
Exploring the Land of the Lost
EXODUS-SPECIAL
EDITION
By
Marc C.
Chapter
1
Rick
Marshall stepped into the pylon filled with hope.
He and his nineteen year old son Will had discovered the pylon just that
morning, and Rick was optimistic that he could somehow open the time doorway
back to Earth. He, Will, and his
thirteen-year old daughter Holly had been stranded in this place for what seemed
like an eternity.
Rick
thought back to that fateful day when he took his family on a routine rafting
expedition on the Colorado River as part of his job as a forest ranger. Suddenly, an earthquake hit, sending the raft
out of control and over a 1000-foot waterfall. Miraculously, the family had escaped death, but they fell through
a portal to another dimension, which they called the Land of the Lost.
Rick
recalled his family's rude introduction to the Land of the Lost. Immediately after their raft came to a stop, the Marshalls found
themselves staring directly at a tyrannosaurus rex. The beast, which Holly named Grumpy, chased them to a nearby cave. Rick
decided that until they found their way home, the cave, which they named High
Bluff, would be their home base.
Grumpy
was not the only beast in the Land of the Lost, as the land was filled with all
types of dinosaurs. In addition, there
were numerous unknowns and other dangers. Perhaps the biggest such danger was a
hostile species called the Sleestak.
The Sleestak were green, lizard-like creatures, approximately seven feet
tall, and lived in a place the Marshalls called the Lost City.
Despite
common sense telling the family to stay away from the Lost City, they simply
could not. The city contained technology
from an intelligent species called Altrusians, ancestors of the Sleestak that
ruled the Land of the Lost centuries before the Marshalls arrived. The Altrusians were technologically advanced,
and created many of the mysteries of the Land of the Lost. Their culture succeeded in part due to
abandoning their emotions for the pursuit of science. Unfortunately, years of bottling up their emotions led to their
destruction.
The
Marshalls learned about the Altrusians from Enik, a member of the race who also
fell through a doorway and was trapped in the Land of the Lost. Enik looked similar to the Sleestak, but was
beige in color and shorter. When the
humans encountered Enik for the first time, they showed him the Lost City, and
sadly, Enik learned of his civilizations fate. He theorized that his race hid their emotions too long, and as a
result, exploded in a cataclysmic war that ended in their destruction. The Sleestak were descendants of the
Altrusians, but were de-evolved versions who were very hostile and violent, and
they retained none of the intelligence of their ancestors.
In
the Lost City, Enik showed the Marshalls that there was a time doorway, which,
if properly set, could get them home. Both
Enik and the family wanted to use the doorway.
The Marshalls wanted to go home, and Enik wanted to return to his time to
warn his people of the disaster. The
problem was that neither Enik nor the humans were able to open a doorway to
their respective worlds. Enik stayed in
the Lost City to concentrate on finding the proper coordinates, while the family
returned to High Bluff to pursue other means of escaping the Land of the Lost. Once
in awhile, the Marshalls would enter Enik's cave to try to figure out the
doorway, but they simply did not have the technical know-how to work the
machine. With millions of worlds and times from which to choose, the odds
of them finding Earth were about the same as trying to figure out the
combination to a lock with dozens of digits.
Still, they had to try, and as a result, they often visited the Lost
City, and encountered the dangerous Sleestak.
Rick
continued fiddling with the pylon, drawing from his prior experiences. Pylons were Altrusian in design, and were
about twelve feet tall. These silver
buildings somehow controlled many of the functions of the Land of the Lost. Some pylons controlled the weather. Others controlled gravity. More important, some pylons could open time
doorways. As the Marshalls explored the
Land of the Lost, they found more pylons, mapped them, and learned what they
could do.
Most
of the pylons had a triangular key at the top of its door that would allow entry
when turned. Inside each pylon was a table with various colored crystals. These
crystals seemed to be the cornerstone of Altrusian technology. When touching individual crystals of
different colors, the Marshalls could make various events occur, from a blinding
light, to a temporary force field.
Somehow, the crystals generated power, and were a major tool for the
Altrusians. A pylons crystal table
controlled its inner workings. The
Marshalls believed that there was a pylon capable of working similarly to the
time doorway in the Lost City, and they were determined to find it so they could
get home.
Rick
rearranged various crystals on the table, and remembered the time he and Will
could have once returned home via a pylon. Unlike
other pylons, this one had no key. It
only opened when the three moons of the Land of the Lost lined up in the sky in
a certain way. The Marshalls called this
pylon the Pylon Express, because like a train, it moved from world to world,
including Earth, stopping long enough to allow the passenger to get off. Rick
and Will were in that pylon at the right time, but Holly was not with them, so
although they could have exited at Earth, the Marshall men would not abandon
Holly. Instead, Rick and Will returned to the Land
of the Lost.
Ironically,
Holly had entered the pylon as well. But
somehow, while Rick and Will were in the pylon, they could not see Holly, and
vice versa. Like her father and brother,
Holly did not exit at Earth when they had the chance. The Marshalls were extremely loyal to each
other, so unless they could all return home together, they would remain in the
Land of the Lost. After Holly exited the
pylon, it closed, and the three moons that needed to align to would not do so
again for several years. In the
meantime, the family searched for another way home.
Just
that morning, the family discovered this new pylon while exploring. Though past experience warned them to be careful, each time the
existence of a new pylon was found, the family prayed that it would be a time
doorway pylon. Rick always felt
responsible for his family's predicament because he was unable to prevent their
raft from going over the waterfall.
Though Ricks training as a forest ranger made him a survival expert, and
although he had trained his children well, he secretly never got over the guilt
about the fate of his family. He would
not stop working until he got his children home.
So
Rick, Will, and Holly spent most of the morning experimenting.
By changing the order of the crystals on the table, they hoped to open up
a doorway to Earth. As they were
working, Will and Holly stepped outside the pylon to grab a snack. Rick decided to work on the table a few more
minutes before joining them.
As
Will and Holly were eating, Rick configured the table.
Suddenly he looked up and right before his eyes was a doorway to Earth! Rick
couldn't believe it. Everything he had been hoping for was about
to happen. Finally, after what he
calculated as two years, he was going to get his children home.
Then,
disaster struck. With the doorway open,
the earth began to shake, throwing Rick off balance. Will and Holly rushed into the pylon.
"DAD!" Holly cried.
"HOLD
ON DAD!" shouted Will.
But
it was too late. The quake sent Rick
straight for the portal. He tried to
move away, but the force of the quake was too strong and sent him on the path to
Earth. He prayed Will and Holly could follow, but
the last thing he heard was a loud noise behind him and the cries of his
children in horror.
As
he traveled through the doorway, Rick felt himself starting to spin. At first, he spun slowly, but as he fell
further, he spun faster. Seconds passed,
and he could no longer hear his children. Then, he stopped spinning.
