Jack London Fullscreen Time-not-waits (1910)

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But he just knew there was another king coming—that was his hunch—and he got it.

And I tell you-all I got a hunch. There's a big strike coming on the Yukon, and it's just about due.

I don't mean no ornery Moosehide, Birch-Creek kind of a strike.

I mean a real rip-snorter hair-raiser.

I tell you-all she's in the air and hell-bent for election.

Nothing can stop her, and she'll come up river.

There's where you-all track my moccasins in the near future if you-all want to find me—somewhere in the country around Stewart River, Indian River, and Klondike River.

When I get back with the mail, I'll head that way so fast you-all won't see my trail for smoke.

She's a-coming, fellows, gold from the grass roots down, a hundred dollars to the pan, and a stampede in from the Outside fifty thousand strong.

You-all'll think all hell's busted loose when that strike is made."

He raised his glass to his lips.

"Here's kindness, and hoping you-all will be in on it."

He drank and stepped down from the chair, falling into another one of Bettles' bear-hugs.

"If I was you, Daylight, I wouldn't mush to-day," Joe Hines counselled, coming in from consulting the spirit thermometer outside the door.

"We're in for a good cold snap.

It's sixty-two below now, and still goin' down.

Better wait till she breaks."

Daylight laughed, and the old sour-doughs around him laughed.

"Just like you short-horns," Bettles cried, "afeard of a little frost.

And blamed little you know Daylight, if you think frost kin stop 'm."

"Freeze his lungs if he travels in it," was the reply.

"Freeze pap and lollypop!

Look here, Hines, you only ben in this here country three years. You ain't seasoned yet.

I've seen Daylight do fifty miles up on the Koyokuk on a day when the thermometer busted at seventy-two."

Hines shook his head dolefully.

"Them's the kind that does freeze their lungs," he lamented.

"If Daylight pulls out before this snap breaks, he'll never get through—an' him travelin' without tent or fly."

"It's a thousand miles to Dyea," Bettles announced, climbing on the chair and supporting his swaying body by an arm passed around Daylight's neck.

"It's a thousand miles, I'm sayin' an' most of the trail unbroke, but I bet any chechaquo—anything he wants—that Daylight makes Dyea in thirty days."

"That's an average of over thirty-three miles a day," Doc Watson warned, "and I've travelled some myself.

A blizzard on Chilcoot would tie him up for a week."

"Yep," Bettles retorted, "an' Daylight'll do the second thousand back again on end in thirty days more, and I got five hundred dollars that says so, and damn the blizzards."

To emphasize his remarks, he pulled out a gold-sack the size of a bologna sausage and thumped it down on the bar.

Doc Watson thumped his own sack alongside.

"Hold on!" Daylight cried.

"Bettles's right, and I want in on this.

I bet five hundred that sixty days from now I pull up at the Tivoli door with the Dyea mail."

A sceptical roar went up, and a dozen men pulled out their sacks.

Jack Kearns crowded in close and caught Daylight's attention.

"I take you, Daylight," he cried.

"Two to one you don't—not in seventy-five days."

"No charity, Jack," was the reply.

"The bettin's even, and the time is sixty days."

"Seventy-five days, and two to one you don't," Kearns insisted.

"Fifty Mile'll be wide open and the rim-ice rotten."

"What you win from me is yours," Daylight went on.

"And, by thunder, Jack, you can't give it back that way.

I won't bet with you. You're trying to give me money.

But I tell you-all one thing, Jack, I got another hunch. I'm goin' to win it back some one of these days.

You-all just wait till the big strike up river.