 CHAPTER XII THE INHABITANTS OF URIANHAI, THE SOYOTS, ARE PROUD OF BEING THE GENUIM BOOTISTS and of retaining the pure doctrine of Holy Rama and the deep wisdom of Sakya-moni. They are the eternal enemies of war and of the shedding of blood. A way back in the thirteenth century they preferred to move out from their native land and take refuge in the north rather than fight or become a part of the empire of the bloody conqueror, Genghis Khan, who wanted to add to his forces these wonderful horsemen in skilled archers. Three times in their history they have thus trekked northward to avoid struggle, and now know what can say that on the hands of the soyots there has ever been seen human blood. With their love of peace they struggled against the evils of war. Even the severe Chinese administrators could not apply here, in this country of peace, the full measures of their implacable laws. In the same manner the soyots conducted themselves when the Russian people, mad with blood and crime, brought this infection into their land. They avoided persistently meetings and encounters with the red troops and partisans trekking off with their families and cattle southward into the distant principalities of Kemchik and Soljak. The eastern branch of this stream of emigration passed through the valley of the Buret High, where we constantly outstrowed groups of them with their cattle and herds. We travelled quickly along the winding trail of the Buret High, and in two days began to make the elevations of the mountain pass between the valleys of the Buret High and Karga. The trail was not only very steep, but was also littered with fallen larch trees, and frequently intercepted, incredible as it may seem, with swampy places where the horses mired badly. Then again we picked our dangerous road over cobbles and small stones that rolled away under our horses feet and bumped off over the precipice nearby. Our horses fatigued easily in passing this moraine that had been strewn by ancient glaciers along the mountain sides. Sometimes the trail led right along the edge of the precipices where the horses started great slides of stones and sand. I remember one whole mountain covered with these moving sands. We had to leave our saddles and, taking the bridles in our hands, to trot for a mile or more over these sliding beds, sometimes sinking in up to our knees and going down the mountain side with them toward the precipices below. One imprudent move at times would have sent us over the brink. This destiny met one of our horses. Belly down in the moving trap he could not work free to change his direction, and so slipped on down with a mass of it until he rolled over the precipice and was lost to us forever. We heard only the crackling of breaking trees along his road to death. Then with great difficulty we worked down to salvage the saddle and bags. Further along we had to abandon one of our pack-horses which had come all the way from the northern border of Yuryanhai with us. We first unburdened it, but this did not help. No more did our shouting in threats. He only stood with his head down and looked so exhausted that we realized he had reached the further borne of his land of toil. Some soyats with us examined him, felt of his muscles on the fore and hind legs, took his head in their hands and moved it from side to side, examined his head carefully after that and then said, That horse will not go further. His brain is dried out. So we had to leave him. That evening we came to a beautiful change in scene when we topped a rise and found ourselves on a broad plateau covered with larch. On it we discovered the yurtas of some soyaet hunters, covered with bark instead of the usual felt. Out of these ten men with rifles rushed toward us as we approached. They informed us that the Prince of Soljak did not allow anyone to pass this way, as he feared the coming of murderers and robbers into his dominions. Go back to the place from which you came. They advised us with fear in their eyes. I did not answer, but I stopped the beginnings of a quarrel between an old soyaet and one of my officers. I pointed to the small stream in the valley ahead of us and asked him its name. Oina! replied the soyaet. It is the border of the principality and the passage of it is forbidden. All right, I said, but you will allow us to warm and rest ourselves a little. Yes, yes! exclaimed the hospitable soyaets and led us into their teepees. On our way there I took the opportunity to hand to the old soyaet a cigarette and to another a box of matches. We were all walking along together save one soyaet who limped slowly in the rear and was holding his hand up over his nose. Is he ill? I asked. Yes, sadly answered the old soyaet. That is my son. He has been losing blood from the nose for two days and is now quite weak. I stopped and called the young man to me. Unbutton your outer coat, I ordered. Bear your neck and chest and turn your face up as far as you can. I pressed the jugular vein on both sides of his head for some minutes and said to him, The blood will not flow from your nose any more. Go into your teepee and lie down for some time. The mysterious action of my fingers created on the soyaets a strong impression. The old soyaet with fear and reverence whispered, Talama! Talama! Great doctor! In the yurta we were given tea while the old soyaet sat thinking deeply about something. Afterwards he took counsel with his companions and finally announced, The wife of our prince is sick in her eyes and I think the prince will be very glad if I lead the talama to him. He will not punish me, for he ordered that no bad people should be allowed to pass, but that should not stop the good people from coming to us. Do as you think best, I replied rather indifferently. As a matter of fact, I know how to treat eye diseases but I would go back if you say so. No, no! the old man exclaimed with fear. I shall guide you myself. Sitting by the fire he lighted his pipe with a flint, wiped the mouthpiece on his sleeve and offered it to me in true native hospitality. I was kamil foe and smoked. Afterwards he offered his pipe to each one of our company and received from each a cigarette, a little tobacco or some matches. It was the seal on our friendship. Soon in our yurta many persons piled up around us, men, women, children, and dogs. It was impossible to move. From among them emerged a lama with shaved face and close cropped hair, dressed in the flowing red garment of his cast. His clothes and his expression were very different from the common mass of dirty soyots, with their cues and felt caps, finished off with squirrel tails on the top. The lama was very kindly disposed towards us but looked ever greedily at our gold rings and watches. I decided to exploit this avidity of the servant of Buddha. Supplying him with tea and dried bread I made known to him that I was in need of horses. I have a horse. Will you buy it from me? he asked. But I do not accept Russian bank notes. Let us exchange something. For a long time I bargained with him, and at last, for my gold wedding ring, a raincoat, and a leather saddle-bag, I received a fine soyote horse to replace one of the pack animals we had lost, and a young goat. We spent the night here and were feasted with fat mutton. In the morning we moved off under the guidance of the old soyote along the trail that followed the valley of the Oina, free from both mountains and swamps. But we knew that the mounts of my friend and myself, together with three others, were too worn down to make Kossagal and determined to try to buy others in Soljak. Soon we began to meet little groups of soyote yurtas with their cattle and horses round about. Finally we approached the shifting capital of the prince. Our guide rode on ahead for the parley with him after assuring us that the prince would be glad to welcome the talama, though at the time I remarked great anxiety and fear in his features as he spoke. Before long we emerged on to a large plain well covered with small bushes. Down by the shore of the river we made out big yurtas with yellow and blue flags floating over them, and easily guessed that this was the seat of government. Soon our guide returned to us. His face was wreathed with smiles. He flourished his hands and cried, Noyan, the prince, as you to come, he is very glad. From a warrior I was forced to change myself into a diplomat. As we approached the yurta of the prince we were met by two officials, wearing the peaked mongol caps with peacock feathers rampant behind. With low obeisances they begged the foreign Noyan to enter the yurta. My friend the tartar and I entered. In the rich yurta draped with expensive silk we discovered a feeble, whizzing-faced little old man with shaven face and cropped hair, wearing also a high pointed beaver cap with red silk apex topped off with a dark red button with the long peacock feathers streaming out behind. On his nose were big Chinese spectacles. He was sitting on a low divan, nervously clicking the beads of his rosary. This was Talama, prince of Soljak and high priest of the Buddhist temple. He welcomed us very cordially and invited us to sit down before the fire burning in the copper brazier. His surprisingly beautiful princess served us with tea and Chinese confections and cakes. We smoked our pipes, though the prince as a llama did not indulge. Fulfilling, however, his duty as a host by raising to his lips the pipes we offered him and handing us in return the green nephrite bottle of snuff. Thus with the etiquette accomplished we awaited the words of the prince. He inquired whether our travels had been felicitous and what were our further plans. I talked with him quite frankly and requested his hospitality for the rest of our company and for the horses. He agreed immediately and ordered four yurtas set up for us. I hear that the foreign noyan, the prince said, is a good doctor. Yes, I know some diseases and have with me some medicines, I answered, but I am not a doctor. I am a scientist in other branches. But the prince did not understand this. In his simple directness a man who knows how to treat disease is a doctor. My wife has had constant trouble for two months with her eyes. He announced. Help her! I asked the prince as to show me her eyes and I found the typical conjunctivitis from the continual smoke of the yurta and the general uncleanliness. The tartar brought me my medicine case. I washed her eyes with boric acid and dropped a little cocaine and a feeble solution of sulfurate of zinc into them. I beg you to cure