A good portion of the finale focuses on the question of who will fill Jacob's Mark Pellegrino role as the protector of the Heart of the Island, which turns out to be a magical, glowing pool at the island's center. This pool is supposedly the source of all life, death, and rebirth, and according to Jacob, it's the cork holding back a malevolent force that could destroy the world.
In the finale, this is revealed to be a literal cork, which Desmond pulls to drain the pool, nearly getting everyone killed. The Heart of the Island also emits a strong electromagnetic field and can manipulate space and time, as evidenced by the relocation of the island and the time travel in earlier episodes.
It's also implied to have a form of consciousness, or at least self-preservation, granting immortality to the humans who are willing to take on the responsibility of keeping it safe. While some of the earlier mysteries of Lost were revealed to have at least moderately plausible sci-fi explanations, the Heart of the Island requires viewers to accept some elements of the supernatural as well.
No details are ever given about the origins of the Heart of the Island, but it's said that a piece of its light is inside every living thing, and if it goes out, so do we. Throughout the series, we see that many of the characters on the show have some sort of connection before ever boarding the plane, implying that they were always predestined to board the same doomed flight and end up on the island together.
However, in Lost 's final season, we learn more about the way that Jacob has been pulling strings for years, traveling around the world in order to bring a group of potential "candidates" to the island, in the hopes of finding someone capable of taking over for him as the island's protector. He knew his brother, the Man in Black Titus Welliver , was searching for a way to kill him and would eventually succeed.
Jacob's intent was to find a successor before that happened. Jacob chose people who reminded him of himself — individuals who were alone and flawed, and who'd come to depend on the island as much as it would rely on them to keep it safe.
All of the survivors of Oceanic fit this criteria, and as the series progressed and he was able to observe their interactions on the island, Jacob began slowly whittling down his list of candidates. None of the connections we saw between the characters in flashbacks were fated or accidental. All of them were engineered by Jacob. Throughout the series, one of Lost 's most enduring mysteries is the nature of the smoke monster, a seemingly sentient column of black smoke that occasionally attacks and even kills people on the island.
And it turns out that the smoke monster is another form of the Man in Black, Jacob's immortal twin brother. So how did that come about? Well, after killing their mother, the Man in Black is transformed when Jacob throws him into the Heart of the Island. For the next years, Jacob and the Man in Black oppose one another, as the Man in Black searches for a way around the supernatural law that keeps him from killing Jacob. As the smoke monster, he can't be killed, but he also can't leave.
Over the years, he assumes his smoke monster form in order to kill the candidates Jacob brings to the island, hoping that if Jacob dies and leaves no successor, the Man in Black can finally leave. Ultimately, though, the Man in Black's immortality is linked to the Heart of the Island, so when Desmond temporarily shuts it down in the finale, he's made mortal and killed by Kate and Jack, ending the smoke monster forever.
After Jack is appointed as Jacob's successor as protector of the island, he promptly gets into a knife fight with the Man in Black, where he's mortally wounded. Realizing he's dying, Jack volunteers to go replace the cork at the center of the island, and tells Hurley that he needs to take over as protector. Hurley agrees , and drinks from the water that's come from the Heart of the Island, making his new role official.
After Jack leaves to restore the Heart, Ben also suggests to Hurley that he doesn't have to "protect" the island in the same way that Jacob did, and that maybe Hurley will find a better way.
Hurley considers this, then asks Ben if he'll consider staying on as his second-in-command, to which Ben responds that he'd be honored. While Jacob lived for years, Hurley doesn't have the dark counterpart in the Man in Black that made it so hard for Jacob to find a replacement protector. So although Hurley likely lives for many years following the finale, it's very possible that retirement will prove much easier for him than it did for Jacob.
The DHARMA Department of Heuristics and Research on Material Applications Initiative first came to the island in the s, with the objective of studying the unique properties of the island and harnessing them in the name of scientific advancement. While DHARMA conducted research across all fields including studies involving polar bears , attempting to uncover the island's secrets, they never fully understood what they were dealing with when it came to the supernatural Heart of the Island.
However, that didn't stop them from trying, and they constructed stations all over the island in an attempt to make sense of the bizarre phenomena they were witnessing.
At the end of "The End," after regaining their memories of their time together on the island, the main characters make their way to a church, where they see the symbols of a number of different faiths.
Christian Shephard then explains to Jack that the flash-sideways was constructed by and for the Oceanic survivors, to help them find one another, let go of the baggage of their lives, and move on together.
