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Authors: Suzanne Weyn

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BOOK: The Diamond Secret
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CHAPTER ONE  

Grim Memories in a Gray City

 

Yekaterinburg, Russia

April 1919

Ivan Ivanovitch Navgorny's dark eyes snapped open.

Not that dream again! With darting glances he surveyed his shabby hotel room in the iron-mining town of Yekaterinburg. Convinced he truly was awake, he sighed with relief. The room was a pit, but it was better than his nightmare.

Walking to the grimy window, Ivan pulled back the stained curtain and gazed out at the gray sky looming above the square industrial buildings. How eerie to return to this grim proletariat city on the border of Siberia, after swearing he'd never be back. He and Sergei had been here for less than a week, and it was already too long.

Where
was
Sergei? His blanket had been tossed off the slumping couch where he'd slept. Ivan guessed that his friend probably had gone to finally pay their overdue hotel bill.

Ivan rubbed the sleep from his eyes. Now that he was awake, Ivan recalled the dream only in fleeting images and murmured conversations, blessedly difficult to reconstruct. But even upon waking he could remember the gunfire in his dream, as it had been in real life.

Ivan knew what terrible memory he was reliving in his sleep.

He didn't like to think of the event if it could be avoided. He shut it out so vigilantly, so utterly, in his conscious waking state that the memory's only outlet was to creep in at night when he could not guard against it.

Guard against it.

Guarding.

He'd been a guard in the Red Army stationed here in Yekaterinburg at The House of Special Purpose, a villa acting as a jailhouse for the exiled Russian royal family, the Romanovs. Guarding was what he'd
thought
he was doing--guarding the imprisoned Czar Nicholas; his wife, Czarina Alexandra; and their five children: the grand duchesses Olga, Tatiana, Anastasia, and Marie--whom they all called Mashka--and their younger brother, Alexei.

Ivan had been a Red soldier with the Bolsheviks then, a true believer in the words of Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky regarding the rights of the Russian workers. Those leaders had believed in the cause of communism and so did Ivan--at least he had believed in it back then.

The one thing Ivan was thankful for was that he had been stationed
outside
the basement early that fateful July seventeenth in 1918. The White Russian Army loyal to the czar was advancing on Yekaterinburg, and he'd thought the royal family, their physician, and three of their servants were just being hidden downstairs to keep the White Army from liberating them.

He'd had no idea what was about to happen.

But he'd cringed outside the door in helpless disbelief when he'd heard the gunfire abruptly erupt, and he had imagined the horrible killings going on inside. Later, his imaginings had been augmented by unwelcome details told to him by soldiers who had fired the shots there in the basement. Ivan had tried to stopper his ears, to shut out their stories, but they had insisted, as though in an attempt to unload the burden of their own horror and guilt over what they'd done.

He understood how the rumor that Anastasia was still alive had started. She must have survived the first round of shootings--all three sisters had. They'd worn petticoats with so many jewels sewn into the waistbands that the gems had served as a kind of body armor, causing the bullets to bounce all over the room. Ivan's soldier comrades had told him that they themselves had had to jump away, shielding their heads, to avoid being struck.

There were no bouncing bullets the second time the soldiers fired.

When the dust had cleared, Czar Nicholas, Czarina Alexandra, Alexei, Olga, Tatiana, Mashka, and Anastasia were all found lying silently in a heap.

Then the soldiers had collected the scattered jewels and had ripped at the seams of the dead family's clothes, searching for more hidden treasure, which they found. Then they had enlisted Ivan's help to take the bodies to the woods to bury.

In the woods, Ivan had stood guard beside the body of Anastasia while the other soldiers had dug graves. Her hair was over her face. Her summer dress had been torn away and now revealed the waist of her bullet-scorched petticoat.

Before that moment, Ivan had seen Anastasia only at a distance as she walked in the garden of The House of Special Purpose. Back then, he hadn't been able to get a close look at her, but he could tell she was a lively soul from the way her slim form danced along the walkways with her sisters, sometimes teasing, often laughing.

