Sex and Drugs and Sausage Rolls
number three?”
    “He’s Tripper number one, who’s returned from the future where Dr Trillby has told him that he’s a stupid boy too, and to go and have another try at the newspaper.”
    “And does he have the bloody nose?”
    “No, because he never got punched.”
    “But if he didn’t get punched—”
    “He does get punched. By Tripper number two.”
    “Why?” asked Jim.
    “Because he tries to grab the newspaper off him. And that’s when Tripper number four gets into the fight.”
    “Who’s Tripper number four?”
    “He’s Tripper number three, who goes back further into the past to find a stout stick to defend himself against Tripper number two. Are you sure you want me to go on with this?”
    “No,” said Jim. “I don’t. How many Trippers were there in the end?”
    “Dozens. Coming and going and going and coming. I counted at least six of them fighting in the solar lounge at one time. But, do you know, I never did see whether any of them had the newspaper.”
    “So I assume that the time travel project was abandoned.”
    “Sometimes it is,” said Geraldo. “And sometimes it isn’t. Things have become a little unstable in the future.”
    “But they did put it online?”
    “Oh no,” said Geraldo. “They never actually put it online.”
    “This is all beyond me.” said Jim. “If they didn’t put it online, how did you get here?”
    “I nicked it,” said Geraldo proudly. “As I said, I watched and heard everything, because I had hacked into Porkie. So when Tripper explained how to download the program, I hastily downloaded it as well.”
    “But after you saw all the chaos, how could you even think of using it?”
    “Wouldn’t you have done the same?”
    “Well,” said Jim, “the prospect of time travel is very appealing. I could certainly win a lot of money on the horses.”
    “Yeah, and screw up the future. We took a vow to change nothing. We’re fanboys and all we wanted to do was travel back to the twentieth century and see all the great bands play. All the originals.”
    “Like the Beatles, for instance?”
    “Exactly. We agreed to meet up at different gigs. But Wingarde never showed up here, and now I know why. He’s been travelling about through time, saving famous rock stars from early deaths.”
    “It’s a very noble thing to do,” said Jim.
    “It’s chaos,” said Geraldo. “And it’s all my fault. I should never have trusted him.”
    “You weren’t to know,” said Jim.
    “Yes, but I should have known. It’s in his genes, you see. He can’t help the way he is. His father was the same and his grandfather before that. All trying to live down the family name.”
    “Why?” Jim asked.
    “Because they had an ancestor in the twentieth century who made a fortune.”
    “What’s so bad about that?” Jim asked.
    “It was the way he made it. He cheated and so his name became a household word, meaning a dirty rotten scoundrel.”
    “Oh,” said Jim. “It wasn’t Branson by any chance, was it?”
    “No,” said Geraldo. “It was Pooley. The scoundrel who pulled off The Pooley.”
    Old Sea Shanty
    Sing us your old sea shanty, Ted.
    Said crowds of little nippers.
    As ancient Ted sat in his shed
    Cooking his ancient kippers.
     
    Well, said Ted, there’s one I know
    Of days on masted brigs.
    With scupper hold and casks of gold
    And outboard schooner rigs.
     
    Eh? went the nippers, levelling bricks at him.
    Ted sang his shanty.
     
    ’Twas in the year of ’fifty-two
    Aboard the black ship Didgery Doo,
    With Captain Rolf and his mutinous crew
    That I went out a-whaling.
     
    We left the port five days behind
    Out west the great white whale to find.
    We waved at Drake on the
Golden Hind
    As he leaned over the railing.
     
    At last with rations running low
    And Rolf boy running to and fro,
    We spied a whale off the starboard bow
    And shouted, cool and groovy.
     
    And Captain Rolf put down the mate
    And came across on a roller skate,
    And said, I think

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