And according to Christian, once they were all ready to do so, they each showed up at the church, one by one. When Jack first arrives at the church, he sees his father's coffin, and seems to think he's there for Christian's funeral. But the coffin is empty, and the funeral that he'd expected is replaced by a reunion with his loved ones and hope for a new future together.
The church seems to symbolize that all of the Lost characters have said their goodbyes to their past lives, and they're finally ready to be at peace with one another. When Christian opens the doors at the end of the episode and light floods the church, it's safe to assume that signifies "moving on," whatever that means. Even though Ben's presence in the flash-sideways seems to indicate that the Oceanic survivors were indeed the most significant people in his life, he elects not to enter the church with them.
Before Hurley returns to the church, he tells Ben that he was a "real good number two," and Ben replies that Hurley was a "great number one," which seems to indicate that Ben and Hurley worked together on the island for a long time after the end of the series, never turning against each other like Jacob and the Man in Black. That Ben was drawn to the church with the rest of them may be an indication that, cosmically at least, his service to the island was enough to redeem him for the horrible things he'd done in life, and that he could move on with the others.
However, Ben opting not to enter the church could mean that he isn't ready to move on yet. Perhaps Ben still has more people to find in the afterlife before he can let go, or maybe, despite having been forgiven by some of the people he wronged, he still has to come to terms with what he did.
Another possibility is that he just can't bring himself to move on and leave his adopted daughter, Alex Tania Raymonde , behind. It's never clarified what happens to Ben after he decides to stay outside, but we can only hope that, eventually, he finds peace. While Christian Shephard explains to Jack that the church exists to help all of the Oceanic survivors "move on" with the people who'd been most significant to them in their lives, that doesn't explain what Christian himself is doing there, along with infants Aaron and Ji Yeon.
None of them lived on the island or at least, not for long , so it couldn't possibly have been the most important time in any of their lives. Surely Christian's "most significant" period would've occurred well before his death, while Aaron's and Ji Yeon's would've likely been once they were adults.
The simplest explanation for their presence is that, like all of the other people in the flash-sideways who weren't survivors of the crash, those weren't the real Christian, Aaron, and Ji Yeon. They were merely manifestations of something the Oceanic survivors needed in order to move on. While the flash-sideways was created exclusively for the survivors of Oceanic , perhaps Christian, along with the adult versions of Aaron and Ji Yeon, are out there in their own versions of the afterlife, searching for their own most significant people before they can move on for themselves.
And sure, their presence raises some interesting questions, but it doesn't take away from Lost 's powerful ending. Lost had no shortage of ongoing mysteries that arose throughout its run, perhaps none greater than the enigmatic numbers that seem to follow the characters around like a curse.
Lost never definitively addressed the nature of the Numbers, but implied that, like so many other things on Lost , the explanation behind the ascending string of figures was more mystical than scientific. Jacob assigned a number to each of the candidates he drew to the island, and the final six candidates each synced up perfectly with one of the numbers: Locke was 4, Hurley was 8, Sawyer was 15, Sayid was 16, Jack was 23, and 42 referred to either Sun or Jin Kwon.
Before arriving on the island, Hurley noticed the pattern recurring in his life and associated it with bad luck, while the other candidates remained oblivious to the numbers until well after they were already on the island.
It's worth noting that Hurley ultimately became the candidate chosen to become the new guardian of the island, suggesting that the numbers may have been tied into the idea of fate and inevitability — a prominent theme on Lost. Without the fateful crash of Oceanic flight in the pilot episode, there would've been no Lost at all.
Like most of the other strange occurrences on the show, it turns out that the circumstances leading to the crash were more complex than it initially appeared. For a long time, it seemed likely that Oceanic merely suffered some sort of tragic yet mundane technical malfunction.
But as the series went on, it became clear that the plane crash was yet another circumstance that had been cosmically engineered by Jacob to serve his own millennia-long agenda. But likely the most significant single piece of the equation was the arrival on the island of Desmond Hume, and the subsequent three years he spent pushing — and becoming increasingly disillusioned about — a button.
Eventually, Desmond accidentally killed his companion in the Swan station and allowed the timer to run down to zero, resulting in a system failure. Desmond was able to fix it, but not before the system unleashed an immense electromagnetic charge, which in turn caused Oceanic to break apart while passing over the island. So in a way, Desmond caused the crash of Flight , but considering that Jacob was the one who brought Desmond to the island, arranged the circumstances that required him to push the button, and carefully selected the passengers on the flight, the electromagnetic surge and the subsequent plane crash were all part of his plan.
