Gerald Pemberton was having the worst Tuesday of his life, and it wasn’t even noon yet. His coffee maker had exploded, covering his kitchen in a fine mist of espresso grounds. His cat, Mr. Whiskers, had somehow figured out how to order three hundred pounds of tuna on his credit card. And now, to top it all off, his grandfather was texting him from the Stone Age.
The first message had arrived at 7:43 AM:
“GERALD HELP. ACCIDENTALLY ACTIVATED THE TIME TOILET. NOW SURROUNDED BY HAIRY PEOPLE WHO SMELL LIKE WET MAMMOTH. THEY THINK I’M THEIR GOD BECAUSE OF MY ELECTRIC TOOTHBRUSH. PLEASE ADVISE.”
Gerald stared at his phone, wondering if the exploding coffee maker had given him a concussion. His grandfather, Professor Reginald Pemberton III, was supposed to be at the Senior Center playing bingo, not texting from prehistory. But then again, this was the same man who had once accidentally invented a microwave that could only heat food to exactly lukewarm temperature and a vacuum cleaner that exclusively sucked up left socks.
Another text buzzed through:
“UPDATE: TAUGHT THEM THE MACARENA. THEY’RE CALLING IT SACRED DANCE OF THE SPARKLY ONE. THAT’S ME. I’M SPARKLY ONE BECAUSE OF MY SEQUINED BOWLING SHIRT.”
Gerald rubbed his temples. The Time Toilet. Of course. His grandfather had been working on that ridiculous invention for months in his garage, insisting that humanity’s greatest limitation was having to use the bathroom in only one temporal dimension. “Think of the possibilities, Gerald!” he’d said. “You could do your business in the Renaissance! Or the future! No more waiting in line at baseball games!”
The phone rang. It was his grandmother.
“Gerald, dear, have you seen your grandfather? He’s been in the bathroom for six hours, and I’m starting to worry. Also, there’s a strange blue glow coming from under the door, and I can hear what sounds like… pterodactyls?”
“Grandma, I think we have a situation.”
Twenty minutes later, Gerald stood in his grandparents’ bathroom, staring at what used to be a perfectly normal toilet but now looked like someone had crossed a Port-a-Potty with the Large Hadron Collider. The seat was covered in blinking LED lights, there were at least seventeen different flush levers, and the tank had been replaced with what appeared to be a small nuclear reactor made from a modified bread maker.
“How is he even texting me from the Stone Age?” Gerald muttered.
His grandmother, Ethel, shrugged while knitting what looked like a sweater for a three-armed person. “Oh, he installed that Temporal Wi-Fi last week. Said something about quantum entanglement and data packets traveling through the time-stream. I wasn’t really listening. I was watching my stories.”
Another text arrived:
“SLIGHT PROBLEM. TRIED TO SHOW THEM INDOOR PLUMBING. THEY’RE NOW WORSHIPPING THE TIME TOILET. BUILT WHOLE RELIGION AROUND IT. POPE FRANCIS IS GOING TO BE SO CONFUSED IN 40,000 YEARS.”
Gerald groaned. “Grandma, do you have the instruction manual for this thing?”
“Oh yes, dear. It’s right here.” She handed him a napkin with illegible scribbles and what looked like a drawing of a dinosaur wearing a top hat.
“This is just his grocery list and a doodle.”
“That’s the manual, sweetie. Your grandfather’s not very good with documentation.”
Gerald’s phone buzzed again:
“MADE FRIEND. HIS NAME IS UGG. ACTUALLY EVERYONE’S NAME IS UGG. VERY CONFUSING AT PARTIES.”
Gerald examined the Time Toilet more closely. There was a small screen displaying “TEMPORAL DESTINATION: 38,000 BCE” and below it, a keyboard made entirely of rubber ducks. Each duck had a different expression, and squeezing them produced various temporal coordinates.
“Okay,” Gerald said, taking a deep breath. “I’m going to try to bring him back.”
He squeezed a particularly grumpy-looking duck. The toilet water began to swirl counterclockwise, then clockwise, then somehow both directions at once. The bathroom filled with the smell of ozone and, inexplicably, fresh-baked cookies.
His phone buzzed:
“WHATEVER YOU JUST DID, DON’T DO IT AGAIN. NOW I’M IN ANCIENT EGYPT AND THEY THINK I’M RA BECAUSE MY BALD HEAD IS SHINY. CLEOPATRA WANTS TO MARRY ME. YOUR GRANDMOTHER WILL NOT BE PLEASED.”
“Oops,” Gerald muttered. He tried squeezing a happier duck. The toilet made a sound like a yodeling walrus.
“ARE YOU KIDDING ME? NOW I’M AT WOODSTOCK. EVERYONE THINKS I’M PART OF THE SHOW. CURRENTLY ON STAGE WITH JIMI HENDRIX. HE LIKES MY SEQUINED SHIRT.”
Ethel peered over Gerald’s shoulder. “Tell him to get Hendrix’s autograph for me.”
“Grandma, this is serious!”
