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 “Two astronauts become stranded on a jungle planet. When they run 
        out of supplies, one is forced to eat the other to survive,” Yasmin 
        Kahn read. 
        “Two princes become stranded on a methane underwater base. When 
        they run out of supplies, one is forced to eat the other to survive,” 
        Dan Lewis responded with a snicker. 
        “Two web designers become stranded on a desert planet. When they 
        run out of supplies, one is forced to eat the other to survive.” 
        Yasmin laughed out loud. 
        “Here’s a different one. A story about two aliens who accidentally 
        kill the Russian President….” 
        “If anything like that happened, we’d give them medals….” 
        “What in the cosmos are you reading?” The Doctor asked looking 
        across the console at her two human companions. 
        “It’s a random space adventure generator,” Dan explained. 
        “For sci-fi authors with writers block.” 
        “Time and space machine lands in a London junk yard disguised as 
        a police box…” Yas continued. 
        “What?” The Doctor’s expression changed to one of concern. 
        “Only kidding,” Yas assured her. “You told me all about 
        the junk yard that time when we were in that bar on the Scallis X. when 
        you claimed that Time Lords don’t get drunk and that Daerusian freight 
        pilot challenged you. I had to be referee. It was embarrassing. And afterwards 
        you couldn’t stop talking.” 
        “Shame I missed that,” Dan said with a wide grin. “Anyway, 
        Doctor, where are we headed, next?” 
        “Ummm… not entirely sure. I’m getting some conflicting 
        readings. It SHOULD be California in 1968, but it’s also saying 
        2022.” 
        “Either would be ok, wouldn’t they?” Yas asked. “There 
        were no earthquakes or forest fires or – KKK marches, were there?” 
        “No, nothing like that. There is a slight risk of a Covid variant 
        in ’22. But you both have your omni-vaccinations from the trip to 
        Mars in the 26th century, so you’re covered. Let’s see WHEN 
        we end up.” 
        Well, after all, few of their journeys had been planned. What was one 
        more mystery tour? 
        The materialisation wasn’t in the most exciting place. They looked 
        around in less than enthusiasm at the interior of a disused burger restaurant. 
         
        It clearly WAS disused. The doors and windows had been boarded up. But 
        curiously, it had been left intact. Tables and chairs were still in place. 
        There were swing bins for rubbish and plant pots containing artificial 
        plants. In front of a closed hatch that should lead to the kitchen there 
        was a long, gleaming counter. At one end was a stack of trays, at the 
        other, cutlery and napkins in a dispenser. In the middle was a soda dispenser 
        with five different flavours advertised as available. A rack for various 
        chocolate bars had been stripped of its contents. 
        They saw all of this by the TARDIS roof lamp, which was far brighter than 
        might be expected. 
        No dust,” The Doctor noted. “Odd. Dust gets everywhere except 
        on space stations with cyber extractors.” 
        “How long do you think it’s been abandoned?” Yas asked. 
        She looked at the panels that had sealed the entrance. They weren’t 
        just plain wood. Somebody had painted a mural in the style known as hyper-realism 
        with bold colours and cleanly defined lines. It depicted a shopping centre 
        – or perhaps, if they actually had landed in America - a mall. Yes, 
        probably, America. There was a supermarket called Winn-Dixie with an old-fashioned 
        style that suggested 1960s, and a shopfront with some very old-fashioned 
        televisions on display.  
        Dan looked the other way and saw a picture of what might be outside the 
        windows. A car park with what he would call ‘classic’ cars. 
        On the far side was a cinema with huge, colourful billboards advertising 
        ‘Speedway' starring Elvis Presley. The cars and the films suggested 
        late 1960s, though he didn’t know enough about Elvis films or American 
        cars to pinpoint a year. 