Lost was the very definition of an ensemble show, with a large cast of characters who each received their own well-developed arc and fleshed-out backstory.
However, even though the series had dozens of "main" characters throughout its run, most viewers would probably agree that if you had to pick a single main character for the show, it was Jack Shephard. The first episode opened on a shot of Jack's eye opening, and the series ended on a similar shot of his eyes closing, bookending the series on Jack's point of view. And all throughout Lost , Jack served as a leader and central figure for the survivors of Oceanic Ultimately, of course, all of the Oceanic survivors wound up reconnecting in the afterlife in the final episode of Lost, including Jack.
However, the afterlife narrative wound up confusing many viewers due to the show presenting it as an alternate reality for the entire last season. So it's understandable to be uncertain about what really happened to Jack and Lost' s other central characters by the end of the series. Jack may have died in the final episode, bleeding to death of stab wounds inflicted by the Man in Black, but he made some hugely significant actions in his final hours.
He briefly agreed to take over from Jacob as the protector of the Island, after which he immediately fought the Man in Black to the death. In his final moments, he said goodbye to Kate and Sawyer, appointed Hurley as the island's new protector, and replaced the cork in the heart of the island that temporarily turned the Man in Black mortal, while also threatening to sink the island and destroy the world.
After Jack saved the island and everyone he loved, he finally succumbed to his wounds and died. As part of Lost 's central love triangle — at least for the first few seasons — Kate was one of the few Oceanic survivors who made it all the way through the final episode more or less unscathed at least physically. After helping Jack lead the survivors on the Island, Kate managed to escape the island along with Jack and the Oceanic six in season four, along with Claire's infant son, Aaron.
Since Claire was still on the island, Kate raised Aaron as her own. She was also tried for the crimes she committed before the crash, and was sentenced to ten years probation on the condition that she didn't leave California.
Jin and Sun's family tombstone. When the Oceanic Six escaped the Island, they believed Jin dead. Sun stated at a press conference that Jin had died on during the plane crash.
She returned to Korea, where she confronted Mr. Paik , blaming him for Jin's death along with one other person. When Sun gave birth, she called out for her husband in delirium. She named her daughter Ji Yeon , as Jin had wished. Hurley later visited her, and they visited Jin's grave together.
Jin's tombstone reads: [1]. Three years after leaving the Island, Sun absolved Kate of blame for keeping her from saving Jin. She said that if they hadn't left Jin behind on the freighter, they would probably all have died. On the dock later, Sun held a gun to Ben's head, still blaming him for Jin's death. Ben avoided getting shot by telling her that Jin was still alive, and he could prove it.
Ben handed her Jin's wedding ring, which he had stolen after murdering John Locke. Jin is shocked to meet a young Danielle Rousseau. Jin survived the explosion and his unconscious body, within the source 's radius, floated on a wreckage and traveled through time over several days. In , Danielle Rousseau 's shipwrecked science expedition discovered him. Montand questioned him, but his disoriented answers frustrated the Frenchman. Rousseau eventually revealed her name, leaving a confused Jin to sort out when he was.
The team dismissed his questions about a helicopter as ranting and asked him about a radio tower. Jin agreed to lead them there so he could find the beach camp. While they traveled through the jungle though, the Monster killed Nadine and dragged Montand into a crevice under the Temple.
Robert , Lacombe and Brennan followed Montand's cries below, but Jin convinced the pregnant Danielle to stay out. The sky soon flashed and Jin was transported to the near future. He found Brennan and Lacombe's corpses on the beach and witnessed Danielle kill Robert in self-defense. Danielle turned her gun on Jin, thinking he too was sick , but her shot missed, and Jin time-traveled once again.
This jump reunited him with Sawyer , Locke , and the rest of their group, and he continued with them to the Orchid. After Charlotte warned him to keep Sun from the Island, Jin made Locke promise not to ask her to return. He gave Locke his wedding ring to present as proof that Jin truly died.
Jin lowers his rifle after encountering Jack , Kate , and Hurley. After one more time shift, Jin found himself in The group encountered Amy , and Jin helped carry her husband's body back to the Barracks. Over the next three years, he worked on the security team and helped map the island, and he learned fluent English.
