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  1. The Man Who Stepped Into Yesterday - Trey A.
  2.  
  3. INTRODUCTION
  4. Wilson
  5. Wilson
  6. Wilson
  7. Wilson
  8. Wilson
  9. Once upon a time there was a mountain that rose out of a vast green forest. And in the forest there were birds and lakes and rocks and trees and rivers. The forest was also inhabited by a small group of people called the lizards. The lizards were a simple people and they had lived in the forest undisturbed for thousands of years in utter peace and tranquility Once a year when spring came, and the first blossoms began to show, the lizards would gather at the base of the mountain, to give thanks for all that they had. They thanked the birds and they thanked the lakes and they thanked the rocks and the trees and the rivers; but most importantly, they thanked Icculus. Icculus lived at the top of the mountain, or at least everyone thought so, for no one had actually ever seen him. But they knew he existed, because they had the Helping Friendly Book. Icculus had given the Helping Friendly Book to the Lizards thousands of years earlier as a gift. It contained all of the knowledge inherent in the universe, and had enabled the Lizards to exist in harmony with nature for years. And so they lived; until one day a traveler arrived in Gamehendge. His name was Wilson and he quickly became intrigued by the Lizards way of life. He asked if he could stay on and live in the forest; and the Lizards, who had never seen an outsider, were happy to oblige. Wilson lived with the Lizards for a few years, studying the ways of the Helping Friendly Book, and all was well. Until one morning when they awoke and the book was gone. Wilson explained that he had hidden the book, knowing that the Lizards had become dependent on it for survival. He declared himself king and enslaved the innocent people of Gamehendge. He cut down the trees and built a city, which he called Prussia. And in the center of the city he built a castle, and locked in the highest tower of the castle lay the Helping Friendly Book out of the reach of the Lizards forever. But our story begins at a different time, not in Gamehendge, but on a suburban street in Long Island, and our hero is no king sitting in a castle, he is a retired colonel shaving in his bathroom.
  10. Colonel Forbin looked square in the mirror and dragged the blade across his cold creamed skin. He saw the tired little folds of flesh that lay in a heap beneath his eyes. Fifty-two years of obedient self-restraint, of hiding his tension behind a serene veil of composure. For fifty-two years he had piled it all on the back burner, and for fifty-two years it had boiled, frothing over in a turbulent storm inside of him. It had escaped through his eyes, reacting with the cigarette smoke and the fluorescent lights and slowly accumulating into a sagging mass. He ran his dripping palm across the stubble on the nape of his neck and thought again about the door. He had discovered the door some months back on one of his ritualistic morning walks with his dog McGrupp. It had started out as a typical stroll with McGrupp bounding joyously ahead of the preoccupied colonel. As they reached the apex of the hill, he saw it and he knew it had always been there, and felt foolish for overlooking the door for so long. At first, he tried to ignore it, but he soon found that it was impossible, and slowly his newly acquired knowledge transformed his dreary life into a prison from which there was only one escape. And on this morning, Colonel Forbin stepped through the door.
  11.  
  12. LIZARDS
  13. Passing through the corridor I came upon an aging knight
  14. Who leaned against the wall in gnarly armor
  15. He was on his way to see the king
  16. Wilson
  17. Wilson
  18. Wilson
  19. He led me through the streets of Prussia talking
  20. As he tried to crush a bug that scurried underneath his boot heel
  21. He said there was a place where we should go
  22. So he lead me through the forest to the edge of a lagoon by which
  23. We wandered 'til we reached a bubbly spring
  24. The knight grew very quiet as we stood there
  25. Then he lifted up his visor and he turned to me and he began to sing
  26. chorus:
  27. He said I come from the land of darkness
  28. I said I come from the land of doom
  29. He said I come from the land of Gamehendge
  30. From the land of the big baboon
  31. But I'm never never going back there
  32. And I couldn't if I tried
  33. 'Cause I come from the land of Lizards
  34. And the Lizards they have died
  35. And the Lizards they have died
  36. And the Lizards they have died
  37. And the Lizards they have died
  38. He told me that the Lizards were a race of people practically extinct
  39. From doing things smart people don't do
  40. He said that he was once a Lizard too
  41. His name was Rutherford the Brave and he was on a quest to save
  42. His people from the fate that lay before them.
  43. Their clumsy end was perilously near
  44. The Lizards would be saved, he said, if they could be enlightened
  45. By the writings of the Helping Friendly Book
  46. In all of Prussia only one existed
  47. And Wilson had declared that any person who possessed it was a crook
  48. [chorus]
  49. The Helping Friendly Book, it seemed, possessed the ancient secrets
  50. Of eternal joy and never-ending splendor
  51. The trick was to surrender to the flow
  52. We walked along beneath the moon
  53. He lead us through the bush 'till soon
  54. We saw before our eyes a raging river
  55. He said that we could swim it if we tried
  56. And saying this the knight dove in forgetting that his suit of arms
  57. Would surely weigh him down and so he sunk
  58. And as his body disappeared before me
  59. I bowed my head in silence and remembered all thoughts that he had thunk
  60. [chorus]
  61. But Rutherford and Forbin weren't alone. And suddenly an unexpected movement caught his eye. On the far side of the river he saw a shaggy creature standing in the weeds who stared across at Forbin with an unrelenting gaze. A gigantic mass of muscles and claws. The hideous beast reared back and hurled himself in the water and swam toward the region where Rutherford lay. And in a flash, the beast was gone, underneath the surface to the frosty depths below while Forbin, bewildered, waited alone. The seconds dragged by in what seemed like hours till finally the colonel felt it all had been a dream. Defeated, he bowed his head then turned to go. Suddenly with a roar, the creature emerged before him and held the brave knight's body to the sky. And the creature laid the knight upon the shore. And the colonel fell beside his friend in prayer that he'd survive. And Rutherford, brave Rutherford was alive.
  62. Forbin and the unit monster were crouched over the soggy knight carefully removing his bulky helmet when the colonel heard a sound behind him. He turned around and came face to face with an enormous shaggy horse-like creature covered from head to tail with alternating blotches of brown and white. It was a two-toned multi-beast, and atop the multi-beast sat the most beautiful woman the colonel had ever seen. After fifty-two years of undaunted bachelorhood, the colonel felt a feeling rush over him as he had never felt before.
  63.  
  64. TELA
  65. The sky is burning in this lonely man
  66. And I kneel by the river and I feel the sand and the wind
  67. The wind from beyond the mountain
  68. The wind from beyond the mountain
  69. And she comes to me in this lonely land
  70. And looks down from the multi-beast on which she rides like the wind
  71. The wind from beyond the mountain
  72. The wind from beyond the mountain
  73. Tela was born in a vulgar crooked hut
  74. In the shadow of Wilson's castle
  75. Venomous scorn from a life of bitter toil
  76. In the shadow of Wilson's castle
  77. Glory esteem fueled by her hatred it grew
  78. Swelling to the point where it would
  79. Burst at the seems there was nothing she could do
  80. Tela Tela jewel of Wilson's foul domain
  81. Tela Tela jewel of Wilson's foul domain
  82. A lullaby the breezes whisper
  83. And I look into her eyes and my frozen heart begins to thaw
  84. And burns, 'til layer after layer melts away into a pool
  85. A sky blue mirror of her eyes
  86. And my soul is made of marble but in her gaze I crumble into dust
  87. And drift away on the wind
  88. The wind from beyond the mountain
  89. The wind from beyond the mountain
  90. Tela grew strong from her struggle to endure
  91. In the shadow of Wilson's castle
  92. Time touched her wounds and shelter proved the cure
  93. In the shadow of Wilson's castle
  94. Each passing day seemed to feed the brazen serpent locked inside
  95. And liberate the spirit she'd concealed for so long
  96. There was no place left to hide
  97. Tela Tela jewel of Wilson's foul domain
  98. Tela Tela jewel of Wilson's foul domain
  99. A lullaby the breezes whisper
  100. Tela reached out her hand and helped Forbin on to the back of the multi- beast, and together they rode off into the forest.
