The Russians Collection

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The Russians Collection Page 237

by Michael Phillips


  “No, Yuri, not yet. But we musn’t forget how to laugh, nor that laughter exists and is a good thing.”

  “I’ll never—”

  “Hush, son. Don’t say ‘never.’ Mourning only lasts for a season. I have mourned, Yuri, I know. Then joy returns. It will return, do you hear?”

  “I’m afraid it won’t. I fear I will always feel this way—like I’m walking through quicksand, reaching out and struggling to find some solid ground, but there is none in sight. I’m sinking, Mama.”

  “Hold on to me, Yuri.”

  “How can you bear it?”

  “God will find a way.”

  About the Author

  Judith Pella is a bestselling, award-winning author whose writing career spans more than two decades. Her in-depth historical and geographical research combines with her skillful storytelling to provide readers with dramatic, thought-provoking novels. She and her husband make their home in Scapoose, Oregon.

  Books by Judith Pella

  Texas Angel

  Heaven’s Road

  Beloved Stranger

  Mark of the Cross

  THE RUSSIANS

  The Crown and the Crucible*

  A House Divided*

  Travail and Triumph*

  Heirs of the Motherland

  Dawning of Deliverance

  White Nights, Red Morning

  Passage Into Light

  THE STONEWYCKE TRILOGY*

  The Heather Hills of Stonewycke

  Flight from Stonewycke

  Lady of Stonewycke

  THE STONEWYCKE LEGACY*

  Stranger at Stonewycke

  Shadows Over Stonewycke

  Treasure of Stonewycke

  DAUGHTERS OF FORTUNE

  Written on the Wind

  Somewhere a Song

  Toward the Sunrise

  Homeward My Heart

  LONE STAR LEGACY

  Frontier Lady

  Stoner’s Crossing

  Warrior’s Song

  PATCHWORK CIRCLE

  Bachelor’s Puzzle

  Sister’s Choice

  RIBBONS OF STEEL**

  Distant Dreams

  A Hope Beyond

  A Promise for Tomorrow

  RIBBONS WEST**

  Westward the Dream

  Separate Roads

  Ties That Bind

  THE HIGHLAND COLLECTION*

  Jamie MacLeod: Highland Lass • Robbie Taggart: Highland Sailor

  THE JOURNALS OF CORRIE BELLE HOLLISTER

  My Father’s World* • Daughter of Grace* • On the Trail of the Truth*

  A Place in the Sun*

  *with Michael Phillips **with Tracie Peterson

  © 1998 by Judith Pella

  Published by Bethany House Publishers

  11400 Hampshire Avenue South

  Bloomington, Minnesota 55438

  www.bethanyhouse.com

  Bethany House Publishers is a division of

  Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan

  www.bakerpublishinggroup.com

  Ebook edition created 2015

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

  ISBN 978-1-4412-2971-7

  This book is a work of fiction. With the exception of historical personages, all characters are a product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to living persons, past or present, is coincidental.

  Cover design by Melinda Schumacher

  Judith Pella is represented by The Steve Laube Agency.

  To Tracie Peterson,

  whose enthusiasm is so very refreshing,

  and whose friendship is a true blessing!

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Cast of Characters

  Part I: Ashes to Ashes

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  Part II: July Days

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  Part III: Revolutions and Rebirth

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25

  26

  27

  Part IV: New Allies, Old Enemies

  28

  29

  30

  31

  32

  33

  34

  Part V: Plans and Deceptions

  35

  36

  37

  38

  39

  40

  Part VI: Passages

  41

  42

  43

  44

  45

  46

  47

  48

  Dasvidaniya . . .

  About the Author

  Books by Judith Pella

  Cast of Characters

  (IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE)

  Andrei Sergeiovich Fedorcenko—a.k.a. Andrei Christinin, Malenkiy Soldat, Ivan. Son of Anna and Sergei, younger brother of Yuri.

  Sonja Morozovna—Andrei’s friend.

  Rudy Gruenwald—Andrei’s friend.

