1
In the middle of October 1870 Maudie Bacon’s husband, Garth, returned home from the wars to a hero’s welcome. Riel and his Métis hooligans had been routed without a shot being fired; Manitoba was salvaged for the Confederation and the federalist cause materially advanced. The Grand Trunk – already rumoured to be vying with some upstart pomposity calling itself the Canadian Pacific for the rights to extend their brand of evolutionary capitalism all the way to the salmon-basins of British Columbia – honoured Corporal Bacon and four other local boys at a banquet held in the concourse of the station on the Point Edward wharf. Major Bolton, representing Colonel Wolseley, toasted the valiant and spoke reverently of Tom Marshall, the fallen comrade no one more than he, his commanding officer, could have wished to have been present here amongst them. His sentiments were echoed all round. The hero’s widow – alas – was not there to acknowledge them.
Just as Lily feared, Robbie took Tom’s death very hard. For a little while he seemed almost pleased with the notion that his father had died in uniform while leading his men valiantly through impenetrable bush and over raging torrents and across waste marshes – every thicket treacherous with Indians who could twist their shadows at will into the shapes of monsters and trolls. From her place at the window Lily watched him slash his way into the underbrush, heard his bullying ululations rise and startle and scatter, then waited, heart-in-mouth, for her brave warrior to tramp out of the woodlot, his weapon trailing in the dirt like a sad plough, all the buoyancy vanished from the large eyes that periodically rolled from side to side in a vain attempt to identify the enemy who would not show himself. Carefully she had explained to him that his father’s body had stopped being – like the stilled rabbit’s or the frozen sparrows on the window-ledge, like Bachelor Bill under the earth a mile away – and that his spirit, his soul – the things they loved most about him, the way he smiled and listened and spoke – had flown back into the air and even now, if you closed your eyes quick, you could see them and hear them and almost touch them. But five minutes later he would scowl over at her and say with innocent ferocity, “When’s Da comin’ home?” When Lily suggested that he was seven-going-on-eight and that his Da would be proud of him if he would walk into town each morning and go to the big school to learn to read and write and start to become a man – he said shortly, “I want Da to take me.” That was that. When Lily propped him up on the chair-arm and began to read the story of Ali Baba to him (she’d memorized it word for word, though strangely enough she actually felt the letters crystallizing on the page, having their full miraculous say), he kicked the book out of her hands and stomped off. Later he allowed himself to be held while he cried, and cried out at the trolls and ogres whose deaths he had marked in black on his avenging scroll. Even then Lily knew these compulsory tears were but a tiny portion of the huge rage shaking him in her arms. That this would become for him the unanswerable anger of his life. When she wept – for herself, for Tom, for the deep absence no accumulation of days or other joys would ever fill – most of her tears were for her son, for the life he had dreamed that would not be, for the consolation she would be forever called upon to give and be rebuked for. Perhaps I am better off, she thought, because I never learned to dream too far ahead; Old Samuels taught us how to dream backwards and be content. Teach me to be lucky, she begged him one terrible November night as she sat in the dark swaddling her son’s fury
Brad was different. He seemed to accept her account of body and spirit, though she could tell it had no more reality for him than the rhymes bouncing in his head at night or as he lay among the spent clover of the meadowlands above the village – flat on his back, extinguishing the sun with an Ali Baba command. Avid for company the boys often played side by side, but only rarely now did their discrete fantasies intersect, and when they did, the outcome was usually swift and violent. Brad accepted Robbie’s sudden unprovoked fists as part of his lot in the scheme of things, even his due – but when the latter added, if he remember to, “I hate you”, Brad would stop crying at once and grow very still. This seemed to please Robbie almost as much as the tears, for he could then carry on his own game without even the background annoyance of his brother’s silliness. As a result Brad drew even closer to her. He ventured out less. He begged her to read to him, and as soon as she had got beyond her repertoire of memorized pieces and slowed to a near-halt at the balking print, he would then throw a tantrum, sometimes yelling out with impudent mockery the meaning of a word that would not come off her tongue. Later, in bed, he would nuzzle against her and start to sing “A froggie came a-wooing” till she relented and joined him part-way through and they finished up with a harmonious roar. I’m spoiling him, she thought, but she couldn’t think how else she could love him. Once when he called out to her from his sleep, she came across to the boys’ room in time to hear him say, “I saw Da, in my dream. He talked to me.” Robbie awakened too, said, “Da’s dead.” She held them both. When she woke up in the morning, they were still there.
