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<strong>The</strong> <strong>Fire</strong><br />

<strong>Kather<strong>in</strong>e</strong> <strong>Neville</strong><br />

Zagorsk Monastery, Russia<br />

Autumn 1993<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>only</strong> <strong>goal</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>chess</strong> <strong>is</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>prove</strong> <strong>your</strong> superiority over the other guy. And<br />

the most important superiority, the most <strong>to</strong>tal one, <strong>is</strong> the superiority of the<br />

m<strong>in</strong>d. I mean, <strong>your</strong> opponent must be destroyed. Fully destroyed.<br />

—Grandmaster Garry Kasparov, world <strong>chess</strong> champion<br />

Solar<strong>in</strong> gripped h<strong>is</strong> little daughter’s mittened hand firmly <strong>in</strong> h<strong>is</strong> own. He could hear the snow crunch beneath<br />

h<strong>is</strong> boots and see their breath r<strong>is</strong>e <strong>in</strong> silvery puffs, as <strong>to</strong>gether they crossed the impregnable walled park of<br />

Zagorsk: Troitse- Sergiev Lavra, the Exalted Tr<strong>in</strong>ity Monastery of Sa<strong>in</strong>t Sergius of Radonezh, the patron sa<strong>in</strong>t of<br />

Russia. <strong>The</strong>y were both bundled <strong>to</strong> the teeth <strong>in</strong> clothes they’d managed <strong>to</strong> forage—thick wool scarves, fur<br />

cossack caps, greatcoats—aga<strong>in</strong>st th<strong>is</strong> unexpected onslaught of w<strong>in</strong>ter <strong>in</strong> the midst of what should have been<br />

Zhensheena Lieta: the Women’s Summer. But the bit<strong>in</strong>g w<strong>in</strong>d penetrated <strong>to</strong> the core.<br />

Why had he brought her here <strong>to</strong> Russia, a land that held so many bitter memories from h<strong>is</strong> past? When<br />

he was just a child himself, when Stal<strong>in</strong> had reigned, hadn’t he witnessed the destruction of h<strong>is</strong> own family <strong>in</strong><br />

the dead of night? He’d survived the cruel d<strong>is</strong>cipl<strong>in</strong>es of the orphanage where he’d been left <strong>in</strong> the Republic of<br />

Georgia, and those long, bleak years at the Palace of Young Pioneers, <strong>only</strong> because they’d learned how very<br />

well the young boy, Aleksandr Solar<strong>in</strong>, could play <strong>chess</strong>.<br />

Cat had begged him not <strong>to</strong> r<strong>is</strong>k com<strong>in</strong>g here, not <strong>to</strong> r<strong>is</strong>k br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g their child here. Russia was dangerous,<br />

she ’d <strong>in</strong>s<strong>is</strong>ted, and Solar<strong>in</strong> himself had not been back <strong>to</strong> h<strong>is</strong> homeland <strong>in</strong> twenty years. But h<strong>is</strong> wife ’s biggest<br />

fear had always been not of Russia but of the game—the game that had cost them both so much. <strong>The</strong> game<br />

that, more than once, had nearly destroyed their life <strong>to</strong>gether.<br />

Solar<strong>in</strong> was here for a game of <strong>chess</strong>, a critical game, the last game of the weeklong competition. And<br />

he knew it did not bode well that th<strong>is</strong>, the f<strong>in</strong>al game, had suddenly been relocated <strong>to</strong> th<strong>is</strong> particular location,<br />

so far from <strong>to</strong>wn.<br />

Zagorsk, still called by its Soviet name, was the oldest of the lavras,or exalted monasteries, form<strong>in</strong>g a<br />

r<strong>in</strong>g of fortress- monasteries that had defended Moscow for six hundred years, s<strong>in</strong>ce the Middle Ages, when,<br />

with the bless<strong>in</strong>g of Sa<strong>in</strong>t Sergius, they had driven back the Mongol hordes. But <strong>to</strong>day it was richer and more<br />

powerful than ever: Its museums and churches were packed with rare icons and bejeweled reliquaries, its<br />

coffers stuffed with gold. Despite its wealth, or perhaps because of it, the Moscow church seemed <strong>to</strong> have<br />

