by Mez Blume
The discovery that Ramona, my Cherokee great-great-great-grandmother, had been a time-traveller too and had passed down her gift of travelling to me had changed everything. The first time I fell through a magic painting and landed in the past, I thought it was just my luck. It might have happened to anyone. But now there was no doubt about it. I was special, and I don’t say that to brag.
Since learning about my ‘gift’, something had weighed on my mind almost every second. Though I heard no voice, it was like someone was calling me to do something. I had a pretty good idea what that something was, though how I was supposed to do it was the greatest mystery I’d faced yet.
I had promised Ramona’s family, Jim Weaver and Ka-Ti, that I would do my best to find her. But I ached to do more than just find her. I vowed to myself that I would bring her back to the family that had been broken by lies and misfortunes. As it turned out, my family. It was up to me to fix what was broken. After all, Ramona’s sketchbook had come to me for a reason. It seemed that I was the only one who could put the broken past back together again.
But how? I’d never had any control over when or where I encountered a magic time-portal painting, or when or where the magic took me. So far, the paintings had sort of found me, as if the magic bound me to Ramona. I could only hope it would find me once again. In the meantime, I would just have to wait and watch for a sign, a flicker, a whisper of magic, and hope that when it came, I would be ready.
My first few days in London were a dream. Aunt Ginny took us Christmas shopping in Mayfair, ice-skating at Somerset House and treated us to high tea at Fortnum and Mason. Exhausted as we were after each day’s festivities, our heavy eyelids never kept Imogen and me from staying awake long after we’d gone to bed, whispering about our own private concerns.
“I was thinking,” Imogen said one night. “There were three months between your first time-slip (as she called it) and your second, right?”
“Right…” I answered.
“And it’s nearly been three months since the last time…”
“Yea, so?”
“So maybe it’s time! Maybe you’re due another trip right about now!”
I mused over the idea for a moment. “I’m not sure it works like that,” I said doubtfully. “But I hope you’re right.”
“Katie?” Imogen turned over to face me, propping herself up on her pillow.
“What?” I answered, alarmed by her no-nonsense expression bearing down on me in the darkness.
“Don’t you dare go back in time without me.”
“Trust me,” I said, “I won’t if I can help it.”
She flopped back down on her pillow and sighed. “Good, because let’s face it; you’ll never be able to find Ramona without me.”
I gave her shoulder a playful shove. “Well then, we’ll just have to make sure we stick together.”
“And keep your sketchbook handy,” she added, “just in case.”
On Christmas Eve, Imogen and I pulled on our woolly sweaters, skirts and tights for Midnight Mass at St. Paul’s Cathedral, a Humphreys family Christmas tradition. Someone knocked on the door. I pulled my sweater down over my head and opened it. Aunt Ginny stood in the hallway, her hair and makeup as perfect and glossy as a magazine model.
“I thought you might like to open this before we leave,” she said, holding out a small, thin package wrapped in brown paper and red string.
“Oh. Thank you, Auntie.” I took it, a little embarrassed that Aunt Ginny hadn’t offered Imogen a gift.
She laughed in her tinkling sort of way. “It’s not from me, dear. Here, it came with a card. Read it for yourself.” She turned to go, calling over her shoulder, “Hurry, girls. We leave in ten minutes, ready or not.”
“Oh, it’s from a secret admirer, I bet,” Imogen teased.
I grimaced at her and ripped open the card. I knew the handwriting instantly.
Merry Christmas, Watson.
Charlie still addressed me as ‘Watson’ in all his letters.
Sorry we won’t get to see each other over the holidays. But I’m sure you and Imogen will get up to all sorts of mischief in London. I thought this little gadget might just come in handy if you stumble across any mysteries while you’re there. Use it well.
See you in the New Year!
Love,
Your #1 brother, Charlie
“I wish I had an older brother,” Imogen said with a sigh as she watched me peel open the brown paper. Inside was a slender leather case. I opened it to find what looked like an expensive, shiny blue fountain pen.
