There were not enough chairs to go around, so Klim was invited to sit beside Nina on a large linen basket, which creaked ominously under their weight.

Nina’s shoulder pressed lightly against Klim’s own, and when she turned her head, her hair tickled his neck. She was warm and familiar, and he ached with love for her. He stroked her knee beneath the tablecloth so that nobody would notice, and Nina answered with a squeeze of her hand. It felt as if everything would be as it had been in the days before they had made such a mess of their marriage.

The Belovs were living in dire poverty. Their dacha was dilapidated and smelled of dried mushrooms and apples. And yet there was a spirit of youthful energy in the house: the walls were covered with children’s drawings, an array of chemical flasks and test tubes stood on the windowsill, and a half-dismantled diesel engine sat in the corner.

Klim was showered with questions about Moscow and did his best to reply. He was amazed to observe these people who had offered to shelter Nina. Their intelligent faces shone with kindness, their clothes, though worn and old, were neat and tasteful, and they peppered their speech with foreign expressions, which nobody had any trouble understanding.

The youngest of the family, a twelve-year-old boy, whom everyone addressed respectfully as Georgy Vladimirovich, even made jokes in Latin.

“He’s interested in ancient Rome,” said Count Belov, ruffling his son’s hair. “But I don’t know how we’re going to teach him. He won’t be accepted into university with his family background.”

“I can teach myself,” answered Georgy Vladimirovich with dignity.

Klim could only feel astonishment that people like the Belovs were now treated as worthless rubbish that had no place in the Soviet society. After all, these were the finest people the nation had to offer.

There was dancing after dinner. The table was carried out of the room, and the countess brought in some sheet music and propped up the lid of the old piano.

Count Belov stood in the middle of the room and made an announcement. “Young men, please take your partners for the first dance!”

Klim bowed to Nina. “Madame?”

She curtseyed as she had been taught back in her school days and held out her hand.

The floors shook, and the curtains jumped in the windows as everybody took part in the dance. Couples whirled to and fro, bumping into each other, pirouetting, laughing, and shrieking. Ladies sank down exhausted onto chairs at the side of the room and fanned themselves with their handkerchiefs.

“Play another, Mamma, please!” the girls shouted, and once again, music shook the house.

It all seemed like a fantastic dream to Klim. Here he and Nina were hiding from the world among strangers, their lives full of fear with no certainty and no hope of planning for the future. And yet right now, his wife was gazing at him with eyes full of love, and he was ready to give up everything for the sake of this dazzling moment.

2

After the dance, Klim followed Nina into the kitchen to help her wash her face before bed. Simply pouring water onto her hands from a mug filled him with indescribable joy.

“Look. This is our product,” Nina said proudly, showing him a cake of soap in the shape of a rooster. “We use old molds for making biscuits and sweets. It looks good, don’t you think?”

Klim nodded. “Very nice.”

The water rushed noisily into the enamel pail. Nina shivered from the cold and wiped her face dry with a towel so old it was almost transparent. Then it was Nina’s turn to pour the water for Klim.

 My God, I’m about to get into bed with my wife! he thought, and his heart swooned at the thought.

A bed had been made up for them on the floor of Belov’s study, a little wooden cubbyhole full of books and sacks of dried apples, the walls hung with portraits of great writers.

The count had unscrewed the only electric light bulb from the chandelier in the living room and offered it to his guests, but Nina had assured him that she and Klim could make do with a church candle.

They put the flimsy door on the latch, placed the candle into a glass jar like a flower in the vase, and sat down on the patchwork blanket, stealing glances at one another.

Nina lay down on her back, and her hair spread out around her head like the wavy rays of a sun on a child’s drawing. Klim ran his fingers gently along one ray and then another.

He knew he needed to speak to Nina about Oscar Reich, but he was reluctant to come down to earth from the clouds.

“I think that I’ve found my Russia right here in Saltykovka,” said Nina. “This dacha, these people, making soap in these old molds—I could stay here forever.”

Klim nodded. “I feel the same. But what if Oscar—”

“Please, let’s not talk about that now.”