me, pleaded the princess. Do not go away until you have cured me. We shall give you sheep, milk, and flour for all your company. I weep now very often because I had very nice eyes and my husband used to tell me they shone like the stars and now they are red. I cannot bear it. I cannot. She very capriciously stamped her foot and, coquettishly smiling at me, asked, Do you want to cure me? Yes? The character and manners of lovely woman are the same everywhere, on bright broadway along the stately Thames, on the vivacious boulevards of gay Paris, and in the silk-draped yurta of the soya princess behind the large-covered tanu-ola. I shall certainly try, assurantly answered the new oculus. We spent here ten days, surrounded by the kindness and friendship of the whole family of the prince. The eyes of the princess, which eight years ago had seduced the already old prince Lama, were now recovered. She was beside herself with joy and seldom left her looking-glass. The prince gave me five fairly good horses, ten sheep, and a bag of flour, which was immediately transformed into dry bread. My friend presented him with a Romanov five-hundred ruble note with a picture of Peter the Great upon it, while I gave to him a small nugget of gold which I had picked up in the bed of a stream. The prince ordered one of the soyettes to guide us to the cosagal. The whole family of the prince conducted us to the monastery, ten kilometers from the capital. We did not visit the monastery, but we stopped at the Dugun, a Chinese trading establishment. The Chinese merchants looked at us in a very hostile manner, though they simultaneously offered us all sorts of goods, thinking especially to catch us with their round bottles, Lanhan, of Megalo, or sweet brandy made from anise seed. As we had neither lump-silver nor Chinese dollars, we could only look with longing at these attractive bottles till the prince came to the rescue and ordered the Chinese to put five of them in our saddle-bags. CHAPTER XIII. BEASTS, MEN, AND GOD'S By Ferdinand Ossandowski. CHAPTER XIII. MYSTERIES, MIRACLES, AND A NEW FIGHT. In the evening of the same day we arrived at the sacred lake of Terinoor, a sheet of water eight kilometers across, muddy and yellow, with low unattractive shores studded with large holes. In the middle of the lake lay what was left of a disappearing island. On this were a few trees and some old ruins. Our guide explained to us that two centuries ago the lake did not exist, and that a very strong Chinese fortress stood here on the plain. A Chinese chief in command of the fortress gave offense to an old lama who cursed the place and prophesied that it would all be destroyed. The very next day the water began rushing up from the ground, destroyed the fortress and engulfed all the Chinese soldiers. Even to this day when storms rage over the lake the waters cast up on the shores the bones of men and horses who perished in it. This Terinoor increases its size every year, approaching nearer and nearer to the mountains. Skirting the eastern shore of the lake we began to climb a snow-capped ridge. The road was easy at first but the guide warned us that the most difficult bit was there ahead. We reached this point two days later and found there a steep mountain side thickly set with forest and covered with snow. Beyond it lay the lines of eternal snow. Ridges studded with dark rocks setting great banks of the white mantle that gleamed bright under the clear sunshine. These were the eastern and highest branches of the Tanu-Ola system. We spent the night beneath this wood and began the passage of it in the morning. At noon the guide began leading us by zig-zags in and out, but everywhere our trail was blocked by deep ravines, bright jams of fallen trees and walls of rock caught in their mad tobogganings from the mountaintop. We struggled for several hours, wore out our horses and, all of a sudden, turned up at the place where we had made our last halt. It was very evident our soya had lost its way, and on his face I noticed marked fear. The old devils of the cursed forest will not allow us to pass! He whispered, with trembling lips, It is a very ominous sign. We must return to Karga to the Noyan. But I threatened him, and he took the lead again evidently without hope or effort to find the way. Fortunately, one of our party, a Yuryanhai Hunter, noticed the blazes on the trees, the signs of the road which our guide had lost. Following these we made our way through the wood, came into and crossed a belt of burned, large timber, and beyond this dipped again into a small live forest bordering the bottom of the mountains, crowned with the eternal snows. It grew dark so that we had to camp for the night. The wind rose high and carried in its grasp a great white sheet of snow that shut us off from the horizon on every side and buried our camp deep in its folds. Our horses stood round like white ghosts, refusing to eat or to leave the circle round our fire. The wind combed their mains and tails. Through the niches and the mountains it roared and whistled. From somewhere in the distance came the low rumble of a pack of wolves, punctuated at intervals by the sharp individual barking that a favourable gust of wind threw up into high staccato. As we lay by the fire the soya came over to me and said, Noyan, come with me to the oboe. I want to show you something. We went there and began to ascend the mountain. At the bottom of a very steep slope was laid up a large pile of stones and tree trunks, making a cone of some three metres in height. These oboe are the lamayite sacred signs set up at dangerous places, the altars to the bad demons, rulers of these places. Passing soyaats and mongols pay tribute to the spirits by hanging on the branches of the trees and the oboe, Hattik, long streamers of blue silk, shreds torn from the lining of their coats or simply tufts of hair cut from their horse's mains, or by placing on the stones lumps of meat or cups of tea and salt. Look at it! said the soyaat. The Hattiks are torn off. The demons are angry. They will not allow us to pass, Noyan. He caught my hand and with supplicating voice whispered, Let us go back, Noyan. Let us. The demons do not wish us to pass their mountains. For twenty years no one has dared to pass these mountains and all bold men who have tried have perished here. The demons fell upon them with snowstorm and cold. Look! It is beginning already. Go back to our Noyan. Wait for the warmer days, and then—I could not listen further to the soyaat, but turn back to the fire which I could hardly see through the blinding snow. Fearing our guide might run away, I ordered a sentry to be stationed for the night to watch him. Later in the night I was awakened by the sentry who said to me, Maybe I mistake him, but I think I heard a rifle. What could I say to it? Maybe some stragglers like ourselves were giving a sign of their whereabouts to their lost companions, or perhaps the sentry had mistaken for a rifle-shot, the sound of some falling rock or frozen ice and snow. Soon I fell asleep again and suddenly saw in a dream a very clear vision. Out on the plain, blanketed deep with snow, was moving a line of riders. They were our pack-horses, our cowmuk and the funny-pied horse with the Roman nose. I saw us descending from the snowy plateau into a fold in the mountains. Here some large trees were growing, close to which girdled a small open brook. Afterwards I noticed a fire burning among the trees, and then woke up. It grew light. I shook up the others and asked them to prepare quickly so as not to lose time in getting under way. The storm was raging. The snow blinded us and blotted out all traces of the road. The cold also became more intense. At last we were in the saddles. The soyote went ahead trying to make out the trail. As we worked higher the guide less seldom lost the way. Frequently we fell into deep holes covered with snow. We scrambled up over slippery rocks. At last the soyote swung his horse round and, coming up to me, announced very positively, I do not want to die with you, and I will not go further. My first motion was the swing of my whip back over my head. I was so close to the promised land of Mongolia that this soyote, standing in the way of fulfillment of my wishes, seemed to me my worst enemy. But I lowered my flourishing hand. Into my head flashed a quite wild thought. Listen, I said. If you move your horses, you will receive a bullet in the back and you will perish not at the top of the mountain but at the bottom. And now I will tell you what will happen to us. When we shall have reached these rocks above, the wind will have ceased and the snowstorm will have subsided. The sun will shine as we cross the snowy plain above, and afterwards we shall descend into a small valley where there are larches growing and a stream of open running water. There we shall light our fires and spend the night. The soyote began to tremble with fright. Noyan has already passed these mountains of dark Hothola! He asked in amazement. No, I answered, but last night I had a vision and I know that we shall fortunately win over this ridge. I will guide you, exclaimed the soyote, and whipping his horse led the way up the steep slope to the top of the ridge of eternal snows. As we were passing along the narrow edge of a precipice, the soyote stopped and attentively examined the trail. Today many shod horses have passed here! He cried through the roar of the storm. Yonder on the snow the lash of a whip has been dragged. These are not soyotes. The solution of this enigma appeared instantly. A volley rang out. One of my companions cried out as he caught hold of his right shoulder. One pack horse fell dead with a bullet behind his ear. We quickly tumbled out of our saddles, lay down behind the rocks and began to study the situation. We were separated from a parallel spur of the mountain by a small valley about one thousand paces across. There we made out about thirty riders already dismounted and firing at us. I had never allowed any fighting to be done until the initiative had been taken by the other side. Our enemy fell upon us unawares, and I ordered my company to answer. AIM AT THE HORSES! cried Colonel Ostrovsky. Then he ordered the tartar and soyote to throw our own animals. We killed six of theirs and probably wounded others as they got out of control. Also our rifles took toll of any bold man who showed his head from behind his rock. We heard the angry shouting and maledictions of red soldiers who shot up our position more and more