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                    by Eva F. Kovats     
               
                       
                      Mishi     
                    Dobos sat on the stoop of the old one-room stone cottage in     
                    the afternoon sun. So much still needs to be done, the lanky     
                    19-year-old said to himself as he surveyed the muddy yard,     
                    the peeling plaster, the broken roof tiles. Beyond the hedgerow     
                    he could see that the trees in the forest were beginning to     
                    lose their leaves. It was Thursday, October 31, 1991, two     
                    days before All Souls' Day, a time of remembrance in Hungary.     
                     
                        To surprise his mother, Mishi was on his     
                    way home to the town of Dombovar for the long weekend from     
                    the school of wildlife management he attended. His mother     
                    would not be back from her job as a social worker until evening,     
                    so Mishi had decided first t check out the family summer cottage,     
                    located on the sparsely settled outskirts of Dombovar.     
                     
                        He loved the tumbledown house. It had taken     
                    all his mother's savings to buy it, but she, Mishi and his     
                    younger sister, Katalin, spent idyllic times there. Ever since     
                    his father left the family a few years earlier, Mishi had     
                    assumed the role of man of the house, doing much-needed repairs     
                    on the building.     
                     
                        As Mishi pondered what he might tackle     
                    next, his eyes fell on the garden well. It was a solid brick     
                    structure about four feet in diameter. He had peered down     
                    it several times the previous summer, wondering why it had     
                    gone dry. Now he decided to have another look.     
                     
                        Rising, Mishi pulled a flashlight from     
                    his pocket and went to the well. If we clean it out, he thought,     
                    maybe it will have water again. He looked into the 74-foot     
                    shaft, as deep as a six-story building. The flashlight beam     
                    barely penetrated the darkness, so Mishi climbed up on the     
                    edge for a better view. He didn't notice the frosty moss on     
                    the rim.     
                     
                        Suddenly Mishi was plummeting feet first     
                    down the brick-lined shaft, his arms and back scraping against     
                    the rough sided. With a jolt, he found himself at the bottom,     
                    ankle-deep in soft mud. His knees buckled, and Mishi collapsed     
                    for ward, the wind knocked out of him. He took a minute, catching     
                    his breath. Then, relieved that he had survived the fall,     
                    he looked up. The mouth of the well was a frighteningly distant,     
                    coin-sized patch of light.     
                       
                  Chilling Realization      
                       Panic seized him at first.     
                    I'll never get out of here. Then a more immediately problem     
                    loomed. What happened to my glasses? He sat down and groped     
                    for them. His hand swept through a small puddle of putrid     
                    water, then touched a jagged slab of concrete. Propped against     
                    the wall was a partly rotted wooden cylinder that must have     
                    been the well's crank. A chilling thought flashed through     
                    Mishi's mind: What if I had landed on this stuff?     
                      
                        Running his hand along the foot of the     
                    slimy wall, he found his glasses, miraculously intact. He     
                    put them on, but still he could hardly see in the gloom. He     
                    got up on his hands and knees and combed every bit of the     
                    floor for his flashlight, but this time came up empty. At     
                    least I have my watch, he thought, glancing at its luminous     
                    face. It was 1:30 p.m.     
                      
                        Mishi tried to stand again but was seized     
                    by sharp pains in his side and hip. "I can't believe     
                    all this is happening to me," he muttered as he sat back     
                    down.    
                      
                        Soon his left foot began to throb. He took     
                    off his shoe for a time to ease the pain, not realizing that     
                    his ankle was deeply gashed and his big toe was broken.     
                      
                        After a while he said to himself, I've     
                    got to at least try. He braced his back against the wall and     
                    his feet against the opposite side and began ratcheting himself     
                    upward. After shinning about ten feet, he was unable to cling     
                    to the slippery bricks, and plopped back to the bottom. He     
                    kept trying for an hour or so, until he collapsed, exhausted.     
                    I just need a rest, he thought. It was 3 p.m. and already     
                    pitch-black at the bottom of the well.     
                        
                  Bitten    
                        Mishi tried to relax, but couldn't get     
                    comfortable on the mud and dirt, so he sat on the cylinder,     
                    leaned against the wall and closed his eyes. But the cylinder     
                    was covered with the remnants of the steel draw cable, and     
                    each time Mishi dozed he slid painfully against the cable's     
                    jagged barbs. He finally draped his scarf on the cylinder     
                    and sat on it. Then he was able to nod off.     
                     
