Authors: Mary Hoffman
Georgia ate little and all three of them were anxious to get on with the business in hand. Once it got dark in Talia they would have only a few hours to make the journey. Falco dismissed the servants and Georgia and Luciano went with him into his bedroom where Georgia took the silver ring out of her eyebrow. She handed it to the boy, who turned it wonderingly before slipping it on to his little finger.
He went to get changed behind a screen and returned looking absurdly young and small in a white nightshirt. He sat on the end of his huge bed.
âWhat shall I do?' he asked.
Georgia went and sat beside him. âIt's simple but hard too. You must go to sleep, thinking about my home in England, where the ring came from. I shall tell you about it so you can imagine it. Here, get into bed and I'll lie down beside you.'
The boy climbed with some difficulty into the high bed and Georgia lay beside him on top of the brocade cover.
âIt'll be like a bedtime story,' she said. âI'll describe my house and bedroom to you. Only remember what I told you about when you wake up in my world. If everything works out properly, I'll be there. If I still seem asleep, just wake me.'
She took her own talisman out of her pocket.
âLuciano,' said Falco. âDon't leave us.'
âNo,' said Luciano, settling himself into a chair beside the bed. âI won't.' He knew he was in for a long night.
The sun streamed into Georgia's room and on to her face. She was lying on her bed, in her top and pants, spooned round the bony back of the young di Chimici. For a moment, she couldn't believe it had worked. Then, âFalco,' she whispered. âAre you all right?'
He turned to her, his huge eyes darting round the unfamiliar room.
âWe have done it!' he said. Carefully, he took the ring off his finger and Georgia fixed it back in her eyebrow.
Then she leapt off the bed, anxious to get him dressed in his English clothes. She showed him everything, including the underwear, which puzzled him very much. Then she gave him the sticks.
âI'll go and get dressed in the bathroom,' she said, âand while I'm away, you put these things on and hide your nightshirt in my bed. I'll lock the door after me.'
Falco just nodded and she caught up her clothes and crept out of the room.
It was early on Saturday and no one else was awake yet. Quickly she showered and dressed and went back to her room. She couldn't risk knocking so she just unlocked the door and went in, hoping that Falco was decent.
To her astonishment, she saw an ordinary boy sitting on her bed. True, he looked bemused and he had put the T-shirt on back to front. And he was unusually pretty for a modern boy. But he didn't look as if he came from another dimension.
âYou look great, Falco,' she whispered.
He tried to smile.
âI'm sorry,' he said, âbut I must relieve myself.'
âOf course,' said Georgia. âThe bathroom's the first door on the right. But you must be very quiet.'
The thought of Russell bumping into Falco on the landing didn't bear thinking of. She handed Falco the sticks and he stood up, but hesitated.
âIt is not a bath that I need,' he said.
Georgia cursed herself for not having explained something so basic to him the night before. Carefully and trying not to embarrass him or herself, she gave him a quick description of modern plumbing. His eyes widened.
She accompanied him to the door and kept watch while he manoeuvred himself to the bathroom and inside. She had explained the lock, but the whole time he was in there, her body was tense with fear. The enterprise was beginning to seem enormous, and this was just the trial run.
She heard the loo flush and a little while later, Falco came out and limped back to Georgia's room. They had passed the first hurdle.
Much to his surprise, Luciano managed to doze a bit in the chair. He woke to see moonlight flooding the room and he had a crick in his neck. He got up and stretched, then peered at the bed. Falco appeared to be asleep, his dark curls on the pillow. Of Georgia there was no sign.
Luciano stared at the sleeping boy. He looked perfectly normal but the Stravagante knew that he was looking at someone who was no longer there. It made him feel terribly homesick.
âWhat are you going to do today, Georgia?' asked Maura. âI was wondering if you needed to do any shopping for your trip away?'
âNo thanks, Mum,' she replied. âI've got everything I need. In fact I'm practically packed. I wanted to go to the British Museum today.'
There was a snorting noise from Russell.
âWhat was that, Russell?' asked Ralph.
âNothing; cereal went down the wrong way,' Russell explained.
âIs it schoolwork?' asked Maura.
âYes,' lied Georgia. âIt's for my Classical Civilisations coursework. I wanted to get some notes done before I go away.'
âGeek,' whispered Russell under cover of the noise of breakfast being cleared away.
