You could not call the place a village,
nor yet could it be called a town. Viewed from
the bluff, on the English side of the river, it was
a long stretch of small farmhouses some
painted red, with green shutters, some painted white,
with red shutters set upon long strips of
land, green, yellow, and brown, as it chanced to be
pasture land, fields of grain, or “plough-land.”
These long strips of property, fenced
off one from the other, so narrow and so precise,
looked like pieces of ribbon laid upon a wide quilt
of level country. Far back from this level land
lay the dark, limestone hills, which had rambled down
from Labrador, and, crossing the River St. Lawrence,
stretched away into the English province. The
farmhouses and the long strips of land were in such
regular procession, it might almost have seemed to
the eye of the whimsical spectator that the houses
and the ribbon were of a piece, and had been set down
there, sentinel after sentinel, like so many toy soldiers,
along the banks of the great river. There was
one important break in the long line of precise settlement,
and that was where the Parish Church, about the middle
of the line, had gathered round it a score or so of
buildings. But this only added to the strength
of the line rather than broke its uniformity.
Wide stretches of meadow-land reached back from the
Parish Church until they were lost in the darker verdure
of the hills.
On either side of the Parish Church,
with its tall, stone tower, were two stout-built houses,
set among trees and shrubbery. They were low
set, broad and square, with heavy-studded, old-fashioned
doors. The roofs were steep and high, with dormer
windows and a sort of shelf at the gables.
They were both on the highest ground
in the whole settlement, a little higher than the
site of the Parish Church. The one was the residence
of the old seigneur, Monsieur Duhamel; the other was
the Manor Casimbault, empty now of all the Casimbaults.
For a year it had lain idle, until the only heir of
the old family, which was held in high esteem as far
back as the time of Louis Quinze, returned from his
dissipations in Quebec to settle in the old place
or sell it to the highest bidder.
Behind the Manor Casimbault and the
Seigneury, thus flanking the church at reverential
distance, another large house completed the acute
triangle, forming the apex of the solid wedge of settlement
drawn about the church. This was the great farmhouse
of the Lavilettes, one of the most noticeable families
in the parish.
Of the little buildings bunched beside
the church, not the least important was the post-office,
kept by Papin Baby, who was also keeper of the bridge
which was almost at the door of the office. This
bridge crossed a stream that ran into the large river,
forming a harbour. It opened in the middle, permitting
boats and vessels to go through. Baby worked
it by a lever. A hundred yards or so above the
bridge was the parish mill, and between were the Hotel
France, the little house of Doctor Montmagny, the
Regimental Surgeon (as he was called), the cooper
shop, the blacksmith, the tinsmith and the grocery
shops. Just beyond the mill, upon the banks of
the river, was the most notorious, if not the most
celebrated, house in the settlement. Shangois,
the travelling notary, lived in it when
he was not travelling. When he was, he left it
unlocked, all save one room; and people came and went
through the house as they pleased, eyeing with curiosity
the dusty, tattered books upon the shelves, the empty
bottles in the corner, the patchwork of cheap prints,
notices of sales, summonses, accounts, certificates
of baptism, memoranda, receipted bills though
they were few tacked or stuck to the wall.
No grown-up person of the village
meddled with anything, no matter how curious; for
this consistent, if unspoken, trust displayed by Shangois
appealed to their better instincts. Besides, they,
like the children, had a wholesome fear of the disreputable,
shrunken, dishevelled little notary, with the bead-like
eyes, yellow stockings, hooked nose and palsied left
hand. Also the knapsack and black bag he carried
under his arms contained more secrets than most people
wished to tempt or challenge forth. Few cared
to anger the little man, whose father and grandfather
had been notaries here before him.
Like others in the settlement, Shangois
was the last of his race. He could put his finger
upon the secret history and private lives of nearly
every person in a dozen parishes, but most of all in
Bonaventure for such this long parish was
called. He knew to a hair’s breadth the
social value of every human being in the parish.
He was too cunning and acute to be a gossip, but by
direct and indirect ways he made every person feel
that the Cure and the Lord might forgive their pasts,
but he could never forget them, nor wished to do so.