  101. As they rode, Tela explained to him about Wilson and the Helping Friendly Book. She told the colonel that she was part of a revolution to overthrow the evil king. The leader of the revolution was a Lizard named Errand Wolfe who was out to avenge the death of his son Roger. Roger, she said, had been executed by Wilson at the age of fourteen on suspicion of treason. He had been abducted from his home and hung in the public square.
  102. The two rode on in silence, deeper and deeper into the heart of the forest until they came to the outskirts of a small community. Tela explained to Forbin that they had reached the base of the revolutionaries. The colonel looked up and there in the center of the clearing stood Errand Wolfe. He was a small man but his presence was overpowering. He seemed to emit a kind of violent energy that sent chills down the colonel's spine. And as the multi-beast moved towards him, he raised his fist in anger, and his voice filled the forest.
  103.  
  104. WILSON
  105. Oh out near Stonehenge, I lived alone
  106. Oh out near Gamehendge, I chafed a bone
  107. Wilson, King of Prussia, I lay this hate on you
  108. Wilson, Duke of Lizards
  109. I beg it all trune for you
  110. Talk my duke a mountain, Helping Friendly Book
  111. Inasfar as fiefdom, I think you bad crook
  112. Wilson, King of Prussia, I lay this hate on you
  113. Wilson, Duke of Lizards
  114. I beg it all trune for you
  115. I talked to my son Roger, Rutherford the same
  116. [or "I talked to Mike Christian, Rog and Pete the same"]
  117. When we had that meeting, over down near Game(henge)
  118. Wilson, King of Prussia, I lay this hate on you
  119. Wilson, Duke of Lizards
  120. I beg it all trune for you
  121. You got me back thinkin' that you're the worst one
  122. I must inquire, Wilson
  123. Can you still have fun?
  124. Wilson
  125. Can you still have fun?
  126. Wilson
  127. Can you still have fun?
  128. Wilson
  129. Meanwhile, in the main square in Prussia, the state of the revolution was taking another turn for the worst. A crowd of townspeople had gathered to witness the hanging of Wilson's accountant, Mr. Palmer. It seemed that Palmer had been a revolutionary himself and had been extorting Wilson's money to fund the revolution. Palmer stood on the scaffold with Wilson and the AC/DC Bag, an electrified robot-hangman with a black bag over his head. Wilson seemed pleased as he began to speak.
  130.  
  131. AC/DC BAG
  132. Mr. Palmer is concerned with the thousand dollar question
  133. Just like Roger he's a crazy little kid
  134. I've got the time if you've got the inclination
  135. So cheer up Palmer, you'll soon be dead
  136. The noose is hanging, at least you won't die wondering
  137. Sit up and take notice Tell it like it is
  138. If I were near you I wouldn't be far from you
  139. I've got a feeling you know what you did
  140. chorus:
  141. AC/DC Bag
  142. AC/DC Bag
  143. AC/DC Bag
  144. DC Bag
  145. (2x)
  146. Time to put your money where your mouth is
  147. Put 'em in a field and let 'em fight it out
  148. I'm running so fast my feet don't touch the ground
  149. I'm a stranger here I'm going down
  150. Let's get down to the nitty gritty
  151. Let's get this show on the road
  152. I'll show you mine if you show me yours
  153. I'm breathing hard - open the door
  154. [chorus]
  155. Brain dead, and made of money
  156. No future at all
  157. Pull down the blinds and run for cover
  158. No future at all
  159. Who would've thought it, that's where I am
  160. No future at all
  161. Don't sweat it, that's where I am
  162. Whoa, carry me down, down, down, down
  163. By that night, news of Palmer's death had traveled back to the camp. Spirits were low and Colonel Forbin felt devastated. Even though he had only been in Gamehendge for one day, he had already developed a deep hatred for Wilson. He wanted desperately to help the revolutionaries, but without Palmer, it seemed hopeless. He wandered slowly through the camp and passed Errand Wolfe, sitting by the fire with Rutherford, who had returned that afternoon. He walked on and soon found himself outside of Tela's hut. Forbin knocked and walked in. Tela sat behind a makeshift desk in the center of a room that was littered with small cages containing spotted stripers, a tiny three-legged breed of animal. The unit monster sat in the corner. The colonel took a step toward Tela and spoke. "I needed to come here tonight" he