“Guess Charlie thought it would come in handy for taking notes in my detective notebook,” I said, taking out the pen and clicking the end with my thumb. Instead of a ballpoint, a thin but strong beam of light shone out the other end.
“A penlight!” Imogen exclaimed. “That’s way cooler than just an old fountain pen. Not to mention a great detective gadget.”
Uncle Phillip called from downstairs.
“We’re coming!” Imogen grabbed her purse and ran out the door.
I returned my new penlight to its box and tucked it inside my satchel alongside my detective notebook and, as Imogen had requested, Ramona’s sketches. “Thanks, Charlie,” I whispered as I slung the bag’s strap over my shoulder and hurried out the door after her.
As soon as I stepped out of the black cab, my eyes soared upwards to the towering dome of St. Paul’s Cathedral. Its shape reminded me of a giant bird cage set against a clear night sky scattered with happy, shimmering little stars.
“Katie, snap out of it.” Imogen jostled my arm and I blinked at her, the dazzle of the stars still blurring my vision.
“Hurry up. They’ve opened the doors, and it’s freezing out here.”
“I never knew you could see so many stars in the city,” I said as we shuffled forward behind the long line of tourists and Londoners crowding the cathedral entrance for Christmas Midnight Mass.
Imogen leaned her head back to look up at the sky. Thankfully, she’d given up the wacky hair dye and gobs of makeup, and I thought her naturally dirty blonde hair never looked better than it did now, in a long, Ka-Ti-inspired braid.
She gave an unimpressed shrug. “If you ask me, this display has nothing on the night skies in Cherokee Country.”
With a glance over my shoulder at my aunt and uncle, I leaned over and shushed her. “Not in front of your parents, remember?”
“Don’t worry. Mum and Dad will stay glued to their phones until the minute the service begins, mark my words. ‘Tis the season for catching up on work, didn’t you know?” she said dryly.
At last our turn came to step through the revolving door and onto the chequered marble floors of the cathedral. Had it not been for the other tourists’ flashing cameras on every side, I could almost have believed we’d stepped through a portal into another world.
St. Paul’s was the grandest place I’d ever set foot in, like the palace of some ancient Roman emperor. My eyes grew wide trying to take in the soaring marble archways, the golden chandeliers hung from the domed ceiling high, high above, the towering sculptures of angels and heroes.
We made our way up the centre aisle to find our seats. My eyes were again drawn up and up until my head spun. I felt like a tiny bug beneath that whale-sized dome and its colossal paintings of the saints peering down as if from heaven.
As we took our seats, Imogen pointed upwards at a rail encircling the base of the dome. “That’s called the whispering gallery.”
“You mean you can go up there?” I felt woozy at the very thought.
“That’s nothing! See up there, the hole right in the middle of the dome?” She pointed to a circular hole, through which I could just see what looked like a smaller dome beyond the main one. It looked a world away.
“That’s called the Golden Gallery,” Imogen whispered. “I went up there on a class trip once. Nearly got sick from vertigo.” She gave a little shiver and lowered her eyes.
As the first
crystal voice broke the silence with ‘Once in Royal David’s City’, my eyes continued their journey around the cathedral. It was my first visit to St. Paul’s, and I wanted to take in every splendid detail. The choir boys processed up the long centre aisle and filed into the choir stalls, their candles glowing off the jewelled mosaics and pearly marble sculptures. All in a rush, that old tingling feeling scurried up my spine like electricity.
It’s just the atmosphere, I told myself, rubbing away the goose bumps prickling my arms.
But whatever I told myself, the feeling did not go away. It got stronger and stronger the longer we sat there under that dome. A nervous pulse began to tap, tap, tap at my temples, and it was all I could do to sit still through the service. At last the organ pipes bellowed out the last notes of ‘Hark the Herald Angels Sing’, the bishop gave the benediction and the sleepy crowds awoke from the spell of the music and candlelight. But not me. As those around me gathered their coats and shuffled slowly through the rows of chairs, I still felt spellbound… breathless, like I was standing on the edge of a vast drop.