“So is my Hendrix collection, dear.”
Gerald tried another duck, this one wearing what looked like a tiny crown. The toilet gurgled ominously.
“MEDIEVAL TIMES. CHALLENGED TO JOUSTING MATCH. USING MOP AS LANCE. WISH ME LUCK.”
“This is hopeless,” Gerald groaned. “The ducks make no sense!”
His grandmother squinted at the toilet. “Have you tried the emergency flush?”
“The what now?”
She pointed to a small button hidden behind the toilet paper holder. It was labeled “TEMPORAL RESET – DO NOT PUSH UNLESS REALITY IS UNRAVELING.”
“That seems ominous.”
“Well, dear, reality does seem a bit unraveled. Your grandfather is currently text messaging from various historical periods while probably creating numerous temporal paradoxes.”
Gerald’s phone buzzed with a flood of messages:
“NOW IN DINOSAUR TIMES. T-REX THINKS MY ELECTRIC TOOTHBRUSH IS MAGIC STICK. TEACHING HIM DENTAL HYGIENE.”
“UPDATE: DINOSAURS VERY INTERESTED IN FLOSSING.”
“UPDATE 2: MAY HAVE PREVENTED THEIR EXTINCTION BY IMPROVING THEIR ORAL HEALTH. SORRY ABOUT YOUR TIMELINE.”
Gerald pushed the button.
The bathroom exploded in a symphony of light and sound. The toilet began playing what sounded like Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony mixed with dubstep. The walls rippled like water, and for a brief moment, Gerald could swear he saw his future self giving him a thumbs up while wearing an eyepatch and riding a cybernetic ostrich.
Then, with a tremendous FLUSH that shook the entire house, everything went quiet.
His grandfather materialized in the bathtub, still wearing his sequined bowling shirt but now also sporting a Viking helmet, hieroglyphic tattoos, and what appeared to be a tail made of colorful scarves.
“Gerald!” Professor Pemberton exclaimed. “You’ll never believe the adventure I’ve had! I’ve seen the dawn of civilization, the rise and fall of empires, and I taught Beethoven how to beatbox!”
“Grandpa, you’ve been gone for less than seven hours.”
“Seven hours? My boy, I’ve lived seventeen lifetimes! I’ve been worshipped as a god, led armies into battle with nothing but a plunger, and I may have accidentally invented democracy 3,000 years early!”
Ethel looked at her husband with a mixture of exasperation and fondness. “Reginald, you missed bingo.”
“Bingo? BINGO? Woman, I just played bingo with Julius Caesar! We used legionnaires as the markers!”
Gerald’s phone buzzed one more time. He looked at it, confused. “Grandpa, how are you still texting me? You’re right here.”
Professor Pemberton looked sheepish. “Ah, well, about that…”
The message read: “HELLO GERALD. THIS IS OTHER GRANDPA. FROM ALTERNATE TIMELINE WHERE YOUR GRANDFATHER STAYED IN STONE AGE. WE’VE BUILT QUITE NICE CIVILIZATION HERE. INVENTED WHEELS LAST WEEK. VERY EXCITING. ANYWAY, CAN YOU SEND MORE SEQUINED SHIRTS? THE CAVES ARE QUITE DRAB.”
“Grandpa… what did you do?”
“I may have… split the timeline. Just a tiny bit. Nothing major. Although you might start noticing some small changes.”
“What kind of changes?”
At that moment, Mr. Whiskers walked into the bathroom on his hind legs, wearing a tiny business suit and carrying a briefcase.
“Excuse me,” the cat said in perfect English, “but I need to discuss the tuna futures I’ve invested in. The market is quite volatile, and I believe we should diversify into salmon.”
Gerald stared at his talking cat, then at his grandfather, then at the Time Toilet, which was now humming the theme from Jeopardy.
“I’m going back to bed,” he announced.
“But Gerald,” his grandfather protested, “I haven’t told you about the time I taught Napoleon how to breakdance! Or when I introduced sushi to the Vikings! Or how I accidentally caused the Renaissance by leaving my smartphone in Leonardo da Vinci’s workshop!”
“Bed. Now. No more time travel.”
As Gerald trudged out of the bathroom, his phone buzzed again:
“STONE AGE GRANDPA HERE AGAIN. WE’VE JUST INVENTED AGRICULTURE. IT’S GOING WELL. PLANTED THE SEQUINS FROM YOUR GRANDFATHER’S SHIRT. EXPECTING GOOD HARVEST OF DISCO BALLS.”
Gerald threw his phone in the trash and went home, where he discovered his apartment had been replaced by a giant mushroom and his car was now a domesticated triceratops named Kevin.
“I should have just let him play bingo,” he muttered, climbing onto Kevin’s back for the ride to work.
Back at the Pemberton house, Professor Reginald Pemberton III was already tinkering with the Time Toilet again.
“I think I can fix the timeline convergence issue,” he told Ethel. “I just need to reverse the polarity of the quantum flush mechanism and—”
“Reginald Pemberton, you step away from that toilet right now, or so help me, I’ll feed your dinner to the time-traveling cat!”