        “Not an actual burger franchise,” he said. The mural included 
        an image of a huge, succulent stacked burger with a crown hovering over 
        it. The words ‘McQueens Burger’ was in reverse, to be viewed 
        from outside. “It’s a wonder McDonalds AND Burger King weren’t 
        after them for copyright infringement. It’s a shame a local business 
        couldn't keep going, though, in the face of mega-commercialism. 
        “It is going,” Yas responded. “Closed down, trapped 
        in time, but still alive and kicking.” 
        The Doctor looked at her curiously.  
        “What made you say that?” she asked. “About it being 
        trapped in time?” 
        “Just….” Yas looked around, thinking about her own words. 
        “I don’t know. I felt… the thought just came into my 
        head… that it was trapped. Why?” 
        “Because… if this place is trapped… we’re trapped 
        with it. I just tried to go back to the TARDIS and… my key wouldn’t 
        turn.” 
        Dan looked at them both, then went to the police box and tried his key. 
        “Not that I didn’t believe you,” he said. “What 
        does it mean….” 
        “It means we’re trapped,” The Doctor answered. “Until 
        I figure out what’s going on or… time sorts itself out by 
        itself – which is perfectly possible.” 
        “Are you just saying that to make us feel better?” Dan asked. 
        “I’m saying it to make ME feel better,” The Doctor replied. 
        “This is a new situation for me. Trapped in a hysteresis without 
        access to the TARDIS….” 
        “Hysteresis?” Yas queried. 
        “I think you can get pills for it,” Dan suggested. 
        “I’m afraid not,” The Doctor said but she smiled at 
        the joke. “We may just have to wait it out.” 
        “Well, there are two problems with that,” Yas said. She glanced 
        around the room and headed towards the doors marked with standard male 
        and female silhouettes. “One of them is easy since we landed in 
        a time when indoor plumbing existed.” 
        She half dreaded the doors being locked or somehow not real – just 
        part of the scenery. But she went into a clean, airy room with cubicles 
        and wash basins. There were only three issues – no light from the 
        high, frosted window which had been painted blue on the outside, no toilet 
        rolls and no soap in the dispensers. But there was running water and the 
        last two problems were solved by the packet of wet wipes in her bag – 
        an essential of time and space travel. 
        When she came back out of the toilets she was surprised to find the burger 
        bar open for business. The lights were on, music was playing, the soda 
        fountain was flowing, oranges floated about in the fresh orange juice 
        dispenser. 
        And people were eating at the tables – eating burgers dispensed 
        by a chubby, rosy-cheeked young man in a colourful apron behind the counter. 
         
        Dan waved Yas over to a table where he and The Doctor were eating burgers. 
        He had gone for what looked like a triple-decker with burgers, sauce, 
        lettuce and cheese slices hanging out of the bun on all sides. He had 
        a large portion of fries and a huge cardboard cup of coke. The Doctor 
        had a more moderate burger and fresh orange juice. A juice and a meal 
        was set for Yas, too. 
        “You know I can’t eat ANYTHING they put in buns, here,” 
        she said cautiously as she sat. 
        “I got him to put cheese slices, tomatoes and lettuce in for you,” 
        Dan told her as she lifted the top part and saw for herself. “It’s 
        1968 – the veggie burger is a couple of decades away.” 
        “This is very kind of you,” Yas said. “Thanks for thinking 
        of me.” 
        “I used to make sure there was a non-meat option at the soup kitchen,” 
        he answered. “I don’t believe in ‘beggars can’t 
        be choosers’.” 
        “Quite right,” The Doctor agreed. “And… in fact….” 
        She looked around the café. The people eating looked as if they 
        were 1968’s versions of Dan’s soup kitchen customers. Clothes 
        were shabby, faces and hair hadn’t seen a beauty regime for a while. 
        Of course, this was the age of the dropout, the hippy ideal. But she had 
        a sense that these people were even lower down the social order of this 
        time. 
        “No money needed,” she said. 