Three years later, Jin encountered Jack , Kate and Hurley at the waterfall after they'd returned via Flight Jin contacted the head of security who reunited with the three.
On hearing they'd arrived on a plane, Jin told Radzinsky at the Flame station to check if one had arrived. They found no plane, but they spotted an intruder, and Jin ran to apprehend him. It was Sayid , and Jin privately informed Sawyer. But Jin pretended Sayid was a hostile , and he and Radzinsky locked him at the Flame. Young Ben later freed Sayid, and when Jin caught them escaping, Sayid knocked him unconscious. Jin awoke and took Ben's bleeding body to the Barracks.
Jin, Miles and Hurley face a suspicious Chang. Sawyer suggested they leave the Island or head into the jungle, but Jin refused to leave as long as a chance of finding Sun remained. Chang , who now believed they'd come from the future, followed them and demanded answers. Hurley tried and failed to maintain their story; he denied the Korean War's existence, to Jin's annoyance.
The group later watched people evacuate the island by sub. They then returned to the Barracks and rescued Jack and Sayid from a shootout. Jack shared his plan to reset time, which would, if successful, reunite Jin with Sun.
Jin agreed to help. They headed to the Swan site, and Jin stayed out of the ensuing gunfight with Hurley and an injured Sayid.
He remained there during the Incident and the time flash that brought them to Jin tries to dissuade Claire from killing Justin. Jin awoke and told Hurley he knew from experience that they'd traveled through time.
He discovered the Swan site, obliterated post- discharge , and helped remove wreckage to free Juliet. He also loaded Sayid into the van and, to save him, Hurley said they should go to where he had gone with Danielle's team. Jin led the group to the Temple wall, and they entered through a declivity at the base. The Others captured them and prepared to shoot them but Hurley provided a list of their names. Sawyer later left the temple, so Jin joined Kate , Aldo and Justin to search for him.
The Others dodged his questions about the Ajira flight, and after Kate incapacitated them, Jin left to search for Sun. They caught up with him, and a trap snagged his leg. As Aldo prepared to shoot Jin, he was killed by a disheveled-looking Claire. She brought Jin and Justin to her hut , where she treated Jin's leg and interrogated Justin about Aaron. Jin told her Kate had taken Aaron, but Claire killed Justin anyway. Scared, Jin now said he'd lied: Aaron was at the temple, and Claire needed him to get in.
The Man in Black then arrived, and Claire identified him as her "friend". Jin talks about Widmore. Jin was still in the hut when Sawyer arrived, after "Locke" had recruited him. The two talked about "Locke", and Sawyer promised not to leave the Island without Sun. Jin followed the group into the jungle.
Before he could leave, a group of assailants attacked the camp with tranquilizer darts. They kidnapped Jin, bringing him to Room 23 on Hydra Island. He accidentally turned on the room's loud video, and he tried escaping, but Zoe tased him.
She then asked him to verify his signature on a map he'd made while in DHARMA of the island's electromagnetic pockets. He demanded to see Charles Widmore , who showed him Sun's camera with pictures of his daughter. Widmore claimed that if the Man in Black escaped the island, everyone would die. He then revealed his weapon against "Locke" - Desmond.
Jin watched as Widmore's team created an electromagnetic field, killing one of their members, and placed Desmond inside it. Sun and Jin drown together. Two days later, Sun came to Hydra Island, and she and Jin had an emotional reunion, during which he promised her they would never again part.
Widmore's team imprisoned them in cages , where Jin talked about seeing Ji Yeon and Sun returned his wedding ring. The smoke monster then attacked, letting them escape. Jin, Sun and the other potential candidates fought their way onto the submarine.
Jack and Jin pulled a cabinet off Sun, but a metal pole still trapped her. Jin gave Jack the last cylinder of oxygen, letting him save Sawyer, leaving him and Sun in the sub alone. She begged him to leave and save himself, but he repeated several times, once in their native language, that he would never leave her again. They drowned together, holding hands to the end. Jin and Sun, who neither spoke English, were unmarried and engaged in a taboo relationship because Jin was still an employee of Sun's father, Mr.
Paik had hired to kill Jin for being with his daughter. Jin and Sun kiss in Sun's hotel room. On the plane, Sun commented on how happy Rose and Bernard seemed together. Fearing Sun's casual attitude could reveal their true relationship, Jin told her to button her sweater. In the airport, customs officials discovered and confiscated Jin's money, detaining him so long that he missed his appointment with Keamy at a restaurant.
