GOM: Bridges of Time: CHAPTER ONE
by Alina
Notes:
GOM: Bridges of Time
Chapter One
*********************************
Time Stream:
just after the destruction of the Moon Kingdom:
************************************************
Ironically, to the Door of Time's sole occupant,
time had no meaning. There was no before, no after,
but only the everlasting existence of guarding the
Gate.
Why did she feel she must do so? Why couldn't she leave? Her memory seemed
as shrouded as the space that surrounded her. In that
shifting fog that covered reality, she saw no answers.
How long she had been at this post,
an ever vigilant, ever lonely soldier? Occasionally
memories would start to surface, but would just
as quickly fade like shadows into the haze.
Her first break in that stream of eternity came in
the form of a pure white light emanating from the
Doors. They sprung open of their own accord, and she
found herself in a world desecrated
by the remains of a battle. Elegantly carved silver-white
pillars splattered the rocky ground.
Had she been there before? A memory (or premonition?)from somewhere
emerged and told her this was the Moon Kingdom that
she served. A voice called her name, bringing into
focus a woman of almost divine beauty and grace.
Pluto turned, her tenseness fading under the aura of peacefulness
that emanated from the woman. A voice in her
mind (her own, or someone else's?) told her she looked
upon Queen Selenity. Yet it surprised Pluto to realize
whoever she stared at did not fully exist in the
world--a telltale translucency to the figure revealed
that the Queen no longer existed at all,
at least, not in the ordinary sense.
"Your Majesty?" Pluto said, as the Moonbeams
swirled past her into the Gate...She looked at the
ghost figure... "What happened?"
"I stopped Time..".Queen Selenity replied.
"If only I could turn it back!" The Queen's gaze surveyed
the fallen stones and pillars of the once magnificent
castle. How could she explain to Pluto what had been
lost? How could Pluto understand the society that
disappeared and the causes for its destruction?
"I have traded my life for a brighter future."
"It is forbidden to change the Time Line!" Pluto
countered automatically. She gazed in wonder at
the real world around her. Hungrily, her eyes
drew in the sight, even as scared as it was. That static
frozen state held questions and information for her
starved mind--who built this? How long ago and
what destroyed it?
The Queen half-smiled. "And I will pay with
my life force for this. I know, Guardian of Time,
what I do. Do not be alarmed, for the sanctity of
Time is not violated by the Spell I have cast."
"I do not understand, My Queen." Pluto said
sadly, wanting to trust the Queen and still follow her duties.
"I only know the rules of Time." Her eyes pleaded
that she wanted to know more.
"Destiny must allow for choice, Pluto. It
is for freedom that we fight Metallia. Do not
let history be another tyrant. " With
almost the last of her strength, the Queen
touched Pluto's sigil. "Keep only the good
memories." Pluto felt herself
tingle with the energy of the Queen as the
Queen merged her essence into the crystal.
And into her.
Pluto nodded, watching as Selenity disappeared
before her eyes, the crystal shimmering. Leaving
the ruins behind her, she entered the time
stream closing the Door of Time on the Moon
Kingdom.
The Queen had given her a precious
gift, even as she had given the other soldiers
a new chance at life. For the first time,
Pluto felt her past separate from her future
as memories began to form in her mind. They
remained as hazy and indistinct as the shadows
on the Moon appear from earth, but she could
still trace the edges of them. For now, she
revelled in the knowledge that she had
memories even if she could not yet fill in
the details of them. For the first time,
she could remember.
She turned her attention to the moonbeams,
trying to guide the rather numerous bubbles
in the chaos of the Time corridor.
A small last figure encased partly in moonbeams,
but also partly in a darker light slipped into
the time stream unnoticed, following behind the others
merging itself with them.
As carefully as she could, Pluto pulled the stream of
tiny moonbeams which carried the children of the moon
along the corridor. Yet the lingering tie between Zoycite and Metallia
caused a flux in the path, and sent the capsules floating astray.
She thought she managed to retrieve them all.
Pausing at the gates of time, she willed the small computer
to show her various times and places. Relying on an innate intuition
she selected late twentieth century Japan as the place to
install the capsules. Somehow, Japan just seemed
familiar to her, and right. Surely there she could
find enough women with latent magical abilities suitable to
reviving the children of the moon in their same forms.