        “I noticed that right away,” Dan pointed out. “There's 
        a cash register for the look of things, but the bloke just gives the food 
        away.” 
        The ‘customers’ were eating as if they REALLY needed the food,” 
        The Doctor noted to herself. People who usually went to fast food restaurants 
        did so as a stopping off point during shopping or as a social meeting 
        point. They weren’t hungry as such and the food was secondary – 
        which was just as well since burger and fries was a rather indifferent 
        sort of meal. But these people were eating because they were really hungry 
        and despite Dan’s assertion, beggars really couldn’t turn 
        down free food. 
        “It’s not 1968, any more,” Yas said, glancing at the 
        mural window. The film advertised at the cinema was The Poseidon Adventure. 
        She was no expert, but she was sure that film was early 1970s rather than 
        late 1960s. 
        “1972,” The Doctor confirmed. Yas looked the other way. The 
        TV shop now boasted that ALL their models were colour. No black and white. 
        The screens were getting bigger, too, though far from the wall sized home 
        cinema of her time.  
        The Doctor looked at the people and noticed that they weren’t the 
        same people, though they were still mostly shabby and hungry. 
        Dan popped to the men’s room and when he got back, confirmed that 
        soap and loo roll were now available. They were part of the fixtures along 
        with the napkin and drinking straw dispensers.  
        The ‘bloke’ at the counter was the one thing that hadn’t 
        changed. He was still a chubby, rosy-cheeked young man. Four years dishing 
        out burgers and fries hadn’t aged him at all. 
        “So, time is passing at an accelerated rate,” Yas said. “But 
        we’re not getting older, so we’re not part of it. Neither 
        is….”She looked at the boy in the apron but couldn't see his 
        name tag from the table. 
        “Chet,” Dan confirmed.  
        “Chet?” Yas giggled. “Really? Real people are called 
        Chet?” 
        “Somebody has to be,” Dan answered a bit defensively. 
        “I knew a Chet at the Prydonian Academy,” The Doctor admitted.” 
        “Short for Chetya-Zorkotho-Drustrumigo.” 
        “Well, anyway OUR Chet isn’t older,” Dan said after 
        a long pause in which neither he nor Yas could think of a comment about 
        Time Lord students. “But he IS a trainee manager now.” 
        When Dan got them all more drinks and ‘Hostess cup cakes’ 
        in individual wrappers for dessert, he noticed that Chet was STILL a trainee 
        manager but when he turned back to the table The Towering Inferno was 
        the film showing at the cinema. 
        “1974,” The Doctor said without being asked. “As for 
        Chet, you can be a trainee manager in places like this for years. But 
        I think he is part of the illusion, too. A Human avatar… the typical 
        burger restaurant worker.” 
        “Illusion?” Yas queried. 
        “Remember that isn’t a window – it’s a painted 
        mural of a window. Yet the film keeps changing. The cars are different 
        styles.” 
        “The people eating….” Dan wondered aloud. 
        “The people are real,” The Doctor assured him. “And, 
        yes, they do seem to be the down-and-outs of the locality.” 
        “How do they get in?” Yas asked. “There are no doors.” 
         
        “This is just a theory,” The Doctor answers. “I think 
        the restaurant sort of… sucks them in. It… finds people who 
        need to eat anywhere near it and….” 
        “Feeds them.” Dan grinned widely. “A philanthropic restaurant.” 
        “A philanthropic genius loci,” The Doctor suggested. “I’ve 
        heard of such a thing….” 
        “Me too,” Dan said. Yas was still puzzled. “It’s 
        like… the spirit of a place. Rivers have them. Like, old Father 
        Thames, or Old Man River, the Mississippi, Sabrina, spirit of the River 
        Severn who has it in for men who hurt women. There’s even a spirit 
        of the Mersey. She’s a Red, of course. And she loves the Beatles 
        and Gerry Marsden. Hates all Tories, especially Margaret Thatcher and 
        NEVER reads The Sun.” 
