I do not own Tomb Raider or any of its characters. This work is for entertainment only.
A/N: This part of the story goes against Tomb Raider 2013 canon. The next arc of "Lara's Little Fan" focuses on the premise of what if the Solarii weren't wiped out by Trinity and had to reform their society after the loss of Mathias? How could a factor such as Lara influence the changes, and how could she ever miss the chance to document them as a largely undiscovered people? Of course this is going to stay horny, because it's me, but this arc is going to have more substance than the first chapters of the original Lara's Little Fan. LLF: Return to Yamati can be a stand-alone, but I would recommend reading the original first as it establishes the relationship and Sam's behavior sending them back to the island.
--
I closed my eyes and took a deep breath as the small plane I chartered for Mr. Phelps, Sam, and myself started to hit turbulence as we entered the Devil's Triangle. We left the morning after my nightmare of Sam overpowering me and her apparent possession, so it didn't give me as much study time as I would have liked before heading into a potentially hot area.
I had only the time we left the mansion to the moment we prepared to jump to see what weather patterns and stories about the Triangle had been doing since we left the first time. Storms still occurred as they would with any island in that locale, but it felt like hold hat to us when we flew right into the same kind of storm that brought us down the first time.
"Lady Croft, I've lost control of the plane!" my daring pilot shouted to me as I strapped into my parachute. "We're still closing in on the island but my controls are unresponsive.
I opened my eyes and exhaled slowly through my nose. "The plane will get us over the drop, but don't expect to fly it on your own until the three of us are gone."
"W-what are you talking about?" the pilot asked, rightly confused and worried.
I just laughed and patted his shoulder. "You're going to be fine, Captain. You're not who the island wants." I turned my attention from the captain and went back to Sam and Mr. Phelps, who by this time had their packs and jump helmets on.
I went to the door and hit the button on the side of the wall to open the hydraulic lock. I looked over and saw that the red and green jump lights weren't even functioning. The island wanted us to do it ourselves.
Wind rushed past my ears and almost pushed me back into the plane as I peaked my head out. We had just made it to the coast of the island and we had a bit of beach head that wasn't swallowed up by wrecks, and had gradual jungle growth moving inland. I waited just a moment and then decided to rip the bandaid off, and I launched myself out of the plane. Hopefully Sam and Seymour would know to follow me down.
As I quickly plummeted, I did my counting and then pulled my parachute release. I had just enough time as I looked up to see friends falling above me before my chute opened.
The island had become somewhat predictable to me by this point. As I had expected, once the island knew we weren't getting away, the storm blew off and allowed us a pretty easy descent. This also told me that the island didn't want at least one of us to die. Who that one was had yet to be revealed.
I tucked in and hit the sand, and I stood up without injury, and I was able to detach myself from my pack. I had no idea what to expect in the way of friends or enemies, so I set about the laborious task of gathering my shoot and trying to pack it back in enough that I could easily stash it. Our arrival would have drawn plenty of eyes, and I didn't want to leave chutes around to confirm where they should start looking.
Sam groaned, seeing what she had to do, but Mr. Phelps was a good lad and did his end without so much as a whimper. He was taking every note he could from me, and if he kept that up, he might actually get out of here alive.
Once we had packed our chutes, we worked together to bury them with collapsible camp shovels, and then we headed inland. We moved in slow, following a small stream that fed out into the surf we had just come from.
"It's so loud in here," Mr. Phelps said, a tinge of reverence to his voice. "The birds, the waves on the beach behind us, the wind in the trees, the little bugs around us. And there's... there's something else. Like a tuning fork, or-or a kind of resonance?"
I smiled and looked back over my shoulder at the young man as he drank in the deepening woods around him. "That sound *is* Yamati, Mr. Phelps. Through all of my journeys, all the dark and wonderful places I've been in this world, that sound that seems like it's in your skull, a frequency you will never feel outside of this place... is Yamati."
"Do you know what it is?" Sam asked, her voice small. I shifted my focus from Mr. Phelps to my longest friend, and she looked moused, reserved and scared. If anyone had a reason to be more afraid of this island than me, it was my Sam. She had such hopes and grandeur dreams of this island once, but it left her scarred, tried to kill her, and here she was again, trying to figure out why it wouldn't let us go for good, even now.
"I don't," I said sadly. "I think Yamati has been so scarred over a millennium that while we stopped Himeko's curse, the island won't recover overnight, and maybe not in our lifetimes. Ancient Japan, the Mongol invasions of Japan that we've seen evidence of here, WWII, and so much death from the modern age of travel and exploration. How many died here just while we were here? And the Solarii? We don't know nearly enough about them to know what kind of imprint they've left on this island."
"Wow, Lara, not only did you fail to answer my question of what the fuck that sound is, but that might also be the most depressing thing I've ever heard. So thanks, I guess," Sam said dismissively.
I just shrugged my pack up my shoulders and kept going. I didn't know just yet where we were going, but the island had a way of telling you where to go, and when it was ready for you to be there.
--
We had been walking up river for about an hour and we were in the thick of it now. The trees were thick;y packed and the sun was struggling to pierce through the canopy and the interwoven layers of branches below. The air was thick and muggy with no breeze.
"This is quite the terrain," Mr. Phelps commented, wiping copious amounts of sweat from his forehead. "Jungle expeditions are nothing to be taken lightly," he said as he took a sparing sip from his belt canteen.