It was only at that moment that she realized the Prince was missing
from among the small capsules. What she thought to be the Prince's
capsule actually contained four other lives, and it began to
divide automatically.
Panic flowed around her, but she stilled its rising waves.
Grabbing the staff, she reached out with her mind to find
the lost Prince. Without having placed him herself, she doubted
whether she could find him before he was reborn. She would
have to take her chances as to how much life he would relive
before she found him. The wrong capsule she'd started to
install in the world spun in the temporal void created by
her disappearance, only 3/4 of its occupants safely entering
rebirth. Pluto's intensity of thought blocked her awareness of the
ripples in the flow of time. All she could think of was finding
Endymion, before his life played out in the wrong time.
California, 1966:
"Endy, don't drive so fast dear." His mother warned anxiously.
She loved her son, but she'd never understood
him and as such, her trust always mixed with an instinctual worry.
"Son." His father couldn't even manage more than that one word.
Through gritted teeth he addressed his wife. "I told
you we shouldn't give him this car. 18 years old
and he thinks he owns the world."
"Please, slow down Endy!" She said again.
"Listen to your mother, Son. Slow down." At least Endy's father
didn't have to shout over wind noise--the specially designed
car was air tight.
In response, Endy grinned and gunned the engine of his brand new
designer car again, drowning out his father's pleas. The
car slid along the curves of the Pacific coast like a snake on the
rocks. At 18, the feeling thrilled rather than terrified him. All his life
he'd felt vaguely out of place. Yet something about tearing along
these rocks so close to death made him feel more alive. Maybe it
was the way the Moon looked so much closer here, up high in the
mountains. Its light reflected and expanded in the crashing waves
below. The dancing beams tickled his mind with images he couldn't quite
piece together. Perhaps if he drove faster he could catch up with
the dance of images and they'd make sense to him.
His mother screamed then, and grabbed his arm. "Watch out! She's
in the road!"
Endy looked at the road, at first seeing nothing, until it was almost too
late. He barely glimpsed the dark fall of a woman's hair, but
her eyes glowed like stoplights, as did a weird device she held.
He slammed on the breaks, utter terror slicing through him as he
felt the car wheel out of control. For seconds he felt everything
grow cold, and all that he thought that mattered, suddenly didn't
matter at all. With clarity he saw how foolish he'd been to
drive so recklessly. Yet the knowledge came too late to do anything.
All he could form was a silent prayer of "Please, don't let this be
it," too terrified and in shock to even scream.
And then he felt the plunge of the water rather than the sharp teeth of
the rocks. Temporarily saved, he realized the car would quickly fill with
water. He slid out of the seat, and turned to face his parents.
They were both unconscious, and his mother was slumped forward. The side
door had caved in, pinning his father. He tried to tug them out,
but realized he desperately needed to breathe. Fighting the urge
to swim up to the top, he continued to tug at his mothers limp form.
Like a mermaid from the depths, a figure swam towards him, smashing
the door in, then grasping him.
She displayed a superior strength as she hauled him upwards.
His eyes met hers briefly, before he collapsed and stopped
breathing. Quickly she began to force
the water from his chest, and to transfer her
own breath to his.
Eventually he coughed, and drew a ragged breath.
"My parents" He said jerking forward. "Still *cough* there"
"It's too late." The mermaid/girl said. His senses returning, he knew
she couldn't have been a mermaid. Yet her hair seemed the color
of seaweed underneath the waves at night. Was she the one who'd
been on the road?
"I couldn't save them. I'm sorry. This is all my fault."
He couldn't say anything, but just stared at her. The cliffs dropped
off very sharply. If she had been the one on the road, then why
and how did she dive off into the sea? If she wasn't, where had she
come from?
"I'd better go after them." He said, shaking the questions off.
Again, her strength surprised him as she held him back. "You
can't, Endymion. It is too late. They're gone."
He turned, his blue eyes bearing deeply into her dark ones.
"How do you know my name?"
"I can't tell you. But we must go now." She stood, raising
the funny device that he hadn't noticed before.
"It was you!" He said, but without condemnation. He still felt
too confused to lay blame. "Just tell me what's going on."
