‘A moment, Miss Wentworth.’ She approached and spoke quietly. It seemed to Lily a prepared speech and one made with regret or some other emotion difficult to place. ‘There is a further name. A woman. Though I’m not sure she fills your criteria. In fact, exactly the opposite. You seek someone who was invited and yet did not put in an appearance. The woman I have in mind was not invited but was, in fact, present last night at the reception … in a manner of speaking … a close relation and very dear friend of mine. She is so completely uninvolved with what we have discussed that I am confident I am not suggesting any villainy when I say you will find her name on my first list but crossed out. That was for my secretary’s information. There was no need to send her an invitation, you see. She told me well in advance not to bother to ask her.’ The princess gave a dry laugh expressive of disapproval and incredulity. ‘She was going to be at the hotel anyway, though not as a guest. Anna Petrovna, her name is. A darling girl, but an eccentric. And a beauty! Wait a moment. You may judge for yourself.’
The princess headed towards a bureau, opened a drawer and took out a photograph. ‘Here. You may look at this. I cannot let you take it away — it’s the only photograph of Anna that I have left. It’s not very clear but it may be of help. You’ll see it was taken by an amateur — the grand duchess’s French master, I believe.’
Five young girls wearing long white dresses and ropes of pearls were caught, it seemed, informally, standing about holding croquet mallets in a woodland setting. They were clearly on friendly terms with the photographer; unusually, they were smiling into camera, their posture relaxed.
An idyllic moment of leisured innocence from a world so soon to be plunged into horror.
‘This was taken, oh, it must be eight years ago — you see all the girls are wearing their hair down. Not yet considered adults … still in the classroom.’ The princess began to pick out the Tsar’s daughters with a forefinger. ‘Now, let me see. I’ll try to get this right but they were peas in a pod, those girls. All very like their mother. And all dressed alike and grinning. Which is which? That one is certainly Anastasia. The shortest. Pretty little rascal. Now … Olga? Maria? Maria had fairer hair so the one on the right is almost certainly Maria. No mistaking the two arm-in-arm on the left. They are Tatiana and her friend Anna Petrovna. A spectacular pair, and didn’t they know it! Both tall, you see. It’s hard to tell from a sepia print, which never did Tatiana justice, but she had chestnut hair which contrasted intriguingly with Anna’s mop of jet-black hair.’ The princess’s voice faltered and she looked aside to hide her grief as she said quietly: ‘My niece was a handsome girl, was she not? In those days. Sadly, if you ever confront her, you will see that the years of privation and harsh treatment have taken a hideous toll.’
Lily’s eyes were drawn straight to the one girl who was not a Romanov. Anna’s full-busted figure made her royal friend appear willowy in contrast. A round face — pretty though rather chubby, Lily thought — was being turned away from the photographer in laughing protest but Lily sensed something more in the evasive game. Camera shy? No. The protective sweep of glossy dark hair being teasingly offered to the photographer suggested flirtation and Lily smiled to herself. After all these years, had she guessed Anna’s secret?
‘The French master? Was he attractive?’
The princess looked at her sharply. ‘Many thought so. The girls all adored him.’ She took the photograph from Lily and looked at it intently. ‘You must understand that, with her birth, wealth and royal connections, my niece was destined to make a good marriage. An English duke … a Pomeranian prince … something of that order.’ She sniffed. ‘But today, if you go looking for her, you might well find her working in a hotel kitchen. She is a law unto herself, my Anna. Never will listen to advice. One tries to help — she is one of us, after all, and may count on our loyalty and support to the death.’ She shrugged her shoulders to indicate that she had wasted her time. ‘Perhaps she will listen to you. If you go at once to her lodgings you will most probably find her there.’
She whispered an address into Lily’s ear before ringing for the butler. Her last words to her were murmured: ‘I fear she is something of a loose cannon whose movements are unpredictable and dangerous. Mind your toes, Miss Wentworth, should you find yourself treading the deck alongside Anna.’