The next morning at school, Dana and Jean were surprised that Ms. Woods was absent. When the vice-principal hurried into the room, flustered and annoyed, they exchanged glances. No explanation was given as he began to teach them, but it was obvious that something was wrong.
“What’s this?” said Jean, at lunch. “You think she run away from us?”
Dana was mystified. “It doesn’t make sense. She sent the note and called our parents. I thought that meant she was on our side. But then she didn’t mention the Book of Dreams. So she doesn’t know about the quest, even though she knows about the gateways. That could put her in the enemy camp. And what about the Halloween deadline? My mother didn’t say anything about that.”
Jean looked equally confused. “She can be bad, she can be good. Maybe she try to trap us? Maybe she try to help? How do we know?”
“We don’t,” Dana said, thinking about it, “until she turns up again. But I think we should go this weekend anyway. We’d be following Grandfather’s advice as well as the musicians’.”
“D’accord. We take the chance she give us, and when she come back we see what happen.”
Though Dana was glad to have a plan, she felt uneasy. What could their teacher’s disappearance mean? What if Ms. Woods was in trouble? Should they do something about it? But what could they do? Whom could they tell?
“We go tomorrow,” Jean was saying. “That give us biens le temps, many time to go to Cape Breton.”
Dana agreed. “We should take sleeping bags,” she suggested, “and maybe some food. Bring everything to school. Our parents will expect us to leave from here.”
Immersed in the details of their trip, Dana soon forgot about her teacher. The thrill of adventure was rising. The fact that Jean was going with her made it all the more exciting.
• • •
The following day, when school was over, Dana and Jean collected their things from their lockers. Since they wouldn’t be going for the spirit canoe until after dusk, they went out for supper.
In the restaurant, sitting across from Jean, Dana suffered a bout of sudden shyness. This was very like a date. Doing her best to stay calm, she agreed with his suggestion to share a pizza, with pepperoni and ham on his half and olives and green peppers on hers.
“In Ireland you can get sweet corn as a topping,” she told him.
“Câlisse,” he said, with a shudder.
He ordered garlic bread for two.
“If one eat garlic, it is necessary all eat garlic,” he said with a grin.
Dana choked on a crumb of pizza crust and went red in the face. To cover her embarrassment, she changed the subject.
“Do you feel bad lying to your parents about this?”
He considered her question. “Non,” he said at last. “For them, the truth is not good. I can’t tell my life as loup-garou or what happen to grand-père. It is more pain for them. Et toi? You feel bad?”
Dana sighed. “Sometimes I wish I could share the magic with my dad, and also my stepmum. But the dangerous stuff rules that out. They would only worry or, worse, try to stop me. In the end, it’s better that I keep it to myself.”
A trace of sadness echoed in her voice. Jean said nothing, but his look was sympathetic. He didn’t have to say that he understood, for he, too, knew the loneliness of living with secrets. Dana’s hand was resting on the table. He reached out to clasp it, and they stayed that way till their food arrived.
• • •
The sun was setting behind the city towers when they reached the Humber Marshes. Together they dragged the spirit boat out of the bushes.
“I bring this for you,” Jean said, producing a knitted cap from his pocket. “Tuque québécoise. The best thing for the head!”
Grinning, he pulled it over her head and ears. It was identical to the one he wore himself, red with black stripes and a long tapering end.
“I brought a thermos of hot chocolate,” she said.
“Like we go on a bus?”
They laughed.
As the canoe rose from the ground and shot over the currents of air, they soon left Toronto far behind. From the moment they were airborne, Dana kept watch for Crowley. Would the boat’s demon call out to him? Despite her worry about an attack, the rowing itself was much easier. Though the dark force of la chasse-galerie struggled against them, they paddled with the skill and strength of a team. Their previous journey had bonded them like true voyageurs.
Dana knelt in the bow, gazing ahead. Once they reached Cape Breton, it was up to her to spot the place she had seen in the music. But first they had a long journey ahead of them. They were flying away from the setting sun into the eastern night. Ahead of them lay the great province of Quebec bordered by the St. Lawrence Seaway. They intended to follow the mighty waterway as if it were a road.
High in the atmosphere the wind was biting. Dana was glad of the tuque Jean gave her, as well as the parka she wore with scarf and mittens.
“Tell me stories about your country,” she called back to Jean. “In Ireland we say that a song or a story shortens the road.”
“I have beaucoup,” he warned her. “Mon grand-père and before she die, ma grand-mère, they tell me many.”
“I’m all ears!” she assured him.