  Anna Fedorcenko Grigorov—nee Burenin. Mother of Andrei, Yuri and Mariana. Widow of Sergei, wife of Misha.

  Raisa Sorokin—Anna’s roommate and close friend, and mother of Talia.

  Daniel Trent—American reporter, husband of Mariana.

  Mariana Trent—nee Remizov. Wife of Daniel, adopted daughter of Anna.

  Children of Mariana and Daniel—John, Katrina, Zenia.

  Yuri Sergeiovich Fedorcenko—son of Anna and Sergei, brother of Andrei.

  Cyril Karlovich Vlasenko—relative and nemesis of Fedorcenkos, one time member of the Imperial Ministry.

  Katya Fedorcenko—wife of Yuri.

  Nicholas Romanov—former tsar of Russia.

  Alexandra Romanov—former tsaritsa of Russia.

  Children of the Romanovs—Olga, Marie, Tatiana, Anastasia, Alexis.

  Bruce McDuff—a.k.a. Lord Findochty and “Finkie.” British aristocrat and supporter of Russian monarchy.

  Paul Burenin—brother of Anna, revolutionary, associate of Kerensky.

  Alexander Kerensky—a.k.a. Sasha. Minister of Justice, later Minister of War and finally, Prime Minister of the Provisional Government.

  Stephan Kaminsky—Lenin’s bodyguard, formerly a friend of the Burenins and one-time suitor of Mariana.

  Vladimir Ilyich Lenin—leader of the Bolshevik Party.

  Dr. Eugene Botkin—physician to the tsar, friend of Yuri.

  Prince Viktor Fedorcenko—grandfather to Yuri, Andrei, and Mariana. Father of Sergei.

  Lev Trotsky—leader in Bolshevik Party, Lenin’s right-hand man.

  Sergei Viktorvich Fedorcenko—deceased father of Yuri and Andrei.

  Lt. Boris Soloviev—head of a monarchist organization involved in rescue of the tsar.

  Monarchist soldiers assisting Daniel—Melink, Sedov, Pitovranov, Karloff.

  Count Wilhelm Mirbach—German ambassador.

  Yakov Sverdlov—president of the Central Executive Committee of the All Russian Congress of Soviets.

  Vasily Yakovlev—Soviet Commissar and head of military unit sent to move the tsar.

  Misha Grigorov—husband to Anna.

  Dmitri Remizov—birth father to Mariana.

  Yakov Yurovsky—head executioner.

  1

  The cold clamped down upon Andrei’s fallen form as insistently as the pain and fear that gripped his soul. He
had been drifting in and out of consciousness, but he knew the next time oblivion struck would be the last. He literally felt the life ebbing from his body.

  “Mama . . .” he murmured, not even certain if sound accompanied the word.

  “I’m here now, my dear one,” came an ethereal voice out of the dark shadows surrounding him.

  Was he only imagining that voice as he’d thought he’d imagined Talia calling her kitty? Then hands began to jostle him. Had his attackers returned? Would they kill him now by manhandling his pain-wracked body? It certainly felt as if that were their intent. He cried out when a particularly sharp movement wrenched his side where the gunshot wound had penetrated.

  “Stop! Rudy, we are only making it worse for him.”

  That was the same voice Andrei had heard soothing him a moment ago, a female. Was it the voice of a rescuer rather than an attacker?

  “You fetched me out in this wretched storm to save this man,” answered a male voice. “Let’s get on with it.”

  “But every movement pains him so.”

  “Better for him to suffer now than to lie here and freeze to death. And I tell you, Sonja Morozovna, though he may die from his injuries, he certainly will perish if left in this storm any longer.”

  “Oh, but my Ivan cannot die. . . .” The woman brushed gentle fingers against Andrei’s cheek.

  “He isn’t Ivan. . . .”

  “What . . . ?”

  “Never mind that, Sonja, let’s just get him moved. I’ll grip him under the arms and try to drag him as much as possible. You mind his feet. I don’t know how we’ll get him up two flights of stairs to your flat, but even if we leave him in the entryway of the building, it will afford him some protection from the elements.”

