A Tyrannosaurus on My Doorstep, Chapter 61

By me, with art by Sam Messerly.

Click here to read from the beginning.

Let’s make this just a little more complicated. What if I leave the frozen kingdom and go to 2018, and another dinosaur, let’s say Thinkwilder, goes to 218 BC. Then time will travel the same speed for him in that time as it does in the frozen world, and the same time passes in my world of 2018. So if we both left the frozen kingdom at the same time, and we both lived in our respective “time zones” of 218 BC and AD 2018 for two weeks and then returned to the frozen world, we would return home at the same time, perhaps even bump into each other as we emerged through the portal. Thinkwilder’s theory—and this seems borne out by the data so far—is that if a dinosaur takes organic material out of the past at a specific time, and if simultaneously another dinosaur from the frozen world is living in the future and is synched up chronologically via frozen world time with the dinosaur stealing organic material in the past, then the organic material removed from the past disappears from the specific future that the future dinosaur is experiencing.

This is extremely difficult to explain, but basically Thinkwilder living in 218 BC in this scenario would be living at the same time as me living in 2018, at least in relation to time as experienced in the frozen kingdom. If Thinkwilder were to change the past in some large way, then that would have reverberating effects throughout history, but it becomes manifested specifically in 2018 because we are synched together via the frozen kingdom and our fates become intertwined through our mutual time slippage.

Let me put it one other way. We can imagine the frozen kingdom as a base world, okay? When someone leaves the frozen kingdom for your world, each time period that they go to is like a separate world—like Medieval Europe World and Wild West World and Crazy Future World. A dinosaur that visits any of these worlds would experience an hour, and that same hour would pass in the frozen world. So if someone visits Crazy Future World and spends an hour, and someone else visits Medieval Europe World and spends an hour at the same time, and then they both return to the frozen kingdom… then they will return to the same time in the frozen kingdom. However, Crazy Future World, Medieval Europe World, and Wild West World are all ultimately the same world, with the same set of matter, and so if something major is changed in any of those worlds, it affects the others according to the timeline of your earth, but those changes are funneled through the connections to the frozen kingdom somehow in such a way that the effects of the stolen matter are made manifest where and when other dinosaurs from the frozen world are living in your world.

What it boils down to is that the effects of changing your world hit the hardest at the points where your world and my world interact. Thus, if Thinkwilder takes a lot of organic material away to the frozen kingdom in 218 BC, that violent uprooting of organic material actually directly affects me and the people in 2018 because of our connection through the frozen kingdom. We don’t know why, but that is how the system works, and so the system creates victims who suffer greatly from the harvesting and mating programs of my people.

And no, I wasn’t in Final Pumpkin in 2015 when you lost your leg… but other dinosaurs were in your world at that time, such as that rebel you call Nessie over in Scotland. (Nessie isn’t a plesiosaur—he actually is a dinosaur, a runt camarasaurus with social anxiety.) Anyway, it just takes one of our kind living in your time to cause a lightning rod effect for the manifestations of what you call “the death virus.”

The “death virus” I am convinced is simply organic matter being stolen from your reality and pulled into the reality of the dinosaurs.

Read the next chapter.

A Tyrannosaurus on my Doorstep, Chapter 60

By me, with art by Sam Messerly.

Click here to read from the beginning.

Thinkwilder’s theory was that, when dinosaurs went to mate and bear young on your earth, they would be inadvertently harvesting organic material as well. Any food they ate—plants or animals—would become a part of their bodies, and when they left your world, that organic material which would have become the basis of parts of other animals and plants in the future then disappeared from your universe. Also, any children born to those dinosaurs would also carry their organic material over to the other side, to our frozen kingdom, and some dinosaurs have large litters—lots of young, which grow to be huge animals, and then all those tons of flesh and bone ripped from your reality into ours then they grow into adults and walk through the portal. If, in the future on your side, that stolen organic material happened to be part of someone’s heart or other vital organs, well… that person would die.

Of course I had a lot of questions. Perhaps the most important question was that none of this really makes any sense. If some organic material was harvested from the past, then since it was taken away from the past, it would never have the chance to become a part of creatures in the future. It should never have a chance to disappear from the bodies of animals or humans or dinosaurs because it should never have existed so as to become a part of those animals.

Yet time travel always presents numerous logical difficulties. It doesn’t really make sense that anyone should ever be able to travel through time. If, for example, a human being were to travel back thirty years with his time-traveling car, then there would be the same matter replicated twice in one time period—the exact same matter from his body already exists in the past, but just in another form, in the trees, in the food he has not eaten yet, in the world around him. It goes against logic that the same matter should be able to exist in two places at the same time.

Nevertheless, as proved by the mysterious portal, time travel exists and is possible. There seems to be some kind of underlying system in reality, though, that prevents paradoxes from occurring. For example, for whatever reason, though attempts have been made, a dinosaur has never been able to travel to a time period in which he already exists, thus exempting two copies of the same dinosaur. Something prevents such paradoxes from happening.

And there also seems to be another mechanism in the systems of reality that governs how matter can appear or disappear from a universe. If, for example, I travel to your world in 2018 one day and spend several days in 2018, then the same amount of time is experienced in the frozen kingdom simultaneously. I mean, if I return to the frozen kingdom from your side again after several days, then several days will have passed in the frozen world, too. It’s impossible so far as we know to go back in time in the frozen world, regardless of what time we jump into and out of when we travel to and from your world. There seems to be some kind of a synchronization that happens between your world’s time and ours when we travel hither and thither for our honeymoons.

These synchronization systems have some possibly deadly consequences.

Read the next chapter.