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After weeks of chopping, limbing and bark peeling, of dragging logs to Monsieur Trépagny's clearing with his two oxen, cutting, notching and mortising the logs as the master directed, lifting them into place, chinking the gaps with river mud, the new building was nearly finished.
"We should be building our own houses on our assigned lands, not constructing a shared lodging next to his ménage," Duquet said, his inflamed eyes winking.
Still they cut trees, piling them in heaps to dry and setting older piles alight. The air was in constant smoke, the smell of New France. The stumpy ground was gouged by oxen's cloven hooves as though a ballroom of devils had clogged in the mud: The trees fell, their shadows replaced by scalding light, the mosses and ferns below them withered.
"Why," asked René, "do you not sell these fine trees to France for ship masts?"
Monsieur Trépagny laughed unpleasantly. He loathed René's foolish questions. "Because the idiots prefer Baltic timber. They have no idea what is here. They are inflexible. They neglect the riches of New France, except for furs." He slapped his leg. "Even a hundred years ago de Champlain, who discovered New France, begged them to take advantage of the fine timber, the fish and rich furs, leather and a hundred other valuable things. Did they listen to him? No. Very much no. They let these precious resources wasteexcept for furs. And there were others with good ideas but the gentlemen in France were not interested. And some of those men with ideas went to the English and the seeds they planted there will bear bloody fruit. The English send thousands to their colonies but France cannot be bothered."
As spring advanced, moist and buggy, each tree sending up a fresh fountain of oxygen, Duquet's face swelled with another abscess. Monsieur Trépagny extracted this new dental offense and said commandingly that now he would pull them all and Duquet would waste no more time with toothaches. He lunged with the blacksmith's pliers but Duquet dodged away, shook his head violently, spattering blood, and said something in a low voice. Monsieur Trépagny, putting this second tooth in his pocket, spun around and said in a silky, gentleman's voice, "I'll have your skull." Duquet leaned a little forward but did not speak.
Some days later Duquet, still carrying his ax, made an excuse to relieve his bowels and walked into the forest. While he was out of earshot René asked Monsieur Trépagny if he was their seigneur.
"And what if I am?"
"Then, sir, are weDuquet and Ito have some land to work? Duquet wishes to know."
"In time that will occur, but not until three years have passed, not until the domus is finished, not until my brothers are here, and certainly not until the ground is cleared for a new maize plot. Which is our immediate task, so continue. The land comes at the end of your service." And he drove his ax into a spruce.
Duquet was gone for a long time. Hours passed. Monsieur Trépagny laughed. He said Duquet must be looking for his land. With vindictive relish he described the terrors of being lost in the forest, of drowning in the icy river, being pulled down by wolves, trampled by moose, or snapped in half by creatures with steaming teeth. He named the furious Mi'kmaq spirits of the forestchepichcaam, hairy kookwes, frost giant chenoo and unseen creatures who felled trees with their jaws. René's hair bristled and he thought Monsieur Trépagny had fallen too deeply into the world of the savages.
The next day they heard a quavering voice in the distant trees. Monsieur Trépagny, who had been limbing, snapped upright, listened and said it was not one of the Mi'kmaq spirits, but one that had followed the settlers from France, the loup-garou, known to haunt forests. René, who had heard stories of this devil in wolf shape all his life but never had seen one, thought it was Duquet beseeching them. When he made to call back Monsieur Trépagny told him to shut his mouth unless he wanted to bring the loup-garou closer. They heard it wailing and calling something that sounded like "maman." Monsieur Trépagny said that to call for its mother like a lost child was a wellknown trick of the loup-garou and that they would work no more that day lest the sound of chopping lead the beast to them.
Excerpted from Barskins: A Novel by Annie Proulx. Copyright © 2016 by Dead Line, Ltd. Excerpted with permission by Scribner, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
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