“But Ethel, think of the scientific possibilities! We could visit our wedding day! Relive our youth! Attend concerts by musicians who haven’t been born yet!”
Ethel considered this. “Could we see Elvis?”
“My dear, we could have lunch with Elvis, dinner with Mozart, and breakfast with the Beatles!”
“Well… maybe just one more trip.”
Meanwhile, Gerald was trying to explain to his boss why he was three hours late to work.
“You see, Mr. Henderson, my grandfather accidentally traveled through time via a modified toilet, created several alternate timelines, and now my cat is a venture capitalist.”
Mr. Henderson, who was now apparently a sentient cactus in a suit, nodded sympathetically. “We’ve all been there, Pemberton. Take the day off. Try to sort out your temporal paradoxes.”
Gerald’s phone, which had somehow crawled out of the trash and developed legs, scuttled over to him with another message:
“HI SWEETIE, IT’S GRANDMA. WE’RE IN THE ROARING TWENTIES. YOUR GRANDFATHER IS TEACHING GATSBY THE ELECTRIC SLIDE. HAVING WONDERFUL TIME. DON’T WAIT UP. P.S. – WE MAY HAVE ACCIDENTALLY PREVENTED THE GREAT DEPRESSION. YOU’RE WELCOME.”
Gerald put his head in his hands. Across the office, his coworkers were adapting surprisingly well to their new forms. Jennifer from accounting was now a highly efficient octopus, typing on eight keyboards simultaneously. Bob from IT had become pure energy and was fixing computer problems by simply existing near them.
“Maybe this isn’t so bad,” Gerald thought. Then he looked out the window and saw a T-Rex in a top hat walking a group of cavemen on leashes while a flying Victorian mansion delivered pizza.
His phone buzzed again:
“ORIGINAL STONE AGE GRANDPA UPDATE: WE’VE REACHED THE BRONZE AGE IN JUST SIX HOURS. THE SEQUINED AGRICULTURE WAS VERY SUCCESSFUL. ALSO, WE’VE DOMESTICATED DINOSAURS. THEY MAKE EXCELLENT ACCOUNTANTS.”
Gerald decided to embrace the chaos. If his grandfather could travel through time and completely rewrite history, the least he could do was try to make the best of it. He stood up, addressed his transformed office, and declared, “Everyone, early lunch! Kevin the Triceratops is giving rides to the new restaurant that serves food from all time periods simultaneously!”
The office cheered. The sentient water cooler did a little dance. The photocopier, which had gained consciousness and was now writing poetry, composed a quick haiku in celebration.
As they filed out of the building, Gerald’s phone received another message:
“GRANDSON! WE’VE FIXED EVERYTHING! FOUND THE MANUAL! IT WAS BEING USED AS A COASTER IN THE CRETACEOUS PERIOD! COMING HOME NOW!”
Gerald felt a wave of relief wash over him. Finally, things could go back to normal. No more talking cats, no more dinosaur coworkers, no more temporal shenanigans.
Then the message continued:
“SLIGHT HICCUP THOUGH. WE’RE BRINGING SOME FRIENDS. HOPE YOU DON’T MIND HOSTING GENGHIS KHAN, AMELIA EARHART, AND A VERY CONFUSED SHAKESPEARE FOR DINNER. ALSO, THE TOILET IS NOW SENTIENT AND WANTS TO BE CALLED REGINALD JR.”
Gerald looked at Kevin the Triceratops, who shrugged as much as a dinosaur could shrug. “Your family seems fun,” Kevin commented in a distinctly British accent.
“You have no idea,” Gerald sighed.
Back at the Pemberton house, the bathroom was getting crowded. Genghis Khan was teaching Amelia Earhart Mongolian throat singing while Shakespeare tried to figure out how to use a smartphone.
“To text or not to text,” the bard muttered, “that is the question. Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to suffer the autocorrect of outrageous fortune…”
Professor Pemberton beamed at his temporal house guests. “Isn’t this wonderful, Ethel? We’re hosting history’s greatest minds!”
“They’re eating all our food, Reginald. Genghis Khan just devoured an entire ham by himself.”
“Details, details! Think of what we can learn from them!”
The Time Toilet, now sporting googly eyes and a small bowtie, gurgled appreciatively. “I find this gathering most stimulating,” it said in a posh British accent. “Though I do wish you’d stop using me for my intended purpose. It’s rather undignified when one has achieved consciousness.”
Amelia Earhart looked up from the throat singing lesson. “So you’re telling me that in your time, people fly around in metal tubes all day long, and nobody thinks it’s special?”
“That’s right,” Ethel replied, offering her more cookies. “Would you like to see our microwave? It makes food hot without fire.”
“Witchcraft!” Shakespeare exclaimed, then paused. “Actually, that would make a great play. ‘The Taming of the Microwave.’ No, wait, ‘A Midsummer Night’s Defrost.’ I’ll workshop it.”
