Part 25 (1/2)
”But he is no traitor. He is as patriotic as you are yourself, Father! He has ever been so,” cried the despairing woman.
”I have no means of knowing that,” he replied in a hard voice, gazing at her with those strange, wide-open eyes, and endeavouring to put that spell upon her that few women could resist. ”Nevertheless, I will forgive you, and, further, I will exercise my influence to save your husband's life if you will consent to enter the circle of our holy disciples.”
The desperate young woman held her breath for a few seconds, staring at him wildly as upon her knees she still knelt, clutching the ”saint's”
dirty hands.
”No,” she replied. ”That I will never do.”
Rasputin saw that his plot had failed. Here at least was one woman over whom he was powerless, one who regarded him as a fraud. In an instant he flew into a sudden rage.
”Enough!” he cried, throwing her off. ”You refuse to accept my condition--therefore your husband shall die!”
The wretched woman, her countenance pale as death, tried to speak. Her lips moved, but no sound came from them. Next moment, by dint of supreme effort, she struggled to her feet and rose stiffly. Then, a moment later, her hands clenched and despair in her splendid eyes, she turned and staggered out.
Four hours later Colonel Svetchine boldly faced a firing-party in the yard of the fortress. There was a word of command, and next second the gallant soldier fell forward on his face--dead.
CHAPTER X
TRAITOROUS WORK
THE true story of the tragic death of a Russian civil servant named Ivan Naglovski, and of the mysterious explosion which destroyed the great munition works at Okhta and killed over four hundred and fifty persons and injured seven hundred, has never been told.
There have been sinister whisperings in Russia, but I am here able to unfold the amazing truth for the first time.
I had accompanied Rasputin to the Verkhotursky Monastery at Perm; the house in the Gorokhovaya was closed, its wooden shutters were fastened, and the Empress was desolate without her ”holy Father.” Sturmer, the Prime Minister, was with the Emperor, daily plotting and striving for the betrayal of our nation to the Germans, and ”Satan in a silk hat”--as one of the Grand Dukes had nicknamed the Minister of the Interior, Protopopoff--had gone on a mission to London, ostensibly in Russian interests, but really as a spy of Germany. The latter was, of course, not known at the time, for the British Government sent him on a tour of munition and other centres, showed him what they were preparing, and feted him in London as the representative of their ally. We now know that, on his return to Petrograd, he at once became violently anti-British, and made a full report of all he knew to the Wilhelmstra.s.se!
The purpose of the monk's pilgrimage to Perm was to form a branch of his believers in that city. He had left Petrograd dressed as a pilgrim, with hair-s.h.i.+rt and staff complete, and as such he posed to everybody. The world, however, did not know that the rooms allotted to him in the monastery by the rascally bishop, whom he had himself appointed, were the acme of luxury, and that in them he held drunken orgies every night.
After we had been there three weeks an Imperial courier brought him a letter from Peterhof. It was night, and the monk was in an advanced state of intoxication with his companions, three other mock-pious rascals like himself.
When I handed him the letter he glanced at the Imperial cipher on the envelope, and, grinning, exclaimed:
”It is from the Empress. Read out what the woman says.”
I hesitated, suggesting that it would be better if I read it to him in private.
”Bah!” he laughed. ”There is nothing private in it. Read it, Feodor.”
So, thus ordered, I obeyed. The letter was written in Russian, but with mistakes in grammar and orthography, for the Empress had never learned to write Russian correctly. These are the words I read for the delectation of the dissolute quartette:
”HOLY FATHER,--Why have you not written? Why this long dead silence when my poor heart is hourly yearning for news of you and for your words of comfort?
”I am, alas! weak, but I love you, for you are all in all to me.
Oh! if I could but hold your dear hand and lay my head upon your shoulder! Ah! can I ever forget that feeling of perfect peace and blank forgetfulness that I experience when you are near me.
”Now that you have gone, life is only one grey sea of despair.
There was a Court last night, but I did not attend. Instead Anna [Madame Vyrubova] and I read your sweet letters together, and we kissed your picture.
”As I have so often told you, dear Father, I want to be a good daughter of Christ. But oh! it is so difficult. Help me, dear Father. Pray for me. Pray always for Alexis [the Tsarevitch].