<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</h2></div>
<p class="caption3">THE GREAT RAM OF THE SHANSI MOUNTAINS</p>
<p>Away up in northern China, just south of the Mongolian
frontier, is a range of mountains inhabited by
bands of wild sheep. They are wonderful animals,
these sheep, with horns like battering-rams. But the
mountains are also populated by brigands and the two
do not form an agreeable combination from the sportsman's
standpoint.</p>
<p>In reality they are perfectly nice, well-behaved brigands,
but occasionally they forget their manners and
swoop down upon the caravan road less than a dozen
miles away. This is done only when scouts bring word
that cargo valuable enough to make it worth while is
about to pass. Each time the brigands make a foray
a return raid by Chinese soldiers can be expected. Occasionally
these are real, "honest-to-goodness" fights,
and blood may flow on both sides, but the battle sometimes
takes a different form.</p>
<p>With bugles blowing, the soldiers march out to the
hills. Through "middle men" the battle ground has
been agreed upon, and a "David" is chosen from the
soldiers to meet the "Goliath" of the brigands. But
David is particularly careful to leave his gun behind,
and to have his "sling" well stuffed with rifle shells.
Goliath advances to the combat armed only with a bag
of silver dollars. Then an even trade ensues—a dollar
for a cartridge—and the implement of war changes
hands.</p>
<p class="tdr">PLATE XIII</p>
<table summary="Plate">
<tr>
<td colspan="2">
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/plate_xiiia.png" width-obs="669" height-obs="450" alt="" /> <div class="caption4">CAVE DWELLINGS IN NORTH SHANSI PROVINCE</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/plate_xiiib.png" width-obs="313" height-obs="455" alt="" /> <div class="caption4">AN ASIATIC WAPITI</div>
</div>
</td><td>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/plate_xiiic.png" width-obs="312" height-obs="356" alt="" /> <div class="caption4">HARRY R. CALDWELL AND A MONGOLIAN BIGHORN</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">- 185 -</span></p>
<p>The soldiers return to the city with bugles sounding
as merrily as when they left. The commander sends a
report to Peking of a desperate battle with the brigands.
He says that, through the extreme valor of his
soldiers, the bandits have been dispersed and many
killed; that hundreds of cartridges were expended in
the fight; therefore, kindly send more as soon as possible.</p>
<p>All this because the government has an unfortunate
way of forgetting to pay its soldiers in the outlying
provinces. When no money is forthcoming and none is
visible on the horizon, it is not surprising that they take
other means to obtain it. "Battles" of this type are by
no means exceptions—they are more nearly the rule in
many provinces of China.</p>
<p>But what has all this to do with the wild sheep? Its
relation is very intimate, for the presence of brigands in
those Shansi mountains has made it possible for the animals
to exist. The hunting grounds are only five days'
travel from Peking and many foreigners have turned
longing eyes toward the mountains. But the brigands
always had to be considered. Since Sir Richard Dane,
formerly Chief Inspector of the Salt Gabelle, and Mr.
Charles Coltman were driven out by the bandits in 1915,
the Chinese Government has refused to grant passports
to foreigners who wished to shoot in that region. The
brigands themselves cannot waste cartridges at one dollar
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">- 186 -</span>
each on the sheep, so the animals have been allowed
to breed unmolested.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, there are not many sheep there. They
are the last survivors of great herds which once roamed
the mountains of north China. The technical name of
the species is <i>Ovis commosa</i> (formerly <i>O. jubata</i>) and
it is one of the group of bighorns known to sportsmen
by the Mongol name of <i>argali</i>. In size, as well as ancestry,
the members of this group are the grandfathers of
all the sheep. The largest ram of our Rocky Mountains
is a pygmy compared with a full-grown <i>argali</i>.
Hundreds of thousands of years ago the bighorns, which
originated in Asia, crossed into Alaska by way of the
Bering Sea, where there was probably a land connection
at that time. From Alaska they gradually worked
southward, along the mountains of the western coast,
into Mexico and Lower California. In the course of
time, changed environment developed different species;
but the migration route from the Old World to the New
is there for all to read.</p>
<p>The supreme trophy of a sportsman's life is the head
of a Mongolian bighorn sheep. I think it was Rex
Beach who said, "Some men can shoot but not climb.
