It was bright day when next he opened his eyes.
The sun showed it to be midday. A glance around
at the far-away banks, and he knew that he was on
the mighty Yukon. Sixty Mile could not be far
away. He was abominably weak. His movements
were slow, fumbling, and inaccurate, accompanied by
panting and head-swimming, as he dragged himself into
a sitting-up position in the stern, his rifle beside
him. He looked a long time at Elijah, but could
not see whether he breathed or not, and he was too
immeasurably far away to make an investigation.
He fell to dreaming and meditating again, dreams and
thoughts being often broken by sketches of blankness,
wherein he neither slept, nor was unconscious, nor
was aware of anything. It seemed to him more
like cogs slipping in his brain. And in this
intermittent way he reviewed the situation. He
was still alive, and most likely would be saved, but
how came it that he was not lying dead across the
boat on top the ice-rim? Then he recollected
the great final effort he had made. But why had
he made it? he asked himself. It had not been
fear of death. He had not been afraid, that
was sure. Then he remembered the hunch and the
big strike he believed was coming, and he knew that
the spur had been his desire to sit in for a hand
at that big game. And again why? What if
he made his million? He would die, just the
same as those that never won more than grub-stakes.
Then again why? But the blank stretches in
his thinking process began to come more frequently,
and he surrendered to the delightful lassitude that
was creeping over him.
He roused with a start. Something had whispered
in him that he must awake. Abruptly he saw Sixty
Mile, not a hundred feet away.
The current had brought him to the very door.
But the same current was now sweeping him past and
on into the down-river wilderness. No one was
in sight. The place might have been deserted,
save for the smoke he saw rising from the kitchen
chimney. He tried to call, but found he had no
voice left. An unearthly guttural hiss alternately
rattled and wheezed in his throat. He fumbled
for the rifle, got it to his shoulder, and pulled
the trigger. The recoil of the discharge tore
through his frame, racking it with a thousand agonies.
The rifle had fallen across his knees, and an attempt
to lift it to his shoulder failed. He knew he
must be quick, and felt that he was fainting, so he
pulled the trigger of the gun where it lay. This
time it kicked off and overboard. But just before
darkness rushed over him, he saw the kitchen door
open, and a woman look out of the big log house that
was dancing a monstrous jig among the trees.
CHAPTER IX
Ten days later, Harper and Joe Ladue arrived at Sixty
Mile, and Daylight, still a trifle weak, but strong
enough to obey the hunch that had come to him, traded
a third interest in his Stewart town site for a third
interest in theirs on the Klondike.
Copyrights
Burning Daylight from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.