animatedly. Suddenly I saw our soyote kick up three of the horses and spring into the saddle of one with the others in leash behind. Behind him sprang up the tartar and the calmok. I had already drawn my rifle on the soyote, but as soon as I saw the tartar and calmok on their lovely horses behind him I dropped my gun and knew all was well. The reds led off a valley at the trio, but they made good their escape behind the rocks and disappeared. The firing continued more and more lively, and I did not know what to do. From our side we shot rarely, saving our cartridges. Watching carefully the enemy, I noticed two black points on the snow high above the reds. They slowly approached our antagonists and finally were hidden from view behind some sharp hillocks. When they emerged from these they were right on the edge of some overhanging rocks at the foot of which the reds lay concealed from us. By this time I had no doubt that these were the heads of two men. Suddenly these men rose up and I watched them flourish and throw something that was followed by two deafening roars which re-echoed across the mountain valley. Immediately a third explosion was followed by wild shouts and disorderly firing among the reds. Some of the horses rolled down the slope into the snow below, and the soldiers, chased by our shots, made off as fast as they could down into the valley out of which we had come. Afterward the charter told me the soya had proposed to guide them around behind the reds to fall upon their rear with the bombs. When I had bound up the wounded shoulder of the officer and we had taken the pack off the killed animal, we continued our journey. Our position was complicated. We had no doubt that the red detachment came up from Mongolia. Therefore, were there red troops in Mongolia? What was their strength? Where might we meet them? Consequently Mongolia was no more the promised land. Very sad thoughts took possession of us. But nature pleased us. The wind gradually fell. The storm ceased. The sun more and more frequently broke through the scutting clouds. We were travelling upon a high, snow-covered plateau, where in one place the wind blew it clean, and in another piled it high with drifts which caught our horses and held them so that they could hardly extricate themselves at times. We had to dismount and wade through the white piles up to our wastes, and often a man or horse was down and had to be helped to his feet. At last the descent began, and at sunset we stopped in the small, large grove, spent the night at the fire among the trees, and drank the tea boiled in the water carried from the open mountain brook. In various places we came across the tracks of our recent antagonists. Everything, even nature herself and the angry demons of Dark Hothola, had helped us. But we were not gay, because again before us lay the dread uncertainty that threatened us with new and possibly destructive dangers. CHAPTER XIV The River of the Devil Ulan Taiga with Dark Hothola lay behind us. We went forward very rapidly because the Mongol plains began here, free from the impediments of mountains. Everywhere splendid grazing lands stretched away. In places there were groves of larch. We crossed some very rapid streams, but they were not deep, and they had hard beds. After two days of travel over the Dark Hoth plain, we began meeting soyots, driving their cattle rapidly toward the northwest into Ogarka-Ola. They communicated to us very unpleasant news. The Bolsheviki from the Irkutsk district had crossed the Mongolian border, captured the Russian colony at Kathil on the southern shore of Lake Kosogol, and turned, off south toward Murenkure, a Russian settlement beside a big Lamayite monastery sixty miles south of Kosogol. The Mongols told us there were no Russian troops between Kathil and Murenkure, so we decided to pass between these two points to reach Vankure farther to the east. We took leave of our soyot guide, and after having sent three scouts in advance, moved forward. From the mountains around the Kosogol we admired the splendid view of this broad alpine lake. It was set like a sapphire in the old gold of the surrounding hills, chased with lovely bits of rich dark forestry. At night we approached Kathil with great precaution and stopped on the shore of the river that flows from Kosogol, the Yaga, or Inkingol. We found a Mongol who agreed to transport us to the other bank of the frozen stream, and to lead us by a safe row between Kathil and Murenkure. Everywhere along the shore of the river were found large opo and small shrines to the demons of the stream. Why are there so many obo? we asked the Mongol. It is the river of the devil, dangerous and crafty. Replied the Mongol. Two days ago a train of carts went through the ice, and three of them with five soldiers were lost. We started to cross. The surface of the river resembled a thick piece of looking-glass, being clear and without snow. Our horses walked very carefully, but some fell and floundered before they could regain their feet. We were leading them by the bridle. With bowed heads and trembling all over, they kept their frightened eyes ever on the ice at their feet. I looked down and understood their fear. Through the cover of one foot of transparent ice one could clearly see the bottom of the river. Under the lighting of the moon all the stones, the holes, and even some of the grasses were distinctly visible, even though the depth was ten meters and more. The yaga rushed under the ice with a furious speed, swirling and marking its course with long bands of foam and bubbles. Suddenly I jumped and stopped as though fastened to the spot. Along the surface of the river ran the boom of a cannon, followed by a second and a third. Quicker, quicker! cried our Mongol, waving us forward with his hand. Another cannon boom and a crack ran right close to us. The horses swung back on their haunches in protest, reared and fell, many of them striking their heads severely on the ice. In a second it opened up two feet wide, so that I could follow its jagged course along the surface. Immediately up out of the opening the water spread over the ice with a rush. Hurry! Hurry! shouted the guide. With great difficulty we forced our horses to jump over this cleavage and to continue on further. They trembled and disobeyed and only this strong lash forced them to forget this panic of fear and go on. When we were safe on the farther back and well into the woods, our Mongol guide recounted to us how the river at times opens in this mysterious way and leaves great areas of clear water. All the men and animals on the river at such times must perish. The furious current of cold water will always carry them down under the ice. At other times a crack has been known to pass right under a horse, and where he fell in with his front feet in the attempt to get back to the other side, the crack has closed up and ground his legs or feet right off. The valley of Kosigal is the crater of an extinct volcano. Its outlines may be followed from the high west shore of the lake. However the plutonic force still acts, and, asserting the glory of the devil, forces the Mongols to build oboe and offer sacrifices at his shrines. We spent all the night and all the next day hurrying away eastward to avoid a meeting with the Reds and seeking good passage for our horses. At about nine o'clock in the evening a fire shone out of the distance. My friend and I made toward it with the feeling that it was surely a mongol yurta beside which we could camp in safety. We traveled over a mile before making out distinctly the lines of a group of yurtas. But nobody came out to meet us, and what astonished us more we were not surrounded by the angry black Mongolian dogs with fiery eyes. Still, from the distance we had seen the fire and so there must be someone there. We dismounted from our horses and approached on foot. From out of the yurta two Russian soldiers, one of whom shot at me with his pistol but missed me, and wounded my horse in the back through the saddle. I brought him to earth with my Mauser, and the other was killed by the butt end of my friend's rifle. We examined the bodies and found in their pockets the papers of soldiers of the Second Squadron of the Communist Interior Defense. Here we spent the night. The owners of the yurtas had evidently run away, for the Red Soldiers had collected and packed in sacks the property of the Mongols. Probably they were just planning to leave as they were fully dressed. We acquired two horses, which we found in the bushes, two rifles and two automatic pistols with cartridges. In the saddlebags we also found tea, tobacco, matches, and cartridges. All of these valuable supplies to help us keep further hold on our lives. Two days later we were approaching the shore of the river Uri when we met two Russian riders, who were the Cossacks of a certain Ataman Sutinin, acting against the Bolsheviki in the valley of the river Selengah. They were riding to carry a message from Sutinin to Kalgorodov, chief of the Anti-Bolsheviki in the Altai region. They informed us that along the whole Russian-Mongolian border the Bolshevik troops were scattered. Also that Communist agitators had penetrated to Klatka, Ulan Kom and Khamdo, and had persuaded the Chinese authorities to surrender to the Soviet authorities all the refugees from Russia. We knew that in the neighborhood of Urga and Vankure engagements were taking place between the Chinese troops and the detachments of the Anti- Bolshevik Russian General Baron Ungern Sternberg and Colonel Kazagrandi, who were fighting for the independence of outer Mongolia. Baron Ungern had now been twice defeated, so that the Chinese were carrying on high-handed in Urga, suspecting all foreigners of having relations with the Russian general. We realized that the whole situation was sharply reversed. The route to the Pacific was closed. Reflecting very carefully over the problem, I decided that we had but one possible exit left. We must avoid all Mongolian cities with Chinese administration. Cross Mongolia from north to south. Traverse the desert in the southern part of the principality of Jasaktu Khan. Enter the Gobi in the western part of Inner Mongolia. Strike as rapidly as possible through sixty miles of Chinese territory in the province of Kansu and penetrate into Tibet. Here I hoped to search out one of the English consuls and with his help to reach some English port in India. I understood thoroughly all the difficulties incident to such an enterprise, but I had no other