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The Boulder Dad had almost finished building his house in the scenic Gatineau Hills. He had drawn plans for a workshop to be located a bit further back, to the right of the house. The site and orientation of the bungalow had been meticulously chosen. Of the three hundred acres he had bought (for a song because of the boondocks situation) there were only about twenty acres where it would not be too difficult to dig a foundation. The spot he had picked, beside a peaceful meadow, had a spectacular view to the west over the valley below. From the large picture window in his living-room, at night, he would be able to admire one sunset after another to his heart’s content. To the left, near the pine grove, he had already had the thrill of watching visiting deer at dusk. That piece of land was my father’s dream come true. Before the age of fifty, he had managed to retire, not from the earnings from his hard work as a lumberman, but from a patent for the specialized wood-chipping machine he had invented. And even though his engineer-partners had left him with the short end of the stick, he had still managed to pull enough money from the patent before they had finished stuffing their pockets and declared bankruptcy. He had enough invested to live, not in luxury, but comfortably for the rest of his days. Dad wasn’t the litigious type; as far as the engineers and their lawyer-friends were concerned, they could all just go to that place down below where he figured there would be plenty of lawyers and engineers, and where, as a young boy, he had been taught by the priest that it’s really hot all the time. Dad had only attended school for a few years but he was smart enough to recognize that he didn’t have the sophistication to outwit those “professional” crooks. He wasn’t going to chase after them and hand over to another lawyer the share they had not managed to embezzle from him. “I have enough to live on comfortably,” he had told my sister when she had brought up the subject, “and I don’t want to hear anymore about it. It’s in the past and leave it there.” That’s how Dad was about things he couldn’t change. On the other hand, when there was a situation he could tackle, he loved the challenge. Ever since he had decided where the workshop should be built, there was one problem gnawing at Dad’s mind. Smack in the middle of the chosen site stood an imposing boulder that would have to be removed. It was an unwieldy, pale grey stone eight or nine feet in diameter and smooth as a pebble. It must have weighed several tons, and it stood there all by itself, as if defying him to move it. It was a mystery how it had ever materialized there in the first place. Dad did not have the equipment to move the boulder himself, and he was loath to pay a large sum of money for what seemed to him just another logistical challenge. He, who had gone from being a miner and then a lumberjack, to owning several trucks and having four or five dozen employees, had, more than once, needed to solve unusual problems. He felt sure that he would find a way of moving this rock without having to break his back or the bank. Over the course of twenty years, he had built many miles of logging roads. This had entailed removing a myriad of obstacles under sometimes primitive conditions, grading the roads so they would not turn into quagmires during spring thaws or under the autumn rains; it had involved building bridges to cross impassable streams. “Brains, not brawn,” he kept thinking. Now, when Dad set himself a task, he was what grade one teachers call “determined” on report cards. He had already figured it would cost him a few thousand dollars to have a truck with the necessary equipment and manpower come all the way out there and get rid of the nuisance. He wasn’t tight with money but, not having had any to spare until a few years before, he had learned from a very early age not to throw it away. The hiring of fancy machines seemed to him, in this circumstance, to be sheer waste. Dad believed in fate. He believed that everything has a reason for being. That boulder was there for a reason, and he would someday find out what that reason was. Dad had started thinking about fate, and believing in it one day when his younger brother, who had become the priest in the family, had pointed out to him that, with his intelligence, he could have had a university degree. “You could have become an engineer, a lawyer, anything you wanted.” And when Dad, the handsome six foot lad with the deep blue eyes and muscles like a Percheron, pictured himself the well- It was a glorious day. Dad was coming back from trimming some of the low branches in the underbrush, working on the winding paths he had been clearing to make his walks more pleasant. Ti-Noir started barking excitedly and running towards the road where a car was cautiously making its way up the hill. “Take it easy, Ti-Noir.” Dad shouted, and he waited curiously to see who would be coming up now, because this was his private bit of road and he wasn’t expecting anyone. He saw the hood of a black Mercedes. Nobody he knew owned such an expensive car. The guy must be lost, thought Dad. City people, you just couldn’t let them loose in the back roads, they invariably chose the wrong fork. The vehicle stopped at the top of the road before the meadow, and a short, paunchy man, about sixty-five, in a dark stripy suit and silk tie came out. Dad let Ti-Noir dance around the man with the shiny black shoes. He faintly tried to discipline him when he put his dusty paws on the man’s suit. “Mr. Lévesque,” the man said. He pronounced the ‘s’ the way English people do who haven’t learnt French and have never caught on that in Quebec, René Lévesque is pronounced Layvaik and not Levesskew. How does he know my name? wondered Dad. It was Sunday morning. Dad figured it wouldn’t be anyone from the government. Who could this man be? What could he want? “Do I know you?” He asked the intruder. “I’m Mr. Loganrooney. Brian Loganrooney,” said