Rescuing the Czar - Two authentic Diaries arranged and translated by James P. Smythe
page 12 of 230 (05%)
page 12 of 230 (05%)
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seems certain that some of the prisoners knew. Why and just how the
hitherto profound State secrets narrated in these diaries come now to light is suggested by a simple little letter that raises the inquiry, "Did the Imperial Russian family escape?" The letter that started this investigation is little different from others one receives from friends traveling in the Orient. By itself it does not clearly identify the family it describes; but, when the scene it pictures is coupled with the events narrated in the purloined diaries which the hands of some invisible diplomats _have_ left behind, the student of the Russian Revolution will marvel at the skill with which some other Royal hands untied the knot of Fate. II WHAT MAY BE READ BETWEEN THE LINES There may be those in official circles who will suggest that a case of mistaken identity is exhibited in the following quotation from the letter. "It is in a sort of arboreal enclosure, with all sorts of flowers and vigorous vegetation that characterizes this region," the letter reads. "Behind the ivy-covered wall that extends around the gardens and shuts out all intruders, I got a glimpse of that man through the heavy iron gate. He was smooth-shaven, slightly drooped, sprinkled with gray and with a scar upon his forehead near the roots of his hair--a little to one side. He was twirling a pruning knife in |
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