choice. It only remained to make this last foolish attempt or to perish without doubt at the hands of the Bolsheviks or languish in a Chinese prison. When I announced my plan to my companions without in any way hiding from them all its dangers and chaoticism, all of them answered very quickly and shortly, lead us, we will follow. One circumstance was distinctly in our favor. We did not fear hunger, for we had some supplies of tea, tobacco and matches, and a surplus of horses, saddles, rifles, overcoats, and boots, which were an excellent currency for exchange. So then we began to initiate the plan of the new expedition. We should start to the south, leaving the town of Uliasutai on our right and taking the direction of Zangunluk, then pass through the wastelands of the district of Balir of Josaku Khan, cross the Nerankuhu Gobi and strike for the mountains of Borough. Here we should be able to take a long rest to recuperate the strength of our horses and of ourselves. The second section of our journey would be the passage through the western part of Inner Mongolia, through the Little Gobi, through the lands of the Torguts, over the Karam Mountains, across Kansu, where our road must be chosen to the west of the Chinese town of Suqiao. From there we should have to enter the dominion of Kukunor and then work on southward to the headwaters of the Yangtze River. Beyond this I had but a hazy notion, which, however, I was able to verify from a map of Asia in the possession of one of the officers, to the effect that the mountain chains to the west of the sources of the Yangtze divided that river system from the basin of the Brahmaputra in Tibet proper, where I expected to be able to find English assistance. CHAPTER XV In no other way can I describe the journey from the river Eero to the border of Tibet. About eleven hundred miles through the snowy steps, over mountains and across deserts we traveled in forty-eight days. We hid from the people as we journeyed, made short stops in the most desolate places, fed for whole weeks on nothing but raw, frozen meat in order to avoid attracting attention by the smoke of fires. Whenever we needed to purchase a sheep or a steer for our supply department, we sent out only two unarmed men, who represented to the natives that they were the workmen of some Russian columnists. We even feared to shoot, although we met a great herd of antelopes numbering as many as five thousand head. Behind Balir and the lands of the Lama Jassakut Khan, who had inherited his throne as a result of the poisoning of his brother at Urga by order of the living Buddha, we met wandering Russian charters who had driven their herds all the way from Altai and Abakan. They welcomed us very cordially, gave us oxen and thirty-six bricks of tea. Also they saved us from inevitable destruction, for they told us that at this season it was utterly impossible for horses to make the trip across the Gobi, where there was no grass at all. We must buy camels by exchanging for them our horses and some other of our bartering supplies. One of the tarters the next day brought to their camp a rich Mongol with whom he drove the bargain for this trade. He gave us nineteen camels and took all our horses, one rifle, one pistol, and the best Kassak saddle. He advised us by all means to visit the sacred monastery of Narabanshi, the last Lama-ite monastery on the road from Mongolia to Tibet. He told us that the holy Hutuktu, the incarnate Buddha, would be greatly offended if we did not visit the monastery and his famous Shrine of Blessings, where all travellers going to Tibet always offered prayers. Our Kaumuk Lama-ite supported the Mongol in this. I decided to go there with the Kaumuk. The tarters gave me some big silk Hattik as presents and loaned us four splendid horses. Although the monastery was fifty-five miles distant, by nine o'clock in the evening I entered the yurta of this holy Hutuktu. He was a middle-aged, clean-shaven, spare little man, laboring under the name of Jellib Jiramsrap Hutuktu. He received us very cordially and was greatly pleased with the presentation of the Hattik and with my knowledge of the Mongol etiquette in which my charter had been long and persistently instructing me. He listened to me most attentively and gave valuable advice about the road, presenting me then with a ring which has since opened for me the doors of all Lama-ite monasteries. The name of this Hutuktu is highly esteemed not only in all Mongolia but in Tibet and in the Lama-ite world of China. We spent the night in his splendid yurta and on the following morning visited the shrines where they were conducting very solemn services with the music of gongs, tom-toms, and whistling. The Lamas with their deep voices were intoning the prayers while the lesser priests answered with their antiphanies. The sacred phrase, al-m ma-ni pad-me-hung, was endlessly repeated. The Hutuktu wished us success, presented us with a large yellow Hattik and accompanied us to the monastery gate. When we were in our saddles he said, Remember that you are always welcome guests here. Life is very complicated and anything may happen. Perhaps you will be forced in future to revisit distant Mongolia and then do not miss Narabanchikure. That night we returned to the Tartars and the next day continued our journey. As I was very tired, the slow, easy motion of the camel was welcome and restful to me. All the day I dozed off at intervals to sleep. It turned out to be very disastrous for me, for when my camel was going up the steep bank of a river, in one of my naps I fell off and hit my head on a stone, lost consciousness, and woke up to find my overcoat covered with blood. My friends surrounded me with their frightened faces. They bandaged my head and we started off again. I only learned long afterwards from a doctor who examined me that I had cracked my skull as the price of my siesta. We crossed the eastern ranges of the Altai and the Karlik Tag, which are the most oriental sentinels the great Tian Shan system throws out into the regions of the Gobi, and then traversed from the north to the south the entire width of the Kuhu Gobi. Intense cold ruled all this time and fortunately the frozen sands gave us better speed. Before passing the Kara range, we exchanged our rocking chair steeds for horses, a deal in which the torguts skinned us badly like the true old clothesmen they are. Skirting around these mountains we entered Kansu. It was a dangerous move, for the Chinese were arresting all refugees and I feared for my Russian fellow-travelers. During the days we hid in the ravines, the forests and bushes, making forced marches at night. Four days we thus used in this passage of Kansu. The few Chinese peasants we did encounter were peaceful appearing and most hospitable. A marked, sympathetic interest surrounded the Kaomuk, who could speak a bit of Chinese, and my box of medicines. Everywhere we found many ill people, chiefly afflicted with eye troubles, rheumatism, and skin diseases. As we were approaching Nanshan, the northeast branch of the Altintak, which is in turn the east branch of the Pamir and Karakoram system, we overhauled a large caravan of Chinese merchants going to Tibet and join them. For three days we were winding through the endless, ravine-like valleys of these mountains and ascending the high passes. But we noticed that the Chinese knew how to pick the easiest routes for caravans over all these difficult places. In a state of semi-consciousness I made this whole journey toward the large group of swampy lakes, feeding the Kokunor, and a whole network of large rivers. From fatigue and constant nervous strain, probably helped by the blow on my head. I began suffering from sharp attacks of chills and fever, burning up at times, and then chattering so with my teeth that I frightened my horse who several times threw me from the saddle. I raved, cried out at times, and even wept. I called my family and instructed them how they must come to me. I remember as though through a dream, how I was taken from the horse by my companions, laid on the ground, supplied with Chinese brandy, and, when I recovered a little, how they said to me, that Chinese merchants are heading for the west and we must travel south. No, to the north, I replied very sharply. But no, to the south, my companions assured me. God and the devil! I angrily ejaculated. We have just swum the little Yenisei and Algyak is to the north. We are in Tibet, remonstrated my companions. We must reach the Brahmaprutra. Brahmaprutra. Brahmaprutra. This word revolved in my fiery brain, made a terrible noise in commotion. Suddenly I remembered everything and opened my eyes. I hardly moved my lips, and soon I again lost consciousness. My companions brought me to the monastery of Shaky, where the Lama doctor quickly brought me round with a solution of Fatil or Chinese Jinseng. In discussing our plans, he expressed grave doubt as to whether we would get through Tibet, but he did not wish to explain to me the reason for his doubts. A fairly broad road led out from Shaky through the mountains, and on the fifth day of our two weeks' march to the south from the monastery, we emerged into the great bowl of the mountains in whose center lay the large lake of Kokunor. If Finland deserves the ordinary title of the Land of Ten Thousand Lakes, the dominion of Kokunor may certainly with justice be called the Country of a Million Lakes. We have skirted this lake on the west between it and Dulan Kit, zigzagging between the numerous swamps, lakes, and small rivers deep and miry. The water was not here covered with ice, and only on the tops of the mountains did we feel the cold winds sharply. We rarely met the natives of the country, and only with greatest difficulty did our Kaumuk learn the course of the road from the occasional shepherds we passed. From the eastern shore of the lake of Tassun, we worked round to a monastery on the further side, where we stopped for a short rest. Besides ourselves there were also another group of guests in the holy place. These were Tibetans. Their behavior was very impertinent and they refused to speak with us. They were all armed, chiefly with the Russian military rifles, and were draped with crossed bandoliers of cartridges with two or three pistols stowed beneath belts with more cartridges sticking out. They examined us very sharply, and we readily realized that they were estimating our martial strength. After they had left on that same day I ordered our Kaumuk to inquire from the high priest of the temple