Read The Romanov Sisters (Four Sisters) Online
Authors: Helen Rappaport
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Russia & the Former Soviet Union, #Biography & Autobiography, #Women's Studies, #Family & Relationships, #Royalty, #1910s, #Civil War, #WWI
That afternoon Alexandra received Viktor Zborovsky, one of the
most trusted officers of the Escort protecting the palace. She thanked him for his continuing loyalty and reiterated that no blood should
be shed in protecting the family. As Zborovsky was leaving Maria
stopped him and they ended up chatting for an hour. He was deeply
moved by the great change in her during recent days. ‘Nothing
remained of the former young girl’, he told his colleagues later; in
front of him stood ‘a serious sensible woman, who was responding
in a deep and thoughtful way to what was going on.’86 But the strain
of it all was telling on her. That evening Lili heard the sound of
weeping and went to look: ‘In one corner of the room crouched
the Grand Duchess Marie. She was as pale as her mother. She
knew
all! . . . She was so young, so helpless, so hurt.’87 ‘Mama cried
terribly’, Maria told Anna Vyrubova, when she visited her sickbed
to talk about her father’s abdication. ‘I cried too, but not more than I could help, for poor Mama’s sake’; but Maria was terrified that
they would come and take her mother away.88 Such ‘proud fortitude’
was but one instance of what Anna later recalled was ‘shown all
through those days of wreck and disaster by the Empress and her
children’.89
Cornet S. V. Markov was another loyal officer allowed in to see
Alexandra that day. He entered via the basement, which he remem-
bered was full of soldiers of the Combined Regiments taking a break
from the cold, and was taken upstairs through many rooms still full
of the lingering fragrance of flowers. In the children’s apartments
he came to a door on which was fixed a piece of paper on which
was written ‘No entry without the permission of Olga and Tatiana’.90
A big table in the middle of the room was covered with French and
English magazines, scissors and water-colours, where Alexey had
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been cutting out and pasting pictures before his illness. Alexandra
came in and surprised him by saying, ‘Hello dear little Markov.’ She
was dressed in her nurse’s white, ‘her sunken eyes very tired from
sleepless nights and fear, expressive of unbearable suffering’. During their conversation she asked Markov to remove his imperial insignia
– rather than have some drunken soldier on the street tear them
from his jacket – and to tell his fellow officers to do likewise. She thanked them all for their loyalty and made the sign of the cross
over him as he left.91
Alexandra was right to be fearful for the loyal troops still guarding her since they did so at increasing risk to themselves. They all took the news of the emperor’s abdication very hard. None more so than
Viktor Zborovsky: ‘Something incomprehensible, savage, unreal had
happened that was impossible to take in’, he wrote in his diary on
4 March. ‘The ground fell away from under one’s feet . . . It had
happened . . . and there was nothing! Empty, dark . . . It was as
though the soul had taken flight from a still living body.’92 For the last couple of days, in an attempt to demoralize those out at Tsarskoe Selo, a false rumour had been put about in Petrograd that the men
of the Escort had defected. But this was far from the truth. When
Alexandra at last made contact with Nicholas on the 4th one of the
first to hear the news from her was Viktor Zborovsky. She wanted
to reassure him that despite the pernicious rumours, she was in no
doubt of the Escort’s loyalty and that she and Nicholas ‘were right
to look upon the Cossacks as our true friends’. She also asked him,
as she had Markov, to tell the officers of the Escort to remove their imperial insignia. ‘Do this for me,’ she urged, ‘or I will once more
be blamed for everything, and the children might suffer as a result.’93
The men of the Escort took this instruction hard when Zborovsky
brought it: for them it was a deeply dishonourable act and some of
them wept and refused to comply: ‘What kind of Russia is it without
the tsar?’ they asked.94 Honour, for the Escort, died hard and they
were prepared to defend theirs to the death.
On 5 March Princess Helena tried to telephone Alexandra at the
palace, only to find that the lines had been cut. With no telephones, no trains to Tsarskoe Selo, palace supplies of food and wood dwin-dling, no electricity or running water, domestic staff defecting and
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TERRIBLE THINGS ARE GOING ON IN ST PETERSBURG
a crowd of curious and increasingly belligerent onlookers gathering
outside the palace gates the situation was becoming very dangerous
for Alexandra and the children: ‘A curtain of bayonets separated the
Imperial Family from the living world.’95 Lili Dehn noticed that
Alexandra was now sometimes smoking cigarettes to ease her stress.
It wasn’t until 5 March that Valentina Chebotareva at the annexe
finally saw news of the abdication in the papers. ‘At the hospital it is as silent as the grave’, she noted. ‘Everyone is shaken, downcast.
Vera Ignatievna [Gedroits] was sobbing like a helpless child. We
really were waiting for a constitutional monarchy and suddenly the
throne has been handed to the people. In the future – a republic.’96
Alexandra was now urging all of her entourage that they had the
right to leave if they so wished. But even Lili Dehn refused to desert her, insisting she would stay ‘no matter what’.97 She feared she would never see Titi again, nor her husband, who was away on a military
mission to England, but she was determined not to desert her
empress. Iza Buxhoeveden, Nastenka Hendrikova and Trina
Schneider – as well as the ever-present Dr Botkin and Count and
Countess Benkendorf – all rallied round as well. Anna Vyrubova
was still lying ill in the other wing of the palace, but her moral
support at this time was crucial, as too was that of Elizaveta
Naryshkina who had at last managed to get back to Tsarskoe Selo
from Petrograd. ‘Oh such emotional turmoil!’ she wrote of their
reunion:
I was with the empress: calm, very sweet, much largesse of spirit.
It strikes me that she has not quite grasped that what has happened
cannot be put right. She told me: ‘God is stronger than people.’