enemies everywhere.<br />

It was <strong>only</strong> two years s<strong>in</strong>ce the bleak, gray Soviet Empire had collapsed with a pouf—two years of<br />

glasnost and perestroika and turmoil. But the Moscow Orthodox Church, as if born aga<strong>in</strong>, had r<strong>is</strong>en like a<br />

phoenix from the ashes. Bogo<strong>is</strong>katelstvo—“the Search for God”—was on everyone’s lips. A medieval chant. All<br />

the cathedrals, churches, and basilikas around Moscow had been granted new life, lav<strong>is</strong>hed with money and a<br />

fresh coat of pa<strong>in</strong>t.<br />

Even sixty kilometers out here <strong>in</strong> rural Sergiev Posad, Zagorsk’s vast park was a sea of newly<br />

refurb<strong>is</strong>hed edifices, their turrets and onion domes lacquered <strong>in</strong> rich, jewel- like colors: blue and cranberry and<br />

green, all splashed with gold stars. It was, thought Solar<strong>in</strong>, as if seventy- five years of repression could no<br />

longer be conta<strong>in</strong>ed and had suddenly exploded <strong>in</strong> a confetti of fever<strong>is</strong>h color. But <strong>in</strong>side the walls of these<br />

bastions, he knew, the darkness rema<strong>in</strong>ed.<br />

It was a darkness Solar<strong>in</strong> was all <strong>to</strong>o familiar with, even if it had changed its hue. As if <strong>to</strong> re<strong>in</strong>force th<strong>is</strong><br />

truth, guards were stationed every few yards along the high parapets and the <strong>in</strong>terior perimeter of the wall,<br />

each wear<strong>in</strong>g a black leather jacket with high collar and mirrored sunglasses, each with a bulg<strong>in</strong>g gun strapped<br />

beneath h<strong>is</strong> arm and a walkie- talkie <strong>in</strong> hand. Such men were always the same, regardless of the era: like the


ever-present KGB who’d escorted Solar<strong>in</strong> everywhere, back <strong>in</strong> the days when he himself had been one of the<br />

greatest of Soviet grandmasters.<br />

But the men here, Solar<strong>in</strong> knew, were the <strong>in</strong>famous Secret Service belong<strong>in</strong>g <strong>to</strong> the “Mafia Monks of<br />

Moscow,” as they were called throughout Russia. It was rumored that the Russian church had formed a lessthan-<br />

holy alliance with d<strong>is</strong>affected members of the KGB, Red Army, and other “national<strong>is</strong>t” movements.<br />

Indeed, that was Solar<strong>in</strong>’s very fear: It was the monks of Zagorsk who had arranged for <strong>to</strong>day’s game.<br />

As they passed the Church of the Holy Spirit and headed across the open court <strong>to</strong>ward the Vestry,<br />

where the game would soon take place, Solar<strong>in</strong> glanced down at h<strong>is</strong> daughter, Alexandra—little Xie—her small<br />

hand still grasp<strong>in</strong>g h<strong>is</strong>. She smiled up at him, her green eyes filled with confidence, and h<strong>is</strong> heart nearly broke<br />

with the beauty of her. How could he and Cat have created such a creature?<br />

Solar<strong>in</strong> had never known fear—real fear—until he had a child of h<strong>is</strong> own. Right now, he tried not <strong>to</strong><br />

th<strong>in</strong>k of the armed and thuglike guards glar<strong>in</strong>g down at them from a<strong>to</strong>p each wall. He knew he was walk<strong>in</strong>g<br />

with h<strong>is</strong> child <strong>in</strong><strong>to</strong> the lion’s den and he was sick at heart at the thought of it—but he knew it was <strong>in</strong>evitable.<br />

Chess was everyth<strong>in</strong>g <strong>to</strong> h<strong>is</strong> daughter. Without it, she was a f<strong>is</strong>h taken out of the water. Perhaps th<strong>is</strong><br />

was h<strong>is</strong> fault, <strong>to</strong>o—perhaps it was <strong>in</strong> her genes. And though everyone had opposed it—most especially her<br />

mother—he knew th<strong>is</strong> would surely be the most important <strong>to</strong>urnament of Xie ’s young life.<br />