"You don't belong here. I'm sorry this happened, but it was
never meant to be. You were never meant to live here, and I
came to take you back."
********
She led him into the Garden of Before. She wasn't
sure if there were other names for the place, nor how she knew
of its existence. She'd never come there before, nor had
anyone in her newly found memory warned her of its existence.
Like so many things in her life since her meeting with the Queen,
she just *knew* things existed. Perhaps she had always
known, but without a memory, what good was such knowledge?
"How did we get here?" Endy asked in awe, looking around
at the strange silvery vegetation. The ground didn't feel hard
as normal earth, and all he could see was light and fog.
"And where is here? What happened, am I dead?"
"No." She said, suddenly self-conscious as he stared at her.
She couldn't really remember ever speaking to another man
like this before. Perhaps she had in some far away life, but
the memory resisted her call. This all seemed to
new to her.
She realized she was still holding his hand, so she released his
hand. He grabbed her wrist.
"Am I dreaming?" He asked quietly.
"I don't think so." She said, a little flustered by his actions.
Again, staring at him loosened another memory from the mists.
She knew him, not from the Queen's memories, but from another
time. Yet there he'd been older, and
he'd always seen him completely in control of himself. A
protective figure, defined by his love for one woman above
all else. This younger version seemed different, though she knew he
was the same as the King she served.
"So I'm not dead, and you're not a dream" He measured the
words, his brain assessing his situation. "So who are you?"
"A Guardian. I've brought
you here so you can be reborn."
"But you just said I'm not dead?" He edged back.
"You aren't. You were reborn into the wrong time."As soon
as she said the words she realized she'd chosen the wrong
method to accomplish her goals.
"How do you know that? I'm happy with my life the way it is...was..
I like who I am. My parents! Did you arrange the whole thing?"
He grabbed her arm then, pulling her face close to his. Her
red eyes made him draw back a bit, as he hadn't quite noticed
that before. "What are you? You're not human."
Sadness and confusion filled her eyes, making him regret his harsh
tone. "No, I don't think I am. But I'm not your enemy."
"Well whatever you brought me here for, you can just let me go.
I don't want any part of it."
"You don't understand. In your past life you--" She
paused trying to remember the details of what
she had been told.
"Past life? Wait a second. No forget it. I don't care
what wacky story you've made up. I'm leaving." He turned,
and started to move. He saw her disappear over his shoulder,
not even moving to stop him. A calm, sad expression hung on
her features, and her eyes glowed long after the rest of her
disappeared.
"The road has to be here somewhere. I'm probably in
a forrest off the beach. All this fog, that's natural around
here. It's night, and that's why it looks so odd. I'm
probably tired." His mind raced through the thoughts, as
he continued walking straight--almost right into Pluto.
Pluto merely tilted her head to one side and said nothing.
"How did you know where I was going?" He demanded. "I told
you, I want no part of whatever is going on here."
"You can't leave here....not by walking anyway." She
cautioned him. She knew that much, for now she
could remember trying once, until she grew so
tired she'd wanted to die.
"Then get me out of here." He demanded. As an only child,
spoiled by two loving parents, he was used to getting his
way. "Now. If this is some elaborate scheme to get
money--"
She shook her head. "You must forget everything you know about this
life Endymion. And remember another life, another time and
place. This was never meant to be."
"By who? What right do you have to pull me
away, and shove some story about my past life at me?
I don't care who I was before. I know who I am.
and I want to get back to my life. Get out of my way."
"I cannot let you do that!" She said. Why was he making
this so difficult? Her future king never seemed so impossible,
and arrogant. Sure of himself, yes, but always kind and not
brash like the young man before her. For a second she
shifted her attention away trying to reach more of the
precious memories, or that strange voice that
sometimes told her what to do--but as she did she heard him
ask her something. "What?" She said startled.
"That stick--that's what's controlling this." He said as he
moved with lightening quickness to grab the stick out of her hand.
"I'll use it, somehow, and get out of here. You might as well help me."
"Don't--you could hurt yourself." She cried as he
examined the garnet orb. No one had ever taken it from her
before...at least, not in her current memory.
"Or you. Whatever you had in mind, forget it. I'm
getting out of here. Even if I have to destroy
this thing to do it."