“Ah, there goes Lily and her boys,” grocer Redmond remarked to a customer during one of Lily’s infrequent visits to town. Lily and her boys. That would be it – her life – at least as far as she could see.
There was so little time, it seemed, to think about the pregnancy, now in its eighth month. Fortunately it felt like the first one, lively and healthful. She had no discomfort except for the weight of the girl herself – she knew it would be a girl and addressed it always as ‘she’. This one will be mine, my private treasure, she thought, tasting the bitter sweetness of the notion, there’s no helping it. I shall try to give her father to her – when she’s ready – but by then she’ll be bonded to me. You have your Papa’s smile, I’ll say to her, and we’ll hug one another, feeling your absence, Tom, in our separate ways. Stop it, stop this, remember Old Samuels – dream backwards, dream of your lover blessing your flesh with the fire you stirred and vanquished with your own desire, his seed tucked away already bequeathed.
November of 1870 turned out to be a cold and nasty month. Sleet storms roared in off the Lake freezing the last leaves to their branches while gusting after-winds snapped them free again. Every morning Lily had to get a fire going early in order to boil gallons of water to unlock the ice choking the well-line under the sink and the one in the yard as well. Robbie and Brad carted wood in from the shed – several of Garth Bacons pals had come out in September and cut four cords – but already she had used too much kindling trying to get fast, hot fires going, and Robbie was coming closer each morning to cutting off his foot as he wielded his father’s hatchet uncertainly. Young Mary Bacon was sent out by Maudie every Saturday, but had to return weekdays to go to school – “A whim she’ll get over soon enough,” Maudie promised. Mary helped to clean and prepare food ahead, but she was less proficient with an axe than Robbie. One day she walked Robbie in and out of the village several times – once in the dark – to make sure he could find his way to Maudie’s house at any hour, should the baby decide to make an impromptu entrance. From Bacon’s a buggy would be despatched to pick up Dr. Dollard in Sarnia. “Sophie’s out of business,” Maudie said through Mary, “too drunk to deliver.” Robbie was delighted with his role as scout and forerunner. Lily was sure he rehearsed it secretly during the afternoons when she had to lie down to rest and he was ordered not to leave the yard. Brad ‘never told’, though he was treated as if he did – daily.
At any rate, Lily could see that life was going to be no easier after the baby came. She would need help. Help would cost money, even if one of Clara’s sisters could be persuaded to give up school for a while and come. And money there was little of. They had saved almost a hundred dollars towards the cottage in town, and the Government had promised some compensation whenever they could find time to pass the necessary legislation. She could live for a year or more on that. Perhaps longer if the boys didn’t go to school, an option she had never seriously considered. What then? The whole acreage could be turned over and made productive, provided she was strong enough in the spring. But prices were uncertain as the new Confederation sorted out its priorities, the weather was fickle and the competition fierce. As Maudie would say not ungenerously, “You see now, Lil, why so many of us cling to the church; what else’ve we got to protect us when we’re down, when our men desert us?” Late one afternoon when she was out in the garden area looking for Robbie, she saw his tiny figure zigzagging through the withered bull-thistle of the meadow, and her eye caught the pines on either side of the opening she stood in. The windbreak. Uncle Chester’s barrier against the encroaching world, Aunt Bridie’s signal to the Grand Trunk of defiance and separateness, Lily’s beloved evergreens that sang softly in the summer and held the stars aloft in black winter skies. The last of the ancient horizons, old sagamore, she whispered to his presence somewhere beside her. Say yes. Robbie’s death-shriek shook her awake. A bull-thistle toppled. Another. He waved to the sentry.