Disoriented,
Rick looked up. He regained his balance
and looked around. Instantly, he
realized where he was. He was home. In fact, he was on a hill overlooking the
same river in which he, Will, and Holly were traveling when they fell through
the doorway to the Land of the Lost.
His hopes that his children were right behind him were dashed immediately
as they were nowhere to be seen.
Suddenly,
Rick noticed that he was not alone. On
the river, he could see a man in a raft similar to the one he and his family had
ridden on that fateful day. The man was
about Ricks age and build, and Rick recognized him instantly. It was his brother Jack.
"He
must still be investigating what happened to us," Rick said to himself,
wishing he never told Jack the route they were taking. Being
so close to the waterfall endangered Jack, and Rick knew it. Luckily Jack was still within a safety margin
to change course if necessary.
As
he observed his brother, Ricks thoughts turned to his children. "What must they be thinking now?" he thought,
"They're probably just as worried as I am. I
bet they're scared and feeling very alone. I
have to get back to them."
Rick
felt his heart breaking. Leaving his
children in the Land of the Lost was the last thing he wanted. Stranding them on another world was bad enough, but for him to
make it home with his children still lost was a nightmare. If someone had to stay, it should have been
him. Once again, he let Will and Holly
down. Rick vowed to get back to his
children and get them home, no matter how long it took.
Suddenly,
Rick remembered something Enik had once told him.
The
Land of the Lost is a closed universe. For
some reason, in order for a human to escape to Earth, another human must enter. For three people to leave, three people had
to enter. Rick thought about how he got
home. He also wondered about the three
people who escaped the Land of the Lost allowing his family to enter.
Rick
realized that there must be an open time doorway to the Land of the Lost nearby. Since Rick left, another human had to enter,
even if it was the same human. Rick
needed to get back to his children, and decided that he would be that human. He
had a sudden sense of dig` vu, though he paid it no attention. He
wondered if the original doorway over the waterfall was open. The original trip was an accident and
difficult to recreate, so he decided to enlist Jacks help. Rick and Jack always worked well together,
and although he had a wife and two children of his own, Jack cared about Will
and Holly like they were his son and daughter.
Jack was a good engineer, and Rick hoped he could devise a way to access
the time doorway without endangering any lives. All he had to do was get Jack out of the water, and the two would
formulate a plan.
He
was about to call to Jack when the earth began to shake once again, sending
Jacks raft out of control and toward the rapids near the waterfall. Rick looked ahead and spotted what had to be an open time doorway. The
doorway was open in between the waterfall and the rocks below, and Jack was
heading straight for it.
The
quake subsided, and Rick regained his balance long enough to see his brother go
over the waterfall. His angle prevented
him from seeing everything, but he looked at the rocks below, and saw nothing.
"He
must have fallen through the portal," Rick said to himself, relieved that
his brother was not lying dead at the bottom of the falls.
Rick
speculated that Jack probably fell to the Land of the Lost. One human left, one human entered. The portal that had enveloped Jack was closed. Rick would not be returning to the Land of
the Lost anytime soon. Rick knew in his
heart that Jack would find his children, and take care of them. Maybe the three of them would find a way home
on their own. However, Rick would not
simply wait and hope for the best.
He couldn't stand the thought of being away from his family. He knew Will and Holly were trained to
survive, and he had faith that they would indeed remain alive, but somehow, he
had to get them home. Again, he swore
head never stop until he was reunited with his children, no matter how long it
took. After all, Marshalls do not give
up. Somehow, Rick knew head get back to
the Land of the Lost. Somehow, head save
his children and brother. But at that
moment, Rick could only do one thing.
He wept.
Chapter
2
As
Jack Marshalls yellow raft went over the waterfall, many thoughts quickly filled
his head. Expecting to be dead in a
matter of seconds, he prayed for his family. Suddenly, he wondered why he hadn't
hit the rocks at the bottom of the waterfalls.
He felt strange, as if he was swallowed up, and was now floating through
space. "I must be dead," he
thought. But he wasn't.
Jack
guessed that he was suffering a fate similar to that of his brother's family. He recalled that on the day they disappeared,
there was also an earthquake. He knew
the route his brother's family took, so he began his search near the waterfalls. Although
the waterfall was not easily accessible from the river, Jack speculated that the
quake could have sent the raft out of control, over the falls.
But since he never found any bodies at the bottom of the waterfalls, he
continued his search. He decided that no
matter how long it took, he would re-trace his missing relatives' route,
step-by-step, until he found what happened.
Unfortunately for Jack, he was about to get his wish. The strange floating feeling began to wear
off, and the next thing Jack knew, his raft came to rest at the edge of some
sort of lagoon. Exhausted, Jack fell
asleep.
* * * *
Will
and Holly Marshall watched in horror as their father disappeared in the pylon. With
the crystal table lying on the floor, they could not follow him. In the blink of an eye, they were alone in
the Land of the Lost, and their lives were turned upside down. Will saw that Holly was visibly upset, and
tried to comfort her. He reminded her
that Rick knew where they were, and that he would never stop until they were
safe at home. Holly saw Will's point,
and took comfort in the thought that her father was home, working on their
rescue. Still, she missed him. Will and Holly decided to return to High
Bluff to regroup.
On
their way back to the cave, Will and Holly encountered Chaka, a Neanderthal-like
child who was a native of the Land of the Lost. The
Marshalls had saved his life shortly after arriving in the Land, and he was one
of the few friendly beings they encountered.
Chaka was a member of species called the Pakuni. He taught the Marshalls some of his language,
and the Marshalls in turn taught Chaka to speak English. In time, the Marshalls
and Chaka became good friends.
The
quake that sent Rick Marshall home was not very kind to Chaka either. Ta and Sa, two other Pakuni, disappeared as a
result of the quake. Chaka found himself
alone and upset, when he came in contact with Will and Holly.
The
Marshall children told Chaka that he could stay with them, which made the paku
very happy. So the trio returned to High
Bluff to figure out their next move.
Unfortunately, to Will's and Holly's dismay, the quake had also destroyed
the cave, leaving them without a home, without their father, and without
supplies.
Once
again, Holly cried, but her sadness quickly turned to curiosity as she saw a
yellow streak in the sky. Excited, she
figured that Rick had returned to them. Will,
Holly, and Chaka investigated, and after an encounter with a beast they had
never seen before, Will spotted a raft. Intrigued,
he told his sister that the raft was the same type that they had used when they
arrived in the Land of the Lost. They
ran toward the raft, and discovered their Uncle Jack, still asleep from his
journey.
