilky tried a smile on me. It didn’t work.

“I think King T-Rex’s winning smile was part of why the judge decided in his favor,” she said. “He really does have nice teeth.”

“I don’t see how his dental pulchritude has anything to do with…”

“We are prepared to pay you,” Pilky said then.

My ears perked up.

“Really?” I said.

“You would be King T-Rex’s official ambassador and caretaker,” Pilky said. “And for that role, you would be compensated generously.”

“Really?” I said again.

“I mean with money,” she said.

“Yes, I understand that,” I said. “But how much money are we talking here?”

Pilky named a number. The number had a lot of zeroes. I might not have been too crazy about the idea of having a giant flesh-eating monster living in my garage, but sometimes a big check makes all the difference when it comes to putting up with the blatantly absurd and potentially dangerous.

“Let me get back to you about that,” I said.

Read the next chapter.