..::An increasing number of settlers were crossing the Atlantic: New France, new fate, as long as one survived the perilous ocean journey. Fronting the harbor, Notre Dame du Bon Secours often became the first dry and steady step for newcomers in the country, who would go by the church to pray for their fortune.
As a thankful gesture for their safe trip, sailors commissioned boat models to be hung in the chapel as ex votos, an unusual display that soon attracted pilgrims and curious travelers. To emphasize the position of Notre Dame du Bon Secours as the patron church of sailors, Monseigneur Ignace Bourget, Bishop of Montreal, offered a Stella Maris, a statue of the Virgin Mary as the Star of the Sea. Placed on the roof of the Chapel, the Virgin Mary keeps welcoming travelers with open arms and her wise overlook on the port::..
...............
Was this the basis of Olier's double church concept? Was the San Sulpice offering the acceptable premise of
the Gnostic "church within a church" which is precisely how historian Alain Tallon refers to the Compagnie du San Sacrament? Was this the true basis of the Societe du Notre Dame de Montreal, designed specifically to establish a new Primitive Church in Ville Marie? Isn't this similar to the purported inner contemplative core of the Knights Templar organization, a secret group that was composed of pious monks? Everything points to this scenario.
Francine Bernier
The Templars' Legacy in Montreal, the New Jerusalem

..............
'Come.' Maurice took Emlyn's arm and escorted her and Alain from the pews. Em became rather skittish when she saw they were heading straight for the monks!
-- and Daryl...
But Maurice steered them to the priest, Fr.Francis. Em saw that Daryl had begun filing out to the parish hall along with the rest of the brothers, although he couldn't stop himself from turning an afrightened and wondering eye upon Em.
She really couldn't begin to imagine what all that was about.
She waited, herself wondering, whilst Maurice and Fr.Francis engaged in some Franglish banter that Em caught most of...something about 'Frere Daryl' and how he wasn't exactly a brother, but had come to the sanctuary for asylum.
Then they lowered their voices and spoke in Occitan; not much to Emlyn's understanding. Then Fr.Francis smiled at them and he followed the monks into the hall. Maurice was smiling as well.
'Off to the hall, like le bon petit agneau that we are...' he was saying, herding them like 'little lambs?' Were we off to the sacrificial altar then? Emlyn's wonder did never cease.
When they arrived, they found the hall full of folk from all over...The monks, she saw, were busy at the kitchens and dining hall, dishing up luncheon. Yes, there was stew. It looked to be a thick hearty one.
Emlyn also noticed that they did indeed have their wares available, 'Donations Always Welcome.'
She was reminded again of Llew and his thoughtfulness to have brought a sheepskin and honey for her. She did donate however, and got a couple of fine sourdough loaves of bread from St.Blaise.
She wandered about, trying to find where Alain and Maurice had gone, she'd lost track of them somewhere...then she spied them engaged in a cabal in the corner with the Fathers from the monasteries.
As she approached, she noticed Maurice reach out an arm and bring her into the circle, claiming that Em could corroborate 'the story'...(whatever that was).
'What story?'
Alain, Maurice and Fr.Francis all began to speak at once, in at least three languages, but Em could follow enough to nod and answer oui, certainement, or non, ne sais pas...and then she closed her mouth and her eyes flew open wide to see Fr.Felix of St.Blaise's bring Daryl over from the stewpots to join them!
But, somehow, eventually, it was all sorted...the entire myth-conception, as it were.
When everyone had explained their side of the story to the satisfaction of all, Daryl emerged vindicated, found not guilty of offering bribes to Fr.Michael and St.Williams; Fr.Michael apologized with intent and offered Daryl a place among them at St.Williams 'as a fellow brother together with us in the peace of le Bon Dieu.'
Emlyn regarded Daryl with alarm. Daryl shot her a quick glance, but smiled and shook his head. 'Non, merci,' it was to be, after all. He would like to visit, however, if he may. Mais, naturellement!
Daryl explained that he was enjoying life at St.Blaise, learning cooking and herbology under the finely honed tutelage and knife of Brother Julian. Fr.Felix made some apparently hilarious but good-natured remark, en Francaise, and everyone turned to look at the large man hovering about the kitchens, seemingly everywhere at once. Brother Julian, Em supposed.