said, "to tell you that I've fallen in love with you." He looked to her eyes for approval but her face remained frozen in an expressionless stare. An awkward blanket of silence fell over the room and hung for a long moment before being shattered by the sound of the door swinging violently open. It was Rutherford the Brave. The ironclad knight rushed across the room and gripped the throats of Tela and the unit monster in each of his mighty hands. They struggled to break free but even the unit monster was no match for Rutherford's power and soon it was over. The bodies fell to the floor in a lifeless heap. Colonel Forbin stepped forward from where he stood in the corner unable to contain his confusion and rage and screamed "WHY?" His question was answered by Errand Wolfe who had quietly slipped through the doorway during the confusion. "She was a spy," he said, and explained to Forbin that she had been sending information to Wilson using the spotted stripers as carriers. Roger's death had aroused his suspicion, and Palmer's had confirmed it. The colonel stood in silence in a world that had turned up-side-down so many times that he no longer knew which way was up. It had all seemed so simple when he first arrived. Good versus evil, and of course he had sided with good as he had done all his life. And now, he stood and stared into the eyes of Errand Wolfe and he saw evil. The entire picture began to seem like an enormous puzzle with one piece missing, and the colonel knew what that piece was. "Within twenty-four hours," he said to Errand Wolfe, "You will have the Helping Friendly Book." And even as the words were leaving his lips, he found himself running out the door and into the forest, not towards Prussia, but toward the great mountain looming in the distance.
  164.  
  165. COLONEL FORBIN'S ASCENT
  166. Colonel Forbin stared up at the mountain
  167. And wiped away the beads of sweat
  168. That glistened on his brow
  169. His tired feet were buried in the quagmire
  170. And his bloodshot eyes saw all that lay between him
  171. And fulfillment of his vow
  172. And he felt his fingers wrap around a knotted root
  173. And pulled his body upwards
  174. To a sea green mossy boulder
  175. And he dragged his weary carcass [or "shit-ass"] up the mountain
  176. And he climbed so slowly
  177. He climbed so slowly
  178. Ahead
  179. Ahead
  180. Suddenly he heard the crack of thunder
  181. And the rocks began to crumble overhead
  182. And tumble down the mountain to the
  183. Dismal swamp that lay beneath the jagged cliffs
  184. through which his path had led
  185. And the earth began to quake beneath his feet
  186. And the mighty mountain changed before his eyes
  187. And he stood amidst a sea of dust and rocks and stones
  188. Cascading down the mountain
  189. And a thousand birds were headed for the sky. Oh...
  190. The sacred creed will be yours
  191. And if you wait until tomorrow
  192. The sacred creed will be yours
  193. To devour
  194. Yours
  195. To seize
  196. And to obey
  197. Obey
  198. When the dust had cleared, the colonel lifted up his head
  199. And was driven to his knees by a blazing beam of light
  200. And he saw the silhouette that stood before him
  201. And he bowed in reverence
  202. Trembling in the shadow of the mighty legend's form
  203. Icculus the prophet stood before his eyes
  204. Looking down on Colonel Forbin
  205. Where he shuddered in the puddles and the muck
  206. And he quietly addressed him
  207. And he spoke so slowly
  208. He spoke so slowly
  209. Ahead
  210. He said
  211. Colonel Forbin I know why you've come here
  212. And I'll help you with your quest to gain the knowledge that you lack
  213. I call upon my faithful friend the mockingbird
  214. To fly and seize the helping book and bring it to your shack
  215. And a tree of knowledge in your soul will grow
  216. And the Helping Friendly Book will plant the seed
  217. But I warn you that all knowledge seeming innocent and pure
  218. Becomes a deadly weapon in the hands of avarice
  219. And greed
  220. The sacred greed will be yours
  221. And if you wait until tomorrow
  222. The sacred creed will be yours
  223. To devour
  224. Yours
  225. To seize
  226. And to obey
  227. And to obey
  228. And the famous mockingbird swooped down out of the sky and landed on Icculus's shoulder, and Icculus whispered into the bird's ear, and it flew off toward Wilson's castle in the valley below.
