I can't give you a definitive answer since it probably would have depended on how many Cyrillic keyboards Remington was selling at the time. The type slugs may have been outsourced, so it might have been easier for Remington to keep a small stock - either of the special slugs or completed machines. Then again, there might have been other ordering options such as a Cyrillic keyboard with a choice of specific characters. In that case it would make more sense that they were made to order.
I would never describe it as rare (it's a very overused term in typewriter circles). Is it less common than a Remington 10 with a QWERTY keyboard? Absolutely, but I'm sure there are still plenty of Cyrillic models kicking around - enough at least that they wouldn't be considered rare. Value, when it comes to typewriters, is dependent on the buyer. I wouldn't pay a penny more for a Cyrillic keyboard, mostly because I don't have use for one, and if two Remington 10s were sitting side-by-side, identically priced, one with a Cyrillic keyboard and the other with a QWERTY, I would buy the QWERTY machine.
Of course there are a few collectors - not many that I've come across - who collect keyboards and typefaces, and it's possible that such a person might pay more for such a machine. My point is that you're not sitting on a gold mine, and what's it truly worth is what you'd be willing to pay for it, or sell it for.