the man presenting his right hand for a shake. Dad put his hand in his pocket and moved his head back to get away from the pungent smell of after-shave. The sun danced on the big square diamond on the man’s short, stumpy fingers. “I hope you’ll forgive me for barging in on you like this, Mr. Levesskew. I couldn’t find your telephone number from Bell.” Dad looked around him at the sky over the property. There was not a telephone post, not an electric pole. The man followed his motion. “Oh, I see. You don’t have a phone yet. That explains it. I should have thought of that.” Dad was a man who liked his privacy. He didn’t fancy strangers wandering uninvited onto his property. Nevertheless, standing there in his plaid shirt, his machete dangling from his left hand, his tall body silently towering over the uninvited guest, he decided to let him say what he had to say. “I was here to see this property in the spring before you bought it,” said the man. “I was all set to buy it but my wife wouldn’t have any of it. Women, you know! She wanted a piece of property on a lake and, this here, well, with just the pond, and so far from everything…, from people, I mean, she told me there was no way she would ever move here at all.” There’s just no way to please some people, thought Dad. He figured the woman must have died or left her man, or something must have happened to make him want to buy the land now. But Dad was not selling. Not at any price. “I see.” “You got yourself a nice piece of land here for not a bad price at all, Mr. Levesskew,” said the short, fat man, taking in the landscape, all the while trying to ignore the large blade swinging almost imperceptibly back and forth at Dad’s side. “Uh-huh,” said Dad, not bothering to move his head. The little paunchy man with the shiny shoes kept on talking. He had backed up a few steps and he kept at a fair distance from Dad. He looked towards the house. “You’ve got yourself a beautiful house there. Did you design that yourself, Mr. Levesskew?” Dad thought he detected a heavy dose of condescension in the man’s voice. “Uh-huh.” “Build it yourself?” Dad continued in his bisyllabic way. “Amazing! It’s beautiful!” said Mr. Loganrooney. He swallowed some spit that had been accumulating in his mouth. “Well, I’ll tell you why I came to bother you, Mr. Levesskew.” He smiled and looked up into Dad’s eyes. “I’ve come to make you a proposition.” Dad did not even bother with a monosyllable this time. “That big rock over there...” said Mr. Loganrooney, pointing to the large boulder. Dad turned around and looked in the direction the man was pointing, as though he did not know which big rock he meant. He repressed a smile. “Yes,” he said. “Would you consider parting with it?” Dad took a minute to let the words completely sink in. “Well now,” he said, admiring the fancy wheel caps on the car behind the paunchy man, “I don’t know. I’ll have to think about that. What would you do with it?” “Well, you see, we did find a property, my wife and I, about ten miles from here on the lake, but the problem is it doesn’t have much character, apart from being beside the water. When we came to see this one here, before you bought it, we noticed that boulder there, and now my wife and I, we were thinking that it would make a great decoration beside our house.” “How would you get it out of here?” “Oh, that would be no problem. I have already talked to contractors about that and it’s no problem at all.” “And when would they come to take it away?” asked Dad in the tone of a man asking the doctor how much longer his wife has before the cancer steals her away. “They could be here tomorrow, if that wasn’t too soon,” said Mr. Loganrooney. The man put his hand in his trouser pocket, and pulled out a cheque book. He brought out an expensive gold fountain pen from the inside pocket of his suit jacket. The lawyer who had made Dad sign the contract for his patent had used a pen almost identical to it. It was of the kind he had seen in Birks’, years before when he had naïvely gone in, thinking he could buy my mother an anniversary present there. That was before he had humiliatingly found out how much things cost. Dad backed away a few steps. Mr. Loganrooney started walking past him, towards the boulder. He kept a good ten feet away from Dad. Ti-Noir was following them, wagging his tail as if he had just discovered a nice, plump rabbit, snared the night before. When the man had his back to Dad, Dad asked him how much he thought the boulder would be worth. Mr. Loganrooney turned around. “Would you take five hundred for it?” He turned again towards the stone, always keeping Dad and the machete in his peripheral vision. Now, Dad is smart enough to know that a man never offers more than he wants to pay for a coveted item. He scratched his chin pensively. The little man opened his cheque book and leaned it against the stone, his pen at the ready. Dad noticed in ornate letters at the top of the cheque: Brian Loganrooney, Lawyer. And below it: Specializing in Bankruptcy. And below that, an address, a fancy one, Dad guessed. Dad touched the stone lovingly. He stood silent for a while, pretending to ponder the offer. “Make it one grand and it’s yours,” he said in the firm voice of a man reluctantly parting with his most precious treasure. “It’s a deal.” The paunchy man wrote his cheque there and then, tore it from the book, and handed it to Dad. Dad took it and backed away slightly in case Mr. Loganrooney tried again to shake his hand. Mr. Loganrooney, lawyer, specialist in bankruptcy, put his cheque book and his pen back in his pockets. He started towards his car, jingling his keys. “And make sure you get it out of here tomorrow,” shouted Dad, “before I change my mind.” The man left in his shiny Mercedes. Ti-Noir danced around Dad. Dad folded the cheque and put it in his back pocket. He pulled out a generous handful of bird seed from another pocket and spread it on the ground, then he went into the house to heat up a bit of his rabbit stew and stare at the valley for a while. |