To see her so still...it was a horror that had sickened him to the very depths of his being.

Stepping away, Ivan had vomited heavily into a bush.

When he turned back, his heart had skipped.

Anastasia--the corpse he'd viewed just a moment before--was pulling herself forward, clawing her way across the dirt.

He'd watched in speechless disbelief, wondering if he possibly could be imagining it.

Tensing as she sensed him watching her, Anastasia had stopped and swung her head around to him.

Through the tangle of hair that veiled most of her face, her eyes had spoken to him, begging him not to reveal her.

He gave his tacit agreement by turning his back to her and bending forward, pretending to heave his guts out once more.

Ivan never questioned his complicity in her escape, not even for a second. If she could manage, by some implausible combination of ferocious will and improbable luck, to escape this atrocious and premature death, he would not be the one to alert the others. The true believer in the Communist cause he had once been had died, just as surely as the Romanovs had been slaughtered.

Glancing back, he had seen that she was getting farther away.

The summer breeze rustled the leaves.

The other soldiers were busy digging.

Below them the Islet River rushed downstream.

Occasionally a soldier's shovel clanged when it hit a rock.

Peering over his shoulder, Ivan had glanced at her again. Anastasia was on her knees about five yards from her family.
Don't stand up. Keep crawling,
he'd thought, wishing he could warn her directly. But she'd staggered to her feet.

And no one had noticed.

Maybe by some miracle she might--

"Hey!" a soldier had shouted. A shot rang through the woods.

Her slim form had shuddered with the impact, her arm flying up as the bullet hit her in the chest, and then her body had slumped to the ground.

Everything around Ivan had begun to spin. This was too much! Too much! He had to get out of there.

He'd put down his rifle and walked into the woods. Vaguely, Ivan knew soldiers were shouting after him. He was even aware of a bullet whistling past his ear. But he'd just kept walking.

Ivan shook off this painful memory as somewhere in town a factory whistle blew, signaling the start of the workday. These forays into the past were not welcome, and he did not succumb to them often. He was all about the future now--his future.

He walked over to the small sink and peered into the oval mirror above it. His wavy, dark brown hair was getting long, falling nearly to his shoulders. He ran his hand over the scruffy three-day stubble covering his strong chin and high cheekbones. I should shave and get a haircut, he considered, his straight, dark brows furrowing as he bent in closer to scrutinize his face. With a careless shrug, he decided not to bother. If their business here was successful, then he'd tend to his grooming. If not, there was no reason to care.

Suddenly the door flew open and in burst a tall, broad-shouldered, burly man in his middle twenties.

He ran his large hand across the top of his short-cropped blond hair. When he spied his friend, his clear, ice-blue eyes widened. "Come on, Ivan. We're leaving right now!" Sergei said urgently, snapping up strewn clothing as he strode around the room. "Hurry!"

CHAPTER TWO
   

Headline News

 

Nadya stretched sleepily as she shuffled down the narrow stairs from her attic bedroom above The Happy Comrades Tavern. With her eyes half-shut, she scowled at the gray morning light that filtered through a grimy window. Six in the morning was an ungodly time to start work, especially since she hadn't gotten to bed until two.

She stepped into the empty main dining area, and a misty cloud of breath formed when she yawned. An involuntary shiver ran through her, and she rubbed her arms for warmth. This morning her first chore would be to relight the fire in the room's big stone fireplace before her employer, Mrs. Zolokov, arrived. The woman hated entering a freezing building and would have an especially ratty temper all day if that happened.

Just the night before, Nadya had served and cleaned away dishes here as the rowdy customers devoured cold borscht, rough bread, and greasy sausage or leaned against the long plank-wood bar where they downed shots of ice-cold Russian vodka, chasing them back afterward with warm beer in mugs. She'd been in Mrs. Zolokov's employ for just under a year. It was exhausting work, but it beat starving in filthy squalor on the street, something she'd done long enough to understand that it was to be avoided at all costs.

