Nina nodded.

Now that proletarian tenants were being packed into former mansions, they would alter them to their own taste without a thought for the architecture. In Moscow now, at every step, you could see the disfigured facades of buildings—their windows bricked up and their balconies destroyed.

Shilo tugged at Nina’s sleeve. “Come on. I’ll show you the best place to climb over. There’s a woodpile on the other side of the fence here. You can get up on that and jump into the yard.”

Nina looked doubtfully at her. “Maybe we should go together after all?”

“Are you starting that again?” snapped Shilo. “I’ve told you!”

“But what if I don’t find anything?”

“You will.”

“But what if someone catches me?”

“Just hit him in the face with your shovel, and that’ll be the end of it.”

Good lord, thought Nina. What on earth am I doing?

Shilo helped her climb onto the snow-covered woodpile. “Come on, St. Nicholas the Wonderworker—don’t let us down!” She made the sign of the cross over Nina. “When you dig up the treasure, give me a shout, and I’ll help you get out of there.”

Nina felt like Aladdin sent by the evil sorcerer into the magic cave to find the lamp.

She jumped down into the snowdrift, and a minute later, the shovel came flying over the fence after her.

The small yard was covered in snow. All that could be seen on the ground were the dark marks of car tracks by the coach house.

Holding her breath, Nina stole along the stone wall. She reached the gate and began to look for the chipped brick. It was snowing more heavily now, and she could see very little in front of her.

At least it will cover my tracks, Nina thought as she ran her hands hastily over the brickwork.

At last, she found a deep pit in one of the bricks. She got down and began to clear away the snow beneath the fence. The ground had not frozen solid, but her shovel kept hitting some roots. Nina chopped away at them with the shovel, and the blows were so loud that they could have been heard a mile away.

Then there was a scraping of metal, and the shovel slipped along a flat surface. Nina threw it aside and began to dig with her hands. Her heart was beating fast with excitement and a sort of superstitious fear. She felt as if she was about to dig up not buried treasure but a coffin.

With a final effort, she pulled out a large metal box, its surface rough with rust. But it was too early to celebrate. She still had to get out of the yard.

Nina stood up, brushed the dirt from the hen of her dress and… froze in horror. Before her stood a huge, strapping man with a shaven head and dressed in an unbuttoned greatcoat.

“Do you need some help?” he asked with a grin.

Nina rushed to the fence, forgetting all about the box.

“Get me out of here!” she called, but there was no answer from Shilo.

Nina dashed to the locked gate and again to the fence.

The terrifying shaven-headed man came striding out of the swirling snow, grabbed Nina by the arm, and dragged her toward the house without a word. She started to scream, but he shook her like a doll. “Stop yelling!”

They were met in the dark entrance hall by two more people: a young man in a silk dressing gown and a large black woman—a servant with a paraffin lamp in her shaking hands.

“Oscar, we should call the police,” barked the shaven-headed man. “I’ve caught a thief.”

The young man took the lamp from the servant and began to examine Nina as if she were some exotic animal. Her red velvet coat, now covered in earth and snow, clearly made an impression on him.

“What are you doing here?” asked the man with a strong American accent.

Nina gawked at him, trying to catch her breath. This Oscar looked quite civilized. He had a well-groomed, pale face, close-set hazel eyes, and a fashionable pencil mustache.

“I didn’t want to steal anything,” Nina said in English. “I just needed some documents.”

“What documents?” snarled the shaven-headed man, who clearly knew English but preferred to speak in Russian.

“I left a box out there in the snow—”

“Yefim, bring it in,” ordered Oscar.

“Then the girl will do a runner!”

“No, she won’t. Theresa and I will watch her.”

Yefim went outside, and Nina took a look around her. She was not in an office but in a rich private house. The hall had parquet floors, and there was a whole array of expensive canes in a carved umbrella stand by the door and a crystal chandelier hanging from the ceiling.

Nina turned her gaze on Oscar.

Who is this man? she wondered. He was living in the center of Moscow like some lord. He even had a black servant.

Yefim came back with the rusty box, put it down on a pier table, and began to take out yellowed envelopes and paperwork. There was no sign of any money or valuables.

Oscar picked up a leather-bound photograph album.

