Saturday, March 1, 2008

True Love - The Real Story

True Love — The Real Story

Introduction

The teacher told his students: "Love is the song of life, and sex is it's handmaiden. When sex is used against life, it destroys love." He knew it because he had used it for life and was still in love. And because he had known so many who had used it against life and foiled their love.

This is a real story. It happened. It is still happening. A story of love: a story of boy meets girl. A story of life: it flowed forth in abundance.

The story is in three parts.

The first part: "And Then There Were Ten" narrates the flowering of love into life.
The second part: "A Baker's Dozen" narrates the hardships of life that nurture's love.
The third part is unwritten as it is life that continues to unfold.
No story is final until death do us part.

Georges Allaire.

Part I. Prélude To "Then There Were Ten"

Prélude

A few years ago, my wife Danielle and I read a work of fiction written by Agatha Christie: "And Then There Were None". The novel began with "Ten" live persons and proceeded on to the elimination of each and every one until "There Were None". The reader is left in the dark as to the identity of the culprit until the very end of the book.

We thought it might be interesting to invert the process in "And Then There Were Ten". The story would be real rather than fiction. The story would start two who would become one and eventually the plot would increase in number until there were ten. The culprits would be identified in the first chapter.

But seriously, when I was a college student and a dreamy-eyed adolescent. I had answers for everything. I was full of self-confidence and ready to face life’s challengesé I felt an urge to change the world according to my views rather than to adapt to the prevailing worldviews. As a young adult, I left many vagaries behind but kept those persuasions I felt better fitted to my capacities. Yet, I dared not expound them too forcefully as I expected the normal retort: "You don't know what you are talking about. You'll see, as the years go by, that reality isn't what you fancy it to be."

Now that I am a member of the mature adult class and about to start downhill into an age where I'll naturally be termed dotty, I figure this is the time to lay down some facts my companion in life and I have more or less managed to live out: not dreams, not persuasions, not a philosophy, simply facts.

I expect to be told: "Of course, its easy to give forth your ideas when they are simply the expression of what you have done."

There is no way out save to set forth the rules of the game:

1- Herein the reader will find facts made up of actions, of feelings and of opinions. All were facts. These actions, feelings and opinions may be deemed absurd, odd, ordinary or pleasing; they may be considered healthy or pathological; they may confirm or weaken judgements, statistics or philosophies; they may be right or wrong, indefensible, commendable or simply boring. They were facts.

2- Needless to add, though we do so, certain names have been altered in order to protect the privacy of the persons concerned.

3- All the persons herein have been presented through the looking-glass of our own persuasions, prejudices and experience and must therefore be regarded as facts relative to a very particular and subjective view-point. We may have misjudged others on occasions as we have even noticed misjudging ourselves at times. But even these judgements are facts and have been reported herein as such. — I am especially grateful for my father-in-law and my mother-in-law, whom I have not always fully appreciated. The reader will recognise how virtuously they have endured my antics.

4- Finally, though the following book has been entirely written by and is far too much preoccupied with myself, I must insist that I strove to be more a biographer than an autobiographer. The living soul that animates our facts is my wife Danielle... who has not been at liberty to be a writer as she is the doer.

Georges Allaire.

Part I. Chapter 1. The Frog and the Princess

The Frog and the Princess

Once upon a time, I was introduced to a smile. A smiling princess.

I had been invited to be part of a student study group. The invitation was most welcome.

For the first time in my twenty young years, I was away from home, from mother and father and the neighbouring friends — nearly half a continent away. I had wished to go to university in my own language, French, which was quite impossible in English Manitoba. So, here I was in Quebec City, capital of the land of the French in America. While cloaked in the security of home, my move to university had seemed an exalting experience. But when I arrived a week early to roam the city and the corridors of my new challenge, solitude had smacked into me with all its crushing impact.

The first day of class had been a deliverance. Strangers like me — though nearer to their home — had arrived, seeking, like me, eager faces, extended hands and comradeships to furnish a derelict heart, till friendships grew there. And with the beginning of classes, the idleness of waiting was corrected by the presence of abstract philosophical thought and the practical requirements of studies.

Yet, I must confess that — by reason of heart, hunting instinct or whatever psychological need — I craved for more than comrades and schooling. Companionship, a girl's, was a definite yearning. To which there was a definite obstacle I might term, in scientific jargon, 'socio-phobia'. In fact, it may have stemmed from a 'novelty-phobia'. Whenever events turn around too fast, they tear away my security blanket. This 'novelty-phobia' has generally prevented my playing any sporting game, since it appeared to me that a person is expected there to react first and think second: a logical process contrary to mine. It is my habit to first be struck by the unexpected, then panic, react badly, slowly calm the inner turmoil, restructure myself with the assimilated novelty, and then act accordingly. By which time, the fly-ball will have dropped to the ground at my feet and all my team-mates will be howling their frustrations out at me. Better I be a loner within books and theories which could await my reactions and would never molest me in any way. By them, I achieved scholarly success and became an apt dialectician, robing my social awkwardness with what I considered to be modestly brilliant remarks and rapid quips.

Sports were ever out. But, more damaging for the present quest, boys and girls' nights out were also strictly off limits.