Through it all, and through a week of abysmal cold, snow, and sleet, the awful <strong>to</strong>urnament food—black<br />

bread, black tea, and gruel—Xie had rema<strong>in</strong>ed undaunted. She seemed not <strong>to</strong> notice anyth<strong>in</strong>g outside the<br />

doma<strong>in</strong> of the <strong>chess</strong>board itself. All week, she’d played like a Stakhanov<strong>is</strong>te, rak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> po<strong>in</strong>t after po<strong>in</strong>t <strong>in</strong> game<br />

after game, a hod carrier stack<strong>in</strong>g up bricks. In the week, she’d lost <strong>only</strong> one game. <strong>The</strong>y both knew she must<br />

not lose another.<br />

He’d had <strong>to</strong> br<strong>in</strong>g her here, hadn’t he? It was <strong>only</strong> at th<strong>is</strong> <strong>to</strong>urnament—here at Zagorsk <strong>to</strong>day, where<br />

the last game would take place—where h<strong>is</strong> young daughter’s future would be decided. She must w<strong>in</strong> <strong>to</strong>day,<br />

th<strong>is</strong> last game at Zagorsk. For they both knew that th<strong>is</strong> was the game that could make Alexandra “Xie” Solar<strong>in</strong>—<br />

who was not yet twelve—the youngest grandmaster of <strong>chess</strong>, male or female, <strong>in</strong> the h<strong>is</strong><strong>to</strong>ry of the game.<br />

Xie tugged her father’s hand and unwrapped her muffler so she could speak. “Don’t worry, Papa. I’ll<br />

beat him th<strong>is</strong> time.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> one she referred <strong>to</strong> was Vartan Azov, the young <strong>chess</strong> wizard from Ukra<strong>in</strong>e, <strong>only</strong> a year older than Xie and<br />

the <strong>only</strong> player <strong>in</strong> the <strong>to</strong>urnament so far <strong>to</strong> have defeated her. But he hadn’t really defeated Xie; Xie had lost<br />

on her own.<br />

Aga<strong>in</strong>st young Azov, she had played the K<strong>in</strong>g’s Indian Defense— one of her favorites, Solar<strong>in</strong> knew, for<br />

it allowed the valiant Black Knight (<strong>in</strong> the gu<strong>is</strong>e of her father and tu<strong>to</strong>r) <strong>to</strong> leap <strong>to</strong> the front over the heads of<br />

the other pieces, and take charge. After a dar<strong>in</strong>g Queen sacrifice that brought murmurs from the crowd and<br />

gave her the center board, it appeared that Solar<strong>in</strong>’s fearlessly aggressive little warrior would—at the very<br />

least—go over the Reichenbach Falls and take young Professor Azov with her <strong>in</strong> a deathlike embrace. But it<br />

wasn’t <strong>to</strong> be.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re was a name for it: Amauros<strong>is</strong> Scacch<strong>is</strong>tica. Chess bl<strong>in</strong>dness. Every player had experienced it at<br />

one time <strong>in</strong> h<strong>is</strong> career. <strong>The</strong>y preferred <strong>to</strong> call it a “blunder”—the failure <strong>to</strong> spot a truly obvious danger. Solar<strong>in</strong><br />

had experienced it once, when really young. As he recalled, it felt like fall<strong>in</strong>g down a well, tumbl<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> free fall<br />

with no sense of which end was up.<br />

In all the games Xie had ever played, it had happened <strong>to</strong> her <strong>only</strong> once. But twice, Solar<strong>in</strong> knew, was<br />

one time <strong>to</strong>o many for a m<strong>is</strong>take like th<strong>is</strong>. It could not happen aga<strong>in</strong> <strong>to</strong>day.<br />

Before they reached the Vestry where the game would take place, Solar<strong>in</strong> and Xie encountered an<br />

unexpected human barricade: a long l<strong>in</strong>e of drab women <strong>in</strong> threadbare overclothes and babushkas, who had<br />

queued up <strong>in</strong> the snow await<strong>in</strong>g the perpetual daily memorial services, outside the charnel house of the<br />

famous Troitsky Sobor—the Tr<strong>in</strong>ity Church of Sa<strong>in</strong>t Sergius, where the sa<strong>in</strong>t’s bones were buried. <strong>The</strong>se pitiful<br />

creatures—there must have been fifty or sixty of them—were all cross<strong>in</strong>g themselves <strong>in</strong> the compulsive


