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The Librarians The Next Chapter S01E05

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00:00These do not appear to be serious scholars.
00:05Smart people don't have to wear robes anymore.
00:07Some of the sharpest kids in the city come here to study.
00:09I was only 15 when I took my first course at Oxford.
00:12I knew we'd get to you somehow.
00:14I just think your campaign to bring me up-to-date in modern science is a little bit silly.
00:18I was considered quite the dimber-damber in astronomy circles.
00:21As Galileo said, I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night.
00:26Yeah, well, we've learned a lot since your time.
00:28You may have shiny new facts at your disposal,
00:30but you will never know the thrill of living in an era of pure scientific inquiry,
00:34the days of Morrie and Dalton when gifted amateurs lit the way.
00:38But science isn't about nostalgia. It's about looking forward.
00:41There have been huge discoveries in the last 170 years.
00:45This is why this is a good opportunity for you.
00:47Ralston Kirch is a genius.
00:50Look over there.
00:52That is where she developed her hypothesis on interstellar dust and active galactic nuclei.
00:57Just sitting under a tree, watching the oil droplets in her teeth.
01:01And?
01:02And then, boom!
01:03Scientific inspiration.
01:05It's a famous story!
01:07And riveting, I'm sure.
01:11She was at Stanford when I was doing my first masters.
01:18Her work on quasars was a real inspiration to me.
01:21Quasars?
01:22Yeah, a supercluster of stars discovered in the 1950s.
01:25Dr. Kirch found a way to use them to predict celestial events, like black holes.
01:29It's all about predicting with you, isn't it?
01:41These are your seats, seven and eight, rule three.
01:47You're welcome.
01:48You did that, um, charmingly.
01:51All I did was show you your seats.
02:02I think she fancies me.
02:03Do you want to know another discovery in the last 170 years?
02:06Mm-hmm.
02:07Creepy staring?
02:08Not sexy.
02:09This must be recent.
02:12Thank you all for being here to celebrate the restoration of the Kutuzov Telescope.
02:20Now, the committee that raised the funds for all of this was led by today's speaker.
02:24So please welcome back to our campus one of the world's preeminent astrophysicists,
02:29Dr. Rosalind Kirch.
02:35Thank you, Dr. Thomas.
02:37And thank you for the tour of the new observatory.
02:40What a privilege to be back on campus as a visiting professor.
02:43This is where I first developed my hypothesis on X-ray emission as a predictor of an accreting black hole system.
02:49I remember it like it was yesterday.
02:51I was sitting out on Observatory Hill and I...
02:58Oh.
03:10Am I still...
03:11Where was I?
03:15You were talking about the day that you formed your galactic nuclear hypothesis.
03:18Oh.
03:21You'll have to forgive me.
03:23I don't think I'll be able to.
03:27Dr. Kirch is extremely jet-lighted.
03:29Oh.
03:30Just a moment, please.
03:33It's fine.
03:49She has one of the sharpest minds I've ever known.
03:51To see her have a neurocognitive episode is just upsetting.
03:53Yeah.
03:54We went through the same thing when my grandfather started off with him forgetting to shut the refrigerator.
03:58Before you knew it, he didn't even recognize us.
04:00You've got to appreciate being young.
04:02Aging is no picnic.
04:03This was not a product of age.
04:05I believe that she was under a spell.
04:08He's the librarian, therefore he thinks everything must be magic.
04:11You know the saying, when all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.
04:14She froze, then shuddered, a tale-tale sign of memory theft.
04:19There are powerful artifacts that could cause this.
04:22Talon of Hydrolath.
04:23That is one, but that is already in the library.
04:27I recovered that one myself.
04:30Oh.
04:32Perhaps a tally stick.
04:34We don't have to ascribe everything to the supernatural or being possessed by demons.
04:39Dementia is a normal and sad part of aging.
04:42Or a Santaj could have pronounced an incantation over that porn.
04:47Is anyone going to help me out here?
04:52It's been so sluggish lately.
04:54So according to Elaine's instructions, I gave it a tarnished bath and realigned its mercury cup and ball weight.
05:02Why is it doing that?
05:12The College of Science Observatory.
05:17As I suspected.
05:19Thanks a lot.
05:20So, magic in the neighborhood, huh?
05:22Let's not jump to conclusions.
05:23This could be something else unrelated to Dr. Courage.
05:25Kind of a coincidence though, don't you think?
