Last Orders
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:18:05
And it comes up. In a month.
:18:08
That wouldn't be a problem.
I sell the house, I sell the shop...

:18:12
...I buy a small tin-pot bungalow in
Margate and scrape by on the remainder.

:18:18
Except that's all off now, isn't it?
:18:23
All bets are off, aren't they?
:18:28
How much?
:18:30
Well, it was seven large when I took it on...
:18:35
-...but now they want £20,000.
-You're joking?

:18:38
No, we're not talking bank managers,
you know, here.

:18:41
It's a special loan. Private loan.
:18:44
Not Vince?
:18:48
No, no.
:18:51
Vince wouldn't lend me money
if I was dying.

:18:54
Well, if you can't see
what is right under your nose....

:18:57
There's a new supermarket
just down the road...

:19:00
...and they've offered you first refusal
to be their new meat manager.

:19:03
-You've got no choice, have you?
-Haven't I?

:19:06
Well, that's down to you, Dad.
That's your funeral.

:19:08
Don't come running back to me.
Don't expect me to lay out any money.

:19:11
At least I'd be my own man.
:19:13
Your own man?
:19:16
You never was your own man.
You was your old man's man, weren't you?

:19:20
That cuts both ways, doesn't it?
:19:23
That should have been our shop.
:19:24
Dad, just don't expect me to bail you out.
:19:29
I ain't got it.
:19:31
Bit of a dry argument over here, Jack.
Wouldn't be your shout, would it?

:19:46
There's a tenner.
:19:48
Buy your mates a drink, a couple of drinks.
Buy yourself one. I'm going home.

:19:52
So who?
:19:54
Some of Vince's pals from the old days.
:19:59
Business pals.

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