Some can climb but not shoot. To get a sheep you must
be able to climb and shoot, too."</p>
<p>For its Hall of Asiatic Life, the American Museum
of Natural History needed a group of <i>argali</i>. Moreover,
we wanted a ram which would fairly represent the
species, and that meant a very big one. The Reverend
Harry R. Caldwell, with whom I had hunted tiger in
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">- 187 -</span>
south China, volunteered to get them with me. The
brigands did not worry us unduly, for we both have had
considerable experience with Chinese bandits and we
feel that they are like animals—if you don't tease them,
they won't bite. In this case the "teasing" takes the
form of carrying anything that they could readily dispose
of—especially money. I decided that my wife
must remain in Peking. She was in open rebellion
but there was just a possibility that the brigands might
annoy us, and we had determined to have those sheep
regardless of consequences.</p>
<p>Although we did not expect trouble, I knew that
Harry Caldwell could be relied upon in any emergency.
When a man will crawl into a tiger's lair, a tangle of
sword grass and thorns, just to find out what the brute
has had for dinner; when he will walk into the open in
dim light and shoot, with a .22 high-power rifle, a tiger
which is just ready to charge; when he will go alone and
unarmed into the mountains to meet a band of brigands
who have been terrorizing the country, it means that he
has more nerve than any one man needs in this life!</p>
<p>After leaving the train at Feng-chen, the journey
was like all others in north China; slow progress with a
cart over atrocious roads which are either a mass of
sticky mud or inches deep in fine brown dust. We had
four days of it before we reached the mountains but the
trip was full of interest to us both, for along the road
there was an ever-changing picture of provincial life.
To Harry it was especially illuminating because he had
spent nineteen years in south China and had never
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">- 188 -</span>
before visited the north. He began to realize what every
one soon learns who wanders much about the Middle
Kingdom—that it is never safe to generalize in this
strange land. Conditions true of one region may be
absolutely unknown a few hundred miles away. He
was continually irritated to find that his perfect knowledge
of the dialect of Fukien Province was utterly useless.
He was well-nigh as helpless as though he had
never been in China, for the languages of the north and
the south are almost as unlike as are French and German.
Even our "boys" who were from Peking had some
difficulty in making themselves understood, although
we were not more than two hundred miles from the
capital.</p>
<p>Instead of hills thickly clothed with sword grass, here
the slopes were bare and brown. We were too far north
for rice; corn, wheat, and <i>kaoliang</i> took the place of
paddy fields. Instead of brick-walled houses we found
dwellings made of clay like the "adobe" of Mexico and
Arizona. Sometimes whole villages were dug into the
hillside and the natives were cave dwellers, spending
their lives within the earth.</p>
<p>All north China is spread with loess. During the
Glacial Period, about one hundred thousand years ago,
when in Europe and America great rivers of ice were
descending from the north, central and eastern Asia
seems to have suffered a progressive dehydration. There
was little moisture in the air so that ice could not be
formed. Instead, the climate was cold and dry, while
violent winds carried the dust in whirling clouds for
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">- 189 -</span>
hundreds upon hundreds of miles, spreading it in ever
thickening layers over the hills and plains. Therefore,
the "Ice Age" for Europe and America was a "Dust
Age" for northeastern Asia.</p>
<p>The inns were a constant source of interest to us both.
