An Amazing Escape by Harry de Windt
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Peek into the footnotes of the history books and you will often find passing references to those second-sons, those footloose daughters, that once roamed the world on horseback. These Long Riders sprang from all parts, for their need was an individualistic expression, not a national trend. One such wide-ranger was Harry de Windt. His life seemed to be a perfect battle within itself - one day Harry could be seen lounging in the most fashionable salons in Paris, the next day he could be found battling to stay alive in some God-forsaken patch of nameless territory. Yes, Harry was a Long Rider to the end of his polished fingertips, with his gourmet appetite for adventure. If, as some people say, The Long Riders' Guild represents the equestrian equivalent of The French Foreign Legion, then Gentleman Harry de Windt would be the General to lead such a band through the snow-covered wilderness of nineteenth-century Persia, as he does in this story.
Our troubles commenced in real earnest at
Patchinar, a desolate-looking place and filthy post-house, which was reached at
sunset. The post from Teherán had
just arrived, in charge of a tall strapping fellow armed to the teeth, in dark
blue uniform and astrachan cap, bearing the Imperial badge, the lion and sun, in
brass. The mail was ten days late,
and had met with terrible weather on the Kharzán.
They had passed, only that morning, two men lying by the roadway, frozen
to death. The poor fellows were on
their way to Teherán from Menjil, and had lain where they fell for two or three
days. “You had far better have
remained at Résht,” added our informant, unpleasantly recalling to my mind
the colonel’s prophecy, “You will be sorry for this to-morrow!”
Notwithstanding hunger and vermin, we managed to
enjoy a tolerable night’s rest. The
post-house was warm at any rate, being windowless. Patchinar was evidently a favourite halting-place, for the
dingy walls of the guest-room were covered with writing and pencil sketches, the
work of travellers trying to kill time, from the Frenchman who warned one (in
rhyme) to beware of the thieving propensities of the postmaster, to the more
practical Englishman, who, in a bold hand, had scrawled across the wall, “Big
bugs here!” I may add that my
countryman was not exaggerating.
There was no difficulty in getting horses the
next morning. The post, which left
for Résht before we were stirring, had left us seven sorry-looking steeds, worn
out with their previous day’s journey through the deep snow-drifts of the
Kharzán. By nine o’clock we were
ready to start, notwithstanding the entreaties of the postmaster, whose anxiety,
however, was not on our account, but on that of the horses.
“I don’t believe I shall ever see them
again!” he mumbled mournfully, as we rode out of the yard. “And who is to repay me for their loss? You will be dead, too, before sundown, if the snow catches
you in the mountains!”
But there seemed no probability of such a
contingency. The sky was blue and
cloudless, the sun so bright that the glare off the snow soon became unbearable
without smoked goggles. The promise
of an extra kerán or two if we reached the end of the stage by daylight had a
wonderful effect on the Shagird. Though
it was terribly heavy going, and the snow in places up to our girths, we covered
the five miles lying between Patchinar and the foot of the Kharzán in a little
over three hours – good going considering the state of the road.
We were as often off the former as on it, for there was nothing to guide
one; nothing but telegraph poles
and wires were visible, and these are occasionally laid straight across country
away from the track.
Our destination for the night was the village of
Kharzán, which is situated near the summit of the mountain, about six thousand
feet high. The ascent is continuous
and precipitous. An idea may be
gained of the steepness by the fact that we now left the valley of the Shah Roud,
barely one thousand feet above sea-level, to ascend, in a distance of about
twelve miles, over six thousand feet.
The Kharzán Pass is at all times dreaded by
travellers, native and European, even in summer, when there are no avalanches to
fear, snow-drifts to bar the way, or ice to render the narrow, tortuous pathway
even more insecure. A serious
inconvenience, not to say danger, is the meeting of two camel caravans
travelling in opposite directions on the narrow track, which, in many places, is
barely ten feet broad, and barely sufficient to allow two horses to pass each
other, to say nothing of heavily laden camels. But to-day we were safe so far as this was concerned.
Not a soul was to be seen in the clefts and ravines around, or on the
great white expanse stretched out beneath our feet, as we crept cautiously up
the side of the mountain, our guide halting every ten or fifteen yards to probe
the snow with a long pole and make sure that we had not got off the path.
"Slowly, inch by inch, the
poor brute lost his hold of the slippery ground, and disappeared, with a shrill
neigh of terror, from sight. For
two or three seconds we heard him striking here and there against a jutting rock
or shrub, till, with a final thud, he landed on a small plateau of deep
snow-drifts at least three hundred feet below.
Here he lay motionless and apparently dead, while we could see through
our glasses a thin stream of crimson flow from under him, gradually staining the
white snow around. |
A stiff and tedious climb of nearly seven hours
brought us to within a mile of the summit.
Halting for a short time, we refreshed ourselves with a couple of
biscuits and a nip of brandy, and proceeded on our journey.
We had now arrived at the most dangerous part of the pass.
The pathway, hewn out of the solid rock, and about ten feet wide, was
covered with a solid layer of ice eight or ten inches thick, over which our
horses skated about in a most uncomfortable manner.
There was no guard-rail or protection of any sort on the precipice side.
All went well for a time, and I was beginning to congratulate myself on
having reached the summit without accident, when Gerôme’s horse, just in
front of me, blundered and nearly lit on his head.
“Ah, son of a pig’s mother!” yelled the little Russian in true
Cossack vernacular, as the poor old screw, thoroughly done up, made a desperate
peck, ending in a slither that brought him to within a foot of the brink.
“That was a close shave, monsieur!” he continued, as his pony
struggled back into safety. “I
shall get off and walk. Wet feet
are better than a broken neck any day!”
The words were scarcely out of his mouth, when a
loud cry from the Shagird, and a snort and struggle from the pack-horse behind,
attracted my attention. This time
the beast had slipped with a vengeance, and was half-way over the edge, making,
with his fore feet, frantic efforts to regain terra firma, while his hind
legs and quarters dangled in mid-air. There
was not time to dismount and render assistance.
The whole thing was over in less than ten seconds.
The Shagird might, indeed, have saved the fall had he kept his head
instead of losing it. All he could
do was, with a loud voice and outstretched arms, to invoke the assistance of
“Allah!” We were not long in
suspense. Slowly, inch by inch, the
poor brute lost his hold of the slippery ground, and disappeared, with a shrill
neigh of terror, from sight. For
two or three seconds we heard him striking here and there against a jutting rock
or shrub, till, with a final thud, he landed on a small plateau of deep
snow-drifts at least three hundred feet below.
Here he lay motionless and apparently dead, while we could see through
our glasses a thin stream of crimson flow from under him, gradually staining the
white snow around.
A cat is popularly supposed to have nine lives.
After my experience of the Persian post-horse, I shall never believe that
that rough and ill-shaped but useful animal has less than a dozen.
The fall I have described would assuredly have killed a horse of any
other nationality, if I may use the word. It
seemed, on the contrary, to have a tonic and exhilarating effect on this
Patchinar pony. Before we could
reach him (a work of considerable difficulty and some risk) he had risen to his
feet, given himself a good shake, and was nibbling away at a bit of gorse that
peeped through the snow on which he had fallen. A deep cut on the shoulder was his only injury, and,
curiously enough, our portmanteaus, with the exception of a broken strap, were
unharmed. There was, luckily,
nothing breakable in either.
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