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  Russian Amerika

  ( Russian Amerika - 1 )

  Stoney Compton

  Liberty is Born in the Czar’s American Lands

  Fight for Free Amerika!

  21st century Russian Amerika—a cold, hard land held in chains by a brutal police state. But now the Cossacks have met their match in a rebel army of Athabaskans and outcast creoles. New republic or slavery’s chains?

  It will all come down to a gritty and courageous rebel commander and a final courageous stand at the remote fortress known as the Chena Redoubt.

  A debut alternate history of astonishing power and prescience from Alaskan native Stoney Compton!

  “[T]his is a mordant, brilliant book.”

  —San Francisco Chronicle

  Alaska, 1989. In a world where Alaska is still a Russian possession, charter captain Grigorivich Plesnett has a stained past—as a major in the Czar’s Troika Guard he was cashiered for disobeying a direct order. Now, ten years later, Grig charters out to a cossack and discovers his past has not only caught up with him but is about to violently change his future, and the future of all nine of the nations of North America as well. Spanning Alaska from the Southeastern Inside Passage to the frozen Yukon, this is an epic tale of one man’s journey of redemption and courage to face old challenges and help birth a new nation.

  Cover artist: Kurt Miller.

  Stoney Compton

  RUSSIAN AMERIKA

  Acknowledgments

  Over a quarter century ago I was hired by the Tanana Chiefs Health Authority to create a comic book designed to interest Athabascan youth in health careers. After the completion of the project I was put on staff as media specialist with this non-profit social services corporation. I was privileged to work with Tanana Chiefs Conference for two years. Those years and that job were an education into a culture I came to admire, respect, and to a large extent, envy.

  This novel reflects my high regard for the Native Peoples of Alaska, and the Athabascan People in particular. As this is a work of fiction, I have taken a few cultural liberties, but have tried to stay true to the essence of the Dená People. Any and all mistakes are mine.

  The names of my characters are similar to family names found in Alaska’s Interior, however all are otherwise complete fabrications of my imagination.

  MAPS

  1

  Clarence Strait, Russian Amerika, July 1987

  Etolin Island lay to starboard and Prince of Wales Island stood fine on the horizon to port. All thirty meters of Pravda tossed like a cork in a pond. The graying seas broke into spraying foam at two meters and the wind shrilled warning.

  Charter Captain Grigoriy Grigorievich couldn’t drop anchor here, nor could he just abandon the wheel and go below to mediate what was sure to turn into rape, at the very least. Both passengers were below in the main cabin. He popped open the hidden compartment on the console and poked the tiny phone into his ear so quickly he hurt himself.

  “No!” Valari said.

  “You will do this with me for two reasons,” Karpov said, sounding like a schoolteacher. “First, it will give us both comfort in this storm. Secondly, if you don’t do it willingly, I will beat you and take you by force. This is inevitable; besides, you used to enjoy me.”

  “I was lying, you swine!” she shrieked. An oddly familiar Thonk came over the phone, and Grisha realized that someone had just been hit with a bottle. A large mass fell on the deck.

  He smiled and put the earphone away. Valari was beginning to appeal to him. She raged up the steps, clutching the vodka bottle by its neck. Throwing it over the side, she grabbed the railing, braced herself on the heaving deck, and shouted at him.

  “I wish to make a formal protest to be entered in the log!”

  He gestured with his chin as he clutched the wheel with both hands.

  “It’s right up there,” he yelled over the building wind. “Make the entry yourself.”

  “But you’re the captain.”

  “Do you want to take over?”

  Hanging on to the railing with both hands she finally took in the sea around them. Huge swells of slate-colored water veined with submerged foam like fat in a rich man’s steak roiled up around them, rising and dropping with unimaginable hydraulic force. Wind ripped loose foam off wave tops and hurled it at the boat where it smacked the hull and topsides like thrown sand.

  Pravda rolled heavily from side to side and pitched up and down as she struggled from one wave to the next. Prince of Wales Island now lay behind a seamless wall of driving water and impenetrable cloud.