Their spacious courtyards contrasted strangely with the
filthy "hotels" of southern China. In the north all the
traffic is by cart, and there must be accommodation for
hundreds of vehicles; in the south where goods are carried
by boats, coolies, or on donkey back, extensive compounds
are unnecessary. Each night, wherever we arrived,
we found the courtyard teeming with life and
motion. Line after line of laden carts wound in through
the wide swinging gates and lined up in orderly array;
there was the steady "crunch, crunch, crunch" of feeding
animals, shouts for the <i>jonggweda</i> (landlord), and
good-natured chaffing among the carters. In the great
kitchen, which is also the sleeping room, over blazing
fires fanned by bellows, pots of soup and macaroni were
steaming. On the two great <i>kangs</i> (bed platforms),
heated from below by long flues radiating outward from
the cooking fires, dozens of <i>mafus</i> were noisily sucking
in their food or already snoring contentedly, rolled in
their dusty coats.</p>
<p>Many kinds of folk were there; rich merchants enveloped
in splendid sable coats and traveling in padded
carts; peddlers with packs of trinkets for the women;
wandering doctors selling remedies of herbs, tonics made
from deerhorns or tigers' teeth, and wonderful potions
of "dragons' bones." Perhaps there was a Buddhist
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">- 190 -</span>
priest or two, a barber, or a tailor. Often a professional
entertainer sat cross-legged on the hang telling endless
stories or singing for hours at a time in a high-pitched,
nasal voice, accompanying himself upon a tiny snake-skin
violin. It was like a stage drama of concentrated
Chinese country life.</p>
<p>Among this polyglot assembly perhaps there may be
a single man who has arrived with a pack upon his back.
He is indistinguishable from the other travelers and
mingles among the <i>mafus</i>, helping now and then to feed
a horse or adjust a load. But his ears and eyes are open.
He is a brigand scout who is there to learn what is passing
on the road. He hears all the gossip from neighboring
towns as well as of those many miles away, for
the inns are the newspapers of rural China, and it is
every one's business to tell all he knows. The scout
marks a caravan, then slips away into the mountains to
report to the leader of his band. The attack may not
take place for many days. While the unsuspecting
<i>mafus</i> are plodding on their way, the bandits are hovering
on the outskirts among the hills until the time is ripe
to strike.</p>
<p>I have learned that these brigand scouts are my best
protection, for when a foreigner arrives at a country inn
all other subjects of conversation lose their interest.
Everything about him is discussed and rediscussed, and
the scouts discover all there is to know. Probably the
only things I ever carry which a bandit could use or
dispose of readily, are arms and ammunition. But two
or three guns are hardly worth the trouble which would
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">- 191 -</span>
follow the death of a foreigner. The brigands know that
there would be no sham battle with Chinese soldiers in
that event, for the Legations at Peking have a habit of
demanding reparation from the Government and insisting
that they get it.</p>
<p>As a <i>raison d'être</i> for our trip Caldwell and I had
been hunting ducks, geese, and pheasants industriously
along the way, and not even the "boys" knew our real
destination.</p>
<p>We had looked forward with great eagerness to the
Tai Hai, a large lake, where it was said that water fowl
congregated in thousands during the spring and fall.
We reached the lake the second night after leaving
Feng-chen. Darkness had just closed about us when
we crossed the summit of a high mountain range and
descended into a narrow, winding cut which eventually
led us out upon the flat plains of the Tai Hai basin.
While we were in the pass a dozen flocks of geese slipped
by above our heads, flying very low, the "wedges" showing
black against the starlit sky.</p>
<p>With much difficulty we found an inn close beside the
lake and, after a late supper, snuggled into our fur bags
to be lulled to sleep by that music most dear to a sportsman's
heart, the subdued clamor of thousands of water-fowl
settling themselves for the night.</p>
<p>At daylight we dressed hurriedly and ran to the lake
shore. Harry took a station away from the water at
the base of the hills, while I dropped behind three conical
mounds which the natives had constructed to obtain
salt by evaporation.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">- 192 -</span></p>
<p>I was hardly in position before two geese came
straight for me. Waiting until they were almost above
my head, I knocked down both with a right and left.
The shots put thousands of birds in motion. Flock after
flock of geese rose into the air, and long lines of ducks
skimmed close to the surface, settling away from shore
or on the mud flats near the water's edge.</p>
<p>No more birds came near me, and in fifteen minutes
I returned to the inn for breakfast. Harry appeared
shortly after with only a mallard duck, for he
had guessed wrong as to the direction of the flight, and
was entirely out of the shooting.</p>
<p>When the carts had started at eight o'clock Harry
and I rode down the shore of the lake to the south, with
Chen to hold our horses. The mud flats were dotted
with hundreds of ruddy sheldrakes, their beautiful bodies
glowing red and gold in the sunlight. A hundred
yards from shore half a dozen swans drifted about like
floating snow banks, and ducks and geese by thousands
rose or settled in the lake. We saw a flock of mallards
alight in the short marsh grass and when I fired at least
five hundred greenheads, yellow-nibs, and pintails rose
in a brown cloud.</p>
<p>Crouched behind the salt mounds, we had splendid
shooting and then rode on to join the carts, our ponies
loaded with ducks and geese. The road swung about to
the north, and we saw geese in tens of thousands coming
into the lake across the mountain passes from their
summer breeding grounds in Mongolia and far Siberia.
