<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</h2></div>
<p class="caption3">NEW TRAVELS ON AN OLD TRAIL</p>
<p>The winter of 1918-19 we spent in and out of one
of the most interesting cities in the world. Peking,
with its background of history made vividly real by
its splendid walls, its age-old temples and its mysterious
Forbidden City, has a personality of its own.</p>
<p>When we had been away for a month or two there
was always a delightful feeling of anticipation in returning
to the city itself and to our friends in its cosmopolitan
community.</p>
<p>Moreover, at our house in Wu Liang Tajen Hutung,
a baby boy and his devoted nurse were waiting to receive
us. Even at two years the extraordinary facility
with which he discovered frogs and bugs, which, quite
unknown to us, dwelt in the flower-filled courtyard,
showed the hereditary instincts of a born explorer.</p>
<p>That winter gave us an opportunity to see much of
ancient China, for we visited Shantung, traveled
straight across the Provinces of Honan and Hupeh,
and wandered about the mountains of Che-kiang on a
serow hunt.</p>
<p>In February the equipment for our summer's work
in Mongolia was on its way across the desert by caravan.
We had sent flour, bacon, coffee, tea, sugar, butter
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">- 39 -</span>
and dried fruit, for these could be purchased in
Urga only at prohibitive prices. Even then, with
camel charges at fourteen cents a <i>cattie</i> (1<sup>1</sup>/<sub>3</sub> lbs.), a
fifty-pound sack of flour cost us more than six dollars
by the time it reached Urga.</p>
<p>Charles Coltman at Kalgan very kindly relieved me
of all the transportation details. We had seen him
several times in Peking during the winter, and had
planned the trip across the plains to Urga as <i>une belle
excursion</i>.</p>
<p>Mrs. Coltman was going, of course, as were Mr. and
Mrs. "Ted" MacCallie of Tientsin. "Mac" was a famous
Cornell football star whom I knew by reputation
in my own college days. He was to take a complete
Delco electric lighting plant to Urga, with the hope
of installing it in the palace of the "Living God."</p>
<p>A soldier named Owen from the Legation guard
in Peking was to drive the Delco car, and I had two
Chinese taxidermists, Chen and Kang, besides Lü, our
cook and camp boy.</p>
<p>Chen had been loaned to me by Dr. J. G. Andersson,
Mining Adviser to the Chinese Republic, and proved
to be one of the best native collectors whom I have ever
employed. The Coltmans and MacCallies were to stay
only a few days in Urga, but they helped to make the
trip across Mongolia one of the most delightful parts
of our glorious summer.</p>
<p>We left Kalgan on May 17. Mac, Owen, and I rode
the forty miles to Hei-ma-hou on horseback while
Charles drove a motor occupied by the three women.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">- 40 -</span>
There is a circuitous route by which cars can cross the
pass under their own power, but Coltman preferred the
direct road and sent four mules to tow the automobile
up the mountains to the edge of the plateau.</p>
<p>It was the same trail I had followed the previous
September. Then, as I stood on the summit of the
pass gazing back across the far, dim hills, my heart
was sad for I was about to enter a new land alone.