Indeed, the straights of my navigation were (and still are) quite narrow. But they allowed for a study group, where intellectual intercourse is the sole manoeuvre expected of its members. Thus was I eager to be part of it, and avid to meet the four dainty damsels I had been told would also be there.

Pierre was the recruiter, organiser and soul of the group. He was a Frenchman who had crossed the Atlantic to study at Laval University in French-speaking Quebec. He lived in the flat his parents kept as a foothold in the New World while they still toiled in the Old Country. Through a common acquaintance, Pierre had heard of Georges Allaire, a fellow from far away Manitoba, also studying at Laval University, who held views similar to his own. This had made him bolt over to my room and add me to his head count. Thus, that evening, he had picked me up in his over-driven Beetle and we were the first to arrive at his flat. Shortly after, two more university students and four college girls brought us to full count.

The fellows could be valued as sparring partners in serious and pleasurable debate. But the roving eye first gave a ruthless evaluation of the members of the other sex. Alas, as was to be expected, enthusiasts of study groups are generally not Hollywood sex symbols. None was.

Maybe certain comments in my defence should be expressed here. "Alas" does not suggest that a young woman should be a sex symbol. But it does pertain to the fact that a man's appreciative eye is quite sensitive to distinctive feminine outlines. And it recognises that such outlines are to be appreciated even though they are not the sole or most important criterion of her value. A Bible is rich by its content alone: yet Medievalists learned to adorn it in gilded lettering. And God deposited a woman's tender heart in a body that is dynamite. Also, personal taste is only of subjective value. The proof of this is that the four girls who disappointed my instincts at first glance have since all managed to rouse the interest of their own man.

Two of the girls were of a type that would never awaken any interest (of mine) outside the reason for which they were present at Pierre's flat: discussion. A third one, Ruth, was revealed as a fighting personality, eager to debate, a Joan of Arc on her battlements, no doubt made of tempered steel and a credit to feminine "virility". As such, she inspired comradeship rather than love, intellectual vitality rather than lust.

Then there was Danielle. Definitely not Hollywoodian. A five foot six brunette, whose greenish brown eyes did not attract particular attention. The good taste and correctness of her dress maintained in discreet reclusion her indisputable particularities of femininity. She was a nice person. But when she spoke to you, she would smile. A smile lighting up her whole personality. A smile full of happiness, happiness in the pleasure of your company. A smile cheerfully consecrating your importance. A smile recognising the existence of Georges. She was nice on the outside and strikingly beautiful on the inside. At least, I did feel a certain giddiness in the head, a glowing warmth in the chest and found genuine delight in each of her remarks that evening, the content of which I have, however, not retained.

Yet the meeting with the princess was marred by a distasteful character blot, for she spoke with the sort of snobbish accent (or so it seemed to me) which generally sends chills up my spine. The experience of mixed warmth and chills was confusing to say the least.

Nevertheless, I was happy to discover the Danielle was the chauffeur for part of the study group. Since she had always taken part in numerous youth activities, from the time she became of age, sixteen, her father found it made life simpler to pass the car over to her rather than to drive her about. It so happened that the campus residences were in the general direction of Danielle's route, which made me one of her regular dependants.

On the road home Danielle sensibly asked my reactions to the study group.

Affected and afflicted by her, I could not hide yet reveal a growing dependency far beyond words of wisdom and need for transportation. I half-jokingly quipped: "The discussions were enthralling and the girls interesting," adding "meaning of course no one in particular."

I was pleased with my answer and exited at my door-step.

I did not know what would come out of this evening. I felt safe because of my efficiency in group discussion, secure behind my joking remarks when matters became more personal, and wondering what avenues I should follow towards the person who had awakened my feelings and yearnings.

In fact, I had unknowingly made a shatteringly bad entry into Danielle's life and an unfortunate sortie out of her evening, though I correctly evaluated the efficiency of my discussion: I had managed to be so unobtrusive as not to be singled out.

When Pierre had said: "This is Georges, a student in Philosophy, at Laval", and "This is Danielle, a student at the girls' college Jesus-Marie", I had naturally spoken of what was the only common private subject between us: "You must then know Sheila, who also studies at Jesus-Marie." Danielle had acquiesced with her charming smile. How was I to know that she had inwardly shuddered and wondered what kind of a guy I must be? I had only briefly met Sheila and another girl when another philosophy student and I happened upon them at a movie house. Sheila came from my friend's home town. And so: chit-chat, a pepsi at the restaurant. All I knew was that Sheila attended Jesus-Marie college. I did not know her to be the school vamp, which made her a very improper introduction into a study group given to deepen the insights of Pope Paul VI "On his Church". Danielle concluded that either I did not really know Sheila or I should not return to the study group. And she was proven right. I stayed in the study group and did not follow up the Sheila connection.

As for my parting quip, Danielle had sat back, surprised, saying to herself: "Well, here is a fellow who wants me to be sure that I have no illusions about his feelings towards me. As if..." And in fact Danielle had not the slightest feeling or yearning for anything other than the comradeship of discussion, so she was not in the least distressed by this expression of my nervousness. Yet she mused to herself: "Wouldn't it be funny if some day he should change his mind."