Jack
awoke and saw Holly and Will, and was happy that he had finally found his
brother's children. But his happiness
quickly turned to concern when he realized his brother was not with his niece
and nephew. As Will and Holly filled him
in on where he was, and what had happened, all three Marshalls experienced mixed
emotions. Jack was happy his brother
made it home, but sad that he did not get the chance to see him. Will and Holly were sad that their uncle was
stuck in the Land of the Lost, but happy that he was with them.
The
first order of business was to find a new home.
Shortly before the quake that claimed their father, the Marshalls
discovered a temple near the Lost City.
The temple had two distinct buildings.
Though they did enter one of the buildings, it contained technology that
made the temple too dangerous to be a home.
The second building seemed harmless on the outside, but they were unable
to open the door to be certain. But they
still went there with the hopes of finding a place to live. Luckily, the quake had somehow loosened the
door, so Jack was able to open it. A
quick examination found the temple devoid of any harmful technology. Using his skills as an engineer, Jack was
able to fix the door, so the Marshalls would have easy access. The family had found a new home, but they
still needed to be careful. Since the
temple was located near the Lost City, the Sleestak were never far behind.
In
general, the Sleestak could not speak English. The
Marshalls had encountered very few Sleestak with whom they could communicate. One
was Enik. Another was the Sleestak leader. The leader was able to speak with the
Marshalls, and gained advice via the Library of Skulls. The Library of Skulls was deep inside the
Lost City, and contained numerous Altrusian skulls, which spoke and could answer
the Sleestak leader's questions.
Unfortunately for the Marshalls, the skulls usually blamed the humans for
the Sleestak's problems, and that further increased hostilities.
The
Sleestak leader was not happy about the Marshalls arrival at the temple, and
tried several times to evict them. He
never succeeded.
Once
they had a new place to live, the humans resumed their quest to return to Earth. New lessons were learned, including the fact
that other humans existed in the Land of the Lost, from various periods in Earth
history. Apparently people can come to
the Land of the Lost from all different times. The Marshalls met people from the 1920s, the
1800s, and even a Viking. As Jack
learned how things in the Land of the Lost worked, he figured that time doorways
existed all over the Land, to various times in Earth history, and somehow, he'd
find one. Even if the Marshalls arrived
at Earth at a different time, at least they'd be away from the dangers of the
Land of the Lost.
Jack also had faint hopes that Rick would help, but he would not count on
him. But no matter what, Jack never
stopped believing that the Marshalls would get home.
Chapter
3
After
he watched his brother's accident, Rick had no idea what to do next. He decided to check on his California home,
since it clearly had been abandoned during his time in the Land of the Lost. How long had it been since he sat on a normal
chair, drove a car, or watched TV? Due
to their resourcefulness, Rick and his children were able to construct various
conveniences out of the bamboo and wood that was so abundant in the Land of the
Lost, such as a cart with wheels, and even a system to bring fresh water
directly to High Bluff. Still, thoughts
of appreciation of being back in civilization filled Rick's head as he made his
way to his home.
When
Rick arrived at his house, he realized that he no longer had his keys. After all, his cave in the Land of the Lost
did not exactly require a lock. But he
jarred the door open, and to his delight, his home was just as he left it. "Jack's family must have taken care of
everything," he thought. He looked
around and fondly remembered the times before the accident. The Marshall family had always been close,
especially after the death of Rick's wife when Holly was seven. Though he always maintained a strong
appearance for Will and Holly, he missed his wife terribly.
Rick
re-familiarized himself with his surroundings.
He smiled when he saw Will's baseball and football trophies, and
reminisced about a no-hitter Will had pitched in high school. He walked into Holly's room and saw her
favorite stuffed animals. "Amazing
how much she's grown," thought Rick, saddened at the thought of his
daughter playing with baby brontosaurus' instead of teddy bears and dolls.
He
stared at a family picture hanging on the wall, which reminded him of how his
children always asked to come along on his expeditions.
Rick liked to have his children with him, and he showed them various
camping and survival techniques that come with being a forest ranger. The job required him once a week to patrol an
area along the Colorado River near where he worked. It was on one of those routine patrols that
the earthquake hit that sent his family to the Land of the Lost.
Rick
decided it was time to see Jack's family. If
he was going to work out a plan to save Will and Holly, they were probably the
only people who could help. After all,
who would believe that he spent all this time in some place with three moons,
dinosaurs, and giant lizard like humanoids?
"They'll lock me up," Rick thought.
Thus, he resolved to tell the world that he had been away with Will and
Holly in Europe, and while he came home, they stayed there to go to boarding
school. The only people he could trust
with the truth were Jack's family.
Rick
went into his bedroom, found a spare wallet, and filled it with various pictures
and money, once again thankful that everything was where he left it. Then, he began the trip to Jack's house.
* * * *
Jennifer
Marshall was wondering what was taking her husband so long to come home. She hated when Jack would come home late
searching for Rick and his family, but she understood. She too secretly hoped that they were all
still alive somewhere. But they had been
gone for six months, and even she was starting to lose hope. The day's earthquake added to her worry. She
remembered that the big earthquake on the day Rick, Will, and Holly disappeared. The thought did not comfort her, as she felt
that something was wrong.
Outside
the house, Bobby Marshall was washing his car.
Bobby was a year older than Will, and occasionally went with his father
to search for his uncle and cousins. He
passed today, because he wanted to play in a pickup basketball game with his
friends. Standing next to Bobby was his
sister Kathy. Kathy was Holly's age, and
Bobby paid her a dollar to help wash his car, a beat-up 1969 Dodge Charger.
"What
time is Dad coming back?" asked Kathy.
"Any
minute. He said he'd be back by dinner," said
Bobby.
"What
about the earthquake?"
"Earthquake? You call that an earthquake? I barely noticed it. Are you sure you're from California?"
joked Bobby.
"Bobby,
I'm serious."
"So
am I. That earthquake was not bad. Dad knows what he's doing. He's fine."
Kathy
changed the subject. "Do you think
he will ever find Uncle Rick, Will and Holly?"
"Well,
they've been gone for six months, so it seems unlikely."
"You
think they're dead?"
Bobby
stopped what he was doing, and walked over to his sister.
"Kathy, I hope not. I hope
that there's a good explanation for why they're gone. But people just don't disappear, especially Uncle Rick. But they never found them, so they could be
alive. I just don't know."
Bobby's
comments didn't exactly comfort Kathy. She
knew that he was probably right, but she still missed playing with Holly. Will and Holly were like siblings to Kathy
and Bobby. She turned to Bobby and
asked, "then why is Dad still looking for them?"
"Uncle
Rick is Dad's brother. Uncle Rick, Will
and Holly mean as much to him as they do to us.
Until Dad knows exactly what happened, he won't give up on them. Remember, Marshalls don't quit."
Bobby's
words made Kathy feel better, but she was still visibly sad. Picking up on his sister's mood, Bobby added, "Hey. If anyone can be missing this long and
survive, it's Uncle Rick. And believe
me, if he's alive, you can bet so are Will and Holly. And don't forget, if anyone can find them, it's Dad." Kathy couldn't help by smile. She continued to hope.
