Gorgito's Ice Rink by Elizabeth Ducie










Gorgito’s Ice Rink

Gorgito's Ice Rink was runner up in Writing Magazine's 2015 Self-Published Book of the Year Awards.

Two small boys grieving for lost sisters — torn between family and other loves. Can keeping a new promise make up for breaking an old one?



When Gorgito Tabatadze sees his sister run off with a soldier, he is bereft. When she disappears into Stalin’s Gulag system, he is devastated. He promises their mother on her death-bed he will find the missing girl and bring her home; but it is to prove an impossible quest.

Forty years later, Gorgito, now a successful businessman in post-Soviet Russia, watches another young boy lose his sister to a love stronger than family. When a talented Russian skater gets the chance to train in America, Gorgito promises her grief-stricken brother he will build an ice-rink in Nikolevsky, their home town, to bring her home again.

With the help of a British engineer, who has fled to Russia to escape her own heartache, and hindered by the local Mayor who has his own reasons for wanting the project to fail, can Gorgito overcome bureaucracy, corruption, economic melt-down and the harsh Russian climate in his quest to build the ice-rink and bring a lost sister home? And will he finally forgive himself for breaking the promise to his mother?

A story of love, loss and broken promises. Gorgito's story, told through the eyes of the people whose lives he touched.
Purchase Links
Kindle universal link: https://geni.us/3OHR
Until 14th October, Gorgito’s Ice Rink is only 99 p/c
 in all territories.



Excerpt 3: Nikolevsky, June 1995




Context: Hospitality is a big part of life in Russia, even when the visitors are working. In this scene, Emma and her team have just completed a successful visit to the factory they are helping to build. Gorgito throws a party for them, before they head back to UK.

By the time the roomful of people reached the main course, inhibitions were starting to melt. Fuelled by vodka and laughter, everyone was less interested in eating than in dancing and having fun. This didn’t surprise Emma. Ron had told her of half-eaten meals going cold on many a restaurant table. Tonight there was no live music but they were using an old gramophone, dragged down from Gorgito’s apartment on the top floor of the administration building.
The style of dancing was new to Emma and Helen, who were more used to jigging around their handbags. They were introduced to the waltz, the foxtrot and even the tango. They barely sat down at all. Each time one partner stepped away with a bow and a smile, another was waiting to take his place. Just when Emma thought her legs wouldn’t hold her any longer, someone started to sing and people gradually sat down to listen. One by one or in little groups, they all did their party pieces.
Gorgito sang a passionate Georgian folk-song. The two women from the Ministry of Health—who had arrived unexpectedly two days before—shed their stern countenances and delivered a soulful version of Midnight in Moscow which had half the room in tears. Emma knew it would be her turn soon. She couldn’t sing and she didn’t feel reciting Ode to a Nightingale would really cut it. In the past two weeks they’d made friends and learned something of the local culture at the same time. Now she wanted to bring a little of the spirit of England to this isolated spot in the forest. So when the party had been going for more than three hours, Emma decided to teach the Russians the hokey-cokey.
Jumping up, she grabbed the hands of the two people sitting nearest to her and dragged them towards the centre of the room. Telling them to wait there for her, she went over to a small group by the bar and gestured for them to join her.
‘Okay, stand in a line and join hands,’ she called. ‘You put your left leg in.’ Emma matched her words with actions. The roomful of Russians looked bemused but quickly caught on. Soon everyone was waving their arms and legs around enthusiastically.
It seemed a good way to end the party. As the evening started to wind down, some of the Russians were heading for the door. Charlie sat in the corner with a smile on his face and one of the packing girls on his lap. Emma had never seen him talk to any of the girls about anything other than tablet machines—and certainly not without an interpreter. Emma didn’t think they were talking business now.






Author Bio – When Elizabeth Ducie had been working in the international pharmaceutical industry for nearly thirty years, she decided she’d like to take a break from technical writing—text books, articles and training modules—and write for fun instead. She started by writing travel pieces, but soon discovered she was happier, and more successful, writing fiction. In 2012, she gave up the day job, and started writing full-time. She has published four novels, three collections of short stories and a series of manuals on business skills for writers.
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