As soon as you start reading this, it hits you: You are about to read a realistic historical retelling of what happened to the Czar's family, the Romanovs. But instead of reading whatever articles of writing they have left from the real Anastasia, this ambitious author offers it up to you in a fictional way... and it hits home directly!
You can see the similarities with the Disney animated movie "Anastasia", and if you are a fan of that movie (like I am), this book is only made better because of the similarities. Its the same idea that the movie follows along, but seen from a very different point of view than the movie.
(SPOILERS) Instead of being a kitchen boy named Dimitri, the young man Anastasia falls in love with is a soldier named Ivan Ivanovitch Navgorny, who was part of the Red Army that held her family captive right before they were killed in the basement of The House of Special Purpose. He saw Anastasia almost survive and escape in the woods afterwards, but she was shot down again, and he firmly believes she is dead. An announcement is circled around Moscow and most of Russia that the Princess Anastasia may be alive, and immediately Ivan (and his best aristocrat friend, Count Sergei Mikhailovitch Kremnikov) start interviewing girls who can possibly play the part. But since Ivan knew what the princess was like, at least from a distance, he turns down every girl they've met.
Then he meets Nadya, a waitress at a small eating place in the ugly and grim town of Yekaterinburg, Russa, the place where historically the Romanovs were kept while the White Army searched for them (and where the Red Army killed them). Ivan has locked away his past dark memories, but he still remembers what the Princess Anastasia was like, and that this orphan waitress girl (who doesn't even know how old she is), is very much like the princess in spirit and physical appearance. At first Nadya doesn't want to go with them, and doesn't trust Ivan at all because of his fierce, prying questions. But when Sergei talks to her, and tells her that they believe she is really the granddaughter of a White Russian exiled countess in Paris, France, she finally agrees to go with them in the hopes of finding her true family.
She and Ivan argue on the way there, and he is embarrassed by her ugly and dirty appearance, doubting if he made the right decision to pick her. He offers her his jacket, but of course she refuses, and it takes Sergei's kind soothing to make her finally agree to take Ivan's jacket. They are hostile to each other, but when Nadya gets scared that a man with a twisted red scar on his cheek is watching her, Ivan shows care about her safety. But of course Ivan and Sergei are con men at this time, and they happily use this distraction until the train starts to leave, because they really have no tickets for the ride.
The conductor comes to get their tickets often, but Sergei always comes up with some kind of excuse, though they are pretty slim. Nadya keeps having terrible nightmares about the Romanov family, and she shares them often with her two companions, who are always interested to hear because they want to find out who she really is (since it would help them all to know, even if she isn't Her Imperial Highness Anastasia Nicholaevna Romanov, one of the grand duchesses of Russia--Ivan doesn't believe she is anyway, though). Nadya helps make an excuse for the tickets also, but they have to jump off the train because the conductor is coming with an officer. Ivan takes her hand, and they jump together, and end up rolling down the hill together, which I thought was pretty nice and romantic, even though they didn't do it to be romantic. From that moment on, they begin teasing each other like crazy, usually Nadya starting it, though.
Once, when they ride in a hay wagon for several miles, she buries Ivan in his sleep, then tickles his nose with a piece of straw. He tries to swat it away, thinking its a bug, but his arms are buried under the hay. He wakes up, and she bursts out laughing, which makes him start throwing hay all over her, and they finally land on the bottom of the wagon and just laugh happily. Sergei, of course, the whole time is watching them with a knowing look, suspicious that they are falling in love and don't even know it themselves. They work for an ice harvester after that, and Nadya takes ice shaving and drops them down Ivan's back, which makes him squirm to get them out, then chase her around with some shavings, which sometimes he succeeds in putting down her back, and they both end up laughing.
The trio goes across Russia working for their food and places to sleep, and Nadya becomes muscular and tanned, which alarms both the men because they think she won't be able to pass for a fair-skinned grand duchess if she looks healthy and strong. They decide not to let her work anymore, and instead to teach her how to be a grand duchess again... and in bringing this up, Nadya realizes that she doesn't want to be Anastasia Romanov, even if she really is. She cries and storms about how Anastasia was a girl, just like her, and she died in cold blood... and Nadya wants nothing to do with it, so she runs away into the woods that they are camped in. She falls down a ravine, and has a dream that is like all the others: a nightmare about the Romanovs and a jewel necklace that used to belong to Marie Antoinette.
She wakes up to find Ivan calling her name urgently. I am going to recount the entire, sweet scene right here, so don't read if you don't want to read SPOILERS!
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"Nadya! Nadya!"
The all-encompassing white snapped into utter blackness.