Gerald arrived home to find his grandparents’ front lawn had been transformed into a temporal refugee camp. Marie Curie was giving impromptu physics lessons to a group of Neanderthals. Cleopatra and Joan of Arc were having an intense discussion about leadership while playing poker. A confused medieval knight was trying to figure out how to ride Kevin the Triceratops.
“This is my life now,” Gerald said to no one in particular.
His talking cat, Mr. Whiskers, adjusted his tiny spectacles. “Could be worse. At least the timeline where everyone is made of pudding didn’t stick.”
“There was a timeline where everyone was pudding?”
“Oh yes. Terrible for the economy. Nobody could shake hands. Business deals fell apart. Literally.”
Inside, Gerald found his grandparents holding court with their temporal guests. Professor Pemberton had set up a whiteboard and was explaining the principles of time travel to an enraptured audience.
“You see,” he said, drawing incomprehensible diagrams, “the key is to think of time not as a river, but as a very confused plate of spaghetti. Each noodle is a possible timeline, and the Time Toilet is essentially a very elaborate fork.”
“I resent being compared to cutlery,” Reginald Jr. (the toilet) interjected.
“My apologies. You’re more of a… temporal colander.”
“Much better.”
Genghis Khan raised his hand. “Question. If I go back and conquer different lands, does that change current time?”
“Excellent question! The answer is yes, no, and maybe, all at once. It’s very quantum. Like Schrödinger’s cat, but with more pillaging.”
Mr. Whiskers looked offended. “I’ll have you know Schrödinger’s cat was my great-great-grandfather. Lovely fellow. Existed and didn’t exist at all the best parties.”
Gerald slumped into a chair, which immediately transformed into a sentient ottoman named Philippe.
“Bonjour!” Philippe said cheerfully. “I was a chair, but zen I thought, why not be an ottoman? Life is about change, no?”
“Even the furniture is having an existential crisis,” Gerald groaned.
His grandmother patted his shoulder. “There, there, dear. Look on the bright side. We’re having the most interesting dinner party in the history of the space-time continuum.”
“Literally,” added Shakespeare, who was now live-tweeting the entire event. “Forsooth, this eve shall be remembered! #TemporalDinnerParty #ToiletTimeTravel #ExitPursuedByTRex”
The doorbell rang, which was odd because the Pembertons’ doorbell had been replaced by a small portal to the dimension of doors.
“I’ll get it!” Professor Pemberton said cheerfully. He opened the door to reveal three versions of himself from different timelines.
“Hello!” they said in unison. “We’re here for the convergence meeting.”
“The what now?” Gerald asked.
“Oh, didn’t I mention?” his grandfather said. “When you create multiple timelines, eventually all versions of yourself need to meet to sort out who gets to keep existing. It’s like a temporal board meeting.”
“How many versions are there?”
“Let me check.” Professor Pemberton pulled out a notebook. “There’s Stone Age me, Renaissance me, Future me, Evil Goatee me, the me that became a professional juggler, the me that invented edible mathematics, Robot me, Ghost me somehow, and… oh dear.”
“What?”
“Apparently there’s a me that became the universe’s most successful boy band member. He goes by Reggie P and has seventeen platinum albums.”
As if on cue, a portal opened and out stepped a version of Professor Pemberton wearing leather pants, sunglasses indoors, and enough hair gel to style a small army.
“Yo, yo, yo!” Reggie P announced. “The Reg-meister is in the temporal house! Where my quantum homies at?”
Gerald watched in horror as his grandfather and Pop Star Grandfather performed an elaborate secret handshake that involved at least three dimensions and possibly a small wormhole.
“Kill me,” Gerald whispered to the sentient ottoman.
“I cannot, monsieur. I am but furniture. Existentially crisis-having furniture, but furniture nonetheless.”
The meeting of the Grandpas quickly devolved into chaos. Stone Age Grandpa insisted everyone should return to a simpler time with better sequined clothing. Future Grandpa argued they should all merge into a single hyper-evolved being. Evil Goatee Grandpa just wanted to take over the world with an army of sentient toilets.
“Gentlemen, please!” Original Grandpa called out. “We need to handle this like civilized temporal duplicates!”
“DANCE BATTLE!” Reggie P shouted.
Somehow, this was unanimously agreed upon as the solution.
What followed was the most bizarre dance-off in the history of any timeline. Renaissance Grandpa performed a period-appropriate gavotte. Robot Grandpa did the robot (naturally). Ghost Grandpa floated through the Electric Slide. Stone Age Grandpa invented a new dance called “The Mammoth” which mostly involved grunting and waving a club.
The historical figures joined in. Genghis Khan breakdanced. Shakespeare vogued while reciting sonnets. Cleopatra and Joan of Arc performed a synchronized routine that somehow incorporated both ancient Egyptian moves and medieval sword work.
Even Reginald Jr. the Time Toilet got involved, though his dancing mostly consisted of rhythmic flushing.
“This is simultaneously the best and worst thing I’ve ever seen,” Gerald said.
