“I’m fine,” the girl sobbed.

  “Oh.”

  The girl continued to cry. She held a slightly moist cigarette in her hands. “If you only knew how freakishly miserable I am at the moment.”

  “Can I do anything?”

  The girl looked out of her wet hands at Tatiana. “Who are you?”

  “You can call me Tania.”

  “Aren’t you the TB stowaway?”

  “I am better now,” Tatiana said quietly.

  “You’re not Tania. I processed your documents myself. Tom gave them to me. You’re Jane Barrington.

  Oh, what do I care? My life is in shambles and we’re talking about your name. I wish I had your problems.”

  Trying quickly to find the words to say something comforting in English, Tatiana said, “It could be worse.”

  “That’s where you’re so wrong, missy. It’s as bad as can be. Nothing worse can happen. Nothing.”

  Tatiana noticed the wedding band on the girl’s finger, and her sympathy flowed. “I am sorry.” She paused. “Is it about your husband?”

  Without looking away from her hands, the girl nodded.

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  “It is terrible thing,” said Tatiana. “I know. This war…”

  The girl nodded. “It’s the pits.”

  “Your husband…he is not coming back?”

  “Isn’tcoming back?” the girl exclaimed. “That’s the whole point! He is very much coming back. Very much so. Next week.”

  Tatiana took a puzzled step away.

  “Where are you going? You look like you’re ready to fall down. It’s not your fault he is coming back.

  Don’t look so upset. I guess worse things have happened to girls at war, I just don’t know of any. You want to go grab a coffee? Want a cigarette?”

  Tatiana paused. “I have coffee with you.”

  They sat down in the long dining room at one of the rectangular tables. Tatiana sat across from the girl who introduced herself as Viktoria Sabatella (“But call me Vikki.”), shook Tatiana’s hand vigorously and said, “You here with your parents? I haven’t seen any immigrants come this way in months. The boats are not bringing them in. So few—what? You’re sick?”

  “I am better now,” said Tatiana. “I am here with myself.” She paused. “With my son.”

  “Get out!” Viktoria slammed her coffee cup on the table. “You don’t have a son.”

  “He almost month old.”

  “How old are you?”

  “Nineteen.”

  “God, they start early where you’re from. Where are you from?”

  “Soviet Union.”

  “Wow. How’d you get this baby anyway? You have a husband?”

  Tatiana opened her mouth, but Vikki went on as if the question had not been asked. Before she drew her next breath, she told Tatiana that she herself had never known her father (“Dead, or gone, all the same”) and barely knew her mother (“Had me too young”) who was in San Francisco, living with two men (“Not in the same apartment”) and pretending to be either sick (“Yes, mentally”) or dying (“From all thatpassion ”). Vikki had been raised by her maternal grandparents (“They love Mumsy but they don’t approve of her”) and was living with them still (“Less fun than you might think”). She had originally wanted to be a journalist, then a manicurist (“In both professions you work with your hands; I thought it was a natural progression”) and finally decided (“Was forced to, more like it,”) to go into nursing when the European war looked like it would suck the United States into it. Tatiana was listening quietly and attentively when Vikki suddenly looked at her and said, “Got a husband?”

  “Once.”

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  “Yeah?” Vikki sighed. “Once. Would that I had a husband once—”

  At that moment their conversation was interrupted by a painfully angular, very tall, immaculately dressed woman in a white brim hat, walking briskly through the dining hall, swinging her white purse and yelling,

  “Vikki! I’m talking to you! Vikki! Have you seen him?”

  Vikki sighed and rolled her eyes at Tatiana. “No, Mrs. Ludlow. I haven’t seen him today. I think he is still cross-town at NYU. He is here on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons.”

  “Afternoons? He’s not at NYU! And how do you know his schedule so well?”

  “I’ve worked with him for two years.”

  “Well, I’ve been married to him for eight and I still don’t know where the hell he is.” She came up to the table and towered over the two girls. She eyed Tatiana suspiciously. “Who areyou ?”