05:27What I saw wasn't supernatural.
05:29It was human and sad.
05:31Some aberration has occurred to this woman.
05:33Now I've trained myself to be observant.
05:35To remember details.
05:36Well, I don't need to remember.
05:38I got it right here.
05:47I remember it like it was yesterday.
05:49I was sitting on Observatory Hill and I was...
05:56Oh.
05:57Wait a minute.
05:58Did you see that?
05:59Use my AI Enhanced 3D program.
06:04Very cool.
06:16Don't.
06:21Well, we need to talk to the victim.
06:23And investigate what is happening at this observatory.
06:29That's it.
06:43The solution to the Volkansky Millennial Prize problem.
06:45I believe it is.
06:46You came to me in a flash last night.
06:50Uh, Lisa Pascal.
06:52I was in your graduate seminar at Stanford.
06:54Ah, yes, of course.
06:55You did a thesis on applied predictive models
06:58based on galactic motion.
07:00Yeah.
07:01Uh, that was me.
07:02Uh, we came to see your lecture yesterday.
07:04Uh, but we were just a bit concerned when you had...
07:07Had my little brain cram.
07:08Yeah.
07:09Dr. Cenari said I was trying to tell a story
07:11of how I developed my quasar hypothesis while drinking tea.
07:14Apparently everybody knows that anecdote but me.
07:16I can't remember a thing about it.
07:18But now this.
07:19The solution to a problem proposed 25 years ago.
07:23A solution that we all believed would still be decades in the future.
07:27And yet.
07:31That poor woman.
07:32Some sort of infernal malediction has robbed her of that important memory from her past.
07:36She can't be that badly affected.
07:38She was able to solve the Volkansky problem.
07:40Not badly affected.
07:41One of her most cherished memories, gone.
07:44Not to be rude or anything, but maybe you're overvaluing memory a little.
07:47I mean, imagine all that brain space could be used for, I don't know, achieving something.
07:51Do you know what your problem is?
07:52Hmm?
07:53The problem with this whole modern world is you don't give a tinker's damn what's going
07:58on in here.
07:59Or in here.
08:00No, you've given it away to your little machines.
08:03No need to think, to know, to remember anything.
08:07No, you're hollowed out.
08:08A list of achievements, and even that's in here.
08:11And soon, very soon, these little contraptions will be feeling for you.
08:16No, I for one would not trade a single memory of mine for gold nor glory.
08:20I sat down and I couldn't remember anything.
08:23I couldn't even remember going to class.
08:26What's your name again?
08:36My lady.
08:40We met last night.
08:42Did we?
08:43Yes, yes.
08:44You showed me to my seat.
08:46We had a moment.
08:48I'm sorry, but I honestly don't remember you.
08:56Forget me.
08:58Impossible!
08:59This can only be some sort of foul necromancy.
09:02This spell, this curse is spreading.
09:05And we have no time to lose.
09:12We tracked down the students we saw in Guy's statements.
09:14Hmm.
09:15A few more confusion cases popped up in the campus health clinic.
09:17We also spoke to the usher.
09:19The ones who can remember have one thing in common with Dr. Kirch.
09:22We all have been to the observatory lately?
09:23Bullseye.
09:24We've identified the locus of this vile, pestilential phenomenon.
09:27Now, we must root out the noisome, feculent, fetid, vile...
09:31You notice it, Bob.
09:32...yucky perpetrators.
09:36Ow!
09:44Some founder is obviously abusing magic.
09:46And just remember, our purpose is the identification and retrieval of any potential artifacts.
09:50We're not beating up bad guys.
09:52It may not be our purpose, but it's the figgy pudding of it.
09:55My job is to keep you out of that kind of thing.
09:56I'm with Charlie.
09:57Let's get the lay of the land before we get confrontational.
09:59And by confrontational, you mean...
10:01Violent.
10:03I was not made for these times.
10:05Hey, Vic.
10:06Give us a sec.
10:07Um, I just wanted to apologize for earlier if I upset you.
10:12I was not upset.
10:14I was insensitive.
10:16I can't imagine what it must be like to be in your shoes.
10:19I mean, you're here and memories are all that's left of your world, so...
10:23I really am sorry.
10:24My world still exists.
10:27In here.
10:29So, there's no need to apologize, Anya.
10:32Lacer.
10:34That's what I said.
