It was the question I had been asking myself ever since I appeared in this timeline on the Ohio serpent mound. Why the heck were they trying to summon Victor Lazlo?
"A few reasons, actually." Dr. Boggs began to explain to me, "a lot of what we know about the paranormal today is due to him. He was a pioneer who treated paranormal research like a scientific discipline. Also, he had a lot of followers. It has sort of made him a public face in paranormal research. As such he could serve as a rallying point, a figure head that could unite us against the invaders. Especially since he was so outspoken about warning us against something just like this happening."
It's true. Victor Lazlo did indeed warn us many times about the dangers of the supernatural, an invasion of our world he could feel happening and the need to rise up to oppose these things.
Victor Lazlo wrote:I listen to myself and wonder. What will become of me and those handful of others who have unearthed some of the lost secrets, and do oppose these otherworldly invaders? Are we a threat or an occasional nuisance? Do we make a difference? And if we do make a difference, if our numbers grow and our voices begin to reach the masses, what then? Will any one of these nightspawned obscenities take notice and try to slay us? That is a question which has preyed on my mind a lot, lately. Perhaps it is just old age creeping up on me. Slowing me down. Still, I'd feel more secure if there were more of us. Otherwise, we'd be so easy to hunt down and terminate. Hell, would anybody even notice our disappearance?
-An excerpt from Victor Lazlo's diary, written three months prior to his disappearance.
"Also," Maddie added, "there is the matter of his disappearance at the Ohio Serpent mound. I'm something of an expert when it comes to geomancy as well as dimensional magic and portals. I believe that the mound in Ohio spikes during certain astronomical events. At all other times, it is dormant."
Dr. Boggs was nursing a shot of whiskey on ice, "this is where she gets all Doctor Who about it."
Maddie went on as though he hadn't spoken, "during these times, most places of power form links to other places. Either other dimensions or perhaps other places here on earth." She held up a finger and paused briefly for dramatic effect, "but on the Ohio mound, it's different. It opens a portal to other times. Or at least allows portals to be opened to other times."
Almost reflexively I responded, "Time travel is impossible."
"And yet here you are." Dr. Boggs held up his glass as though in toast. Then he narrowed his eyes at me, "but then were was it you were?"
"And when?" Maddie added.
"I live in Richmond, Virginia. Or at least I will. Or would have. When I arrived at the serpent mound, it was the winter solstice, in twenty-ten."
"So you're from the future?" Doctor Boggs was looking interested, "so you can tell us who wins, right?"
Sadly, I shook my head, "in my time line, this invasion never took place."
"Why were you at the mound?" Maddie's eyes seemed to flash, "And why at that time?"
It didn't seem wise to play all my cards quite yet but at the same time there was much to be gained by careful telling of the truth. "I became aware of a powerful supernatural entity and had reason to believe that it was active in the area. When I arrived at the mound, it became apparent that it had already gone through a portal to someplace..." I paused, "or somewhen else. An attempt was made to send me after it."
The language coming from Maddie suggested that she wasn't always very lady like.
"So what the hell happened?" Doctor Boggs demanded.
Maddie collapsed into a chair and crossed her arms in front of her chest, "it looks like the portal IT made leaving his time, was reopened. So he started on his trip back in time after it. Except that it had already started changing things to this timeline. So our spell basically pulled him out of the time stream on his way back instead of bringing Victor Lazlo forward."
This Dr. Boggs then demonstrated the same intelligence and intuition I have come to respect from our Dr. Boggs. "So you think this thing was travelling back into the past," he waved his hand in a circle to include all of us in the room, "all of our pasts to change things?"
Maddie nodded mutely.
"So if we were to go back in time after IT, we could perhaps stop all of this from ever happening?" There was definitely some optimism in his voice, but it seemed foreign to his demeanour.
Maddie again nodded, but remained mute and still seemed angry.
"When will be the next time the Ohio serpent mound connects to the past?" I asked, suspecting and dreading the answer.
"During the Winter Solstice, twenty-ten."