        Yas laughed at his description of the Spirit of the River Mersey, using 
        the most typical traits of a working-class scouser. It sounded about right 
        to her.  
        “Old houses, ships, big shops like Harrods, anything that has seen 
        a lot of life, will have a genius loci,” The Doctor said. “The 
        creepy clown at Blackpool Pleasure Beach. Some people think the London 
        Underground or the phone network might have one. The scariest possibility 
        is the internet having a sentient life of its own. That might have to 
        be dealt with if it ever happens.” 
        “But this place looked brand new in the 1960s,” Dan pointed 
        out. “And never actually used. Like it closed down before it even 
        opened. Where does it get the ‘lot of life’? From the down-and-outs 
        it feeds or…. Is IT feeding on them?” 
        “Not in a parasite sense,” The Doctor assured him. “Genius 
        loci, in the original understanding, were local gods – especially 
        the rivers and other natural features. They were worshipped. In China, 
        there was Chenghuangshen, a city God, with characteristics matching the 
        city or town. By the way, Dan, Balisama is the goddess of the river Mersey, 
        but you had her about right. A party girl but no fan of the Tories or 
        The Sun.” 
        “So… these homeless people being fed… are the worshippers 
        of the McQueen Burger spirit?” Yas conjectured. “By the way, 
        1974 took ages… and the cinema now has two screens showing Alien 
        and Rocky II. I’ve lost count of how many of either were made.” 
        “1979,” The Doctor said. “We seem to be getting edited 
        highlights of the decade. I wonder if it fixed on 1979 because we mentioned 
        Margaret Thatcher. That was the year she became Prime Minister.” 
        “Let’s STOP talking about Margaret Thatcher,” Dan suggested. 
        Nobody objected.  
        “E.T. and Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan….” Yas said. 
        “And diet Coke is available at the counter.” 
        “1982,” The Doctor noted. “A three year gap this time. 
        It’s a better way to see time passing than clothes in a fashion 
        shop,” she added. Her two friends looked puzzled. “The 1960 
        film of the Time Machine by my old pal Herbert George Wells – time 
        travel was depicted by the fashions altering in a boutique across the 
        road from Rod Taylor’s laboratory. You’ve never seen it?” 
        Neither had. 
        “Shame, it’s a good talking point when time travelling. The 
        amazing thing is that the premises remained a clothes shop for about seventy 
        years. Most small businesses change hands a little bit more.” 
        “Speaking of time travel….” Dan nodded towards the mural. 
        Back to the Future was the big feature at the cinema with a huge 3D DeLorean 
        bursting out of the billboard.  
        “1985. I know that one,” Yas said with a satisfied grin. “Because 
        I remember in 2010, twenty-five years after, people were asking where 
        their hover boards and rehydrated pizzas were.” 
        “The future is never what science-fiction writers imagine,” 
        The Doctor confirmed with a wry smile.  
        “People needing to eat doesn’t change,” Dan remarked, 
        looking at a still busy restaurant. Clothes had changed, even for those 
        at the bottom end of the market, but hunger was the same.  
        The films showing at the mural cinema were an indicator of time passing. 
        Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade was the main feature, now. The Doctor 
        confirmed it was released in 1989. 
        “That far back!” Dan commented. “The best of the three, 
        if you ask me. The Holy Grail. Classic!” 
        The Doctor smiled knowingly at Yas, who returned the grin. 
        “We went to Petra in the 1930s,” Yas explained. “Graham 
        and Ryan were there as well. I wanted to visit at the time Agatha Christie’s 
        Appointment with Death was set. We’d already done the Orient Express 
        and a Nile Cruise. Petra is amazing, but there are no ancient knights 
        guarding the Grail. Only a very shy bunch of red silica-based lifeforms 
        who hide out in the caves, pretending to be rocky outcrops when people 
        were about.” 
