losers.
“Surge up, everybody!” Daylight went on. “Name your
snake-juice! The winner pays!”
“This is my night! ” he was shouting, ten minutes later. “I’m
the lone he-wolf, and I’ve seen thirty winters. This is my
birthday, my one day in the year, and I can put any man on his
Burning Daylight
20
back. Come on, you-all! I’m going to put you-all in the snow.
Come on, you chechaquos [1] and sourdoughs[2], and get your
baptism!”
[1] Tenderfeet. [2] Old-timers.
The rout streamed out of doors, all save the barkeepers and the
singing Bacchuses. Some fleeting thought of saving his own
dignity entered MacDonald’s head, for he approached Daylight with
outstretched hand.
“What? You first?” Daylight laughed, clasping the other’s hand
as if in greeting.
“No, no,” the other hurriedly disclaimed. “Just congratulations
on your birthday. Of course you can put me in the snow. What
chance have I against a man that lifts nine hundred pounds?”
MacDonald weighed one hundred and eighty pounds, and Daylight had
him gripped solely by his hand; yet, by a sheer abrupt jerk, he
took the saloon-keeper off his feet and flung him face downward
in the snow. In quick succession, seizing the men nearest him,
he threw half a dozen more. Resistance was useless. They flew
helter-skelter out of his grips, landing in all manner of
attitudes, grotesquely and harmlessly, in the soft snow. It soon
became difficult, in the dim starlight, to distinguish between
those thrown and those waiting their turn, and he began feeling
their backs and shoulders, determining their status by whether or
not he found them powdered with snow.
“Baptized yet?” became his stereotyped question, as he reached
out his terrible hands.
Several score lay down in the snow in a long row, while many
others knelt in mock humility, scooping snow upon their heads and
claiming the rite accomplished. But a group of five stood
upright, backwoodsmen and frontiersmen, they, eager to contest
any
man’s birthday.
Graduates of the hardest of man-handling schools, veterans of
multitudes of rough-and-tumble battles, men of blood and sweat
and endurance, they nevertheless lacked one thing that Daylight
possessed in high degree–namely, an almost perfect brain and
muscular coordination. It was simple, in its way, and no virtue
of his. He had been born with this endowment. His nerves
carried messages more quickly than theirs; his mental processes,
culminating in acts of will, were quicker than theirs; his
muscles themselves, by some immediacy of chemistry, obeyed the
messages of his will quicker than theirs. He was so made, his
muscles were high-power explosives. The levers of his body
snapped into play like the jaws of steel traps. And in addition
Burning Daylight
21
to all this, his was that super-strength that is the dower of but
one human in millions–a strength depending not on size but on
degree, a supreme organic excellence residing in the stuff of the
muscles themselves. Thus, so swiftly could he apply a stress,
that, before an opponent could become aware and resist, the aim
of the stress had been accomplished. In turn, so swiftly did he
become aware of a stress applied to him, that he saved himself by
resistance or by delivering a lightning counter-stress.
“It ain’t no use you-all standing there,” Daylight addressed the
waiting group. “You-all might as well get right down and take
your baptizing. You-all might down me any other day in the year,
but on my birthday I want you-all to know I’m the best man. Is
that Pat Hanrahan’s mug looking hungry and willing? Come on,
Pat.” Pat Hanrahan, ex-bare-knuckle-prize fighter and
roughhouse-expert, stepped forth. The two men came against each
other in grips, and almost before he had exerted himself the
Irishman found himself in the merciless vise of a half-Nelson
that buried him head and shoulders in the snow. Joe Hines,
ex-lumber-jack, came down with an impact equal to a fall from a
two-story building–his overthrow accomplished by a
cross-buttock,
delivered, he claimed, before he was ready.
