Burning Daylight by Jack London

BURNING DAYLIGHT by Jack London

PART I

CHAPTER I

It was a quiet night in the Shovel. At the bar, which ranged

along one side of the large chinked-log room, leaned half a dozen

men, two of whom were discussing the relative merits of

spruce-tea and lime-juice as remedies for scurvy. They argued

with an air of depression and with intervals of morose silence.

The other men scarcely heeded them. In a row, against the

opposite wall, were the gambling games. The crap-table was

deserted. One lone man was playing at the faro-table. The

roulette-ball was not even spinning, and the gamekeeper stood by

the roaring, red-hot stove, talking with the young, dark-eyed

woman, comely of face and figure, who was known from Juneau to

Fort Yukon as the Virgin. Three men sat in at stud-poker, but

they played with small chips and without enthusiasm, while there

were no onlookers. On the floor of the dancing-room, which

opened out at the rear, three couples were waltzing drearily to

the strains of a violin and a piano.

Circle City was not deserted, nor was money tight. The miners

were in from Moseyed Creek and the other diggings to the west,

the summer washing had been good, and the men’s pouches were

heavy with dust and nuggets. The Klondike had not yet been

discovered, nor had the miners of the Yukon learned the

possibilities of deep digging and wood-firing. No work was done

in the winter, and they made a practice of hibernating in the

large camps like Circle City during the long Arctic night. Time

was heavy on their hands, their pouches were well filled, and the

only social diversion to be found was in the saloons. Yet the

Shovel was practically deserted, and the Virgin, standing by the

stove, yawned with uncovered mouth and said to Charley Bates:-

“If something don’t happen soon, I’m gin’ to bed. What’s the

matter with the camp, anyway? Everybody dead?”

Bates did not even trouble to reply, but went on moodily rolling

a cigarette. Dan MacDonald, pioneer saloonman and gambler on the

upper Yukon, owner and proprietor of the Tivoli and all its

games, wandered forlornly across the great vacant space of floor

and joined the two at the stove.

“Anybody dead?” the Virgin asked him.

“Looks like it,” was the answer.

Burning Daylight

3

“Then it must be the whole camp,” she said with an air of

finality and with another yawn.

MacDonald grinned and nodded, and opened his mouth to speak, when

the front door swung wide and a man appeared in the light. A

rush of frost, turned to vapor by the heat of the room, swirled

about him to his knees and poured on across the floor, growing

thinner and thinner, and perishing a dozen feet from the stove.

Taking the wisp broom from its nail inside the door, the newcomer

brushed the snow from his moccasins and high German socks. He

would have appeared a large man had not a huge French-Canadian

stepped up to him from the bar and gripped his hand.

“Hello, Daylight!” was his greeting. “By Gar, you good for sore

eyes!”

“Hello, Louis, when did you-all blow in?” returned the newcomer.

“Come up and have a drink and tell us all about Bone Creek. Why,

dog-gone you-all, shake again. Where’s that pardner of yours?

I’m looking for him.”

Another huge man detached himself from the bar to shake hands.

Olaf Henderson and French Louis, partners together on Bone Creek,

were the two largest men in the country, and though they were but

half a head taller than the newcomer, between them he was dwarfed

completely.

“Hello, Olaf, you’re my meat, savvee that,” said the one called

Daylight. “To-morrow’s my birthday, and I’m going to put you-all

on your back–savvee? And you, too, Louis. I can put you-all on

your back on my birthday–savvee? Come up and drink, Olaf, and

I’ll tell you-all about it.”

The arrival of the newcomer seemed to send a flood of warmth

through the place. “It’s Burning Daylight,” the Virgin cried,

the first to recognize him as he came into the light. Charley

Bates’ tight features relaxed at the sight, and MacDonald went

over and joined the three at the bar. With the advent of Burning

Daylight the whole place became suddenly brighter and cheerier.