Jin and Sun then went to their hotel, where Jin demanded separate rooms to hide their relationship. He came to her room that night, planning to leave afterward, late, for the restaurant. An irritated Sun began unbuttoning her sweater for him, mocking his earlier warning, and the two fell into bed. Jin and Sun remember their lives. The two talked the next morning, and Sun suggested running away to America, just as Jin's father had once suggested they do.
Keamy then showed up, and Jin hid in the bathroom. Omar quickly found him, took him to the restaurant and tied him up in a walk-in freezer. Keamy spoke in English about his plan to kill Jin, but Keamy's other visitor, Sayid , wounded him and killed his henchmen. Sayid then gave Jin a razor to free himself. Sun and Mikhail , a translator, arrived soon after, and the two men fought until Jin shot him through the eye.
One of the stray bullets hit Sun in the abdomen, and she revealed she was pregnant, much to Jin's surprise. Jin rushed her to the hospital and brought her flowers. The baby turned out to be fine, and when he saw her on the sonogram, Jin remembered his past life and began speaking English. Detective James Ford entered the hospital room shortly after with concerns for their safety. Jin smiled and laughed, cryptically saying that they would see him " there ".
Reunited with their friends, Jin and Sun sat together in the church as a light washed over them, welcoming them to whatever the afterlife held in store for them. When Jin arrived on the Island, he had no knowledge of the English language, which left him alienated from the rest of the survivors.
As time passed however, he slowly picked up words and phrases with the help of Sun. She also created a notebook to help him learn some simple English. Three words that Jin uses often and seems to understand completely are " monster ", " others " and " gun ". In the flash-sideways, the pair were reunited and moved on with their friends from the Island.
The glass ballerina smashes at Sun's feet. Paik on March 20 As the daughter of a wealthy industrialist, she received a luxurious and privileged upbringing. At a young age, Sun could play the piano and was willing to protect herself no matter the cost. Sun once accidentally knocked over a glass ballerina figurine in her large manor home and fled to another room, afraid and guilty.
Paik found her and asked if she was responsible. She denied and blamed the maid, fully aware this meant the maid would be fired. And Found ". Sun and Jin marry. After graduating, Sun's parents commissioned a matchmaker who suggested Sun meet hotel heir Jae Lee.
They met and bonded; but while Sun took the relationship seriously, Jae Lee's heart lay with an American woman. Sun first saw Jin-Soo Kwon when he was a hotel doorman, but they met when they accidentally ran into each other.
She and Jin fell passionately in love, and kept their relationship discreet because of the class divide; Jin once waited at a party Sun attended and sent her a message using a napkin. Sun wanted to elope, but Jin refused, giving her a flower and promising it would one day be a ring. Shortly after, Jin did give her a ring - Sun's father had given them permission to marry, so long as he first worked six months for him.
Sun and Jin married, and a stranger blessed them at their wedding. Despite the strain on their marriage, Sun and Jin try for a child. Jin's father confirmed the story, and Sun paid the blackmailer but threatened to have her killed if she contacted them again.
Sun took this money from her father, and he held Jin liable for the debt, using him for increasingly shady work. This work took its toll on their marriage.
The couple first had to postpone their honeymoon - Jin again gave her a flower in its place - and a later gift of a dog made Sun recall when a flower had meant as much.
The work kept Jin away from home and often interrupted meals. Jin once came home with bloodstained hands revealing his work's nature. The two argued, and Sun slapped her husband, furtherly straining their marriage.
The couple failed to conceive a child, only adding to their issues. A fertility doctor said scar tissue blocked Sun's fallopian tubes. A distraught Jin accused Sun of knowing and withholding this information; Sun mocked the idea that she tried " to trap the son of a fisherman.
Paik 's employees. Sun also started an affair with Jae Lee , who'd been teaching her English so she could flee to America. Jae suggested they flee together, but Mr. Paik discovered the affair, catching the two in bed together. He ordered Jin to kill Jae to restore the family honor, but he didn't reveal the affair - he simply said Jae was "stealing" from him.
Jin beat Jae Lee but didn't kill him. Jae committed suicide nonetheless, holding Sun's pearl necklace as he died. Jin hands Sun the white flower. Losing all hope in reconciliation, Sun decided to go through with her plan to flee to America.