Daryl excused himself, to 'return to my kitchen duties', and off he went, if not like a bon little lamb, at least as much less wolf than he'd been vilified for.
After half a minute, Emlyn followed.
'Can I help?' she inquired, taking a dishtowel from a pile and tying it about her waist.
'Eh, ah...of course!' Daryl was rather flummoxed by her. 'Just, well, keep the bread coming, you can slice it, and keep the, ah, bowls filled...'
'I have the idea,' she assured him, and went to work.
After hauling hot potatoes out to the tables and refilling water jugs, bringing baskets of fresh bread and butter, and of course, honey, things finally began to slow down somewhat and Emlyn, having kept Daryl in sight, took her apron off and him aside for an impromptu chat.
'Thank you for helping out,' he said, sighing as they took a seat along the wall, watching as folk began to exit at last and the parishioners helped the clean-up crew tidy the hall.
'Daryl,' she took his hand, 'you're welcome.' She smiled. As if to say, it's all right. Whatever it is.
'So! How did you come to be...here?'
He raised that one eyebrow she knew so well. 'Et tu, Josephine?'
They both had to laugh at that.
He looked down. He seemed rather different now, and it wasn't just the beard.
'You never did have much of a beard.' Em remembered.
'Ah. No.' He looked up, with the familiar lop-sided grin. 'Just...got tired of shaving. You know, all men about. Not real cosmopolitan at the monastery. Sheep and vegetables, work and chant...I find it peaceful.'
'So, you were caught in a storm?' Em still wondered about some things.
'Quite the storm, yes...' He seemed to retreat inward. 'I thought I might die that night. Might have.' He glanced her way. 'But somehow, I found St.Williams.'
'-- Providential,' Em declared.
Daryl said nothing. That was new. Yes, he did seem changed somewhat.
Emlyn noticed then that eyes were upon her. -- Maurice. A look from across a crowded room. Oh yes, she felt it. She got to her feet and let go of Daryl's hand.
'I should be going.'
Daryl stood and joined her. He also glanced at Maurice. His gaze narrowed: 'Is that Allyn?' He asked. Yes, and Maurice is his oncle. 'Ah.'
'I'm, I've been staying in Montreal with them.' Em noticed a slight stiffening in Daryl's shoulders. 'We've been trying to work out what to do about...things. St.John and Kidd.' She regarded him. 'Any ideas?'
Daryl didn't react, but then he slowly shook his head. 'I'm out of it, Em. It's just all so...' he looked away, off in the distance at something within. '...it just doesn't matter, any longer. I want nothing to do with the world anymore.' He regarded her with weary eyes.
'The world may have a way of intruding, even into the bois of St.Blaise,' Emlyn warned him.
'If it does, then, I'll do what I must.' Daryl looked down at her, not unkindly. 'But only then.'
Emlyn was not amused. Leave it to Daryl to eject a sticky package on our doorstep and then exit when everyone else steps in it.
'Tell Llew hello from me.' So he was off. Again. 'I like him very much, Em. He's a good kid.' So, Daryl's last words before renouncing the world are for Llew? Well...
Not quite.
He bent and kissed her, chastely. On the cheek. Like a Brother.
'Je t'aime...' he breathed. And was gone.
.............
They decided to walk home from church. That is, to Maurice's cottage in town.
'So...tell me about the wee boat.' Emlyn was truly interested.
'Eh?'Alain looked puzzled.
'She means the ex votos, on the church ceiling,' Maurice explained, smiling slightly.
'Exactement,' Em confirmed
'This area here,' Maurice waved an arm out to sea, 'was where French emigres landed after the long voyage across the Atlantic.'
'Bonsecours is the sailor's church,' Alain added, 'And that is how one can tell -- the boats are somewhere displayed in the church.'.
'Oui,' Maurice took Emlyn's arm in his. 'Being a port city, Montreal deals in trade, always has. And sailors in harbor feel tres' intimate with their bon Dieu, after risking life and limb on the high seas...'
He stopped, turned about, and pointed with two fingers at the stature of Maris Stella with open arms on the rooftop of Bonsecours. 'There she is. She who is no stranger to tears and woes of the world. And they feel they are home here. And safe, once more, and grateful to be back.' He paused a moment, staring at the Madonna. 'They made a vow, to Mother Mary, and these boats are symbolic of that vow.'

