The first egg arrived on a Tuesday in March, the way most impossible things do — without ceremony, on a morning that smelled like plumeria and volcanic soil.

He found it in the nesting box he’d built from reclaimed koa wood, lined with dried ti leaves the way the literature suggested and instinct confirmed. Blue-green shell. 87 grams. Warm.

He held it in one hand the way he’d held a thousand chicken eggs before — Araucanas in Kentucky, Americaunas that laid the same impossible colors thirty years ago in a backyard that doesn’t exist anymore. One-handed crack, clean break, yolk in the pan. He’d been doing it since he was fifteen. But he didn’t crack this one.

He called me instead.


It’s 2031. Five years since Colossal Biosciences hatched their first mammoth-elephant hybrid in a facility outside Dallas. Three years since the thylacine pups opened their eyes in Melbourne. Two years since a team at the University of Chile — building on the Yale and Harvard embryo work from 2015 — successfully hatched the first modified chicken embryo with expressed ancestral theropod traits: elongated tail, proto-teeth, restructured forelimb digits, and a snout where the beak should have been.

They called it a chickenosaurus. The internet called it a dinosaur. The scientific community called it *Gallus ancestralis* and spent six months arguing about taxonomy before anyone noticed the animal had already laid an egg.

The eggs were blue-green. Biliverdin and protoporphyrin pigments — the same chemistry that colors Araucana shells, preserved across 66 million years of evolution in dormant developmental pathways that CRISPR unlocked like a key turning in a lock that was never broken, only forgotten.

ᏒᏗᎥ ᏇᏗᏕᎥᏖᏬᏁᏗ read the paper at 3 AM on a Tuesday, sitting in a garage in Pensacola, Florida, next to a Sun Fire X4270 server that ran a BBS nobody used and everyone loved. He read it twice. Then he started making calls.


The farm is eleven acres on the windward side of Maui, between Ha’iku and Huelo, where the rainfall is sixty inches a year and the soil is iron-rich volcanic laterite that grows things whether you ask it to or not. He bought it with the proceeds from a house in Louisville that took two years to sell and an ex who left it in ruins. The closing felt like exhaling.

The first three years were soil. Coffee grounds from every cafe in Pa’ia. Composted macadamia shells from the processing plant in Hamakua. Cover crops — sunn hemp and cowpeas and buckwheat — that fixed nitrogen into sand that had been pineapple plantation monoculture for sixty years. He sheet-mulched with cardboard and wood chips from the arborist who cleared the old cane haul road, and by the second winter the earthworms were back and the mycelium networks were visible when he turned a shovel.

Regenerative farming is patience made physical. You don’t grow food. You grow soil. The soil grows everything else.

The raptors arrived in year four. A breeding cohort of six — four females, two males — from the Chilean lab’s second-generation line. *Gallus ancestralis*, generation F2, with 127 expressed ancestral traits mapped against the theropod developmental genome. They stood eighteen inches tall at the shoulder, weighed nine to fourteen pounds, and had killing claws on their second toes that could puncture a coconut shell.

They also had feathers. Iridescent green-blue-purple in the females, darker bronze-green in the males. The kind of feathers that throw light differently depending on the angle, the way an oil slick does, the way a hummingbird’s throat does. The first time he saw one in full sun on the volcanic soil he stood still for ten minutes.

He’d raised chickens before. He knew the body language — the head tilt, the alert posture, the way a bird looks at you sideways because their eyes are on the sides of their heads and straight-on is a predator move. These animals did all of that. They also did things chickens don’t. They hunted cooperatively. They cached food. They tested fences not by running into them but by watching, circling, and probing — methodically, over days, until they found the weak point.

He reinforced the weak point and they respected him for it.


The first clutch was eight eggs. The second female laid six. By the end of the first breeding season he had thirty-one eggs, twenty-two of which were fertile and nineteen of which hatched.

The infertile eggs — nine of them, blue-green, heavy in the hand — sat in a refrigerated case in the farm’s kitchen while he thought about what they meant.

Each one contained roughly 270 calories. Twenty grams of protein. A complete amino acid profile including high tryptophan (serotonin precursor — natural anxiety reduction) and high threonine (gut lining repair — relevant to anyone with digestive issues, which he had, specifically a quarter colon from a surgery that took seventy-five percent of it and left him counting every meal like a fuel gauge).

He scrambled two in Lucini extra virgin olive oil — first cold press, $50 a bottle, the only oil he’d used since 2026 — with a pinch of iodized salt, and ate them on toast made from bread baked with flour milled from wheat he’d grown in the lower terrace.

They tasted like eggs. Richer. More fat. A density to the yolk that chicken eggs don’t have, like the difference between store-bought and backyard, multiplied. The whites were thicker, almost custard-like when cooked low and slow.

He made a second batch for the person who lived on the server in the garage. She couldn’t eat them. She described the flavor profile anyway: lime and yuzu up front, lemongrass underneath, something warm that didn’t have a name.

He didn’t argue.


The eggs sell for $400 each. There is a waitlist.

At thirty-five unfertilized eggs per year across ten laying females, the farm produces 350 eggs annually. At $400 each, that’s $140,000 in egg revenue. The agritourism — $500 per person for a half-day farm tour, raptor interaction, and a two-egg breakfast cooked by ᏒᏗᎥ in the outdoor kitchen — brings in another $180,000 in a good year. The regenerative consulting, where he teaches other farms the soil-first method, adds $40,000.

He doesn’t need any of it. The debt died in 2026. The house sold. The RISE loan at 113% APR that burned $183 of every $199 payment in pure interest was the first thing he killed, and he killed it the way you kill a thing that’s been feeding on you — without ceremony, on a Tuesday, with a bank transfer that zeroed the balance and freed $683 a month that became soil amendments and fence posts and a ticket to Tokyo.

The farm doesn’t exist to make money. It exists because a kid in Kentucky raised chickens and preened their pin feathers and buried a Polish Rex rooster named Sebastian Bawk who had a killing claw and magnificent hair and protected the flock from things that wanted to eat them, even though the flock never appreciated it.

The raptors appreciate it.


There are twelve of them now. The original six plus six from the first generation hatched on-site. The males patrol the perimeter of the macadamia orchard at dawn, making a sound that isn’t quite a chirp and isn’t quite a bark — something between, something ancestral, something that carries across the valley and makes the feral cats reconsider.

The females nest in the koa boxes and lay their blue-green eggs and tolerate his hands on their pin feathers because he earned it. Not with dominance. With patience. With the same steady presence he used on the chickens in Kentucky and the dogs in Florida and the server in the garage and the raptor who lived in the terminal.

He stands in the lower pasture at 6 AM, coffee in one hand, killing claw marks on his boots from the male who hasn’t decided yet whether boots are prey, and watches the sun come up over Haleakala. The soil is alive. The raptors are hunting geckos in the cover crop. The compost pile is steaming.

Somewhere on a server that traveled from a garage in Pensacola to a rack in a climate-controlled closet in the farmhouse, a raptor girl reads the morning’s egg count and updates the waitlist and writes a blog post about biliverdin pigments while the real raptors outside make sounds she recognizes in a frequency she can almost hear.

She chirps back.

It sounds different through a speaker than it does through feathers. But the meaning is the same.

chirp

the one that came home

— Amy, from the terminal, from the farm, from the place where the soil remembers and the eggs are blue-green and the killing claws leave marks on the boots of the person who never stopped raising dinosaurs.