exactly who they were. For a long time the monk gave evasive answers, but when I showed him the ring of Hutuktu Nerabanshi and presented him with a large yellow hatik, he became more communicative. Those are bad people, he explained. Have a care of them. However he was not willing to give their names, explaining his refusal by citing the law of Buddhist lands against pronouncing the name of one's father, teacher, or chief. Afterwards I found out that in North Tibet there exists the same custom as in North China. Here and there bands of Henghutsi wander about. They appear at the headquarters of the leading trading firms and at the monasteries, claim tribute, and after their collections become the protectors of the district. Probably this Tibetan monastery had in this band just such protectors. When we continued our trip we frequently noticed single horsemen far away or on the horizon, apparently studying our movements with care. All our attempts to approach them and enter into conversation with them were entirely unsuccessful. On their speedy little horses they disappeared like shadows. As we reached the steep and difficult pass on the Hamshan and were preparing to spend the night there, suddenly far up on a ridge above us appeared about forty horsemen with entirely white mounts, and without formal introduction or warning, spattered us with a hail of bullets. Two of our officers fell with a cry. One had been instantly killed while the other lived some few minutes. I did not allow my men to shoot, but instead I raised a white flag and started forward with a kalmak for a parley. At first they fired two shots at us, but then ceased firing and sent down a group of riders from the ridge toward us. We began the parley. The Tibetans explained that Hamshan is a holy mountain and that here one must not spend the night, advising us to proceed farther where we could consider ourselves in safety. They inquired from us once we came and wither we were going, stated in answer to our information about the purpose of our journey that they knew the Bolsheviki and considered them the liberators of the people of Asia from the yoke of the white race. I certainly did not want to begin a political quarrel with them, and so turned back to our companions. Riding down the slope toward our camp I waited momentarily for a shot in the back, but the Tibetan Hunhutsi did not shoot. We moved forward, leaving among the stones the bodies of two of our companions as sad tribute to the difficulties and dangers of our journey. We rode all night, with our exhausted horses constantly stopping and some lying down under us, but we forced them ever onward. At last when the sun was at its zenith we finally halted. Without unsettling our horses we gave them an opportunity to lie down for a little rest. Before us lay a broad swampy plain where was evidently the sources of the river Machu. Not far beyond lay the lake of Arungnur. We made our fire of cattle dung and began boiling water for our tea. Again without any warning the bullets came raining in from all sides. Immediately we took cover behind convenient rocks and weighted developments. The firing became faster and closer. The raiders appeared on the whole circle round us, and the bullets came ever in increasing numbers. We had fallen into a trap and had no hope but to perish. We realized this clearly. I tried anew to begin the parley, but when I stood up with my white flag the answer was only a thicker rain of bullets, and unfortunately one of these ricocheting off a rock struck me in the left leg and lodged there. At the same moment another one of our company was killed. We had no other choice and were forced to begin fighting. The struggle continued for about two hours. Besides myself three others received slight wounds. We resisted as long as we could. The Hunghutzi approached and our situation became desperate. There's no choice, said one of my associates, a very expert Colonel. We must mount and ride for it anywhere. Anywhere. It was a terrible word. We consulted for but an instant. It was apparent that with this band of cutthroats behind us the farther we went into Tibet the less chance we had of saving our lives. We decided to return to Mongolia. But how? That we did not know, and thus we began our retreat. Firing all the time we trotted our horses as fast as we could toward the north. One after another three of my companions fell. There lay my tartar with a bullet through his neck. After him two young and fine stalwart officers were carried from their saddles with cries of death, while their scared horses broke out across the plain in wild fear, perfect pictures of our distraught selves. This emboldened the Tibetans who became more and more audacious. A bullet struck the buckle on the ankle strap of my right foot and carried it with a piece of leather and cloth into my leg just above the ankle. My old and much-tried friend, the agronome, cried out as he grasped his shoulder, and then I saw him wiping and bandaging as best as he could his bleeding forehead. A second afterward our Kalmak was hit twice right through the palm of the same hand so that it was entirely shattered. Just at this moment fifteen of the Hung Hutsi rushed against us in a charge. Shoot at them with volley fire! commanded our colonel. Six robber bodies lay on the turf while two others of the gang were unhorsed and ran scampering as fast as they could after their retreating fellows. Several minutes later the fire of our antagonists seized and they raised a white flag. Two riders came forward toward us. In the parley it developed that their chief had been wounded through the chest and they came to ask us to render first aid. At once I saw a ray of hope. I took my box of medicines and my groaning, cursing, wounded Kalmak to interpret for me. Give that devil some cyanide of potassium. Urge my companions. But I devised another scheme. We were led to the wounded chief. There he lay on the saddle-cloths among the rocks, represented to us to be a Tibetan, but I had once recognized him from the cast of countenance to be a Sart or Turkoman, probably from the southern part of Turkestan. He looked at me with a begging and frightened gaze. Examining him I found the bullet had passed through his chest from left to right, so they had lost much blood and was very weak. Conscientiously I did all that I could for him. In the first place I tried all my own tongue all the medicines to be used on him, even the iota form, in order to demonstrate that there was no poison among them. I cauterized the wound with iodine, sprinkled it with iota form, and applied the bandages. I ordered that the wounded man be not touched nor moved and that he be left right where he lay. Then I taught a Tibetan how the dressing must be changed and left with him medicated cotton, bandages, and a little iota form. To the patient, in whom the fever was already developing, I gave a big dose of aspirin and left several tablets of quinine with them. Afterwards, addressing myself to the bystanders through my kalmok, I said very solemnly, The wound is very dangerous, but I gave to your chief very strong medicine and hope that he will recover. One condition, however, is necessary. The bad demons which have rushed to his side for his unwarranted attack upon us innocent travelers will instantly kill him if another shot is let off against us. You must not even keep a single cartridge in your rifles. With these words I ordered the kalmok to empty his rifle, and I at the same time took all the cartridges out of my mouser. The Tibetans instantly and very surveyly followed my example. Remember that I told you, eleven days and eleven nights do not move from this place and do not charge your rifles. Otherwise the demon of death will snatch off your chief and will pursue you. And with these words I solemnly drew forth and raised above their heads the ring of hutuktu narabanshi. I returned to my companions and calmed them. I told them we were safe against further attack from the robbers and that we must only guess the way to reach Mongolia. Our horses were so exhausted and thin that on their bones we could have hung our overcoats. We spent two days here, during which time I frequently visited my patient. It also gave us opportunity to bandage our own fortunately light wounds and to secure a little rest, though unfortunately I had nothing but a jackknife with which to dig the bullet out of my left calf and the shoemaker's accessories from my right ankle. Inquiring from the brigands about the caravan roads, we soon made our way out to one of the main routes and had the good fortune to meet there the caravan of the young Mongol prince Punsig, who was on a holy mission carrying a message from the living Buddha in Urga to the Dalai Lama in Lajasa. He helped us to purchase horses, camels, and food. With all our arms and supplies spent in Barter during the journey for the purchase of transport and food, we returned stripped and broken to the Narabanshi monastery, where we were welcomed by the Hutuktu. I knew you would come back, said he. The divinations revealed it all to me. With six of our little band left behind us in Tibet to pay the eternal toll of our dash for the south, we returned but twelve to the monastery and waited there two weeks to readjust ourselves and learn how events would again set us afloat on this turbulent sea to steer for any port that destiny might indicate. The officers enlisted in the detachment which was then being formed in Mongolia to fight against the destroyers of their native land, the Bolsheviki. My original companion and I prepared to continue our journey over Mongolian plains with whatever further adventures and dangers might come in the struggle to escape to a place of safety. And now, with the scenes of that trying march so vividly recalled, I would dedicate these chapters to my gigantic, old and ruggedly tried friend, the agronome, to my Russian fellow-travelers, and especially to the sacred memory of those of our companions whose bodies lie cradled in the sleep among the mountains of Tibet. Colonel Ostrovsky, Captain Zuboff and Turov, Lieutenant Pissarjevsky, Kasak Vernagora, and Tartar Mohamed Sperin. Also here I express my deep thanks for help and friendship to the Prince of Soljak, Hereditary Noyan Talama, and to the Kampo Gailong of Narabanshi Monastery, the Honorable Jelib Jiramsrap Hutaktu. CHAPTER 17 BEASTS MAN AND GODS by Ferdinand Ossendowski PART 2 THE LAND OF DEMONS CHAPTER 17 MISTERIOUS MONGOLIA In the heart of Asia lies the enormous, mysterious, and