A STORY OF THE OTTAWA RIVER.
Ma’ame Baptiste Larocque peered
again into her cupboard and her flour barrel, as though
she might have been mistaken in her inspection twenty
minutes earlier.
“No, there is nothing, nothing
at all!” said she to her old mother-in-law.
“And no more trust at the store. Monsieur
Conolly was too cross when I went for corn-meal yesterday.
For sure, Baptiste stays very long at the shanty this
year.”
“Fear nothing, Delima,”
answered the bright-eyed old woman. “The
good God will send a breakfast for the little ones,
and for us. In seventy years I do not know Him
to fail once, my daughter. Baptiste may be back
to-morrow, and with more money for staying so long.
No, no; fear not, Delima! Le bon Dieu manages
all for the best.”
“That is true; for so I have
heard always,” answered Delima, with conviction;
“but sometimes lé bon Dieu requires one’s
inside to pray very loud. Certainly I trust,
like you, Memere; but it would be pleasant
if He would send the food the day before.”
“Ah, you are too anxious, like
little Baptiste here,” and the old woman glanced
at the boy sitting by the cradle. “Young
folks did not talk so when I was little. Then
we did not think there was danger in trusting Monsieur
lé Cure when he told us to take no heed of the
morrow. But now! to hear them talk, one might
think they had never heard of lé bon Dieu.
The young people think too much, for sure. Trust
in the good God, I say. Breakfast and dinner and
supper too we shall all have to-morrow.”
“Yes, Memere,”
replied the boy, who was called little Baptiste to
distinguish him from his father. “Le bon Dieu
will send an excellent breakfast, sure enough, if
I get up very early, and find some good dore
(pickerel) and catfish on the night-line. But
if I did not bait the hooks, what then? Well,
I hope there will be more to-morrow than this morning,
anyway.”
“There were enough,” said
the old woman, severely. “Have we not had
plenty all day, Delima?”
Delima made no answer. She was
in doubt about the plenty which her mother-in-law
spoke of. She wondered whether small Andre and
Odillon and ’Toinette, whose heavy breathing
she could hear through the thin partition, would have
been sleeping so peacefully had little Baptiste not
divided his share among them at supper-time, with the
excuse that he did not feel very well?
Delima was young yet, though
little Baptiste was such a big boy, and
would have rested fully on the positively expressed
trust of her mother-in-law, in spite of the empty
flour barrel, if she had not suspected little Baptiste
of sitting there hungry.
However, he was such a strange boy,
she soon reflected, that perhaps going empty did not
make him feel bad! Little Baptiste was so decided
in his ways, made what in others would have been sacrifices
so much as a matter of course, and was so much disgusted
on being offered credit or sympathy in consequence,
that his mother, not being able to understand him,
was not a little afraid of him.
He was not very formidable in appearance,
however, that clumsy boy of fourteen or so, whose
big freckled, good face was now bent over the cradle
where la petite Seraphine lay smiling in her
sleep, with soft little fingers clutched round his
rough one.
“For sure,” said Delima,
observing the baby’s smile, “the good angels
are very near. I wonder what they are telling
her?”
“Something about her father,
of course; for so I have always heard it is when the
infants smile in sleep,” answered the old woman.
Little Baptiste rose impatiently and
went into the sleeping-room. Often the simplicity
and sentimentality of his mother and grandmother gave
him strange pangs at heart; they seemed to be the children,
while he felt very old. They were always looking
for wonderful things to happen, and expecting the
saints and lé bon Dieu to help the family out
of difficulties that little Baptiste saw no way of
overcoming without the work which was then so hard
to get. His mother’s remark about the angels
talking to little Seraphine pained him so much that
he would have cried had he not felt compelled to be
very much of a man during his father’s absence.
If he had been asked to name the spirit
hovering about, he would have mentioned a very wicked
one as personified in John Conolly, the village storekeeper,
the vampire of the little hamlet a quarter of a mile
distant. Conolly owned the tavern too, and a sawmill
up river, and altogether was a very rich, powerful,
and dreadful person in little Baptiste’s view.
Worst of all, he practically owned the cabin and lot
of the Larocques, for he had made big Baptiste give
him a bill of sale of the place as security for groceries
to be advanced to the family while its head was away
in the shanty; and that afternoon Conolly had said
to little Baptiste that the credit had been exhausted,
and more.