  “His bed is all ready for him with fresh, clean sheets. I knew he’d come home soon. I am ready for him. I have a nice ham in the oven baking. . . .”

  “Ah, Sonja,” sighed Rudy, “if you have a ham in these times, or even clean sheets, I will give up my atheism and consider the possibility of a God.”

  Sonja made no response but to whisper words of encouragement to Andrei. “Dear boy, it will hurt for a bit. It can’t be helped . . . be brave and strong, then you will be safe in your mama’s home.”

  “Mama . . . you are here, then . . . ?” breathed Andrei.

  “Always, child. I will not leave . . . and you will not leave me again.”

  The two rescuers began again the difficult and excruciating process of moving Andrei. Mercifully, he blacked out after a few minutes.

  It took a lot longer than it would have in normal conditions to traverse the alley, round the corner, and cover the few yards to the building’s front entrance. But Rudy was not a large man, and he was a scholar, not a laborer, so he was hardly conditioned to move two hundred-plus pounds of dead weight even a short distance. Once they left the shelter of the alley, the wind and falling snow impaired their vision, and the icy ground caused them to slip and slide several times before they reached the steps to the building. And those five steps up might just as well have been a mountain. At least the doorman, who had disappeared when the revolution began, was not there to question them. Everyone knew all doormen in Russia were agents of the Okhrana.

  By the time Andrei’s body was deposited in a corner of the inside entryway, as far from the door as possible, Rudy felt certain they were merely transporting a corpse. He had completed three years of medical school before he had been expelled for political reasons, but he did not need those years of instruction to tell him that no one in this man’s condition could survive such treatment. He was shocked when he bent over the body and felt Andrei’s chest rise and fall. True it was only a slight movement, but unmistakable nonetheless. The man was still alive!

  “Well, he made it this far, Sonja!” said Rudy, clasping his frozen, gloved hands together to warm them.

  “Of course,” Sonja replied. “Did you ever doubt it? Now the stairs—”

  “Hold it! I will die if I have to lug this bear to your flat. Leave him here for the night, and in the morning we can get more help. It will be easier, anyway, to transport him to a hospital from here.”

  “A hospital . . . ?” Sonja shook her head. “I will not let my Ivan leave me again. Besides, I can nurse him better than any stranger in a hospital could.”

  “You may be right there,” said Rudy, “especially in these times. But still it can wait till tomorrow—”

  “No! I will get help now. He has come so far to get home.” She spun around and rushed up the stairs.

  Sonja Morozovna was about fifty years of age, though she looked much older. Her frame was petite and slightly bent in the shoulders, but she moved with amazing speed and agility. If only her mind were as quick and able as her body. But the last few years had taken a terrible toll on her. Rudy remembered her in happier days when her family filled the flat on the second floor and there was always laughter and life in her home. Though working-class folks, they were never as poor as most because her husband was a skilled weaver. Sonja, a hardworking, industrious woman, brought in additional income by selling fine handmade lace items. She was generous, though, with her bounty. Rudy and many of the other neighbors had often enjoyed her fresh bread or the sweets she loved to bake.

  Three years of war destroyed all that. Her husband and two eldest sons were killed in the first year of fighting. Her youngest son, Ivan, overcome with grief, ran away and joined the army against her wishes. He was killed in the fall of 1916, less than six months ago. Sonja’s sanity had already begun to deteriorate. She simply did not have the stamina to face a grim, dark, lonely world with a future that promised only more heartache. Ivan’s death sent her completely over the edge. Perhaps that was a mercy. In her clouded mind the world had not changed. Why, she even continued to bake bread for her neighbors—not real bread, of course, for there was not enough flour for that. Wearing a smile that was an empty shadow of her former happiness, she would offer a dish just as empty.

