Burning Daylight by Jack London

Francisco upside down with that last raid of yours. You’re a

bonny fighter, you know, and you touch my imagination, though my

cooler reason tells me that you are a lunatic like the rest. The

lust for power! It’s a dreadful affliction. Why didn’t you stay

in your Klondike? Or why don’t you clear out and live a natural

life, for instance, like mine? You see, I can ask questions,

too. Now you talk and let me listen for a while.”

It was not until ten o’clock that Daylight parted from Ferguson.

As he rode along through the starlight, the idea came to him of

buying the ranch on the other side of the valley. There was no

thought in his mind of ever intending to live on it. His game

was

in San Francisco. But he liked the ranch, and as soon as he got

back to the office he would open up negotiations with Hillard.

Besides, the ranch included the clay-pit, and it would give him

the

whip-hand over Holdsworthy if he ever tried to cut up any didoes.

CHAPTER X

The time passed, and Daylight played on at the game. But the

game had entered upon a new phase. The lust for power in the

mere gambling and winning was metamorphosing into the lust for

power in order to revenge. There were many men in San Francisco

against whom he had registered black marks, and now and again,

with one of his lightning strokes, he erased such a mark. He

asked no quarter; he gave no quarter. Men feared and hated him,

and no one loved him, except Larry Hegan, his lawyer, who would

have laid down his life for him. But he was the only man with

whom Daylight was really intimate, though he was on terms of

friendliest camaraderie with the rough and unprincipled following

of the bosses who ruled the Riverside Club.

On the other hand, San Francisco’s attitude toward Daylight had

undergone a change. While he, with his slashing buccaneer

methods, was a distinct menace to the more orthodox financial

gamblers, he was nevertheless so grave a menace that they were

glad enough to leave him alone. He had already taught them the

excellence of letting a sleeping dog lie. Many of the men, who

knew that they were in danger of his big bear-paw when it reached

out for the honey vats, even made efforts to placate him, to get

on the friendly side of him. The Alta-Pacific approached him

confidentially with an offer of reinstatement, which he promptly

declined. He was after a number of men in that club, and,

whenever opportunity offered, he reached out for them and mangled

them. Even the newspapers, with one or two blackmailing

exceptions, ceased abusing him and became respectful. In short,

he was looked upon as a bald-faced grizzly from the Arctic wilds

to whom it was considered expedient to give the trail. At the

Burning Daylight

137

time he raided the steamship companies, they had yapped at him

and worried him, the whole pack of them, only to have him whirl

around and whip them in the fiercest pitched battle San Francisco

had ever known. Not easily forgotten was the Pacific Slope

Seaman’s strike and the giving over of the municipal government

to the labor bosses and grafters. The destruction of Charles

Klinkner and the California and Altamont Trust Company had been a

warning. But it was an isolated case; they had been confident in

strength in numbers–until he taught them better.

Daylight still engaged in daring speculations, as, for instance,

at the impending outbreak of the Japanese-Russian War, when, in

the face of the experience and power of the shipping gamblers, he

reached out and clutched practically a monopoly of available

steamer-charters. There was scarcely a battered tramp on the

Seven Seas that was not his on time charter. As usual, his

position was, “You’ve got to come and see me”; which they did,

and, to use another of his phrases, they “paid through the nose”

for the privilege. And all his venturing and fighting had now

but

one motive. Some day, as he confided to Hegan, when he’d made a

sufficient stake, he was going back to New York and knock the

spots

out of Messrs. Dowsett, Letton, and Guggenhammer. He’d

show them what an all-around general buzz-saw he was and what a

mistake they’d made ever to monkey with him. But he never lost

his head, and he knew that he was not yet strong enough to go

into death-grapples with those three early enemies. In the

meantime the black marks against them remained for a future

easement day.

Dede Mason was still in the office. He had made no more

overtures, discussed no more books and no more grammar. He had

no active interest in her, and she was to him a pleasant memory

of what had never happened, a joy, which, by his essential

nature, he was barred from ever knowing. Yet, while his interest

had gone to sleep and his energy was consumed in the endless

battles he waged, he knew every trick of the light on her hair,

every quick denote mannerism of movement, every line of her

figure as expounded by her tailor-made gowns. Several times, six

months or so apart, he had increased her salary, until now she

was receiving ninety dollars a month. Beyond this he dared not

go, though he had got around it by making the work easier. This

he had accomplished after her return from a vacation, by

retaining her substitute as an assistant. Also, he had changed

his office suite, so that now the two girls had a room by

themselves.

His eye had become quite critical wherever Dede Mason was

concerned. He had long since noted her pride of carriage. It

was unobtrusive, yet it was there. He decided, from the way she

carried it, that she deemed her body a thing to be proud of, to

be cared for as a beautiful and valued possession. In this, and

Burning Daylight

138

in the way she carried her clothes, he compared her with her

assistant, with the stenographers he encountered in other

offices, with the women he saw on the sidewalks. “She’s sure

well put up,” he communed with himself; “and she sure knows how

to dress and carry it off without being stuck on herself and

without laying it on thick.”

The more he saw of her, and the more he thought he knew of her,

the more unapproachable did she seem to him. But since he had no

intention of approaching her, this was anything but an

unsatisfactory fact. He was glad he had her in his office, and

hoped she’d stay, and that was about all.

Daylight did not improve with the passing years. The life was

not good for him. He was growing stout and soft, and there was

unwonted flabbiness in his muscles. The more he drank cocktails,

the more he was compelled to drink in order to get the desired

result, the inhibitions that eased him down from the concert

pitch of his operations. And with this went wine, too, at meals,

and the long drinks after dinner of Scotch and soda at the

Riverside. Then, too, his body suffered from lack of exercise;

and, from lack of decent human associations, his moral fibres

were weakening. Never a man to hide anything, some of his

escapades became public, such as speeding, and of joy-rides in

his big red motor-car down to San Jose with companions distinctly

sporty–incidents that were narrated as good fun and comically in

the newspapers.

Nor was there anything to save him. Religion had passed him by.

“A long time dead” was his epitome of that phase of speculation.

He was not interested in humanity. According to his rough-hewn

sociology, it was all a gamble. God was a whimsical, abstract,

mad thing called Luck. As to how one happened to be

born–whether

a sucker or a robber–was a gamble to begin with; Luck dealt out

the cards, and the little babies picked up the hands allotted

them.

Protest was vain. Those were their cards and they had to play

them, willy-nilly, hunchbacked or straight backed, crippled or

clean-limbed, addle-pated or clear- headed. There was no

fairness

in it. The cards most picked up put them into the sucker class;

the cards of a few enabled them to become robbers. The playing

of

the cards was life–the crowd of players, society.

The table was the earth, and the earth, in lumps and chunks, from

loaves of bread to big red motor-cars, was the stake. And in the

end, lucky and unlucky, they were all a long time dead.

It was hard on the stupid lowly, for they were coppered to lose

from the start; but the more he saw of the others, the apparent

winners, the less it seemed to him that they had anything to brag

Burning Daylight

139

about. They, too, were a long time dead, and their living did

Leave a Reply