                        A sudden sharp pain jarred him wake. He     
                    jumped in fright and swatted at his leg. An insect had apparently     
                    crawled from the puddle and bitten his open wound. The place     
                    is crawling with bugs, Mishi thought with a shiver. People     
                    go mad in condition like this.     
                     
                        Trying to stay warm, he pulled his jacket     
                    around his neck and blew on the hands. Then de dozed off once     
                    more.    
                     
                        Mishi slept fitfully until he woke at the     
                    first glimmer of morning light from above. His stomach was     
                    knotted with hunger. How will I survive without food and water?     
                    I've got to get out of here!     
                    When he stood, however, the excruciating pain in his foot     
                    made him sink back to the ground.     
                       "Help!"     
                    he began to shout. "Help!"     
                     
                        Just then, around 8 a.m., Istvan Orsos,     
                    a neighbor, was out riding his bike, accompanied by his three     
                    dogs. As he wheeled past the Dobos cottage, the animals tore     
                    into the yard and barked madly. They're on a scent -  
                  probably     
                    a fox, Orsos thought. But he wasn't about to go on someone     
                    else's property, so he moved on.     
                     
                        Mishi heard the dogs bark and felt a rush     
                    of hope. It won't be long now. He kept up his screaming.     
                     
                        As Mishi's voice echoed off the well's     
                    walls, his shouts pounded against his own ears. Still, no     
                    one came to his rescue. After an hour, he sank back on his     
                    cylinder perch, hoarse and fighting back tears. His broken     
                    toe hurt so much that he took his shoe and sock off and socked     
                    his foot in the cold puddle to ease the pain. Please, he prayed,     
                    let Mom come to the house for the weekend. But he knew that     
                    she had no reason to visit the house.     
                      
                        Now he couldn't stop to think about food.     
                    I'm so hungry, he thought, I could eat a whole bowl of lecso,     
                    a tomato, onion and green-pepper dish he normally detested.     
                     
                        The next morning, All Souls' Day, Mishi     
                    yelled for two solid hours for help. When he got no response,     
                    it dawned on him for the first time that he might die in the     
                    well, his body never to be found. His mother undoubtedly thought     
                    he stayed in school for the weekend, while the school thought     
                    he was at home. Feeling abandoned. Mishi buried his head in     
                    his hands and cried.     
                     
                        He thought about his family. He now regretted     
                    that he had refused Katalin's request to go on a stroll with     
                    him the last time he was home. She was 14 years old, adored     
                    Mishi and demanded all his attention.     
                     
                        Then he considered how his mother would     
                    take the news of his disappearance. They were very close,     
                    and Mishi always told her where he was going. He knew she     
                    would never understand how he could just vanish.     
                      
                        Shortly after noon, it started to rain.     
                    Mishi turned his head upward and tried to drink the drops.     
                    His face and jacket got wet, but his tongue stayed dry and     
                    swollen.    
                        
                  Friendly Visitors      
                       Sitting on the cylinder,     
                    Mishi leaned forward and closed his eyes. Soon, to his amazement,     
                    cavity after cavity opened up in the wall, and strangers popped     
                    out. They were friendly folk, village people who chatted about     
                    everyday concerns like the harvest and the early frost. When     
                    Mishi told them he was hungry and thirsty, the visitors fell     
                    silent. "Then just show me how to get out!" he begged.     
                    At that, the strangers turned and withdrew. "Please let     
                    me come with you!" Mishi screamed as the vision vanished.     
                      
                        On his fourth day in the well, Mishi tried     
                    to make his seat a little more comfortable. He grabbed the     
                    cylinder by a carpenter's clamp---a foot-long piece of metal     
                    with upturned ends---which was at one end, to shift the cylinder     
                    to a better position. The clamp ripped away from the rotting     
                    wood.    
                      
                        Mishi stared at the sharp piece of rusty     
                    steel in his hand. What can I do with this? He wondered. He     
                    began to scrape and chip at the all, thinking he could find     
                    a trickle of water, but his search was in vain. His frustration     
                    swelled into rage. He hammered the wall with his fists. Again     
                    he tried to shinny up, and again he slid back, "Oh.,     
                    God!" he shouted. "I have to get out!" He was     
                    exhausted, and his mouth felt as if it were on fire. "I     
                    must have some water or I will faint," he thought. He     
                    stared for a moment at the disgusting puddle at his feet.     
                    Then he took the vinyl sleeve of his railway pass from his     
                    pocket and filled it with water from the pool, careful not     
                    to scoop up any insects. He took a sip and gagged from the     
                    swampy stench. Holding his nose, he took another - and felt     
                    new strength in his limbs.     
                        
