The Family Romanov: Murder, Rebellion, and the Fall of Imperial Russia (40 page)

BOOK: The Family Romanov: Murder, Rebellion, and the Fall of Imperial Russia
3.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Chapter Sixteen

  
1
“sadness … descended …”: Volkov, np.

  
2
“These days …”: Anastasia to Marie, 24 April/7 May 1918, in Steinberg, 302.

  
3
“Why Ekaterinburg?”: Kobylinksy Deposition in Wilton, 207.

  
4
“finishing off …”: Steinberg, 186.

  
5
“I consider it …”: Negotiations by telegraph between Yakovlev and officials on transfer of Nicholas II to Ekaterinburg, 29 April/12 May 1918, in Steinberg, 252.

  
6
“It is not clear …”: Marie to Olga Nikolaevich, 18 April/1 May 1918, in Steinberg, 298.

  
7
“right snake …”: Kurth, 188.

  
8
“a strict prison”: ibid.

  
9
“We get nasty surprises …”: Marie to Olga Nikolaevich, 27 April/10 May 1918, in Steinberg, 304.

10
“Your soldiers would …”: ibid.

11
“If you do not …”: ibid.

12
“Are you Olga …”: Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, 336.

13
“Darling, you must …”: Olga Nikolaevna to Anna Vyrubova, nd, May 1918, GARF.

14
“We feel …”: Gilliard, 264–265.

15
“In our thoughts …”: Anastasia to Marie, 24 April/7 May 1918, in Steinberg, 302.

16
“The rooms are empty”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 137.

17
“Life down there …”: Tegleva testimony of 5–6 March 1913, Houghton Library, Harvard University, Sokolov Archive, vol. 5: document 36.

18
“I cannot describe …”: Buxhoeveden,
Left Behind
, 75.

19
“Look! [The tsar] …”: ibid.

20
“Death to the tyrant!”: ibid.

21
“The dresses … of wanton …”: ibid.

22
“Down with them …”: ibid.

23
“a tragic symphony …”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 145.

24
“Nagorny the sailor …”: Gilliard, 269–270.

25
“It [always] looks …”: Nicholas II Diary, 15 May/28 May 1918, in Maylunas, 622.

26
“hot and stuffy”: Nicholas II Diary, 22 May/4 June 1918, ibid., 627.

27
“cosy”: Marie to Olga Nikolaevna, 22 April/5 May 1918, in Maylunas, 618. “Nicholas the Blood-Drinker”: Massie,
Nicholas and Alexandra
, 509.

28
“are original …”: Nicholas II Diary, 25 April/8 May 1918, in Maylunas, 620.

29
“money”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 122.

30
“all kinds of mistakes …”: Strekotin, Statement, 1934, np.

31
“In my opinion …”: Kurth, 190.

32
“The shoes [you have] on …”: Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, 342.

33
“insisted on changing …”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 161.

34
“astronomical!” and “a little work …”: ibid.

35
“[I] could find no …”: ibid.

36
“Comrade Laundry Teacher …”: ibid.

37
“[he] proved rather clever …”: ibid.

38
“excellent”: Alexandra Diary, 18 June/1 July 1918, GARF.

39
“Hugged him to” and “Being a child …”: Strekotin, Statement, 1934.

40
“It [is] unbearable …”: Krustalev, XLI.

41
“Why?”: Nicholas II Diary, 14 May/27 May 1918 in Steinberg, 324.

42
“everyone had a chance …”: Strekotin, Statement, 1934, np.

43
“passed some sleepless …”: ibid.

44
“There is nothing …”: ibid.

45
“stuck up and stupid”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 238.

46
“There was something …”: Strekotin, Statement, 1934, np.

47
“We’re so bored!”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 240.

48
“Don’t try to …”: ibid.

49
“pretending fright …”: ibid.

50
“everyone relaxed more …”: ibid.

51
“Our dear Marie is …”: Nicholas II Diary, 14 June/27 June 1918, in Maylunas, 632.

Chapter Seventeen

  
1
“Today there was …”: Nicholas II Diary, 21 June/4 July 1918, in Maylunas, 633.

  
2
“Because of …”: ibid.

  
3
“dark gentleman”: Kurth, 193.

  
4
“It was left to me …”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 258.

  
5
“all obedience …”: ibid., 257.

  
6
“Always fright[ened] …”: Alexandra Diary, 28 June/11 July 1918, in Steinberg, 333.

  
7
“Constantly hear …”: Alexandra Diary, 29 June/12 July 1918, ibid., 334. “liquidated”: Yurovsky’s Account of the Execution of the Tsar, 1 February 1934, in Steinberg, 357.

  
8
“It has to be said …”: Yurovsky’s Note on the Execution, 1920, in Maylunas, 633.