My "best assistant" was on the ocean coming as fast as
steam could carry her to join me in Peking. I wondered
if Fate's decree would bring us here together that
we might both have, as a precious heritage for future
years, the memories of this strange land of romance
and of mystery. Now the dream had been fulfilled and
never have I entered a new country with greater hopes
of what it would bring to me. Never, too, have such
hopes been more gloriously realized.</p>
<p>We packed the cars that night and at half past five
the next morning were on the road. The sky was gray
and cloud-hung, but by ten o'clock the sun burned out
and we gradually emerged from the fur robes in which
we had been buried.</p>
<p>Instead of the fields of ripening grain which in the
previous autumn had spread the hills with a flowing
golden carpet, we saw blue-clad Chinese farmers turning
long brown furrows with homemade plows. The
trees about the mission station had just begun to show
a tinge of green—the first sign of awakening at the
touch of spring from the long winter sleep. Already
caravans were astir, and we passed lines of laden camels
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">- 41 -</span>
now almost at the end of the long journey from Outer
Mongolia, whither we were bound. But, instead of
splendid beasts with upstanding humps and full neck
beards, the camels now were pathetic mountains of almost
naked skin on which the winter hair hung in ragged
patches. The humps were loose and flat and flapped
disconsolately as the great bodies lurched along the
trail.</p>
<p>When we passed one caravan a <i>débonnaire</i> old Mongol
wearing a derby hat swung out of line and
signaled us to stop. After an appraising glance at
the car he smiled broadly and indicated that he would
like to race. In a moment he was off yelling at the top
of his lungs and belaboring the bony sides of his camel
with feet and hands. The animal's ungainly legs
swung like a windmill in every direction it seemed, except
forward, and yet the Mongol managed to keep his
rolling old "ship of the desert" abreast of us for several
minutes. Finally we let him win the race, and
his look of delight was worth going far to see as he
waved us good-by and with a hearty "<i>sai-bei-nah</i>" loped
slowly back to the caravan.</p>
<p>The road was much better than it had been the previous
fall. During the winter the constant tramp of
padded feet had worn down and filled the ruts which
had been cut by the summer traffic of spike-wheeled
carts. But the camels had almost finished their winter's
work. In a few weeks they would leave the trail to ox
and pony caravans and spend the hot months in idleness,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">- 42 -</span>
storing quantities of fat in their great hump reservoirs.</p>
<p>There was even more bird life than I had seen the
previous September. The geese had all flown northward
where we would find them scattered over their
summer breeding grounds, but thousands of demoiselle
cranes (<i>Anthropoides virgo</i>) had taken their places in
the fields. They were in the midst of the spring courting
and seemed to have lost all fear. One pair remained
beside the road until we were less than twenty
feet away, stepping daintily aside only when we threatened
to run them down. Another splendid male performed
a love dance for the benefit of his prospective
bride quite undisturbed by the presence of our cars.
With half-spread wings he whirled and leaped about
the lady while every feather on her slim, blue body expressed
infinite boredom and indifference to his passionate
appeal.</p>
<p>Ruddy sheldrakes, mallards, shoveler ducks, and teal
were in even the smallest ponds and avocets with sky-blue
legs and slender recurved bills ran along the shores
of a lake at which we stopped for tiffin. When we
had passed the last Chinese village and were well in
the Mongolian grasslands we had great fun shooting
gophers (<i>Citellus mongolicus umbratus</i>) from the cars.
It was by no means easy to kill them before they slipped
into their dens, and I often had to burrow like a terrier
to pull them out even when they were almost dead.</p>
<p>We got eighteen, and camped at half past four in
order that the taxidermists might have time to prepare
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">- 43 -</span>
the skins. There was a hint of rain in the air and we
pitched the tent for emergencies, although none of us
wished to sleep inside. Mac suggested that we utilize
the electric light plant even if we were on the
Mongolian plains. In half an hour he had installed
wires in the tent and placed an arc lamp on the summit
of a pole. It was an extraordinary experience to see
the canvas walls about us, to hear the mournful wail of
a lone wolf outside, and yet be able to turn the switch
of an electric light as though we were in the city. No
arc lamp on Fifth Avenue blazed more brightly than
did this one on the edge of the Gobi Desert where none
of its kind had ever shone before. With the motor
cars which had stolen the sanctity of the plains it was
only another evidence of the passing of Mongolian mystery.</p>
<p>Usually when we camped we could see, almost immediately,
the silhouettes of approaching Mongols black
against the evening sky. Where they came from we
could never guess. For miles there might not have
been the trace of a human being, but suddenly they
would appear as though from out the earth itself. Perhaps
they had been riding along some distant ridge
far beyond the range of white men's eyes, or the roar
of a motor had carried to their ears across the miles of
plain; or perhaps it was that unknown sense, which
seems to have been developed in these children of the
desert, which directs them unerringly to water, to a lost
horse, or to others of their kind. Be it what it may,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">- 44 -</span>
almost every night the Mongols came loping into camp
on their hardy, little ponies.</p>
<p>But this evening, when we had prepared an especial
celebration, the audience did not arrive. It was a bitter
disappointment, for we were consumed with curiosity
to know what effect the blazing arc would have
upon the Mongolian stoics. We could not believe that
natives had not seen the light but probably they
thought it was some spirit manifestation which was to
be avoided. An hour after we were snuggled in our
fur sleeping bags, two Mongols rode into camp, but
we were too sleepy to give an exhibition of the fire-works.</p>
<p>We reached Panj-kiang about noon of the second
day and found that a large mud house and a spacious
compound had been erected beside the telegraph station
by the Chinese company which was endeavoring
to maintain a passenger service between Kalgan and
Urga. The Chinese government also had invaded the
field and was sending automobiles regularly to the
Mongolian capital as a branch service of the Peking-Suiyuan
railroad. In the previous September we had
passed half a dozen of their motors in charge of a foreign
representative of Messrs. Jardine, Matheson and
Co. of Shanghai from whom the cars were purchased.