  Tatiana pulled up her cloth mask from her neck to her mouth. Vikki stepped in. “She is from the Soviet Union. She barely speaks English.”

  “Well, she should learn, shouldn’t she, if she expects to earn her keep in this country. We’re at war, we have no business supporting wards.” And swinging her purse, nearly hitting Tatiana on the head, the woman swept from the dining room.

  “Who she?” asked Tatiana.

  Vikki waved her hand. “Never mind her. The less you know about her, the better. That’s Dr. Ludlow’s crazy wife. She storms in here once a week looking for her husband.”

  “Why she keep losing him?”

  Vikki laughed. “The question I think should be why does Dr. Ludlow let himself be lost so often.”

  “All right, why?”

  Vikki waved Tatiana off. Tatiana understood. Vikki did not want to be talking about Dr. Ludlow. With a small smile, Tatiana appraised Vikki. Now that she had stopped crying, Tatiana could see that Vikki was a striking girl, a proper girl who was pretty and knew it and did everything to make sure everyone knew it. Her hair was shiny and long and swept over her face and shoulders, her eyes were outlined in black eyeliner and runny mascara, and her full lips had traces of bright red lipstick. Her white uniform was tight on her long-limbed figure and came just a touch too high above the knee. Tatiana wondered how the wounded men responded to so much…Vikki.

  “Vikki, why you cry? You not love your husband?”

  “Oh, I love him, all right. I love him.” She sighed. “I just wish I could love him from five thousand miles away.” Lowering her voice, she continued. “This is really not a good time for him to come back.”

  “For husband to come back to his wife?” When was not a good time for that?

  “I wasn’t expecting him.” She started to cry again, into her coffee. Tatiana moved the cup away slightly so Vikki could finish the coffee later if she wanted to.

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  “When were you…?” What was the word? Expecting?

  “At Christmas!”

  “Oh. Why he coming home so soon?”

  “Can you believe it? He was shot down over the Pacific.”

  Tatiana stared.

  “Oh, he’s fine,” Viktoria said dismissively. “It’s a scrape. A little superficial shoulder wound. He flew the plane ninety miles after he was shot. How bad could it be?”

  Tatiana stood from the table. “I think I go feed my son.”

  “Yes, but Chris is going to be miserable.”

  “Who is Chris?”

  “Dr. Pandolfi. You haven’t met him? He comes here with Dr. Ludlow.”

  Chris Pandolfi. That’s right. “Oh, I met him.” Dr. Pandolfi was the doctor who had come aboard the ship she was on and decided he wasnot going to help to deliver her baby on U.S.…soil. He wanted to send her back to the Soviet Union, broken amniotic waters, TB and all. It was Edward Ludlow who had said no and made Dr. Pandolfi help get Tatiana to the hospital on Ellis Island. Tatiana patted Vikki on the shoulder. She wasn’t sure Chris Pandolfi was such a great catch. “You be fine, Viktoria. Maybe stay away from Dr. Pandolfi. Your husband is coming home. You areso lucky.”

  Viktoria got up and followed Tatiana down the hall to her
room. “Call me Vikki,” she said. “Can I call you Jane?”

  “Who?”

  “Isn’t your name Jane?”

  “You call me Tania.”

  “Why would I call you Tania when your name is Jane?”

  “Tania my name. Jane just on documents.” She saw Vikki’s uninterested and confused face. “Call me what you like.”

  “When are you getting out?”

  “Getting out?”

  “Out of Ellis.”

  Tatiana thought about it. “I do not think I am getting out,” she said. “I have nowhere to go.”

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  Vikki followed Tatiana into her room and glanced at her son sleeping in his bassinet. “He’s kind of little,”

  she said absent-mindedly, touching Tatiana’s blonde hair. “His father was dark-haired?”

  “Yes.”

  “So what’s it like being a mother?”