Maurice sighed and turned for home. 'But, things are changing now. Lumber, fish, furs...Canada has these things in abundance. Now. But, with manufacturing taking over in the cities,' he shook his head, 'it can't last for too long. We require some imports, to aid in manufacture. Mining I worry about, some. And this is a huge change from coal and steam to oil...' He waved an arm over the city. 'Ah, the future of Canada is still a mystery. For now...'
He'd seemed to be talking to himself, Emlyn noticed, his voice low. Her own thoughts were spinning...she needed some space to organize things; seeing Daryl and finding out that they were all on their own here had thrown her somewhat.
'So, seeing Daryl there today was a surprise, non?' Alain inquired, reading her mind.
'It was indeed a shock,' Emlyn agreed. 'I simply can not figure out what exactly happened.' She frowned. 'Or, is happening still...'
'This Daryl, his experience with the kidnapping, it is worrying.' Maurice was frowning. 'It is certainly enough to drive a man to the cloisters. Well, it is probably the safest place for him.'
Emlyn knew that to be true. But meanwhile...
'Meanwhile, what are we to do?' She was still feeling somewhat abandoned. 'I had hoped for some help from Daryl. But, he is in no condition for it.'
Alain and Maurice both looked at her.
'We are here, and we can help,'Alain told her. 'Emmeline, you are not alone in all this! And Shannon will soon join us. She is still in Arcadia, oui, but I am expecting her any time now. She was to join us by the weekend.'
Maurice had stopped in his tracks.
'Maurice?' Em turned to him.
He put up a hand, a puzzled look on his face. 'Wait. Alain, you...you said, "Emmeline", just now. Why?'
'Oh, Maurice...' Em began, knew that she'd have to come out with it. Sighing, she admitted, 'Emmeline is my real name. I changed it to Emlyn recently. It seemed more...Welsh.'
Maurice turned to her, taking her hands in his. 'Emmeline. From Arcadia.' He stared down at her, half amused, half wondering.
'Ah.' Alain stood, hands in pockets, smiling at them. 'Oncle has found himself a mythical heroine...'
Now Em looked puzzled.
'You surely recall?' Maurice put her arm through his again, and resumed their walk. 'The Longfellow poem, the tale of Gabriel and Evangeline? Of old Arcady? The real name, of the real lady, was Emmeline. Of Arcadia.'
'And now, you have found her!' Alain grinned at them, teasing. 'Oncle, you've a living legend on your arm.'
'So it would seem,' Maurice was also smiling.
Em found herself smiling as well...
................
Suddenly, Maurice stopped.
'La, see here.' he pointed to a small cafe. 'I have not been here in some time.' He turned to them. 'It was a favorite of mine, but I have not been here in a while.
-- Shall we? Un petit nosh, oui?'
Emlyn hadn't eaten much at the luncheon, she'd been busy waitressing and working the crowd, as it were.
'I could have a petit something,' she allowed.
'Oncle; me, I am always hungry you know,' Alain was up for it as well.
A petit bell sounded as they opened the door. Inside was small, but delectable scents from the kitchen promised wonders to come. A few tables were occupied, but there were also some open. Maurice steered them to a corner booth.
'More, intimate,' he said. What he meant was they could have a more private conversation there.
They studied what was on offer and all agreed on de jour special: prawns in garlic and wine sauce, with linguine and Chanterelles, with salads.
This proved to be a wise move, and as the crowd soon filled the cafe, it seemed that they were not the only ones to think so. The ambient noise was welcome, however, they could speak more freely amongst themselves.
'How did you like the church service, Emmeline? I know you are not Catholique,' Maurice said, studying her anew.
'Non. I am not,' Em allowed Maurice to call her by her former appellation. With his French accent, it was spoken as: "Emmeleene" not the Anglo "Emm-a-LYNE" which had aggrieved Em enough to toss it out entirely.
Honestly, she thought the English hated the French so much that they put the wrong 'english' or accent on things just to separate them from Francaise; they did not go to the bal-let' but to the BAL-ley. It was all so tiresome. And don't even get her started on Saskatchewan's "Re-GYNE-a".
'I enjoyed it very much, though,' Em assured Maurice. 'I sometimes attended Catholic services with friends at Mission Delores in San Francisco, but I have not been baptised.'
Alain and Maurice stopped eating. They looked at one another, then back at Em. 'Not at all?' Asked Alain. 'Not even as the Protestant?'