10:35Um, the astronomy department office is chock-a-block with rare curios.
10:38Any one could be our artifact.
10:40You and Connor reconnoiter what's in there.
10:42See if any of the magical artifacts we're looking for are there.
10:45And Charlie and I will try to root out the potential abusers.
10:50Non-confrontationally.
10:52Of course.
11:10May I help you?
11:12Uh, we're just admiring the collection.
11:14Do you work here?
11:15I'm Dr. Stanaris' teaching assistant.
11:17As well as the astronomy department archivist.
11:20Archivist?
11:21Yeah.
11:22So, you're responsible for finding and bringing in these pieces?
11:28Who did you say you were again?
11:34Dr. Stanaris!
11:36Yes?
11:37It is a pleasure to make your acquaintance.
11:39I was at the presentation last evening.
11:41Ah.
11:42You're an astronomy, love.
11:43Or professional in the field.
11:44Well, let's just say I'm an accomplished amateur.
11:48Have you heard of the Imperial Astronomical Society?
11:50Yeah, from the early 19th century.
11:52Didn't they disband back in the early Victorian era?
11:56Yes.
11:57Well, we've relaunched it.
11:59Oh.
12:00Well, so you're a gentleman stargazer of the old school.
12:02Of the old school.
12:03Well, you appear to be of the old school yourself.
12:05This star cartography is from the 1500s.
12:09You have a fine eye.
12:12It's from my pet project about Shakespeare's understanding of the cosmos.
12:15Ah.
12:16It is not in the stars to hold our destiny.
12:18But in ourselves.
12:20Hmm.
12:21You're also a poet.
12:23We're poets and astronomers.
12:24We seek the same thing.
12:25A larger view of the universe.
12:27Well said.
12:28I must say, I find your Shakespeare project fascinating.
12:32Well, it grew out of my belief that the Big Bang not only created matter and antimatter,
12:35but is also the source behind great hearts.
12:37Hmm.
12:38Big Bang?
12:40You have a way with a phrase, Professor.
12:43Please, tell me more.
12:45Well.
12:46It's really amazing, don't you think?
12:48In my astrolabe and the Adelaide online community,
12:50we call them the smartphones of antiquity.
12:52Looking after all of these important objects must be a real responsibility.
13:06Is this where you keep the paperwork?
13:12Well, yeah.
13:22No, I already told you.
13:47I'm a friend of Dr. Kirch's.
13:49I'm just interested in the collection.
13:51Well, it just seems like you were looking for something.
13:53No?
13:54I am wondering why you're sweating so much.
13:56Sweating?
13:57Me?
13:58No.
13:59Hey.
14:00I just remembered.
14:01We have to go meet Uncle Vic.
14:03What?
14:04No.
14:06Oh, yeah.
14:07Sorry.
14:08We gotta go.
14:09Bye.
14:10See you soon, maybe.
14:11Yeah, you run, run.
14:14These are the Culpepper papers.
14:16The originals?
14:17The Culpepper papers?
14:18Nicholas Culpepper was a 17th century artifact collector.
14:20As soon as I saw what they were, I thought they might tell us something.
14:22Of course.
14:23The crystal of Dr. John Dee.
14:25Culpepper was once its owner.
14:26Slow down.
14:27Yeah.
14:28Who is Dr. John Dee?
14:29He was the court magician to Queen Elizabeth the First.
14:32A genius.
14:33A true Renaissance man.
14:34During the actual Renaissance.
14:35And Dee used the crystal to communicate to the angels and divine the future.
14:38A major magical artifact.
14:40I think it's in a London museum.
14:41So wait, what does this have to do with our case?
14:43Ah, the legend is that Dee saw something that made him lose his mind.
14:46He no longer knew who he was.
14:48Didn't recognize his family.
14:49Couldn't function.
14:50He lost his memory.
14:56Whoa.
14:57Why?
14:59It's not just the Culpepper papers.
15:01These are the writings of John Dee himself, dated 1588.
15:04Culpepper says that they are always to accompany the crystal.
15:06It's basically an instruction map.
15:08Right.
15:09So they're fragile.
15:10We need to go and take them somewhere and read them carefully.
15:12There's just one problem.
15:14It's written in Enochian.
15:16You're losing me again.
15:18It's a language Dee invented.
15:19Got it from the angels.
15:20Yeah.
15:21And it's not just basic Enochian.
15:22It's high Enochian.