Orthodox fashion, as if seized by a mass religious frenzy, as they gazed up at the portrait of Our Savior high on<br />

the outer church wall.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se women, as they moaned and prayed <strong>in</strong> the whirl<strong>in</strong>g snow, formed a barrier nearly as<br />

impenetrable as the armed guards posted high on the parapets. And <strong>in</strong> the old Soviet tradition, they refused <strong>to</strong><br />

budge or part ranks <strong>to</strong> let anyone pass through their queue. Solar<strong>in</strong> could scarcely wait <strong>to</strong> get past them.<br />

As he picked up h<strong>is</strong> pace <strong>to</strong> skirt the long queue, over the women’s heads Solar<strong>in</strong> glimpsed the facade<br />

of the Art Museum, and just beyond, the Vestry and treasury, where they were headed for the game.<br />

<strong>The</strong> museum’s facade had been fes<strong>to</strong>oned with a large, colorful banner d<strong>is</strong>play<strong>in</strong>g a pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g and handpr<strong>in</strong>ted<br />

words that announced, <strong>in</strong> Cyrillic and Engl<strong>is</strong>h: SEVENTY- FIVE YEARS OF SOVIET PALEKH ART.<br />

Palekh art were those lacquered pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gs that often depicted scenes from fairy tales and other<br />

peasant themes. <strong>The</strong>y’d long been the <strong>only</strong> primitive or “superstitious” art acceptable <strong>to</strong> the Commun<strong>is</strong>t<br />

regime and they adorned everyth<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Russia, from m<strong>in</strong>iature papier-mâché boxes <strong>to</strong> the walls of the Pioneers’<br />

Palace itself, where Solar<strong>in</strong>—with fifty other boys—had practiced h<strong>is</strong> defenses and counterattacks for more<br />

than twelve years. As he had had no access all that time <strong>to</strong> s<strong>to</strong>rybooks, car<strong>to</strong>ons, or films, the Palekh<br />

illustrations of these ancient tales had been young Aleksandr’s <strong>only</strong> access <strong>to</strong> the realm of fantasy.<br />

<strong>The</strong> pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g on th<strong>is</strong> banner was one with which he was well acqua<strong>in</strong>ted, a famous one. It seemed <strong>to</strong><br />

rem<strong>in</strong>d him of someth<strong>in</strong>g important. He studied it carefully as he and Xie picked their way around the long l<strong>in</strong>e<br />

of zealously pray<strong>in</strong>g women.<br />

It was a render<strong>in</strong>g of the most famous Russian fairy tale, the s<strong>to</strong>ry of the <strong>Fire</strong>bird. <strong>The</strong>re were many<br />

versions that had <strong>in</strong>spired great art, literature, and music, from Pushk<strong>in</strong> <strong>to</strong> Strav<strong>in</strong>sky. Th<strong>is</strong> picture on the<br />

banner was the scene where Pr<strong>in</strong>ce Ivan, hid<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> h<strong>is</strong> father the tsar’s gardens all night, f<strong>in</strong>ally sights the<br />

lum<strong>in</strong>ous bird that had been eat<strong>in</strong>g h<strong>is</strong> father’s golden apples, and he tries <strong>to</strong> capture her. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Fire</strong>bird escapes,<br />

leav<strong>in</strong>g just one of her fabulous magical feathers <strong>in</strong> Ivan’s grasp.<br />

Th<strong>is</strong> was the well- known work of Alexander Kotukh<strong>in</strong> that hung <strong>in</strong> the Pioneers’ Palace. He was one of<br />

the first generation of Palekh art<strong>is</strong>ts from the 1930s, who was said <strong>to</strong> have hidden secret messages with<strong>in</strong> the<br />

symbols he used <strong>in</strong> h<strong>is</strong> pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gs that the State censors couldn’t always easily <strong>in</strong>terpret—though the illiterate<br />

peasantry could. Solar<strong>in</strong> wondered what th<strong>is</strong> decades- old message had meant, and <strong>to</strong> whom.<br />

