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
of cloaks and cushions until the beds arrived.2 But the reunion was
soon marred when, when, much to his parents’ intense frustration,
Alexey managed to slip and bang his knee. Nicholas and Alexandra
put him to bed in their room, where he lay for several days in agony; it was 5 June before he was able to join the others outside in the
garden.
Two huge wooden palisades surrounded the Ipatiev House,
ominously designated ‘the house of special purpose’ by their
Bolshevik captors. They were so high that, from inside the house,
the Romanovs could not even see the tops of the trees.3 What little
was visible of the blue sky above had been obliterated in mid-May
when the windows in all the family’s rooms were painted with
370
693GG_TXT.indd 370
29/10/2013 16:17
PRISONERS OF THE URAL REGIONAL SOVIET
whitewash, creating what seemed like a blanket of fog outside.4
It was dreadfully cramped and stuffy inside the first-floor rooms
that served as the Romanovs’ new accommodation. For this was in
no way a home – but a prison – and it was abundantly clear to
everyone that they would have to endure a rigorous regime here
quite different from those at Tobolsk or the Alexander Palace.5 There were armed guards everywhere: on the street, inside and outside the
palisades surrounding the house, on the roof, in the garden. Guards
also manned machine-gun nests in the basement, the mansard, the
garden and even the belfry of the Voznesensky Sobor across the
road. An announcement in the
Uralskaya zhizn
by Bolshevik War Commissar Filipp Goloshchekin, in overall charge of the family’s
incarceration in the city, had made the hardening of the official
attitude towards the former imperial family, all too plain:
All those under arrest will be held as hostages, and the slightest
attempt at counterrevolutionary action in the town will result in
the summary execution of the hostages.6
The days had been monotonous enough in Tobolsk but at
Ekaterinburg the pace of life was slowed to an intolerable tedium.
No papers were delivered and no letters. One solitary parcel, of a
few eggs, coffee and chocolate, had been received from Grand
Duchess Ella on 16 May; but she too was now a prisoner, at Alapaevsk
95 miles (153 km) away to the north.7 With no letters allowed in
or out the girls were deprived of the one thing that had kept them
going all this time – contact with their friends. Visitors, of course, were forbidden. The imperial family was cast adrift; they had ‘no
news of anybody’, as Alexandra noted in her diary.8
Outdoor recreation at Ekaterinburg was restricted to a mournful
little garden with a few stubby trees that was even smaller than the
one at Tobolsk. But as always Nicholas and the girls made the most
of every opportunity to get outside during their two brief daily
exercise periods, and the girls sometimes swung in a couple of
hammocks put up between the trees for them by the guards. Alexey,
when he was well enough, was carried down, often by Maria, and
sat in their mother’s wheelchair. But during recreation periods one
of the sisters always remained indoors with Mama, who with the
371
693GG_TXT.indd 371
29/10/2013 16:17
FOUR SISTERS
temperature rising into the high 70s F (24–6 degrees C) rarely
ventured out. Yet even these brief snatches of summer were enough,
as Nicholas noted, for them to catch the wonderful scent of flowers
‘from all the gardens in the town’ that was heavy on the air, even
if they could not see them beyond the palisade.9 The unsealing of
one small window in their rooms on 10 June to allow in a refreshing
breeze was a major concession in the otherwise dreary regularity of
their highly constrained lives. It was punctuated by regular acts of
humiliation from the guards, such as searches of their belongings,
confiscation of their money and attempts to remove even Alexandra’s
and the girls’ gold bracelets from their wrists. Tatiana and Maria’s
request that their confiscated cameras be returned to them so that
they could at least amuse themselves with photography was also
refused.10
The month of June brought several family birthdays beginning
with Alexandra’s 46th on the 6th; it passed unnoticed, Nicholas in
bed with painful haemorrhoids and Alexey also indoors for most of
the day, despite the beautiful weather.11 Tatiana’s 21st followed on
11 June but was a very modest day for such an auspicious stage in
her life, the highlight being the surprise treat of fruit compote at
lunch prepared by Kharitonov. There were of course no presents;
Tatiana spent the day reading to her mother: extracts from Alexandra’s favourite book, the
Complete Yearly Cycle of
Brief Homilies for Each
Day of the Year
by an Orthodox priest, Grigory Dyachenko.12 Later she played cards with Alexey and read to him and before bed enjoyed
the prosaic novelty of helping her sisters wash everyone’s pocket-
handkerchiefs.13 Poor Anna Demidova had been struggling single-
handedly with all the family’s personal washing (the bed linen still
being sent out to a laundry) and the sisters had happily volunteered
to help, as they did with darning everyone’s worn-out socks, stock-
ings and underwear.14
Anastasia’s seventeenth birthday – 18 June – was a very hot day
when again there were no celebrations and the girls spent the time
learning another new practical skill – how to knead, roll and bake
bread with Kharitonov.15 Soon they were helping him more and
more in the kitchen in an effort to dissipate their crushing sense of boredom. But it was unbearably airless indoors and even Alexandra
372
693GG_TXT.indd 372
29/10/2013 16:17
PRISONERS OF THE URAL REGIONAL SOVIET
preferred to be outside when her health allowed. Evenings now were
one interminable game of bezique after another and rereading the
few books left to them. Tatiana seemed always to be doing the lion’s
share of looking after her mother and Alexey; her nursing skills were also called on when Dr Botkin suffered a severe attack of kidney
pain and she gave him an injection from the family’s precious supply
of morphine.16 Olga was now so thin and pale, and had become ever
more withdrawn and morose at Ekaterinburg. One of the guards,
Alexey Kabanov, remembered her visible unhappiness, how she
hardly talked and was ‘uncommunicative with the other members
of her family apart from her father’ – with whom she always walked
arm in arm during recreation in the garden.17 But she did not spend
as much time there as her three other sisters, who all seemed to
him far more cheerful and animated, often breaking into folk songs
when they walked round with the dogs. Maria, so strong and stoical,
seemed still the most rounded and unaffected, ‘the incarnation of
“modesty elevated by suffering”’, as one guard recalled, remembering
a poem by Tyutchev.18 At first – much as at Tobolsk – the younger
sisters had been keen to engage with their captors, asked them about
their lives and their families and showed them their photograph
albums. They were dreadfully bored, they told them: ‘We were
so much happier in Tobolsk.’19 But the arrival of a new and
exacting commandant, Yakov Yurovsky, put paid to any more such
fraternization.
