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Authors: Magali Favre

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BOOK: 21 Days in October
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“Mama said you have to take care of us,” says the younger boy.

Gaétan pulls himself wearily out of bed and drags his feet into the kitchen. As long as he's home he would have liked to sleep a little more. But he did promise.

“You guys want toast with peanut butter?”

“No, cookies from the box!”

Gaétan smiles. “The box” is the red metal container where his mother puts her famous cookies—oatmeal, molasses, or gingerbread, depending on what she feels like making or what's left in the kitchen cupboards. All the children on the block have tasted them. At Christmas, she uses it to store her fruitcake, which can stay there for a month. Even empty, the box smells spicy enough to tempt a saint.

“Want a glass of milk, too?”

“Can we watch TV?”

“Go ahead, I'll bring everything in.”

Deep down, Gaétan is proud to be taking care of his brothers, to be responsible enough to say yes or no. He enjoys preparing their snack, which he puts on a tray and brings into the living room.

“Wow, what service! Thanks!”

“I'm giving you a treat today, but don't think it's gonna be like this every day. After
Fanfreluche
, go do your homework,” he says in a voice he wants to sound authoritative.

“We don't even got any!”

“I doubt that. If I remember correctly, Mme Paquette gave homework every night. Don't even try to pull a fast one on me.”

“I just have a little math to do,” admits Patrick.

“I got some grammar exercises,” Richard adds. “You gonna help us?”

“We'll see. In the meantime, move over! I want to watch
Fanfreluche,
too.”

The two boys jump aside to make a place for him in the centre of the sofa. The show's theme song begins and Fanfreluche appears, opening her enormous book. Today, the mischievous doll with her pigtails pointing in all directions is going to the circus, where Mme Dora will predict her future. As usual, when Fanfreluche doesn't agree with the story, she jumps into the adventure to change the ending.

Gaétan prefers
Sol and Gobelet
, the two clowns who always get themselves into crazy situations. But they're on Tuesdays. And anyway, the boy doesn't want to deny himself this pleasure. A good snack in front of a children's show is always a special treat.

The boys have just opened their notebooks on the kitchen table to start their homework when their father's voice rings out.

“Man alive! It's good to be back home!”

The whole family comes to surround him.

His wife, who has come in with him, smiles broadly when she sees the notebooks on the table. She hugs Gaétan and thanks him for taking care of his brothers.

“You might not be so happy when you see that the cookie box is empty.”

“I'll make more. You can see they didn't keep him too long. I bet they'd had enough of him!”

“It's unbelievable, arresting people like that!” exclaims Gaétan's father.

Before his son's sceptical gaze, he recounts the events surrounding his arrest while Gaétan's mother begins preparing the evening meal.

“I wanted to make sure people weren't cheating at the polls. I was positive that the big guy with the brown hair wasn't Mr. Gosselin. I've seen Mr. Gosselin before, thought he was a little tubby guy, an' what's more, he died last spring. I said as much to the election officer, but he didn't wanna hear it. I got mad and they had to call the police to come take me outta there.”

Gaétan smiles, imagining the heap of abuse the police must have taken.

“Laugh if you want, but I know I was right. So I'm being charged for insulting police officers. I gotta appear in court in a month. You call that justice, arresting the guy who saw someone cheating and letting the cheater off the hook? Those damned cops, can't find the guys setting off bombs and kidnapping a minister, but they sure can give us regular folks a hard time!”

“Spaghetti's ready! Time to eat!”

They all gather around as the mother fills their plates, happy to be together again.

15
Thursday, October 29

H
e pushes the café door open. A thick cloud of smoke envelops him. Charlebois'
La Marche du président
is playing softly. In every corner, the young and the old with their long hair and scruffy beards are smoking and drinking, talking loudly and lustily. A little unnerved, Gaétan sweeps the room with his eyes. Eventually he can make out a shadow with short hair, the shortest of the room, boys and girls combined. Louise is bent over a notebook, surrounded by several volumes. He sits down in front of her, his eyes already red from the smoke.