As
if on cue, Bobby got the shock of his life as his Uncle Rick came walking up the
street.
Chapter
4
Once
the initial surprise of seeing Rick Marshall walk through the door wore off,
Jennifer, Bobby, and Kathy listened to his story.
Rick told them everything he remembered, from the earthquake that started
the nightmare, to the accident that sent him home. He also explained what he believed to be Jack's
fate. Rick's story visibly upset
Jennifer, who was skeptical. "Come
on Rick, are we really supposed to believe that you were trapped in some other
world, and that Jack took your place?"
Rick
looked at her and replied, "Jen, I know it sounds crazy, but it's true. Will and Holly are there right now, and I'm
sure that Jack's there too. Enik told us
that if one person leaves, another has to enter. I left, and I saw Jack fall through an open portal. We can't be 100 percent sure, but that HAS to
be what happened to Jack." Jennifer
still did not look convinced, but people do not just disappear and reappear, and
Rick did not have a crazy bone in his body. He was always truthful with her, and would never make up a story
like that. Assuming Rick was telling the
truth, then his sudden return gave her hope for Jack, Will and Holly. After all, if one Marshall could make it
home, three would be no problem, and Jack was every bit the fighter Rick was.
"Does
that mean we'll never see Daddy again?" Kathy asked, scared.
Rick
turned to her. "Not if I can help
it honey. Your father is trapped because he wouldn't
give up on your cousins and I. It's my
fault they are all there, and I won't stop until they are all home where they
belong." Rick's confidence
reassured Kathy.
"Why
can't we just take a raft and go over the waterfall?" asked Bobby.
Rick
shook his head. "I don't think
that will work. Watching what happened
to your father gave me a new perspective on what happened to Will, Holly, and I. To get to the Land of the Lost, we were
thrown through some sort of portal one of the time doorways I was telling
you about. This morning, I landed on
the side of the river just before the quake hit.
I definitely saw the open portal that took your dad. But just after Jack fell through and
disappeared, and the portal closed.
It's not there anymore. If we
take a raft and go over the fall, we'd probably be killed."
"Then
how can we help them?" asked Jennifer.
"That's
the problem. I'm not sure. We know there's a way in to the Land of the
Lost. We also know that there's a way
out. I'm proof of that. When I got out, Jack took my place. I can't live with that anymore than Jack
could live without knowing what happened to the three of us. There's got to be a way to help them, and I
promise to find it, no matter how long it takes."
"We
have to get them out," said Jennifer, worried.
"We
will. It's just a question of when. And how." Rick replied. "We also have to be concerned about a
time factor."
"What
do you mean?" asked Jennifer.
"The
Land of the Lost is a strange place, where things that seem impossible, are
possible. The laws of nature don't seem to work the
same there. I tried to keep track of how
long we were gone, and I calculated about two years. Then, I got back home, and only six months
had passed. This can mean one of two
things: either time moves faster in the Land of the Lost, or the doorway that I
opened simply placed me six months from when I left. I think it could be the latter of the two," said Rick. Jack's family looked confused.
"How
can you be sure Uncle Rick?" Bobby asked.
"At
first, we thought that Will, Holly, and I were the only people in the Land of
the Lost. But Will was once
experimenting with a pylon, and opened a doorway to Earth.
Unfortunately the doorway was in the sky, so we couldn't just jump
through, but by accident, the doorway brought a skydiver from our future into
the Land of the Lost. We were there, and
he was there, different people, from different times, in the same place. Because
the doorway was opened over the Earth's sky, and since only he had a parachute,
he couldn't help us get home. We got
him to a mountain high enough to get to the doorway, and we believe he made it. But the point of this story is that it's
possible for people from different times to end up in the Land of the Lost at
the same time as people from our time.
If that's possible, then it makes sense that people could escape the Land
of the Lost into different periods of Earth history.
"This
also explains how we also met a Confederate soldier. People have been falling through these time doorways for
centuries. We even once found journals
from a soldier in General Washington's army."
Rick saw the look on Kathy's face, and turned to her. "Getting out is possible. If I can do it, they can do it."
Jennifer
had a question. "If people can
return to Earth at different points in history, then how do we know that Jack,
Will, and Holly haven't already come home in another time? For all we know, they could be in the 19th century, or in the
23rd."
"You're
right," said Rick. "They
could have escaped on their own, and could be living their lives in some other
time on Earth. But I'm not willing to simply ignore the
problem. Jack didn't ignore me. Until I know that Will, Holly, and Jack are
out of that world, I have to try to get back there. I just need to figure out a way."
Rick,
Bobby, Jennifer, and Kathy continued to talk, and while they sat thinking of
ways to help their relatives, they didn't notice the woman watching them from
the outside.
Chapter
5
Jack
Marshall missed his family. To the best
of his knowledge, about a decade had passed since he was first stranded in the
Land of the Lost. By now, he thought,
Kathy and Bobby would be grown, and Jennifer would have probably stopped
wondering what had happened and moved on. The
thought saddened him, but he knew that his family would be all right, and he
still planned to return to them.
The
Marshalls had tried for years to get home. They
often visited Enik's time doorway chamber in the Lost City, but had never been
able to find the proper combination to Earth.
Throughout
the years, the family had come close to returning home several times. Once, Will and Holly found a key to a pylon
that controlled the flow of time in the Land of the Lost. Jack had figured that they use that pylon to
travel back in time to the point where he first entered the Land of the Lost,
and somehow go through the still open doorway home. However, just as Jack was about to step into the pylon, Torchy, a
fire-breathing beast, singed the key to the door, rendering the pylon useless.
Not
too long after that, the family returned to a cave that Will believed had a lot
of potential to provide a route home. Shortly
before Jack's arrival, the Marshalls were visited by a transparent figure from
another universe. The figure looked
exactly like Holly, and came to her family's counterparts for help. To speak to the Marshalls, she "possessed"
Holly, and told Rick and Will that she needed them to help her own father and
brother. With the alternate Holly's
guidance, Holly was able to lead the Marshalls to their counterparts. The other' Holly had warned Rick and
Will not to touch her father and brother, because for some reason, the
touch would kill them. Rick theorized
that these other Marshalls were probably from an antimatter universe. Once inside the cave, Rick and Will heard the
sound of a car horn, which led them to believe that they were near a time
doorway to Earth. They found duplicates
of themselves trapped in a wall, barely able to move. Next to their duplicates, a crystal table with three missing
crystals was suspended in the wall as well.
Rick and Will placed the crystals in the table, and the alternate
Marshalls were saved. Shortly
thereafter, Rick was gone.