Having shut the world out by closing my door, I was now with a practical problem: "What next?" This queer fascinating snob (or was she, since all but her 'affected' speech contradicted the suggestion?) had raised my temperature. I must now discover her address and determine whether any serious follow-up would be physically possible. Being a pedestrian in a large city, I had to ascertain if there was a relative proximity between the victim and the suitor. I picked up the telephone book and ran my eyes in the K section to find "Kello", which had been mentioned to be Danielle's family name. No "Kello" appeared.

Self-respect prevented me from telephoning Pierre to say: "Look here, there is this young lass in our study group I might go out with. Could you fill me in on her and her whereabouts?" But then, I recalled Ruth inviting us all to a youth meeting of some kind in the near future. She had given us her phone number should we be interested; which I now machiavelically dialled. I queried her on the meeting — which I did not, in fact, go to. Then we talked of our study group. Somehow the conversation touched upon Danielle... was it Kello?

"Oh no," answered Ruth, laughingly. "It is Q-U-E-L-O-Z. It is as in Quebec and not as in Kellogg's."

Danielle came from Switzerland. No snobbery in the accent. It was authentic import.

"Oh?", said I, uninterested...

Then, back to the phone book: yes, there was a Quéloz in Quebec City. Only one. On La Falaise avenue. Now to the city map. There it was: La Falaise avenue. Far away. Out of reach by foot and with terribly bad bus links. So ended what might have been a sweet dream come true.

On the other hand, Ruth's home was a fifteen minutes walking distance from campus. So the following week-end, Ruth and I went to the theatre.

Ruth was a great fellow. We could talk on any matter. She would easily be teased into a furious discussion. She was fun. And I was far way from home. I would regularly telephone her, even daily. We would go to the movies most weekends. I bought her a charming pendant. Nothing serious. Ruth was not a sentimentalist. The nearest we ever came to intimacy was on our first date. I gave a try at taking her hand in mine. She reacted with a challenging: "You have twenty minutes to let go."

Apparently, this caused boys instantly to recoil. I looked at my watch, held on, and, twenty minutes later, let her be. And never tried again.

The evening study group continued every week. And non-snobbish, delightful yet unattainable Danielle was there.

The school-term came to an end. My parents generously offered me the flight to Winnipeg so that I could be home for Christmas. Back in the security of mother, father and friends, during those ten days, I could clearly realise that if Ruth might be a good friend, she was not my love. With logical thoughtlessness, I decided the time had come to part from her. In intent, there seemed to be no real parting. Never had I realised that a woman was hiding behind the dialectical armour she wore. It was only years later that I was told how Ruth had once cherishingly shown some girl friends the pendent she had received from her Georges. And there was only one time in the early weeks following the parting that I was shocked to see a wavering in Ruth's eyes as she evoked, in a state of near-panic, the possibility that I come over to her house for lunch. But a year later, Ruth was on the way towards happy matrimony with a young man who had seen the woman I had overlooked.

* * *

When the New Year rolled in, Danielle was certainly a happy girl. She was a lone child because sickness — rather than planning — had kept her parents' generosity towards life from expressing itself in a larger family. She had arrived in Quebec City at the age of five. She benefited from a stern and loving education in keeping with the Swiss work and family ethic. Thus, she knew neither laxity nor repression. She was actively put before living challenges and supported all the way by personal attention.

Her school work was a success won by constant yet not intensive labour, with slight difficulties in composition and history, largely compensated for by her fascination with and mastery of mathematics. Her social life was full of gaiety and action in various organisations. Her emotional life was without a ripple. She had previously kept in touch with a useful boy-attendant for the rare mixed events at school, to whom she was otherwise totally unattached. And, if traditional authors are correct in defining peace as "the tranquillity of order", Danielle had complete peace of mind, body and soul. "Order" meaning direction in life, her direction was planned with Swiss precision. She was to finish her college degree, then — in a year and a half's time — her parents and herself were going back to Switzerland where she would take a Master's degree in mathematics at Neuchatel University. Her parents had come over to Quebec because of a special job and had never contemplated making a permanent living there. Emotional involvement was Danielle's least preoccupation and a matter inconceivable in a family where both parents had neared thirty before marrying.

Then Danielle made a slight mistake. When driving back from the first study group meeting after Christmas holidays, there being only Georges and a girl from the group left to drop off, Danielle had a memory lapse. She wondered aloud: "Whom do I bring home next?"

The efficient answer was evident. Campus was just a block away whereas Lucie lived some ten minutes drive further off. Of course, Georges took the question to mean: "Who wants to be dropped off last?" He did. And he said so. Needless to add that Georges misunderstood the intention that lay behind the question: he saw it as an invitation to be in pleasurable company longer than usual.

Danielle was also polite and gentle. When she realised that Georges lived nearest, she said nothing of it and accepted his company for twenty more minutes, ten of which would be spent alone together on the return trip. After all, his conversation was agreeable. What began as a mistake thus became a weekly habit.

Danielle's equanimity was certainly not matched by Georges' state of mind. His fear of novelty and strangers on a personal level, his fear of being inadequate or hurt, especially vivid because of the ebullient turmoil of affection he felt deep inside, added to the difficulty of distance between her home and campus, might have well delayed or prevented any direct manoeuvring towards Danielle. But now, she had taken the first step. No computation could any longer prevent the clicking of the mind and the throbbing of the heart in view of the forthcoming assault, whatever would come out of it.