Regiment after regiment swept past, circled away to the
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">- 193 -</span>
west, and dropped into the water as though at the command
of a field marshal.</p>
<p>Although we were following the main road to Kwei-hua-cheng,
a city of considerable importance not far
from the mountains which contained the sheep, we had
no intention of going there. Neither did we wish to
pass through any place where there might be soldiers,
so on the last day's march we left the highway and followed
an unimportant trail to the tiny village of Wu-shi-tu,
which nestles against the mountain's base. Here
we made our camp in a Chinese house and obtained two
Mongol hunters. We had hoped to live in tents, but
there was not a stick of wood for fuel. The natives
burn either coal or grass and twigs, but these would not
keep us warm in an open camp.</p>
<p>About the village rose a chaotic mass of saw-toothed
mountains cut, to the east, by a stupendous gorge. We
stood silent with awe, when we first climbed a winding,
white trail to the summit of the mountain and gazed
into the abysmal depths. My eye followed an eagle
which floated across the chasm to its perch on a projecting
crag; thence down the sheer face of the cliff a thousand
feet to the stream which has carved this colossal
cañon from the living rock. Like a shining silver tracing
it twisted and turned, foaming over rocks and running
in smooth, green sheets between vertical walls of
granite. To the north we looked across at a splendid
panorama of saw-toothed peaks and ragged pinnacles
tinted with delicate shades of pink and lavender. Beneath
our feet were slabs of pure white marble and great
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">- 194 -</span>
blocks of greenish feldspar. Among the peaces were
deep ravines and, farther to the east, rolling uplands
carpeted with grass. There the sheep are found.</p>
<p>We killed only one goral and a roebuck during the
first two days, for a violent gale made hunting well-nigh
impossible. On the third morning the sun rose in a
sky as blue as the waters of a tropic sea, and not a breath
of air stirred the silver poplar leaves as we crossed the
rocky stream bed to the base of the mountains north of
camp. Fifteen hundred feet above us towered a ragged
granite ridge which must be crossed ere we could gain
entrance to the grassy valleys beyond the barrier.</p>
<p>We had toiled halfway up the slope, when my hunter
sank into the grass, pointed upward, and whispered,
"<i>Pan-yang</i>" (wild sheep). There, on the very summit
of the highest pinnacle, stood a magnificent ram silhouetted
against the sky. It was a stage introduction
to the greatest game animal in all the world.</p>
<p>Motionless, as though sculptured from the living
granite, it gazed across the valley toward the village
whence we had come. Through my glasses I could see
every detail of its splendid body—the wash of gray with
which many winters had tinged its neck and flanks, the
finely drawn legs, and the massive horns curling about
a head as proudly held as that of a Roman warrior. He
stood like a statue for half an hour, while we crouched
motionless in the trail below; then he turned deliberately
and disappeared.</p>
<p>When we reached the summit of the ridge the ram was
nowhere to be seen, but we found his tracks on a path
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">- 195 -</span>
leading down a knifelike outcrop to the bottom of another
valley. I felt sure that he would turn eastward
toward the grassy uplands, but Na-mon-gin, my Mongol
hunter, pointed north to a sea of ragged mountains.
We groaned as we looked at those towering peaks;
moreover, it seemed hopeless to hunt for a single animal
in that chaos of ravines and cañons.</p>
<p>We had already learned, however, that the Mongol
knew almost as much about what a sheep would do as
did the animal itself. It was positively uncanny. Perhaps
we would see a herd of sheep half a mile away.