They must go. This winter, white-pine would still be fetching a good price, before the peninsula was opened up for systematic slaughter. Also, she realized, it was time. The smoke from the cottages was less than half-a-mile away. Some of the timber she could take back as sawn boards; she’d get someone, perhaps the timber-cutter, to put up two chicken coops. Chickens she knew. Eggs were a sure living. She’d trade vegetables for grain. Her thoughts raced, full of figures, schemes, possibilities. She barely felt Robbie’s petulant tug on her sleeve.
When Mary Bacon came that Saturday – the last in November – Lily was still excited, and some of her enthusiasm had rubbed off on the boys. “I’m gonna help cut the trees down!” Robbie announced, “an’ Brad an’ me’s gonna collect the eggs every mornin’, ain’t we, Brad?” and he demonstrated his technique for terrorizing any hen who harboured thoughts of saving an egg for her own pleasure. Lily came out with Tom’s writing pad, his quill pen and a bottle of thickened ink. “I’d like a message to be put up in the post office,” she said, and Mary, wide-eyed, picked up the pen, eager to display her newly-achieved skills. She left, skipping through the wet snow.
“When the hens get too old to give eggs,” Brad said, “what’ll we do with them?”
“Chop off their heads an’ eat ’em!” Robbie said. “Eh, Mama?”
Lily didn’t hear. She was clutching her abdomen with both hands.
“The baby kick you?” Brad said, open-mouthed.
“You okay, Mama?” Robbie clasped her arm and steadied her.
“Yes,” she hissed, sitting down, dredging up a thin smile.
That was no contraction, she thought.
2
Whatever fears pursued him, Robbie Marshall acted with a courage and sense of purpose that would have made his father whistle with pride. Despite the galling pain that stabbed incoherently – spitefully – at her body, Lily found time to worry about her seven-year-old melting into the snowy dark, lamp in hand, the map of his voyage floating a foot beyond its shivelled glow, her life in his care, his life suddenly lost to hers. As each scream jolted through her clenched teeth, Brad jumped in the invisible ring that pinned him to one spot on the earth. Between jolts she was at last able to ask him to bring her some water and another blanket. A long time later, hours it seemed, he meandered back in, humming to himself. He put the blanket on and began tucking her in, one tiny fold at a time. There was no water. Her throat burned. The pain no longer sliced into her in slender arcs, it scoured at the entire abdominal cavity, as if some drunken ploughman were dragging a harrow-disc cornerwise across it. Then the air around her went numb. She dreamt of Maman LaRouche in her ice-house, the soothing cool of ice on the skin, a sunny room shorn of flies.
Dr. Dollard arrived with a rush and a clatter that woke Brad out of his dazed sleep. He started to cry as if he would die were he to stop. Mary went straight to him, forgetting that Robbie was still in her arms dreaming he was awake and strong and not really lost. Maudie and the doctor headed for the bedroom. Garth Bacon tethered the horse and sat in the democrat shivering between ‘belts’ from his flask. He was only thirty but looked fifty – already he’d seen too much of this. Nothing could ever brace him against the kind of screams that came, undeflected by wood or grass or muffling snow or alcohol, straight into this brain. He thought of a pig being gutted alive by a deaf-and-dumb butcher. She’ll die, he thought. We’ll all die.
Dr. Dollard, puffing and sweating like a lumberjack, swore at Maudie, the fickleness of chloroform, at God’s indifference – wishing to Christ the woman would stop rising out of her death-drowse just long enough to disembowel him with an accusing shriek. “I said give me the forceps, you stupid girl. Quick! I might be able to save the child!”
Maudie stood frozen to her feet. She couldn’t understand what was holding her upright. She could see nothing but a brace of female thighs wrenched apart; a battering, bloody child’s skull driven back and up and in by some bellicose, furred sphincter the doctor’s paws plunged into with fury and disgust. Around her the air stank, like an outhouse in Hell. Mary caught hold of her sister-in-law just as she gave up the ghost. Then Mary herself handed Dr. Dollard his forceps and positioned the lamp so he could see. She saw the dried blood on their pincering grip. She wondered how she had been born, then forgiven, then loved.