That Saturday, I dared invite Danielle to movies. As it was, Pierre had already organised a group outing to the movies. Danielle was part of the group. I tried to persuade her that we should make it a twosome somewhere else. But she was staunchly loyal to the gang. My only chance was to get myself invited along. Danielle had no objection, and Pierre could evidently not reject the presence of one of his good debaters.

The movie was the most thoroughly boring movie I ever saw in my whole life. It was a brightly entertaining comedy showing for the third month in Quebec City. Three months previously, I had seen it as a novelty and had enjoyed it so much that I had convinced a friend to come with me the next day so that I could see it again. Now, a comedy carries the day by its unexpected absurdities which make us laugh. A second viewing leaves little unexpected. Laughter, the second time around, is more a libation poured in honour of our first laugh. Then I had gone out with Ruth. And there was no other decent show in town. So I gallantly accompanied her to see The Gendarme of St. Tropez. I was now trudging through its fourth showing. In fact, I hardly looked at the screen where the automatons were going through their motions. Seated beside Danielle, I watched her. I enjoyed her laughter, her mirth, her presence.

The following week, I began regular, soon daily, phone calls. Did we not have to talk over our enchanting movie? And there were our common experiences as members of the study group, as students, as citizens of the universe, and whatever. But first, we had to meet again, hadn't we? Danielle did not show any particular eagerness, but neither did she dismiss the idea. She had no special taste for movies. She would rather take a walk. A sporting walk in the cold January nights. I was to discover that she has a particular thermal build. I thought it normal, on a cold day, to be first warm from indoors, then, by gradual degrees, to loose this warmth till one became quite cold and desirous to enter any heated place to recuperate. Danielle first feels the cold out of doors. Then, gradually, she warms up and has the capacity to enjoy the brisk frisky air till her companion is an icicle, without herself feeling any discomfort.

Our first date was thus a walk, a chatting, cool walk which left me all warm inside. But before it began, I had serious apprehensions towards it. I would have to manage the to and from her home in addition to the time together and wondered how much more freezing enjoyment I should take. Suddenly the major difficulty of distance disappeared. With phone in hand, I followed Danielle's instructions upon my city map. La Falaise Avenue is a very long street. My previous query in the matter had made me discover its western end, on the other side of town, whilst Danielle lived at its eastern tip, only twenty walking minutes away from campus. To think that I had lost a whole term because of my incapacity to read correctly a city map.

Warming up in my room after our t te- -t te, I recognised that I was now unreservedly in love.
On Monday, January 25, I wrote home:
"Dear Mom and Dad,
I have found you the perfect daughter-in-law. There only remains for me to win and wed her. This may not succeed. ... Am I infatuated? At the least, I am interested.
Your son,
Georges."

My parents sighed, thinking: "Poor boy. He is probably in for a heart-break." For they knew me well. Only, they did not know Danielle, nor the mixed-up ways of Providence.

* * *

In their pessimistic view of life, the Ancients coined the phrase: "The gods blind those they would destroy". Many were now blinded. For, had they seen, and acted accordingly, never would my venture have come to its fulfilment.

The very first opponent of any serious emotional involvement had been and still was Danielle. Here, my Ruthcapade, come out of a misreading of the city map, paid off. Danielle was quick to notice the similarity between the symptoms of Georges' attention to her and those of his previous attention to her friend Ruth. The phone calls were regularly made. The dates were ceaselessly asked for. Logically, the same parting would follow. Danielle diagnosed a lonesome soul seeking diversion through light companionship. And why not be friends? Georges was original, had a serious mind on serious questions and, on the whole, a wholesome sense of humour. So, while I was falling in love, Danielle was entering into an interesting companionship. She answered the phone calls, accepted long walks, and dropped Georges off last on meeting evenings, accepting also a bit more talk before he left the car and she drove back home. There was nothing serious there.

Of course, Danielle's parents, intensely preoccupied by their daughter's success in life, could not fail to notice the daily intrusion of a certain university student. This was especially evident since their family life was closely knit. Danielle regularly went skiing on weekends with her father. She always asked for permission when she went out in the evenings. She reassured them that nothing whatsoever was developing. Since she is a truthful person, she was convincing. But to be on the safe side, Mrs Quéloz insisted that I be told that the family would be going back to Switzerland in a year and a half. Danielle dutifully slipped this piece of information in one of our conversations, though she did not see any reason for it. I reflected that I had a year and a half to change her mind.

Mr. Quéloz was the stauncher supporter of my enterprise by his utter disbelief in it. No fellow so totally and ridiculously persistent could be taken seriously. A king's buffoon is at best entertaining. Though he was not himself entertained, he had no objection if his daughter was. He did agree, though, on one limitation some time latter: a measure of restraint should be put on the number of phone calls and dates. But that policy would be enacted only upon the belief that people should be reasonable and that study periods should not be regularly interrupted by recreation.

And so Danielle's tranquil companionship and my uneasy love affair went on side by side for a terribly long time, it seemed to me. I dared not let my true repressed feelings be expressed for fear of being rebuffed. But I seized every opportunity to hear the magical voice, to contemplate heaven's most marvellous creation, to be in her divine company. And at that time my friends must have found me an insufferable bore with my perpetual hymns to my princess.

