Later, she and Peter are about to go out for drinks when she sees Peter shimmering. She is able to locate the building and evacuate it just in time. Olivia is scared, and Peter Bishop is about to kiss her when she realizes that she needs to be scared to see the shimmer. Brandon Fayette of Massive Dynamic attempts to locate the building. She calls Phillip Broyles, who in turn calls Olivia to tell her the changeover is starting. In New York, Nina Sharp arrives home to the sound of howling dogs. She panics and is pulled out, then argues with Walter over what he did with the other children. Walter injects her with Cortexiphan, allowing her to see into the other side. The team head to William Bell's clinic in Jacksonville, where Olivia was treated as a child. Olivia will be able to see this building because it will shimmer. Walter then realizes what has happened, a building has been moved to our universe, so the other universe must now take a building of the same mass. She discovers a double-decker toy car and asks if this is what they drive. This causes Walter to state that this man is from the Alternate Universe.Īt the lab, Astrid Farnsworth is disturbed by what she sees. The worker replies by saying that the Pentagon and White House were hit before dying. Walter asks him some questions, one of which is about September 11. Inside, they discover the worker is still alive. Walter Bishop says this is because the event has rearranged the atoms and put them back in the wrong order. The Fringe team arrive on the scene, with Olivia Dunham commenting on how the building looks rearranged. When he awakes, a support beam has suddenly appeared, punching through his shoulder, and he suddenly has four legs and arms.
Suddenly a big tremor hits and the ceiling falls in.
Ted Pratchett is worried about tremors that are shaking the building he works in.
#The fringe season 2 episode 13 summary how to
Olivia must go to Jacksonville to the former school where she was experimented on to relearn how to see the other universe in order to save people from dying in especially gruesome ways.