  To ease his mind of Sonja’s sad story, Rudy focused his attention on the wounded young man. He loosened the clothing, a difficult process because the blood-soaked areas around the wound were frozen and stuck to the broken skin. When Sonja returned he would have her boil water in her flat so he could pack the area with warm compresses. The cold had stanched the bleeding a bit, a fact that might well have saved the fellow’s life. The wound appeared to be the result of a gunshot, which raised many questions in Rudy’s mind. It was not surprising with all the violence and chaos in the city now. But it did cause Rudy to wonder what side his “patient” was on to have ended up in the line of fire. The dirty red armband tied around the young man’s coat sleeve meant he supported the revolutionaries. However, there were many who had donned the armbands only in hopes of traversing the city safely.

  Rudy Gruenwald himself was a revolutionary, though he could claim no membership in a specific party. At the beginning of the war his German heritage had caused him to be ostracized at the university. He was already accustomed to harsh treatment because of his Jewish ancestry, but it nevertheless encouraged him to become more deeply involved in revolutionary activity. He finally got himself expelled from medical school for marching with a group of strikers at the Putilov Steel Works about a year ago. After that he had immediately been drafted into the military. His German name no longer seemed to matter. Not fancying the “underground” life, he did his duty—that is until about three months ago when he deserted along with droves of other disillusioned Russian soldiers. The senseless carnage, due almost entirely to the inept leadership of bungling Russian generals, had become too much. Rudy could not stand by and watch a moment longer. Under normal conditions it would have been unwise to return to his old home, but with no place else to go, he took the risk. He found his old room let out to other tenants, but there was a vacant attic room that proved quite suitable. And, as it turned out, the country was in such disorder that he was never pursued.

  In a few minutes Sonja returne
d with two old men at her side—strong, young men were hard to come by these days. Between the four of them, they managed to carry the unconscious man up the stairs to Sonja’s flat. Unfortunately, the jostling caused the man’s wound to start bleeding again.

  “You must patch him up, Rudy,” Sonja said. The young man had been laid upon her own bed, which for warmth’s sake was in the main room of her two-room flat.

  Rudy shrugged. Even with three years of medical school behind him, he felt far from competent to treat such a wound. Still, under the circumstances, he might be the young man’s best hope of survival. He certainly couldn’t harm him any further.

  “I’ll need some water boiled,” he told Sonja. “And gather whatever you can find to use as bandages. I will also need instruments—a good, sharp knife will have to do. And vodka—someone in this building must have some hidden away. Get all you can.”

  Sonja jumped up and hurried to the door, but she paused before opening it. “You must save him, Rudy . . . he must live.”

  Rudy nodded and tried to offer a reassuring smile. Too bad God did not exist, for the young patient had little hope but that.

  2

  A huge red flag dominated the top of the Winter Palace. Images of double-headed eagles lay in piles of rubble on the streets. The monarchy was gone. The tsar no longer ruled. But Russia was still Russia. All was completely changed, yet eternally the same.

  The khvost, or bread queue, was a seemingly eternal fact of life in Russia. Anna Fedorcenko Grigorov had come to think very little of waiting hours in a khvost for bread, meat, or a few beets for borscht. Instead of complaining about the inevitable, most Russians just made the most of such an ordeal, turning the khvost into a social experience. It became the main source of news and gossip, and of many of the most fantastic rumors imaginable. Anna once heard that the Germans had surrendered, then five minutes later that the Allies had been driven from Europe altogether.

  The only thing Anna knew without doubt was that the future of Russia, and indeed her own future, was as uncertain now as when she had been a young girl embarking on a journey from her peasant village to the frightening big city.

  She let her thoughts wander wistfully back forty-one years to that day she left her family’s izba in Katyk. Her papa used to call her his little “snow child,” after the old fairy tale about the childless couple who after years of longing for a child were finally given a daughter formed out of the snow. But when the child had to leave them before the winter snows melted, they were greatly grieved until she assured them she would return with the first snowfall of winter. That was Papa’s way—always finding joy in difficult circumstances. No doubt he would quip now that waiting in line for bread for hours wasn’t so bad, because it gave him a chance to visit with his neighbors.

 

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