Upon
hearing the story, Jack disagreed with Rick's assessment that these people were
antimatter. Jack theorized that if they
were antimatter, the other' Holly would not have been able to exist in
their Land of the Lost. When matter and
anti-matter touch, a big explosion occurs, and that did not happen when the
alternate Rick and Will were stuck in the walls. Thus,
Jack concluded that these people were not antimatter, but rather, from some kind
of mirror universe, where things were similar, but not identical.
Jack,
Will, and Holly once returned to that cave to investigate the potential to
follow the other' Marshalls. Unfortunately,
they were unable to find a time doorway. The
crystal table that Will and Rick used was still there, but as far as they could
see, even if they found the right combination to Earth, there was no gateway. Jack
thought perhaps it was behind a wall, damaged by the quakes.
Plus, there was always a fear they would end up on an alternate Earth
where they could not physically survive.
More
time passed, and the family simply had no luck getting home. Even the Pylon Express, which Will and Holly were counting on as
the sure way home, became unavailable.
Four years after Jack arrived, the moons were aligned properly so that
the pylon that could lead them home would open. The Marshalls had every intention of being there, but once again,
fate prevented their escape. The
Sleestak Leader had consulted the Library of Skulls, which erroneously warned
them that if the Marshalls were to enter the pylon, they would return with an
invasion force of humans that would destroy the Sleestak. So the Sleestak attacked the Marshalls, and
once again attempted to sacrifice them to their god in the pit. They captured both Will and Chaka, and Jack
and Holly had to rescue them. By the
time everyone was safe, the pylon was closed.
Will was upset that Jack and Holly did not just go home, but Jack told
him, "either all of us go, or none of us go."
Will was not surprised, since in his first few months in the Land of the
Lost, he had a similar opportunity to leave by himself and did not take it,
choosing instead to stay and help his family.
Time
passed. Years passed. The moons aligned again, but unfortunately, access to the Pylon
Express was cut off. The Marshalls were
separated from the pylon by a rock bridge.
Their temple and the Lost City were on one side, and High Bluff and the
Pylon Express were on the other side.
For years, the family used that bridge to travel from place to place in
the Land of the Lost. However, still
fearing human invasion if the Marshalls were to return home, in between moon
alignments, the Sleestak destroyed the bridge.
The humans simply did not have the tools to build a new one.
So
more time went by, and though they still searched for the way home, the
Marshalls tried to make a life for themselves in the Land of the Lost. Will and Holly got older.
Will did not change very much physically, but Holly did. She was now an adult, and she had long
outgrown the red plaid shirt and brown pants she had been wearing when she
entered the Land of the Lost. Luckily,
she was resourceful, and was able to use some fabric Jack had brought to tailor
her clothes.
Jack
thought it was amazing how well they had survived to date. Will and Holly had been in the Land of the Lost almost twelve
years, and Jack ten, and despite the dangers of the Sleestak, the dinosaurs, and
other mysteries that they faced, they were still alive and healthy. Not everyone they had encountered was so
lucky. Malak, a Viking from the 11th
century, fell victim to Grumpy. The
Confederate soldier that Rick, Will, and Holly met shortly after arriving in the
Land of the Lost, was turned to stone by a Medusa. Medusas were creatures like those found in
Greek mythology. Any animal that looks
at the Medusa is instantly turned to stone.
Jack
had outsmarted the Medusa by tricking her into looking at herself in a mirror. She turned to stone, and the Marshalls never
encountered another one. Jack always
said that the fact that the family had survived so long said a lot about their
fortitude, as well as Rick's teachings.
* * * *
Will
was out gathering food alone and was lost in thought.
By his own estimates, he figured he was about twenty-nine years old. However,
with all the stress of living in the Land of the Lost, he felt a lot older. Thoughts of home had rarely left Will's mind. Though he had long since adapted to life
without Rick, Will still missed his father. He
never stopped wondering what his father was doing and how he adjusted to
returning to Earth.
Will
felt badly that Rick had never returned. He
was not bothered by Rick's failure, because he knew in his heart his father
would return if he could, but he felt anguish at the thought of his father
living with the guilt of the Marshalls' fate.
Will even remembered one of the first things he said to comfort his
sister when Rick left. He told her that
no one would work harder than Rick to rescue the family. Will still believed that. Not only could he picture Rick trying every
possible way to get back to the Land of the Lost, he could picture the task
becoming an obsession. But ten years had
passed. The idea that his father would
be obsessing for such a long time really saddened Will. In fact, one of his continuing motivations to
get home was to see his father again.
Thus, where many people would have simply tried to make a life for
themselves and given up trying to get home, Will kept going, if only to relieve
his father's guilt.
So
Will worked constantly with his uncle and his now twenty three year old sister
to get home. The problem was that
lately, there were no new opportunities.
In
the twelve plus years Will had been in the Land of the Lost, he could kick
himself over the blown chances. If only
he could have had Enik explain to him the inner workings of the Lost City. But Enik had disappeared several years
earlier. Presumably, he returned to his
own time, but the Marshalls would never know.
To this day, Will was certain that the way to Earth was through the Lost
City. If the humans could have figured
out how to align the crystals on the table to open a doorway to Earth, and if
the Sleestak did not prevent so many attempts, things might have been different.
As
he returned to the temple, Will saw Holly and Chaka talking near the temple in
which they lived. Both were children
when the adventure in the Land of the Lost began.
But now, both were fully-grown.
Chaka had been with them a long time, and as far as Jack, Will, and Holly
were concerned, Chaka WAS a Marshall.
Of course, should the opportunity arise, and should the Marshalls find a
chance to go home, Will knew that Chaka would remain in the Land of the Lost. He would be as out of place on Earth as the
family was in the Land of the Lost.
Will
went inside the temple to find his uncle preparing a special dessert. Today was Holly's birthday, which is the main
reason Will figured he was thinking about their father. Will smiled at Jack, secretly happy that
Holly was not doing the cooking, the one thing that had not improved with time. Jack
returned the smile, and the two of them walked outside to meet Chaka and Holly.
"Happy
Birthday Holly," Jack said as he presented a cake.
In reality, the cake was made of oversized fruits and plants found in the
Land of the Lost. Will looked at the
cake and remembered the days when he took chocolate for granted.
"That
sure looks good," said Will. "But
then again, anything's better than Holly's smilax cakes," he playfully
jabbed at his sister.
"Will
Marshall, one more word out of you and you'll be wearing this food, not eating
it," she retorted, shaking a fist at her brother.
Despite the many mysteries of the Land of the Lost, the one constant was
Will and Holly bickering at each other.
Of course, at this point, it was all in fun, as the siblings were really
close.
Jack
couldn't resist getting into the game. "Listen
you two, one more crack, and I'll take this delicious cake and divide it between
Chaka and I."