Why were things so confused? She'd already violated the
Rules by crossing Time herself to rescue him,
and now he refused to be reborn properly. Had she
already lost control of time by doing that? Was time
already irrevocably distorted because of her mistake?
"Endymion, don't be selfish." She said in desperation.
Even as she pleaded, she wondered if what she asked
were even possible. How can a person be reborn exactly
as they were? She only knew that the Queen Selenity
had made that possible, and had summoned her (or more
accurately, had appeared in the Gates of Time) to
guide the Children of the Moon to the new future.
But did Pluto have the power to rework that spell?
"Selfish?" The words made him pause. "What do you mean?"
"Someone is waiting for you. Someone who loves you--and
who you love." Pluto's mind filled with the face of
the Neo-Queen. How could anyone turn away such love,
she wondered to herself.
"From my past life again, right? Forget it. I'll find
love for myself, in this lifetime." He scowled at her.
"Endy, she's your soul-bond...you can't find
love without her." Was it possible for him to
refuse? She had already seen a world where he did not.
She couldn't remember much of it, but how could
she have a memory of a place that did not exist?
How could it be possible otherwise?
"How do you know? Why should I believe
you? Are you the "girl" you're talking about?" He
shot back.
She lowered her eyes. "No. It is not me. I can't tell
you why I know these things." She couldn't tell herself,
but then she'd never questioned her way of life. That
was not her place. In fact, she avoided most questions
since she could so rarely give herself answers. In
the Time-Stream, all she knew was each moment, but now
as the clouds over her memory lifted she wondered
what else she could know?
Before she had lived in a state of
permanent amnesia that selectively lifted as the
events around her shifted. That cleared as people approached her or
things occurred that she needed to handle. She could
remember being able to recall things, and then forgetting
them. But this time, she had a memory. This time the cloak of
forgetfulness would not let her dodge tough
questions. Until she found answers, the questions would
haunt her.
"Then why do you believe them?" The harshness disappeared
from his voice which suddenly became smoother. He could
see the confusion in the way she stood, half turned away
from him, eyes on the ground.
She looked up then , eyebrows drawn together. "Why not?"
She challenged him back. The pressure surrounding her
head expanded into a full-fledged migraine.
"If you can't explain any of this to me, why do you believe
it? How can you expect me to believe?"
"Because I know there are things beyond explanation,
Endymion." She said the words, but without conviction,
as if the answer were one she were required to give.
"My mother used to say tha--" He broke off
suddenly noticing the door appearing in the mist. It's
silvery grey surface reflected an eerie blue glow around
its edges. Two heavy pillars formed its border, while tiny
etchings formed its decorations. A small keyhole yawned
on one side of the double-panelled door.
He stepped closer,examining the heavy and ornate surface
with one hand. "What is this?"
"The Door of Time." She said warily.
"I am its Guardian. I am to destroy those who seek
to violate the taboo and travel through it to upset the
flow of time."
"Then why are you showing me this thing?" He turned and studied
her face which continued to gaze wearily back at him framed
in the door.
"I am not. You have the staff. You brought it here." She
paused, and then put a hand towards him. "Please return
my staff to me. We are in grave danger if you do not."
"We are? So you're powerless now, huh? I bet ol' Scrooge would
have loved that trick with the Ghost of Christmas past."
She wrinkled her brow not getting the reference. "
If you know what you used to know,
your mind will change. Please, I feel things changing,
the winds of time are becoming unstable." She wished
she could explain to him and herself what was happening,
but again all she had was this instinctual feeling she
couldn't define.
Endy noticed that the slight hairs along his arms
were prickling up, and he could feel a wind ruffle through
him. Strands of her hair whipped towards him, obscuring
his view of her.
He hesitated. "I don't think so. Maybe this is a trick.
I can still smash this thing of yours, so don't get in my way.
How do I open the door?"
The ground trembled a bit. He steadied himself, keeping
a firm grip. She remained silent, shaking her head.
He placed the staff above his knee, in a position
to smash it.
Pluto had a feeling that things were getting more out
of control. "It opens with a touch from the
staff." She said at last, fearful lest he break
the staff. To herself, she wondered why it mattered
so much to her. She knew it allowed her to control
the door--but beyond that, why should she care?