15:23There are maybe three people on earth who know how to translate it.
15:25No.
15:29There are four.
15:32The crystal is rendered harmless at which hour it is contained in the necklace.
15:36But once loose, it hath the power to grant a single willed glimpse here.
15:40The cost behests a single moment of the past.
15:4221st century version, please.
15:44The crystal is rendered harmless when it is contained in its necklace setting.
15:49But once it is taken out, it has the power to grant a single desired glimpse into the future.
15:56The cost being a single memory.
15:58And then it refers to amplifying or expanding the power of the crystal.
16:01The crystal is behest amplified to the point where the past is cleared.
16:06Hence, the knowledge of the future is limitless.
16:09The past is cleared.
16:11Does it say how the crystal can be amplified?
16:14Hmm.
16:15It can emit spectral particulates.
16:18The rest of the instructions appear to be missing.
16:20I just checked with my old contacts in the illegal procurement world.
16:24And the word is that the de-crystal was stolen, along with those papers from the London Science Museum a few weeks back.
16:30They've been keeping it under wraps because of all the superstition.
16:33Huh.
16:36Let us roll.
16:40Right.
16:41No more namby-pamby.
16:42The papers are here.
16:43The crystal has got to be here.
16:44I'm going to confront these gentlemen and force them to acknowledge the core.
16:47Whoa, whoa, whoa.
16:48We don't know that they're both in on it.
16:49You said your man was acting suspicious.
16:51Oh, yeah. He was sweating.
16:52Not a scenarios.
16:53Well, it was as odd as a duck mole.
16:54At the very least, they know something and we are going to wring it out of them.
16:57We can't force them to do anything.
16:59All right, we're not the police.
17:00But I'm the librarian.
17:01And they are abusing a very powerful magical artifact.
17:04Now, we have tried your ever-so-fashionable non-confrontation belly wash.
17:08But now we'll do things my way.
17:15Once I put the screws to them, these fellows will be discouraged from any further traffic of magical artifacts,
17:20not to mention robbery.
17:22Well, you say you put the screws to them. You don't really need screws, do you?
17:25I want information.
17:26Well, violence is the last resort.
17:27Oh, we have tried the first resort.
17:29What?
17:30First resort?
17:31Last resort?
17:32Second resort?
17:33We know it's them.
17:34We know they have the crystal somewhere.
17:35We still don't know what they're getting out of this.
17:37That is a nice car for teaching assistant.
17:44This vehicle.
17:45Expensive?
17:46Very.
17:47You two, find all the scenarios and bring him to the office.
17:50These gentlemen are about to receive a proper buffeting.
18:05Have we been peering into the future?
18:07Maybe wagering a whist?
18:08Or a hazard deck?
18:09Perhaps the trotters?
18:11Are you with the police?
18:14No.
18:15But you do have something that we're going to need back.
18:17Hmm.
18:18We are going to recover that crystal.
18:19What crystal?
18:20I don't know anything about any crystal.
18:21Well, if you don't have a crystal then why are you running away?
18:22I don't know!
18:23I don't know!
18:24Ah!
18:25I don't know anything about any crystal!
18:29Well if you don't have a crystal then why are you running away?
18:35I don't know!
18:37Ahhh!
18:38We are going to recover that crystal.
18:42What crystal?
18:43I don't know anything about any crystal.
18:45Well, if you don't have a crystal, then why are you running away?
18:47I don't know.
18:52I demand you make this stop.
18:54I can't remember how to drive.
19:00No, no, no.
19:01I've got to make it stop.
19:03Okay, pull back with your hands and push down with your feet like a horse.
19:08No!
19:16He's not in here either.
19:23Must have gone home for the day.
19:31Call Connor.
19:39So it's the man who hates cell phones.
19:41Hello Connor, yes.
19:42It's Vikram.
19:43Yes.
19:44I need advice.
19:45How do you stop a motorized carriage?
19:49Do you have anything?
19:58No! Nothing that looks like a key!
20:00Do something!
20:01Do something!
20:24What's going on?
20:25Alright!
20:26Brilliant work, Charlie.
20:54What are you thinking?
20:56Do something stupid like that!
20:57I don't know.
20:58He seemed to forget how to pilot the carriage.
21:01He must be under the spell.
21:02Spell?
21:06What about you?
21:09Are you okay?
21:10Charlie?
21:17Who are you people?
21:18You are my guardian, sent by the library.
21:28How do you know about the library?
21:30Because I'm the librarian.
21:32Well, a librarian.
21:33Do you remember how you got the money?
21:35I've just had a clairvoyant moment.
21:37I saw a roulette wheel with two numbers.
21:42So I went to the casino and put all my money on those numbers.
21:48I'm not a guardian.
21:49I didn't make the cut.
21:50Initially, but then Jacob Stone contacted you.
21:53It was like I could see the future.
21:59It felt like cheating.
22:00I was afraid someone was going to come after me.
22:02So that is why you're acting so suspiciously?
22:04And it seemed like you knew my secret.
22:15How's it going?
22:17She has a complete blank from right before Stone called up until about an hour ago.
22:21Hasn't met us.
22:22Isn't sure how she got here.
22:23That's two months.
22:24He only forgot how to drive.
22:25Well, she was obviously exposed after him, so it's getting stronger.
22:29What else did we learn?
22:30Philip says that Stonaris traveled to London on the weekend of the 18th.
22:33That's the weekend the crystal was stolen.
22:35Can't be a coincidence.
22:36So, Stonaris is the malefactor.
22:38But where is the crystal?
22:40He thinks he knows where it might be.
22:42The vault is in the building.
22:44Downstairs.
22:45Let's go.
22:47We're going to need you.
22:49So you know about the library.
22:53You could be an enemy.
22:55You could be using magic to try and co-opt me.
22:57You know, Eve Baird may have thought that I wasn't ready.
23:00And maybe I'm not.
23:01But I am still loyal to the library.
23:05Take him inside.
23:06See about this vault.
23:07Come on.
23:12The fact that the library even considered you as a possible guardian
23:14means you must have better instincts than that.
23:16I am not an enemy of the library.
23:19A powerful spell has taken a portion of your memory,
23:21and that portion includes us.
23:23I cannot give you back your actual memories,
23:25but what I can do, I can tell you what you need to know.
23:29So you can be part of our team again.
23:34I'm not allowed in here without Dr. Stonaris.
23:36It can only be opened with his retinal scan.
23:40This is one I've never cried before.
23:42How do you know so much about breaking and entering?
23:44Well, there isn't an app on the internet for discovering magical secrets.
23:57Move.
23:57Which brings me up to the moment that you saved me from a runaway vehicle.
24:06That all happened?
24:08To me?
24:08You don't think that you are guardian material,
24:11because you do not remember what you have done over the past five weeks.
24:16But I do.
24:18I'm the librarian.
24:19And you are my guardian.
24:22Even if on a trial basis.
24:27Got it, sir.
24:29Hey guys, come on.
24:38Here's another one.
25:06From London.
25:13Seems to be from the court of Elizabeth.
25:15Do you think you held the necklace and crystal?
25:18Guys, look at this.
25:21The picture is changing to someone else.
25:26Does this mean what I think it means?
25:28What do the translations say again about the crystal being amplified?
25:30Ah, um, the crystal is behest amplified to the point of where the past is cleared hence.
25:37And the knowledge of the future is limitless.
25:40The past is cleared hence.
25:41Not memories, the actual past.
25:43So Dr. Kirsch didn't just lose the memory of coming up with her hypothesis.
25:46It never happened.
25:47Someone else did it.
25:48Are you saying actual events have been wiped out?
25:50History's been changed?
25:52Why would he want to do this?
25:53Oh, he doesn't.
25:55He wants the other part.
25:56The limitless knowledge of the future.
25:59Oh, he doesn't care about consequences.
26:01He is what we call a remorseless monomaniac.
26:04Sociopath.
26:05How is he amplifying the crystal?
26:06The question is, if his goal is to selfishly gain knowledge, then why would he involve other people?
26:10Because he needs something from them in order to achieve his goal.
26:16They're memories.
26:17Magical causality.
26:19He must get his power to look into the future by consuming people's memories.
26:22Correction, by consuming the past.
26:24And the more people that look through it, the more powerful it becomes.
26:26When did Charlie look through the glass?
26:28Ah, when me and Cenarius were verbally jousting, she looked through the telescope.
26:35Of course.
26:35Where else would you put a piece of glass people will look through?
26:38It's just another lens.
26:40Thank you for saving me the trouble of explaining all that.
26:45No!
26:45Dammit!
26:46Get your nurse out of here, you pounder!
26:48Sorry to keep you here like this, but I have 20 undergraduates arriving for a stargazing session.
26:55And once they've all looked at the Andromeda galaxy, the crystals should be fully amplified.
26:59Stenaris, you have unleashed forces beyond your control!
27:02Do you know what it's like for a man of my intellect to cast my pearls before swiny undergraduates,
27:08while people like Wozlin Kirsch get famous on stories of cups of tea and picnics?
27:13Now this is the story, the greatest discovery of the history of science.
27:19And my name will go down with Copernicus, Galileo and Sagan.
27:22Sagan?
27:24Think about the consequences of erasing history!
27:27As a remorseless monomaniac, let me just tell you, I don't care.
27:43It's not going to work. The door in frame is case-hardened steel.
27:52But if the crystal is already overcharged, then imagine what would happen once he sunk the memory of 20 more people.
27:59Zombie apocalypse?
28:00It's actually worse than that. When you change the past, it takes time for those changes to catch up with you.
28:05The past changed when Dr. Kirsch lost her memories, but it took time for the causality changes to catch up with our timeline.
28:11Which is why the book and the painting are only changing now.
28:14Exactly.
28:14I don't understand.
28:16Imagine time like a lake, and we exist on its shore, and the erased memory is like a pebble, dropped in the center.
28:23It takes time for the ripples to reach us.
28:25So when Charlie's timeline catches up with us, she doesn't just forget.
28:28But she never actually met us.
28:30And if we never met her...
28:32Then no one saved you from the Dracovac.
28:34Which would mean that on our current timeline, we would all be...
28:39Dead.
28:41Dead.
28:42Thank you for coming.
28:44Next week we get to view the Triffid Nebula.
28:47Thank you, Dr. Stenaris.
28:49That was incredible.
28:51Yes, but it can be overwhelming, so my advice is to go straight home.
29:11The French isn't helping.
29:22Wait!
29:32Panic is the enemy.
29:34Toujours équilibre.
29:36Toujours équilibre.
29:37French isn't helping.
29:39Pardon.
29:40Who installed this vault?
29:42A security company.
29:43What kind of company?
29:44They specialize in banks, museums?
29:45Museums, I think.
29:47Museum and art gallery systems usually have a fire override sensor
29:51to allow firefighters to enter a burning vault without having the passports.
29:54I don't know anything about that, sorry.
29:56It wouldn't be out in plain sight like a smoke-a-lot.
30:02Over here.
30:06We could use this lens and find a strong enough light source
30:10that perhaps the focus beam could generate enough heat and then...
30:14You're not coming.
30:24We could just use my lighter.
30:26Oh, here.
30:30Tiny portable tinderbox.
30:34Au revoir.
30:35Au revoir.
30:35Au revoir.
30:36Au revoir.
30:37Au revoir.
30:38Au revoir.
30:39Au revoir.
30:40Au revoir.
30:41Au revoir.
30:42Au revoir.
30:43Au revoir.
30:44Au revoir.
30:54There it is.
31:08Can I help you?
31:10Why am I here?
31:11You seem confused.
31:12what just happened the d papers mentioned the crystal emitting spectral particulates
31:25it must be overflowing with them i remember running up the stairs and that's it but you
31:29know who i am yeah then he pulled you out just in time when you were in it you were rendered
31:33completely impotent but why doesn't it affect stonaris i do not know but we have to get that
31:38crystal away from him there is only one choice i must go in there and get it what just like that
31:45what makes you think you won't be rendered completely impotent me i don't think you know
31:49what it's like i feel like i have a 10 second hole in my brain and who knows what it'll be like if
31:53you stay in there are you of all people willing to risk your memories my mental discipline is
31:58unlike any other not that you're ordinary and not to gloat or bluster but i believe i am our best
32:03chance i don't like it and i'm responsible for you no i am responsible i'm the librarian
32:12and my memories mean no more than any of yours you three go under the platform see if you can
32:18lower the floor anything to get him away from that telescope
32:20okay
32:33stonaris
32:34well how are you able to
32:49i have trained my brain to silo thought away from my active mind
32:58i can lock away what i need and only give away useless memories to this pestiferous hex
33:18what's the most important thing in the world team
33:38what's the most important thing in the world team
33:46the main controls are up there okay well this looks like a pretty standard servo motor
34:08yep shouldn't be too hard to hardware we should lower the floor to avert stonaris from looking
34:12through the telescope guys
34:20what's happening to me
34:25she's disintegrating out of our timeline
34:30you got no time for this now
34:37i could tell that you were different you seem to have an esoteric knowledge almost for another
34:50time i heard you talking in the vault about translating hi inokin well only a handful of
34:54people know hi inokin unfortunately i'm one of them so i didn't leave any of the important
35:00papers lying around in the office for you to read they explain how to amplify the crystal and how the necklace could give its wearer immunity from the unfortunate side effects
35:13you just gotta stay here okay just stay present okay just stay present okay you've gotta fight this fight it
35:26you just stay here we need you we need you here please
35:39you just stay here
35:40you just stay here we need you we need you here please
35:45you just stay here we need you here please
35:52Promise me, okay? Just stay here. We need you. We need you here. Please.