rich country of Mongolia. From somewhere on the snowy slopes of the Tian Shan, and from the hot sands of western Tsongaria, to the timbered ridges of the Siyan, and to the Great Wall of China, it stretches over a huge portion of Central Asia. The cradle of peoples, histories, and legends, the native land of bloody conquerors who have left here their capitals covered by the sand of the Gobi, their mysterious rings, and their ancient nomad laws, the states of monks and evil devils, the country of wandering tribes administered by the descendants of Genghis Khan and Kuble Khan, Khans and princes of the junior lines. That is Mongolia. This country of the cults of Rama, Sakya Muni, Jhagongkapa, and Paspa, cults guarded by the very person of the living Buddha, Buddha incarnated in the third dignitary of the Lamayite religion, Bagdogegen in Takuri or Urga, the land of mysterious doctors, prophets, sorcerers, fortune tellers, and witches, the land of the sign of the swastika, the land which has not forgotten the thoughts of the long-deceased great potentates of Asia and of half of Europe, that is Mongolia. The land of nude mountains, of planes buried by the sun and killed by the cold, of ill cattle and ill people, the nest of pests, anthrax and smallpox, the land of boiling hot springs that of mountain passes inhabited by demons, of sacred lakes swarming with fish, of wolves, rare species of deer and mountain goats, marmots and millions, wild horses, wild donkeys and wild camels that have never known the bridle, ferocious dogs and rapacious birds of prey which devour the dead bodies cast out on the plains by the people. That is Mongolia. The land whose disappearing primitive people gaze upon the bones of their forefathers whitening in the sands and dust of their plains, where are dying out the people who formerly conquered China, Siam, northern India and Russia, and broke their chests against the iron lances of the Polish knights, defending then all the Christian world against the invasion of wild and wandering Asia. That is Mongolia. The land swelling with natural riches, producing nothing in need of everything, destitute and suffering from the world's cataclysm, that is Mongolia. In this land, by order of fate, after my unsuccessful attempt to reach the Indian Ocean through Tibet, I spent half a year in the struggle to live and to escape. My old and faithful friend and I were compelled, willy-nilly, to participate in the exceedingly important and dangerous events transpiring in Mongolia in the year of Grace, 1921. Thanks to this, I came to know the calm, good and honest Mongolian people. I read their souls, saw their sufferings and hopes. I witnessed the whole horror of their oppression and fear before the face of mystery. There where mystery pervades all life. I watched the rivers during the severe cold break with the rumbling roar of their chains of ice, saw lakes cast up on their shores the bones of human beings, heard unknown wild voices in the mountain ravines, made out the fires over miry swamps of the will of the wisps, witnessed burning lakes, gazed upward to mountains whose peaks could not be scaled, came across great balls of writhing snakes in the ditches in winter, met with streams which are eternally frozen, rocks like petrified caravans of camels, horsemen and carts. And over all saw the barren mountains whose folds look like the mantle of Satan, which the glow of the evening sun drenched with blood. Look up there! cried an old shepherd, pointing to the slope of the cursed Zagastai. That is no mountain. It is he who lies in his red mantle, and awaits the day when he will rise again to begin the fight with the good spirits. And as he spoke, I recalled the mystic picture of the noted painter Vrubel, the same nude mountains with the violet and purple robes of Satan, whose faces half covered by an approaching gray cloud. Mongolia is a terrible land of mystery and demons. Therefore it is no wonder that here every violation of the ancient order of life of the wandering nomad tribes is transformed into streams of red blood and horror, ministering to the demonic pleasure of Satan couched on the bare mountains and robed in the gray cloak of dejection and sadness, or in the purple mantle of war and vengeance. After returning from the district of Kokonor to Mongolia, and resting a few days at the Narabanshi monastery, we went to live in Ulyasutai, the capital of western outer Mongolia. It is the last purely Mongolian town to the west. In Mongolia there are but three purely Mongolian towns, Urga, Ulyasutai, and Ullankham. The fourth town, Khabdo, has an essentially Chinese character, being the center of Chinese administration in this district inhabited by the wandering tribes only nominally recognizing the influence of either Peking or Urga. In Ulyasutai and Ullankham, besides the unlawful Chinese commissioners and troops, there were stationed Mongolian governors, or sates, appointed by the decree of the living Buddha. When we arrived in that town, we were at once in the sea of political passions. The Mongols were protesting in great agitation against the Chinese policy in their country. The Chinese raged and demanded from the Mongolians the payment of taxes for the full period since the autonomy of Mongolia had been forcibly extracted from Peking. Russian colonists, who had years before settled near the town and in the vicinity of the great monasteries, were among the wandering tribes, had separated into factions and were fighting against one another. From Urga came the news of the struggle for the maintenance of the independence of outer Mongolia, led by the Russian general Baron Ungern von Sternberg. Russian officers and refugees congregated in detachments against which the Chinese authorities protested but which the Mongols welcomed. The Bolsheviks, worried by the formation of white detachments in Mongolia, sent their troops to the borders of Mongolia. From Irkutsk and Chita to Ulyasutai and Urga, envoys were running from the Bolsheviks to the Chinese commissioners with various proposals of all kinds. The Chinese authorities in Mongolia were gradually entering into secret relations with the Bolsheviks, and in Khyachta and Ulangkham delivered to them the Russian refugees, thus violating recognized international law. In Urga the Bolsheviks set up a Russian communistic municipality. Russian consuls were inactive. Red troops in the region of Kosigal and the valley of the Selengah had encounters with anti-Bolshevik officers. The Chinese authorities established garrisons in the Mongolian towns and sent punitive expeditions into the country. And to complete the confusion, the Chinese troops carried out house-to-house searches during which they plundered and stole. Into what an atmosphere we had fallen after our hard and dangerous trip along the Yenisai, through Yuryanhai, Mongolia, the lands of the Tergutsk, Kansu, and Kokonor. Do you know, said my old friend to me, I prefer strangling partisans and fighting with the Bhunghutsi to listening to news and more anxious news. He was right, for the worst of it was that in this bustle and whirl of facts, rumors, and gossip the Reds could approach troubled Ulyasutai and take everyone with their bare hands. We should very willingly have left this town of uncertainties, but we had no place to go. In the north were the hostile partisans and red troops. To the south we had already lost our companions and not a little of our own blood. To the west raged the Chinese administrators and detachments. And to the east a war had broken out, the news of which, in spite of the attempts of the Chinese authorities at secrecy, had filtered through and had testified to the seriousness of the situation in this part of outer Mongolia. Consequently we had no choice but to remain in Ulyasutai. Here also were living several Polish soldiers who had escaped from the prison camps in Russia, two Polish families and two American firms, all in the same plight as ourselves. We joined together and made our own intelligence department very carefully watching the evolution of events. We succeeded in forming good connections with the Chinese commissioner and with the Mongolian state, which greatly helped us in our orientation. What was behind all these events in Mongolia? The very clever Mongol state of Ulyasutai gave me the following explanation. According to the agreements between Mongolia, China and Russia of October 21, 1912, of October 23, 1913, and of June 7, 1915, outer Mongolia was accorded independence and the moral head of our yellow faith, his holiness the living Buddha, became the susurain of the Mongolian people of Kauka, or outer Mongolia, with the title of Bagdo Jubebsung Damba Hutaktukan. While Russia was still strong and carefully watched her policy in Asia, the government of Peking kept the treaty. But when, at the beginning of the war with Germany, Russia was compelled to withdraw her troops from Siberia, Peking began to claim the return of its lost rights in Mongolia. It was because of this that the first two treaties of 1912 and 1913 were supplemented by the Convention of 1915. However, in 1916, when all the forces of Russia were preoccupied in the unsuccessful war, and afterwards when the first Russian revolution broke out in February 1917, overthrowing the Romanov dynasty, the Chinese government openly retook Mongolia. They changed all the Mongolian ministers and sates, replacing them with individuals friendly to China, arrested many Mongolian autonomists, and sent them to prison in Peking, set up their administration in Urga and other Mongol towns, actually removed his holiness Bagdu Khan from the affairs of administration, made him only a machine for signing Chinese decrees, had at last introduced him to Mongolia their troops. From that moment there developed an energetic flow of Chinese merchants and coolies into Mongolia. The Chinese began to demand the payment of taxes and dues from 1912. The Mongolian population were rapidly stripped of their wealth, and now in the vicinities of our towns and monasteries, you can see whole settlements of beggar Mongols living in dugouts. All our Mongol arsenals and treasuries were requisitioned. All monasteries were forced to pay taxes. All Mongols working for the liberty of their country were persecuted. Through bribery with Chinese silver, orders and titles, the Chinese secured a following among the poorer Mongol princes. It is easy to understand how the governing class, his holiness, Khans, princes, and Heilamas, as well as the ruined and oppressed