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Ruzsky left the shelter of the wall and began to walk away. He heard a shout and then a shot. He ducked his head and ran, turning to check that Pavel was still with him.

He pounded over the river, swung left onto Yalta ’s fashionable Pushkinskaya and then right into a narrow alley that led off it. He slowed as he ran up the hill into the warren of Tartar houses.

They rounded another corner and Ruzsky pulled Pavel to the ground beside him.

They looked back down the slope, breathing heavily.

Two men in dark suits and fedoras dashed into the light. Ruzsky aimed carefully at the first.

He fired once and watched the man fold. The other ducked into the shadows and shouted for assistance.

Ruzsky pulled Pavel to his feet.

They ran again, the alleys getting narrower and steeper, all crisscrossed by lines of washing.

There were more shouts behind them. Pavel hissed, “Stop,” his voice low but hoarse. Ruzsky waited while his partner regained his breath.

A window opened above, the alley bathed in light as a woman came to the window. She saw them standing in the darkness opposite and heard the shouts of their pursuers. She stared at them for a moment and then pulled the shutters closed again.

“Come on,” Ruzsky said.

They moved at a slower pace, but the warren of alleys gave them the advantage. At the top of the hill, Ruzsky led them across the road and into the shelter of a cypress tree.

They sat against its trunk, trying to catch their breath. Pavel’s forehead glistened with sweat. Ruzsky watched the road.

They heard a horse whinny and then saw a cab race up the hill to the crossroads.

In the moonlight, they could both clearly make out the figure of Ivan Prokopiev climbing out of the cab, the sea shimmering behind him. He was wearing a long black cloak and stood with his hands on his hips, facing the alley up which they had just walked. The horse breathed heavily from the exertion, snorting into the night air.

Two of their pursuers emerged.

“No sign,” one said, in response to Prokopiev’s barked question.

“Impossible,” Prokopiev snapped. “Go back.”

The men swung around reluctantly and began to jog down the hill. Prokopiev waited for a few minutes and then turned around. Ruzsky wondered whether he had sensed their presence, but they were well hidden.

They listened to the sound of the cicadas.

The secret policeman got back into the cab, standing tall as he looked down over the town. Then he sat and barked at the driver to continue along the straight road ahead, disappearing in a cloud of dust.

Neither Pavel nor Ruzsky moved until he was out of sight.

They stood in silence. Ruzsky considered lighting a cigarette, then thought better of it.

“Which way?” Pavel asked.

“Hold on a minute.”

“What’s the point in waiting? They’ll be back.”

“We’re well hidden.”

Neither man spoke.

Ruzsky closed his eyes and tried to gather his thoughts. The peace of the night was beguiling.

“I have something I need to do,” he said eventually. “We can walk over the hill, then get transport from there in the morning. Or you can stay here, and I’ll come back to get you.”

“What is it that you need to do?”

“I need to find someone.”

“Why?”

“I’ll explain when we get there.”

“Explain now. Don’t tell me it has to do with the girl.”

Ruzsky didn’t answer.

“Sometimes-”

“I found the names of our victims in Godorkin’s files,” Ruzsky said. “I looked through all the paperwork for 1910 and found nothing. So I tried by name and still drew a blank. Then I found the political files. All three of our corpses were part of a cell of the Black Terror here in Yalta.”

“The assassins?”

“Yes.”

Pavel shook his head sorrowfully.

“The files detail meetings through the spring and summer of 1910. There are six names in the reports: Ella, the American White, Markov-”

“The one we found by the Lion Bridge?”

“Yes. Then a man called Borodin, another woman, and Maria Popova.”

“Your Maria?”

“Maria Popova, yes.”

Pavel was silent. They stared at the crossroads. A crude sign had the word Yalta in one direction and Sevastopol in the other.

“She is a revolutionary? An assassin?”

Ruzsky did not respond.

“So, what did they do, this group?” Pavel asked.

“In the file that I saw, they were engaged in planning a train robbery. All surveillance was called off two or three weeks before it happened and there are no further references to that or anything else in the file. After it, the records come to an end.”

“So where is Maria Popova now?”

Ruzsky sighed heavily. His desire to strike out on his own was overwhelming, but he knew Pavel would never accept it. “She said she was going to a sanatorium to see her sister.” Ruzsky eased himself gently to his feet, leaning against the tree trunk.

“Did she say which one?”

“Yes.”

Pavel stared out to sea, deep in thought. “Did you know she was going to be on that train?”

Ruzsky hesitated. “Yes.”

“Did she ask you to join her?”

“No.”

“Did she know that you would be coming to Yalta?”

“No.”

Pavel looked at him. “If this sanatorium exists, what makes you think she’ll still be there?”

Ruzsky shrugged.

“Sandro,” Pavel said, “come on.”

“What do you mean?”

“She’s one of them. She has lured you down here into a trap. If she gave you the name of this sanatorium, who is to say they won’t be waiting for us when we get there?”

“I’ll go alone.”

“That’s not the point.” Pavel’s voice was gentle and full of compassion. “I understand how you feel, but please face the facts as they are.”

“I know how it might look,” Ruzsky said softly, “but it’s not like that.”

“Love is blind.”

Ruzsky shook his head. “I understand what you say and why, but it’s-”

“It’s about faith.”

“Yes.”

“Well… I trust your judgment. More than anyone’s,” Pavel said.

“Why don’t you stay here. I’ll-”

“From now on, we stick together. What was Borodin doing in Yalta?”

“I don’t know,” Ruzsky replied.

“This is the same man… the Bolshevik?”

“I assume so.”

“Well, what about the American. What was he doing here?”

Ruzsky shook his head.

36

T he sanatorium stood high on the hill overlooking the bay and Ruzsky and Pavel watched its entrance closely as the red dawn stole through the trees around them.

A nurse in a starched white apron with a cross on her chest wheeled an officer in uniform out of the wide doorway and slowly down the gravel drive. On the still morning air, Ruzsky heard a terrible, hacking cough from inside the hospital’s entrance.

They could discern no sign of Prokopiev’s men, but Ruzsky found it difficult to concentrate on the possibility of danger. If Maria had no sister here, as Pavel suspected, she was a liar and he’d been played for a fool.

Ruzsky stood. He nodded at Pavel and walked down the grassy bank to the curved stone porch. The sign next to the entrance announced that this was the Yalta Convalescent Home, but a newly painted one above the reception desk bore the title Tatyana Committee Convalescent Home. A large icon hung on the wall next to it.

The charitable initiatives of the Tsar’s second daughter still had a long reach.

The elderly porter summoned a nurse. She was a stiff, formal woman in her fifties or sixties with dark hair pulled back from her forehead and tied behind her neck. Ruzsky realized that he must look disheveled and scruffy. He had not shaved and could feel the fatigue behind his eyes.

“Popova?” she said, in response to his inquiry. “No. We have no one of that name.”