  “By the saints, no,” she said, nearly inaudible, swaying with the dance of the boat. She raised her voice. “Are we going to get out of this?” Water sluiced across the deck and gurgled into the scuppers as the boat labored through the shrieking elements.

  “Of course!” He forced himself to smile and licked salt spray from his lips.

  “You don’t lie very well. Tell me the truth.”

  “We’re not far from Fort Dionysus. If the storm doesn’t get any worse we will make it easily.”

  “And if the storm gets worse?”

  He shrugged. “Figure it out for yourself: we won’t make it.”

  “Shit! This was such a stupid idea! Now we’re all going to die. If I get out of this I’m going to get a new job.”

  “Why are you here?” Grisha shouted to be heard over the storm.

  She gave him a level look and smiled. “Don’t worry your pretty little head about it. The less you know the better off you’ll be.”

  Grisha repressed the flare of anger.

  Suddenly Karpov, blood streaming down the side of his head, erupted out of the companionway, slid across the soaking deck on his knees, and tackled Valari. She screamed and pounded his head with her fists.

  “What are you doing, you ass?” she screamed at him. “Have you lost your mind?”

  Still on his knees, the beefy man gripped her shirt with one hand, slapped her face with the other. Blood arced from her cut lip. The small sound from deep in her throat jerked open Grisha’s gut anger.

  Holding the wheel with one hand, he turned and snap-kicked Karpov as hard as he could in the side of the head. Still clutching Valari, Karpov flew backward and his head smashed into the fishing-gear compartment. The door to the locker swung open as he flopped on the deck, spasming as he tried to retain consciousness.

  Valari squirmed out from under Karpov’s twitching mass. “Thank you, Captain Grisha. I think he would have really hurt me this time.” She staggered across the shifting deck and hugged him fiercely. He put one arm around her. “I owe you for that one,” she said.

  With a gasp she was wrenched out of his grasp and flung across the bridge deck by a seething Karpov. The large man didn’t even look back at the woman. He stood glaring at Grisha, rain and blood running down his face as bruises and lumps purpled and thickened.

  “I relieve you of command!” he said with a growl, and swung his massive fist at Grisha’s face.

  Grisha released the wheel, ducked under the swing and put all of his weight behind a two-fisted uppercut to Karpov’s solar plexus. Air whoofed out of the larger man and he staggered back three steps. Grisha kicked him in the crotch as hard as he could. Karpov doubled over with a moan and fell heavily.

  Grisha grabbed the spinning wheel and gave his attention to straightening the boat, which had immediately turned broadside to the wind. Pravda lurched sideways off a wave top and slid to the bottom of the trough with a crash. He felt thankful the boat hadn’t rolled down the liquid incline.

  Seawater crashed into the open bridge, soaking it and everyone on it. Gear spilled out of the fishing locker and slid around the deck. On the other side of the bridge, Valari pull
ed herself to her feet and clung to the railing, shivering.

  Karpov shook his head and swung from the deck to bury his fist in Grisha’s stomach, smashing him against the bulkhead and knocking him breathless. Grisha slid down on the deck, gasping. The boat again put beam to the wind and rolled heavily to starboard, hanging for an impossibly long time before rolling back to port.

  More seawater inundated them. The bridge deck swirled with the increasing water the scuppers couldn’t handle.

  “Wheel!” Grisha gasped. “Get the wheel!”

  Karpov threw himself on Grisha and hit him with three hammering blows. The vessel lurched in the moaning gale and crunched into a trough. Crockery shattered in the galley and Grisha twisted his body and threw Karpov off him.

  He rolled over and pushed himself up, tried to hit Karpov but couldn’t find a target the few times he could put any strength behind his fist. Valari grabbed the wheel and turned it back and forth uselessly.

  “Into the wind!” he screamed. “Turn into the wi—”

  Karpov’s fist drove the oxygen from his lungs again. Grisha crashed back on the deck. The heavy man straddled him and began choking him with both hands.