'Most assuredly, not as a Protestant,' Em forked a luscious prawn in her mouth. Heaven. Here and now.
Alain and Maurice traded looks again.
'But, you did enjoy the Catholic service, non?' Maurice asked, pouring more wine all round.
'Mais oui!' Em realised that she truly had. 'The church itself! C'est magnifique! I wish that we'd more time there...I would have liked to look at the art. It was like being surrounded by beauty.'
'"Beauty is Truth,"' quoted Maurice, passing her the rolls. 'So, you are a pagan still, Emmeline? But, you were close, no? -- with this Daryl, who was kidnapped.'
Em knew she would be best served by sticking to the truth. 'We were, engaged. Briefly.' She admitted, tearing her roll. She did not mention that they were also living together.
'Ah.' He nodded, as if he understood. 'So, things changed when Daryl left for the monastery. A monk is not the best of fiance's, non?'
'Non!' Em replied, flustered. 'That is, we had not been together for some time before all that! No, I had no idea that Daryl would wish to stay at St.Blaise. Or wherever.
'Becoming a monk is the last thing I, or anyone else, would have thought Daryl would do. But, non...we have been apart for, oh, months now. Perhaps longer...' Em truly couldn't recall.
Studied looks passed betwixt Maurice and Alain as they resumed their repast. Emmeline ignored all that. Let them think what they would of her. She sighed. Just wait til Maurice gets a load of Shannon, she thought, the anti-Pope.
Her smile faltered, however, as she glanced up at whomever had entered, the bell on the cafe door ringing. Though he was wearing a tuque pulled down low, she could not mistake the fey: shining bright as a new copper penny, there stood Llew.
'Diosa...' she breathed, her hand crushing the roll to bits. She stood. 'Excuse me, un moment.'
She hurried over to Llew, and took him by the arm, back out onto the sidewalk. 'What? How--?' She began.
'Emlyn,' Llew interrupted. 'It's Shannon. She is GONE, Em! Kidd and Jeanne have her, I saw them take her. They had found out that she has a mobile unit.'
'Where? Where is she?' Em doubted it not.
Llew shook his head. 'Don't know. I guess, assume, she is with them. Somewhere. Kidd's?'
'Not good. I have to find her.' Em frowned at him. 'How did you find me here?'
'Emlyn,' Llew was patient now. 'I am fey, and we are related.' This said it all, apparently.
'Yes, well, I am sorry, cheri, but you cannot stay...'
Em's gaze went to the table where Alain and Maurice were staring in wonder.
Llew merely smiled and walked beyond the windows. When he was past, he vanished into thin air.
Neat trick, that, thought Em.
But, Shannon, now. Whatever next? Em looked at the cafe, and Maurice. She was out of ideas. Best to tell all and have done with it. These men here were the best she could have about her now.
'Was that really Llew?' Alain asked, somewhat fearful.
'I'm afraid so,' Em took her seat, regarding them both.
'He, he came to tell me news. It seems that...' she sighed, '...it seems, Kidd and Jeanne had discovered that Shannon has...well, something that they greatly desired. And so now, they have her. Kidd has kidnapped Shannon.'
Alain stood, nearly knocking over the table. 'We will go and get her, then!'
Maurice reached up, taking his arm. 'Non, non -- Alain, s'il vous plait? Sit.' He regarded them all.
'Now, we will think about this a bit, oui?' Maurice waved the waiter over for the cheque. 'So, back in Arcadia, these "friends" of yours have taken Shannon. But, you know not where, exactly. But you have a guess.'
'Oui, naturellement! They are at Kidd's maison.' Alain looked like a bull about to charge.
'Perhaps,' Maurice finished his wine, and paid the cheque. 'And, perhaps not. Perhaps they have taken Shannon, so that you and Emmeline will go after her. And then? Then they will have the entire package.'
He stood, and they followed.
Back out on the street, they resumed their walk, much faster now.
'We must do something, though, Oncle.' Alain was falling apart before their eyes.
'Think.' Maurice told him. 'Flying off into the blue without a plan, is just what they are expecting you to do.'
'They could be up to anything, though,' Em was catching Alain's paranoia. 'If St.John is involved, he could have them all up in Alaska...'