He told her tales of John the Bear, Teur-Merisier, Talon-Rouge, and Ti-Jean the Giant-Killer, after whom he suspected he had been named. There were also tales of the devil—le Diable, beau danseur—who seemed to have a penchant for French-Canadian parties and dances. He would always appear as a dark, handsome stranger, richly dressed, with a fine beaver cloak and ebony cane. In the heart of winter he drove a magnificent sleigh pulled by a glossy black horse with silver bells and harness. The prettiest maid at the dance would inevitably be fatally attracted to him. But just as he was about to carry her off and steal her soul, some innocent would unmask him, usually a child. Proof of his true identity would be confirmed when his cloven hoof was revealed—the cause of his limp!—or the floor was seen to have been burnt in the places where he had danced. Then the Devil’s game was up, and he would be chased away as everyone made the Sign of the Cross and the curé came running with Holy Water.
“Now you tell the story,” he insisted, “or sing une chanson irlandaise.”
“This is like a road trip with my da.”
She was about to take her turn with a song when she noticed something strange below. The land seemed to have patches of darkness and light, as if it were day in one place and night in another. The more she gazed down, the more confused she grew. She wasn’t sure what she was looking at. There were moments when she saw things she couldn’t possibly see from that far up, as if she were only feet away. Then she realized the truth. Like gazing into a crystal ball, she was viewing the land with magical sight. As well as the bright vistas of modern cities and townlands, she could see layers of time on top of one another, as if time itself were a heap of events, a great collection of moments.
“I’m seeing all kinds of things down there!” she exclaimed.
“Mais oui. Remember when you see Étienne Brûlé? This happen sometime with la chasse-galerie. The flying, she make une ouverture sur le Grands Temps. A big hole in time? No, I don’t mean this.”
Dana understood. “An opening in the Great Time. It’s the same with Faerie! Time and space go all weird around it. More like a circle than a line or, better still, a spiral.”
“Oui, c’est ça! Exactement!” He waved grandly at the panorama below. “Regarde, chérie. See my country.”
As the spirit boat passed over Montreal, another name came whispering through the cobbled streets and around the corners of tall buildings and sidewalk cafés. Hochelaga. At the foot of a hill not yet called Mont Royal stood a thriving Iroquois community. Palisaded like a town, with fifty longhouses, it overlooked tilled fields of corn and maize.
On sped the canoe past Trois-Rivières and Cap-de-la-Madeleine to la Ville de Québec. Again the layers peeled away like an onion. Beneath the majestic walls of the city and the great star-shaped fortress called le Citadel, Dana could see another settlement. La Habitation was a simple quadrangle of wooden buildings with a stockade and moat. It stood on a point where the St. Lawrence narrowed, a kebek as the Algonquian people called it.
A new sound reached the flying canoe. Musket fire and the roars of men.
On the Plains of Abraham, in the shadow of Quebec City, two armies gathered. Two old countries waging war for new land. Thousands of British troops were mustered on the grassy field below the western walls of the fortress. They had already bombarded and destroyed much of the city. If the French had only waited for reinforcements, they would have had a chance. But they were already moving out to engage in battle.
The spirit canoe quivered violently and stalled.
“We go!” Jean shouted. “Vite! Rapidement!”
But they didn’t leave. It was as if the canoe were caught in a hidden current. It began to circle around the scene.
Dana didn’t want to look, but found herself mesmerized. It was nothing like the battles she had seen in movies or on television. Everything was chaotic, brutal and bloody. Limbs blown off with musket balls. Men screaming horribly. Her stomach heaved.
Frantically steering the boat away at last, Jean called Dana out of her daze. But even as they left, she remembered the outcome from her history book. The fight for Quebec was short and bloody, less than half an hour, but both leaders died. General Wolfe lay dead among his troops on the battlefield, while the Marquis de Montcalm perished from his wounds the following day.
Though they didn’t get caught again as they continued eastward, Dana began to notice a pattern in their journey. Whenever the land told a story of death and destruction, the canoe would judder with delight. He was a murderer from the beginning. Feeding off the darkness below, the demon would gain in strength and ferocity. Then Dana and Jean had to struggle with all their might to keep control of the craft.
The demon was particularly strong whenever they encountered the devastation wrought by the settlers on the First Peoples of the land. Without pity or remorse, the Europeans burned villages and crops; enslaved men, women, and children; and slaughtered all who opposed them. Sometimes in the crowd of slaves or the bodies of the slain, Dana thought she recognized Grandfather and Roy. She would turn away with shame. She couldn’t bear to watch.
Upstream of Quebec, they passed a small island. Dana felt a sharp ache in her heart. The wooded isle was sculpted with coves and capes. On a rocky promontory overlooking the river stood a Celtic High Cross carved in stone: a tombstone to mark the site of mass graves.