The memory easily eluded her searching mind, skipping
away from her thoughts.
He started to lean the staff in to the door, but
even before contact globes of light spun from the staff
to the keyhole. The rainbow of colors trickled into the
space, with glowed and then released the heavy panels backwards.
At first he saw nothing but a blue space, but then he
could see the other side the same
sweep of empty road. He started to
step through, when two figures appeared.
The first was hooded with a dark cloud, its slightly stooped
form blocked Endy's way.
"Finally...the door of time is weakened to my dark
power! I will destroy the Crystal City in the past before
the Neo-Queen's power can stop it!" The figure hissed, its inhumanly
black-green-blue skin glowing on its claw like hand.
"The dark crystal will destroy everything before it
starts!" It continued. The other figure seemed entirely
unaware of the presence of the first, but said something
along the same lines "Finally, I am free of the prison
of the Time Corridor! This time, I will not let
anything stop me from my goal!" Eerie laughter punctuated
the announcement.
"Quick--the staff!" Pluto yelled.
"Is this some trick?" He asked, backing a bit. Everything
in the last twenty minutes of his life had surpassed strange.
He wasn't sure what was going on, and therefore, he didn't
know what to expect. Yet her fear seemed genuine. Somehow,
he felt instinctively that he could trust her.
"No! I' m the guardian of this gate--HALT." She
addressed the Monsters. She posed, ready to strike with
her hands but a blast of dark energy repelled her into the mist.
"Pathetic Guardian...it is too late to stop me!" The hooded figure
laughed. It began to place a hand
through the door. "Eternity belongs to the Death
Phantom..." It laughed as
it held up a dark globe to summon dark
energy to corrupt the gate. At the same time, the other
figure began to emit a grey miasma that also covered
the surface of the door--the two energies struggled
against each other. "All change will stop--I
will stop time itself!"
"What is this resistance?" The two screamed.
"Endymion--please!" Pluto pleaded "Before its
too late!"
"What do I do?" He asked.
She appeared beside him, using his confusion to wrest
the staff away-- "Dead Scream" She shouted as a globe
of purple energy formed and slashed into the figures before
them--shattering their links with the door.
"Dark Dome Close!" She shouted as the doors swung shut.
"It is too late!" She whispered, as her head hung low
against the doors. "They have violated the doors of
Time..."
"What does that mean? What were those things?" Endy
asked, still slightly in shock. He leaned against
the door opposite from her.
She shook her head, not answering him. "What have I done?"
To his amazement, the doors swung open,
and they fell through a void of space.
Despite the instant sensation of falling,
Endy found himself standing back on
the coast of California.
The floating door created an eerie addition to the
normal and beautiful sight of the coastline. Yet
everything else looked normal, the world breathing with the
sea waves crashing below.
"I've ruined everything. I failed my duty." Pluto whispered more
to herself than him. She didn't seem awed by their sudden change
in location or even aware of it. She finally had
a new memory, but ironically, it was one she wanted to
forget.
She glanced at the staff lying on the rocks.
She sunk til her head leaned against it. "My King, though you refused
to do as I've asked before, grant me this request.
End my life." A strange light filtered over her, and suddenly,
her features changed revealing a young woman in a long dark
dress. He knew it was the same person, despite the difference
he couldn't quite describe.
"Hey, wait..." he lifted up her shoulders, so their eyes met.
"What are you talking about? King? Duty?
You look younger than I am."
"I did not age in the Corridors of Time...I have no
idea how old I am. But I am no longer worthy of
my post! I have failed."
"Hey, I still don't know what's going on, but maybe
you should consider you're expecting too much of yourself?"
"You do not understand! And I cannot explain. I could
never explain what I must do--so how I can convince
you I have failed?" The lack of emotion with which she uttered
these words made the self-condemnation all the more powerful.
If she had screamed, or cried, or somehow illustrated her
frustration, Endy would not have been as touched. Even
as she felt her order falling around her, she struggled alone.
He put a finger to her lips, stalling further
self-recriminations. "Hey, I don't understand
what you're talking about but as far as I can tell
you're fine and so am I, and its a beautiful night."
"Beautiful? That thing may destroy time itself. And
that was only one enemy! The Plan of Destiny
has been corrupted already, and the future may already be
destroyed."