“Gotcha by the ears, you little bugger,” the doctor gasped, pulling back as if he were rowing a coal-barge upstream. Lily made no sound to interrupt the whooshing blast of blood and pus that greased the baby’s slide into the air. The force of it knocked the doctor back onto his rump. The foetus dripped onto the bed. Maudie was awake now. All was in motion. The age-old rituals. Garth had come in and was stoking the fire. He listened for the signal, the all-clear. It didn’t come.
Lily opened her eyes to see the tears in those of the women. “Thank God, you’re alive,” Maudie said. “It’s a miracle.”
“The baby’s gone,” said Dr. Dollard wearily. “Probably died yesterday.”
Lily whispered something in Maudie’s ear. “She wants to know if it was a girl,” Maudie said.
The doctor appeared puzzled. “As a matter of fact, it was,” he said. “But it was all for the best, Mrs. Marshall. Your little girl was hydrocephalic, a Mongolian idiot.”
Maudie and Mary both shuddered. The Lord moved in mysterious ways His wonders to perform.
“Come on, ladies,” barked the doctor, “we’ve got work to do.”
Three weeks later Lily, always a marvel to the skeptics of the medical profession, was feeling well enough to send Mary back to her studies. Brad had slept with Mary every night since the stillbirth of little Kathleen. When Mary left he crawled in beside his mother. Robbie announced he was ready to trek into the village to give school a try. After the holiday, Lily promised, and he dashed out into the snow to re-enact the legend of his pilgrimage he was longing to find an audience for.
Lily was sound asleep on the kitchen cot when Brad shook her awake. His eyes directed her towards the doorway. She felt the draft over her bare legs, the thinness of her shift under the blanket. The door closed and before it, filling most of the space there, stood a tall dark-skinned young man whose moustache rubbed against his smile. He pulled the tuque off his head and held it in front of him.
“Your boy,” he said with a grin that was both sheepish and bold, “he tell me to come in.” Robbie popped out from behind one of the powerful legs; he had an axe in his hands.
Lily sat up, still blinking.
The accent was familiar. “I come about the notice in the post office,” he said and ruffled Robbie’s hair.
3
Ti-Jean Thériault swung his big axe and another of the great pines went crashing to the ground right where it was supposed to. The boys, well out of the way, jumped up and sprinted through the snow towards Ti-Jean, who posed for them, one foot on the fallen tree like a hunter beaming over a bull-moose. He grinned wickedly and flung Robbie through the air, laughing at his squeals of terror and glee. Brad laughed, too, seated as usual about three feet away from Ti-Jean in a place where he could observe him, secure and rapt. Often Ti-Jean would make teasing lunges his way but he always stopped just short, just in time. Robbie grabbed his father’s hatchet and under Ti-Jean’s tutelage soon became proficient at stripping away the small branches of a felled tree. Brad would follow behind, trailing his fingers along the bark and stubs, humming to himself, keeping an eye on Ti-Jean in hope that he would burst into his strange, loud, off-beat singing – as he often did when the work had eased a little. Once, while they sat on a log sharing jam sandwiches, Lily saw Brad lean over and press his face into Ti-Jean’s rough Hudson’s Bay shirt; Ti-Jean kept right on talking to Robbie.
Voici l’hiver arrivé
Les rivières sont gelées
C’est le temps d’aller aux bois
Dans les chantiers nous hivernerons
Dans les chantiers nous hivernerons
trolled the timberman, and Brad, dawdling behind Robbie and his chattering hatchet, repeated the music with his high, boyish flute, the backwoodsy accent flawless. Soon he drifted off into the shelter of the hardwoods while Robbie kept hacking dutifully and Ti-Jean lit his clay-pipe and uttered puffs of smoke through his frozen breath. Later on Brad circled back, coming up unnoticed behind the busy labourers – the song still singing in his head, possessed.