Mr. Whiskers, now wearing a tiny judge’s outfit, held up scorecards. “I give it an 8.5. Points deducted for timeline coherence, but bonus points for enthusiasm.”
The dance battle raged on for what felt like hours but was actually negative six minutes due to temporal distortion. Finally, Ethel had had enough.
“EVERYONE STOP!” she shouted.
The room froze. Even time itself seemed to pause out of respect for an angry grandmother.
“Now then,” Ethel continued, “we’re going to solve this like reasonable people. Or reasonable versions of people. Or whatever you all are. Reginald, all of you, you’re going to put your heads together—literally if necessary—and figure out how to merge the timelines back together.”
“But Ethel—” several Grandpas protested at once.
“No buts! Except yours, back in those Time Toilets where they belong! We have one timeline, one Reginald, and one dinner time, which you’re all making me late for!”
The Grandpas huddled together, their various forms creating a bizarre temporal symposium. After much discussion, arguing, and one brief lightsaber duel between Future Grandpa and Evil Goatee Grandpa, they reached a conclusion.
“We’ve figured it out!” Original Grandpa announced. “If we all flush ourselves simultaneously while thinking about converging, the timelines should merge!”
“That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard,” Gerald said.
“Exactly! It’s so dumb it has to work! It’s like how bumblebees shouldn’t be able to fly but do anyway!”
“Actually,” Marie Curie interjected, “bumblebees can fly because—”
“Not now, Marie!” the Grandpas said in unison.
They arranged themselves around various Time Toilets that had been brought in from their respective timelines. On the count of three, they all flushed.
The house shook. Reality hiccupped. Gerald briefly saw himself as a baby, a teenager, an old man, and somehow a penguin all at once. The air smelled like cotton candy and existential dread.
Then, with a sound like the universe’s largest rubber band snapping, everything went white.
When Gerald’s vision cleared, he was standing in his grandparents’ normal bathroom. There was only one toilet, and it was decidedly non-sentient. His grandfather stood there in his regular clothes, looking slightly confused.
“Did I just have the strangest dream?” Professor Pemberton asked.
“If your dream involved time travel, talking toilets, and teaching dinosaurs dental hygiene, then no, that was real,” Gerald said.
“Oh good. I was worried I’d imagined the whole thing. Ethel, dear, are Genghis Khan and the others still here?”
“No, Reginald. They all went back to their proper times when the timelines merged. Although Shakespeare left his Twitter handle. He wants to stay in touch.”
Gerald checked his phone. His cat had sent him a text: “Timeline merger successful. Returning to normal cat activities. The tuna investment portfolio has been liquidated. Meow.”
“So everything’s back to normal?” Gerald asked hopefully.
“Mostly,” his grandfather admitted. “There might be a few… residual effects.”
“Like what?”
At that moment, Kevin the Triceratops stuck his head through the bathroom window. “Pardon me, but could I trouble you for some tea? I’m feeling rather peckish.”
“Kevin decided to stay,” Grandpa explained. “He’s got a job at the natural history museum now. Gives tours. Very popular with the children.”
Gerald sighed. “Of course he did.”
“Also,” his grandmother added, “you might notice history is slightly different now. Nothing major. Just small things. The Mona Lisa smiles a bit wider. The Great Wall of China has a gift shop every mile. Oh, and disco never died.”
“DISCO NEVER DIED?”
“Afraid not. Reggie P’s influence was too strong. On the bright side, leisure suits are very comfortable.”
Gerald looked down and realized he was, indeed, wearing a powder blue leisure suit. It was surprisingly comfortable.
“I’m going home,” he announced. “I’m going to pretend this never happened.”
“But Gerald,” his grandfather called after him, “I haven’t shown you the Time Bidet I’m working on!”
“NO MORE TIME PLUMBING!”
As Gerald left his grandparents’ house, he reflected on the day’s events. His grandfather had torn holes in the fabric of reality, created multiple timelines, and somehow made disco immortal. His cat had become a venture capitalist. He’d ridden a triceratops to work. His furniture had gained sentience.
And yet, as he walked home in his leisure suit, waving to Kevin the Triceratops who was trimming the neighbors’ hedges, Gerald had to admit it hadn’t been all bad. Sure, reality was a bit more flexible than it used to be, but at least it was interesting.
His phone buzzed one last time:
“GERALD, THIS IS FUTURE YOU. JUST WANTED TO SAY IT GETS WEIRDER. ALSO, INVEST IN SEQUINED CLOTHING. TRUST ME ON THIS. P.S. – NEXT WEEK GRANDPA INVENTS THE TIME MICROWAVE. PREPARE ACCORDINGLY.”
Gerald looked at the message, then at the sky where a flock of pterodactyls were doing synchronized aerial disco moves, then back at his phone.
“At least he’s not working on a Time Shower,” he muttered.
From his grandparents’ house, he heard his grandfather’s excited voice: “Ethel! I’ve just had the most wonderful idea about temporal bathing!”
Gerald started running.
Behind him, Kevin the Triceratops called out in his properly British accent, “I say, Gerald! Fancy a spot of tea later? I’m having the Shakespeares over! Both the original and the rap battle champion version!”
Gerald kept running, but he was smiling. After all, in a world where your grandfather could accidentally rewrite history through plumbing mishaps, where cats could become venture capitalists, and where disco was eternal, what else could you do but embrace the chaos?
His phone buzzed again. This time it was from his grandmother:
“Dear, could you pick up milk on your way home tomorrow? The regular kind, not the kind that exists in twelve dimensions. Your grandfather got confused at the store again.”
“Sure, Grandma,” Gerald texted back. “Just regular milk. From this timeline. That doesn’t talk.”
“You’re such a good grandson. By the way, we’re having dinner with your parents on Sunday. They don’t know about the time travel yet. Maybe don’t mention it? Your mother’s still adjusting to the talking toaster.”
Gerald pocketed his phone and headed home to his apartment, which thankfully still existed in only three dimensions. As he walked, he noticed other small changes from the timeline merge. The local coffee shop was now run by hyper-intelligent dolphins. The park statue of the town founder now depicted him doing the hustle. Every clock in town played “Staying Alive” on the hour.
“Could be worse,” Gerald said to himself. “At least I’m not made of pudding.”
“That timeline was actually quite pleasant,” said a passing jogger who Gerald was pretty sure hadn’t existed five minutes ago. “Very jiggly, though.”
When Gerald finally reached his apartment, he found Mr. Whiskers sitting on the couch, wearing reading glasses and perusing the Wall Street Journal.
“Ah, Gerald,” the cat said, then caught himself. “I mean… meow?”
“It’s okay, Mr. Whiskers. I know you can still talk.”
“Oh thank goodness. Do you have any idea how exhausting it is to pretend to be a normal cat? The licking alone is so undignified. Anyway, I’ve been thinking about getting back into the stock market. The timeline merger created some interesting opportunities in the tuna futures sector.”
Gerald collapsed on the couch next to his entrepreneurial cat. “No more timeline stuff. Please. I just want one normal day.”
“Normal is relative, Gerald. Speaking of relatives, your grandfather called. He wants to know if you can help him test the Time Bidet this weekend.”
“Absolutely not.”
“He said he’d pay you in stock options for his new company: Temporal Plumbing Solutions.”
“Still no.”
“He also mentioned something about already accidentally sending your Uncle Larry to the Jurassic period.”
Gerald sat up. “Uncle Larry? The one who’s afraid of birds?”
“The very same. Apparently, he’s now leading a pterodactyl cult. They worship him as the Featherless Prophet.”
Gerald grabbed his phone and called his grandfather. “Do NOT touch any more plumbing fixtures!”
“Too late!” his grandfather said cheerfully. “I’ve just finished the Time Sink! Watch this!”
Through the phone, Gerald heard the sound of running water, followed by a splash, followed by what sounded distinctly like Viking battle cries.
“Oops,” his grandfather said. “I appear to have connected my kitchen sink to a Norse longship. The Vikings are very confused. But on the bright side, they’re excellent at washing dishes! Very thorough!”
“GRANDPA!”
“Got to go, Gerald! The Viking chief wants to know about our Wi-Fi password. Apparently, they want to start a podcast about pillaging!”
The line went dead.
Gerald looked at Mr. Whiskers. “Pack your briefcase. We’re moving.”
“Where to?”
“Anywhere that doesn’t have indoor plumbing.”
“So… camping?”
“Camping it is.”
As they packed, Gerald’s phone received one final message of the day:
“HEY NEPHEW! IT’S UNCLE LARRY! PTERODACTYLS ACTUALLY VERY NICE ONCE YOU GET TO KNOW THEM. STARTING PREHISTORIC AIRLINE. NEED INVESTORS. ALSO, CAN YOU SEND SUNSCREEN? IT’S VERY SUNNY IN THE JURASSIC. LOVE, PROPHET LARRY.”
Gerald turned off his phone, grabbed his camping gear and his business-savvy cat, and headed for the door. As he left, he could hear disco music playing from every radio in the building, a reminder of his grandfather’s permanent mark on the timeline.
“Next time,” he muttered, “I’m letting him go to bingo.”
But deep down, Gerald knew there would always be a next time. Because that’s what happened when your grandfather was Professor Reginald Pemberton III, inventor of temporal plumbing and destroyer of linear time.
At least life was never boring.
The next morning, Gerald woke up in his tent to find seventeen text messages, all from different time periods, all from various relatives who had somehow gotten hold of Time Plumbing.
“Dear nephew,” one read, “This is your Aunt Martha from Renaissance Italy. I’ve opened a pizza parlor with Leonardo da Vinci. He’s surprisingly good at tossing dough. Please send mozzarella. The Renaissance version is terrible.”
Another: “Yo cuz! This is your second cousin Jimmy from the year 3021. Everything here is chrome. EVERYTHING. Even the food. Send help. And non-chrome snacks.”
Gerald turned to Mr. Whiskers, who was somehow managing to type on a laptop despite having paws. “How is my entire family traveling through time?”
“Your grandfather started a YouTube channel,” Mr. Whiskers explained. “‘Temporal Plumbing DIY.’ It has seventeen million views. Also, I may have invested heavily in his company. We’re going to be rich.”
“We’re going to be temporally displaced!”
“Tomato, to-mah-to.”
Gerald’s phone rang. It was his mother.
“Gerald, dear, your father and I are in Ancient Greece. We meant to visit your grandmother but took a wrong turn at the Time Bidet. The Spartans are lovely, though a bit intense about their workout routines. Your father’s already pulled three muscles. Could you be a dear and feed the goldfish?”
“Mom, you don’t have goldfish.”
“We do now! Your grandfather sent them through the Time Sink. They’re from the Cretaceous period. They’re the size of sharks and they only eat disco music. Just play the Bee Gees near their tank.”
“I’m in the woods, Mom!”
“Oh, how nice! Give our love to the trees. Got to go, the Olympics are starting and your father entered the discus throw. He doesn’t know what a discus is, but he’s very enthusiastic!”
She hung up.
Gerald emerged from his tent to find Kevin the Triceratops had somehow found him.
“Morning, old chap!” Kevin said brightly. “Thought you might fancy some breakfast. I brought crumpets. Had to fight off some very confused park rangers to get here, but nothing a proper British dinosaur can’t handle!”
“How did you even find me?”
“Your grandfather put a temporal tracking app on your phone. ‘Find My Relatives Across Time and Space.’ Quite handy, really. Though it does show your Uncle Larry is currently in three different time periods simultaneously. That can’t be healthy.”
Gerald accepted a crumpet from the helpful dinosaur and sat on a log to think. His entire family was scattered across history. The timeline was more tangled than his grandmother’s knitting. And somewhere, his grandfather was probably working on yet another temporal bathroom fixture.
“Mr. Whiskers,” he said finally, “how do we fix this?”
The cat adjusted his tiny business spectacles. “Well, according to my calculations, if we can get everyone to return to their original time simultaneously while singing the same song, the temporal resonance should snap everyone back to the present.”
“What song?”
“Given your grandfather’s alterations to history, there’s only one song everyone throughout time would know.”
Gerald groaned. “Please don’t say—”
“‘Stayin’ Alive.’ The eternal anthem of disco.”
“Of course it is.”
Gerald pulled out his phone and opened the ‘Find My Relatives Across Time and Space’ app. The screen showed a dizzying array of dots scattered across history. His parents in Ancient Greece. Uncle Larry spread across three different prehistoric eras. Aunt Martha in Renaissance Italy. His cousins scattered everywhere from Ancient Egypt to the distant future.
“Okay,” he said, taking charge. “Kevin, I need you to go back to town and get the largest speakers you can find. Mr. Whiskers, use your business connections to set up a temporal broadcast system. We’re going to play disco across all of time and space.”
“Brilliant!” Kevin exclaimed. “Though I should mention, I passed your grandfather on the way here. He was carrying what looked like a Time Jacuzzi.”
“Of course he was.”
Three hours later, they had assembled what could only be described as the most ambitious sound system in the history of chronology. Speakers the size of buildings, connected to temporal transmitters that Mr. Whiskers had somehow procured through his business networks.
“I called in some favors,” the cat explained. “Turns out the Temporal Stock Exchange owed me one.”
Gerald’s phone buzzed with messages from across time:
“READY IN ANCIENT ROME! CAESAR LOVES DISCO!” – Cousin Tony
“Vikings prepared to boogie!” – Aunt Sylvia
“Dinosaurs surprisingly good dancers!” – Uncle Larry Part 1
“Medieval knights polished armor for maximum disco ball effect!” – Grandma’s bridge club (somehow)
Gerald took a deep breath and grabbed the microphone. “Attention all Pemberton family members across time and space. This is Gerald. In exactly one minute, we’re going to play ‘Stayin’ Alive.’ When you hear it, dance like your temporal existence depends on it—because it does. Also, Grandpa, PUT DOWN THE TIME JACUZZI!”
“But it has jets that massage you in the fourth dimension!” his grandfather’s voice crackled through the temporal speakers.
“I DON’T CARE!”
Gerald nodded to Mr. Whiskers, who hit play.
The opening notes of ‘Stayin’ Alive’ echoed across time itself. In Ancient Greece, Gerald’s parents disco danced with Socrates. In the Renaissance, Aunt Martha and Leonardo da Vinci performed synchronized moves while tossing pizza dough. Uncle Larry’s three temporal copies formed their own disco trio with confused pterodactyls as backup dancers.
Throughout history, Pembertons danced. The pyramids shook with the beat. Viking longships became floating discos. Medieval castles hosted the greatest parties they’d never forget. Even the dinosaurs got into it, with T-Rexes doing their best despite the tiny arms.
