She yanked the door closed behind her, breathing in the warm interior air and stamping life back into her feet. Only Ainur, a dark-eyed woman from Kazakhstan, was off duty and slouched on her bunk reading The Red Star, the army newspaper.
“If only they let us stand guard in valenki,” Alexia moaned, dropping onto her bunk and drawing off her boot. She untied her footcloth and rubbed icy toes.
“Then you’d look like some peasant from the kolkhoz.” Ainur snorted. “But it’s only because I’m your best friend that I say that.”
Alexia snorted back. “My feet are my best friends, and they hate you.” She tied on clean footcloths that were at least room temperature and padded over to her friend’s bunk. “So, what’s the news?” she asked, nodding toward the newspaper.
Ainur glanced back down at the article. “Leningrad. The Volkhov and Leningrad fronts are just starting a new offensive to break the encirclement south of Lake Ladoga. This might be the breakthrough.”
“I wish I was there helping out.”
“I thought you had an aversion to those kinds of bloody battles.”
“You make me sound like a coward. I’m not. I’m a good patriot and willing to die for the homeland. But I was raised by a priest, who told me that killing is sin.”
“Priests are traitors. So, now you’re reconsidering? About killing, I mean.”
“I might. Frankly…” Alexia glanced around to make sure no one was within earshot. “I’m a little tired of the backbiting among the officers and others coming and going at the Kremlin. When you stand guard around them, they forget you’re there, listening to the nasty little conspiracies they come up with. Always trying to undermine each other and curry favor with the boss they’re all terrified of. It doesn’t feel like you’re helping the war at all.” She sighed and leaned over Ainur’s shoulder toward the paper.
“So what else is in the news? Anything more cheerful?”
“A nice report about our snipers. Zaitsev, of course. Everyone loves him. But this says they already have heroes from the Women’s Sniper Training School in Podolsk. Look here. They even have pictures. Very attractive. But of course the big name is Pavlichenko, with a score of over three hundred.”
Alexia took the paper out of her hands and perused the article. Half a dozen women were named and their “kill” scores listed. The largest photo showed Lyudmila Pavlichenko, a round-faced woman with an appealing sisterly face but dreadfully cut hair who posed stiffly with her sniper’s rifle across her chest.
“They look good, posing with their rifles, don’t they?” Ainur said. “I bet they get a lot of respect from their comrades.”
Alexia shrugged. “We get plenty of respect, too, and we don’t have to fire our guns.”
“Yeah, maybe standing at the wall or by Lenin’s tomb. But no one looks at us when we’re freezing in our guard boxes.”
“I was thinking more of state occasions. When Tatyana and I stood guard at the conference in Tehran, I could feel the foreigners staring at us.”
Ainur snickered. “They were staring at you because you’re pretty and look so fine in your uniforms. Vlasik also seems to think so. Have you noticed the way he watches you?”
Alexia gave another dismissive shrug. “If that gets me service at the foreign conferences, he can ogle me all he wants. That was the best assignment I ever had. I like traveling outside of Russia, meeting foreigners.”
“Be careful. If anyone hears you talking like that, you could get in trouble.”
“As long as you don’t betray me, I’m fine. Now let’s go to the mess hall. I have to go back on duty soon, and I need something hot in my stomach.”
Alexia drew on her boots again, and as they marched together down the corridor toward the mess hall, she bumped elbows with Ainur. “So, tell me more about the women’s sniper school.”
As if to underline Ainur’s assessment of him, Nicolai Vlasik summoned Alexia to his office the next day. Alarmed that he had somehow learned of their conversation, which could easily land her in Lubyanka Prison, Alexia hurried to his door. She tugged down her tunic, checked that her boots were free of mud or snow, and knocked.
A gruff voice called out, and she entered, closed the door behind her, and saluted smartly.
Vlasik sat upright behind his desk, his hands clasped under his impressive array of high-powered medals. She disliked looking at his squarish, slightly jowly face and stared at a spot directly over his head. His long silence made her certain he had gotten word of her remarks. Her mouth went dry.
“How long have you served in the Kremlin Special Purpose Regiment?”
“Five months, sir.” Her heart fluttered. So short a career, now come to an end.
“Interesting. In such a short time, you have already come to the notice of Comrade Stalin.”
Alexia dropped her glance to look at him directly. The word Stalin had her full attention. “Come to his notice? How?”
“Marshal Stalin approved your performance in Tehran and has specifically recommended you for a task.”
So, obviously no Lubyanka. Now if he would only get to the point.
“In a few days time, two Americans from the White House will be visiting the Kremlin, and a private guard will be assigned to each one for security. You will escort them to meetings, remain in attendance unless directed otherwise, escort them to their hotel afterward, and then report back to me each evening. Is that clear?”
“Uh, yes, sir. If I may ask, who are the persons in question?”
“We will inform you before you’re sent out. You’ll be personally representing the Soviet Union so you must be on your best behavior.”
She snapped to attention. “Will that be all, sir?”
“Yes, for the moment. You are dismissed.”
As she hurried back to her barracks to tell Ainur, she could barely stifle a grin. Escorting American visitors from the White House. Suddenly being a guard was interesting again.
Chapter Eight
January 1944
After an international flight to RAF Kinloss Airport and a train ride to Invergorden, Scotland, Mia stood wearily on the dock next to Harry Hopkins. They both stared mournfully at the Catalina flying boat rocking in the icy water in front of them. Much wider than any plane she’d ever seen, its propeller engines hung from the wings over the fuselage, and it reminded her of some vast bird of prey.