Every morning now the boys were up before Lily. Robbie got a smoky fire going in the stove while Brad discomfited the embers into the fireplace. Moments after sunrise they headed out to the windbreak to watch for the jaunty figure of Ti-Jean cutting across the fields from the village. Lily could hear them arguing about who had seen him first. Robbie always won. Ti-Jean was boarding at Green House, a dingy hostel run by the Grand Trunk. He came every morning, Monday to Saturday – whistling, singing, puffing on his pipe, wool shirt open at the throat – and worked until four o’clock, when he waved the boys goodbye across the fields and disappeared. Lily made him and the boys a lunch, and brought hot tea out to the worksite from time to time. Robbie insisted on drinking out of a tin mug.
Lily assumed that Ti-Jean would be returning home to his family in Woodston up in Huron County for the Christmas holiday, so she was surprised when he asked, in the diffident manner he invariably used when talking to her, if he might join them for the occasion. “Yes! Yes!” Robbie said before Brad could get in. Lily, who could deny her boys very little, said yes. Tom had always maintained the traditions of Christmas he had inherited from Aunt Elspeth and insisted that they keep them up ‘for Auntie’s sake’.
When Ti-Jean asked her to come with them to select a tree, she said no, that she wasn’t feeling up to a walk in the woods yet, and he understood perfectly and the three men tramped off, axe and hatchets aloft, into the bush. Lily watched them go for a bit but had to sit down shortly. She felt dizzy; her heart fluttered and slammed. Get up, woman, she said aloud, you’ve got work to do and a life to lead.
Somewhat later she put on her macintosh and boots and went out to wait for them. She noted that Ti-Jean was more than half-way through his work. He had cleared an opening in the windbreak almost fifty feet wide. She could see straight across to the village. When the job was finished, she realized that she would be able to stand in her kitchen window and view the entire sweep of the town from the rail-yards and docks in the south-west to the dunes and First Bush in the north and north-east. Between these extremes lay the cottages of the labouring folk, already four-streets square with hearth-fires aglow, smoke from their chimneys welcoming and insular, the cries of their children carrying freely over the fields. She thought she could see the tall brick chimney of the new two-room school on Victoria Street. Above the low snow-covered landscape before her, the winter sun burned without solace.
At Ti-Jean’s behest Lily brought out the little Testament with Papa’s writing on it. “I read in English almost as good as French,” he announced after dinner, “that’s what my Maman say, an’ she’s never wrong, eh?” He winked at the boys and grinned shyly in Lily’s direction. “Always my job to read the Christmas story.” “After mass?” He laughed, went red in the face, then said, “Ah non, nous sommes Hugenots.”
He read the St. Luke version of the nativity in a halting cadence that soon established its own authenticity, its own sort of flawed beauty – at least in the mind of one of the listeners. Though Lily had heard it before, she never lost her sense of the story’s magic, of its having happened in a longago time when such mysteries were radiant with possibility, as probable as the rings of Saturn or the moons of Jupiter. She glanced over at Brad and was not disappointed.
Some small presents were exchanged. Robbie’s eyes lit up at the sight of a bone-handled knife in its own leather case. Brad clutched the wooden carving of a Gryphon as if it were greased and likely to slip away. Lily blushed when she saw the Irish linen handkerchief. She went back into the shed and came out with a quilt under her arm. Ti-Jean stopped smiling. He took it in his hands, and she saw them shake a little. “Maman makes these,” he said. “But not like this.”
“Not that one,” Lily said. “You can keep that one for now, but I’ll make you a proper one in the new year, when I’m feelin’ better.”
Ti-Jean jumped up and went over to his haversack, the one he’d pulled the presents out of. He had a leather case in his hand. He drew out a fiddle, perched on a stool and began to play. And sing.
Quand tu retourn’ chez son père
Aussi pour revoir ta mère
Le bonhomme est a la porte
La bonn’femme fête la gargotte
Dans le chantiers, ah ! n’hivernerons plus!