  Grisha stared at the hate-filled eyes in the bloody face. He dimly realized this was the first fight he’d been in since he got married. He felt his windpipe crackle and knew he was going to die very soon.

  The lack of air became more pressing than the pain. He tried to struggle. But his arms lacked strength, pinned under the Russian’s massive weight. Spots swam redly before his eyes.

  Karpov lurched violently, his jaw dropped open and his eyes lost focus. The terrible crushing at Grisha’s throat eased as the man collapsed on him. The medicinal scent of vodka mingled with his last shuddering breath.

  Karpov suddenly rolled off Grisha and flopped on the deck, arms flung wide, and slid to the back of the boat in the quarter meter of water running across the deck. Valari pulled back the foot she had used to push Karpov’s corpse and stood braced against the console. Blood and rain dripped off the steel spike on the halibut club in her hands.

  “Get up and drive this goddamned thing!” she screamed, waving the club.

  Even though Grisha felt like lying there and going to sleep, he rolled over and dragged himself up into the captain’s chair bolted to the deck. Pravda rolled heavily to starboard again, and he grasped the wheel, turning to follow the roll, praying the tiller would grab enough water to keep from completely rolling over. Seawater seeped over the starboard gunwale as the boat pushed into multiple tons of brine.

  Pravda edged slowly into the keening wind, the laboring diesel barely audible, and slowly, reluctantly, creaked back to port. His head and throat ached. Every breath felt like fire. The spots dancing in front of his eyes gradually evolved into rain drops.

  “This isn’t good weather for fishing,” he said in a croak and shook his head. He pointed the bow into the wind and increased the throttle. Pravda surged against the storm and slowly made headway.

  He estimated the waves to be ten meters from trough to top.

  Valari huddled against the far bulkhead, braced and sobbing. “What are we going to do?”

  They were both soaked to the skin. The ocean temperature rarely warmed more than eight or ten degrees above freezing. With the squall blowing in excess of fifty knots, they both were in the depths of hypothermia.

  “We’re going to live!” he said roughly, wincing at the pain in his throat. “We beat him, we can beat the storm!”

  “I’m so cold!” she wailed.

  “Go below, first locker on your right. Coats. Bring me one, too.”

  The few minutes she took seemed like hours to him. She reemerged bundled in a coat too large for her and handed him a foul-weather jacket. He shrugged into the dry coat and knew he was going to be all right.

  “We m-must get rid of that,” she said, nodding toward Karpov’s bloody body. She was all business again, the tears gone but teeth still chattering.

  “B-but how?”

  “Why do we have to get rid of him?”

  “You f-fool! We’ve k-killed one of the Czar’s co-Cossacks! The Okhana will hang us both for that.”

  “Find something heavy,” he said. “Tie it to him. Once we’re out of the weather, we’ll dump him over. Tell them he fell over the side when he was drunk. They’ll believe us.”

  She gave him a look of respect and something else—he didn’t know what. Despite the heavy weather she conducted a quick search, and dragged out Karpov’s heavy tackle kit.

  “Will this do?” Color had returned to her face and she no longer shivered. She only held the rail with one hand and didn’t watch her feet. Grisha decided she was a natural sailor.

  “Open it. He brought that onboard. I want to see what’s in it.”

  Valari grabbed the halibut club and brought it down with on the kit with a crash. The broken padlock skittered across the deck. She unsnapped the clasps and threw the lid open. Oily metal glistened from the box.

  “What the hell?” Grisha said.

  Valari pulled out a gleaming pistol, twisted it about while she examined it and released the rail to pull the slide open to look into the chamber. She had handled weapons before. Grisha felt his stomach drop. Other pistols rested in the box.

  “Kharitikoff, nine-millimeter,” she announced. “Holds a clip of seven rounds, accurate up to twenty meters. An excellent weapon.”

  Over the last seven years Grisha had carried many illegal items on his boat, but never this. He had two rifles locked in their rack down in the main cabin, but pistols?

