Burning Daylight by Jack London

alone knew just how he stood, and that, with his last claim sold

and the table swept clean of his winnings, he had ridden his

hunch to the tune of just a trifle over eleven millions.

His departure was a thing that passed into the history of the

Yukon along with his other deeds. All the Yukon was his guest,

Dawson the seat of the festivity. On that one last night no

man’s dust save his own was good. Drinks were not to be

purchased. Every saloon ran open, with extra relays of exhausted

bartenders, and the drinks were given away. A man who refused

this hospitality, and persisted in paying, found a dozen fights

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on his hands. The veriest chechaquos rose up to defend the name

of Daylight from such insult. And through it all, on moccasined

feet, moved Daylight, hell-roaring Burning Daylight,

over-spilling with good nature and camaraderie, howling his

he-wolf howl and claiming the night as his, bending men’s arms

down on the bars, performing feats of strength, his bronzed face

flushed with drink, his black eyes flashing, clad in overalls and

blanket coat, his ear-flaps dangling and his gauntleted mittens

swinging from the cord across the shoulders. But this time it

was neither an ante nor a stake that he threw away, but a mere

marker in the game that he who held so many markers would not

miss.

As a night, it eclipsed anything that Dawson had ever seen. It

was Daylight’s desire to make it memorable, and his attempt was a

success. A goodly portion of Dawson got drunk that night. The

fall weather was on, and, though the freeze-up of the Yukon still

delayed, the thermometer was down to twenty-five below zero and

falling. Wherefore, it was necessary to organize gangs of

life-savers, who patrolled the streets to pick up drunken men

from where they fell in the snow and where an hour’s sleep would

be fatal. Daylight, whose whim it was to make them drunk by

hundreds and by thousands, was the one who initiated this life

saving. He wanted Dawson to have its night, but, in his deeper

processes never careless nor wanton, he saw to it that it was a

night without accident. And, like his olden nights, his ukase

went forth that there should be no quarrelling nor fighting,

offenders to be dealt with by him personally. Nor did he have to

deal with any. Hundreds of devoted followers saw to it that the

evilly disposed were rolled in the snow and hustled off to bed.

In the great world, where great captains of industry die, all

wheels under their erstwhile management are stopped for a minute.

But in the Klondike, such was its hilarious sorrow at the

departure of its captain, that for twenty-four hours no wheels

revolved. Even great Ophir, with its thousand men on the

pay-roll, closed down. On the day after the night there were no

men present or fit to go to work.

Next morning, at break of day, Dawson said good-by. The

thousands that lined the bank wore mittens and their ear-flaps

pulled down and tied. It was thirty below zero, the rim-ice was

thickening, and the Yukon carried a run of mush-ice. From the

deck of the Seattle, Daylight waved and called his farewells. As

the lines were cast off and the steamer swung out into the

current, those near him saw the moisture well up in Daylight’s

eyes. In a way, it was to him departure from his native land,

this grim Arctic region which was practically the only land he

had known. He tore off his cap and waved it.

“Good-by, you-all!” he called. “Good-by, you-all!”

PART II

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83

CHAPTER I

In no blaze of glory did Burning Daylight descend upon San

Francisco. Not only had he been forgotten, but the Klondike

along with him. The world was interested in other things, and

the

Alaskan adventure, like the Spanish War, was an old story. Many

things had happened since then. Exciting things were happening

every day, and the sensation-space of newspapers was limited.

The

effect of being ignored, however, was an exhilaration. Big man

as

he had been in the Arctic game, it merely showed how much bigger

was this new game, when a man worth eleven millions, and with a

history such as his, passed unnoticed.

He settled down in St. Francis Hotel, was interviewed by the

cub-reporters on the hotel-run, and received brief paragraphs of

notice for twenty-four hours. He grinned to himself, and began

to look around and get acquainted with the new order of beings

and things. He was very awkward and very self-possessed. In

addition to the stiffening afforded his backbone by the conscious

ownership of eleven millions, he possessed an enormous certitude.

Nothing abashed him, nor was he appalled by the display and

culture and power around him. It was another kind of wilderness,

that was all; and it was for him to learn the ways of it, the

signs and trails and water-holes where good hunting lay, and the

bad stretches of field and flood to be avoided. As usual, he

fought shy of the women. He was still too badly scared to come

to close quarters with the dazzling and resplendent creatures his

own millions made accessible.

They looked and longed, but he so concealed his timidity that he

had all the seeming of moving boldly among them. Nor was it his

wealth alone that attracted them. He was too much a man, and too

much an unusual type of man. Young yet, barely thirty-six,

eminently handsome, magnificently strong, almost bursting with a

splendid virility, his free trail-stride, never learned on

pavements, and his black eyes, hinting of great spaces and

unwearied with the close perspective of the city dwellers, drew

many a curious and wayward feminine glance. He saw, grinned

knowingly to himself, and faced them as so many dangers, with a

cool demeanor that was a far greater personal achievement than

had they been famine, frost, or flood.

He had come down to the States to play the man’s game, not the

woman’s game; and the men he had not yet learned. They struck

him as soft–soft physically; yet he divined them hard in their

dealings, but hard under an exterior of supple softness. It

struck him that there was something cat-like about them. He met

them in the clubs, and wondered how real was the good-fellowship

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84

they displayed and how quickly they would unsheathe their claws

and gouge and rend. “That’s the proposition,” he repeated to

himself; “what will they-all do when the play is close and down

to brass tacks?” He felt unwarrantably suspicious of them.

“They’re sure slick,” was his secret judgment; and from bits of

gossip dropped now and again he felt his judgment well

buttressed. On the other hand, they radiated an atmosphere of

manliness and the fair play that goes with manliness. They might

gouge and rend in a fight–which was no more than natural; but he

felt, somehow, that they would gouge and rend according to rule.

This was the impression he got of them–a generalization tempered

by knowledge that there was bound to be a certain percentage of

scoundrels among them.

Several months passed in San Francisco during which time he

studied the game and its rules, and prepared himself to take a

hand. He even took private instruction in English, and succeeded

in eliminating his worst faults, though in moments of excitement

he was prone to lapse into “you-all,” “knowed,” “sure,” and

similar solecisms. He learned to eat and dress and generally

comport himself after the manner of civilized man; but through it

all he remained himself, not unduly reverential nor

considerative, and never hesitating to stride rough-shod over any

soft-faced convention if it got in his way and the provocation

were great enough. Also, and unlike the average run of weaker

men coming from back countries and far places, he failed to

reverence the particular tin gods worshipped variously by the

civilized tribes of men. He had seen totems before, and knew

them for what they were.

Tiring of being merely an onlooker, he ran up to Nevada, where

the new gold-mining boom was fairly started–“just to try a

flutter,” as he phrased it to himself. The flutter on the

Tonopah Stock Exchange lasted just ten days, during which time

his smashing, wild-bull game played ducks and drakes with the

more stereotyped gamblers, and at the end of which time, having

gambled Floridel into his fist, he let go for a net profit of

half a million. Whereupon, smacking his lips, he departed for

San Francisco and the St. Francis Hotel. It tasted good, and

his hunger for the game became more acute.

And once more the papers sensationalized him. BURNING DAYLIGHT

was a big-letter headline again. Interviewers flocked about him.

Old files of magazines and newspapers were searched through, and

the romantic and historic Elam Harnish, Adventurer of the Frost,

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