Dans le chantiers, ah ! n’hivernerons plus!
They all joined in on the chorus, several times.
With both children asleep on the rug in front of the fire, Ti-Jean held the Testament in his hands for a moment, stared at Lily and said, “Who is Lady Fairchild?”
“Somebody who lived a long time ago,” Lily said.
Just after New Year’s when Lily arrived one morning with a jug of tea, Robbie looked up with a smug smile on his face and said, “Ti-Jean’s in the barn, ain’t he, Brad?” Brad’s smile confirmed the conspiracy.
“There’s an old stove in there,” Ti-Jean said when he came up to them.
“And a sleepin’ cot,” Robbie said.
“We moved it there when Bachelor Bill’s place was torn down by the railroad,” Lily said.
“A bit of glass on the broken windows an’ it could be fixed up real nice,” Ti-Jean said.
“Nice an’ warm,” Robbie said.
“But you’ll be through cuttin’ in two weeks,” Lily said.
“Not if I rent a team an’ haul these logs to the mill before the break-up.”
“I couldn’t afford to pay you.”
“We’ll help, won’t we, Brad?”
“After the mill pays you, that’s okay with me.”
“It’d be cheaper in the long run,” said Lily slowly.
“I could get some boards sawn,” he said, nodding to the boys.
“To build the coops,” said Robbie.
“For the chickens,” said Brad.
“I’m real good with my hands.”
Lily smiled. “Accordin’ to Maman,” she said.
Robbie promised to give school a try as soon as Ti-Jean no longer needed him in the woodlot. It was nearing the end of January. Lily was feeling much stronger. She accompanied Ti-Jean and the boys to Little Lake but did not join them on the ice. Brad cried because he fell and couldn’t keep up with Robbie and Ti-Jean, but settled down when Ti-Jean sat and whittled a strange sea-monster out of a piece of frozen driftwood and told him a story about it half in English, half in French. Robbie found some older boys and showed them how good he was on skates. In a week or so the horses were due to arrive and both boys would get to drive them, Robbie first, then Brad. Ti-Jean fixed up Uncle Chester’s hideaway so that it was indeed warm and cozy. He loved the rope-rug Lily gave him for the floor and the curtains she adapted for the window over the bunk. He even had a little shelf where he kept some books – in French. “Junior Book Three,” he said proudly. “Best in the family.”
Lily began to think ahead, to get herself organized for the spring. She hauled out of the shed Uncle Chester’s boxes and containers, still bearing the stamp of his patient hand. She set up the quilting frame once again, hoping to get four or five completed by April. With the boys out of her hair, even on Sundays, she could work miracles. However, she discovered she was short of rags and swatches. She knew she should go over to see Clara, who would supply her ten times over, but still she hesitated. Later, when I’m ready, she thought. Then she noticed the trunk where she’d tossed all of Tom’s clothes last August. She opened it quietly as one eases open a closet where some ghost has slept forever undisturbed. She lifted them, squeezed them, smelled them, let their hues and textures become vivid again. Then she took her scissors and one by one she cut the shirts, trousers, underclothes, socks and his navvy’s cap into neat geometric shapes she would weave into remembrance.