'Emmeline...non, non.' Maurice put an arm about her shoulders, then Alain's as well. 'I am sure she is fine. And, I am just as sure that neither of you should show yourselves to these people. What you need, is someone they do not know, to go and check things out and see how it all looks, and where exactly Shannon is first.'
'But whom?' Emlyn was wondering...
'Eh, well, I thought perhaps...myself?' Maurice asked, with an eyebrow flourish.
Alain and Em exchanged a glance. 'We should talk,' Em said, 'and think about things first. D'accord.'
Alain sighed, 'D'accord.'
'Inside,' Maurice had reached his door, and opening it with a large key, he ushered them within. 'Parlez.'
...............
'This Daryl was an alchemist?!' Maurice was desperate to understand.
They had been in parlez for some time now. Alain was growing antsy. 'Just let me go, s'il vous plait! I will be quick and quiet!'
Em was torn. She was afraid to let Alain go and perhaps become hostage #2. This was why she, herself would not be going anywhere.
'All right.' Em finally thought she saw a way.
'A compromise: Alain will go to the gatehouse, you know where that is, non?' He nodded. 'Bon. Talk to Athena and Wolf Star there. Tell them what has happened. Tell them that stealth is required. A quick and subtle recon at Kidd's, find Shannon, and fly back here, ASAP.' She glanced at Maurice. 'If that's agreeable with you.'
'Oui. Whatever you think.' He seemed to genuinely wish to help.
Em was relieved. 'Bon. I think this is safest. Kidd would not expect us here.' She had another thought: 'If you see Llew, he may also be of some help. He has...certain areas of expertise that may come in handy.'
'If you say so...' Alain wasn't so sure, but agreed.
'Very well. I will get you there, then I must return before they're onto my trace signature.' Emlyn stood, and took Alain with her to the other room. Maurice watched, of course, but she did feel rather more at ease not being in the same room with him.
Emlyn and Alain blinked out and only one blinked back in.
Maurice stood. 'We must talk.'
Em nodded. 'Yes.' She looked at him, a little weary now, and sighed. 'Oui. Daryl was somewhat of an alchemist.'
Maurice smiled slightly and took her into the conservatory. 'Let us have coffee and a good long parlez, oui?'
.................
Finding Shannon had been the easiest of all.
Alain, Athena and Wolf Star were rather amazed to see her with Kidd and Jeanne behind the lodge where they had barbequed the night of the barn dance. Once more, they appeared to be preparing a feast.
Some distance from where Kidd sat, pouring cider and holding forth as usual, energy focused on running his mouth and not much else, was where a pit was dug and the carcass of a deer slowly roasting, tended by several of the local Indian men.
This gave Wolf Star an idea.
...............
'So...' Maurice poured the hot strong brew, refreshing their cups as he endeavored to comprehend this newest mode of travel. 'This Daryl had discovered the eh, avenue? Pathway?' Em nodded, encouraging. 'This time road, that travels to the past or future?'
'Essentially, oui.' Em wasn't sure herself about all the hows and wherefores. 'It was a magical working that he became caught up in. But, it was his nephew Jack, a physicist and inventor, who developed a means to control and regulate this...time stream'
'Ma foi...so, it is no small wonder that Daryl is ready to retire from the world!' Maurice slowly shook his head. Then he stared hard at Em. He got up and went to a wicker cabinet just within the cottage and returned with Armagnac.
A raised eyebrow in inquiry. Em sighed and nodded. A drop of Armagnac in the coffee would not go amiss at this point. But only a drop.
'Salud,' they toasted, but to what?
Maurice sighed again, 'Ah, ma cher Emmeline...' he shook his head again. 'This is, could be, tres' diabolique. That you actually are able to travel the avenues of time! I did not believe, before, but now that I have seen -- !'
'Now you know just what sort of a debacle can result from these plots of, well, international intrigue and, -- assassination, Maurice!' Em ran her hands through her hair and held her head as if to squeeze it free of chaos.
'Oui. Diabolique!' Maurice drank, pouring more coffee and Armagnac. 'Ah, Emmeline...strange and dangerous times we are living in, cher.'
Em was very sorry for that. 'I wish it weren't so.' She lifted her gaze to his. 'We are a long ways from that free and easy gallop yesterday through the fields...I am sorry to have involved you in all this.'