  229.  
  230. FAMOUS MOCKINGBIRD
  231. Fly famous mockingbird
  232. Fly...
  233. Fly famous mockingbird
  234. Fly...
  235. Fly famous mockingbird
  236. Fly...
  237. Fly famous mockingbird
  238. Fly...
  239. Fly...
  240. Fly...
  241. Fly famous mockingbird
  242. Fly...
  243. The next morning at the camp Errand Wolfe and Rutherford stood frozen in awe as the famous mockingbird flew out of the sky and laid the Helping Friendly Book at their feet. The quest for the book had dragged on for so many years that it's sudden appearance left the men staring in disbelief, unsure of what their next move should be. The shock wore off quickly though, and Errand Wolfe shot into high gear. He snatched up the book with one hand and the famous mockingbird with the other, and began to inform Rutherford of his plan. He would first kill Wilson, and then put the Helping Friendly Book to work for him.
  244. With Rutherford's aid he fastened the famous mockingbird to a pole, with glue and rubber bands, to insure the secrecy of his mission, and then set out to find the only man in Gamehendge who could handle the job of eliminating a King.
  245.  
  246. SLOTH
  247. They call me the sloth
  248. Way down in the ghetto
  249. Italian Spaghetti
  250. Singing falsetto
  251. Sleeping all day
  252. Rip Van Winklin'
  253. Spend my nights in bars
  254. Glasses tinklin'
  255. I'm so bad
  256. He's so nasty
  257. Ain't got no friends
  258. Real outcasty
  259. Stay out of my way
  260. Or you'll end up a cripple
  261. I'll take this piece of paper
  262. And slice your nipple
  263. They call me the sloth
  264. Way down in the ghetto
  265. Italian Spaghetti
  266. Singing falsetto
  267. Sleeping all day
  268. Rip Van Winklin'
  269. Spend my nights in bars
  270. Glasses tinklin'
  271. Colonel Forbin stared at the fourteen bars that stood at the end of the cell. He ran his hand across the cold, damp dungeon wall and thought again about the door. He had traveled through the door out of necessity. Once he knew it existed, he simply couldn't leave it alone. Just like Wilson. Just like Tela. Just like Errand Wolfe. And he sat in the dungeon, and he realized that he was back again through the door. And through the tiny window in the corner of his cell, he heard the distant strains.
  272. Errand
  273. Errand
  274. Errand
  275. Errand
  276. And from atop the mountain Icculus looked down on all that went on below him. And he smiled.
  277.  
  278. POSSUM
  279. I come from atop the mountain baby
  280. Where the people come to pray
  281. I come from atop the mountain baby
  282. Where the people come to pray
  283. There ain't no truth in action
  284. 'Less you believe it anyway
  285. I was riding down the road one day and
  286. Someone hit a possum
  287. I was riding down the road one day and
  288. Someone hit a possum
  289. The road was his end
  290. His end was the road
  291. So they say
  292. Whoa possum...
  293. possum, possum...
  294. POSSUM
  295. Whoa possum...
  296. possum, possum...
  297. POSSUM
  298. Whoa possum, possum
  299. Your end is the road
  300. I was riding down the road one day and
  301. Someone hit a possum
  302. I was riding down the road one day and
  303. Someone hit a possum
  304. The road was his end
  305. His end was the road
  306. So they say
  307. Whoa possum...
  308. possum, possum...
  309. POSSUM
  310. Whoa possum...
  311. possum, possum...
  312. POSSUM
  313. Whoa possum,
  314. Your end is the road
  315. Whoa possum, possum
  316. Your end is the road
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