  “Do you know what they do to you if they catch you with an unauthorized handgun?” Grisha asked, horror in his voice. “They take your dominant hand off at the wrist!”

  She looked at him for a long moment, then returned the pistol to the box and shut it. “Where’s the rope?”

  Grisha pointed to another locker. “In there, but for now just hang on.”

  The boat dropped heavily into another trough as he worked his way toward land.

  2

  Four Days Earlier

  It didn’t take Grisha long to realize this was the charter trip from hell. He’d puzzled at it ever since the broker called to book boat and skipper for a five-day fishing trip to New Archangel, the capital of Russian Amerika, three hundred miles west. Most fishermen arrived at the dock the same time he did, eager to pursue the chavych, or Chinook salmon, or the monstrous halibut that could grow larger than a barn door.

  Grisha had arrived just after sunrise. The summer sun hung two hand widths above tree-covered Mt. Robare when he finally spied the big man lumbering toward him down the dock. The client dressed like a fisherman, complete with trolling pole and tackle kit, but he walked like a Cossackarrogantly precise in a ruler-straight line and exuding the certainty he owned the world. At the edge of the dock he stopped and stared into Grisha’s eyes, spoke Russian. “You are Charter Captain Grigoriy Grigorievich, yes?”

  “Yes,” Grisha replied in English. “Are you my charter to New Archangel?”

  The man casually threw his tackle kit over the gunwale. When Grisha caught it, he nearly collapsed with the surprising weight of the locked metal box. The man climbed on deck and looked around.

  “You have vodka on board?”

  Grisha glanced at the chronometer in the console, it was half past eight of the morning. Stale sweat and bowel gas eddied around the large man, who dropped into the other seat bolted to the bridge deck.

  Grisha watched the man look around at his nautical surroundings, obviously for the first time. So what was in the tackle box? This was obviously a smuggling run and would provide much more money at the end of the trip than previously agreed.

  “Yes, and beer, even some California whiskey.”

  The man regarded Grisha with baleful, piggish eyes. “That is against the Czar’s law, unless you have paid the duty, of course.”

  “Of course!” Grisha suppressed a grin while stowing the tackle
box, which he estimated at ten kilos, with his own fishing gear.

  Like this walrus ever worried about duty taxes!

  Maintaining a professional mien, he slipped over the side onto the dock. “We’re late. I’ll get us underway.” Quickly, he untied both lines and stepped back aboard.

  Grisha edged the boat into gear and eased the throttle forward. “Do you have a name? Other than Pig-eyes?”

  The boat gently left the slip and angled toward the channel. A warm breeze rippled the water and the sky stretched bereft of clouds as far as the eye could see. A charter skipper couldn’t ask for better omens.

  “I am Karpov. How long does it take to get to T’angass?”

  “Depends on how much fishing we do on the way and how fast we go.” Grisha snapped his head around and stared at Karpov. “Wait a minute, I thought we were going to New Archangel.”

  “There has been a change of plans. I wish to go to T’angass.”

  Karpov said. “We will fish on the way back. At maximum speed, how long will it take us to get to get there?”

  “Today and two more days if we don’t run into bad weather. If you’re in a hurry, why don’t you fly?”

  “I enjoy the sea air. Where is the vodka?”

  “In the galley.” Grisha motored slowly past the harbor patrol, careful not to show any wake. So far he wasn’t making all that much on this run, and a fine would put him in the hole, as well as add stamps to his license. Collect enough stamps and the license disappears; he loved the symmetry of Russian law.

  Karpov disappeared into the cabin. Grisha decided he had a smuggler on his hands. Smuggling paid a lot better than charter fishing trips, so he would patiently wait for the proposal.

  A ruble was a ruble, what the hell. His wife’s face flashed through his mind and he slapped the wheel.

  No time for that now. It’s either better when I return or it’s over. Small angry teeth bit inside his gut. They chewed at him a great deal these days. He felt pissed at himself.