Burning Daylight by Jack London

with them. True, running away from Queen Anne, he had later

Burning Daylight

76

encountered them on the Yukon and cultivated an acquaintance with

them–the pioneer ones who crossed the passes on the trail of the

men who had opened up the first diggings. But no lamb had ever

walked with a wolf in greater fear and trembling than had he

walked with them. It was a matter of masculine pride that he

should walk with them, and he had done so in fair seeming; but

women had remained to him a closed book, and he preferred a game

of solo or seven-up any time.

And now, known as the King of the Klondike, carrying several

other royal titles, such as Eldorado King, Bonanza King, the

Lumber Baron, and the Prince of the Stampeders, not to omit the

proudest appellation of all, namely, the Father of the

Sourdoughs, he was more afraid of women than ever. As never

before they held out their arms to him, and more women were

flocking into the country day by day. It mattered not whether he

sat at dinner in the gold commissioner’s house, called for the

drinks in a dancehall, or submitted to an interview from the

woman representative of the New York Sun, one and all of them

held out their arms.

There was one exception, and that was Freda, the girl that

danced, and to whom he had given the flour. She was the only

woman in whose company he felt at ease, for she alone never

reached out her arms. And yet it was from her that he was

destined to receive next to his severest fright. It came about

in the fall of 1897. He was returning from one of his dashes,

this time to inspect Henderson, a creek that entered the Yukon

just below the Stewart. Winter had come on with a rush, and he

fought his way down the Yukon seventy miles in a frail

Peterborough canoe in the midst of a run of mush-ice. Hugging

the rim-ice that had already solidly formed, he shot across the

ice-spewing mouth of the Klondike just in time to see a lone man

dancing excitedly on the rim and pointing into the water. Next,

he saw the fur-clad body of a woman, face under, sinking in the

midst of the driving mush-ice. A lane opening in the swirl of

the current, it was a matter of seconds to drive the canoe to the

spot, reach to the shoulder in the water, and draw the woman

gingerly to the canoe’s side. It was Freda. And all might yet

have been well with him, had she not, later, when brought back to

consciousness, blazed at him with angry blue eyes and demanded:

“Why did you? Oh, why did you?”

This worried him. In the nights that followed, instead of

sinking immediately to sleep as was his wont, he lay awake,

visioning her face and that blue blaze of wrath, and conning her

words over and over. They rang with sincerity. The reproach was

genuine. She had meant just what she said. And still he

pondered.

The next time he encountered her she had turned away from him

angrily and contemptuously. And yet again, she came to him to

beg his pardon, and she dropped a hint of a man somewhere,

Burning Daylight

77

sometime,–she said not how,–who had left her with no desire to

live. Her speech was frank, but incoherent, and all he gleaned

from it was that the event, whatever it was, had happened years

before. Also, he gleaned that she had loved the man.

That was the thing–love. It caused the trouble. It was more

terrible than frost or famine. Women were all very well, in

themselves good to look upon and likable; but along came this

thing called love, and they were seared to the bone by it, made

so irrational that one could never guess what they would do next.

This Freda-woman was a splendid creature, full-bodied, beautiful,

and nobody’s fool; but love had come along and soured her on the

world, driving her to the Klondike and to suicide so compellingly

that she was made to hate the man that saved her life.

Well, he had escaped love so far, just as he had escaped

smallpox; yet there it was, as contagious as smallpox, and a

whole lot worse in running its course. It made men and women do

such fearful and unreasonable things. It was like delirium

tremens, only worse. And if he, Daylight, caught it, he might

have it as badly as any of them. It was lunacy, stark lunacy,

and contagious on top of it all. A half dozen young fellows were

crazy over Freda. They all wanted to marry her. Yet she, in

turn, was crazy over that some other fellow on the other side of

the world, and would have nothing to do with them.

But it was left to the Virgin to give him his final fright. She

was found one morning dead in her cabin. A shot through the head

had done it, and she had left no message, no explanation. Then

came the talk. Some wit, voicing public opinion, called it a

case of too much Daylight. She had killed herself because of

him. Everybody knew this, and said so. The correspondents wrote

it up, and once more Burning Daylight, King of the Klondike, was

sensationally featured in the Sunday supplements of the United

States. The Virgin had straightened up, so the feature-stories

ran, and correctly so. Never had she entered a Dawson City

dance-hall. When she first arrived from Circle City, she had

earned her living by washing clothes. Next, she had bought a

sewing-machine and made men’s drill parkas, fur caps, and

moosehide mittens. Then she had gone as a clerk into the First

Yukon Bank. All this, and more, was known and told, though one

and all were agreed that Daylight, while the cause, had been the

innocent cause of her untimely end.

And the worst of it was that Daylight knew it was true. Always

would he remember that last night he had seen her. He had

thought nothing of it at the time; but, looking back, he was

haunted by every little thing that had happened. In the light of

the tragic event, he could understand everything–her quietness,

that calm certitude as if all vexing questions of living had been

smoothed out and were gone, and that certain ethereal sweetness

about all that she had said and done that had been almost

Burning Daylight

78

maternal. He remembered the way she had looked at him, how she

had laughed when he narrated Mickey Dolan’s mistake in staking

the fraction on Skookum Gulch. Her laughter had been lightly

joyous, while at the same time it had lacked its oldtime

robustness. Not that she had been grave or subdued. On the

contrary, she had been so patently content, so filled with peace.

She had fooled him, fool that he was. He had even thought that

night that her feeling for him had passed, and he had taken

delight in the thought, and caught visions of the satisfying

future friendship that would be theirs with this perturbing love

out of the way.

And then, when he stood at the door, cap in hand, and said good

night. It had struck him at the time as a funny and embarrassing

thing, her bending over his hand and kissing it. He had felt

like a fool, but he shivered now when he looked back on it and

felt again the touch of her lips on his hand. She was saying

good-by, an eternal good-by, and he had never guessed. At that

very moment, and for all the moments of the evening, coolly and

deliberately, as he well knew her way, she had been resolved to

die. If he had only known it! Untouched by the contagious

malady himself, nevertheless he would have married her if he had

had the slightest inkling of what she contemplated. And yet he

knew, furthermore, that hers was a certain stiff-kneed pride that

would not have permitted her to accept marriage as an act of

philanthropy. There had really been no saving her, after all.

The love-disease had fastened upon her, and she had been doomed

from the first to perish of it.

Her one possible chance had been that he, too, should have caught

it. And he had failed to catch it. Most likely, if he had, it

would have been from Freda or some other woman. There was

Dartworthy, the college man who had staked the rich fraction on

Bonanza above Discovery. Everybody knew that old Doolittle’s

daughter, Bertha, was madly in love with him. Yet, when he

contracted the disease, of all women, it had been with the wife

of Colonel Walthstone, the great Guggenhammer mining expert.

Result, three lunacy cases: Dartworthy selling out his mine for

one-tenth its value; the poor woman sacrificing her

Leave a Reply