She pulled on Klim’s hand, but out of mischief, he resisted. Even using all her weight, she could not manage to get his hand away from him.

“You’re not playing fair!” Nina said, laughing. “That being the case, I’m going to my den.”

She grabbed a sofa cushion in an oversized pillowcase of flowery calico and pulled the end of the case over her head.

“Wow! It’s not a den here,” Nina said. “This is the Garden of Eden. Do you want to come and see me in here?”

How could he refuse?

It felt wonderful to play together like children, kissing under the pillowcase and looking up at the light through the colored flowers printed on calico.

Klim ran his hand over Nina’s waist, then lower, over the steep curve of her hip, and lower still, down the more gentle, gradual line of her thigh. He wanted to take his time, to absorb as many tiny details as he could. The faint trace of warmth on the sheet where Nina had been lying; the nub of her wrist bone through her skin; the tiny golden hairs on her arm.

It was more than any human heart could bear. Klim crushed her tightly to him and realized all at once that they were breathing as one.

3

“Do you think we made too much noise?” Nina whispered afterward, pulling the sheet up to cover her shoulders. “Now the Belovs will make us leave in disgrace.”

“Not only that; we’ve disgraced ourselves in front of all these literary masters,” said Klim, pointing to the portraits of Tolstoy and Dostoevsky.

The great men were staring down from the wall with expressions of evident disapproval.

The candle had burned down, and now, it went out, giving off a sharp smell of burning and releasing a thin stream of blue-gray smoke into the air.

“Oscar somehow found out that I was going to the driving classes,” said Nina in a whisper. “He told me that he had documents in his briefcase that would expose me, and I was afraid he was going to turn me in to the OGPU.”

Klim laced his fingers with Nina’s and squeezed her hand.

“Oscar tried to choke me,” she continued, “so I hit him hard with the crank handle and grabbed the briefcase. I was expecting to find the documents inside, but I found something else.”

“What?”

“Ten thousand American dollars in hundred-dollar notes.”

Klim propped himself up on his elbow. “No kidding?”

Nina pressed in close to him and began to cry. “I can’t stay with the Belovs—their position is already so dangerous. And what will happen if I’m caught?”

Klim suddenly had an idea. “I know what to do. We’ll get you some false papers. You can be a German peasant girl who has never had any official documents apart from certificates from the village council. We’ll use Oscar’s money to bribe Babloyan. He’ll get you a foreign passport, and then we’ll send you out to Hamburg to charter a ship. You can stay in Germany, and Kitty and I will come out to join you. My contract expires soon in any case.”

“We’re crooks, you and I,” Nina said, still sobbing. “The Belovs would never use stolen money.”

“That may be so, but we’re two of a kind,” said Klim. “We were made for one another.”

4

Galina rang Klim and, without any explanation, told him that she would not be coming back to the house on Chistye Prudy. Klim breathed a sigh of relief, but no sooner had one problem been solved than another appeared in its place. He was being shadowed. Every time he looked out, he could see an observer standing on the street opposite his house.

Klim tried to tell himself that it was no big deal to be accompanied everywhere by the snoops. After all, they never attacked him and generally left him alone. But despite this, he felt a keen sense of loss—the loss of a little thing called freedom. He could no longer go anywhere he chose or meet anyone he liked.

On the bright side, he had passed his driving exam and was now qualified as a driver, which meant he could get away from the snoops who were shadowing him. Even when the OGPU came with cars, they could not keep up with Mashka.

Several times, taking great precautions not to be followed, Klim had gone out to Saltykovka. What bliss it had been to visit Nina and walk with her in the golden birch woods, making crazy plans for the future!

Father Thomas had agreed to register Nina as one of his fellow villagers by the name of Hilda Schultz.

Klim began to count up all the surnames Nina had had in her life: “You were born Kupina. Odintzova was your first married name; then you took the false name Bremer. Reich was your false married name, and Schultz is your official name according to your documents.”

Nina laughed. “But my real name is Mrs. Rogov.”

When they came home, they would go up to Belov’s study and leaf through the atlas.