"Chaka
like cake," yelled the Paku, rubbing his stomach.
Will
and Holly stopped bickering, and soon all were laughing.
Holly smiled at her uncle, thanking him for the cake. Of course, she could not be sure that it
really was her birthday, since they had no Earth calendar. However, several years earlier, her uncle and
brother, for lack of a better guess, designated this day as her birthday. They
had celebrated it ever since.
Twelve
years. Will still could not believe how much his
sister had grown. Holly was no longer a
dependent child constantly clinging to her father. Will figured losing Rick changed Holly. Although she loved Uncle Jack, it just was not the same. Like Will, Holly would later come to
understand that her feelings of loss for Rick probably did not compare to his
feelings of guilt over leaving his children behind. She learned to be quite independent, and Will took solace in the
fact that if anything ever happened to he or Jack, she and Chaka would be able
to survive.
Jack
had put primitive candles that he had made himself on the cake. "Well, I think it's time you made a
wish," he said.
Holly
blew out the candles. "Somehow I
think you know what I wished for," she said.
Will
and Jack didn't need to say a word. They
knew. Holly had wished for the same
thing for the last twelve years. Will
and Jack had the same wish. The
Marshalls wanted to go home.
But
the peacefulness of the birthday celebration quickly vanished as the ground
suddenly began to shake.
Chapter
6
"INTERFERENCE
WITH THE NATURAL COURSE OF EVENTS IS FORBIDDEN.
YOU ARE NOT ALLOWED TO ALTER THE COURSE OF HISTORY."
The
blonde woman recited these words to herself. She
had heard them for years, and up until now, she had pretty much accepted them. As time passed, her adventures led her to
understand the workings of the Land of the Lost's time doorways, but that
knowledge had not come without a price. She
was robbed of her childhood, and she endured the loss of her family. She had spent what felt like an eternity
alone before being recruited by the Builders, a group of beings that originated
on Earth far in her future. At some
point in Earth's future, the doorways that led to the Land of the Lost were
discovered. In time, the Builders came
to understand the technology, and soon mastered it. They had full knowledge of the workings of the time doorways, and
kept a complete record of the historical events that led to the evolution of the
Land of the Lost. In fact, they improved
on many of the workings of the Land of the Lost, and were even able to
manipulate the evolution of the Land's natural inhabitants. For example, an encounter with Chaka left
the Paku with an enhanced ability to learn.
After meeting the Builders, Chaka's knowledge of English improved to the
point where it was rare to hear him speak in his native language. Communication with the Marshalls was much
easier.
Still,
the Builder's manipulation was only done under special circumstances, and only
with a species is on the cusp of evolving on its own. Their most stringent of rules prohibits using time travel to
interfere with the lives of others.
Natural events could never be changed.
That was one of the first things the blonde woman was taught.
In
addition, the Builders took it upon themselves to monitor the inner workings of
the Land of the Lost in eras after the fall of the Altrusian civilization. If something went wrong, a Builder was sent
to repair it. In fact, though they did
not know it at the time, the Marshalls encountered one of those repairmen
shortly after Jack arrived in the Land of the Lost.
Eventually,
the Builders came to believe that they were as much responsible for the way
things worked in the Land of the Lost as the Altrusians. Few knew of the Builder's existence, though in time, they expanded
their inner circle to include intelligent races other than humans. Recruitment
was very selective, as they only chose highly intelligent people with little or
no future who had the capability of understanding what they did.
They would monitor their lives until they hit a crucial point, and then
reveal themselves.
On
more than one occasion, the Builders acted to prevent the total destruction of
the Land of the Lost. However, they did
not to interfere with any of the trapped humans there. For example, they knew of the Marshalls, but they would not help
them home, although they could. They
feared that doing so might affect their existence, so the Marshalls, as well as
any other human that entered the Land of the Lost, were on their own.
Still,
the Builders were not without heart. They
had watched the blonde woman grow up, and saw all the pain of her life. They looked into her future, and saw that in
due time, she would succumb to the dangers of her environment. They realized that she could not affect the
future, since she had none. She was
highly intelligent, and highly motivatedand their mysterious leader deemed
her the perfect candidate. So when they
felt the timing was right, they recruited her.
At
first she was apprehensive. She was
still depressed over the recent loss of her family, who just a month earlier had
disappeared leaving her all alone. But
in time, she realized that she finally had an opportunity to do something with
her life. Thus, she joined the Builders. And
while she knew the rules well, deep down she figured that perhaps she could
change things. But for the time being, she kept that plan to
herself.
As
time passed, she became quite knowledgeable about the workings of the time
doorways. She was able to travel to the past and
present, on both Earth and the Land of the Lost. In the beginning of her time with the Builders, she took comfort
in seeing her family, as they once were.
In fact, she once confronted her past self, and gave the younger version
the courage to save her brother's life.
And while that event was bittersweet, the knowledge of things to come
bothered her. She never fully recovered
from the sudden disappearance of her family, and for some reason, the Builders
always prevented her from learning exactly what happened to them. The only exception involved her father, whom
she was allowed to observe from time to time.
She
stepped through the time doorway to Earth, just in time to see Rick Marshall
discussing his adventures in the Land of the Lost with Jack's family. Seeing Rick Marshall made the blonde woman
smile. But then again, Rick always had
that effect on Holly.
Chapter
7
When
she encountered her past self in the Land of the Lost, the elder Holly called
herself Rani, a secret name she used as a child. She did not reveal her identity, because her only goal was to give
the child the courage to save Will, who at the time was trapped in the Sleestak
pit. She figured that things would be
less complicated if her identity remained secret. Besides, the elder Holly knew her younger
self would eventually figure out who she was, since she remembered the incident
in her
childhood. Thus, keeping herself secret
allowed the elder Holly to avoid being questioned by her father and brother.
At
the time, the elder Holly did not want to talk to Rick at all. She knew her father well enough to know he would probe her with
too many questions, and she did not want to be tempted to reveal the future. Besides,
she had not spoken to Rick in over a dozen years, and would not know what to
say. Her goal was to complete the cycle as she
remembered it, and to give her younger self the courage to help save Will's
life. She knew she could not help her
family get home, because doing so would create a dangerous paradox. If she got home as a child, she would not
have been rescued by the Builders, so she could not have gone back in time to
help her family get home. These issues
always gave Holly a headache, but temporal paradoxes were one of the main
reasons the Builders did not allow interference with the natural flow of events. Holly
understood, and even agreed with the logic. She
could do nothing for her family in that time period.
The
elder Holly soon departed, and decided that she would find a way to help her
family later. She also came to the
conclusion that in any encounter with her family, she would keep her identity
secret. Doing so would simply make her goals easier
to accomplish. She loved the name Rani,
and decided that it would suffice.