The terribly long time lasted one whole fortnight, bringing us to February 14, St. Valentine's day. But half-way through that time, Pierre had intervened. My infatuation being a secret only to Danielle and family, Pierre decided to put an end to my manoeuvres. He told me that our study group was not a private harem for Georges Allaire. He reproached me for having first toyed with Ruth and for now attempting the same with Danielle. I righteously answered that he was mixing apples and oranges on two counts: first, the study group was a study group in which we all participated by proper discussions, whereas our private affairs outside hours did not concern him but rather myself and other individuals. Next, Ruth had been a fine friend, never more; whereas I was truly fond of Danielle and wished to pursue this involvement freely.

Despairing of getting anything out of my unreasonable head, Pierre called on the reasonable partner in this affair, Danielle. And was he ever answered! Danielle exploded at the suggestion of any involvement between her and Georges. She was totally incredulous when Pierre, now cut down to size, meekly insisted that Georges was really in love. Finally, he accepted Danielle's true and adamant assertions that there was nothing whatever to fear because there was nothing to it, at least on her part, no matter what he might think. Pierre was reassured. — His intervention was timely. He had defused a bomb which would otherwise have blown up in my own face.

On Sunday the 14th of February, I was keen on going out again with Danielle. Once again Pierre had organised a group's outing to the movies. Once again Danielle was loyal to the group. Once again I followed. This time the movie was boring at first viewing. But I must admit that both Danielle and I saw very little of it; and we probably exasperated the spectators round us, for we talked — albeit in a low voice — all through it. The subject of our conversation was serious.

It all started when I tried, for the first time since we had known each other, to hold Danielle's hand. To which she pulled back, retorting, "Naughty hand, naughty man."

Though disappointed by my failure, I was especially frustrated by this kind of rebuke. I felt like a reprimanded child. So, to recover some security and perhaps a little dignity, I talked. I asked Danielle what her feelings were towards me.

A week had gone by since Pierre's intervention. Danielle had never believed him that Georges could really be in love with her. It was all too outlandish. Of course, the idea itself was amusing, even flattering. Its lack of seriousness allowed Danielle to play around with it. Just a little bit. Not really.

And now, she was being asked to express her feelings. Of course, Georges was a likeable man.
Yes, she did like him quite a bit.

I finally told her I loved her. And added, "Well?"

"Well what?", she said.

"How about you?"

"What do you mean by 'love'?", Danielle asked in a desperate attempt to make sense of this strange conversation, and to sort out her own feelings.

I lied instantly. I counterattacked with full might: "I do not mean we are going to be married", said I in the tone of obvious statement.

"Of course not!", she agreed.

"Well?", I said.

"Well, what do you mean by 'love'?"

"I mean that I am very fond of you."

"Oh but," said she quoting the well-known author, Antoine de St-Exupéry, "'Love is not staring at each other but looking together in the same direction'."

I assented. I would have assented to any definition that would save the word.

Having limited the meaning of the word as best she could, Danielle fatally admitted to both of us, "Well, yes, I love you also."

She had given an inch; I took a mile. My heart leaped, though I outwardly remained still. It was not yet time to steal back her hand. But I was happy. Danielle was rather confused.

Danielle was neither introvert nor secretive. She was thus bound to tell her mother what had happened. Her mother would then immediately order a stop to these things. Danielle would obey. That would be the end of it. But Danielle felt she must first regain control and inner balance before putting the facts before her mother.

Unexpectedly, on the 17th of February, news came from Switzerland that grand-father Charles Boillat had died of a heart attack. He had spoken in a normal manner to his boarder who was going out. A few minutes later, his wife had come back to their apartment from the grocery-store and found him peacefully sitting in his chair, quite dead. Mrs Quéloz immediately left for Switzerland for a few weeks, to attend to her father's burial and to give a helping hand to her widowed mother. This tragic event prevented all contacts between Danielle and her mother at the crucial moment of our venture. When her mother returned, the damage was done. Danielle's involvement was deepening, and she felt too unbalanced by each further step to have sufficient security for an ever-more serious admission to her mother.

By the time her mother returned from Switzerland, I had taken Danielle's hand during a long walk. Danielle had let me do it. I held on. And that would be standard procedure from then on.

Then came March 8. My twenty-first birthday. We were allowed the evening together even though it was a Monday, a school day. After all, a birthday comes only once a year. I figured that a first kiss was in line as a birthday present. She had expected the asking and decided that the giving was proper. At a time in history when kisses had hardly any value or meaning, I was allowed a first kiss by an eighteen year old girl (soon to be nineteen) who had never before bestowed the honour upon any other boy.

Needless to add: I took a second one. I was begged to be reasonable, but I insisted, at her doorstep, on a third one. And, after that, I never was reasonable. Danielle, simply, gradually entered into another world, where every act is measured by reason of the given heart.

Part I. Chapter 2. The Princess Is In Pain

The Princess Is In Pain

Was it the proverbial bull in the china shop, was it a herd of buffalos stampeding through the cabbage patch, was it a silly frog dripping on the living-room carpet, was it a wild hermit howling in a fashionable salon? Worse. It was Georges making his entry into the Quéloz household. A cultural shock. Far more so for being unconscious, undeliberate and present in each subtle detail of daily activity.