For Monsieur Duhamel, the old seigneur, for the drunken
Philippe Casimbault, for the Cure, and for the Lavilettes,
who owned the great farmhouse at the apex of that wedge
of village life, he had a profound respect. The
parish generally did not share his respect for the
Lavilettes.
Once upon a time, beyond the memories
of any in the parish, the Lavilettes of Bonaventure
were a great people. Disaster came, debt and
difficulty followed, fire consumed the old house in
which their dignity had been cherished, and at last
they had no longer their seigneurial position, but
that of ordinary farmers who work and toil in the field
like any of the fifty-acre farmers on the banks of
the St. Lawrence River.
Monsieur Louis Lavilette, the present
head of the house, had not married well. At the
time when the feeling against the English was the
strongest, and when his own fortunes were precarious,
he had married a girl somewhat older than himself,
who was half English and half French, her father having
been a Hudson’s Bay Company factor on the north
coast of the river. In proportion as their fortunes
and their popularity declined, and their once notable
position as an old family became scarce a memory even,
the pride of the Lavilettes increased.
Madame Lavilette made strong efforts
to secure her place; but she was not of an old French
family, and this was an easy and convenient weapon
against her. Besides, she had no taste, and her
manners were much inferior to those of her husband.
What impression he managed to make by virtue of a
good deal of natural dignity, she soon unmade by her
lack of tact. She had no innate breeding, though
she was not vulgar. She lacked sense a little
and sensitiveness much.
The Casimbaults and the wife of the
old seigneur made no friends of the Lavilettes, but
the old seigneur kept up a formal habit of calling
twice a year at the Lavilettes’ big farmhouse,
which, in spite of all misfortune, grew bigger as
the years went on. Probably, in spite of everything,
Monsieur Lavilette and his family would have succeeded
better socially had it not been for one or two unpopular
lawsuits brought by the Lavilettes against two neighbours,
small farmers, one of whom was clearly in the wrong,
and the other as clearly in the right.
When, after years had gone by, and
the children of the Lavilettes had grown up, young
Monsieur Casimbault came from Quebec to sell his property
(it seemed to the people of Bonaventure like selling
his birthright), he was greatly surprised to find
Monsieur Lavilette ready with ten thousand dollars,
to purchase the Manor Casimbault. Before the
parish had time to take breath Monsieur Casimbault
had handed over the deed, pocketed the money, and
leaving the ancient heritage of his family in the
hands of the Lavilettes, (who forthwith prepared to
enter upon it, house and land), had hurried away to
Quebec again without any pangs of sentiment.
It was a little before this time that
impertinent peasants in the parish began to sing:
“O when you hear my little
silver drum,
And when I blow my little gold trompette-a,
You must drop your work and come,
You must leave your pride at home,
And duck your heads before the Lavilette-a!”
Gatineau the miller, and Baby the
keeper of the bridge, gave their own reasons for the
renewed progress of the Lavilettes. They met in
conference at the mill on the eve of the marriage of
Sophie Lavilette to Magon Farcinelle, farrier, farmer
and member of the provincial legislature, whose house
lay behind the piece of maple wood, a mile or so to
the right of the Lavilettes’ farmhouse.
Farcinelle’s engagement to Sophie had come as
a surprise to all, for, so far as people knew, there
had been no courting. Madame Lavilette had encouraged,
had even tempted, the spontaneous and jovial Farcinelle.
Though he had never made a speech in the House of
Assembly, and it was hard to tell why he was elected,
save because everybody liked him, his official position
and his popularity held an important place in Madame
Lavilette’s long-developed plans, which at last
were to place her in a position equal to that of the
old seigneur, and launch her upon society at the capital.
They had gone more than once to the
capital, where their family had been well-known fifty
years before, but few doors had been opened to them.
They were farmers only farmers and
Madame Lavilette made no remarkable impression.
Her dress was florid and not in excellent taste, and
her accent was rather crude. Sophie had gone
to school at the convent in the city, but she had
no ambition. She had inherited the stolid simplicity
of her English grandfather. When her schooling
was finished she let her school friends drop, and
came back to Bonaventure, rather stately, given to
reading, and little inclined to bother her head about
anybody.