"Then lets enjoy today." He said. His
brain rapidly sought a way to make sense of everything
he'd just witnessed. The girl, he decided, was crazy.
But then, was he sane? Wasn't he sharing her elaborate delusion
to some extent?
The ground here seemed real. The cold
air smelled appropriately salty. He could hear
the soft sound of his companion's breathing. "Look,
if what you're saying is true, we wouldn't be here, would we?
How could we exist if time didn't?"
"I...I don't know. I think I usually get premonitions,
but they have stopped. I feel as if something has
been lost...a part of me has been cut away." Her eyes vacantly
stared into the sky, latching onto the moon. "I do
not know what is going to happen!"
"Hey, most of us live life without knowing what's coming
up. You adjust as you go along." He tipped her
chin to bring her face to his. "You just hope for a bright
future, and enjoy the present."
"Destiny already controls what is to be." She argued.
Where had that phrase come from? Who had taught her that?
Yet though she didn't know why she believed that, she
knew she did.
"Again, how do you know that?" He asked, slightly amused with her
seriousness.
"I just know." She replied mysteriously. At least, she
used to feel as if she knew. Now, she could not say.
He smiled. "Stubborn, aren't you?
Just tell me, what would be the point of living if everything
followed a predetermined path?"
"I didn't say it does. Your understanding of time is
too limited. You think it is separate, flowing in one
direction and I know that is not true. But if either
end interferes with the other everything unravels.
When I say Destiny controls the path, I mean the flow of time
runs smoothly." Against the pain in her head she struggled
to pull the pieces of her world together.
He laughed, as his eyes briefly shifted away to the
Moon before returning to her.
"You say that so seriously. But it just sounds so crazy.
I'm sorry, but that doesn't make any sense."
She turned away and faced the cliffs without
answering. After a minute she replied
slowly "There is a world I must protect. A world
that will come in the future, and bring happiness this
earth has not yet known." She smiled, as memories skipped
past of tall crystalline buildings.
"And what do I have to do with that?" He asked, a little
confused by her shift in subject.
"You're one of the rulers of this world." She said, as
she turned back to face him. The image of King Endymion
flashed before her eyes, overlaying the features of the
man in front of her.
"Or would have been. I don't know what will happen now."
"What do you mean "happen now'? Do you mean because of those
things back there? Or because I won't cooperate with this
"Vision" of yours?"
"I don't know. Those things were more evil than
I'd thought possible." she paused. "But perhaps
the mistake was mine. I know I should not have crossed
time...Perhaps it was inevitable that things should
find the door..."
"So why did you "cross" time? And what do you mean by that?"
"You were sent from the past to be reborn in the future--
but I was to guide you to a time. I failed, and came to retrieve
you. Please, perhaps if you come with me now,
and agree to be reborn, all will be restored."
"That again? I thought...forget it. I'm trying to understand
the world you believe in. I'm trying to understand how this
"future" could already have happened even though I'm standing
right here now...Perhaps we had better start again."
"I'm only beginning to understand
myself. I've never thought about my duty before." She took in a deep
breath, to clear her head. "There are people unhappy
with their lot in that future world I spoke of. These
people seek to change the past, rather than themselves.
And I was charged with stopping them. By who, when or
how I cannot tell you. Then somehow, I found
myself responsible for helping to create that world by
guiding its rulers to be reborn. That led me to you. And
in taking that duty on, I've somehow failed to accomplish
my first goal."
He tried to trace her logic, and decided his brain could
take no more. He decided to change the subject "The Moon is
very bright tonight. She will watch over us. And I
will watch over you. So don't worry."
He moved closer to her.
"What you see here, this is my reality, not
some strange future. I don't know what happened
tonight. But I do know that I need to clear my head
to understand it. I need some sleep, and in the morning
I can sort out what is illusion and what is real. "
He stepped back from her. "I think you need to do the
same."
Lost in her own thoughts, she merely nodded. He had the
distinct sense she simply was too tired or upset to protest,
rather than that she agreed with him. She followed
along beside him, occasionally checking to make sure the
door followed her still. Endy wondered what people would
say, if they saw the two of them walking: This girl in
her strange long black dress, the hovering door, and him.
END CHAPTER ONE