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Lucy and the Tsar
\\nLucy served as second officer on a 747 operated by Trans-Oceanic Airlines. Twice a week she flew from Dallas to Leningrad; with brief layovers in New York and Brussels. She had been a second officer for five years.
\\nLucy was looking forward to promotion to first officer. She would be the second woman to command a 747 for Trans-Oceanic. Her performance reviews were always exceptional. Never had Trans-Oceanic Airlines treated her differently than any other pilot. The glass ceiling seemed nonexistent. Lucy, as a highly paid professional airline pilot, owned a beautiful 5000 square foot home in Dallas where she lived with her son, daughter and a full- time housekeeper/nanny. She was happy. Her future was unlimited. At forty years of age she was approaching the apex of her professional career. Her layover in Leningrad was usually two days. Lucy would recover from the inevitable jet lag by visiting the great museums of the time of the Tsars.
\\nHer favorite was the Hermitage, which was once the Tsar\\u2019s summer palace. To the museum she always brought along her Nikon single lens reflex camera that recorded each picture with very high resolution. She used the Nikon to photograph the magnificent treasures stolen by the Bolsheviks from the Tsar. The fast lens and digital enhancement allowed her to obtain images without using a flash. Lucy would spend evenings in her hotel sorting her photographs into categories on her lap top.
\\nShe had collections of close-up shots of Faberge royal Easter eggs; of oil paintings by Gaugin, Degas, Van Gogh and Picasso; and photos of fine works of art made by native Russian craftsmen unknown in the West. Lucy converted the settlement check to US currency Travelers Checks.
\\nShe placed the Travelers Checks in her overnight bag on the airplane. When she landed, as part of a well-known airline crew, her luggage was not inspected by the local customs officials. The Travelers Checks, better than cash, entered the new Russia without hindrance. Lucy immediately went to the dealer appointed by the Hermitage and purchased the Faberg\\xe9 bird she lusted for paying only 200,000 US Dollars in Travelers checks. With the remaining $50,00 she purchased two Faberg\\xe9 silver cigarette cases and a small Picasso drawing in pencil signed and dated by the artist. The bird is displayed prominently over Lucy\\u2019s mantelpiece and she used the Faberg\\xe9 cigarette case to hold note papers and a fountain pen.
\\nLucy was lucky. If anyone at Edward Lloyd\\u2019s Insurance Company had gone to the Dallas public library, they could have found similar photographs of the same items in any one of several books on the Hermitage collection housed at the library. They did not. Lucy was promoted to Captain.
\\nShe now commands a Trans-Oceanic 747 that flies three times a week nonstop from Dallas to London\\u2019s Heathrow airport. She is starting a collection of photographs from the Queen\\u2019s Museum at Buckingham Palace.
\\n(c) 2022 Barry Zalma & ClaimSchool, Inc.
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