a   quarter of  the way around  the world.  To  get there   in  1969    would   have
meant   two to  three   weeks   on  the Trans-Siberian, the tracks  unspooling
into    the future  with    agonizing   slowness    like    a   real-time   progression of
Eurasian    conquest    and collapse.   Khabarovsk  is  situated    at  a   strategic   bend
in  the Amur    River,  less    than    ten miles   from    its confluence  with    the Ussuri
and the Chinese frontier.   One hundred and fifty   miles   to  the south,  just
over    the Primorye    border, lies    the Bikin   valley  and the site    of  Sobolonye,
a   village that    did not exist   when    Markov  first   arrived in  the region.
The magnitude   of  such    a   move    for a   provincial  like    Markov  cannot  be
underestimated. Beyond  the language,   nothing would   have    been    the same,
and many    of  his new acquaintances   would   have    been    outcasts    of  one kind
or   another.    There   was     no  tradition   of  serfdom     in  the     Far     East    and,
historically,    the     region  has     been    a   haven   for     a   multiethnic     rabble  of
bandits,    deserters,  poachers,   fur trappers,   and persecuted  Old Believers   (a
conservative     branch  of  Orthodox    Christians),    all     of  whom    favored
voluntary   banishment  over    a   wide    range   of  unappealing alternatives.   Add
to  this    the exile   population—both Russian and Chinese,    and the Cossack
soldiers    sent    by  the czar    to  settle  and guard   this    new frontier—and    the
results become  uniquely    volatile,   more    crucible    than    melting pot.
Today,   the     Bikin   valley  is  seen    by  many    outsiders   as  a   place   as
dangerous   for its human   inhabitants as  it  is  for its animals.    It  is  dotted
with    small,  isolated    villages,   many    of  which   operate off the grid    and
outside the law.    To  a   pair    of  foreign journalists,    a   friend  of  Markov’s
once     exclaimed,  “You    came    here    alone?^4   Aren’t   you     afraid?     Usually,
outsiders   only    come    in  big delegations.”
Evidence    suggests    that    Markov  found   this    environment more    liberating
than    frightening and,    in  Soviet  Russia, liberty was a   rare    thing.  In  any
case,   Markov  adapted and,    ultimately, adopted this    frontier    as  his home,
and  it  may     have    been    thanks  to  the     army.  According    to  friends     and
neighbors,   Markov  was     trained     in  reconnaissance,     and     these   skills—
wilderness   survival,   orienteering,   stealth,    and     the     handling    of  arms—
would   serve   him well    in  ways    he  never   anticipated.    Denis   Burukhin,   a
young    trapper     from    Sobolonye   who     knew    Markov  as  Uncle   Vova    (a
