The White Russian

The White Russian Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: The White Russian Read Online Free PDF
Author: Tom Bradby
Tags: thriller
runners of one of his father’s upended sleds, with its distinctive green and gold livery.
    He climbed the steps and knocked. The door was opened, but not by Ivan, the family’s old butler.
    Ruzsky stared at the young man before him. He was tall and thin, handsome but for his pimples, with wavy dark hair curling over his collar. He wore the red and gold uniform of his father’s house.
    “Can I help you, sir?”
    It took Ruzsky a few moments to get over the shock of not being recognized in his own home. “Where’s Ivan?”
    “Ivan is not here. And you are?”
    “I’m the son of the house,” Ruzsky said as he walked forward into the hallway. He stopped, realized his manner had been churlish, and offered his hand. “I apologize, I’m Sandro.”
    “Master Sandro, sir, yes.” The young man’s handshake was firm. “I’m Peter. I believe your father is out.”
    “I’m here to see my son.”
    “Yes, sir. Would you like me to find the boy?”
    Ruzsky forced himself to smile. “I will be all right, thank you.”
    “Of course. New Year, New Happiness.”
    “And the same to you.”
    The young man shut the door and withdrew discreetly, down the wooden stairs toward the kitchen in the basement.
    Ruzsky stood for a moment in the semidarkness of the hallway. He realized he had been holding his breath.
    He shoved his hands into the pockets of his coat and slowly exhaled. Ahead of him was a fir tree, decorated for Christmas. He took a pace closer and touched one of the round pink and white gingerbreads his mother had always instructed the servants to bake. The decorations were the ones she had bought at Peto’s all those years ago: tiny sedan chairs, violins, bears, monkeys, and thin candles in tin candlesticks. Ruzsky imagined Michael helping his grandfather and the servants decorate the tree. He thought of the excitement that would have lit up his son’s face.
    He’d heard that Christmas trees had been banned as too Germanic, but the rule clearly did not apply to such high servants of the Tsar.
    The hall was wide, leading onto the formal rooms to his right and left. His father’s study and the winter room were at the back, before the stairs leading down to the kitchen. The hall was dominated on one side by a giant gilt-edged mirror above an ornate chestnut dresser, and on the other by a dark tapestry hanging from a long metal pole. There was an iron coat stand in the corner. Beside it, on top of a wooden pillar, was a bust of Ruzsky’s grandfather. In the style of Roman emperors, his brother Dmitri had always said, and with similar pretensions to grandeur.
    Next to it was a portrait of their mother, with a cold smile playing at the corner of her lips. Ruzsky stared at it for a moment.
    The memory it triggered was of the scene in this hallway on the day Ruzsky had begun as a cadet at the Corps des Pages-the last time he had seen her. Standing by the door in the uniform of the school, next to his father, he had raised his hand to her to say goodbye and she had failed to lift her own in response.
    He had hesitated, waiting for something more, his face reddening as he realized that nothing would be forthcoming.
    The door to the drawing room was open and Ruzsky walked through it, conscious of the noise of his footsteps on the wooden floor. This room, too, was in semidarkness. His father forbade the servants from lighting a fire until after four in the afternoon, even in the depths of winter.
    It had been redecorated since Ruzsky’s last visit, with a rich red wallpaper that matched the Persian rugs. On the wall closest to him a curved saber hung below a painting of a mountain from the northern part of the Hindu Kush. Next to the saber was a tall wooden table upon which stood an elaborate, bejeweled box, and on the wall above that, portraits of his two brothers.
    His mother had wanted a society artist, but his father had chosen someone cheaper and less fashionable. Ruzsky could no longer even remember the man’s name,
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