“My people are buried here!” she cried with sudden knowledge.
The sorrowful sound of keening was carried on the wind, a wake of fiddles and the clatter of bones. Oileán an nGael. The Island of the Irish. She heard the whispers of the thousands who had perished in this place. Some had crossed the Atlantic in “coffin ships” to escape the Great Famine. Others had come seeking new lives and freedoms. Here they died of disease and malnutrition, meeting death in their dreams.
“I know this complainte,” Jean told her. “This is Grosse Île. Like Pointe Sainte-Charles too. With them lie the French also, who try to help. Like I tell you, chérie,” he called to her sadly, “the French and the Irish are always good friend.”
They continued to follow the St. Lawrence as if it were a highway. The great river had yet to freeze and was busy with sea traffic. Amidst the modern vessels, Dana caught sight of ancient canoes and ghost ships.
How long they traveled along that shining seaway, Dana had no idea. Hours seemed to pass like minutes and sometimes a minute seemed to contain eternity. Again and again, the land told its tales with all the color and verve of a storyteller. Then a silence fell over the country, like a book closed at bedtime, and they paddled on through the darkness beneath the sky of stars.
They heard the gulf before they saw it, a mournful sound in the distance, the plangent murmur of the sea. When they reached the estuary of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, it looked as wide as an ocean.
Jean steered the canoe south. To their left, in the distance, was the dark silhouette of Île d’Anticosti standing guard at the gateway of the great river’s mouth. To their right, ahead of them, was Prince Edward Island.
They had journeyed through a long night into the rising sun. The waters of the gulf gleamed in fiery splendor. The sky blazed gold. Soon they came in sight of Cape Breton Island.
Dana scanned the rocky landscape and the sea-washed shores. Nothing looked familiar.
“Let’s go inland,” she suggested, trying not to sound anxious.
What if they had come all this way for nothing? What if they couldn’t find the Place of Stones? She suffered a pang of doubt. What if it didn’t exist, except in a song that she could hardly remember!
They had begun to descend. Jean was looking for a place to land.
“We don’t fly near the lake,” he warned. “There is fog on Bras d’Or .”
His words triggered her memory. The line of the song echoed through her mind.
There’s fire in the blood and a fog on Bras d’Or.
“That’s it!” she cried. “The fog! Fly through it!” There was a moment after they had sailed into the mist when they both regretted the decision. It was a moment of intense cold and damp and milky blindness. Both were all too aware that a huge, deep lake lay somewhere beneath them. If they were going to land on a body of water, they would prefer to see it! Both held their breaths as they continued to paddle, and only released them again when they flew out of the haze.
And there, in the clear light of day, was the place Dana sought.
Where the lake opened its arms to embrace the Atlantic was a little cove with a scattering of houses. The village was sheltered by a ridge of low hills. The highest peak had a crown: a jagged circle of stones.
“The Place of Stones!” Dana called out, delighted.
They landed the canoe on the pebbly shore of the cove. The air was salty with sea spray. Other boats lay upturned on the stones, small wooden craft painted in bright colors.
“It’s like the west of Ireland,” said Dana.
“There is nowhere to hide le canot,” Jean observed, looking around.
The hills nearby were all grass and gray rock. There were few trees in sight.
“It should be safe here,” she assured him, thinking of home. “This is fishermen’s country.”
Still, he didn’t look happy at the thought of leaving the canoe out in the open.
“How about a picnic?” she suggested, to distract him. “Time for breakfast.”
They spread out a sleeping bag over the stones and opened their knapsacks. He had rolls of ham and beef, while she had cheese and egg-salad sandwiches.
“You don’t eat meat?” he asked her curiously. “never?”
“I won’t eat anything that had a face.”
“This I can’t do,” he said, shrugging. Then he wolfed down his food.
As they ate their meal, they discussed whether they should rest or explore. After traveling all night, both were pale and bleary-eyed.
“The Place of Stones is on the highest hill,” Dana said, surveying the range.
“Maybe we go to the village first, eh?” Jean stifled a yawn. “We see who live there.”
“Sounds good to me.”
Dana stuffed a few chocolate bars into her pocket, then rolled up the rest of her things in her sleeping bag and stowed them under the canoe. Though she was tired, she felt she could keep going for a while yet.
Jean was regarding her strangely.
“What?” she said.
“I like that we do this together, you and me.”
His words made her smile. She felt exactly the same way. Only a year ago, she had quested alone in the mountains of Ireland. How much more wonderful it was to have a companion!
Hand in hand, they walked toward the village. They were ready for anything.