At last they reached the end of the long l<strong>in</strong>e of wait<strong>in</strong>g women. As Solar<strong>in</strong> and Xie curved back <strong>to</strong> head<br />

<strong>to</strong>ward the Vestry, a s<strong>to</strong>oped old woman <strong>in</strong> a babushka and threadbare sweater and carry<strong>in</strong>g a t<strong>in</strong> pail left her<br />

place <strong>in</strong> the queue and brushed past them—still cross<strong>in</strong>g herself fervently. She bumped <strong>in</strong><strong>to</strong> Xie, bowed an<br />

apology, and cont<strong>in</strong>ued across the yard.<br />

When she’d passed, Solar<strong>in</strong> felt Xie tugg<strong>in</strong>g h<strong>is</strong> hand. He glanced down <strong>to</strong> see h<strong>is</strong> daughter extract<strong>in</strong>g a<br />

small embossed cardboard placard from her pocket—a ticket or pass <strong>to</strong> the Palekh exhibit, for it bore the same<br />

picture as the banner.<br />

“Where did th<strong>is</strong> come from?” he asked, although he was afraid he knew. He glanced after the woman,<br />

but she’d van<strong>is</strong>hed across the park.<br />

“That lady put it <strong>in</strong><strong>to</strong> my pocket,” Xie was say<strong>in</strong>g.<br />

When he looked down aga<strong>in</strong>, h<strong>is</strong> daughter had flipped over the card, and Solar<strong>in</strong> snatched it away. On<br />

the back was pasted a small illustration of a fly<strong>in</strong>g bird set <strong>in</strong>side an Islamic eight- po<strong>in</strong>ted star, and three words<br />

were pr<strong>in</strong>ted <strong>in</strong> Russian:<br />

oпa´снo бepe´чьcя пoжa´p<br />

Read<strong>in</strong>g these words, Solar<strong>in</strong> felt the blood puls<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> h<strong>is</strong> temples. He glanced quickly <strong>in</strong> the direction the old<br />

woman had gone, but she seemed <strong>to</strong> have van<strong>is</strong>hed. <strong>The</strong>n he saw someth<strong>in</strong>g flicker at the far periphery of the<br />

walled fortress; emerg<strong>in</strong>g from the copse of trees, she was van<strong>is</strong>h<strong>in</strong>g aga<strong>in</strong> around the far corner of the Tsar’s<br />

Chambers—a d<strong>is</strong>tance of more than one hundred paces.<br />

Just before she d<strong>is</strong>appeared, she turned <strong>to</strong> glance over her shoulder directly at Solar<strong>in</strong>, and he—who<br />

had been about <strong>to</strong> follow her—halted <strong>in</strong> shock. Even at th<strong>is</strong> d<strong>is</strong>tance, he could make out those pale blue eyes,<br />

the w<strong>is</strong>p of silvery-blond hair escap<strong>in</strong>g from her scarf. Th<strong>is</strong> was no old crone, but a woman of great beauty and<br />

<strong>in</strong>f<strong>in</strong>ite mystery.


And more. It was a face he knew. A face he had imag<strong>in</strong>ed he would never see aga<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong> th<strong>is</strong> life.<br />

<strong>The</strong>n she was gone.<br />

He heard himself speak. “It cannot be.”<br />

How could it be? People do not r<strong>is</strong>e from the dead. And if they did, they would not look the same after<br />

fifty years.<br />

“Do you know that lady, Papa?” Xie asked <strong>in</strong> a wh<strong>is</strong>per so no one could hear.<br />

Solar<strong>in</strong> dropped <strong>to</strong> one knee <strong>in</strong> the snow beside h<strong>is</strong> daughter and <strong>to</strong>ssed h<strong>is</strong> arms about her, bury<strong>in</strong>g<br />

h<strong>is</strong> face <strong>in</strong> her muffler. He felt like weep<strong>in</strong>g.<br />

“For a moment she looked familiar,” he said <strong>to</strong> Xie. “But I’m sure I do not.”<br />