        “Which was all the time,” The Doctor confirmed. “It 
        was a major tourist spot in the day. Which would have made it tricky for 
        Indiana Jones, in fact.” 
        Dan laughed and insisted that the film was still a classic. As was Speed, 
        released in 1994.  
        “Graham likes that one,” Yas said. “But he swore he 
        wouldn’t take that jump, no way, no how.” 
        Dan laughed with them and expressed the hope of meeting the old gang some 
        time. 
        “A scouser in Sheffield… might be dangerous,” Yas answered. 
        “We’d better go somewhere neutral – Preston bus station 
        or Blackpool Prom.” 
        “Sounds good to me,” Dan conceded. “The prom, for preference. 
        Preston Bus Station has a certain brutalist charm, but they can’t 
        do a decent cuppa in their caff.” 
        Yas thought that would be a good day out for all, providing that The Doctor 
        didn’t find something nasty crawling out of the sea.  
        “Wayne’s World,” Dan said as 1995 rolled around. “Good 
        music but didn’t think much of the plot.” 
        He stood and went to the counter, obtaining more drinks. After delivering 
        them to Yas and The Doctor he returned to the counter and stood beside 
        Chet, the eternal assistant manager and helped give out food to the never-ending 
        line of people. Yas noticed him talking to some of them, but there was 
        little time to strike up a long conversation.  
        “He’s great, though, isn’t he,” Yas commented, 
        watching Dan at work. “He can’t resist pitching in there. 
        We don’t even know what’s going on, here, exactly. But he 
        sees hungry people and goes for it, helping out.” 
        “He’s a remarkable human being,” The Doctor agreed. 
        “We’re in 1998, by the way. The Truman Show is on at the cinema. 
        The years have slowed down a bit. I saw the film titles for 1996 and 1997 
        while you were watching Dan. Up till now, they jumped years. Now we’re 
        seeing them year by year.” 
        To prove it, Fight Club and The Perfect Storm brought them to the Millennium 
        while Dan took a coffee break. 
        With coffee. They sold coffee, now. New meu items were being added, too, 
        like salads. Though not many people were taking them up on it. 
        “There’s a lady called Sal who’s been coming here most 
        of the 1990s. I say lady, she’s only twenty-two. She ran away from 
        home when she was fourteen. Lived rough all that time. She says, most 
        of the homeless know there’s a place around here, but not how to 
        get in.They just find themselves here all of a sudden, and ger to eat 
        their fill. People who would never get a hot meal, or a jumbo coke. I 
        know it’s not healthy food, but when you’re hungry and cold, 
        its FOOD.” 
        The Doctor agreed with that sentiment, but she was interested in the fact 
        that the people didn’t know how they got into the restaurant. Also 
        that an urban legend was growing – one believed in only by people 
        to whom nobody else would be listening.  
        But surely it couldn’t last forever? She glanced at the window mural 
        and noted that Finding Nemo represented the films of 2003. She had a theory 
        she hadn’t shared with Yas and Dan – in case she was wrong. 
         
        The Day After Tomorrow was the film of 2004 – at least in the cinema 
        painted on the boards – its aerial view of a frozen New York one 
        of the first film posters to show the ‘gap’ in the city from 
        the real-world catastrophe of 9-11. While The Doctor was thinking about 
        that, Batman Begins heralded 2005 and then The Da Vinci Code, the most 
        controversial film of 2006 followed on.  
        “Sal isn’t coming any more,” Dan noted with a tense 
        expression. There were a lot of bad things that could happen to a homeless 
        young woman. At least six of them passed through his mind in a heartbeat. 
        “Maybe she had a happy ending,” Yas suggested. “A job, 
        home, a husband… kids.” 
        “Maybe,” Dan agreed, though he wasn’t entirely convinced. 
        “I shouldn’t have asked her name - found out about her. Now 
        I’m wortried for her. I know its daft – well soft – 
        after all, hundreds of them have been here. I don’t even remember 
        their faces. But I got to know Sal….” 