“No; you can’t get any
pork,” said the storekeeper. “Don’t
your mother know that, after me sending her away when
she wanted corn-meal yesterday? Tell her she
don’t get another cent’s worth here.”
“For why not? My fader
always he pay,” said the indignant boy, trying
to talk English.
“Yes, indeed! Well, he
ain’t paid this time. How do I know what’s
happened to him, as he ain’t back from the shanty?
Tell you what: I’m going to turn you all
out if your mother don’t pay rent in advance
for the shanty to-morrow, four dollars
a month.”
“What you talkin’ so for?
We doan’ goin pay no rent for our own house!”
“You doan’ goin’
to own no house,” answered Conolly, mimicking
the boy. “The house is mine any time I
like to say so. If the store bill ain’t
paid to-night, out you go to-morrow, or else pay rent.
Tell your mother that for me. Mosey off now.
‘Marche, donc!’ There’s no
other way.”
Little Baptiste had not told his mother
of this terrible threat, for what was the use?
She had no money. He knew that she would begin
weeping and wailing, with small Andre and Odillon as
a puzzled, excited chorus, with ’Toinette and
Seraphine adding those baby cries that made little
Baptiste want to cry himself; with his grandmother
steadily advising, in the din, that patient trust in
lé bon Dieu which he could not always entertain,
though he felt very wretched that he could not.
Moreover, he desired to spare his
mother and grandmother as long as possible. “Let
them have their good night’s sleep,” said
he to himself, with such thoughtfulness and pity as
a merchant might feel in concealing imminent bankruptcy
from his family. He knew there was but one chance
remaining, that his father might come home
during the night or next morning, with his winter’s
wages.
Big Baptiste had “gone up”
for Rewbell the jobber; had gone in November, to make
logs in the distant Petawawa woods, and now the month
was May. The “very magnificent” pig
he had salted down before going away had been eaten
long ago. My! what a time it seemed now to little
Baptiste since that pig-killing! How good the
boudin (the blood-puddings) had been, and the
liver and tender bits, and what a joyful time they
had had! The barrelful of salted pike and catfish
was all gone too, which made the fact that
fish were not biting well this year very sad indeed.
Now on top of all these troubles this
new danger of being turned out on the roadside!
For where are they to get four dollars, or two, or
one even, to stave Conolly off? Certainly his
father was away too long; but surely, surely, thought
the boy, he would get back in time to save his home!
Then he remembered with horror, and a feeling of being
disloyal to his father for remembering, that terrible
day, three years before, when big Baptiste had come
back from his winter’s work drunk, and without
a dollar, having been robbed while on a spree in Ottawa.
If that were the reason of his father’s delay
now, ah, then there would be no hope, unless lé
bon Dieu should indeed work a miracle for them!
While the boy thought over the situation
with fear, his grandmother went to her bed, and soon
afterward Delima took the little Seraphine’s
cradle into the sleeping-room. That left little
Baptiste so lonely that he could not sit still; nor
did he see any use of going to lie awake in bed by
Andre and Odillon.
So he left the cabin softly, and reaching
the river with a few steps, pushed off his flat-bottomed
boat, and was carried smartly up stream by the shore
eddy. It soon gave him to the current, and then
he drifted idly down under the bright moon, listening
to the roar of the long rapid, near the foot of which
their cabin stood. Then he took to his oars,
and rowed to the end of his night-line, tied to the
wharf. He had an unusual fear that it might be
gone, but found it all right, stretched taut; a slender
rope, four hundred feet long, floated here and there
far away in the darkness by flat cedar sticks, a
rope carrying short bits of line, and forty hooks,
all loaded with excellent fat, wriggling worms.
That day little Baptiste had taken
much trouble with his night-line; he was proud of
the plentiful bait, and now, as he felt the tightened
rope with his fingers, he told himself that his well-filled
hooks must attract plenty of fish, perhaps
a sturgeon! Wouldn’t that be grand?
A big sturgeon of seventy-five pounds!
He pondered the Ottawa statement that
“there are seven kinds of meat on the head of
a sturgeon,” and, enumerating the kinds, fell
into a conviction that one sturgeon at least would
surely come to his line. Had not three been caught
in one night by Pierre Mallette, who had no sort of
claim, who was too lazy to bait more than half his
hooks, altogether too wicked to receive any special
favors from lé bon Dieu?
Little Baptiste rowed home, entered
the cabin softly, and stripped for bed, almost happy
in guessing what the big fish would probably weigh.