The old fellow would seat himself, nonchalantly fill his
pipe and puff contentedly, now and then glancing at the
animals. In a few moments he would announce what
was about to happen, and he was seldom wrong.</p>
<p>Therefore, when he descended to the bottom of the
valley we accepted his dictum without a protest. At
the creek bed Harry and his young hunter left us to
follow a deep ravine which led upward a little to the
left, while Na-mon-gin and I climbed to the crest by
way of a precipitous ridge.</p>
<p>Not fifteen minutes after we parted, Harry's rifle
banged three times in quick succession, the reports rolling
out from the gorge in majestic waves of sound. A
moment later the old Mongol saw three sheep silhouetted
for an instant against the sky as they scrambled across
the ridge. Then a voice floated faintly up to me from
out the cañon.</p>
<p>"I've got a f-i-n-e r-a-m," it said, "a b-e-a-u-t-y,"
and even at that distance I could hear its happy ring.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">- 196 -</span></p>
<p>"Good for Harry," I thought. "He certainly deserved
it after his work of last night;" for on the way
home his hunter had seen an enormous ram climbing a
mountain side and they had followed it to the summit
only to lose its trail in the gathering darkness. Harry
had stumbled into camp, half dead with fatigue, but
with his enthusiasm undiminished.</p>
<p>When Na-mon-gin and I had reached the highest
peak and found a trail which led along the mountain
side just below the crest, we kept steadily on, now and
then stopping to scan the grassy ravines and valleys
which radiated from the ridge like the ribs of a giant
fan. At half past eleven, as we rounded a rocky shoulder,
I saw four sheep feeding in the bottom of a gorge
far below us.</p>
<p>Quite unconscious of our presence, they worked out
of the ravine across a low spur and into a deep gorge
where the grass still showed a tinge of green. As the
last one disappeared, we dashed down the slope and
came up just above the sheep. With my glasses I could
see that the leader carried a fair pair of horns, but that
the other three rams were small, as <i>argali</i> go.</p>
<p>Lying flat, I pushed my rifle over the crest and aimed
at the biggest ram. Three or four tiny grass stems were
directly in my line of sight, and fearing that they might
deflect my bullet, I drew back and shifted my position
a few feet to the right.</p>
<p>One of the sheep must have seen the movement, although
we were directly above them, and instantly all
were off. In four jumps they had disappeared around
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">- 197 -</span>
a bowlder, giving me time for only a hurried shot at the
last one's white rump-patch. The bullet struck a few
inches behind the ram, and the valley was empty.</p>
<p>Looking down where they had been so quietly feeding
only a few moments before, I called myself all
known varieties of a fool. I felt very bad indeed that I
had bungled hopelessly my first chance at an <i>argali</i>.
But the sympathetic old hunter patted me on the shoulder
and said in Chinese, "Never mind. They were small
ones anyway—not worth having." They were very
much worth having to me, however, and all the light
seemed to have gone out of the world. We smoked a
cigarette, but there was no consolation in that, and I
followed the hunter around the peak with a heart as
heavy as lead.</p>
<p>Half an hour later we sat down for a look around.
I studied every ridge and gully with my glasses without
seeing a sign of life. The four sheep had disappeared
as completely as though one of the yawning ravines
had swallowed them up; the great valley bathed
in golden sunlight was deserted and as silent as the
tomb.</p>
<p>I was just tearing the wrapper from a piece of chocolate
when the hunter touched me on the arm and said
quietly, "<i>Pan-yang li la</i>" (A sheep has come). He
pointed far down a ridge running out at a right angle
to the one on which we were sitting, but I could see
nothing. Then I scanned every square inch of rock,
but still saw no sign of life.</p>
<p>The hunter laughingly whispered, "I can see better
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">- 198 -</span>
than you can even with your foreign eyes. He is standing
in that trail—he may come right up to us."</p>
<p>I tried again, following the thin, white line as it
wound from us along the side of the knifelike ridge.
Just where it vanished into space I saw the sheep, a
splendid ram, standing like a statue of gray-brown
granite and gazing squarely at us. He was fully half
a mile away, but the hunter had seen him the instant he
appeared. Without my glasses the animal was merely
a blur to me, but the marvelous eyes of the Mongol
could detect its every movement.</p>
<p>"It is the same one we saw this morning," he said.