Christine, the younger sister, had
gone to Quebec also, but after a week of rebellion,
bad temper and sharp speaking, had come home again
without ceremony, and refused to return. Despite
certain likenesses to her mother, she had a deep,
if unintelligible, admiration for her father, and
she never tired looking at the picture of her great-grandfather
in the dress of a chevalier of St. Louis almost
the only thing that had been saved from the old Manor
House, destroyed so long before her time. Perhaps
it was the importance she attached to her ancestry
which made her impatient with their present position,
and with people in the parish who would not altogether
recognise their claims. It was that which made
her give a little jerky bow to the miller and the postmaster
when she passed the mill.
“Come, dusty-belly,” said
Baby, “what’s all this pom-pom of the
Lavilettes?”
The miller pursed out his lips, contracted
his brows, and arranged his loose waistcoat carefully
on his fat stomach.
“Money,” said he, oracularly,
as though he had solved the great question of the
universe.
“La! la! But other folks
have money; and they step about Bonaventure no more
louder than a cat.”
“Blood,” added Gatineau,
corrugating his brows still more.
“Bosh!”
“Both together money
and blood,” rejoined the miller. Overcome
by his exertions, he wheezed so tremendously that
great billows of excitement raised his waistcoat,
and a perspiration broke out upon his mealy face,
making a paste which the sun, through the open doorway,
immediately began to bake into a crust.
“Pah, the airs they have always
had, those Lavilettes!” said Baby. “They
will not do this because it is not polite, they will
not do that because they are too proud. They
say that once there was a baron in their family.
Who can tell how long ago! Perhaps when John the
Baptist was alive. What is that? Nothing.
There is no baron now. All at once somebody die
a year ago, and leave them ten thousand dollars; and
then maïs, there is the grand difference!
They have save and save twenty years to pay their
debts and to buy a seigneury, like that baron who
live in the time of John the Baptist. Now it is
to stand on a ladder to speak to them. And when
all’s done, they marry Ma’m’selle
Sophie to a farrier, to that Magon Farcinelle bah!”
“Magon was at the Laval College
in Quebec; he has ten thousand dollars; he is the
best judge of horses in the province, and he’s
a Member of Parliament to boot,” said the miller,
puffing. “He is a great man almost.”
“He’s no better judge
of horses than M’sieu’ Nic Lavilette eh,
that’s a bully bad scamp, my Gatineau!”
responded Baby. “He’s the best in
the family. He is a grand sport; yes. It’s
he that fetched Ma’m’selle Sophie to the
hitching-post. Voila, he can wind them all round
his finger!”
Baby looked round to see if any one
was near; then he drew the miller’s head down
by pulling at his collar, and whispered in his ear:
“He’s hot foot for the
Rebellion; that’s one good thing,” he said.
“If he wipes out the English ”
“Hold your tongue,” nervously
interrupted Gatineau, for just then two or three loiterers
of the parish came shambling around the corner of the
mill.
Baby stopped short, and as they greeted
the newcomers their attention was drawn to the stage-coach
from St. Croix coming over the little hill near by.
“Here’s M’sieu’
Nic now and who’s with him?”
said Baby, stepping about nervously in his excitement.
“I knew there was something up. M’sieu’
Nic’s been writing long letters from Montreal.”
Baby’s look suggested that he
knew more than his position as postmaster entitled
him to know; but the furtive droop at the corner of
his eyes showed also that his secretiveness was equal
to his cowardice.
On the seat, beside the driver of
the coach, was Nicolas Lavilette, black-haired, brown-eyed,
athletic, reckless-looking, with a cast in his left
eye, which gave him a look of drollery, in keeping
with his buoyant, daring nature. Beside him was
a figure much more noticeable and unusual.
Lean, dark-featured, with keen-glancing
eyes, and a body with a faculty for finding corners
of ease; waving hair, streaked with grey, black moustache,
and a hectic flush on the cheeks, lending to the world-wise
face a wistful look-that, with near six feet of height,
was the picture of his friend.
“Who is it?” asked the
miller, with bulging eyes. “An English nobleman,”
answered Baby. “How do you know?”
asked Gatineau.
“How do I know you are a fat,
cheating miller?” replied the postmaster, with
cunning care and a touch of malice. Malice was
the only power Baby knew.