Putting his arms around little Andre,
he tried to go to sleep; but the threats of Conolly
came to him with new force, and he lay awake, with
a heavy dread in his heart.
How long he had been lying thus he
did not know, when a heavy step came upon the plank
outside the door.
“Father’s home!”
cried little Baptiste, springing to the floor as the
door opened.
“Baptiste! my own Baptiste!”
cried Delima, putting her arms around her husband
as he stood over her.
“Did I not say,” said
the old woman, seizing her son’s hand, “that
the good God would send help in time?”
Little Baptiste lit the lamp.
Then they saw something in the father’s face
that startled them all. He had not spoken, and
now they perceived that he was haggard, pale, wild-eyed.
“The good God!” cried
big Baptiste, and knelt by the bed, and bowed his
head on his arms, and wept so loudly that little Andre
and Odillon, wakening, joined his cry. “Le
bon Dieu has forgotten us! For all my winter’s
work I have not one dollar! The concern is failed.
Rewbell paid not one cent of wages, but ran away, and
the timber has been seized.”
Oh, the heartbreak! Oh, poor
Delima! poor children! and poor little Baptiste, with
the threats of Conolly rending his heart!
“I have walked all day,”
said the father, “and eaten not a thing.
Give me something, Delima.”
“O holy angels!” cried
the poor woman, breaking into a wild weeping.
“O Baptiste, Baptiste, my poor man! There
is nothing; not a scrap; not any flour, not meal,
not grease even; not a pinch of tea!” but still
she searched frantically about the rooms.
“Never mind,” said big
Baptiste then, holding her in his strong arms.
“I am not so hungry as tired, Delima, and I can
sleep.”
The old woman, who had been swaying
to and fro in her chair of rushes, rose now, and laid
her aged hands on the broad shoulders of the man.
“My son Baptiste,” she
said, “you must not say that God has forgotten
us, for He has not forgotten us. The hunger is
hard to bear, I know, hard, hard to bear;
but great plenty will be sent in answer to our prayers.
And it is hard, hard to lose thy long winter’s
work; but be patient, my son, and thankful, yes, thankful
for all thou hast.”
“Behold, Delima is well and
strong. See the little Baptiste, how much a man!
Yes, that is right; kiss the little Andre and Odillon;
and see! how sweetly ’Toinette sleeps!
All strong and well, son Baptiste! Were one gone,
think what thou wouldst have lost! But instead,
be thankful, for behold, another has been given, the
little Seraphine here, that thou hast not before seen!”
Big, rough, soft-hearted Baptiste
knelt by the cradle, and kissed the babe gently.
“It is true, Memere,”
he answered, “and I thank lé bon Dieu
for his goodness to me.”
But little Baptiste, lying wide awake
for hours afterwards, was not thankful. He could
not see that matters could be much worse. A big
hard lump was in his throat as he thought of his father’s
hunger, and the home-coming so different from what
they had fondly counted on. Great slow tears
came into the boy’s eyes, and he wiped them away,
ashamed even in the dark to have been guilty of such
weakness.
In the gray dawn little Baptiste suddenly
awoke, with the sensation of having slept on his post.
How heavy his heart was! Why? He sat dazed
with indefinite sorrow. Ah, now he remembered!
Conolly threatening to turn them out! and his father
back penniless! No breakfast! Well, we must
see about that.
Very quietly he rose, put on his patched
clothes, and went out. Heavy mist covered the
face of the river, and somehow the rapid seemed stilled
to a deep, pervasive murmur. As he pushed his
boat off, the morning fog was chillier than frost
about him; but his heart got lighter as he rowed toward
his night-line, and he became even eager for the pleasure
of handling his fish. He made up his mind not
to be much disappointed if there were no sturgeon,
but could not quite believe there would be none; surely
it was reasonable to expect one, perhaps two why
not three? among the catfish and dore.
How very taut and heavy the rope felt
as he raised it over his gunwales, and letting the
bow swing up stream, began pulling in the line hand
over hand! He had heard of cases where every hook
had its fish; such a thing might happen again surely!
Yard after yard of rope he passed slowly over the
boat, and down into the water it sank on his track.
Now a knot on the line told him he
was nearing the first hook; he watched for the quiver
and struggle of the fish, probably a big
one, for there he had put a tremendous bait on and
spat on it for luck, moreover. What? the short
line hung down from the rope, and the baited hook
rose clear of the water!