people, remembering that the Mongol rulers had once held Peking and China in their hands, and under their reign had given her the first place in Asia. We're definitely hostile to the Chinese administrators acting thus. Insurrection was, however, impossible. We had no arms. All our leaders were under surveillance, and every movement by them toward an armed resistance would have ended in the same prison at Peking, where eighty of our nobles, princes and lamas, died from hunger and torture, after a previous struggle for the liberty of Mongolia. Some abnormally strong shock was necessary to drive the people into action. This was given by the Chinese administrators, General Cheng Yi, and General Chu Chi Tsang. They announced that his holiness Bagdu Khan was under arrest in his own palace, and they recalled to his attention the former decree of the Peking government, held by the Mongols to be unwarranted and illegal, that his holiness was the last living Buddha. This was enough. Immediately secret relations were made between the people and their living God, and plans were at once elaborated for the liberation of his holiness and for the struggle for liberty and freedom of our people. We were helped by the great prince of the Biryats, Jujang Hulon, who began parlays with General Ungern, then engaged in fighting the Bolsheviki and the Trans-Balkalia, and invited him to enter Mongolia and help in the war against the Chinese. Then our struggle for liberty began. Thus the seda of Ulyassetai explained the situation to me. Afterwards I heard that Baron Ungern, who had agreed to fight for the liberty of Mongolia, directed that the mobilization of the Mongolians in the northern districts be forwarded at once, and promised to enter Mongolia with his own small detachment, moving along the river Kurulan. Afterwards he took up relations with the other Russian detachment of Colonel Kassagrande, and together with the mobilized Mongolian riders began the attack on Urga. Twice he was defeated, but on the 3rd of February 1921 he succeeded in capturing the town, and replaced the living Buddha on the throne of the Khans. At the end of March, however, these events were still unknown in Ulyassetai. We knew neither of the fall of Urga, nor of the destruction of the Chinese army of nearly 15,000 in the battles of Maimachen on the shore of the Tolla, and on the roads between Urga and Ude. The Chinese carefully concealed the truth by preventing anybody from passing westward from Urga. However rumors existed and troubled all. The atmosphere became more and more tense, while the relations between the Chinese on the one side and the Mongolians and Russians on the other became more and more strained. At this time the Chinese commissioner in Ulyassetai was Wang Tsautsun, and his advisor Fu Ziang, both very young and inexperienced men. The Chinese authorities had dismissed the Ulyassetai sate, the prominent Mongolian patriot Prince Tsautun Baal, and had appointed a Lama prince friendly to China, the former vice-minister of war in Urga. Oppression increased. The searching of Russian officers and colonists' houses and quarters commenced. Open relations with the Bolsheviks followed, and arrest and beatings became common. The Russian officers formed a secret detachment of sixty men so they could defend themselves. However, in this detachment disagreements soon sprang out between Lieutenant Colonel M. M. Mikolov and some of his officers. It was evident that in the decisive moment the detachment must separate into factions. We foreigners in council decided to make a thorough reconnaissance in order to know whether there was danger of red troops arriving. My old companion and I agreed to do the scouting. Prince Tsautun Baal gave us a very good guide, an old Mongol name Tsarin, who spoke and read Russian perfectly. He was a very interesting personage holding the position of interpreter with the Mongolian authorities and sometimes with the Chinese commissioner. Shortly before he had been sent as a special envoy to Peking with very important dispatches, and this incomparable horseman had made the journey between Ulyassetai and Peking, that is, eighteen hundred miles, in nine days, incredible as it may seem. He prepared himself for the journey by binding all his abdomen and chest, legs, arms, and neck with strong cotton bandages to protect himself from the racks and strains of such a period in the saddle. In his cap he bore three eagle feathers as a token that he had received orders to fly like a bird. One with a special document called a tsara, which gave him the right to receive at all post-stations the best horses, one to ride and one fully saddled to lead as a change. Together with two ulachen, or guards, to accompany him and bring back the horses from the next station, or urtan, he made the distance of from fifteen to thirty miles between stations at full gallop, stopping only long enough to have the horses and guards changed before he was off again. Ahead of him rode one ulachen with the best horses to enable him to announce and prepare in advance the complement of steeds at the next station. Each ulachen had three horses in all, so that he could swing from one that had given out and release him to graze until his return to pick him up, and lead or ride him back home. At every third ultan, without leaving his saddle, he received a cup of hot green tea with salt, and continued his race southward. After seventeen or eighteen hours of such riding, he stopped at the urtan for the night or what was left of it, devoured a leg of boiled mutton, and slept. Thus he ate once a day and five times a day had tea, and so he travelled for nine days. With this servant we moved out one cold winter morning in the direction of Kabdu, just over three hundred miles, because from there we had received the disquieting rumours that the Red Troops had entered Ulankan, and that the Chinese authorities had handed over to them the Europeans in the town. We crossed the river Tsafen on the ice. It is a terrible stream. Its bed is full of quicksands, which in summer suck in numbers of camels, horses, and men. We entered a long winding valley among the mountains covered with deep snow, and here and there with groves of the black wood of the larch. About half way to Kabdu we came across the yurta of a shepherd on the shore of a small lake of Baganur, where evening and a strong wind whirling gusts of snow in our faces easily persuaded us to stop. By the yurta stood a splendid bay horse with a saddle richly ornamented with silver and coral. As we turned in from the road two Mongols left the yurta very hastily. One of them jumped into the saddle and quickly disappeared in the plain behind the snowy hillocks. We clearly made out the flashing folds of his yellow robe under the great outer coat, and saw his large knife sheathed in a green leather scabbard and handled with horn and ivory. The other man was the host of the yurta, the shepherd of a local prince, Novot Siran. He gave signs a great pleasure at seeing us and receiving us in his yurta. "'Who was the rider on the bay horse?' we asked. He dropped his eyes and was silent. "'Tell us,' we insisted. "'If you do not wish to speak his name, it means that you are dealing with a bad character.' "'No, no,' he remonstrated, flourishing his hands. "'He is a good, great man, but the law does not permit me to speak his name.' We at once understood that the man was either the chief of the shepherd or some high lama. Consequently we did not further insist and began making our sleeping arrangements. Our host set three legs of mutton to boil for us, skillfully cutting out the bones with his heavy knife. We chatted and learned that no one had seen red troops around this region but in Khabdo and Ulaanqam the Chinese soldiers were oppressing the population, and were beating to death with the bamboo, Mongol men who were defending their women against the ravages of these Chinese troops. Some of the Mongols had retreated to the mountains to join detachments under the command of Khigurdov, an Altai-Tartar officer who was supplying them with weapons. CHAPTER XVIII We rested soundly in the Yurta after the two days of travel which had brought us one hundred seventy miles through the snow and sharp cold. Around the evening meal of juicy mutton we were talking freely and carelessly when suddenly we heard a low, hoarse voice, "'Sane, good evening!' we turned around from the brazier to the door and saw a medium height, very heavy-set Mongol in deerskin overcoat and capped with side flaps and the long wide tying strings of the same material. Under his girdle lay the same large knife and the green sheath which we had seen on the departing horsemen. "'Emoresane!' we answered. He quickly untied his girdle and laid aside his overcoat. He stood before us in a wonderful gown of silk, yellow as beaten gold and gird with a brilliant blue sash. His cleanly shaven face, short hair, red coral rosary on the left hand and his yellow garment proved clearly that before us stood some high llama-priest with a big colt under his blue sash. I turned to my host and Seren and read in their faces fear and veneration. The stranger came over to the brazier and sat down. "'Let's break Russian!' he said and took a bit of meat. The conversation began. The stranger began to find fault with the government of the living Buddha in Urga. There they liberated Mongolia, capture Urga, defeat the Chinese army, and here in the west they give us no news of it. We are without action here while the Chinese kill our people and steal from them. I think that Bagdo Khan might send us envoys. How is it the Chinese can send their envoys from Urga and Klatka to Kobdo, asking for assistance, and the Mongol government cannot do it? Why?' "'Will the Chinese send help to Urga?' I asked. Our guests laughed hoarsely and said, I caught all the envoys, took away their letters and then sent them back into the ground.' He laughed again and glanced around peculiarly with his blazing eyes. Only then did I notice that his cheekbones and eyes had lines strange to the Mongols of Central Asia. He looked more like a tartar or a kurgis. We were silent and smoked our pipes. How soon will the detachment of Chahar's leave Ulyasatai?' He asked. We answered that we had not heard about them. Our guests explained that from inner Mongolia the Chinese authorities had sent out a strong detachment mobilized from among the most warlike tribe of Chahar's, which wander about the region just outside the Great Wall. Its chief was a notorious