Part 23 (1/2)
”Are you OK, mate?” The Australian tw.a.n.g in the question meant that although I couldn't see the questioner I knew we had attracted attention from the building.
”I'm not sure,” Blackbird responded. ”My friend got a shock off those gates just now.”
There was a slight pause. ”That's impossible. They're not electric or anything. He couldn't have done.” A man in uniform, possibly a security guard, walked into my field of view. ”Are you OK, sir?”
”I think I'll be OK in a minute. Can you help me sit up?”
”Do you think that's wise? I could get an ambulance for you, if you like?” The long ”A” of ambulance was almost comical and I found myself smiling at his Australian accent, despite my aching head.
”Well, you've still got a sense of humour about you.” He stepped back and let Blackbird help me to a sitting position. I sat on the cold paving with my head against my knees while the spinning sensation slowly subsided. ”I've never seen anything like it. You went up in the air like you were doing a backwards somersault. I saw it on the monitors.” Clearly this was the most exciting thing that had happened all day and now he had established I wasn't dead he was determined to make the most of it.
”Well you should definitely have those gates checked,” a.s.serted Blackbird with all her authority. ”They caused a nasty accident. Next time someone could be killed.”
”I still don't see how,” he commented, taking his peaked hat off and scratching his head. ”Maybe some sort of static build-up?” He glanced back at the gates, inert inside the doorway. ”What were you doing, anyway?”
”We were trying to work out how old the building is.”
”1917,” he said. ”Well, what I mean is, they were able to move in by then. I don't think the building was fully finished until after the First World War.”
The way the intonation in his accent lifted at the end made every sentence made it sound like a question, as if everything were uncertain and he was looking for constant confirmation of reality. Having banged my head on the paving, I knew how he felt.
”The decorations must have taken a while to complete,” he continued. ”It's very grand inside. We used to have open days so you could look around, though that had to stop after the 7/7 bombs. How's your friend?”
Blackbird stood up. ”I think he'll recover but that could have been serious.”
”We've never had any trouble before. I can't think why he would get a shock from there.”
”Do you want to go and touch the gates, after that?” she asked him.
”No, I think we'll have the electricians in to check them out, first, eh?” he grinned.
”It might be wise. We were just trying to find out about the building. Do you know what was here before all this?” She gestured at the grand facade.
I was a little miffed that Blackbird was more intent on the security man than on my injuries, but it did present an opportunity to find out more. I sat on the ground and listened while she gently pressed him for more information.
”I've worked here for thirty years and I don't remember anyone mentioning anything before this. You'd be amazed at some of the enquiries we get, though, people wanting to emigrate and everything. We don't get many historical queries, though. Mind you, one of my colleagues trained as one of those guides, you know, an official London guide? He's got a certificate and everything. I could ask him if he knows anything. ”
”That would be very kind.”
He turned and went back into the building, taking a careful look at the gates as he pa.s.sed them. Blackbird turned back to me.
”What on earth did you think you were doing?” She kept her voice down, though her anger was evident. ”I thought the gates might be the reason we were here,” I said defensively. ”They're made of iron! ”
”What's so special about iron?” I asked.
”Iron is the ant.i.thesis of magic. All the Feyre react to iron. It's one of the things that marks us out. ”
”I didn't know.”
”Couldn't you feel it? What on earth possessed you to touch them?”
”I told you, I thought they might be what we came for.”
She probed the back of my head with her fingers. ”Nine times idiot!” she hissed. ”It's a good thing you weren't right inside the doorway or you'd have been flung back into the other gate. If your head had hit iron instead of concrete, you wouldn't be sitting here nursing a headache. Look up at me.”
I lifted my head off my knees and looked up into her grey eyes, surprised by the concern that showed there. ”At least your pupils are the same size. How do you feel?”
”A bit nauseous, but the world has stopped spinning. ”
”I still can't believe you touched them. Didn't it feel wrong?”
”Yes, kind of, but at the same time it was compelling, almost alive.”
”Let me see your hand.”