Yakutsk was almost pleasant after the barges, and the remaining weeks of
the summer passed without incident. Prison regulations, owing to the
remoteness of the settlement, were lax enough, and A.J. made several
acquaintances. One of them, an educated exile who had been allowed to set up
as a boot-repairer, had even heard of Russkoe Yansk. It was on the Indigirka
river, he thought, well beyond the Arctic Circle. It could only be a very
small settlement and it was years since he had heard of anyone being sent
there. “Perhaps they have made a mistake,” he hazarded, with
dispassionate cheerfulness. “Or perhaps the place does not exist at all
and they will have to bring you back. That