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CHAPTER EIGHT

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Fourth instalment of the account, written by Lt-Cdr H. G. Dikeston RN, of his journeyings

in Russia in the spring and summer of 1918

I stood swaying in the night, feeling like death, and repeated, in Russian, 'I am in urgent need of your assistance. It is most important that I speak with Mr Preston, the Consul.' I could barely stand, so powerfully was the fever upon me now; but the man stood there in silk, looking down his nose at me. He said again, 'It is too late,' and made to close the door.

It was Ruzsky, beside me, who turned matters. He said in a low and threatening voice, 'Urgent! We are from the Urals Oblast Soviet. You should have a care, Comrade.'

The man frowned. 'Who are you?'

'Commissar Ruzsky. He is Commissar Yakovlev,' said Ruzsky. 'Inform Preston at once.'

And so it was done. Preston appeared; I told him I must speak with him urgently and alone; he took me to an upstairs room and looked upon me with no great favour. 'What the devil is all this about?'

'It is about the King's business,' I said, and he looked at me sharply, cocking an eyebrow; he must have wondered if this were a joke of some kind. 'Have you a Navy List?' I then demanded. He had, the Lord knows why, for he stood a thousand miles from navigable ocean. I said, 'Dikeston, Henry George, Lieutenant-Commander.'

'Then what's this Yakovlev nonsense?' he demanded, laying the List to one side.

'I want your word, Preston,' I told him. 'Your word that nothing about me, and nothing of what I tell you, will ever be passed to another soul.'

He frowned at once, reluctant. 'Only if you convince me you are on the King's errand. You'll have to prove it.'

'I can't. ' But I told him my tale and showed him my paper from Sverdlov, and I could see he soon began to believe. Mention of Zaharoff made him scowl, though. ' That man -and with the King!' It was as though he could not believe it.

'And with the King's blessing,' said I. 'Now: your word.'

He gave it, and I then explained our difficulties. Preston had some of his own. He was under pressure from both London and the embassy in Moscow to intercede for the Imperial Family and had been making daily attempts to visit them. All his requests had been refused. 'However,' he went on, 'though I have been unable to have audience of His Majesty, or to speak with him, it is possible to see him from a distance. Come with me.'

I accompanied him to the stairs and we climbed to a room on the upper floor, where he drew back a curtain and, as the moonlight entered the room, said, 'You see?'

And indeed I did. The consulate lay beyond the Ipatiev House, with the result that the view that lay before us was a slanting one. But from that upper room the line of sight was of a height to pass over the palisade and see direct into a corner of the courtyard of the House of Special Purpose. The space was deserted now, of course, and no movement was visible in the former Ipatiev House, though in a few places there was light at a dimmed window.

'You do see them?' I asked Preston.

'Oh yes.' He was matter-of-fact in his manner of delivery, but it was easy to see that Consul Preston had deep feelings. 'For an hour or so each day the Tsar and Tsarina and their daughter come into the courtyard there, for air and exercise. They walk up and down. Imagine - for the Tsar of all the Russias to be so confined!'

'Could you communicate with them?' I demanded. 'Would it be possible?" He shook his head. 'I dare not.'

'Dare!' I said angrily. 'Surely when the cousin of your Sovereign is in such -'

He interrupted me. 'There is much you do not know. Difficult news.'

'In what way?'

Preston sighed: 'British and American troops have made a landing at Archangel. Accordingly, I am now the representative here of a power engaged in acts of war against Russia.'

'At war with Russia!' I could hardly believe my ears. Russia had so long been Britain's ally.

'Not at war,' Preston said. 'Though it is a mere technicality, there has in fact been no declaration. None the less my position here in the Urals must now be considered precarious. For myself it hardly matters, of course, but as senior Consul I represent the interests of many residents here, not only British subjects, and I cannot put them further at risk by provocative acts.'

I eyed him angrily, but he put his hand on my sleeve and went on, 'There is a similar view across the street, perhaps a better, from the Purin house. From there the garden can be seen.'

'Where is this house?' I asked him.

It was close by, and owned by a merchant, one Lev Purin.

'Is he loyal to the Tsar?' I demanded.

'He's a banker,' Preston said wryly. 'What is there for him now but loyalty?'

The hand on my sleeve must at last have sensed my trembling, for he now said, 'You are ill?'

I shall be,' I replied, for by now I was certain of it.

'Aspirin, hot toddy and lemon,' he said, and took me to a sitting-room where a fire burned, even though the evening was a warm one. He made the toddy with whisky and boiling water and as I drank it, Preston told me more of Purin, and remarkable listening it made. For not only did 17Qthe Purin house offer a better sight of the House of Special Purpose; it had a secret telephone. Purin's wife had a sister who lived elsewhere in the town and the private line ran between the two houses.

'It could be useful to you,' Preston said.

In that way he was helpful; otherwise he was determined he could offer nothing more. I recall arguing with him heatedly about duty, but I was close to collapse by then, and have no true recollection of the detailed conversation.

Soon I left, staggering, barely able to stay upright. I remember little more, save that Ruzsky had waited outside for me: that I babbled out to him the things told to me by Preston, and that twice he cracked his palm across my cheek when I was in danger of sinking to the ground . . . I woke in a bare room and for a time lay unmoving, eyes closed more than they were open, for merely to raise my eyelids seemed to require an effort beyond my strength. Then, gradually I came to know my surroundings. A white sheet covered me, the walls were white also; there was a window, small and barred and bare of curtains, and I thought for a moment this must be a cell - as indeed it proved to be, though not in a prison. An hour passed, in which I learned the extent of my weakness. To lift my hand or move my head was an impossibility. To move a finger needed willpower. My body seemed without sensation and my mind afloat in emptiness.

I lay for an hour, unconcerned. I learned later this was a product of weakness, for I was weak indeed, weakened almost to death.

At last I heard a door catch, and the movement of harsh fabric, and a woman's voice said in Russian,

'Can you be awake?' I tried to answer, but my mouth was arid and nothing came but a grunt. Next I saw her face looking down at me. She was a woman of perhaps fifty, her head and shoulders shrouded¡n the habit of a nun of the Orthodox Church. 'You are awake,' she said, and added when I tried to nod, 'No, be still' She put her hand on my forehead and it felt cool and dry. 'How do you feel are you thirsty?' My eyelids, heavy as they were, gave her an affirmative and she filled a glass with water and, lifting my head, held it to my lips.

I drank gratefully, and she said, 'Prayer saved you, you know. We all prayed 50 much.'