They have all endured extreme danger and now it is as though
order has been reestablished. She does not understand that there
are consequences to all mistakes, and especially her own . . . the
condition of the sick children is still serious.98
It was around 7 March that Alexandra regretfully decided, on
the urging of Lili Dehn, to begin the systematic destruction of all
her letters and diaries.99 Lili was worried that if they fell into the wrong hands they might easily be misinterpreted, or worse be
deemed treasonous and used against her and Nicholas. And so, over
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the course of the following week, the two women sat together day
after day in the girls’ sitting room, taking great piles of letters from a huge oak chest in which Alexandra had stored them and burning
them in the fireplace. All of Alexandra’s most treasured letters from her grandmother Queen Victoria, her brother Ernie and many other
relatives were ruthlessly consigned to the flames, but the hardest of all to part with were undoubtedly the hundreds of letters she had
received from Nicky since the day of their engagement in 1894.
Occasionally she stopped to read parts of them and weep before
tossing them into the flames. And then too there were her many
diaries, satin-covered ones dating from her childhood and the later
leather-bound ones, which even now she was still keeping.
*
Everything remorselessly was turned to ash – with one exception: Nicky’s letters to her from Stavka during the war years, which Alexandra was
determined to preserve as proof, should it be needed, of their undying loyalty to Russia.100 But on Thursday the 9th one of Alexandra’s
maids came in and ‘begged us to discontinue’ as Lili recalled. The
half-charred papers were being carried up the chimney and settling
on the ground outside where some of the men were picking them
up and reading them.101
In the sickroom, signs of recovery among the children were slow
to come. Although Alexey was improving and his temperature drop-
ping, Olga now was suffering from one of the complications of
measles, encephalitis – inflammation of the brain – and Anastasia’s
temperature was worryingly high. And then on the evening of the
7th the inevitable happened: Maria began to feel unwell and soon
was running a temperature of 39 degrees C (over 102 degrees F).
‘“Oh I did so want to be up when Papa comes,” she kept on repeating,
until high fever set in and she lost consciousness.’102
On Wednesday 8 March Alexandra finally received news of
Nicholas from Count Benkendorf – that he was safe and back at
Mogilev, and would be returning to the Alexander Palace the
following morning. At midday, General Lavr Kornilov, Commander-
in-Chief of the Petrograd military district, arrived in the company
* Alexandra took her current diary with her to Tobolsk and continued writing it until the night before her death in July 1918. These diaries were recovered after the family were murdered and are now in the Russian State Archives, GARF.
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of Colonel Evgeny Kobylinsky, newly appointed head of the military
garrison at Tsarskoe Selo. ‘Kornilov announced that we are shut up
. . . From now [we] are considered pris[oners] . . . may see nobody
fr[om] outside’, Alexandra noted dispassionately.103 As Benkendorf
understood it at the time, the imperial couple would only be under
arrest until the children had recovered, after which ‘the Emperor’s
family would be sent to Murmansk [an ice-free port on Russia’s
extreme north-west border] where a British cruiser would await
them and take them to England’.104 This was the hoped-for swift
resolution to the problem of what to do with the former tsar,
announced by the new Minister of Justice, Alexander Kerensky, in
Moscow the previous day, and in response to an initial offer of help
from King George V. ‘I will never be the Marat of the Russian
Revolution’, Kerensky had grandly declared, but the hopes of a
speedy and safe evacuation of the imperial family would soon prove
to be a pipe dream.105
That morning Elizaveta Naryshkina had gone to church, during
which the congregation had hissed when prayers were said for the
tsar. When she got back to the palace Benkendorf told her:
We are arrested. We do not have the right either to go out of
the palace, or telephone; we are only allowed to write via the
Central Committee. We are waiting for the Emperor. The
Empress asked to have prayers said for the Emperor’s return trip.
Refused!106
Those in the entourage who wanted to leave, Kornilov told
Alexandra that morning, had only forty-eight hours to do so; after
that they too would be under house arrest. Many left hurriedly soon
after in a ‘veritable orgy of cowardice and stupidity, and a sickening display of shabby, contemptible disloyalty’, recalled Dr Botkin’s son Gleb.107 Dr Ostrogorsky, the children’s paediatrician, sent word that he ‘found the roads too dirty’ to get out to Tsarskoe Selo any more.108
Much to his dismay Sydney Gibbes, who had been in Petrograd for
the day on the 10th – his day off – was not allowed back into the
palace. Even worse, however, was the news that the men of the
Escort and Combined Regiments were to be sent away and replaced
by 300 troops of the 1st Rifles, sent by the provisional government.
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Although Maria already knew the truth, it was no longer possible
for Alexandra to keep the news of their father’s abdication from the
other children. They took it calmly, although Anastasia resented the
fact that her mother and Lili had not told them, but ‘as Papa is
coming, nothing else matters’.109 Tatiana was still so deaf from the
otitis brought on by her measles that Iza Buxhoeveden noticed that
‘she could not follow her mother’s rapid words, her voice rendered
husky with emotion. Her sisters had to write down the details before
she could understand.’110 It was a bewildered and downcast Alexey,
now on the mend, who was full of questions. ‘Shall I never go to
G.H.Q. again with Papa?’ he asked his mother. ‘Shan’t I see my
regiments and my soldiers? . . . And the yacht, and all my friends
on board – shall we never go yachting any more?’ ‘No’ she replied.
‘We shall never see the “Standart” . . . It doesn’t belong to us now.’111
The boy was concerned too about the future of the autocracy. ‘But
who’s going to be tsar, then?’ he quizzed Pierre Gilliard. When his
tutor responded that probably no one would be, it was only logical
that he should then ask: ‘But if there isn’t a Tsar, who’s going to
govern Russia?’112
Wednesday 8 March was an intensely melancholy day for