“How can you work in this place?”

“I feel less alone than in my room. I like it. So, what happened to you the other day?”

Since waking up that morning, Gaétan has been searching for a way to avoid telling her about Paul. But he can't lie.

“I have a friend who has a friend…”

“What?”

He has to start from the beginning. As he moves through the explanation, Louise is listening to him with increasing attention and maybe even a hint of admiration. At the end of his story, she exclaims, “Wow! I didn't know you hung around with guys in the FLQ!”

“It's not what you think—and don't talk so loud! Luc's been my friend since forever. He's a good worker. He only wants to improve the conditions on the job, and Paul offered to help him. I don't really know him. But Luc's not a ‘revolutionary' like you say, let alone a member of the FLQ. He knows that killing a minister won't ever make things better.”

“Obviously if we do nothing, we don't risk a thing!”

“But when we do too much, we give our enemies the ammunition they need to scare everyone.”

“And you say you don't understand politics at all.”

“Factory workers can understand things, too. My father's an active member of a citizens' committee to get rid of Mayor Drapeau, who's been wreaking havoc on our neighbourhood for years. And now a bunch of bums who think they're better than everyone come and screw everything up.”

“Speaking of your father, I bet you were just messing with me when you said that your great-grandfather knew Louis Riel.”

“Not at all!”

Gaétan begins to tell her the family legend, carefully handed down over the past three generations.

His great-grandfather's name was Lionel Simard. He had only one leg, and when you asked he'd tell you how he lost the other one in a battle against the English. It was his pride and joy.

He had begun to work in Montréal at a young age, as a day hand for the Masson family. There he'd met a young man from the immense prairies that stretch as far as the eye can see on the other side of the Great Lakes. His name was Louis Riel. He studied at the Collège de Montréal's Petit Séminaire and had only one desire: to return to the banks of the Red River. Lionel listened for hours as Louis described the immensity of the region's fertile land and the miraculous buffalo hunts. In his mind, this wild, bountiful nature was meant to be shared among all people of good will. So when Louis Riel returned to his lands, Gaétan's great-grandfather, then only seventeen, didn't think twice before going with him.

Lionel cleared a plot of land that ran like a strip up from the Red River and a long way into the land behind. He built a camp with help from Louis Riel and his Métis friends. The families were very close-knit. Whenever one of them went through a difficult spell, they all helped each other. Life there was rough, and without the knowledge picked up from the Indians, few would have survived. Lionel managed one wheat harvest, but the following year everything was destroyed by locusts. Luckily, there was hunting, fishing, and the fur trade with the highest bidder winning, be it the American or the British companies. So they managed to survive, even when crops failed.

But the Canadian government at the time had strong views on how the region would be developed, since it had just been bought from the Hudson Bay Company. And the Métis had no place there.

When government surveyors came to divide up the land English-style, as if no one had ever lived there, the Métis banded together to prevent them from completing their paperwork. Louis Riel became their leader and formed a temporary government. Lionel was wounded during a battle with the English settlers who had come from Ontario to settle on land he had cleared himself. He was wounded in the leg and it had to be amputated. For him, it was the end of a dream. He came back to Montréal, never to set foot on the Prairies again. As family legend goes, Lionel Simard, the tough, uncompromising man who had managed to raise a family of twelve children on only one leg, had cried the day they hung Louis Riel.

“I even think my father still has a picture of Lionel in front of his camp on the Red River.”

“You've got to show me! I'll make a photocopy and put it in with my paper,” says Louise.

Gaétan can't believe that an old family story he's never paid much attention to fascinates the girl. He watches her earnestly write down his story in her notebook, savouring being the object of her interest.

16
Friday, October 30

I
t's three o'clock in the morning. Gaétan takes his place next to the spinner with a heavy heart. At the end of the large machine room where the noise is deafening, a shabby little room with a few picnic tables and a vending machine invites the workers to have a bite to eat during their breaks.