At least he won't offer to go with me, thought Georgia, even to torment me. There was no way that Russell would go into a museum. Still, she needed to know what he and their parents
would
be doing. Getting Falco out of the house was going to be the hardest thing.
But she was in luck. Russell and Ralph were both in their sports gear and were going to the gym. Maura said she would shut herself up in the little room that she and Ralph used as an office and sort through all the bills.
âI've been putting it off for ages,' she said guiltily.
Georgia waited till the men had left, then made her mother a cup of coffee and took it to the office. Maura's hair was sticking up and she was biting the end of her pen as she fiddled with a calculator.
âI'm just off, Mum,' said Georgia. âI won't be back till after lunch.'
Maura smiled gratefully. âThanks for the coffee, Georgia. And let me give you some money.' She took a twenty-pound note from her purse. âThis should buy you some lunch as well as your fare,' she said.
Georgia knew that Maura wouldn't be coming out of the office for a while, so she took her chance to smuggle Falco downstairs. He was surprisingly agile. After the grand sweeping staircases of Santa Fina, he was not likely to be defeated by a couple of flights in an Islington terrace.
She had told him the plan â they were going to look for an Etruscan horse like her talisman. But the subplot was to give Falco a taste of central London. And he very nearly freaked before they were even out of the front gate. A couple of perfectly ordinary cars passed and he jumped, terrified. All Georgia's attempts to explain about cars and traffic were nothing compared to the reality; it was more than he could cope with. However, he was not too disturbed by his absence of shadow when Georgia pointed it out to him.
It took ages to walk to Caledonian Road tube. Georgia had checked that it had a lift, so that Falco wouldn't have to cope with escalators, but she hadn't reckoned with the slowness of his walking and the many times he had to stop, alarmed by the traffic. In the end, Georgia took him into a café.
âYou need some breakfast, anyway,' she said.
She bought them tea and fried egg sandwiches. Falco, who had never tasted either before, wolfed it all down. It seemed to do him good. The rest of the journey was easier, though Falco cowered back from the platform when the tube train came rushing in. Georgia realised how much of her ordinary daily life was remarkable now she was seeing it through sixteenth-century eyes.
The change at Leicester Square did involve an escalator, but not a big one and Falco managed it without problems. But he was already flagging when they got into the lift at Goodge Street, and it was quite a walk from there.
When they reached the corner of Gower Street and Great Russell Street, Falco heaved a sigh of relief.
âWe are here â good! I don't think I could walk much further.'
Georgia realised that he must think the handsome art book shop on the corner, labelled âBritish Museum', was their destination. What on earth was he going to think when he saw the real thing?
âJust a tiny bit further,' she said encouragingly, leading him along Great Russell Street past the black railings. Suddenly they were at the gates and Falco saw the museum in all its colonnaded splendour. He gasped.
âBut it is a palace!' he exclaimed. âWhat mighty Prince or Duke lives there?'
âNone,' said Georgia, âbut I'm glad you're impressed.' She guided Falco across the forecourt, full of tourists and pigeons. He stopped by the massive bronze head at the side and paused for a long time.
âIs it a fragment?' he asked. âThe original statue must have been huge. Where is the rest of it?'
âThat's all there is,' explained Georgia. âThe sculptor made it that way.'
There was still a long way for him to go, up the flight of steps to the main entrance. By the time he got to the top, Falco was exhausted. Nevertheless, when Georgia told him that what they were looking for would be on the first floor, he set off gamely for the wide marble staircase.
âWait,' said Georgia, concerned by how tired he looked. âThere must be a lift; there always is nowadays.'
An attendant heard her and came over to them. âThe lifts are over there, Miss, just before the Great Court. But wouldn't you like a wheelchair for your friend? They're just over here.'
He led them round a corner where ranks of folded wheelchairs sat just waiting to be taken.
âHow much is it?' whispered Georgia, who was getting seriously alarmed by the cost of taking Falco out and about. Thank goodness Maura had given her some money.
âIt's free, Miss,' smiled the attendant. âJust bring it back when you've finished with it.'
He took out a chair and unfolded it and showed them how to work the brakes. Falco was thrilled. He put the walking sticks carefully between his knees.
âWill it go by itself now?' he asked.
Georgia remembered telling him about electric wheelchairs.
âNot this one, son,' said the attendant. âSee, you have to push the wheels with your hands or get your friend to push you by the handles.'
âI'll push,' said Georgia firmly. âThanks for all your help.'