In a daze, I got to my feet.
“Might as well sit,” Imogen said through a yawn as she slouched further down in her chair. “Mum and Dad will want to speak to the bishop. He’s a friend of theirs. We won’t get out of here for ages.”
I forced myself back down into my seat beside her and gazed up into the dome, my foot tapping the rhythm of my pulse on the tiles.
“Katie, are you alright? You seem a bit… jittery.” Imogen was giving me a suspicious glare.
“I just have one of those feelings. You know, like I told you about. It’s nothing.” I said dismissively.
A conniving smile came over her face. “I’ve got an idea.” She leaned in closer so as not to be overheard. “Want to see the crypt?”
I glanced around at the crowds of people being ushered towards the exits. “Are we allowed to?”
“Best not to ask,” she said and sprung from her seat. “Anyway, we’ll just nip down there, have a quick look around and be back before anyone notices. I’ll tell Mum and Dad we’re popping to the loo and we’ll meet them on the steps outside.”
But Uncle Phillip and Aunt Ginny apparently wanted to speak to about a dozen important people on their way to the bishop. By the time Imogen got the chance to break in, most of the crowds had already disappeared out into the night.
We shook hands with the bishop as Uncle Phillip introduced us, then walked away as ladylike as we could, breaking into a run the second we reached the shadows of an enormous archway.
Imogen made a beeline for an open doorway, and we slipped inside without notice, turning down a broad flight of marble stairs.
The crypt was dark but for candles on wall sconces and chandeliers. Their flames danced into life as we walked past. The vaulted ceilings felt terribly low after sitting beneath the lofty cathedral dome. But all the same, the crypt was a vast world below ground, a maze of rooms, hallways and giant marble monuments. I was imagining how easy and how terrifying it would be to get lost down there when I caught sight of a painting in an alcove at the end of a long, candlelit hallway. While I stared at it, a voice whispered my name … or so I thought.
“Im, was that you?”
“Was what me?” She spoke from behind me where she was bent over reading the inscription on a tomb. The voice must have been my imagination.
I turned back to the painting. It was small, too small really to hang over such a grand table. I could hardly make out the details from where I stood, yet the earthy colours felt familiar. With apprehensive steps, I drew closer until I was standing close enough to see the picture clearly.
The candlelight shimmered on the painting’s glossy surface, bringing warmth to the simple scene of an old beggar woman and a pretty young girl sitting side-by-side on the steps of St. Paul’s and offering bits of bread to the pigeons.
“What is it?” Imogen stood beside me, head tilted as she examined the painting.
Without answering, I dug into my bag for Ramona’s sketchbook, then frantically flipped through the pages until I found what I was looking for. Taking the page out, I held it up to the painting on the wall. My heart did a victory leap.
Imogen gasped and laid a clammy hand on my arm. “It’s the same.” She turned to face me. “But Katie, you don’t think this painting could be…?” Her voice trailed off as our heads turned in unison, as if drawn by an invisible thread, towards the painting. I didn’t dare blink, or even breathe.
Then, like passing into a dream, impossible things began to happen. A painted pigeon soared from the head of a sculpture and alighted on the old woman’s outstretched arm. As she caught it, most unmistakably, her face wrinkled into a smile. Her head turned, and, next thing I knew, her bright, smiling eyes had found mine.
Before I could move, a whoosh of cold air whipped up through the passageway, snuffing out every last candle. In the pitch darkness, the cathedral did a pirouette. I was thrown off balance by an invisible force, landing hard on the marble floor, unsure whether it was my head spinning or my surroundings.
But as suddenly as the commotion began, it stopped. All was still, silent, and black as a starless night.
2
Once in Royal Victoria’s City
“Ow,” Imogen groaned nearby in the darkness.
I peered around for her uselessly. Then, all on their own, the candles lit up, first dimly, then strengthening to full beam.
I twisted around and found Imogen sitting a few meters behind me, her feet splayed out like a ragdoll’s, rubbing a bump on her forehead. We looked at each other, neither of us speaking a word. We didn’t need to. We both knew perfectly well that we were thinking the same thing.
I got shakily to my feet and helped Imogen up. We both stood on the spot, looking around for some sign of what had happened.
There was none to be found. The painting hung on the wall, just the same. The candlelight flickered against the marble and mosaics, just as before. Nothing had changed. We were right where we’d started.
But how could it be?
Imogen’s utterly confounded face must have been a perfect mirror of mine.
“We’re still here.” She said each word slowly, as if she hardly believed them. “But I thought… then what just happened?”
As I opened my mouth, not knowing how to answer, the church bells began to toll midnight.
Like waking up from a daydream, Imogen gasped and scrambled down the passageway, up the flight of stairs and through the doorway into the cathedral. The entire place was empty! We shot down the chequered aisle floor for the main doors, but found them shut and bolted with a giant, wooden beam. Every last tourist and clergyman had gone.
“Now what? Mum and Dad will be looking everywhere for us,” Imogen groaned.
I looked around, still half-dizzy, half-sick with disappointment to find ourselves in the same place, and just a bit relieved at the same time.
“Hang on,” I said. “Didn’t we come in through revolving doors?”
Imogen frowned at the carved wooden door. “I thought so too. Never mind. Help me lift this beam.” She got both of her hands beneath the heavy wooden beam that barred the door from the inside. I followed her example and together we heaved it up and let it clatter onto the floor. While I looked around expecting to see someone coming to see what was making all the noise, Imogen found a handle of a smaller door built into the larger one. She gave it a wrench and, to my immense relief, the small door opened. We flung ourselves out into the frosty London air just as the bell tolled its twelfth and final gong.
The first thing that struck me was that the stars had disappeared behind a thick blanket of cloud. The night sky, so glassy clear before, was a whirlpool of snow flurries. A freezing wind whipped the powdery drifts wildly about chimney pots, lampposts and carriages…
Carriages?
The old tingling feeling crept up my spine like icy fingers as it dawned on me. The London before my eyes had undergon
e a transformation. The cityscape before me belonged on the front of an old-fashioned Christmas card: snow flurries dancing in the misty light of gaslit lanterns; raggedly-dressed children laughing and hoisting snowballs at one another across cobbled alleys. In place of the bustling traffic of black cabs and red double-decker buses, a fanfare of stately, horse-drawn carriages jangled up to the cathedral steps where men in top hats and capes held out their gloved hands to women who gathered up long, bustled skirts before gracefully climbing in.
I blinked the snow from my eyelashes and turned to Imogen, once again seeing the same dawning realisation reflected on her face.
Before either of us spoke, a man’s voice shouted, “Oi! You two!”
A man dressed in a blue, buttoned-up coat and a domed helmet was running up the cathedral stairs right for us, waving a truncheon threateningly as he came.
“Police!” Imogen grabbed my wrist and, together, we took off as fast as our shaky legs would go down the opposite side of the broad stairs, made slippery from the fast-falling snow. At the bottom, I chanced a look over my shoulder to see the policeman hobbling down after us.
“Come on!” Imogen urged, grabbing my hand and whipping me around the corner of the cathedral. In front of us was a shadowy cemetery. We did our best to stay together, dodging and skirting our way through the snow-powdered headstones.
“Stop there!” the policeman’s voice bellowed behind us.
We threw ourselves behind a big stone grave monument with the carved figure of a knight in armour sleeping on its lid. I hoped to goodness he would protect us from the policeman’s view.
“Can you see him? Is he still coming?” Imogen panted.
I peered around the knight’s pointed shoes. Against the misty gaslights, I could see the policeman’s tall hat ducking and bobbing up among the headstones.