The
Builders were not happy with Rani's interference in her past life. However, they knew that young Holly was supposed to save Will, so
history was not altered. Her biggest
"crime" was giving the Marshalls three Builder pendants. These pendants were highly advanced necklaces
that picked up the heartbeats of each Marshall, who wore the respective pendant
around his or her neck.
Through a crystal in the center of the pendant, the family could track
each other.
Because
of Rani's actions, the Builders forbade her from visiting her family again. However, at least one of the Builders knew
that she would not listen.
At
the time of her encounter with young Holly, the Builders had only taught Rani
how to work the doorways to the Land of the Lost.
Although Rani told Holly that her presence meant that she had a chance to
return to Earth, in truth, the Builders had not given her access to her home as
of that time. But quite some time has
passed since then, and Rani learned more about manipulating the technology, and
had visited Earth several times.
She also was more emotionally prepared to make contact with someone other
than a child version of herself.
Rani was still a Marshall, and the years she spent with the Builders
enabled her to formulate an exact plan to change the lives of her family for the
better, in a way that would endanger no one. All she needed was access to the time doorways in the Builders'
main chamber. At the first opportunity,
she would help.
The
first time Rani found the time doorway unguarded, she set the controls for
Earth, 1974, California. It was her
first trip to 20th
century Earth since she was a child, and she arrived shortly after Rick had
returned home. She knew her father was a
smart man, but he was dealing with an unknown. Somehow, she would show him the way back to the Land of the Lost. She
had to be careful though, not wanting to cause a paradox. The
timeline could not be changed. Even if
Rani could do so without affecting too much, her respect for the Builders would
not allow her to cause any damage to others.
The timing had to be perfect.
Rani needed to save her family without preventing the events that enabled
her to help them in the first place.
Luckily, she was in a position to observe Rick's actions at different
time periods to determine the best point to confront him. Deciding that an instantaneous return to the
Land of the Lost was not the best course for her father, Rani vanished to
another era.
Chapter
8
Two
years had passed since Rick Marshall returned home.
Part of him wanted to rebuild his life, but the thoughts of his family in
the Land of the Lost haunted him almost to a point of obsession. Though whether he returned to the Land was
not within his control, Rick never overcame the guilt that he was home while
Will, Holly, and probably Jack remained in danger. At times, this guilt was unbearable. It was his idea to bring Will and Holly along on the
original raft trip. Jack disappeared
while searching for him. These
thoughts fueled Rick in his quest to return to the Land of the Lost. Plus, he would never give up on his family. It
was not in his nature.
In
the time since he returned home, Rick familiarized himself with every inch of
the area of the waterfall. However, he
never was able to find any evidence of the time doorway.
Jack's family helped when they could, but Jennifer did her best to make
sure Bobby and Kathy each had as normal a life as possible. They told the world that Jack was off on some
long-term engineering project abroad.
They wanted to believe in Rick.
They wanted to believe that somehow, Jack survived, but all they had was
Rick's word.
Rick
never gave up, but he was growing more frustrated in his inability to trigger a
doorway. As far as he knew, the only
time the doorway opened was during an earthquake, and the area surrounding the
waterfall had not seen so much as a tremor since Jack's disappearance.
Rick
sat down on a log overlooking the waterfall, and put his head down.
"You'll
never be able to help Will, Holly and Jack by sitting around."
Rick
looked up and saw a blonde woman talking to him. He
had no clue how she got there. "Who
are you?"
"A
friend. You can call me Rani."
Somehow,
Rani looked very familiar to Ricka bit like his late wife. Ignoring the resemblance, Rick realized that
this woman knew something about Will and Holly, and he was determined to find
out what it was she knew. "What do
you know about my children?" he asked.
"And
your brother Jack. I can tell you that
they are still alive, and that I can help you."
"How? Who are you?"
Rani
was thankful that she had changed enough in appearance that Rick did not
recognize her. The emotion over talking to her father for
the first time in so many years was overwhelming enough. She fought the urge to reveal everything to
him, and just hug him. But that would
only hurt her plan, so she remained calm.
"I told you. I am Rani. I am a Builder." She smiled.
"BuildersI've
heard that before Are you one of the people who built that temple near the
Lost City?" Rick asked.
Proud
that her father's memory was as great as she remembered, Rani nodded. She tried to sound as cold as possible, so
her father would not guess her identity.
"We long have had a presence in the region you call the Land of the
Lost. We have the capability to travel
space and time, and we observe various historical events." Rani knew her father well enough to know that
he would not merely take her at her word.
Therefore, she took a device out of her pocket as proof. It was a pendant, with a long chain, and a
ruby-like stone in the center. She
showed it to Rick.
"These
are like the pendants Holly gave Will and I," he said.
Rick had never taken his pendant off since he returned home. Something about it made him feel closer to
his children and Jack. "Somehow,
Will, Holly, and I could see each other by looking at the pendant. Holly said a lady came out of the time
doorway and gave them to her. Are you
that lady?"
Rani
nodded.
Something
about this woman made Rick start to trust her.
He still had trouble placing her, but he could not shake the feeling that
she was on his side. He had many
questions, but he controlled himself.
If this woman could help him get back to his family, he would solely
focus on that. Returning to the
pendants, he took his out and said, "My pendant hasn't worked since I
returned home."
"The
pendants can pick up Will and Holly over distances, but not worlds. But with a little help from mine, your
pendant does have other functions. If
you need further proof that I can help, look at the pendant now."
Rick
looked down, and was amazed at what he saw. Somehow,
this pendant was displaying the original accident that sent Rick and his family
into the Land of the Lost. Looking up he
asked, "can I use this to get to Will, Holly, and Jack?"
Rani
smiled, working her way to the next part of her plan.
"No. I'm just here to let
you know they are all-right."
"You
mean you won't help me?"
"I
am forbidden from interfering."
"You
sound like Enik." Rick complained.
Rani
betrayed nothing. But Rick was not about
to accept her silence. He had numerous
discussions with Enik on similar topics, and felt he knew how to deal with
people like this Rani. He continued,
"don't you realize that the mere fact that you are here is interference? You came for a reason, and it's not just to
tell me my family is ok. Please. I need to get back to them."
Rani
hesitated, rethinking her plan. She was
torn between her love for her father and her duty to the Builders. She had the power to her family home, but
doing so directly would violate the most fundamental of Builder principles. She
had to be in a position to protect the Builder codes, and to be on the outside
in case of unknown contingencies. She
also had to prevent a paradox. Rick had
to figure a way around the Builder code himself. It
would help her defend her actions to the other Builders.
Rani
remembered how shortly after becoming a Builder, she learned that she was
already a part of a paradox. Although
she had no direct memory of the event, apparently, when the Marshalls first
entered the Land of the Lost, a problem occurred.
Two events somehow played out.