The temporal energy built and built, reality bending and swaying to the rhythm. Gerald felt the timeline pulling itself back together like a cosmic rubber band.
“It’s working!” Mr. Whiskers shouted over the music. “Keep dancing!”
Gerald, Kevin, and Mr. Whiskers joined in, their dance moves creating a focal point for the temporal convergence. Gerald did the hustle. Kevin invented something called the Cretaceous Slide. Mr. Whiskers, despite being a cat, performed a flawless moonwalk.
With a flash of light and the smell of polyester and hairspray, suddenly the clearing was full of Pembertons. They materialized mid-dance move, still caught up in the rhythm. Uncle Larry appeared doing three different dances simultaneously until his temporal copies merged with a small “pop!”
“We did it!” Gerald exclaimed as the music faded.
“That was groovy!” his mother said, still wearing a toga. “Though I think your father needs a chiropractor. Ancient Greek disco is harder than it looks.”
Professor Pemberton materialized last, still clutching the Time Jacuzzi. “Well, that was educational! Did you know disco solves temporal paradoxes? I should write a paper!”
“NO MORE TEMPORAL ANYTHING!” the entire family shouted in unison.
“But—”
“Reginald,” Grandma Ethel said firmly, “if you invent one more time-traveling bathroom fixture, I’m enrolling you in that pottery class you’ve been avoiding for forty years.”
“Not pottery!” Grandpa gasped. “Anything but pottery! My hands aren’t meant for creative expression! They’re meant for bending the laws of physics!”
“Then no more Time Plumbing.”
Professor Pemberton hung his head. “Yes, dear.”
As the family began sharing their temporal adventures—Aunt Martha had apparently taught Michelangelo the Macarena, while Cousin Jimmy had started a chrome-polishing business in the future—Gerald felt his phone buzz one last time.
It was from an unknown number: “Dear Gerald, This is Reginald Jr., formerly your grandfather’s Time Toilet. I wanted to thank you for the adventure. I’ve decided to pursue a career in stand-up comedy. My first show is next Thursday. Would love to see you there. I’ll be performing under the stage name ‘Lou’.”
Gerald smiled despite himself. A sentient toilet doing stand-up comedy was actually one of the more normal things to come out of this whole adventure.
“So,” his grandmother said, surveying her temporally displaced family, “who wants lunch? I’m thinking we order from that new place run by the time-traveling Vikings. They deliver by longship, but their sandwiches are worth it.”
As the family headed back to town, discussing their adventures and comparing temporal jet lag remedies, Gerald walked beside his grandfather.
“You’re not really going to stop inventing, are you?” Gerald asked.
His grandfather grinned. “Of course not! But I promise to stay away from bathroom fixtures. I’m thinking more along the lines of temporal kitchen appliances. Imagine a refrigerator that keeps food fresh across multiple timelines!”
Gerald groaned. “Here we go again.”
“Don’t worry, my boy. What’s the worst that could happen?”
At that moment, a portal opened in front of them and out stepped another Gerald, this one wearing an eyepatch and riding the cybernetic ostrich from the bathroom incident.
“Greetings, past me!” Future Gerald announced. “I’m here to warn you about the Time Toaster!”
“The what now?” both Geralds said in unison.
“Grandpa’s next invention. Let’s just say bread isn’t meant to exist in seventeen dimensions simultaneously. Also, the marmalade gains sentience. Very inconvenient at breakfast.”
Present Gerald turned to his grandfather. “No Time Toaster.”
“But—”
“NO. TIME. TOASTER.”
Future Gerald saluted. “Good call. Well, must dash. The Temporal Breakfast Wars don’t fight themselves. Kevin, Mr. Whiskers, always a pleasure.”
He disappeared back into the portal, leaving Present Gerald staring at the spot where his future self had been.
“Did I look cool with an eyepatch?” Gerald asked.
“Very dashing,” Kevin confirmed. “Though the cybernetic ostrich was a bit much.”
“I thought it complemented the ensemble,” Mr. Whiskers disagreed. “Very post-apocalyptic chic.”
As they continued back to town, Gerald reflected on the insanity of the past day. His grandfather had torn holes in reality. His family had been scattered across time. He’d organized history’s first trans-temporal disco party. And apparently, his future involved cyborg ostriches and sentient marmalade.
But as he looked around at his family—his parents still in togas, his uncle comparing notes with his past selves, his grandmother knitting what appeared to be a temporal paradox into a sweater—Gerald realized something.
This was his normal now. And honestly? He wouldn’t change a thing.
Well, except maybe the leisure suit. But in a world where disco was eternal, some sacrifices had to be made.
“Next Tuesday,” his grandfather whispered conspiratorially, “I’m starting work on the Time Dishwasher.”
Gerald sighed. “Of course you are, Grandpa. Of course you are.”
And somewhere in the distance, carried on the temporal winds, the faint sound of “Stayin’ Alive” continued to echo across all of time and space, a reminder that in the Pemberton family, staying alive meant staying weird.
The End.
(Or was it? Time travel makes endings very complicated.)