“Property of Baroness Nina A. Bremer,” he read the inscription on the cover.

On the first page was a picture of a young girl in a fancy dress and a fetching hat pulled down over one eyebrow.

“Look! It’s her!” exclaimed Theresa, pointing at Nina.

Clearly, the photograph showed a young Shilo, and there was a definite resemblance to Nina. They did indeed look like sisters.

“So, you’re a baroness, are you?” asked Oscar, looking at Nina with interest. “Well, I’m very pleased to meet you. Will you have dinner with me?”

Nina had expected that the evening might end in any number of ways—scandal, hue and cry, police procedures—but she had not expected an invitation to dinner.

“Th-thank you,” she stammered. “I’d be delighted.”

“Theresa, lay another place at the table, would you?” asked Oscar.

“Very good, Mister Reich.”

They can think what they like about me, thought Nina, so long as they don’t call the police.

3

Nina followed Oscar through a succession of rooms, and she was barely able to believe her eyes. Here, in the heart of communist Moscow, was a veritable oasis of capitalism. Every chair and every vase was a work of art.

What is Oscar Reich’s line of work? she wondered. Was he a foreign diplomat? How could the Soviet government allow him to live in such dazzling splendor?

Nina had many questions she wanted to ask, but she bit her tongue. She had a feeling this man might be able to help her. The important thing was not to frighten him off.

As she went past a large mirror, Nina felt secretly pleased that she had decided to wear the beautiful dress. It would have been horribly awkward to dine with Oscar in her darned skirt and faded blouse.

Theresa ladled out soup into bowls. Nina tried a spoonful—it was real New England Clam Chowder served with thin pieces of melba toast and fresh herbs. She was prepared to act the imposter for a while for the sake of pleasures such as this. Shilo’s grand title clearly opened the door to certain privileges.

Nina pointed out the wooden panels around the ceiling to Oscar. “Do you see those angels? They’re portraits of me with my brothers. Mother had them carved specially. That’s Mishka, and those two are Ilya and Anton,” she said, naming the other brothers off the top of her head. Who knew their names, anyway?

Oscar looked at her with a mixture of amazement and disbelief. “So, where have you been living all this time?”

Nina improvised a tragic story about how she had spent many years roaming the country after the revolution and had finally decided to go abroad.

“There’s nothing for me here,” she said woefully. “I need money and documents, so I dug up my box.”

“I understand,” Oscar nodded.

Everything seemed to be going to plan.

I’ll flirt with him for a bit and then ask him for a loan, thought Nina. It’ll be nothing to him to give me some money with his fortune.

4

After dinner, Oscar told Theresa to light a fire in the library and to bring in a bottle of wine and two glasses.

Nina was delighted. This was a good sign!

In the library, she went straight to the window. As Shilo had said, under the windowsill was a tiny hiding place covered with a small piece of wood. Nina moved the wood to one side, reached into the crack, and took some sweets in silver wrappers, hardened with age.

“Help yourself,” she said, holding one out to Oscar.

He laughed. “Antique sweets! Whatever next.”

He had unnaturally white teeth that looked as if they were made of porcelain. How much do crowns like that cost? Nina wondered. They had to be more expensive than gold ones.

“Will you join me in a drink?” asked Oscar, opening the bottle. “Wine isn’t like sweets—it gets better with time.”

They chinked glasses and drunk to Nina’s health.

Encouraged, she could not resist asking a question. “Tell me, who are you? What do you do?”

“I’m a Red capitalist,” answered Oscar. “When there was famine in Russia, I brought a fully equipped field hospital over from the States and sixty thousand dollars’ worth of canned goods. After that, the Soviet government gave me a concession, and now I have my own pencil factory at the Dorogomilovskaya Gate.”

Nina was bewildered. The fight against capitalism was the mainstay of Bolshevik ideology. Why was an American allowed to own a factory in Moscow?

Seeing her confusion, Oscar laughed. “The Bolsheviks want to build a new kind of society, but they don’t have the technical specialists they need: they’ve all either run away or died during the war. Currently, eighty-five percent of the population of the USSR live in rural areas, and half of them can’t read and write. The first thing the country needs is to fight against illiteracy, and there’s a huge demand for pencils and pens. So, they made an exception for me.”