Baptiste instantly made up his mind
that that hook had been placed a little too far in-shore;
he remembered thinking so before; the next hook was
in about the right place!
Hand over hand, ah! the second hook,
too! Still baited, the big worm very livid!
It must be thus because that worm was pushed up the
shank of the hook in such a queer way: he had
been rather pleased when he gave the bait that particular
twist, and now was surprised at himself; why, any
one could see it was a thing to scare fish!
Hand over hand to the third, the
hook was naked of bait! Well, that was more satisfactory;
it showed they had been biting, and, after all, this
was just about the beginning of the right place.
Hand over hand; now the splashing
will begin, thought little Baptiste, and out came
the fourth hook with its livid worm! He held
the rope in his hand without drawing it in for a few
moments, but could see no reasonable objection to
that last worm. His heart sank a little, but
pshaw! only four hooks out of forty were up yet! wait
till the eddy behind the shoal was reached, then great
things would be seen. Maybe the fish had not
been lying in that first bit of current.
Hand over hand again, now! yes, certainly,
there is the right swirl! What? a losch,
that unclean semi-lizard! The boy tore it off
and flung it indignantly into the river. However,
there was good luck in a losch; that was well
known.
But the next hook, and the next, and
next, and next came up baited and fishless. He
pulled hand over hand quickly not a fish!
and he must have gone over half the line! Little
Baptiste stopped, with his heart like lead and his
arms trembling. It was terrible! Not a fish,
and his father had no supper, and there was no credit
at the store. Poor little Baptiste!
Again he hauled hand over hand one
hook, two, three oh! ho! Glorious!
What a delightful sheer downward the rope took!
Surely the big sturgeon at last, trying to stay down
on the bottom with the hook! But Baptiste would
show that fish his mistake. He pulled, pulled,
stood up to pull; there was a sort of shake, a sudden
give of the rope, and little Baptiste tumbled over
backward as he jerked his line up from under the big
stone!
Then he heard the shutters clattering
as Conolly’s clerk took them off the store window;
at half-past five to the minute that was always done.
Soon big Baptiste would be up, that was certain.
Again the boy began hauling in line: baited hook!
baited hook! naked hook! baited hook! such
was still the tale.
“Surely, surely,” implored
little Baptiste, silently, “I shall find some
fish!” Up! up! only four remained! The boy
broke down. Could it be? Had he not somehow
skipped many hooks? Could it be that there was
to be no breakfast for the children? Naked hook
again! Oh, for some fish! anything! three, two!
“Oh, send just one for my father! my
poor, hungry father!” cried little Baptiste,
and drew up his last hook. It came full baited,
and the line was out of the water clear away to his
outer buoy!
He let go the rope and drifted down
the river, crying as though his heart would break.
All the good hooks useless! all the labor thrown away!
all his self-confidence come to naught!
Up rose the great sun; from around
the kneeling boy drifted the last of the morning mists;
bright beams touched his bowed head tenderly.
He lifted his face and looked up the rapid. Then
he jumped to his feet with sudden wonder; a great
joy lit up his countenance.
Far up the river a low, broad, white
patch appeared on the sharp sky-line made by the level
dark summit of the long slope of tumbling water.
On this white patch stood many figures of swaying men
black against the clear morning sky, and little Baptiste
saw instantly that an attempt was being made to “run”
a “band” of deals, or many cribs lashed
together, instead of single cribs as had been done
the day before.
The broad strip of white changed its
form slowly, dipped over the slope, drew out like
a wide ribbon, and soon showed a distinct slant across
the mighty volume of the deep raft-channel. When
little Baptiste, acquainted as he was with every current,
eddy, and shoal in the rapid, saw that slant, he knew
that his first impression of what was about to happen
had been correct. The pilot of the band had
allowed it to drift too far north before reaching the
rapid’s head.
Now the front cribs, instead of following
the curve of the channel, had taken slower water,
while the rear cribs, impelled by the rush under them,
swung the band slowly across the current. All
along the front the standing men swayed back and forth,
plying sweeps full forty feet long, attempting to
swing into channel again, with their strokes dashing
the dark rollers before the band into wide splashes
of white. On the rear cribs another crew pulled
in the contrary direction; about the middle of the
band stood the pilot, urging his gangs with gestures
to greater efforts.