He discovered immediately that the difficulties which
the Chinese had encountered were largely the result of
incompetent chauffeurs.</p>
<p>We had kept a sharp lookout for antelope, but saw
nothing except a fox which looked so huge in the clear
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">- 45 -</span>
air that all of us were certain it was a wolf. There
are always antelope on the Panj-kiang plain, however,
and we loaded the magazines of our rifles as soon as
we left the telegraph station. I was having a bit of
sport with an immense flock of golden plover (<i>Pluvialis
dominicus fulvus</i>) when the people in the cars signaled
me to return, for a fine antelope buck was standing
only a few hundred yards from the road. The ground
was as smooth and hard as an asphalt pavement and
we skimmed along at forty miles an hour. When the
animal had definitely made up its mind to cross in front
of us, Charles gave the accelerator a real push and the
car jumped to a speed of forty-eight miles. The antelope
was doing his level best to "cross our bows" but
he was too far away, and for a few moments it seemed
that we would surely crash into him if he held his course.
It was a great race. Yvette had a death grip on my
coat, for I was sitting half over the edge of the car
ready to jump when Charles threw on the brakes.
With any one but Coltman at the wheel I would have
been too nervous to enjoy the ride, but we all had confidence
in his superb driving.</p>
<p>The buck crossed the road not forty yards in front
of us, just at the summit of a tiny hill. Charles and
I both fired once, and the antelope turned half over in
a whirl of dust. It disappeared behind the hill crest
and we expected to find it dead on the other side, but
the slope was empty and even with our glasses we could
not discover a sign of life on the plain, which stretched
away to the horizon apparently as level as a floor. It
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">- 46 -</span>
had been swallowed utterly as though by the magic
pocket of a conjurer.</p>
<p>Mac had not participated in the fun, for it had
been a one-man race. Fifteen minutes later, however,
we had a "free for all" which gave him his initiation.</p>
<p>An extract from Yvette's "Journal" gives her impression
of the chase:</p>
<p>"Some one pointed out the distant, moving specks
on the horizon and in a moment our car had left the
road and started over the plains. Nearer and nearer
we came, and faster and faster ran the antelope stringing
out in a long, yellow line before us. The speedometer
was moving up and up, thirty miles, thirty-five
miles. Roy was sitting on the edge of the car with his
legs hanging out, rifle in hand, ready to swing to the
ground as soon as the car halted. Mr. Coltman, who
was driving, had already thrown on the brakes, but
Roy, thinking in his excitement that he had stopped,
jumped—and jumped too soon. The speed at which
we were going threw him violently to the ground. I
hardly dared look to see what had happened but somehow
he turned a complete somersault, landed on his
knees, and instantly began shooting. Mr. Coltman, his
hands trembling with the exertion of the drive, opened
fire across the wind shield. As the first reports crashed
out, the antelope, which had seemed to be flying before,
flattened out and literally skimmed over the plain.