Georges, we will recall, was socially gauche or 'social-phobic'. Thus, inept in general company. Georges had long been the only child of life-generous parents (curtailed by a rhesus-factor incompatibility). His brother Raymond arrived when Georges was sixteen. Thus Georges had been deprived of the social schooling brothers and sisters inevitably bring about and he did not make up for it in the outside world. Though secluded, he had acquired general traits from the North-American milieu which prevented him from being singled out on a ordinary day. But the day was no longer ordinary. It was now to prolong itself in weeks of mutual intimate contacts with strangers from an alien culture.

And so Georges would ring the door-bell. Since he would inevitably be ten minutes early and Danielle would invariably be ten minutes late, that would leave an awkward twenty minutes wait in this strange household. Mrs Quéloz, truly well bred and well intent towards this poor homesick boy from farawayland, would generously offer her company in the usual manner between civilised strangers. She would inquire how things were. Any correct person would instantly talk at least of the weather, possibly of good or ill health, of the state of his studies, and also inquire about the other's health, humour and activities. But Georges would simply react coolly (because nervous) by a non-committal, "Things could be better; things could be worse."

Sensing the impossibility of making any progress in conversation, Mrs Quéloz would politely retreat to her kitchen, leaving the unhousebroken boy to wait in the living room.

This did not prevent her from making various kind of gestures towards him on various occasions. For instance, she invited him over for supper on March 28, Danielle's nineteenth birthday. On this occasion, Mrs Quéloz had made one of Danielle's favourite dishes: fricandos. This consists of thin slices of beef individually rolled around a filling of chopped onion, bacon and various spices, tied with a small thread, then roasted to a point and finally cooked for three hours in a pot. The result is most favourable to the delicately educated palate. But Georges was a fast-food boy. When genially asked by his hostess for his reaction towards this novel culinary pleasure, Georges politely refrained from admitting its strangeness of taste. Instead, he politely answered in a smile, "They are not hamburgers, but they are okay."

His sense buds were too gross to feel the chill that followed.

After the meal, Georges was invited to take part in a card game with Danielle and her parents. What could go wrong in a card game? It all depends how one has learned to play it. Back home, we used to play it with generous invective against the opponents. Across the ocean, somewhere near the Alps, it seems that people take a more sporting view of mutual entertainment. They applaud their adversaries' good moves and delicately refrain from over-enjoying their own success. Thus the clash between "Why, that was a dirty..." and "Well played, Georges" was both awkward and inevitable.

Also, after a few visits at Danielle's house, the venerable and immortal wooden chairs come all the way from Switzerland and impeccably faithful these last thirteen years in North America, suddenly began to weaken and squeak. As Danielle's mother would angrily remark to her daughter, "Any civilised person knows that one does not simply let himself drop into a chair."

The, one day, Danielle leaked one of her mothers remarks: "My mother wonders whether you sleep with your trousers on."

"Of course, I sometimes do", said he in an assured manner.

It certainly couldn't be expected that one would wearily take them off when dozing an occasional half-hour. At home, the caring for clothing had been mother's responsibility. Without feminine guidance, trousers remained only an efficient non-artistic preoccupation, and were worn till worn-out. When once the thread giving strategic unity to the underside of his trousers was broken, Georges ingeniously found it simpler to staple the two parts together rather than to sew them. When a hole finally appeared inappropriately in the rear, the bearer was taken short, for he had still to go to class before managing a visit to the store to buy a new pair. He realised that it would not do to have a piece of white underwear peaking through till then. So, the mind being master of matter, he simply scotch taped the inside of his pants and, for half a day, went about his dutiful activities till the replacement was acquired.

But a greater clash occurred on the matter of freedom. For years now, my life had been unfettered or, as the other side would put it, unguided. Being an only child for sixteen years had certainly simplified the rules of the home. But such an explanation would explain nothing since Danielle had always been an only child herself. It was in fact simply part of the general atmosphere of my home that I could come and go as I wished. Adult example, love, the needs of life, school-requirements, a healthy social environment and, later, my fear of society, kept me in line. This freedom had been gradually handed over to me as I grew up. Thus I remember one Christmas day, during my mid-teens. My parents were still sleeping-in because we has gone to midnight Mass and feasted afterwards. I woke relatively early, scraped bits of cold turkey and gobbled some pieces of cake. Then I left for down-town to find the movie-house that opened at noon on that day. After two full-length features, I slowly walked back home in time for supper. This was routine freedom. My parents had not been worried. Now, years later, I was on my own at university far far away and answerable only to myself for my every action and decision.

This was not Danielle's lot. I had been surprised, even slightly shocked, that she should need permission to simply come for a walk the first time we did so; and again so each time we went out together. How could this be the fate of an eighteen-year-old girl? Then nineteen. Ruth had never shown symptoms of such a slavish condition. Why should Danielle? Then, added vexation: we had to be back at ten. In Manitoba, I could walk long hours with a friend and get to bed at any time of the night I chose or which my eyelids forced upon me.

Now came the limits. I was in love. I loved Danielle with utmost fervour. I would have married her instantly and lived by her adoring side forever if Danielle had been ready and if we had had the financial means for it. She was ever present in my mind and with my every breath. My class notes became jotted with D.Q.s on every page. Every evening, I would phone Danielle. Every Friday, Saturday, Sunday, I would attempt to be with her. Is that not standard procedure?