  “It’s—”

  “Well, when you’re all better, I want you to come home with me. Meet Grammy and Grampa. They love little babies. They keep wanting me to have one.” Vikki shook her head. “God help me.” She glanced again at Anthony. “He’s sort of cute. Too bad his father has never seen him.”

  “Yes.”

  The boy was so helpless. He couldn’t move, or turn his head, or hold his head. He was so difficult to dress—his floppy arms and head defying Tatiana’s awkward mothering skills—that some days she kept him naked just in a cloth diaper, swaddled underneath the blankets. She had no clothes for him except for the few nightgowns Edward had brought for her. It was summer and warm and he didn’t need much, thank goodness, for the head would not fit in the nightgown hole, the arms refused to go into the long sleeves. Bathing him was even harder, if that were possible. His bellybutton had not healed completely, so she washed his body with a cloth, and that was not too bad, but washing his hair was outside her expertise. He couldn’t do anything, he could not help her in any way, he could not lift his arms or stay still when she needed him still or be propped up. His head bobbed backward, his body slipped out of her grasp, his legs dangled precariously above a sink. She lived in fear that she would drop him, that he would slither out of her arms and onto the black-and-white tile floor. Her feelings about his absolute dependence on her fluctuated from intense anxiety over his future to an almost suffocating tenderness.

  Somehow, and maybe that was how nature intended it, his need for her made her stronger.

  And she needed to be made stronger. Too often when he was asleep and safe, Tatiana herself felt that her own bobbing head, her own dangling arms and legs, her fragile body would slip on the sill and plummet down to the concrete ground below.

  And so to draw sustenance from him, she would uncover him, unwrap him and touch him. She would lift him from his bed and place him on her chest, where he would sleep, head on her heart. He was long, his limbs were long, and as she caressed him, she imagined looking at another boy through the eyes of his mother, a baby boy, long like Anthony, dark like him, soft like him, touched by his mother, bathed, nursed, caressed by his new mother who had waited her whole life to have this one boy.

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  The Interrogation, 1943

  HE HEARD VOICES OUTSIDE, and the door opened.

  “Alexander Belov?”

  Alexander was going to say yes but for some reason thought of the Romanovs shot in a small basement

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  room in the middle of the night. Was it the middle of the night? The same night? The next night? He decided to say nothing.

  “Come. Now.”

  He followed the guard to a small room upstairs, this one not a classroom. It was an old storage area, maybe a nurses’ station.

  He was told to sit in the chair. Then he was told to stand up. Then to sit back down again. It was still dark outside. He couldn’t figure out what the time was. When he asked, he was met with a “Shut up!”

  He decided not to ask again. After a few moments, two men entered the room. One of them was the fat Mitterand, one of them was a man he did not know.

  The man shined a bright light into Alexander’s face. He closed his eyes.

  “Open your eyes, Major!”

  Fat Mitterand said softly, “Vladimir, now now. We can do this another way.”

  He liked that they were calling him major. So they still couldn’t get a colonel to interrogate him. As he had suspected, they didn’t have anyone to deal with him here in Morozovo. What they needed to do was get him to Volkhov where things would be different for him, but they didn’t want to risk any more of their men for a drive across the river. They had already failed once. Eventually he would go in a barge, but the ice would have to melt first. He could spend another month in the Morozovo cell. Could he take another minute in it?

  Mitterand said, “Major Belov, I am here to inform you that you are under arrest for high treason. We have irrefutable documents accusing you of espionage and treason to your mother country. What say you to these charges?”

  “They’re baseless and unfounded,” said Alexander. “Anything else?”

  “You are accused of being a foreign spy!”

  “Not true.”

  “We are told you have been living under a false identity,” said Mitterand.

  “Not true, the identity is my own,” said Alexander.

  “In front of us we have a few words we would like you to sign, to the effect that we have informed you of your rights under the Criminal Code of 1928, Article 58.”

