During this time Natasha and I
were together every evening and night.
I was officially a resident at the Rossiya Hotel and had to be picked up
there in the morning with the rest of the crew. So each morning I would depart
from Natasha’s building by taking the elevator down. To keep other residents from seeing me wait
at the elevator and start to wonder who this man was, Natasha told me to either
walk up a couple of flights or down a couple of flights before getting on the
elevator. Then I would walk across the
street and catch a bus to the metro station.
It would still be dark and footsteps in the snow made a resounding
crunch. Some days it was so cold that the bus door would not close all the
way. Everyone was supposed to drop a
kopek or two into a box in the middle of the bus, but sometimes it was so
crowded that the effort needed and the disruption caused was just now worth
it.
Upon arriving at the Metro
station, 10 kopeks allowed me to descend a fast moving escalator, down about 70
meters and wait for the subway that allowed me to come within 2 blocks of the
Rossiya Hotel. I then had to show my
room card to the semi-frozen door man to enter the hotel, take the elevator up
to my floor, hand my card to the floor lady, who then gave me the key to my
room. I would shower in tepid or cold
water, change clothes and meet everyone for breakfast. The breakfast room was Spartan and dreary but
had windows so we could see the sun hang low in the south. By the end of January, the sun was visible
for almost 8 hours.
It was during this time that Natasha and I became close. We were hampered by our language barrier, me
with no Russian at all except one to three word essentials and Natasha’s
limited English. We bought English-Russian,
Russian-English dictionaries which helped some, but when it came to expressing
complex thoughts or feelings, it became very difficult. Still we learned about
our families. She was divorced with a
daughter who lived with her ex-husband.
Natasha saw her daughter often and she seemed to be a good terms with
him.
To keep my foreign status less
obvious we went to the Beriozka where I bought a red fox hat that suited my
fantasy and with the long winter coat I had purchased in Austria, I looked like
a “handsome Russian man,” according to Natasha.
We went to a variety of great restaurants she knew about and I learned
how she cleverly bribed the doorman if we were denied entrance always with a
smile as she looked straight at the person and shook hands as five Rubles was
passed.
In Moscow, things really were not
expensive. It was the lack of goods and
services that made life difficult. I
learned that in Russia, it was necessary to have a network of friends who could
get things for you. Hard currency could
get you many things unavailable otherwise and within the black market one could
get 3 or 4 Rubles for a dollar which was much better than the official exchange
rate of which took $1.40 to get one Ruble. This was one of the things Natasha
was able to do for me. I would give her $1 00 and she would give me at least
300 Rubles sometimes more. Suddenly I became a big spender when it came to
dining out. Having champagne and caviar
at dinner was routine.
I never asked her what happened
to the dollars as I didn’t want to know.
Once when I returned to the states, she asked me to buy her a boom box
which I did and brought back to her. She paid me for it and it disappeared. During
this time ABBA, the Swedish rockers were popular and they were heard often here
and there. But my favorite, Pink Floyd
was an entirely new sound and I gave her some of my tapes of them along with a
few others.
Once we were having lunch in the
Rossiya Hotel and the waiter asked Natasha something and she translated. “He asked if you would like to buy ½ a kilo
of caviar for $25 U.S. dollars.” I said
yes of course and after paying for lunch, we met in the hall outside the
restaurant and received a pound of caviar wrapped in a newspaper. I ate caviar
every day until I could not eat anymore.
One thing hard currency couldn’t
buy was a ticket to the Bolshoi. But Natasha got tickets through her
friends. The ticket price was very
modest, but getting access to one took some maneuvering.
I will never forget going to the
Bolshoi with Natasha. It was awesome
enough just to be able to go inside and see the crimson, gold trimmed seats and
the special second story balcony layout front and center that was built for the
tsars. But to watch Swan Lake performed
in the Bolshoi with this beautiful Russian woman at my side, definitely will
always be one of the highlights of my life.
At the end of the performance every single person rose to their feet in
applause yelling “bravo” and those close to the stage throwing flowers. Several curtain calls later, I was left
speechless. Did I mention that I will
never, ever forget this night? Chills
run up my spine while I am writing this.
We also attended a performance of the Nutcracker Suite and that pretty
special also.
The Russians were on to the fact
that I had a girlfriend. The time I
returned with the boom box, the driver asked me, “how is Natasha?” I am sure the floor lady in the Rossiya Hotel
reported the fact that I never slept in my room, but to know specifically who I
spent my time with, I can only chalk up to being spied upon. I didn’t suspect Natasha as being involved
even though I knew I could not be totally, 100% sure at that point. Anyway I
knew they knew so I didn’t need to be coy about it.
She told me she had a plan before
she met me on how to get out of Russia.
A Japanese man wanted to marry her and her plan was to marry him, go to
Japan, divorce him and go to Paris to live.
She liked to talk about what she knew about Russia before the revolution
and grandeur of life around the Tsar. She
considered the communists a bunch of thugs.
In that regard she certainly had a point.
She took the train down to
Voronezh twice to visit me, which was all right, but staying with me we knew
would be a problem. So I would do in and
stand in front of the lady at the desk blocking her view, while Natasha crept in
behind and got in the elevator. She then
never went out of the building while I was at work. We got caught once though
coming out of the elevator which I am sure got reported.
In Russia, being able to buy a
round trip train ticket was not possible, so I went with her to the train
station while she tried to buy a first class train ticket. She was told there were no more spaces, which
to her meant to bribe the ticket seller.
When that didn’t work, she came to me and said “fucking communists”. Apparently the bribe was turned down based on
ideology.
I began to have thoughts of
marriage even though it would be extremely difficult to accomplish, although
not impossible. One American I knew
married one of our interpreters,
In the end, I was asked to leave
Russia due to Natasha. Apparently we
were star crossed lovers without realizing it.
She met me at Sheremetyevo
Airport before my flight home and when I saw her I had to choke back
tears. She was all smiles and gave me
three tins of caviar. I was able to
control my emotions then and smiled back.
I told her I loved her and she replied back with, “I love you, Davie”.
She called me a month later when
I was home in Lancaster, urging me to come to Moscow, but I had to tell her it
would be impossible for me. I don’t know
how she managed to accomplish this and before we were finished, we were cut
off. That was the last time I heard from
her. I often wonder if she married the
Japanese man and somehow made it to Paris.
Natasha, I hope you are safe and
happy and thank you for being in my life.