Jack London Fullscreen Time-not-waits (1910)

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"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 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?"

Daylight grinned as he answered,

"Drumming up trade for a free rural delivery route."

"Well, I'm glad I wrote that letter this afternoon," the little man went on, "or else I'd have missed seeing you.

I've seen your photo in the papers many a time, and I've a good memory for faces. I recognized you at once.