Burning Daylight by Jack London

Burning Daylight

129

As on the previous day, just for the joy of it, he followed

cattle-trails at haphazard and worked his way up toward the

summits. Coming out on a wagon road that led upward, he followed

it for several miles, emerging in a small, mountain-encircled

valley, where half a dozen poor ranchers farmed the wine-grapes

on the steep slopes. Beyond, the road pitched upward. Dense

chaparral covered the exposed hillsides but in the creases of the

canons huge spruce trees grew, and wild oats and flowers.

Half an hour later, sheltering under the summits themselves, he

came out on a clearing. Here and there, in irregular patches

where the steep and the soil favored, wine grapes were growing.

Daylight could see that it had been a stiff struggle, and that

wild nature showed fresh signs of winning–chaparral that had

invaded the clearings; patches and parts of patches of vineyard,

unpruned, grassgrown, and abandoned; and everywhere old

stake-and-rider fences vainly striving to remain intact. Here,

at a small farm-house surrounded by large outbuildings, the road

ended. Beyond, the chaparral blocked the way.

He came upon an old woman forking manure in the barnyard, and

reined in by the fence.

“Hello, mother,” was his greeting; “ain’t you got any men-folk

around to do that for you?”

She leaned on her pitchfork, hitched her skirt in at the waist,

and regarded him cheerfully. He saw that her toil-worn,

weather-exposed hands were like a man’s, callused,

large-knuckled, and gnarled, and that her stockingless feet were

thrust into heavy man’s brogans.

“Nary a man,” she answered. “And where be you from, and all the

way up here? Won’t you stop and hitch and have a glass of wine?”

Striding clumsily but efficiently, like a laboring-man, she led

him into the largest building, where Daylight saw a hand-press

and all the paraphernalia on a small scale for the making of

wine. It was too far and too bad a road to haul the grapes to

the valley wineries, she explained, and so they were compelled to

do it themselves. “They,” he learned, were she and her daughter,

the latter a widow of forty-odd. It had been easier before the

grandson died and before he went away to fight savages in the

Philippines. He had died out there in battle.

Daylight drank a full tumbler of excellent Riesling, talked a few

minutes, and accounted for a second tumbler. Yes, they just

managed not to starve. Her husband and she had taken up this

government land in ’57 and cleared it and farmed it ever since,

until he died, when she had carried it on. It actually didn’t

pay for the toil, but what were they to do? There was the wine

trust, and wine was down. That Riesling? She delivered it to

the

Burning Daylight

130

railroad down in the valley for twenty-two cents a gallon. And

it was a long haul. It took a day for the round trip. Her

daughter was gone now with a load.

Daylight knew that in the hotels, Riesling, not quite so good

even, was charged for at from a dollar and a half to two dollars

a quart. And she got twenty-two cents a gallon. That was the

game. She was one of the stupid lowly, she and her people before

her–the ones that did the work, drove their oxen across the

Plains, cleared and broke the virgin land, toiled all days and

all hours, paid their taxes, and sent their sons and grandsons

out to fight and die for the flag that gave them such ample

protection that they were able to sell their wine for twenty-two

cents. The same wine was served to him at the St. Francis for

two dollars a quart, or eight dollars a short gallon. That was

it.

Between her and her hand-press on the mountain clearing and him

ordering his wine in the hotel was a difference of seven dollars

and seventy-eight cents. A clique of sleek men in the city got

between her and him to just about that amount. And, besides

them, there was a horde of others that took their whack. They

called it railroading, high finance, banking, wholesaling, real

estate, and such things, but the point was that they got it,

while she got what was left,–twenty-two cents. Oh, well, a

sucker was born every minute, he sighed to himself, and nobody

was to blame; it was all a game, and only a few could win, but it

was damned hard on the suckers.

“How old are you, mother?” he asked.

“Seventy-nine come next January.”

“Worked pretty hard, I suppose?”

“Sense I was seven. I was bound out in Michigan state until I

was woman-grown. Then I married, and I reckon the work got

harder and harder.”

“When are you going to take a rest?”

She looked at him, as though she chose to think his question

facetious, and did not reply.

“Do you believe in God?”

She nodded her head.

“Then you get it all back,” he assured her; but in his heart he

was wondering about God, that allowed so many suckers to be born

and that did not break up the gambling game by which they were

robbed from the cradle to the grave.

Burning Daylight

131

“How much of that Riesling you got?”

She ran her eyes over the casks and calculated. “Just short of

eight hundred gallons.”

He wondered what he could do with all of it, and speculated as to

whom he could give it away.

“What would you do if you got a dollar a gallon for it?” he

asked.

“Drop dead, I suppose.”

“No; speaking seriously.”

“Get me some false teeth, shingle the house, and buy a new wagon.

The road’s mighty hard on wagons.”

“And after that?”

“Buy me a coffin.”

“Well, they’re yours, mother, coffin and all.”

She looked her incredulity.

“No; I mean it. And there’s fifty to bind the bargain. Never

mind

the receipt. It’s the rich ones that need watching, their

memories

being so infernal short, you know. Here’s my address. You’ve

got

to deliver it to the railroad. And now, show me the way out of

here. I want to get up to the top.”

On through the chaparral he went, following faint cattle.

trails and working slowly upward till he came out on the divide

and gazed down into Napa Valley and back across to Sonoma

Mountain… “A sweet land,” he muttered, “an almighty sweet

land.”

Circling around to the right and dropping down along the

cattle-trails, he quested for another way back to Sonoma Valley;

but the cattle-trails seemed to fade out, and the chaparral to

grow thicker with a deliberate viciousness and even when he won

through in places, the canon and small feeders were too

precipitous for his horse, and turned him back. But there was no

irritation about it. He enjoyed it all, for he was back at his

old game of bucking nature. Late in the afternoon he broke

through, and followed a well-defined trail down a dry canon.

Here he got a fresh thrill. He had heard the baying of the hound

some minutes before, and suddenly, across the bare face of the

Burning Daylight

132

hill above him, he saw a large buck in flight. And not far

behind came the deer-hound, a magnificent animal. Daylight sat

tense in his saddle and watched until they disappeared, his

breath just a trifle shorter, as if he, too, were in the chase,

his nostrils distended, and in his bones the old hunting ache and

memories of the days before he came to live in cities.

The dry canon gave place to one with a slender ribbon of running

water. The trail ran into a wood-road, and the wood-road emerged

across a small flat upon a slightly travelled county road. There

were no farms in this immediate section, and no houses. The soil

was meagre, the bed-rock either close to the surface or

constituting the surface itself. Manzanita and scrub-oak,

however, flourished and walled the road on either side with a

jungle growth. And out a runway through this growth a man

suddenly scuttled in a way that reminded Daylight of a rabbit.

He was a little man, in patched overalls; bareheaded, with a

cotton shirt open at the throat and down the chest. The sun was

ruddy-brown in his face, and by it his sandy hair was bleached on

the ends to peroxide blond. He signed to Daylight to halt, and

held up a letter. “If you’re going to town, I’d be obliged if

you mail this.”

“I sure will.” Daylight put it into his coat pocket.

“Do you live hereabouts, stranger?”

But the little man did not answer. He was gazing at Daylight in

a surprised and steadfast fashion.

“I know you,” the little man announced. “You’re Elam

Harnish–Burning Daylight, the papers call you. Am I right?”

Daylight nodded.

“But what under the sun are you doing here in the chaparral?”

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