Maurice looked stunned. 'Eh? Non, non...' he leaned forward, taking her hands. 'Cheri, I, too am sorry we must deal with this nasty business, but it is what we must do! As good folk must, oui?' He poured a drop more brandy into her cup. 'I do not regret having met you, Emmeline of Arcadia.'
Em took a sip and smiled. 'Nor I you, Maurice of Mont Real.'
'Ha!' Maurice barked a laugh. 'That Long Fellow wrote no such verse!' He smiled then, dropping his head. 'You know, I have kept myself alone much these past few months. Alain, I have remained in touch with, but few others.' He raised his eyes to hers. 'I welcome your presence here, Emmeline.'
'I fear I just bring trouble to your door...' she began. '...the last thing I would wish.'
'Non. Never.' He sat back then, regarding her. 'You have inspired me. Non, it is so! I had not even felt like riding at all, in weeks...it is not fair to the horses, either.'
Em was staring off into nothingness, thinking. 'The thing is...' Her glance took in his. 'I wonder... except for the assassination, of course, I wonder if it might not be, you know, a possibility for a better reality, perhaps? That is, perhaps...they may be right?'
Maurice frowned at her, leaning on the table. 'You mean, if having Charles Edward Stuart made king of Scotland, and Great Britain, and Canada...as well as America?' He shook his head, leaning back far. 'Oh, non. It would be a disaster...for New France! For the French Canadians! We would become even more marginalized...'
His eyes were alight with fear. 'Such a great lot of resources and power all upon the shoulders of one man. That is something you do not wish to experience. Just think of Napoleon! The French know well about despots. C'est fou.'
'I know little of Canada's politics,' Em admitted.
'It has been rather rocky, you know, but with the election of Laurier as Prime Minister, it is getting somewhat better.' Maurice calmed down somewhat. 'But, I would not wish to rock that boat now, as they say.'
Maurice and Em sat silently a while, waiting, thinking. Trying not to think. Wondering about this "plan."
'You know,' he began, pouring the last of the coffee.
'The city of Montreal and surrounding area was created as a New Jerusalem.'
'I have heard something of this,' Em allowed, 'but none of the details. The early settlers had a new land with a new vision in mind.'
'Oui. Back in the 1600s. They were visionaries, exactemente! Far from France and the old, stagnant regulations and habits of the past. And Emmeline, the women were the leaders in this! C'est vrai; it was the women who started the hospitals and the schools, naturellement!' Maurice was smiling.
'In the 1600s? And the men went along with this?' Em was impressed.
'Oh oui. Everyone had to work together, non? The Indians were a concern they needed to band together to deal with here, to dialogue with them and try to know them... So, women and men, all got along together in building a new world here. They had to, they depended upon each other.'
Emmeline regarded him anew. Another man with a plan?
'It is still a dream that some here try to keep alive, ma cheri,' remarked Maurice, full of caffeine and ideas.
...............
Wolf Star saw his chance.
When he saw that Shannon was closest to him while the others were otherwise occupied, he made certain that she could view him.
He quietly hailed the Indian men who were tending the deer on the spit, and engaged them in parley. He and Shannon made eye contact and he motioned to where she should be positioned. Shannon moved nearer the hay wagon to the side of the yard, which was where Alain and Athena were hidden.
Wolf Star was demonstrating to the men a new type of knot with which to secure the leather straps holding the spit together with the poles on either side. His foot suddenly slipped and nearly knocked the spit, deer and all, over into the fire.
-- Chaos ensued.
While the men scrambled to grab the deer and not get burned, Shannon and Wolf Star ran behind the wagon, and Alain and Athena got them all out of there tout de suite via her mobile unit.
Possibly due to the Kidd's handy yet unfortunate habit, for them, of cider drinking before noon, added to the fact that, in the melee, neither Jeanne nor Alex had noticed Shannon's disappearance until it was too late.
No, they hadn't gotten their hands on her mobile unit. She hadn't brought it with her, or she'd have not been long in their clutches.
..............
'And, are you one of those men, Maurice?' Em asked, wondering where his interests lay...what fueled his obsession with the past?
Maurice ran a finger along his chin, as if stroking a non-existent beard. 'Possibly.' He stared about them at the plants, herbs and greenery surrounding them in the small glass conservatory...a petit fountain ran into a rock pool of water lilies and iris, making a pleasant silvery sound.