“So this is what you get when you’re not entitled to presidential treatment.”
“Afraid so. Since we don’t have air-force escort, we have to travel around North Cape, Norway, to Arkhangelsk. Worse, they’re already carrying cargo, so we’re being shoved into the machine gunner’s station in the tail.”
As soon as the hatch opened, they climbed inside. They crammed their baggage into the Plexiglas blister and crouched below the machine gun, which Mia fervently hoped would not be needed on this trip. They wore padded flight suits, but she already felt the chill of the unheated craft.
“How long is this flight?” she called out to the navigator, knowing the answer would not be welcome.
“About twenty-one hours, and most of that will be in darkness. We’re fully loaded so can’t fly at top speed. Best to sleep through the trip.”
“Sleep, sure thing,” she muttered, and stretched out the best she could, tucking her hands into her armpits and using her luggage as a pillow. The hours passed and she tried to doze, but the cold and the roar of the engines made it impossible.
Consequently, when they arrived in Moscow and landed on the Moscow River, she was dizzy with exhaustion. They clambered out onto the dock into the shock of frigid winter air.
The US ambassador to Russia, Averell Harriman, strode toward them. “Welcome to Russia. You both look like you could use a warm-up and some rest. Come on. We’ll do our best to make you comfortable at the embassy.”
While they walked toward the ambassador’s car, Mia studied the man through sleep-deprived eyes. She’d corresponded with him several times on Lend-Lease matters, and he’d been one of the president’s allies moving in the background at Tehran. Now, up close, he was rather handsome, and his robustness contrasted radically with Hopkins’s bony frailty.
“How’s the embassy managing, Averell?” Hopkins asked.
“Only just. We’re down to a staff of six but still get the work done. Spaso House was damaged by bombs in ’41, and the repairs are ongoing. Fortunately, we still have telephone lines and a telegraph, and can do basic business.”
He opened the car door for her and she dropped into the rear, much relieved. Soon she could wash and eat and sleep. For once, she was glad to be only an assistant, allowed to doze in the warmth of the backseat while in the front the men talked strategy.
Spaso House, in the New Empire style, with its central portico, was a bit like a White House in miniature. Inside, the main hall and soaring domed ceiling were impressive, even to her foggy mind. Harriman noticed her perusal of the ceiling and smiled.
“Not bad, eh? It was built just before World War One for a fabulously rich merchant. Back in those tsarist days, you could be fabulously rich. You should have seen it before they took down the chandelier.”
Mia nodded appreciatively. “Is it always so chilly?”
“Unfortunately, yes. The air raids broke a lot of windows, and we can’t get glass for them. We’ve had to cover them with wooden boards, and the cold seeps through the cracks. The furnace doesn’t always work either, so we’ve installed oil stoves in the sleeping rooms. It’s a little unsightly, but we still manage to provide a luxury that is rare in Moscow these days, hot water.”
Once in her room, Mia lit her stove immediately, then unpacked her suitcase. Though the hot water in the bathroom down the hall was not sufficient for a full bath, she managed a warm wash, then hurried back to her room. The bed was fresh, and as soon as she warmed it with her body, she fell asleep.
Harriman and Hopkins were already at the table when she came downstairs, and the cook brought her breakfast. The scrambled eggs, though a bit watery, were from real eggs, but the bread was gritty and dry. The coffee was the real thing, but the absence of bacon, or any meat at all, was disappointing.
“Who are you meeting with first?” Harriman asked.
“Dmitriy Ustinov, Arms Minister.” Hopkins warmed his hands around his coffee cup.
“Oh yes, at the People’s Commissariat of Armaments, over on Gorky Street. I’d planned for Mr. Dornwend to drive you in the embassy car, but the Kremlin wants to send one over with their minders. They call it ‘security,’ as if someone might assassinate you if you were alone, but they simply want to monitor you.”
“Really? It’s gotten that bad?” Hopkins set his cup aside and lit a cigarette.
“Yes. The Kremlin is very suspicious of foreigners. But it’s not so bad. You can go most places in Moscow. You just always have a babysitter.” He glanced at his watch. “They should be here any minute.”
“I suppose we can regard them as guides,” Mia said, chewing her resistant toast.
Harriman glanced past her toward the sound of a door opening. “Ah, that must be them. Early, of course.” He downed the last of his coffee and stood up.
Two uniformed guards stood in the entryway. One was a dashing fellow over six feet tall, and the other was a stately blond woman. Mia halted in mid-step. It was the Grushenka guard she’d seen in Tehran.
“We escort you to Kremlin,” the young man said in thickly accented English.
Mia regained her composure. “It’s quite all right. You can speak Russian,” she assured him. “May I ask your name?”
“Kiril Yegorov.” Obviously relieved, the young man tipped his head in the hint of a bow. Mia turned to the young woman.
“And you are Alexia.”
The woman’s surprise was disciplined, merely a slight lifting of the brows. “How do you know that?” she asked in Russian.
“You were one of Stalin’s guards in Tehran. They told me your name.”
Alexia seemed perplexed but did not reply, and Kiril continued. “We have an official car outside, and of course we do not want to keep the Commissar for Armaments waiting.” He gestured toward the door.
Kiril sat in the front with the Kremlin driver, while Alexia, to Mia’s delight, squeezed into the rear with Hopkins and her. After a short ride in which Kiril identified the historic buildings, and Mia translated for Hopkins, the driver deposited them at the People’s Commissariat of Armaments. A single contingent of guardians recognized the Kremlin guards and let them pass. At the relevant office, the two minders waited in the corridor.
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