The barkeepers were active. Voices were raised. Somebody

laughed. And when the fiddler, peering into the front room,

remarked to the pianist, “It’s Burning Daylight,” the waltz-time

perceptibly quickened, and the dancers, catching the contagion,

began to whirl about as if they really enjoyed it. It was known

to them of old time that nothing languished when Burning Daylight

was around.

He turned from the bar and saw the woman by the stove and the

eager look of welcome she extended him.

“Hello, Virgin, old girl,” he called. “Hello, Charley. What’s

the matter with you-all? Why wear faces like that when coffins

Burning Daylight

4

cost only three ounces? Come up, you-all, and drink. Come up,

you unburied dead, and name your poison. Come up, everybody.

This is my night, and I’m going to ride it. To-morrow I’m

thirty, and then I’ll be an old man. It’s the last fling of

youth. Are you-all with me? Surge along, then. Surge along.

“Hold on there, Davis,” he called to the faro-dealer, who had

shoved his chair back from the table. “I’m going you one flutter

to see whether you-all drink with me or we-all drink with you.”

Pulling a heavy sack of gold-dust from his coat pocket, he

dropped it on the HIGH CARD.

“Fifty,” he said.

The faro-dealer slipped two cards. The high card won. He

scribbled the amount on a pad, and the weigher at the bar

balanced fifty dollars’ worth of dust in the gold-scales and

poured it into Burning Daylight’s sack. The waltz in the back

room being finished, the three couples, followed by the fiddler

and the pianist and heading for the bar, caught Daylight’s eye.

“Surge along, you-all” he cried. “Surge along and name it. This

is my night, and it ain’t a night that comes frequent. Surge up,

you Siwashes and Salmon-eaters. It’s my night, I tell you-all–”

“A blame mangy night,” Charley Bates interpolated.

“You’re right, my son,” Burning Daylight went on gaily.

“A mangy night, but it’s MY night, you see. I’m the mangy old

he-wolf. Listen to me howl.”

And howl he did, like a lone gray timber wolf, till the Virgin

thrust her pretty fingers in her ears and shivered. A minute

later she was whirled away in his arms to the dancing-floor,

where, along with the other three women and their partners, a

rollicking Virginia reel was soon in progress. Men and women

danced in moccasins, and the place was soon a-roar, Burning

Daylight the centre of it and the animating spark, with quip and

jest and rough merriment rousing them out of the slough of

despond in which he had found them.

The atmosphere of the place changed with his coming. He seemed

to fill it with his tremendous vitality. Men who entered from

the street felt it immediately, and in response to their queries

the barkeepers nodded at the back room, and said comprehensively,

“Burning Daylight’s on the tear.” And the men who entered

remained, and kept the barkeepers busy. The gamblers took heart

of life, and soon the tables were filled, the click of chips and

whir of the roulette-ball rising monotonously and imperiously

above the hoarse rumble of men’s voices and their oaths and heavy

laughs.

Burning Daylight

5

Few men knew Elam Harnish by any other name than Burning

Daylight, the name which had been given him in the early days in

the land because of his habit of routing his comrades out of

their blankets with the complaint that daylight was burning. Of

the pioneers in that far Arctic wilderness, where all men were

pioneers, he was reckoned among the oldest. Men like Al Mayo and

Jack McQuestion antedated him; but they had entered the land by

crossing the Rockies from the Hudson Bay country to the east.

He, however, had been the pioneer over the Chilcoot and Chilcat

passes. In the spring of 1883, twelve years before, a stripling

of eighteen, he had crossed over the Chilcoot with five comrades.

In the fall he had crossed back with one. Four had perished by

mischance in the bleak, uncharted vastness. And for twelve years

Elam Harnish had continued to grope for gold among the shadows of

the Circle.

And no man had groped so obstinately nor so enduringly. He had

grown up with the land. He knew no other land. Civilization was

a dream of some previous life. Camps like Forty Mile and Circle

City were to him metropolises. And not alone had he grown up

with the land, for, raw as it was, he had helped to make it. He

had made history and geography, and those that followed wrote of

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