There was nothing exhausting in all this to Daylight. He did
not heave and strain through long minutes. No time, practically,
was occupied. His body exploded abruptly and terrifically in one
instant, and on the next instant was relaxed. Thus, Doc Watson,
the gray-bearded, iron bodied man without a past, a fighting
terror himself, was overthrown in the fraction of a second
preceding his own onslaught. As he was in the act of gathering
himself for a spring, Daylight was upon him, and with such
fearful suddenness as to crush him backward and down. Olaf
Henderson, receiving his cue from this, attempted to take
Daylight unaware, rushing upon him from one side as he stooped
with extended hand to help Doc Watson up. Daylight dropped on
his hands and knees, receiving in his side Olaf’s knees. Olaf’s
momentum carried him clear over the obstruction in a long, flying
fall. Before he could rise, Daylight had whirled him over on his
back and was rubbing his face and ears with snow and shoving
handfuls down his neck. “Ay ban yust as good a man as you ban,
Daylight,” Olaf spluttered, as he pulled himself to his feet;
“but
by Yupiter, I ban navver see a grip like that.” French Louis was
the last of the five, and he had seen enough to make him
cautious. He circled and baffled for a full minute before coming
to grips; and for another full minute they strained and reeled
without either winning the advantage. And then, just as the
contest was becoming interesting, Daylight effected one of his
lightning shifts, changing all stresses and leverages and at the
same time delivering one of his muscular explosions. French
Louis resisted till his huge frame crackled, and then, slowly,
was forced over and under and downward.
Burning Daylight
22
“The winner pays!” Daylight cried; as he sprang to his feet and
led the way back into the Tivoli. “Surge along you-all! This way
to the snake-room!”
They lined up against the long bar, in places two or three deep,
stamping the frost from their moccasined feet, for outside the
temperature was sixty below. Bettles, himself one of the gamest
of the old-timers in deeds and daring ceased from his drunken lay
of the “Sassafras Root,” and titubated over to congratulate
Daylight. But in the midst of it he felt impelled to make a
speech, and raised his voice oratorically.
“I tell you fellers I’m plum proud to call Daylight my friend.
We’ve hit the trail together afore now, and he’s eighteen carat
from his moccasins up, damn his mangy old hide, anyway. He was a
shaver when he first hit this country. When you fellers was his
age, you wa’n’t dry behind the ears yet. He never was no kid.
He was born a full-grown man. An’ I tell you a man had to be a
man in them days. This wa’n’t no effete civilization like it’s
come to be now.” Bettles paused long enough to put his arm in
a proper bear-hug around Daylight’s neck. “When you an’ me
mushed into the Yukon in the good ole days, it didn’t rain
soup and they wa’n’t no free-lunch joints. Our camp fires was
lit where we killed our game, and most of the time we lived on
salmon-tracks and rabbit-bellies–ain’t I right?”
But at the roar of laughter that greeted his inversion, Bettles
released the bear-hug and turned fiercely on them. “Laugh, you
mangy short-horns, laugh! But I tell you plain and simple, the
best of you ain’t knee-high fit to tie Daylight’s moccasin
strings.
Ain’t I right, Campbell? Ain’t I right, Mac? Daylight’s one of
the old guard, one of the real sour-doughs. And in them days
they
wa’n’t ary a steamboat or ary a trading-post, and we cusses had
to
live offen salmon-bellies and rabbit-tracks.”
He gazed triumphantly around, and in the applause that followed
arose cries for a speech from Daylight. He signified his
consent. A chair was brought, and he was helped to stand upon
it. He was no more sober than the crowd above which he now
towered–a wild crowd, uncouthly garmented, every foot moccasined
or muc-lucked[3], with mittens dangling from necks and with furry
ear-flaps raised so that they took on the seeming of the winged
helmets of the Norsemen. Daylight’s black eyes were flashing,
and the flush of strong drink flooded darkly under the bronze of
his cheeks. He was greeted with round on round of affectionate
cheers, which brought a suspicious moisture to his eyes, albeit
many of the voices were inarticulate and inebriate. And yet, men
have so behaved since the world began, feasting, fighting, and
Burning Daylight
23
carousing, whether in the dark cave-mouth or by the fire of the
squatting-place, in the palaces of imperial Rome and the rock
strongholds of robber barons, or in the sky-aspiring hotels of
modern times and in the boozing-kens of sailor-town. Just so
were these men, empire-builders in the Arctic Light, boastful and