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Face the world's fiercest dinosaurs and make it back to the future in one piece! You're a physics student with a dream: travel back in time and document the world of dinosaurs. Can you survive the terrors of the Tyrannosaurus rex? When you successfully convert your Land Rover into a working time machine, you set your sights on traveling to the age of the Tyrannosaurus rex, triceratops, and pterosaur where you'll study dinosaurs and film a thrilling documentary. The only problem is the competition: your rival and enemy Darien Vance has claimed your work for his own, accused you of plagiarism, and had you kicked out of graduate school. When you travel back in time, you'll have to prove you got there first, redeem your good name, and make it home safely.

HUGUEL_0568 · Urban
Not enough ratings
126 Chs

23

If you can pull this off, there's no disputing your accomplishment. You're about to become the Amelia Earhart of your generation (only with a better ending).

Switching to time-travel mode goes without a hitch. The Way Way Wayback Machine emits a familiar, reassuring hum. The flux navigator springs to life. There's almost nothing more welcoming than the glowing green lights winking on. You key in the command sequence to enable the time window to open.

AAOOOGGHAAA! AAOOOGGHAAA! AAOOOGGHAAA! blasts out across the prehistoric landscape. It's your one-minute warning. The orange shimmer cascades around the Land Rover. The time window stands open. Your heart thumps in time with those glorious pulses. You press the dual launch buttons.

The Cretaceous world disappears. One second, the lake and the sequoia forest lie outside your dust-streaked windshield, and the next second your time machine is surrounded by inky darkness. When your eyes adjust, you perceive purple ripples, familiar from the voyage out, only there seem to be more of them now, and they bombard you from all sides. Is this normal?

The standard readings on your flux navigator do nothing to calm your nerves. Nor does its hum. There's no sensation of motion, though you experience an unsettled feeling in the pit of your stomach. You place your hands on the steering wheel out of habit. It moves freely, as though disconnected from anything meaningful. Although that's what you expected and what you experienced on the backward journey, nonetheless it feels wrong. The chronometer above the rearview mirror counts up the return trip. Home in fifteen minutes.

Nobody says a word or even meets one another's eye. What, after all, is there to say? The trip feels like an eternity. On the way, how do you spend your time?