Her family fell onto the rocks below the waterfalls, and her family fell
into the Land of the Lost. They were
dead, and they were alive. As a result,
the time doorway in the Lost City could only focus on the Marshalls' accident. She
later learned that had the problem gone uncorrected, there could have been
devastating consequences to the whole universe.
Just
like the current scenario, Rick was with someone who could help. Enik was in the time doorway chamber,
frustrated at the paradox, but unable to help the Marshalls directly due to an
Altrusian code that prevented Enik's interference. But Rick did figure out a solution. He was able to get around Enik's noninterference rule, by asking a
specific question a question Rani was counting on Rick to ask again.
As
a result of his quick thinking, Rick hoped to create a situation where the
Marshalls stepped through the time doorway, thinking they were going home, while
an alternate Rick, Will, and Holly arrived in the Land of the Lost. However, in reality, Enik tricked them. When the Marshalls stepped through the time
doorway, they merged with their counterparts, and relived everything that had
happened to them up to that point, minus the paradox. Enik had justified the treachery to himself by deciding that it
was the more logical solution than arranging events so that the Marshalls died,
especially since Rick's idea would not have worked. Rather than further walking the gray line of violating his people's
code, Enik opted for an alternate solution, which he implemented.
Rani
did not completely understand exactly how these temporal lines worked, though
the story did explain the constant feelings of dij` vu that she and her family
experienced during her first few months in the Land of the Lost. Still, the bottom line was that Rick had once figured out a way
around a noninterference rule. If he
could do so in this time line, not only would she help him, she would not trick
him like Enik did.
Rani's
only fear was that Rick would not ask the right question. Enik's actions wiped out Rick's experience in his chamber, so he
could not draw from it. Her father would
have to think the same way he did in an alternate timeline, or she would have to
leave, and try again in another era.
Then, to her delight, Rick asked the question she hoped he'd ask.
"If
you can't interfere with the course of events, can you tell me what to do, so I
can return to the Land of the Lost and save Will, Holly, and Jack?"
Containing
her smile, and implementing a plan she had thought of for years, she said,
"Well done Da....I mean Rick. I
suppose there is no rule that forbids me from giving you the means to return to
the Land of the Lost, but there is a price."
"What
price?" Rick asked suspiciously, not noticing Rani's near slip.
Rani
sighed. Her price was big indeed, but it was
necessary to prevent the paradox.
However, she feared that Rick would not do what he had to if she revealed
the price now. "When the time
comes, you'll know, but in the mean time, I suggest you get what you need. You're going back to the Land of the Lost."
Rick
hoped the price this woman spoke about was not too harsh, but he was willing to
pay any price to save his family, even give his life, if necessary. So Rick did what he had to do. His first thought was to get Bobby, Jennifer,
and Kathy, but he decided not to risk putting them in danger. He felt he had done enough damage to his
family. Besides, he knew they would
object to his running off on the word of a stranger, so he resolved to not tell
Jack's family a thing. With any luck, he
would have a nice surprise for them soon.
So he went home, packed up a bag few survival supplies, met up with Rani,
and proceeded on to his next adventure.
Chapter
9
Rick
quickly went home, and expertly packed a bag of supplies that he knew would come
in handy in the Land of the Lost. "Amazing,"
Rick thought to himself, "here I am, about to return to the most dangerous
place I have ever been, with only the amount of equipment I can carry, with a
strong possibility of never returning, and I am actually looking forward to it." Rick Marshall was about to see his family
again.
Rick
would have brought a tank if he could, but Rani had told him that he could only
bring what he could carry. "Packing
is a lot different when you actually KNOW you are going to the Land of the Lost,"
he thought. Soon, he arrived at the spot
where he had last seen Rani. No one was
there at first, and Rick wondered if his conversation with her was a dream, but
he was relieved when he saw the woman appear from what seemed like nowhere.
"Ready?"
she asked.
"I've
been ready for over two years."
"Well,
let me warn you that things may not exactly be what you expect. Remember, it's been awhile since you've seen your children and
brother."
Rick
didn't care. His desire to return to the
Land of the Lost was an obsession. "As
long as they're alive, and I can get them home, a few changes are not that
important."
Rani
looked at him, and said, "very well, here we go.
I want you to look at your pendant, and concentrate on your destination."
Rani
then took out two crystals, a white one and a gold one.
Rick had never seen a gold crystal.
Yellow crystals were abundant, but he never laid his eyes on a gold one. Clearly,
Rani possessed a level of knowledge beyond anything Rick had ever encountered.
So
Rick did as Rani instructed. He thought
of nothing but Will, Holly, and returning to the Land of the Lost. Suddenly he was surrounded by a mist, which
reminded him of the mist surrounding time doorways in the Lost City. He felt himself spinning, and the next thing
he knew, he was standing in a pylon, and the ground was shaking.
The
tremor soon stopped, and Rick regained his balance.
He quickly realized that Rani had not followed. Whatever he had to do, he would have to
figure it out on his own. "Well,"
he thought, "I guess the first thing I'd better get my bearings."
He
looked around inside the pylon, and saw that the diamond shaped door was open. He gazed outside and instantly knew where he
was. Rani had returned him to the exact
same pylon that sent him to Earth two years earlier. He turned around and noticed that the matrix
table had fallen, confirming the sound he heard just before he went through the
portal. Clearly, the fallen table was
the reason Will and Holly had never followed him.
With
no crystal table, Rick would have no way of activating the time doorway. He would have to find another way home. Still, the idea of being in the same spot
made Rick think that perhaps he wasn't gone that long in Land of the Lost'
time. After all, if Rani was capable of
moving through both time AND space, perhaps she was able to turn back the clock.
"I bet it's only been a few moments since I've left Will and Holly,"
he said to himself.
Rick
then stepped outside the pylon hoping to find Will, Holly, and possibly Jack
waiting for him. But they were not
there. He looked around to reacquaint himself with
his surroundings. In the background,
Grumpy's distinctive roar could be heard.
Not
wasting any time, Rick figured that the best place to find his family was the
cave. He smiled as he pictured the look on their
faces upon his return. For the first
time in a long time, Rick Marshall was excited.
But
his excitement soon turned to horror when he arrived at High Bluff. Somehow, the cave entrance was covered by a huge bolder. Fearing his family was trapped inside, Rick
ran up to the cave and desperately started digging. Was this some sort of cruel joke by the people who ran the Land of
the Lost? Was Rani all part of a plan to
get him back here? Why? He was beginning to panic. He began to dig with a pickax he brought, but
was making little progress. But he did
make enough of a dent in the cave to see inside. He could see that the Marshalls' equipment was covered in dust,
but there were no bodies in there. Rick
sighed in relief. The cave looked
exactly as he remembered, except for the dust.
Rick
realized that whatever happened, it happened shortly after he left, but enough
time had passed to cover the