He squeezed her harder, as if he could wr<strong>in</strong>g her out. In all these years, he had never lied <strong>to</strong> h<strong>is</strong><br />

daughter. Not until now. But what could he tell her?<br />

“And what does her card say?” Xie wh<strong>is</strong>pered <strong>in</strong> h<strong>is</strong> ear. “<strong>The</strong> one with the fly<strong>in</strong>g bird?”<br />

“Apahsnah—it means ‘danger,’ ” Solar<strong>in</strong> <strong>to</strong>ld her, try<strong>in</strong>g <strong>to</strong> pull himself <strong>to</strong>gether.<br />

For God’s sake, what was he th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g? Th<strong>is</strong> was a fantasy brought on by a week of stress and bad food<br />

and m<strong>is</strong>erable cold. He must be strong. He got <strong>to</strong> h<strong>is</strong> feet and pressed h<strong>is</strong> daughter’s shoulder between h<strong>is</strong><br />

f<strong>in</strong>gers. “But perhaps the <strong>only</strong> danger here <strong>is</strong> of you forgett<strong>in</strong>g <strong>your</strong> practice!” He gave a smile that Xie did not<br />

return.<br />

“What do the other words say?” she asked.<br />

“Byrihgyees pahzhar,” he <strong>to</strong>ld her. “I th<strong>in</strong>k it’s just a reference <strong>to</strong> the firebird or phoenix <strong>in</strong> th<strong>is</strong> picture<br />

here.” Solar<strong>in</strong> paused and looked at her. “In Engl<strong>is</strong>h, it means, ‘Beware the fire.’ ” He <strong>to</strong>ok a deep breath. “Now<br />

let’s go <strong>in</strong>side,” he said, “so you can beat the pants off of that Ukra<strong>in</strong>ian patzer!”<br />

From the moment they entered the Vestry of Sergiev Lavra, Solar<strong>in</strong> knew someth<strong>in</strong>g was wrong. <strong>The</strong> walls<br />

were cold and damp, depress<strong>in</strong>g like everyth<strong>in</strong>g else <strong>in</strong> the so- called Women’s Summer. He thought of the<br />

woman’s message. What did it mean?<br />

Taras Petrossian, the dash<strong>in</strong>g nouveau capital<strong>is</strong>t <strong>to</strong>urnament organizer, <strong>in</strong> h<strong>is</strong> expensive Italian suit,<br />

was hand<strong>in</strong>g a large wad of rubles as a pourboire <strong>to</strong> a sk<strong>in</strong>ny monk with a big r<strong>in</strong>g of keys, who’d unlocked the<br />

build<strong>in</strong>g for the game. Petrossian, it was said, had made h<strong>is</strong> fortune through under- the- table deal<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>in</strong> the<br />

several designer restaurants and nightclubs he owned. <strong>The</strong>re was a colloquial word for it <strong>in</strong> Russian: blat.<br />

Connections.<br />

<strong>The</strong> armed thugs had already penetrated the <strong>in</strong>ner sanctum—they lurked everywhere <strong>in</strong> the Vestry,<br />

lean<strong>in</strong>g conspicuously aga<strong>in</strong>st the walls, and not just for warmth. Among other th<strong>in</strong>gs, th<strong>is</strong> low, squat,<br />

unobtrusive build<strong>in</strong>g served as the monastery’s treasury.<br />

<strong>The</strong> glut of the medieval church’s gold and jewels were d<strong>is</strong>played on pedestals <strong>in</strong> brightly lit glass cases<br />

scattered around the floor. It would be hard <strong>to</strong> concentrate on <strong>chess</strong>, thought Solar<strong>in</strong>, with all th<strong>is</strong> bl<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g<br />

glitter—but there was the young Vartan Azov, already seated beside the <strong>chess</strong>board, h<strong>is</strong> large dark eyes<br />

focused upon them as they entered the room. Xie left her father and went <strong>to</strong> greet him. Solar<strong>in</strong> thought—not<br />

for the first time—that he would like <strong>to</strong> watch Xie wipe the board with the arrogant brat.<br />

He had <strong>to</strong> wipe that message from h<strong>is</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d. What did the woman mean? Danger? Beware the fire?<br />

And that face he could never forget, a face from h<strong>is</strong> darkest dreams, h<strong>is</strong> nightmares, h<strong>is</strong> worst horrors—<br />