She was dressed for morning work in her faded blue shift and brown flat shoes. In the evening, when the place was crowded, Mrs. Zolokov insisted she look more presentable and had provided a flounced secondhand black skirt and a flowing, embroidered peasant-style blouse. Sometimes male customers, mostly ironworkers and miners, told her she looked attractive--though they often expressed the sentiment in cruder terms. In her own opinion she was scrawny and too pale, with dark circles under her eyes and the curse of drab, lackluster hair.

Grabbing a handful of her snarled dark blond hair--not yet swept into its usual messy updo--she breathed it in. It stank of last night's cherry-scented tobacco from cigars and pipes. And lately customers had been smoking those disgusting cigarettes, too.

Nadya would have to wash it soon, but the water from the outside pump was just so cold! Would spring never arrive?

Something lying on the wooden floor caught her eye. It was a small, gray windup mouse that one of the customers had shown his raucous dinner companions the night before. As she was cleaning away their plates she'd heard him brag about buying the novelty in Moscow for his cat. The man probably had become so obliterated with vodka that he'd forgotten all about it. Now, after examining its lifelike tiny ears and tail, she slipped the toy mouse into her skirt pocket.

Yawning as she moved through the kitchen, Nadya went out the back door into a small yard to get some of the chopped wood from the pile. A light snow had fallen during the night and had dusted everything in sparkling white.

Three geese huddled in the goose shed while the lead male waddled out to the far end of his pen to honk angrily at her. "Oh, pipe down, you blabbermouth," Nadya scolded back. "I'll get your breakfast as soon as I can. You'll live till then." With a shudder of self-consciousness, Nadya realized she was starting to sound like Mrs. Zolokov. "I'll be back in a minute," she said to the noisy goose a bit more kindly.

Nadya gathered an armful of wood. A chilly wind made her shiver, and she hurried back into the tavern. She tossed a piece into the kitchen's woodburning stove and dumped the rest into the main fireplace. Attempting to light a match, Nadya found that her hands were trembling from the cold. Even when she finally managed a flame, the damp wood refused to ignite.

"Newspaper," she muttered, disgruntled. In the trash can behind the bar she found old papers that customers had left behind. She lifted out the top two and stuffed them under the wood in the fireplace, and then struck her match to set the paper ablaze.

Remembering the demanding goose, Nadya went into the kitchen to retrieve the plate of stale bread she'd set aside for his meal. When she returned from feeding the geese, the paper was charred but the wood had failed to catch fire.

Mrs. Zolokov was due any minute. Glancing through the front window, Nadya saw the heavily bundled woman barreling toward the tavern; her head, covered in a flap-eared khaki-green woolen hat, was bowed against the swirls of blowing snow.

She's going to be mad, Nadya noted silently, quickly digging in her pocket for more matches.

Instead, Nadya's hand wrapped around the toy mouse.

A plan hatched. A distraction! That's what was needed!

Hurrying to the door, Nadya unbolted it and, stepping aside, wound the artificial mouse with rapid strokes.

Mrs. Zolokov turned the knob and pushed the door open.

Nadya set the toy mouse scurrying toward her boss.

"Mouse! Mouse!" the heavy woman bellowed in terror the moment she noticed the creature scurrying in circles around her feet. Hoisting her cumbersome frame onto a chair, she knocked it over as she scrambled up onto the table. "Nadya, do something! We have a mouse!"

Biting hard on her laughter, Nadya snapped up a straw broom from the side of the bar and flailed it at the toy mouse, pounding it. "I'll get you, you nasty rodent!" she cried. "Don't worry, Mrs. Z., I'll save you!" Nadya continued to whale on the toy mouse until its windup mechanism ran out. "Got it," Nadya announced proudly.

BOOK: The Diamond Secret
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