        “I understand,” Yas told him. “They tell us in police 
        training - not to get too emotionally involved. When its battered women 
        and bruised kids – the stuff we pass on to social services. We can’t 
        fix everything.” 
        “We had a course at the Prydonian Academy,” The Doctor admitted. 
        “Emotional Detachment. I was no good at it. Sometimes, you have 
        to care…. About a planet, a city, about a person….” 
        Dan nodded. That was it. You knew that for everyone who got fed at your 
        soup-kitchen there were fifty more going hungry. You just did your smell 
        bit and hoped it helped.  
        But he kept thinking about Sal. He was worried about her, even though 
        he knew he shouldn’t – couldn’t – do anything 
        to help her. 
        Yas noticed his mood and tried to cheer him by talking about Despicable 
        Me and Kung Fu Panda II that represented 2010 and 2011 passing by. Or 
        how much of a let-down Men in Black 3 – 2012 – was compared 
        to the first two and how much bigger the televisions in the mall shop 
        had become.  
        “When we get out of this….” He said. “I need to 
        know. Doctor… you can find out with the TARDIS. Even if she’s 
        ‘off-grid’ to welfare or the tax office, you can do it….” 
        The Doctor didn’t point out that the TARDIS databases accumulated 
        knowledge by accessing local technology like tax and welfare records. 
        If Sal remained a street person without any kind of bank account, Facebook 
        profile, streaming service subscription, she really could be invisible 
        even to the TARDIS. Perhaps they would never know the fate of that one 
        woman – one of millions of Americans who kept that sort of low profile. 
        Dan at least agreed with Yas that Frozen was the most over-rated film 
        of 2013 and the song REALLY irritating and that The Amazing Spider-Man 
        2 in 2014 was worse than the first one. He agreed that Spectre, the Bond 
        movie of 2015 was pretty good, if overlong, but his heart wasn’t 
        in it. He went back to the counter and carried on serving alongside Chet. 
        He talked to the customers, but perhaps with a little self-protecting 
        reserve.  
        The Doctor watched the films change, not because she had any opinion about 
        Deadpool (2016), Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017) or even Bohemian Rhapsody 
        - though she had broken the Time Lord rule about trivial use of a TARDIS 
        to see the London premiere in 2018 – but because she was sure the 
        whole thing was coming to a close , soon, and she felt there was going 
        to be an optimum moment to get back into the TARDIS and leave the scene. 
        She trusted they WOULD be able to get into the TARDIS. 
        That moment came just as the cinema started to advertise Top Gun: Maverick, 
        the big box office smash of 2022. For a few minutes Dan and Chet had been 
        handing out take away food rather than sit-in. Then Chet wasn’t 
        there. Nobody was there. 
        The lights were off. The counter was empty. No snacks, no diet Coke tins, 
        no leaflets for the cinema.  
        And there were noises outside the mursal eindow that they vhadnt hewarde 
        before now. 
        “Time to go,” The Doctor said, heading for the TARDIS and 
        hoping the door would open. 
        It did. She stepped inside, followed by Yas and Dan. She went to the console 
        and pushed a few buttons, pulled a lever. For a very brief time there 
        was a sensation of movement.  
        The door opened again. They stepped out, unnoticed, into a car park between 
        a mega-sized shopping mall as beloved by American consumers and what was, 
        now, a multiplex cinema at which Top Gun: Maverick was only one of a dozen 
        choices. 
        A crowd had gsthered to watch something happrning at the Mall. 
        Dan looked artound and spotteds a catering vsn which, according to the 
        sign, gave out free food to the homeless. He wandered over and struck 
        up a conjveedsaton with the young man givijg out burgers and fries and 
        cups of cdoffee.  