And then he saw it. In a glass d<strong>is</strong>play case far across the room.<br />

Solar<strong>in</strong> walked as <strong>in</strong> a dream across the wide-open floor of the Vestry and he s<strong>to</strong>od look<strong>in</strong>g down at the<br />

large glass case.<br />

With<strong>in</strong> was a sculpture he had also thought he would never see aga<strong>in</strong>—someth<strong>in</strong>g as impossible and as<br />

dangerous as the face of that woman he’d glimpsed outside. Someth<strong>in</strong>g that had been buried, someth<strong>in</strong>g long<br />

ago and far away. Yet here it was before him.<br />

It was a heavy gold carv<strong>in</strong>g, caked with jewels. It portrayed a figure dressed <strong>in</strong> long robes and seated <strong>in</strong><br />

a small pavilion with the draperies drawn back.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> Black Queen,” wh<strong>is</strong>pered a voice just beside him. Solar<strong>in</strong> looked down <strong>to</strong> see the dark eyes and<br />

<strong>to</strong>usled hair of Vartan Azov.


“D<strong>is</strong>covered <strong>only</strong> recently,” the boy went on, “<strong>in</strong> the cellar of the Hermitage <strong>in</strong> Petersburg—along with<br />

Schliemann’s treasures of Troy. <strong>The</strong>y say th<strong>is</strong> once belonged <strong>to</strong> Charlemagne and was hidden—perhaps s<strong>in</strong>ce<br />

the French Revolution. It may have been <strong>in</strong> possession of Cather<strong>in</strong>e the Great of Russia. Th<strong>is</strong> <strong>is</strong> the first time it<br />

has been shown <strong>in</strong> public s<strong>in</strong>ce it was found.” Vartan paused. “It was brought here for th<strong>is</strong> game.”<br />

Solar<strong>in</strong> was bl<strong>in</strong>ded by terror. He could hear noth<strong>in</strong>g further. <strong>The</strong>y had <strong>to</strong> depart at once. For th<strong>is</strong> piece<br />

was theirs—the most important piece of all those they had captured and buried. How could it be surfac<strong>in</strong>g here<br />

<strong>in</strong> Russia, when they had buried it twenty years ago, thousands of miles away?<br />

Danger, beware the fire? Solar<strong>in</strong> had <strong>to</strong> get out of th<strong>is</strong> place and get some air, he had <strong>to</strong> escape with<br />

Xie right now, the game be damned. Cat had been right all along, but he couldn’t see the whole picture yet—he<br />

couldn’t see the board for the pieces.<br />

Solar<strong>in</strong> nodded politely <strong>to</strong> Vartan Azov and crossed the room <strong>in</strong> a few swift strides. He <strong>to</strong>ok Xie by the<br />

hand and headed for the door.<br />

“Papa,” said Xie <strong>in</strong> confusion, “where are we go<strong>in</strong>g?”<br />

“To see that lady,” he said cryptically, “the lady who gave you the card.”<br />

“But what about the game?”<br />

She would forfeit if she wasn’t there when they started the clocks. She would lose everyth<strong>in</strong>g they had<br />

worked so long and hard for. But he had <strong>to</strong> know. He stepped outside, hold<strong>in</strong>g her hand.<br />

From the <strong>to</strong>p of the Vestry steps, he saw her across the park. <strong>The</strong> woman was stand<strong>in</strong>g at the gates,<br />

look<strong>in</strong>g across the space at Solar<strong>in</strong> with love and understand<strong>in</strong>g. He had been right about her. But then her look<br />

changed <strong>to</strong> one of fear, as she glanced up <strong>to</strong>ward the parapet. It was <strong>only</strong> another <strong>in</strong>stant before Solar<strong>in</strong><br />

followed her gaze and saw the guard, perched on the parapet high above, the gun <strong>in</strong> h<strong>is</strong> hand.<br />

Without th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g, Solar<strong>in</strong> shoved Xie beh<strong>in</strong>d him for protection and glanced back at the woman.<br />

“Mother,” he said.<br />

And the next th<strong>in</strong>g he saw was the fire <strong>in</strong> h<strong>is</strong> head.

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