  
9
“Everything is the same”: The Guard’s Duty Log Book, 30 June/13 July 1918, GARF.

10
“Baby … managed …”: Alexandra Diary, 30 June/13 July 1918, in Steinberg, 334.

11
“Today we have absolutely …”: Nicholas II Diary, 30 June/12 July 1918, in Maylunas, 633.

12
“gave the impression …”: Testimony of Father Storozhev in King and Wilson,
Fate
, 275–276.

13
“With the saints …”: Keating, 146.

14
“were spirited …”: Testimony of Eudokia Semyonova in King and Wilson,
Fate
, 277–278.

15
“a giant among men”: ibid.

16
“They were not gods …”: ibid.

17
“It’s been decided …”: ibid., 290.

18
“to be in a state …”: ibid., 291.

19
“arranging [their] medicines”: Alexandra Diary, 3 July/16 July 1918, in Maylunas, 634.

20
“the execution …”: Trotsky,
Diary
, 213.

21
“anything out of …”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 280.

22
“[They] said they …”: ibid., 300.

23
“complaining about the murders”: ibid.

24
“15 degrees”: Alexandra Diary, 3 July/16 July 1918, in Maylunas, 634.

25
“Everyone [must] …”: Yurovsky’s Account of the Execution, 17 February 1934, in Steinberg, 356.

26
“all skin and bones”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 304.

27
“they smiled naturally …”: ibid.

28
“They still did not imagine …”: Yurovsky’s Account of the Execution,

29
17 February 1934, in Steinberg, 348.

30
“None of the members …”: Interrogation of Pavel Medvedev, 21–22 February 1919, in Steinberg, 348.

31
“Well, we’re going …”: Testimony of Peter Ermakov in Halliburton, 135. “What, there isn’t …”: Yurovsky’s Note on the Execution, 1920, in Steinberg, 352.

32
“Please, you stand here …”: Massie,
Romanovs
, 5.

33
“They [still] had no idea …”: Yurovsky’s Note on the Execution, 1920, in Steinberg, 352.

34
“with a flash …”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 306.

35
“In light of the fact …”: Yurovsky’s Note on the Execution, 1920, in Steinberg, 352.

36
“Lord, oh, my God …”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 306.

37
“So we’re not …”: ibid.

38
“I can’t understand …”: ibid.

39
“What? What?”: Yurovsky’s Note on the Execution, 1920, in Steinberg, 352.

40
“This!”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 306.

41
“jumped about …”: Yurovsky’s Note on the Execution, 1920, in Steinberg, 353.

Chapter Eighteen

  
1
“The … Soviet passed …”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 338.

  
2
“the world will never …”: Bulygin, 239.

  
3
“received the news …”: Lockhart, 304.

  
4
“missing Romanovs”: Fige, 641.

  
5
“But the children …”: Gilliard, 277.

  
6
“I could not believe …”: ibid., 275.

  
7
“The houses looked …”: Goldman, 8–9.

  
8
“Comrade Stalin … has concentrated …”: Clarkson, 566.

  
9
“We wanted …”: Massie,
Romanovs
, 27.

10
“It was frightening!”: ibid., 33.

11
“We swore an oath …”: ibid., 35.

12
“All the skeletons …”: Seward, np.

13
“His life, his actions …”: King and Wilson,
Fate
, 497.

14
“[Nicholas] could have chosen …”: ibid., 498.

15
“doing their moral duty …”: ibid.

16
“My heart leaped …”: Harding, np.

Beyond the Palace Gates

  
1
“What a stunning impression …”: Kanatchikov, 7–19.

  
2
“My early childhood was not …”: ibid., 1–6.

  
3
“Hush, hush, hushaby …”: Tian-Shanskaia, 101.

  
4
“Grandpa rented …”: Gorky, 150–151.

  
5
“I, too, made …”: ibid., 161–171.

  
6
“About ten in the morning …”: Korolenko.

  
7
“The first thing the shop owner …”: Gudvan, 195–196.

  
8
“I tried to take my son …”: ibid., 191–192.

  
9
“The third [train] whistle …”: Palmer, 37–44.

10
“With a jubiliant …”: Poole, 47–51.

11
“It was one o’clock …”: Paustovsky, 474–475.

12
“Suddenly from behind …”: Williams, 143–144.

13
“Like a black river …”: Reed, 99.

14
“I shall describe my day …”: Fige, 727–729.

Other books

The World of Cherry by Kay Brandt
Shrinking Violet by Danielle Joseph
Aced by Ella Frank, Brooke Blaine
The Daykeeper's Grimoire by Christy Raedeke
Blackbriar by William Sleator
Giftchild by Janci Patterson
I Married A Dead Man by Cornell Woolrich