Half a dozen bullets struck behind the herd, then as
Roy's rifle cracked again, one of those tiny specks
dropped to the ground.</p>
<div class="tdr" >PLATE IV</div>
<table summary="Plate">
<tr>
<td colspan="2">
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/plate_iva.png" width-obs="692" height-obs="457" alt="" /> <div class="caption4">THE WATER CARRIER FOR A CARAVAN</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/plate_ivb.png" width-obs="313" height-obs="451" alt="" /> <div class="caption4">A THIRTY-FIVE POUND BUZZARD</div>
</div>
</td><td>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/plate_ivc.png" width-obs="312" height-obs="450" alt="" /> <div class="caption4">YOUNG MONGOLIA</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">- 47 -</span></p>
<p>"If was a wonderful shot—four hundred and twenty
yards measured distance. No, this isn't a woman's inaccuracy
of figures, it's a fact. But then you must remember
the extraordinary clearness of the air in Mongolia,
where every object appears to be magnified half
a dozen times. The brilliant atmosphere is one of the
most bewildering things of the desert. Once we
thought we saw an antelope grazing on the hillside
and Mr. Coltman remarked disdainfully: 'Pooh, that's
a horse.' But the laugh was on him for as we drew
near the 'horse' proved to be only a bleached bone. At
a short distance camels and ponies stood out as though
cut in steel, seeming as high as a village church steeple;
and, most ridiculous of all, my husband mistook me
once at a long, long distance for a telegraph pole!
Tartarin de Tarascon would have had some wonderful
stories to tell of Mongolia!"</p>
<p>We had hardly reached the road again before Mrs.
Coltman discovered a great herd of antelope on the
slope of a low hill, and when the cars carried us over
the crest we could see animals in every direction, feeding
in pairs or in groups of ten to forty.</p>
<p>We all agreed that no better place could be found
at which to obtain motion pictures and camp was made
forthwith. Unfortunately, the gazelles were shedding
their winter coats and the skins were useless except for
study; however, I did need half a dozen skeletons, so
the animals we killed would not be wasted.</p>
<p>It was four o'clock in the afternoon when the tents
were up and too late to take pictures; therefore, the
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">- 48 -</span>
photography was postponed until the next day, and
we ran over toward a herd of antelope which was
just visible on the sky line. When each of us had killed
an animal, the opinion was unanimous that we had
enough. I got mine on the first chase and thenceforth
employed my time in making observations on the antelope's
speed.</p>
<p>Time after time the car reached forty miles an hour,
but with an even start the gazelles could swing about
in front and "cross our bows." One of the antelope
had a front leg broken just below the knee, and gave
us a hard chase with the car going at thirty-five miles
an hour. I estimated that even in its crippled condition
the animal was traveling at a rate of <i>not less than
twenty-five miles an hour</i>.</p>
<p>My field notes tell of a similar experience with the
last gazelle which Mac killed late in the afternoon.
"... We ran toward another group of antelope standing
on the summit of a long land swell. There were
fourteen in this herd and as the car neared them they
trotted about with heads up, evidently trying to decide
what species of plains animal we represented. The
sun had just set, and I shall never forget the picture
which they made, their graceful figures showing in
black silhouettes against the rose glow of the evening
sky. There was one buck among them and they
seemed very nervous. When the men leaped out to
shoot we were fully two hundred and fifty yards
away, but at his third shot Mac dropped the buck.
It was up again and off before the motor started in
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">- 49 -</span>
pursuit and, although running apart from the herd, it
was only a short distance behind the others. Evidently
the right foreleg was broken but with the car traveling
at twenty-five miles an hour it was still drawing ahead.
The going was not good and we ran for two miles without
gaining an inch; then we came to a bit of smooth
plain and the motor shot ahead at thirty-five miles an
hour. We gained slowly and, when about one hundred
yards away, I leaped out and fired at the animal breaking
the other foreleg low down on the left side. Even
with two legs injured it still traveled at a rate of fifteen
miles, and a third shot was required to finish the unfortunate
business. We found that both limbs were broken
below the knee, and that the animal had been running
on the stumps."</p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">- 50 -</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />