displaced.â
As you can imagine, most of us just let his words wash over us.
The exceptions were Clever Trevor, who tried sucking up to Mr Phillips by asking questions and appearing interested, and Is, who was sitting bolt upright and had an intent expression on her face.
âWhen we go on a ferry we all accept that itâs made of metal, donât we?â Mr Phillips went on. âWe donât give it a second thought. But we should stop and ask ourselves why it floats, shouldnât we?â
âBecause the ferry companyâd be sunk if it didnât,â chortled Kevin, obviously still flush with the success of his brick levitation.
Personally I thought that was quite good for Kevin, but Mr Phillips was less than impressed.
âYes, thank you, Ryder. You can keep your jokes to yourself in future.â After a pause while he wiped his shiny bald bit with a handkerchief, Mr Phillips carried on. âOf course, when they made the first iron boats, back in Victorian times, people didnât believe theyâd float either. In fact, some of you may remember a couple of years ago they brought back one of those early iron boats from the Falkland Islands, way down near the tip of South America.â We all looked blank. I didnât remember anything about any iron ship. And at the time the Falkland Islands meant nothing to us either; after all, the Falklands war didnât happen for another ten years. âThe ship,â blabbered on Mr Phillips, âwas the SS Great Britainâ¦â
My ears pricked up at that. The SS Great Britain was one of those boats Is had shown me in the museum. I looked across at her and grinned at the happy coincidence. But she didnât appear to notice me. She was staring straight ahead, in a way I knew spelt trouble.
â⦠at the time it was one of the largest iron ships ever builtâ¦â
âIt wasnât one of the largest, Sir. It was the largest,â interrupted Isabel.
âAll right Isabel, it was the largest. Thatâs hardly important, is it? The fact that it was a bit bigger than other ships of the time is of no consequence.â
âIt is of great consequence to me, Sir, it most certainly is,â replied Is firmly in a suddenly very adult and formal-sounding voice.
Mr Phillips looked taken aback by the way she had answered him, but before he managed to say anything, she continued in the same vein.
âAnd I will have you know that the Great Britain was not â to use your inadequate words â âa bit bigger than other shipsâ. She was, Sir, at 3444 tons, twice the the size of her contemporaries.â
Mr Phillips recovered himself to say with a smirk: âYes, well thank you for the history lesson, Isabel. Weâll let you know when we want to find out some more.â
Is continued as if she hadnât heard a word he said.
âPeople said that it would sink, of course. There are always sceptics in every society. Always there are those who cannot, who will not, believe. I had to suffer more than my fair share of such fools.â
âI hope I donât have to repeat myself, Isabel. I seem to remember you adopting this ridiculous tone once before in my class. Well I have to warn you, I will not have it.â Mr Phillips was quite clearly bristling by now. But Isabel took no notice. She carried on as if there was nobody else in the room.
âThe SS Great Britain, of course, was nothing compared to my final triumph,â she said. âI was determined to launch the greatest ship in the history of mankind. And I did!â
âSsh,â I whispered at her and shook my hand from side to side to try to make her stop. But she wouldnât, she was completely oblivious of everything around her.
âThe Great Eastern was to be that ship. And I, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, was the engineer to design it.â
âShut up, Is!â I hissed. But it was too late; everyone started
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