Danielle's parents answered "Not at all." These carrying-on were unreasonable. The values of life must come before the pleasures of life. The phone calls were to be limited to one every two days. Going out was to be limited to once a week. I fumed. I raged. I yelped. Of course, orders and reactions came by way of the buffer zone: Danielle, whose situation made her explain Georges to her dismayed parents and her parents to her unreasonable boyfriend. There was never a clash between combatants: only through Danielle.

I suggested that we might meet secretly outside regulations. She could go to plays or whatever, where I would happen by. But she refused and insisted we comply to the rules set down by her parents.

The day following her nineteenth birthday, I turned to sophistry and wrote the Tractatus de Limitationibus for her parents. It began with a preliminary note: "The author of the present essay, being party to the question here treated, confesses not to have respected objectivity in his tractatus. He has taken as a rule that truth must serve the individual and not the contrary. — He hopes that his sophistry will suffice to bring about consequences favourable to his pursuit."

Then, the treatise was scientifically moulded to consider all possible cases of limitations: those touching a bad object against the will of the said object; those touching a bad object yet in concurrence with the will of the said object; those touching a good object in agreement with the object; and, finally, those touching a good object against the will of the object. In this last case we found: "the dates and phone calls between a boy and a girl, arbitrarily limited by the parents of the said girl, against the will of the said boy."

It was said axiomatically that "on the one hand, dates and phone calls are evidently good, even desirable; on the other hand, the future in-laws are a power to be feared." Two avenues were thus to be avoided. It was unacceptable to simply comply to these rules, because this went against the excellent nature of dates and calls. It was also unacceptable to reject these rules, because the in-laws were just too powerful. A compromise could be reached on the matter of phone calls by limiting the length of daily phone calls rather than having the terribly long phone calls every two days, which were the inevitable result of compressed passion. As for dates, the principle of a date a week should be respected as an average. Since the two concerned parties were to be separated from May to September, the dates scheduled during these months would be taken during the coming month of April.

Having thus displayed the might of distinctions and argumentation given by daily frequentation of Greek and Medieval philosophers, I awaited the verdict of Danielle's parents. They laughed. And said: "No."

* * *
Ever since the memorable avowals of St. Valentine's day, Georges' uncertainty and emotional insecurity had been replaced by a certainty driving in high gear towards total love. But Danielle's peace was now in shambles. She had previously never allowed herself to be near to total commitment. She had seen a very dear girl-friend fall head over heels in love with a college boy, and then be horribly heart-broken. But her friend's experience was not the reason for Danielle's shunning of romance. It only confirmed the correctness of her commitment to keep her life free of love till she was ready for a mature step towards intimate responsibilities. And now a hurricane was sweeping her off her feet. She felt no solid ground beneath her upon which to stand, to stop, to reflect, to assimilate, to build.

No doubt her heart was entangled in the web of love, otherwise she would not have felt so miserably happy, so uncomfortably captivated by the presence of this young man. There was joy to hear his voice on the phone. There was happiness to be with him, to feel his company, his warmth. Yet, it was all so unreasonable, unclear.

She was caught up in the conflict between her parents' dissatisfaction with her new friend and her wooer's dissatisfaction with her parents. She loved both. She realised that behind each party's angry remarks, was true tender affection for herself. She so wished that each would understand the other. If only each side would stop attacking a person or persons to whom she was so deeply attached. Why must they always be tearing her apart?

Yes, Georges had faults, huge visible ones which appeared whenevr he was placed in her home's atmosphere. But he was also tender and affectionate towards her. He knew how to speak to her soul. He brought her flowers, that tingle in her life — too often for her parents sense of reasonableness. If only her parents could see this.

Her mother once said: "It is not everything for a boy to be handsome."

Danielle had noticed that Georges was handsome. She was proud to be his girl. But he was not only, not primarily handsome. He was kind. He had a generous nature. She knew that and loved him for it. Unfortunately, his fear of people would make him hide this good nature when he was with her parents and her friends. Then he became — unintentionally — so abrupt, elusive, cold.

Danielle's parents were still compromising. They hadn't asked for the parting of Danielle and Georges. They had merely asked that calls and dates be limited. Of course Danielle would rather be with Georges more often, to hear him, to touch him. But couldn't Georges realise how her parents had always acted for her own good, how she could securely put her confidence in their judgement? She had never been deceived by them. Why must he always push, pull, tug at her? Why be so insistent?

Danielle had also to face the incomprehension of her schoolmates. Previously the life of their parties, she no longer went to them. Georges disliked parties and groups, except for the study group. She felt his fear of social gatherings and respected it. She had greater joy in his company than in the crowd. Her best girl-friend told her to drop this crude fellow. Danielle was wilting away, said she, because of his influence. She was becoming a recluse. Why could her friends no longer have the pleasure of her company? Danielle was hurt by these remarks. If only they could know Georges as she did.

Danielle's future was till heading towards a degree in mathematics far away in Switzerland. This cross-purpose with her growing commitment, unconscious as it was, did not make things easier.

