les from Yekaterinburg, my namesake. I watched copper-tinged snow fall. It was winter, 1910, and I was seventeen years old. The Popovas, our regents – we knew no tsar in the Copper
streaks of green and cinnamon striated like ve
hair and twirled it round my thumb. Azovka smiled, her malachite eyes and scaled legs shi
ribbon as fine as the tsarina's silk. You could find malachite like that – a gown – in sheets at Snake Hill. Azovka, the Mistress of
ough immortal. I trusted the Copper Men in a way Prokovitch the Stonecutter did not. I confided in Azovka like our Landlord Peter swallowing dir
uscles from hunting and lifting heavy stones for father – shining in contrast to Azovka's slim eleganc
ld playing cards had green crowned lizards on them with m
a's queen with my king of hearts. "
es. We bundled up in our dresses, malachite belts, kerchiefs, elk boots and white fur coats and ate lunch down by the stone works. The grain mill churned in the river'd distance, and horses and buggies rode through the cros
pent all night with the dough – she really liked to bake. We dipped the rye bread in the soup from the thermos. Our mothers had both died in
he Copper Guard ran a vast network exporting the Ural Mountain's riches past the Malachite Gates and importing minerals from abroad
one from the river," I smiled, ha
th her pearly teeth. They cut the gem like butter, and the lizards that always thronged by her feet thrum
Kingdom. And I always liked pretty girls – I am ugly, dearest Azovka! I need a polished best friend to harp up my strengths when it
n angels out of the cloudy powder. It cushioned our fur jackets. Azovka stuck out her tongue. "Not
ing at her embroidere
brimming with mirth. "Promise me you wil
d
, swallowing and spitting out some red clay, crossi
terhood. It was a tall, gaunt boy, with a mop of dusty blonde hair – a beggar in tattered
re, save Azovka, I had ever seen. "Sure," I said,
r? I am princess of this town. Someday, I
ore into the bread. "
d in on hers
y on his elbow. "You s
ike childish maidens. I'm eighte
t look ol
zards crawl up his legs. The boy just smil
eep him. Fatten him up with my blinis. Make him pierogis and borscht. Ask him to
hough, was ask th
id. "Someday, I
r what? Begging? I
o said obtusely. "Look
princess,
tersburg to find a better life – rode the rails to here, last stop past Yekaterinburg. Outside the Malachite Walls, beyond the reach of the Copper
look and smiled. "Su
ck, a bright
it for that, beggar boy," I said with all the love a seventeen-year-old girl could tease the
t her lizards. I lik
n the winter