Suddenly he made a new motion; the
gang behind drew in their oars and ran hastily forward
to double the force in front. But they came too
late! Hardly had the doubled bow crew taken a
stroke when all drew in their oars and ran back to
be out of danger. Next moment the front cribs
struck the “hog’s-back” shoal.
Then the long broad band curved downward
in the centre, the rear cribs swung into the shallows
on the opposite side of the raft-channel, there was
a great straining and crashing, the men in front huddled
together, watching the wreck anxiously, and the band
went speedily to pieces. Soon a fringe of single
planks came down stream, then cribs and pieces of
cribs; half the band was drifting with the currents,
and half was “hung up” on the rocks among
the breakers.
Launching the big red flat-bottomed
bow boat, twenty of the raftsmen came with wild speed
down the river, and as there had been no rush to get
aboard, little Baptiste knew that the cribs on which
the men stood were so hard aground that no lives were
in danger. It meant much to him; it meant that
he was instantly at liberty to gather in money!
money, in sums that loomed to gigantic figures before
his imagination.
He knew that there was an important
reason for hurrying the deals to Quebec, else the
great risk of running a band at that season would not
have been undertaken; and he knew that hard cash would
be paid down as salvage for all planks brought ashore,
and thus secured from drifting far and wide over the
lake-like expanse below the rapid’s foot.
Little Baptiste plunged his oars in and made for a
clump of deals floating in the eddy near his own shore.
As he rushed along, the raftsmen’s boat crossed
his bows, going to the main raft below for ropes and
material to secure the cribs coming down intact.
“Good boy!” shouted the
foreman to Baptiste. “Ten cents for every
deal you fetch ashore above the raft!” Ten cents!
he had expected but five! What a harvest!
Striking his pike-pole into the clump
of deals, “fifty at least,”
said joyful Baptiste, he soon secured them
to his boat, and then pulled, pulled, pulled, till
the blood rushed to his head, and his arms ached,
before he landed his wealth.
“Father!” cried he, bursting
breathlessly into the sleeping household. “Come
quick! I can’t get it up without you.”
“Big sturgeon?” cried
the shantyman, jumping into his trousers.
“Oh, but we shall have a good
fish breakfast!” cried Delima.
“Did I not say the blessed lé
bon Dieu would send plenty fish?” observed
Memere.
“Not a fish!” cried little
Baptiste, with recovered breath. “But look!
look!” and he flung open the door. The eddy
was now white with planks.
“Ten cents for each!”
cried the boy. “The foreman told me.”
“Ten cents!” shouted his
father. “Baptême! it’s my winter’s
wages!”
And the old grandmother! And
Delima? Why, they just put their arms round each
other and cried for joy.
“And yet there’s no breakfast,”
said Delima, starting up. “And they will
work hard, hard.”
At that instant who should reach the
door but Monsieur Conolly! He was a man who respected
cash wherever he found it, and already the two Baptistes
had a fine show ashore.
“Ma’ame Larocque,”
said Conolly, politely, putting in his head, “of
course you know I was only joking yesterday. You
can get anything you want at the store.”
What a breakfast they did have, to
be sure! the Baptistes eating while they worked.
Back and forward they dashed till late afternoon, driving
ringed spikes into the deals, running light ropes through
the rings, and, when a good string had thus been made,
going ashore to haul in. At that hauling Delima
and Memere, even little Andre and Odillon gave
a hand.
Everybody in the little hamlet made
money that day, but the Larocques twice as much as
any other family, because they had an eddy and a low
shore. With the help of the people “the
big Bourgeois” who owned the broken raft
got it away that evening, and saved his fat contract
after all.
“Did I not say so?” said
“Memere,” at night, for the hundredth
time. “Did I not say so? Yes, indeed,
lé bon Dieu watches over us all.”
“Yes, indeed, grandmother,”
echoed little Baptiste, thinking of his failure on
the night-line. “We may take as much trouble
as we like, but it’s no use unless lé bon
Dieu helps us. Only I don’
know what de big Bourgeois say about that his
raft was all broke up so bad.”
“Ah, oui,” said
Memere, looking puzzled for but a moment.
“But he didn’t put his trust in lé
bon Dieu; that’s it, for sure. Besides,
maybe lé bon Dieu want to teach him a lesson;
he’ll not try for run a whole band of deals
next time. You see that was a tempting of Providence;
and then the big Bourgeois is a Protestant.”