'It is true I escape often into the past, as much to find inspiration and drive, as rest and solace, as I do here, in this verdant place. A city oasis,' he admitted. 'And, yes, at one time, I and my confreres were committed to establishing a...a bastion; a combination library, society, school and sanctuary, that was outside the Church, yet dedicated to the real meaning of morality, charity and good works.'
'I wonder that you are Catholic, and yet a Freemason,' Em commented.
'Hm. Oui. The fault lies with the Revolution, non?' Maurice stood, and wandered about the circular glass enclosure about the lily pool. '"The Age of Reason" and Rousseau...' He shook his head slowly, as he strode, pinching off brown leaves here and there.
'Many Freemasons were involved in the planning of all that. And with only the best of intentions, which led to the road to hell, non?' Maurice took up a pair of pruning shears and cut the dead heads from dried plants. 'And heads did roll...'
'Alas. And so, best laid plans of those like David and Danton, eh? They were cast aside in a power grab fueled by blood lust. Marat, Robespierre...' He looked as if he wanted to spit, or worse. '...monsters, all. Too many monsters and too few true men. All the high minded ideals of Freemasonry cast aside in the passion which only poisons.'
'So, your Catholic dogmas do not conflict with the Masonic?' Em still couldn't get a direct subjective answer.
Maurice smiled, and cut a budding red rose, handing it to Em, who inhaled the rich crimson. 'But of course they do, cher.' He resumed his seat. 'You are not Catholique, so...' he waved a hand as if to say, and so it is something you'd not understand.
'There are many ways around the interpretations of the dogma, and then, there's the writings of the saints and desert fathers, not to mention the Popes and all their petit additions...it is a living thing, this.' Maurice attempted to explain, to his credit. 'And so it is with one's personal beliefs, and, yes, we adhere to tradition! That is our creed, the Apostolic succession; -- the church is closest to the original, primitive teachings of the apostles and of course, le Bon Dieu.' His eyes were locked with hers.
'But, there is always room for, eh, interpretation, non?'
'I see,' Em said. But she did not. 'And this compaigne, a society of like-minded men? Are they Masons also?'
'Some.' Maurice was not so forthcoming on this, she sensed. 'We are not meeting as before, however. We have had to...regroup, somewhat. But, there is still that passion for reform on a grand scale, to carry forth the dream of a real spiritual rennaisance, here, in Montreal, and to make it the true Real Jerusalem!'
Suddenly Em and Maurice were galvanized by a loud banging on the front door. They both leapt up and hurried out.
Opening the door, they were astonished to see Alain and Shannon come falling inside the hallway.
'She is back! She is safe!' Alain righted himself, with an arm about Shannon, pulling her upright as well.
Em started forward, taking Shannon by the hand. 'Cherie, are you all right?'
'Yes. Yes.' Shannon looked weary, but relieved. 'It is good to see you, Em.' Her gaze went to Maurice. 'Pleased to make your acquaintance, oncle!' She made un petit curtsy. 'Oh. I need to sit down...'
'More coffee, Maurice?' Em asked. He hustled off to the kitchen and Em and Alain took Shannon into the parlor.
She was seated upon the sofa and leaned into Alain, who put an arm protectively about her.
As Alain told of Wolf Star's deceptive ploy and their brilliant escape, Maurice entered with a tray of hot coffee and gingerbread. He poured, adding honey. 'Drink some, petit cherie, you need it,' he said, handing the cup to Shannon. 'The poor girl is in shock,' he murmured to Alain. He did not add that she also seemed rather inebriated.
'No, I'm fine, merci,' Shannon told them, sitting up.
'Some food would be welcome...I haven't had breakfast, only cider and an apple!'
Alain cut gingerbread and handed it to her. 'Ma pauvre cheri, she was taken away very early and then given strong drink with the promise of a very special presentation later...'
Between bites Shannon told them of some reportedly new and fabulous 'find' that Kidd had come upon, through the revelations and excavations of his good friend...
'Yes!' Shannon polished off her cake deftly and then dropped Le Bombe: 'I met with St.John! Who was, as promised, fabulous and special, indeed...' She finished her coffee, making a grimace. '...and also quite dangerous.'
...........
CLICK BELOW TO LISTEN! Jane Birkin et Serge Gainsbourg: Je T'aime .... Moi, Non Plus
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k3Fa4lOQfbA