36:04So what was it?
36:06A woman.
36:11It's very interesting. You're in tremendous pain, but you can't seem to remember why.
36:17That is nothing compared to what I'm about to experience.
36:20For millennia, man has looked to the heavens to see the distant past.
36:24And I will be the first man to peer into the heavens and to see the future.
36:28I will know how the story of the universe ends.
36:31And I will publish.
36:47The colors.
36:48It's even more beautiful.
36:53Help!
36:55What are you doing?
36:57I don't know!
36:59I can't remember.
37:02Get away from there, you maniac. You're ruining everything.
37:05Somebody help me!
37:06Catch!
37:24Now I remember.
37:30What have you done?
37:31I don't know.
37:33Well, what have you done?
37:54I don't know.
37:55Come on.
38:25I know it sounds crazy.
38:30I don't think I was asleep, but I must have been dreaming because all of a sudden it seemed as if I were disappearing.
38:37And then it all came back to me.
38:39The moment on Observatory Hill when I developed my hypothesis.
38:44It's hard to explain.
38:46And I feel as if you and your friends had something to do with it.
38:49I'm so grateful.
38:51That was one of my most important memories.
38:53I never knew how much I valued my past until it was gone.
38:59I see that you erased the equation.
39:03You didn't think I'd write it down somewhere?
39:08I had to get rid of it.
39:10I don't know where it came from.
39:12And there was something about it I just didn't trust.
39:15Probably for the best.
39:17Some mysteries need to be revealed in time.
39:20And we can appreciate the implications.
39:22And scientific advancement should come through application of scientific method.
39:27And this answer came to me.
39:28Like magic.
39:30Well, I'm glad to hear that she's alright.
39:32Oh, we were able to check up on the students who'd been affected.
39:35It was mind-blowing, but they're no worse for wear.
39:37Most of them have forgotten their future visions.
39:40Though four of them have formed a jam band.
39:42Charlie, how are you feeling?
39:45Uh, all squared away, sir.
39:47You never told us your vision of the future.
39:50Or was that all so forgotten when the effects were reversed?
39:54Uh, yes.
39:55Wiped out.
39:57Completely.
39:57Still impressed with how you were able to stave off the effects from the memory bubble.
40:05I couldn't have done it.
40:06My mental discipline is highly attuned and perfectly calibrated.
40:10That, and I had no memories to lose for 178 years, save a few weeks.
40:15I thought that might give me some advantage.
40:17And you saw Kahn struggling and you needed to help him?
40:21Perhaps.
40:23Well, whatever it was, you were willing to risk what matters most to save us, so...
40:28As Descartes said, I think, therefore I am.
40:34But maybe I remember, therefore I am.
40:41Maybe that's the truth of it.
40:45Anyway!
40:46I feel safer knowing that this is all locked away and out of the hands of a pseudo-academic
40:51polymathic megalomaniac.
40:56Speaking of which, what do you think will happen to Dr. Stenaris?
41:02The reverse-amplified view of the universe provides us with a final answer.
41:08Copernicus and Galileo, they tell us nothing.
41:11Stephen Hawking?
41:12Hmm.
41:13Only I, Frederick Stenaris.
41:15Have viewed the future.
41:18And I'd still be viewing it now, if it wasn't for the interference of a crypto-cult organisation
41:23called The Library.
41:25And its fanatical, destructive operative, who calls himself...
41:29THE LIBRARIAN!
41:30убenda rien!
41:32E num вот!
41:34Theintell HOW!
41:34END!
41:35as
41:43as
41:46as
41:46as
41:47as
41:48as