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They glanced at Mrs. Vaska, who stood serenely beside her husband's chair, holding a teapot.

“Inna?” Cole asked, raising his hands in the universal gesture for what do you think?

The old Russian woman nodded curtly, like she was pecking at something with her chin. “Da.

That settled it.

• • •

Inna thought she had everything planned out, but she was still missing one key piece of the plan — letting Harry know.

So the day after her meeting with the Americans, she packed some medical supplies and made her way toward the barracks where Harry and Ramsey lived. The work crews were back for the day, and it wouldn't be the first time that she had visited the barracks at the end of the day. Most of the guards were never too curious, but she always explained that the Americans were patients. That made sense to the guards — Americans were special.

Walking across the Gulag compound, she thought about how the meeting with the rescuers had gone. They seemed competent enough, although she worried about the tension between the one named Honaker and Cole. Honaker claimed to be in charge, but Cole seemed to be the one who knew what he was doing.

The truth was, though, that Cole made her uneasy. It wasn't that she didn't trust him. But Cole had strange eyes like ice that looked right through you, and a quiet, deliberate manner. Inna had just lived through a devastating war, and she knew Cole's type. There were plenty of soldiers, but maybe one in a thousand was something more. A killer. This Cole was one of them. So was Barkov. Such men frightened her.

The one person who set her mind at ease was Vaska. He had a reputation in the village as a capable hunter and trapper, and quite trustworthy. Did she trust him with her life — and with Harry's?

Lost in thought, Inna didn't see Barkov in front of the barracks until it was nearly too late.

His bulk was unmistakeable, hulking like a bear near the entrance to the barracks.

She had not seen him there these last few days. What did he want? With a sinking feeling, she realized that he wanted her.

She recalled an expression that her American father used to say. Bad news. Barkov was bad news.

Ducking her head, Inna changed course, hoping that she hadn't been seen.

Barkov had already run into her before, going to the Americans' barracks. Why hadn't he just gone to the infirmary? Because the Gulag compound was his territory, she thought. The infirmary was run by doctors and nurses who didn't have much patience with him.

Her heart pounding, she ducked into the laundry house. Looking out, it was clear that Barkov hadn't seen her — he was lighting a cigarette and not looking in her direction at all.

Another worrisome thought gripped her. Did Barkov know about the escape plan? It seemed impossible, but there were spies everywhere. People would trade their souls for an extra piece of bread or a bottle of vodka. Maybe someone in the village had seen her go to Vaska's house.

Inna slipped out the back of the laundry and returned to the infirmary. By the time she got there, she already had a plan in mind.

Inna took a piece of paper and composed a poem in English. Well, it would be passable as a poem to someone who didn't know English, but perhaps not to an English teacher. She smiled, in spite of everything, at the thought of writing Harry a poem.

It took her several tries, scratching out words here and there, and when she finished she took a fresh sheet of paper and made a good copy.

She found one of the old zeks who worked around the infirmary because he was too frail for railroad construction. She gave him a heel of bread to deliver the poem to the American. She started to tell him which barracks, and which American, but the old man waved her off.

"The handsome American. Everyone in camp knows him." The weathered old zek winked, as if to say, Ah, love.

• • •

Whitlock laid down on the bunk and couldn't even think about getting up again. He was that exhausted. He couldn't imagine how Ramsey must feel. Ramsey had a will of iron, even if his body was down to skin and bones. His chest rattled every time he coughed — which was almost constantly.

Not that Whitlock was doing much better. Fortunately, he had stayed healthy, but he had lost weight steadily since last spring, first in the German camp, and especially now in the Gulag, where the labor was constant and the intake of calories did little to replace the ones expended in building the railroad. He didn't have a scale, but he guessed that he had lost twenty pounds in the last few months, and Whitlock hadn't exactly been heavy to start with. At night when in lay in his bunk he could count his ribs, and his shoulder blades grated painfully against the slats of the bunk.

"Maybe your girl is coming by tonight,” Ramsey said.

He knew Ramsey enjoyed Inna's company as much as he did, and that was all right — he was willing to share. Ramsey needed every bit of encouragement he could get.

Out of the corner of his eye, he noticed a zek from another barracks angling toward his bunk. The man held a piece of paper in his hand.

Inna, he thought. Who else would send him a note?

He took the few final steps toward Whitlock, a smile on his face as if this were the postman back home rather than a prisoner delivering a message in a prison camp.

A guard materialized to block his path.

The zek's smile vanished. The guard snatched the note from him.

These guards were a rough and brutal lot. It wasn't clear that the guard could read, let alone read English, but every guard excelled at petty cruelty. He studied the note intently.

"Poeziya," the guard said with a sneer.

Then he crumpled the note and tossed it toward one of the stoves that struggled to warm the barracks.

Whitlock felt his heart stop and anger bubbled up in is throat. The son of a bitch was trying to burn Inna's note. His note, goddamnit. He started to get off the bunk, the exhaustion in his muscles forgotten. What he'd like to do is take his fist and—

Ramsey caught his eye. “Don’t even think about it,” he muttered.

Fortunately, the guard had turned and wandered off before the note hit the floor. He wasn't all that intent on destruction. Neither was the stove, even though the damn thing glowed cherry red. The note struck the grate that served to keep sparks from burning down the barracks and bounced off, singed but legible.

Whitlock waited until the guard was gone. Then he was off the bunk, snatching the note out of the cinders and dirt on the rough wood floor boards.

The note contained a poem that was one stanza in length.

First Words of Icarus

Escape the great northern sky Gate beyond the stars Three wisdoms keep their watch Midnight in the garden of evil Tomorrow can't come soon enough Scarf of the muse if the path is clear

"She sent me a poem," Whitlock said, a little in awe. A woman had never sent him a poem before. In this place, seeing a few words of English on a scrap of paper was the equivalent of getting the New York Times delivered. "It's lovely, even if it doesn't make any sense."

He handed it off to Ramsey.

The other man read it and announced, "Harry, your girl may be a looker, but I hate to say that she's a lousy poet."

"It's the thought that counts."