As he does every night, Gaétan goes in to gulp down two bottles of Coke to keep his eyes open until the end of his shift.

Today, a woman who could have been his mother was crying in a corner. She had just been fired for missing a few days of work because one of her children had been sick. When she returned, she had already been replaced by a younger girl. The foreman hadn't even warned her. She had tried to negotiate another position, even one less well paid, but it was no use.

Now, the roar of the machines scrambles his thoughts. Gaétan can't get the woman's expression out of his head. He would have liked to help her. He has a sudden desire to drop everything, to run away from this place where life seems to count for so little. He remembers Luc's words: “
Cheap labour. All we are is cheap labour
.”

A nagging question runs through his head. How many years will he spend in front of this machine? Thirty? Forty? He is sick to his stomach.

Suddenly, his machine gets caught and a few of the threads snap. It's a catastrophe. He pushes the red emergency button and the foreman comes running.

“Goddammit… Better not let that happen too often, or believe me you won't stay here long. It takes three hours to get that machine going again—that's three hours' production time lost.”

Gaétan says nothing.

“You can get the hell out of here for today. In three hours, your shift'll be over. But I'm holding a half-day on your paycheque.”

Gaétan turns and bolts towards the stairs.

“You heartless bastards!” he yells behind him. Fortunately, his voice is covered by the noise of the machines.

Gaétan finds himself outside under a starry sky. At this time of night, it is more than just cold. Neither the buses nor the metro are running. He will have to walk back across the entire city. Tonight is a night full of anger. Gaétan clenches his fists.

He is now trudging down Sainte-Catherine. Usually so full of life and light, it is strangely deserted. Tomorrow is Halloween, and the store windows decorated with skeletons, ghosts, and witches end up giving off a gloomy feeling. There are hardly any cars; only a few taxis circulate, looking for the last stragglers after a night on the town.

The boy arrives at the corner of the Main. It's the only place in the whole city where snack bars are still open at this late hour. Boulevard Saint-Laurent, its real name, is the stomping grounds of prostitutes and other non-conformists of all types. Gaétan decides to go eat a hot dog at the Montréal Pool Room before going home. A woman beckons to him from the door of a nightclub. He quickens his pace.

Once he has bolted down the hot dog, he continues walking, quickly crossing the area where his mother doesn't like to see him hanging around. For her, the Red Light district is where the mafia made their fortune during American prohibition. And if she still supports Mayor Drapeau, it's mainly for his crusade against these visible remnants of those dissolute days.

Gaétan gradually leaves the lights on the Main for the dark and familiar streets of his neighbourhood in the East.

Two vagrants are sleeping under an air vent outside of the Beaudry metro station. They are wrapped in old sleeping bags and surrounded by several empty liquor bottles, a symbol of their daily struggles.

Gaétan has definitely seen his share of misery tonight.

To avoid explaining the reason for his early return, he decides to spend the rest of the night at Luc's. At the same time, he'll check to see if the apartment is still empty.

It's garbage day, and the lane is overflowing with garbage cans. A rat, eagerly sniffing the contents of a ripped bag, scurries away as Gaétan approaches, only to return right after he passes.

Exhausted, Gaétan climbs the stairs and enters the apartment. He walks through all the rooms; the apartment is empty. Nothing seems to have moved since his last visit. His legs have gone numb. Without thinking, he collapses on Luc's bed and pulls the blankets around him. He falls asleep instantly.

“Get up! Get up!”

Gaétan is being shaken vigorously. A flashlight beam is shining in his eyes. Blinded and dazed, he can't see the person who is roughing him up. What does he want?

“Hey! Stop shaking me!”

“Who're you? Where's Paul? Hey! Answer!”

“Jesus! Let me go!”

“It's ok, he's awake. Let him get up.”

Gaétan sits up, stunned. He can make out three shadows in front of him. It's still dark outside. He glances at the clock: four in the morning. He's only been sleeping for an hour. He's dizzy and disoriented. The only thing he wants is to go back to sleep.

BOOK: 21 Days in October
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