"I was sure we would find him over here. He has very
big horns—much better than those others."</p>
<p>That was quite true; but the others had given me a
shot and this ram, splendid as he was, seemed as unobtainable
as the stars. For an hour we watched him.
Sometimes he would turn about to look across the ravines
on either side and once he came a dozen feet toward
us along the path. The hunter smoked quietly,
now and then looking through my glasses. "After a
while he will go to sleep," he said, "then we can shoot
him."</p>
<p>I must confess that I had but little hope. The ram
seemed too splendid and much, much too far away. But
I could feast my eyes on his magnificent head and almost
count the rings on his curling horns.</p>
<p>A flock of red-legged partridges sailed across from
the opposite ridge, uttering their rapid-fire call and
alighted almost at our feet. Then each one seemed to
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">- 199 -</span>
melt into the mountain side, vanishing like magic among
the grass and stones. I wondered mildly why they had
concealed themselves so suddenly, but a moment later
there sounded a subdued whir, like the motor of an aëroplane
far up in the sky. Three shadows drifted over,
and I saw three huge black eagles swinging in ever
lowering circles about our heads. I knew then that the
partridges had sought the protection of our presence
from their mortal enemies, the eagles.</p>
<p>When I looked at the sheep again he was lying down
squarely in the trail, lazily raising his head now and then
to gaze about. The hunter inspected the ram through
my glasses and prepared to go. We rolled slowly over
the ridge and then hurried around to the projecting
spur at the end of which the ram was lying.</p>
<p>The going was very bad indeed. Pieces of crumbled
granite were continually slipping under foot, and at
times we had to cling like flies to a wall of rock with a
sheer drop of hundreds of feet below us. Twice the
Mongol cautiously looked over the ridge, but each time
shook his head and worked his way a little farther. At
last he motioned me to slide up beside him. Pushing
my rifle over the rock before me, I raised myself a few
inches and saw the massive head and neck of the ram
two hundred yards away. His body was behind a rocky
shoulder, but he was looking squarely at us and in a
second would be off.</p>
<p>I aimed carefully just under his chin, and at the roar
of the high-power shell, the ram leaped backward.
"You hit him," said the Mongol, but I felt he must be
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">- 200 -</span>
wrong; if the bullet had found the neck he would have
dropped like lead.</p>
<p>Never in all my years of hunting have I had a feeling
of such intense surprise and self-disgust. I had been
certain of the shot and it was impossible to believe that
I had missed. A lump rose in my throat and I sat with
my head resting on my hands in the uttermost depths of
dejection.</p>
<p>And then the impossible happened! Why it happened,
I shall never know. A kind Providence must
have directed the actions of the sheep, for, as I raised my
eyes, I saw again that enormous head and neck appear
from behind a rock a hundred yards away; just that
head with its circlet of massive horns and the neck—nothing
more. Almost in a daze I lifted my rifle, saw
the little ivory bead of the front sight center on that
gray neck, and touched the trigger. A thousand echoes
crashed back upon us. There was a clatter of stones, a
confused vision of a ponderous bulk heaving up and
back—and all was still. But it was enough for me;
there could be no mistake this time. The ram was
mine.</p>
<p>The sudden transition from utter dejection to the
greatest triumph of a sportsman's life set me wild with
joy, I yelled and pounded the old Mongol on the back
until he begged for mercy; then I whirled him about in
a war dance on the summit of the ridge. I wanted to
leap down the rocks where the sheep had disappeared
but the hunter held my arm. For ten minutes we sat
there waiting to make sure that the ram would not dash
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">- 201 -</span>
away while we were out of sight in the ravine below.