Staring dazedly into the abyss of nothingness, Nadya began to see silvery forms gradually taking shape before her eyes; first the ovals of eyes appeared, then the slanting ridge of a nose. "Ivan?" Nadya asked the disembodied form hovering in the blackness above her.
"Thank goodness you're okay. I've been looking for you for hours. How'd you get down here? Are you hurt?"
"Where am I?" Nadya asked. Ivan's arm was around her now, and the solidness of and heat from his body was reassuring.
"You're at the bottom of a king of ravine. I used my last mathc, or else I'd show you. You must have fallen and rolled down here. When I spotted you sprawled on the ground, I thought you were dead."
Shaken by this news, Nadya bowed her head and covered her face with her hands. "Oh God--I don't want to be dead."
Ivan tightened his hold around her. "No. No. Don't be dead. I'm so happy that you're not dead." He kissed the top of her head. "Definitely don't be dead."
In the darkness, Nadya tilted back her head and reached up her hand until her fingers contacted the smooth surface of his lips.
Tenderly, he kissed her fingertips.
Then Ivan pulled her closer and sought out Nady's lips with his own, kissing her gently at first, and then with growing passion. Nadya returned his kiss, somehow aware that all th ese days of traveling together had been leading them to this moment.
Ivan stroked Nadya's hair tenderly and then stood. Taking her hand, he drew her to her feet. "Do you feel well enough to walk?" he asked.
"I think so. Do you know the way back?"
Ivan hesitated uncertainly. "Not really," he admitted. "Let's see what we can find."
THE END OF "Chapter Ten: In the Night Forest"
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Of course that was one of my favorite scenes. After that, it is pretty clear to both of them that they deeply love each other, and they aren't very afraid to show it, though they are very quiet about it, and don't even tell Sergei what happened between them in the ravine. They just seem more bonded, and more happy than he remembers they were before, and they tenderly lean towards each other when they talk like true lovers do--so Sergei is almost completely convinced they are in love, but won't speak of it. The next day the owner of the land they are on (without knowing it), comes and confronts Nadya and Sergei while they are practicing how to be a grand duchess in the campsite (while Ivan is working in the fields somewhere else). The owner of the land is Count Dubinskey, who actually was one of Count Sergei's friends from the White Russian aristocracy before, and they are happily welcomed into the man's personal estate.
Ivan is sent for by a servant, and he has to choose between possible captivity or arrest for leaving the army... or losing his only friend Sergei, and his love, Nadya. When he thinks of her, he begins running, afraid for her safety, not wanting her to be alone, and not wanting to be without her in his life. He reaches the estate, and finds that she has gone shopping with the Count Dubinksy's sister, Irina. Ivan is worried sick, especially since Count Dubinsky is planning a ball to introduce Her Imperial Highness Anastasia Romanov back into the world of high society of the exiled rick Russians--which means that their scam has just reached the next level, and they can't retreat back from it now.
Nadya comes into the room all dressed up in the Parisian style with Irina, wearing make-up with her hair curled--and Ivan explodes. He doesn't like the way she looks, which upsets Nadya very much because she cares about his opinion, but his behavior just makes Irina believe that Ivan is deeply in love with her. She tells Nadya later that he is, saying that no man would be so jealous and protective if he wasn't head over heels, and that makes Nadya feel wonderful... The only problem is that Irina tells Nadya that she can't marry a commoner like Ivan since she is a grand duchess, and that alarms and upsets Nadya, even though she keeps it to herself.
The ball is a success, and everyone agrees that Nadya is Anastasia Romanov, even though she doesn't remember anyone because of her amnesia problems. Nadya fits in well, and she dances with Ivan that night, and it is a wonderful night for her. The next morning, early, they are summoned straight to Paris by one of Empress Marie's (her grandmother) servants. They are all nervous because they don't know what's going to happen to their scheme--except Nadya, who is worried that she might not be Anastasia Romanov. Empress Marie is a very stern, kind of blind, and very skeptical woman by now... but she did send for them because some of her very trusted friends sent word to her, saying that they believe it is the real Anastasia.
During her first visit with the empress, Nadya finds out about the reward money, and immediately is shocked by Ivan and Sergei's con plan, and completely doesn't trust them anymore and feels betrayed. Ivan doesn't know what to do, since it is true, and he and Sergei leave immediately. Empress Marie doesn't even believe that Nadya didn't know about it, but she agrees to keep her at her personal estate for a week and see if she decides that she is authentic or not (Nadya is the first girl to show up claiming to be Anastasia, but with amnesia).