  “I am not signing a single thing,” said Alexander.

  “The man next to you in the hospital told us that he thought he heard you speaking English to the Red Cross doctor who came to visit you every day. Is that true?”

  “It is not.”

  “Why did the doctor come to visit you?”

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  “I don’t know if you are aware of why soldiers go to the critical ward of a hospital, but I was wounded in action. Maybe you should talk to my superiors. Major Orlov—”

  “Orlov is dead!” snapped Mitterand.

  “I’m sorry to hear that,” said Alexander, momentarily flinching. Orlov was a good commanding officer.

  He was no Mikhail Stepanov, but then who was?

  “Major, you stand accused of joining the army under an assumed name. You stand accused of being an American named Alexander Barrington. You stand accused of escaping while en route to a corrective camp in Vladivostok after having been convicted of anti-Soviet agitation and espionage.”

  “All bald-faced lies,” said Alexander. “Where is my accuser? I’d like to meet him.” What night was it?

  Was it at least the next night? Had Tania and Sayers gotten out? He knew that if they had, they would have taken Dimitri with them, and then it would be very difficult for the NKVD to maintain that there was an accuser when the accuser himself disappeared like one of Stalin’s Politburo cabinet ministers. “I want to get to the bottom of this as much as you do,” said Alexander with a helpful smile. “Probably more so.

  Where is he?”

  “You are not to ask questions of us!” Mitterand yelled. “Wewill ask the questions.” Trouble was, they had no more questions. Rather, they had the same question over and over again: “Are you an American named Alexander Barrington?”

  “No,” would reply the American named Alexander Barrington. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.” Alexander could not tell how long this continued. They shined a flashlight into his face; he closed his eyes. They ordered him to stand up, which Alexander took as an opportunity to stretch his legs. He stood gleefully for what seemed like an hour, and regretted being told to sit back down. He didn’t know it was precisely an hour but to keep himself occupied during the repetitive questioning, he started counting the seconds it took for each round
to be completed from “Are you an American named Alexander Barrington?” to “No. I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

  It took seven seconds. Twelve if he drew out his response, if he tapped his feet together, if he rolled his eyes, or if he sighed heavily. Once he started to yawn and could not stop for thirty seconds. That made the time go faster.

  They asked the question 147 times. Mitterand had to take a drink six times to continue. Finally he passed the reins to Vladimir, who needed less to drink and fared much better, even asking Alexander ifhe wanted a drink. Alexander politely declined, grateful for the diversion. He knew he must never accept anything they offered him. That was their invitation into his graces.

  Still not diverting enough. One hundred and forty-seven times later Vladimir said, with naked frustration in his voice and on his face, “Guard, take him back to his cell.” And then he added, “We will make you confess, Major. We know the accusations against you are true and we will do all it takes to make you confess.”

  Usually, when the Partyapparatchiks interrogated prisoners with the intention of convicting them as soon as possible and sending them to a forced labor camp, everyone knew the charade being played. The interrogators knew the charges were bogus, and the stunned and dazed prisoners knew the charges were bogus, but in the end, the alternatives presented to them were too stark for them to continue to deny the obvious fallacies. Tell us, you-who-have-lived-next-door-to-an-anti-proletarian-revolutionary, that you

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  are in collusion with him, or it will be twenty-five years in Magadan for you. If you confess you will get only ten. That was the choice and the prisoners confessed—to save themselves, or to save their families, or because they were beaten, degraded, broken-down, paralyzed from thought by the barrage of lies.

  But Alexander wondered if this was the first time since these sham interrogations began decades ago that the prisoner was accused of the actual truth—that he indeed was Alexander Barrington—and the interrogators for the first time were armed with truth, and truth stood in front of them, truth that Alexander had to deny, truth that Alexander had to bury under a barrage of lies if he were to live. He thought about pointing this out to Mitterand and Vladimir but he didn’t think they would either understand or appreciate the grim irony.