The weather was positively ‘tropical’ according to Nicholas on
Maria’s 19th birthday on 27 June.20 Four days previously the family
had been comforted by ‘the great blessing of a real
Obednitsa
and vespers’ – when a priest and deacon had been allowed in to conduct
the first service for the family in three months.21 But they were two of only a handful of people to see them in these new and very
straitened circumstances. Those on the outside trying to look in
could only guess at what the family was having to endure at the
hands of its intimidating Bolshevik captors.
*
During the final eight weeks of the Romanov family’s captivity many
people – the curious, the covert, the foolhardy – and even royal
373
693GG_TXT.indd 373
29/10/2013 16:17
FOUR SISTERS
relatives such as the intrepid Princess Helena – made their way up
Voznesensky Prospekt to the Ipatiev House, to try and catch a
glimpse of them. But none was admitted, bar Dr Derevenko, who
was staying in town and had been allowed in to treat Alexey and
put his swollen knee in plaster.
Local children were rather more adventurous. They often came
near and tried to peep through the palisades surrounding the house.
One sunny day soon after the family’s arrival, nine-year-old Anatole
Portnoff came out of the Voznesensky Church opposite after
morning service and ran across the road to take a look. He found
a gap in the paling and peeped through and there, standing directly
in front of him, so he later claimed, he saw Tsar Nicholas ‘taking
a walk about the grounds’. But a sentry soon came rushing up,
‘unceremoniously grabbed him by his coat and told him to be on
his way’.22
Vladimir and Dimitri Storozhev, sons of a priest at the
Ekaterininsky Sobor, were more persistent, for their home was next
door to the Ipatiev House and they managed to communicate ‘by
gestures and talking over the fence with the girls of the imperial
family’.23 Eleven-year-old Vladimir loved flying his kite from the
roof, from which vantage point he could often ‘see the tsar’s children playing in Upatiev’s [
sic
] yard, and the tsar himself would come out once a day and split wood for an hour or so’.24 But the Storozhev
family was fearful of the intimidating Red Guards who watched over
the Romanovs and who often went out summarily searching nearby
houses and arresting people at will. Their father had made the family all sleep in one room, by the door, ‘so if someone comes in and
starts shooting, we will all be together’.25
It was Father Ivan Storozhev who was one of the last people
from the outside to see the imperial family alive, at a service he
conducted in the house at 10.30 a.m. on Sunday 14 July. Guards
from the Ipatiev House had banged on his door early that morning.
Father Storozhev thought they had come for him, but no, they
wanted him to go next door to conduct a service for the family. ‘Just stick strictly to what the service is all about’, they warned. ‘We don’t believe in God now, but we remember what the service, the funeral
service, is all about. So, nothing but the service. Don’t try to communicate or anything or else we’ll shoot.’26
374
693GG_TXT.indd 374
29/10/2013 16:17
PRISONERS OF THE URAL REGIONAL SOVIET
Having climbed the stairs past young guards bristling with
weapons, Storozhev found the family gathered in their sitting room,
a table for the service specially prepared by Alexandra featuring their favourite icon of the Most Holy Mother of God. The girls were
simply dressed in black skirts and white blouses; their hair, he noticed, had grown quite a lot since his previous visit on 2 June, and was
now down to their shoulders.
During the service, the whole family had seemed to Storozhev
to be greatly oppressed in spirit – there was a terrible weariness
about them, quite markedly different from his previous visit, when
they had all been animated and had prayed fervently.27 He came
away shaken to the core by what he had seen. The Romanovs had,
uncharacteristically, all fallen to their knees when his deacon,
Buimirov, had sung rather than recited ‘At Rest with the Saints’ –
the Russian Orthodox prayer for the departed.
*
It seemed to give them great spiritual comfort he noted, though for once they had
not joined in the responses to the liturgy, something they would
normally have done.28 At the end of the service they had all come
forward to kiss the cross and Nicholas and Alexandra had taken the
sacrament. Covertly, as Storozhev passed them to leave, the girls
softly whispered a thank-you. ‘I knew, from the way they conducted
themselves,’ Father Storozhev later recalled, ‘that something fearful and menacing was almost upon the Imperial Family.’’29
The following morning the family appeared to have regained
their equilibrium when four women, sent by the officious-sounding
Union of Professional Housemaids, came to wash the floors. Perhaps
the women’s presence alone – as ordinary people from the world
outside – brightened their mood. They seemed relaxed, gathered
together in the sitting room, and smiled when the women entered.
They were strictly forbidden to speak to them, but by an exchange
of looks and smiles it was clear that the four sisters were only too
happy to help the women move the beds in their room; they would
have helped them wash the floors too if they could. One of the
women, Evdokiya Semenova, remembered their sweet, friendly
* This prayer is normally only sung (rather than recited) at Russian Orthodox funerals.
375
693GG_TXT.indd 375
29/10/2013 16:17
FOUR SISTERS
manner and how ‘every gentle look was a gift’.30 Although Yurovsky