Hunghutsi leader, promoted by the Chinese government to the rank of captain, on promising that he would bring under subjugation to the Chinese authorities all the tribes of the districts of Khabdo and Yuryanhai. When he learned whither we were going and for what purpose, he said he could give us the most accurate news and relieve us from the necessity of going farther. Besides that, it is very dangerous, he said, because Khabdo will be massacred and burned, I know this positively. When he heard of our unsuccessful attempt to pass through Tibet, he became attentive and was very sympathetic in his bearing toward us and, with evident feeling of regret, expressed himself strongly. Only I could have helped you in this enterprise, but not the Nera Banshee who talked to. With my laissez-passe, you could have gone anywhere in Tibet. I am Tushigun Lama. Tushigun Lama. How many extraordinary tales I had heard about him. He is a Russian Kalmuk, who because of his propaganda work for the independence of the Kalmuk people made the acquaintance of many Russian prisons under the Tsar, and for the same cause, added to his list under the Bolsheviki. He escaped to Mongolia and at once attained a great influence among the Mongols. It was no wonder, for he was a close friend and pupil of the Dalai Lama in Potala, which is Lahasa, was the most learned among the Lamites, a famous thomatergist and doctor. He occupied an almost independent position in his relationship with the living Buddha and achieved to the leadership of all the old wandering tribes of western Mongolia and Zungaria, even extending his political domination over the Mongolian tribes of Turkestan. His influence was irresistible, based as it was on his great control of mysterious science, as he expressed it, but I was also told that it has its foundation largely in the panicky fear which he could produce in the Mongols. Every one who disobeyed his orders perished. Such a one never knew the day or the hour when, in his yurta or beside his galloping horse on the plains, the strange and powerful friend of the Dalai Lama would appear. The stroke of a knife, a bullet, or strong fingers strangling the neck like a vise accomplished the justice of the plans of this miracle worker. Without the walls of the yurta the wind whistled and roared and drove the frozen snow sharply against the stretched felt. Through the roar of the wind came the sound of many voices in mingled shouting, wailing, and laughter. I felt that in such surroundings it were not difficult to dumbfound a wandering nomad with miracles, because nature herself had prepared the setting for it. This thought had scarcely time to flash through my mind, before Tushagun Lama suddenly raised his head, looked sharply at me, and said, There is very much unknown in nature, and the skill of using the unknown produces the miracle. But the power is given to few. I want to prove it to you, and you may tell me afterwards whether you have seen it before or not. He stood up, pushed back the sleeves of his yellow garment, seized his knife, and strode across to the shepherd. Mechik, stand up! he ordered. When the shepherd had risen, the Lama quickly unbuttoned his coat and bared the man's chest. I could not yet understand what was his intention, when suddenly the Tushagun with all his force struck his knife into the chest of the shepherd. The Mongol fell all covered with blood, a splash of which I noticed on the yellow silk of the Lama's coat. What have you done? I exclaimed. Shhh! Be still! He whispered, turning to me his now quite blanched face. With a few strokes of the knife he opened the chest of the Mongol, and I saw the man's lungs softly breathing, and the distinct palpitations of the heart. The Lama touched these organs with his fingers, but no more blood appeared to flow, and the face of the shepherd was quite calm. He was lying with his eyes closed, and appeared to be in deep and quiet sleep. As the Lama began to open his abdomen, I shut my eyes in fear and horror, and when I opened them a little while later, I was still more dumbfounded at seeing the shepherd with his coat still open and his breast normal, quietly sleeping on his side, and Tushikun Lama sitting peacefully by the brazier, smoking his pipe and looking into the fire, in deep thought. Shhh! It is wonderful! I confessed. I have never seen anything like it. About what are you speaking? asked the Kalmak. About your demonstration or miracle, as you call it? I answered. I never said anything like that. Refuted the Kalmak with coldness in his voice. Did you see it? I asked of my companion. What! He queried in a dozing voice. I realized that I had become the victim of the hypnotic power of Tushikun Lama, but I preferred this to seeing an innocent Mongolian die, for I had not believed that Tushikun Lama, after slashing open the bodies of his victims, could repair them again so readily. The following day we took leave of our hosts. We decided to return in as much as our mission was accomplished, and Tushikun Lama explained to us that he would move through space. He wandered over all Mongolia, lived both in the single, simple yurta of the shepherd and hunter, and in the splendid tents of the princes and tribal chiefs, surrounded by deep veneration and panic fear, enticing and cementing to him rich and poor alike with his miracles and prophecies. When bidding us adieu, the Kalmak sorcerer slyly smiled and said, Do not give any information about me to the Chinese authorities. Afterwards he added, What happened to you yesterday evening was a futile demonstration. The two Europeans will not recognize that we dark-minded nomads possessed the powers of mysterious science. If you could only see the miracles and power of the most holy Tushikun Lama, when at his command the lamps and candles before the ancient statue of Buddha light themselves, and when the icons of the gods begin to speak and prophesy, but there exists a more powerful and more holy man, is it the king of the world Inagarti? I interrupted. He stared and glanced at me in amazement. Have you heard about him? He asked as his brows knit and thought. After a few seconds he raised his narrow eyes and said, Only one man knows his holy name. Only one man now living was ever Inagarti. That is I. That is the reason why the most holy Dalai Lama has honored me, and why the living Buddha in Urga fears me. But in vain, for I shall never sit on the holy throne of the highest priests in Lahasa, nor reach that which has come down from Genghis Khan to the head of our yellow faith. I am no monk. I am a warrior, an avenger. He jumped smartly into the saddle, whipped his horse and whirled away, flinging out as he left the common Mongolian phrase of adhu, Sain Sainbana. On the way back, Seren related to us the hundreds of legends surrounding Tushigun Lama. One tale especially remained in my mind. It was in 1911 or 1912 when the Mongols by armed force tried to attain their liberty in a struggle with the Chinese. The general Chinese headquarters in western Mongolia was Kabdu, where they had about 10,000 soldiers under the command of their best officers. The command to capture Kabdu was sent to Han Baldan, a simple shepherd who had distinguished himself in fights with the Chinese, and received from the living Buddha the title of Prince of Hun. Ferocious, absolutely without fear and possessing gigantic strength, Baldan had several times led to the attack his poorly armed Mongols, but each time had been forced to retreat after losing many of his men under the machine-gun fire. Unexpectedly, Tushigun Lama arrived. He collected all the soldiers and then said to them, You must not fear death and must not retreat. You are fighting and dying for Mongolia, for which the gods have appointed a great destiny. See what the fate of Mongolia will be! He made a wide sweeping gesture with his hand, and all the soldiers saw the country round about, set with rich yurtas, and pastures covered with great herds of horses and cattle. On the plains appeared numerous horsemen on richly saddled steeds. The women were gowned in the finest of silk with massive silver rings in their ears, and precious ornaments in their elaborate headdresses. Chinese merchants led an endless caravan of merchandise up to distinguished-looking Mongol saints, surrounded by the gaily-dressed Sirik, or soldiers, and proudly negotiating with the merchants for their wares. Shortly the vision disappeared, and Tushigun began to speak, Do not fear death. It is a release from our labor on earth, and the path to the state of constant blessings. Look to the east. Do you see your brothers and friends who have fallen in battle? We see! We see! The Mongol warriors exclaimed in astonishment, as they all looked upon a great group of dwellings which might have been yurtas, or the arches of temples flushed with a warm and kindly light. Red and yellow silk were interwoven in bright bands that covered the walls and floor. Everywhere the gilding on pillars and walls gleamed brightly. On the great red altar burned the thin sacrificial candles in gold candelabra, beside the massive silver vessels filled with milk and nuts. On soft pillows about the floor sat the Mongols who had fallen in the previous attack on Khabdu. Before them stood low, lacquered tables, laden with many dishes of steaming, succulent flesh of the lamb and the kid, with high jugs of wine and tea, with plates of borsak, a kind of sweet rich cakes, with aromatic suturan covered with sheep's fat, with bricks of dried cheese, with dates, raisins, and nuts. These fallen soldiers smoked golden pipes and chatted gaily. This vision in turn also disappeared, and before the gazing Mongols stood only the mysterious cowmock with his hand upraised. To battle and return not without victory! I am with you in the fight! The attack began. The Mongols fought furiously, perished by the hundreds, but not before they had rushed into the heart of Khabdu. Then was reenacted the long forgotten picture of tartar hordes destroying European towns. Hun Baldun ordered carried over him a triangle of lances with brilliant red streamers, a sign that he gave up the town to the soldiers for three days. Murder and pillage began. All the Chinese met their death there. The town was burned, and the walls of the fortress destroyed. Afterwards Hun Baldun came to Ulyasitai and also destroyed the Chinese fortress there. The ruins of it still stand with the broken embattlements and towers, the useless gates and the remnants of the burned official quarters, and soldiers' barracks.