Danya,
I hope this letter finds you well. It's been too long since we last wrote. I thought perhaps after three years, it may be safe. There have been no more visits, and I have read few reports on anything concerning the panels. Since we last communicated, my daughter and her husband divorced. They love each other, yet simply cannot live together. My grandchildren are well. I hope yours are, too. We are both old. It would be nice to venture and see if the panels are really there. But neither of us can make the journey. Besides, it might still be too dangerous. Somebody was watching when Yancy Cutler asked questions about Loring. I know in my heart that bomb was not meant for an Italian minister. I still grieve for the Cutlers. So many have died looking for the Amber Room. Perhaps it should stay lost. No matter. Neither of us can protect it much longer. Good health, old friend.
Karol
Rachel,
My precious darling. My only child. Your father now rests in peace with your mother. We are surely together, for a merciful God would not deny two people who loved each other the opportunity of eternal happiness. I have penned this note to say what perhaps should have been said in life. You have always been aware of my past, what I did for the Soviets before emigrating. I pilfered art. Nothing more than a thief, but one sanctioned and encouraged by Stalin. I rationalized it at the time with my hatred for the Nazis, but I was wrong. We stole so much from so many, all in the name of reparations. What we sought most was the Amber Room. Ours by heritage, stolen by invaders. The letters bound to this note tell some of the story of our search. My old friend Danya and I looked hard. Did we ever find it? Perhaps. Neither of us really went and looked. Too many were watching in those days and, by the time we narrowed the trail, both of us realized the Soviets were far worse than the Germans. So we left it alone. Danya and I vowed never to reveal what we knew, or perhaps simply what we thought we knew. Only when Yancy volunteered to make discreet inquiries, checking information that I once thought credible, did I inquire again. He was making an inquiry on his last trip to Italy. Whether that blast on the plane was attributable to his questions or something else will never be known. All I know is that the search for the Amber Room has proved dangerous. Maybe the danger comes from what Danya and I suspect. Maybe not. I haven't heard from my old comrade in many years. My last letter to him went unanswered. Perhaps he is with me now, too. My precious Maya. My friend Danya. Good companions for eternity. Hopefully it will be many years before you join us, my darling. Have a good life. Be successful. Take care of Marla and Brent. I love them so. I'm very proud of you. Be good. Maybe give Paul another chance. But never, absolutely never concern yourself with the Amber Room. Remember the story of Phaethon and the tears of the Heliades. Heed his ambition and their grief. Maybe the panels will be found one day. I hope not. Politicians should not be entrusted with such a treasure. Leave it in its grave. Tell Paul I'm so sorry. I love you.
NINETEEN
6:34 p.m.
Paul's heart pounded as Rachel looked up from her father's final note, tears falling from her sad green eyes. He could feel the pain. Hard to tell where his stopped and hers started.
'He wrote so elegantly,' she said.
He agreed.
'He learned English well, read incessantly. He knew more about participial phrases and dangling modifiers than I ever did. I think his broken speech was just a way to hold on to his heritage. Poor Daddy.'
Her auburn hair was tied in a ponytail. She wore no makeup, was dressed only in a white terry-cloth robe over a flannel nightgown. The house was finally clear of all the mourners. The children were in their rooms, still upset from the emotional day. Lucy was scampering through the dining room.
'Have you read all these letters?' Rachel asked.
He nodded. 'After I left the bank. I went back to your father's house and got the rest of this stuff.'
They were sitting in Rachel's dining room. Their old dining room. The two folders with news articles on the Amber Room, a German map, the
'Daddy was watching something on CNN about that when I left the kids with him. I remember the name.' Her body sagged in the chair. 'What was that file doing in the freezer? That's not like him. What's going on, Paul?'
'I don't know. But Karol was obviously interested in the Amber Room.' He pointed to Borya's last note. 'What did he mean about Phaethon and the tears of the Heliades?'
'Another story Mama used to tell me when I was little. Phaethon, the mortal son of Helios, God of the Sun. I was fascinated by it. Daddy loved mythology. He said thinking about fantasy was one of the things that got him through Mauthausen.' She shuffled through the clippings and photocopies, glancing closely at a few. 'He thought he was responsible for what happened to your parents and the rest of the people on that plane. I don't understand.'
Neither did he. And he'd thought of little else during the past two hours. 'Weren't your parents in Italy on museum business?' asked Rachel.
'The whole board went. The trip was to secure loans of works from Italian museums.'
'Daddy seemed to think there was a connection.'
He also recalled something else Borya wrote.
What did he mean,
'Don't you want to know what happened?' Rachel suddenly asked, her voice rising.
He'd not liked that tone years ago and didn't appreciate it now. 'I never said that. It's just that nine years have passed, and it would be nearly impossible to find out. My God, Rachel, they never even found bodies.'
'Paul, your parents may have been murdered, and you don't want to do anything about it?'
Impetuous and stubborn. What had Karol said?
'I didn't say that either. There's just nothing practical that can be done.'
'We can find Danya Chapaev.'
'What do you mean?'
'Chapaev. He may still be alive.' She looked down at the envelopes, the return addresses. 'Kehlheim couldn't be that hard to find.'
'It's in southern Germany. Bavaria. I found it on the map.'
'You looked?'
'Not hard to spot. Karol circled it.'
She unfolded the map and saw for herself. 'Daddy said they knew something on the Amber Room but never went to check. Maybe Chapaev could tell us what that was?'
He couldn't believe what she was saying. 'Did you read what your father said? He told you to leave the Amber Room alone. Finding Chapaev is the one thing he
'Chapaev might know more about what happened to your parents.'