A friend gave her a false identity as "Dahlia Choi" and arranged a car that would take her from Sydney Airport to her new life. Sun went with Jin to Sydney on the way to Los Angeles for a business errand. At though, when the time came to leave, Jin raised a white flower, the same sort he'd given when their romance was young.
She then reluctantly ditched her escape attempt and joined him. Later, still recovering from her emotional choice, Sun spilled coffee on to Jin's lap. She tried to clean up the mess as an American woman nearby mocked her subservience. The two then boarded Oceanic Flight Sun finds Kate bathing by the shore, and looks at her enviously. Upon arriving on the Island, Sun and Jin separated themselves from the others. Jin was overly protective multiple times, such as when he told Sun to button her shirt or when he refused to let a fellow survivor under their shelter during a rainstorm.
The protectiveness continued in a softer manner when Sun became dehydrated and Jin managed to trade Sawyer a fish for two bottles of water. Later, Jin told Sun she was filthy and needed to wash up.
Finding a spot in the jungle, Sun removed her shirt and cleaned up, but was interrupted by a startled Michael who apologized and left. Sun tells Michael that she speaks English.
Sun, wanting to be more active with the other survivors, slowly began to find her place with them, leaving Jin to fish. Though the language barrier existed, Michael chose Sun as Walt 's babysitter while he hunted boars. Sun then began to share her knowledge of herbs, showing Walt how to use an aloe plant like toothpaste. Paik's Rolex. Sun explained the issue to Michael, revealing she knew English.
Jin no longer felt safe on the beach and the two moved from the beach into the caves. At the caves, Sun continued participating more, helping dig rocks that trapped Jack and using eucalyptus to treat Shannon 's asthma. Jin still bossed her around, scolding her for wearing a tank top, but she began to disobey. She also began cultivating plants in the caves and creating a garden close by in the jungle.
She began an awkward friendship with Kate who discovered she spoke English. Michael also continued asking her advice about Walt. Kate learns that Sun speaks English. Michael later caught Sun burying her fake driver's license , and they almost kissed.
Later, Jin forcibly covered Sun with a blanket when he saw her in a bikini and when Michael rushed to her aid she slapped him, fearing what Jin might do. She later apologized, and she confided her worries with Kate that night.
The survivors then found someone had set fire to the raft , and Jin told Sun he'd burned his hands trying to extinguish the flames. The other survivors saw the burns and attacked him as the culprit, so Sun explained his innocence - in English. Furious, Jin went to the caves to pack his bags.
Sun followed and tearfully asked if they could start over. He ignored her pleas and left her. Later, Sun had a moment in her bikini on the beach. In Translation ". Sun's redemption. In Translation " promotional still. Sun continued helping the camp, offering Sawyer medicine for his headaches and assisting Jack with Boone 's surgery, even providing sea urchin spines as needles for a blood transfusion.
She translated awkwardly when Jin tried to fetch Jack for Aaron 's birth and convinced Jack to stop giving Boone his blood. Afterwards, she convinced Jack he needed rest and helped Claire care for her newborn.
Her attempt failed. Before Jin left, she made him a book of English phrases, and they tearfully reconciled. Sun also shared an awkward hug with Michael before he left. As the raft set sail, Sun cried on the beach.
Soon after though, Rousseau arrived and attacked Claire , and Sun rushed to the screaming Claire. Sun tended to the injured mother and helped lead the Losties to the caves for protection against the mysterious " Others ". The Message Bottle is buried by Sun.
When Claire found the raft's bottle of messages Sun feared the worst for those on the raft and buried the bottle in desperation. Sun later noticed that her wedding ring was missing, leaving her devastated. Jack said it would turn up, Hurley suggested Vincent might have eaten it and Locke , who caught a distraught Sun destroying her garden, suggested she stop looking. As Sun later mused that it was silly of her to be so upset, Kate noticed the ring in the sand and Sun was overjoyed.
Sun returned to her garden and was shocked when Michael stumbled upon her. She took him to Jack in the Hatch and after a short wait reunited on the beach with Jin. The two embraced and spent that night together, emerging from their tent the next morning happily smiling. The couple began to again act as part of island life.
Sun again became Jack's nurse, watching over a wounded Sawyer. The next day, when Sun affectionately made Jin wear a hat against the sun, they learned Michael had fled into the jungle after Walt. Sun forbade Jin from joining the rescue team. Though Jin resented being told what to do, she explained that she had been told what to do for four years and did not like it either.
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