Not every evening did Ti-Jean stay with them after their supper was done, though the boys made his periodic escape difficult. He had some young friends in town (“a girl friend,” Robbie breathed) or he had a book to finish reading in his refurbished quarters. But sometimes he stayed on for a few moments after the boys were ordered to bed to have a quiet cup of coffee with Lily. As soon as they were alone, he became very shy, and only by gentle questioning could Lily – knitting or sifting patches for her quilts – get him to talk about himself. It wasn’t long before she learned to their mutual surprise that although he was born and raised in Woodston, his mother had come there from Sandwich in 1835. As a girl she had known Maman LaRouche, a LaPeche like her and a second cousin. Lily found it fascinating to hear of the Frenchman’s exploits in the War of 1812 narrated once again, but this time through a different set of filters. Maman herself came through as lively and as special as she had been in real life. Lily added some of her own favourite ‘Maman’ stories to the legend, the happier ones, the ones she cherished. Lily and Ti-Jean lapsed so easily into French that Lily was often unaware of it until some exotic phrase momentarily jolted the flow of their evening-soft, embering soliloquies. It was much later – and sandwiched between longer, more reminiscent narratives – that Lily was able to piece together his own story, and then only as a fragmented outline. His father had come to the Huron Tract with John Galt and Tiger Dunlop. He was a lusty primitive who lived for cutting trees and trekking miles into the snow-bound bushlands of the county. Ti-Jean was the oldest of eleven children, his mother wanted him to stay in school, he wanted to stay in school but at thirteen he was side by side with his father in a pinery. His father roughed him up on a whim or in a whiskey rage, he slapped his wife when she dared to intervene, and Ti-Jean, who was almost twenty and no longer petit, blackened both of his father’s eyes, keeping him out of the bush for a week, and his mother cried over her son and said she was ashamed of him, so he left to seek his fortune out of the bush, on the docks or the railroad or in a factory, he didn’t write and he didn’t go home for Christmas. He would never go home again.
“It’s a beautiful baby girl with the sweetest big blue eyes I’ve ever seen,” Maudie said, then flushed and looked at her tea.
“When was it born?” Lily asked.
“Just before Christmas. A few weeks late.”
“Clara was never one for bein’ on time,” Lily said and saw the puzzlement in Maudie’s face. “I’m kiddin’,” she added. Maudie appeared to be thrown into worse confusion, but after a strong dose of fresh tea she recovered.
“You need to get into town more,” she said.
“Sarnia’s a long ways for me.”
“You know I mean the Point. Us. Our Wednesday afternoons.”
“I know. I don’t want you to ever feel I’m ungrateful. You an’ Garth saved my life. I’ll come. Soon.”
“Clara wants desperately to see you, but she’s shy about bringin’ the baby out here. She’d like you to come to the Christenin’ next Sunday.”
Lily listened for a while to Robbie barking his hopeless commands at Dick and Diamond, the team of Belgians with a mind of their own. “I just can’t, Maudie. Not yet.”
“We understand, we honestly do. But will you think about comin’ to the wedding in March, then? We’re cookin’ up a shivaree.” Lily smiled on cue. “You know Steve, Garth’s younger brother, an’ his girl Elaine is just the sweetest thing you’d ever wanna meet.”
Lily waited for the codicil.
“’Course, she’s Baptist, but still an’ all –”
Ti-Jean let out an oak-rattling whoop and the horses, chained logs, master and apprentices could be heard moving through the woods towards the winding road that led all the way to Sarnia.
Maudie dropped her voice into a deeper, minor key, full of inescapable regret. Lily leaned back. “You know, of course, it don’t mean nothin’ to me, or Garth for that matter, but I wouldn’t be much of a friend if I didn’t tell you what kind of ugly, disgustin’ gossip is goin’ around town.”
“Folks don’t like me cuttin’ down the windbreak?”
Maudie skidded a bit but got right back on the rails: “It’s about...him.”
“Who?”
“You know who, the Frenchie.”
“Ti-Jean Thériault?”
“Lily, I’m serious. I’m worried about your welfare even if you ain’t. You gotta remember your boys’re gonna be in school next fall. Think of them, for God’s sake.”
“They like the Frenchie.”
“That ain’t the point an’ you know it perfectly well. Folks are sayin’, out loud mind you, that he’s livin’ out here, that he used to be seen comin’ home from here every afternoon at a respectable hour but after New Year’s he’s only been back to town three or four times.” She cast a furtive glance towards the bedrooms, blushed, and plunged into the mire: “People are wonderin’ just where he’s hangin’ up his socks, if you get my meanin’.”
“In the barn,” Lily said. She followed Maudie’s gaze around to the window and out across the drifts to where the smoke hung sweetly nicely above the chimney-pipe Ti-Jean had rigged up. “Ain’t that where Frenchie’s usually live?”