Ivan comes to give Nadya back her rag doll and her petticoat that were messed up with some of his and Sergei's belongings in their swift departure from the forest campsite, and they have an argument where Ivan decides to turn around his love for her into just playing her... because he realizes what kind of life she is being offered with the empress, and doesn't want to make her give it up for love of him. Nadya is devastated that he never really loved her, and goes back into the mansion crying (without the doll or petticoat). Ivan leaves, kind of sad, but firm in the belief that he did the right thing.
Nadya goes to the Russian opera with the Empress Marie, and hears a rumor there that Count Sergei's wife and son (that he has been searching for for a year or more) are in Paris, working at a monastery. Forgetting her hate and their betrayal, Nadya leaves the opera to find Sergei and tell him where his missing family is. At this time, Ivan is walking restlessly down some of the streets of Paris, and in doing so, he is confronted by the man with the red scar on his face, who is really an old assistant of Rasputin, the man who hated the Romanovs, and was trying to get the Marie Antoinette's necklace from Anastasia Romanov's mother for healing her son Alexei from his frequent bleeding spells. The scarred man and Ivan struggle on the waterfront, and Ivan gets shot while the other man falls into the river.
At this time, Sergei goes to find his family at the monastery, and tells Nadya to leave a message for Ivan when he comes back later. She agrees, and asks the man at the front desk of the hotel if she can leave a note to "Ivan Ivanovitch Navgorny", and the man speaks to her in French which she doesn't understand--but he finally makes it clear what he means by showing her a paper with a rough sketch of a man on a table with a gunshot wound in his chest. Nadya realizes the name underneath the picture is the same as her lost lover: Ivan Ivanovitch Navgorny. She goes to the room where he is kept, where the people who found him put him, since they couldn't find any of his friends or family members. She tries to stop his fatal bleeding, and in this way, remembers bleeding and being shot in the woods with the rest of her family, the Romanovs of Russia. When she finally wakes up from the memory, she cries and tells him not to leave her and die, and that she loves him. She doesn't notice his hand gently stroking her hair.
Ivan wakes up inside the Empress Marie's mansion, but wants to leave as soon as possible, not wanting to ruin Nadya's new life with her grandmother--even though he has no idea she remembered everything until she tells him. He disappears before she has a chance to say anything to him except "I was worried that you would never wake up", and she asks her grandmother why she can't marry a commoner if she loves him. Her grandmother tells her that most royals of any country never marry for love, but that the name "Anastasia" means "breaker of chains". She tells Anastasia to choose her own path, and to do what she thinks is best, and to break the chains of normal society laws if she wants to.
In this way, Nadya ends up boarding a ship with Ivan bound for America. The scene is just priceless. Again, SPOILERS EXTREME, so stop now if you want to read it after you finish the book (like normal people). This review does not explain what "The Diamond Secret" is. You have to read the book for that, and you shouldn't miss it. ;)
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Shielding her eyes with a flattened hand to her brow, Nadya frantically scanned the dock. Her heart skipped when she spied Ivan unsteadily climbing the gangplank of a freighter. "Ivan," she shouted, but the ocean winds carried off her voice, and she knew he hadn't heard her.
The freighter's horn blasted, signaling that its departure was imminent. "Ivan," she shouted, her curls blowing in her eyes as she ran for the freighter.
Finally, when she was at the bottom of the gangplank, Ivan heard her and turned.
His face exploded with joy.
He started to come back down the ramp, but she hurried up and met him halfway. "I'm sorry for leaving without saying goodbye," he explained. "I was afraid I wouldn't be able to leave you if I didn't just go."
"Don't leave me, then," she said with her hands on his arms.
"I have to. You're the grand duchess Anastasia. There's no place for me in your life."
"Not in Anastasia's life, but in Nadya's life there's all the room in the world. Don't you see? I don't want a life without you."
"Are you absolutely sure?" Ivan asked.
"Completely sure," she insisted.
The freighter sounded its horn once more.
Ivan pulled her into his arms and kissed her hard. Nadya held him tight. "You're giving up so much," he reminded her when they pulled out of the embrace.
Nadya smiled up at him. "I'm getting so much more than I'm losing," she assured him.
The freighter's horn blared a third time. "You're sure?" Ivan checked.
"Positive," Nadya said.
Ivan took Nadya's hand, and they hurried up to the top of the gangplank and onto the deck. As the vessel pulled away from the dock, they watched the land recede into the distance.
"We might never see home again," Ivan remarked, wrapping his arm around her shoulders.
"That's all right," Nadya replied, knowing in her heart that, from this moment on, wherever Ivan was would be home to her.