                  A Frightening Slip      
                       Surveying the wall, Mishi     
                    noticed that a brick was missing on one side. That gave him     
                    an idea. If he used the metal clamp to remove bricks in a     
                    staggered, upward sequence, the holes would provide toeholds     
                    for climbing out. The walls might cave in, he thought, but     
                    it's my only chance.     
                      The bricks, swollen with moisture and pressed together by     
                    the full weight of the structure, were difficult to budge,     
                    and the mortar was too hard to loosen. Mishi had to chip away     
                    at the bricks. By dark he had forged only two toeholds.      
                        
                      
                        This will never work, Mishi thought as     
                    he sank back to the floor. He rested and took another drink     
                    from the mud puddle. Finally he stirred. "I am not let     
                    my family down." At dawn of the fifth day he was back     
                    on the wall.      
                      
                        Off the ground, the work became even harder.     
                    While resting one foot in a toehold, Mishi had to brace himself     
                    against the opposite wall with the other foot and one hand,     
                    and wield the heavy clamp with the other. He found the most     
                    he could do was three bricks an hour, after which he had to     
                    climb back down to rest. As pried away more bricks, he lined     
                    them up on the bottom to make a primitive pallet. Exhausted,     
                    he would sleep.      
                      
                        Still, his stamina was running out. Mishi     
                    was again haunted by visions. He made the "visitors"     
                    disappear by scaling back up the wall. "I've got to keep     
                    going," he muttered.      
                      
                        By day six he had made it more then halfway     
                    up. At one point, as he started back down for a rest, he couldn't     
                    find a toehold for his left foot. Hanging three stories above     
                    the bottom, he suddenly felt his other foot slip. He clung     
                    to the bricks with his fingers, tearing off his nails, until     
                    he managed to find the other toehold. Gasping for air, he     
                    felt his pulse throbbing at his throat. Then he collected     
                    himself and cautiously edged back to the bottom.      
                      
                        The next morning, when he was working about     
                    15 feet from the top, Mishi felt an icy trickle on his foot.     
                    He climbed down and took off his shoe. Aghast, he saw that     
                    his toes were black from frostbite, and liquid was oozing     
                    from them.      
                      
                        Soaking the foot had eased the pain of     
                    his broken toe, but it had also given him gangrene. Mishi     
                    knew that if he didn't get to a doctor soon, the foot would     
                    have to be amputated. He made a momentous decision. So far     
                    he had made the toeholds only a foot or two apart so that     
                    he could more easily grope for them on his way down. Now he     
                    would make them as far apart as he could reach. This would     
                    save time, but also make it nearly impossible to retreat to     
                    the bottom. He put his shoe back on, climbed up and set to     
                    work again.      
                      
                        For over an hour he kept at it. Suddenly,     
                    he felt his head start to spin and his strength leave him.     
                    He paused, clinging to the wall. Could he afford to climb     
                    back down for a rest? No, he told himself. I have to go on,     
                    or I will die.      
                      
                        One hand in a crevice, Mishi pried out     
                    another brick with his free hand and let it plummet. He shinned     
                    himself up a notch and tore out another. He was now only ten     
                    feet from the top... now only six feet! He was finally able     
                    to grab the upper rim. Pulling with all his might, he swung     
                    his leg over it, gave one last heave and fell into the dry     
                    weeds surrounding the well. The first thing he felt was the     
                    sun's warmth on his shoulders.      
                      
                        On November 7 at 12:30, six days and 23     
                    hours after plunging into the well, Mishi Dobos was free.     
                    For a minute or so he had to shield his eyes from the blinding     
                    light. Then he looked around. He was astonished at how bare     
                    the trees had become and how different everything looked.     
                    He caught sight of the rusty carpenter's clamp, now lying     
                    in the weeds, and suddenly burst into giddy laughter. When     
                    all had seemed lost, God had given him this normally useless     
                    thing as a means to freedom, and the cleverness and strength     
                    to use it. Never again would he take anything in life for     
                    granted.     
                      
                        Mishi eventually hobbled to the nearest     
                    house. The neighbors were incredulous until he showed them     
                    his foot. Taken to the hospital by ambulance, he received     
                    treatment for his toe fracture, frostbite, numerous lacerations,     
                    and dehydration. He slept almost continuously for three days.     
                    A month later he was back in school.      
                      
                        Today, Mishi says the experience taught     
                    him to appreciate everyday blessings in life - sunshine, a     
                    clean bed, a wholesome meal, and especially his family and     
                    his friends. As for the well, he and his family have made     
                    arrangements to fill it in.       
      
     
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