But I knew in my heart that it was all unnecessary. My
bullet had gone where I wanted it to go and that was
quite enough. No sheep that ever walked could live
with a Mannlicher ball squarely in its neck.</p>
<p>When we finally descended, the animal lay halfway
down the slope, feebly kicking. What a huge brute he
was, and what a glorious head! I had never dreamed
that an <i>argali</i> could be so splendid. His horns were
perfect, and my hands could not meet around them at
the base.</p>
<p>Then, of course, I wanted to know what had happened
at my first shot. The evidence was there upon
his face. My bullet had gone an inch high, struck him
in the corner of the mouth, and emerged from his right
cheek. It must have been a painful wound, and I shall
never cease to wonder what strange impulse brought
him back after he had been so badly stung. The second
ball had been centered in the neck as though in the
bull's-eye of a target.</p>
<p>The skin and head of the sheep made a pack weighing
nearly one hundred pounds, and the old Mongol
groaned as he looked up at the mountain barriers which
separated us from camp. On the summit of the first
ridge we found the trail over which we had passed in
the morning. Half an hour later the hunter jerked
me violently behind a ledge of rock. "<i>Pan-yang</i>" he
whispered, "there, on the mountain side. Can't you see
him?" I could not, and he tried to point to it with my
rifle. Just at that instant what I had supposed to be a
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">- 202 -</span>
brown rock came to life in a whirl of dust and vanished
into the ravine below.</p>
<p>We waited breathlessly for perhaps a minute—it
seemed hours—then the head and shoulders of a sheep
appeared from behind a bowlder. I aimed low and fired,
and the animal crumpled in its tracks. A second later
two rams and a ewe dashed from the same spot and
stopped upon the hillside less than a hundred yards
away. Instinctively I sighted on the largest but
dropped my rifle without touching the trigger. The
sheep was small, and even if we did need him for the
group we could not carry his head and skin to camp that
night. The wolves would surely have found his carcass
before dawn, and it would have been a useless waste of
life.</p>
<p>The one I had killed was a fine young ram. With
the skin, head, and parts of the meat packed upon my
shoulders we started homeward at six o'clock. Our
only exit lay down the river bed in the bottom of a
great cañon, for in the darkness it would have been dangerous
to follow the trail along the cliffs. In half an
hour it was black night in the gorge. The vertical walls
of rock shut out even the starlight, and we could not see
more than a dozen feet ahead.</p>
<p>I shall never forget that walk. After wading the
stream twenty-eight times I lost count. I was too cold
and tired and had fallen over too many rocks to have it
make the slightest difference how many more than
twenty-eight times we went into the icy water. The
hundred-pound pack upon my back weighed more every
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">- 203 -</span>
hour, but the thought of those two splendid rams was as
good as bread and wine.</p>
<p>Harry was considerably worried when we reached
camp at eleven o'clock, for in the village there had been
much talk of bandits. Even before dinner we measured
the rams and found that the horns of the one he had
killed exceeded the published records for the species by
half an inch in circumference. The horns were forty-seven
inches in length, but were broken at the tips; the
original length was fifty-one inches; the circumference
at the base was twenty inches. Moreover, mine was not
far behind in size.</p>
<p>As I snuggled into my fur sleeping bag that night, I
realized that it had been the most satisfactory hunting
day of my life. The success of the group was assured,
with a record ram for the central figure. We had three
specimens already, and the others would not be hard to
get.</p>
<p>The next morning four soldiers were waiting in the
courtyard when we awoke. With many apologies they
informed us that they had been sent by the commander
of the garrison at Kwei-hua-cheng to ask us to go back
with them. The mountains were very dangerous; brigands
were swarming in the surrounding country; the
commandant was greatly worried for our safety.
Therefore, would we be so kind as to break camp at
once.</p>
<p>We told them politely, but firmly, that it was impossible
for us to comply with their request. We needed
the sheep for a great museum in New York, and we
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">- 204 -</span>
could not return without them. As they could see for
themselves our passports had been properly viséed by
the Foreign Office in Peking, and we were prepared to
stay.</p>
<p>The soldiers returned to Kwei-hua-cheng, and the
following day we were honored by a visit from the commandant
himself. To him we repeated our determination
to remain. He evidently realized that we could not
be dislodged and suggested a compromise arrangement.
He would send soldiers to guard our house and to accompany
us while we were hunting. We assented readily,
because we knew Chinese soldiers. Of course, the
sentinel at the door troubled us not at all, and the ones
who were to accompany us were easily disposed of. For
the first day's hunt with our guard we selected the
roughest part of the mountain, and set such a terrific
pace up the almost perpendicular slope that before long
they were left far behind. They never bothered us
again.</p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">- 205 -</span></p>
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