        “It’s a weird story,” the yoiung man told him. “Fifty 
        odd years sgo, the msall was readyv tov open. A young couple had bpught 
        the freehold or leasehold, whcihevere it is – for a diner. Ben and 
        Tessa McQueen – They were going to cvsll the bplcre McQureen’s 
        butgered. It was all ready like everuthijg rlse. Only teo weeks before 
        the grand opening they were killed vin a car crash.” 
        “Oh no,” Dan responded, because he felt a response to such 
        tragedy was required, even if it was fifty years too late.  
        “Thing is, neither of them had any family and no will. Nobody to 
        take over the place. When the mall opened, the boards stayed up on the 
        diner. And they stayed up. The people who owned the Mall then couldn’t 
        touch it because of the legalities. then the whole place was sold to another 
        owner and I guess they forgot it was even there. People just thought it 
        was a wall, usually covered in cinema posters.” 
        That explained some of the story, Dan realised. 
        “So... what’s happening now?” he asked. 
        “Well, couple of months back it was ‘found again’. The 
        whole thing like a time capsule – a fully functional diner, kitchen 
        restrooms, the lot. And it was all down to that lady over there giving 
        the TV interview.” 
        Dan looked and recognised Sal, about ten years older than when he’d 
        first met her, and dressed like somebody who’d fallen on her feet 
        financially. 
        “Sal….” He murmured. 
        “Yeah, that’s right, Sal Browning as we knew her. Mrs Sally 
        Everington, now. She used to be one of us – street sleeper, half 
        starved. Then the lawyers tracked her down – her father was dead 
        and she inherited a whole property portfolio from him. She’s rich, 
        now. But she didn’t forget us. That diner – her lawyers got 
        the freehold sorted easily enough. And as of tomorrow, we’re not 
        going to be giving out the burgers from this old van. We’re moving 
        in to the diner. Free food for the hungry, from a proper diner. Nobody 
        turned away. The bills all paid.” 
        “Wow.” Dwn turned back to look at Sal. He wondered if he could 
        talk to her. Would she know him? Would he just be part of a vivid dream 
        from back when she was a runaway from her rich dad? 
        What would he say anyway? 
        It didn’t matter. 
        What mattered, was that it had all come round in the best possible way 
        for her and for everyone – everyone except the mall owners who, 
        he suspected would have liked to get rid of the homeless hangers-on and 
        now had them by the bucketload.  
        He grinned widely and drifted back to where The Doctor and Yas waited 
        by the TARDIS, that had surely never been ignored in a crowded place as 
        much as it was right now. they went inside. The door shut. Moments later 
        it was gone. 
        He told them the story. Yas was thrilled to know Sal was ok. So was The 
        Doctor.  
        I'd been thinking about it since the mid-90s,” Dan admitted. “Like… 
        getting you to take me back in time to set up a bank account - you know, 
        twenty quid in high interest – that would set something up after 
        the genius loci shut up shop. I figured it would. You said the TARDIS 
        wasn’t sure if it was 1968 or 2022. So that was the window - it 
        was all going to come to an end. But... Sal’s way is better and 
        you don’t have to break any rules. I’ll bet there are some 
        about making money that way.” 
        “Tons of them,” The Doctor agreed. “And, yes, Sal’s 
        way is better. The ordinary human way.” 
        “What about the Genius Loci?” Yas asked. “Is it still 
        there?” 
        “I expect so,” The Doctor answered. “Funny, I’ve 
        never heard of one of them fixed on a brand new building,. I’ll 
        bet if we looked into it there’d be some old native burial site 
        on the spot or something. But we don’t need to. She’s there… 
        feeding the hungry – fed in return by their… their love… 
        gratitude… no, not really. Just by their presence. That’s 
        obviously what she craved in the find place. That’s why she put 
        the idea in Sal’s head, I expect.” 
        It was all guesswork, but Dan nodded, still grinning. It all make sense 
        to him – after a fashion.   “So… next stop Blackpool prom?” 
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