“Thank the Lord,” sighed Maudie, depleted and relieved. “I’ll spread the word.” She finished her tea, took Lily by the hand and just squeezed it. For some occasions even Maudie had no words.
“I will think about the weddin’,” Lily said and brushed her friend’s forehead with a kiss. “By the way,” she added, handing Maudie a package wrapped in tissue, “I made this little quilt for the baby.”
The windbreak was down. The west wind that blew over the village now continued across the open fields and ruffled the shingles on the house where Lily Marshall and her boys lived. All the logs had been taken to the mill on Sarnia Bay. Ti-Jean received his pay. A wagonload of sawn boards and joists arrived in the last week of February and were stored in Benjamin’s stall until the first crack in the winter weather. A few days later it thawed a bit, and Ti-Jean and his helpers cleared the ground and drew the outlines of two coops in the softening earth. Indoors, they sketched plans and Ti-Jean explained the intricacies of squaring and gabling. The boys begged to go with Ti-Jean into Sarnia to buy nails and two tack-hammers. But Brad came down with a hacking cough, had to stay home, and despite having made up his mind to sulk all day, he was delighted to discover his mother could sing in French as well as that other weird tongue. He fell asleep and when he woke she was sitting on his bed.
Just as Ti-Jean and Robbie came up the lane, the wind changed direction, slicing down unopposed from the north-west. By the time they had their boots off, the snow had started in earnest.
Robbie was exhausted. Lily managed to get a little soup into Brad before he fell into a deep slumber beside his brother. She drew the comforter lingeringly over them. Ti-Jean was behind her in the doorway, watching. She kissed each of her sons, and when she turned to slip out, Ti-Jean was no longer there.
She found him in front of the fire, propped on one elbow and staring into the flames, enlivened by the storm swirling above them. On the window sills fresh snow flowered. The room drew itself inward. Lily sat down on the sheepskin next to Ti-Jean, then lay back, succumbing to the languorous, sleepy heat of the fire already beginning to wane. Ti-Jean slipped his sweater over his head – his skin rubbed copper in the ebb of light. Behind her, the kitchen lamp sputtered, and she felt the darkness against the calves of her legs, her bare arms, the nape of her neck. Outside, the snow ceased, as if touched by a wizard’s wand.
Ti-Jean rose up slowly dreamily – his torso bent like a paladin’s shield, burnished and rippled from splendid use, his eyes as bright as Lancelot’s might have been above Guinevere’s sudden beauty. He leaned over, captured her wrist and drew her up with him so they were standing together, only the fold of their hands fluttering between the reach and yearn of their bodies. His open hand folded around her waist, he eased her breast against his, he launched her clasped hand outward with his, upward like the wing of a revived bird, he was moving his legs against hers, nudging urging coaxing them into sensual motion. They were dancing. Hesitant, anapest, with no music but the song they were singing – separately – in their loneliness. They were dancing, in a circle no rounder than the moon’s on All Hallow’s Eve. His teeth crushed her lips; she nipped his tongue with her own. A wave of chilling air shot between them.
“I got to go home,” he said. “For a little while.”
Lily gathered her breath, some strength and said, “Of course, you must. They been waitin’ a long time for you.”
“I’ll come back.”
“Don’t promise.”
Lily helped him pack his few belongings. She was surprised to note that it was only about eight o’clock. The wind had eased off and fresh snow glittered as the moon sailed in and out of the thick clouds. Ti-Jean said that there was a way-freight leaving for the north from the rail-yards in about an hour. He knew the engineer; he could be home by midnight. He was a long time in the boys’ bedroom, though he did not wake them up to say goodbye. He held Lily again at the door, and for a second neither of them was willing to admit the impossibility of what they both desired. Then he turned and left. He didn’t stop to wave, as he did with Lily’s boys.
Lily fell exhausted into Uncle Chester’s chair. Only the feeble glow from the spent fire gave any relief to the gathering gloom. Before she lit the lamp beside the quilting frame, she spoke into the darkness: “See what you’ve done? See what you’ve brought me to? Why did you leave me, Tom?”