The worst of all was the unnatural and painful secrecy with which Danielle now lived her two lives. She simply could never master herself sufficiently to lay before her parents the extent of her ever-deepening affection for Georges. And she simply could not put Georges' overpowering fervour on hold to have the needed breather to put him before the extent of her parents ignorance of their growing ties. She could have screamed: "STOP!" But neither side ever stopped. All went crazily on ahead.

Summer holidays were nearing. Georges would soon be returning to St-Boniface, Manitoba. Danielle would be, once again, going on to work as a secretary in Moncton, New Brunswick, which gave her experience in personal responsibility and allowed her to acquire a certain fluency in the English language.

Then came the day when Georges was to leave. Danielle and he were together on the balcony of a friend's apartment. The friend was absent. Georges and Danielle talked in a loving and melancholy way. Parting for so long, so far away, was terrible. Georges analysed and rearranged the universe as any proper student of philosophy would do. Danielle listened, impressed. Suddenly, Georges dropped a disturbing thought, one which Danielle had never focused upon before. For Georges, this thought had long been evident and was becoming an obsession. It should no doubt have been clear to Danielle: but it could not, since it simply broke to bits all the built-in purpose of her life of the last years. Georges asked: "What if we got married... some day?"

It seemed so far down the endless tunnel of time. Danielle simply could not imagine it. She talked about it, though, as a purely fantastical hypothesis. This was enough for her wooer. So he added:
"Wouldn't it be something if one day, you and I, we should have ten children?"

What a whopper! Ten children! Danielle said that such matters could not be decided in abstract numbers — even speaking hypothetically. Each child must be seriously considered when the time comes. She admitted there were no prior reasons to limit the giving of life to any number. But there was a prior impossibility to arbitrarily set down a precise number.

Georges was reasonable. He agreed that "ten" was only a tentative number, subject to future health, moneys, and all the rest.

"But wouldn't it be something to have ten children?"

In fact, Georges did not think of ten as of a definite number. What he really meant was a family, a real family, as his mother's parents had had; and as their eldest son had had; and as other uncles and aunts had approximated. He simply wished a normal family. As did anyone in love, he thought.

Danielle was in love. She hadn't yet realised the meaning of it. She certainly did not yet feel it to mean marriage and family. Not just now at least. But, even so, her experience of family life had never been one of "huge" families. There was certainly nothing normal and ordinary about a family of ten children. For one thing, those would be poor families with many hardships that had to be agreed upon ahead of time by the parents. She would not rule out any number of children, but believed one must enter knowingly in each commitment to create a new human life.

However, such decisions — matrimony and family — were so far away, she talked of them as of a strange subject Georges had brought up. She did not feel tied to it. She said so.

Georges then left for the West. Danielle stayed on for a while in Quebec City. Then she also went off for the summer.

* * *

Summer holidays were terribly long. Every single day, I wrote a letter to my sweetheart. First, to Quebec City. Then to Moncton. I had a holiday for vacation. She had a holiday for work. Yet she generally managed to keep the same rhythm in our correspondence. I piled on words of sublime enthusiasm. She replied with everyday news. But as she wrote nearly as often as I, she must, I thought, feel the same.

Inevitably, I soon recalled the conversation we had on our last day together. I pushed, I pulled, I tugged. We loved each other: we must marry.

Danielle was evasive. She was not ready to rush into things. She agreed with the premise of love but had not yet followed it to its conclusion. On the whole, marriage was not discounted. The way was certainly open. Which once again meant, for Danielle, a miserable feeling that things kept getting out of hand. Which meant, for Georges, that persistence was carrying the day.

* * *

I arrived back in Quebec City before Danielle. I eagerly waited for her return. She would arrive by plane that evening. That afternoon, I took a twenty minute walk to salute Danielle's parents politely. With their usual kindness, they inquired about health, family, weather and summer. I came back to my room, full of burning anticipation for the evening. After supper, I phoned. The plane was slightly late. I phoned later. Yes, Danielle had arrived. But she was exhausted. It was out of the question, I was told, that we should meet this evening. Danielle must first recuperate. Please call back tomorrow. I politely put the receiver down, and I exploded in anger and frustration.

All the summer months, I had lived for this precious moment. I had dreamed of it, ached for it, and now sweet reason was preventing me from it. What kind of totalitarian monsters were those parents? Danielle's heart was mine. Our hearts were one. No one had the right to intervene, to separate us, especially at so precious a moment as this. So thought I. We had been arbitrarily separated... for the eternity of a few hours.

Next day, when Danielle and I were alone, after we had hugged and kissed in a passionate embrace, Danielle realised that the (relative) calm of summer was over, that once again she was in the midst of a raging war. There was no longer time and distance to smooth things out. The opposing parties of reasonableness and passion fought anew against each other again tearing her apart. Yet both parties possessed her — she could not retreat.

* * *

During this school term, we found an oasis of love, with the return of Carlos, accompanied by his family. Carlos is the nearest I have ever come to having a loving elder brother.

We had met in January of the previous winter term. Carlos Sacheri was an Argentine Ph.D. in Law who had discovered the fundamental value of philosophical thought. This had brought him north with his family to Laval University, where he had completed his studies for the Doctorate the year before I arrived. He had brought his family back to Argentina and then returned to Laval as a guest professor of Ethics and Politics. Should he accept the invitation to become a permanent member of the teaching staff, he would then have his family move to Québec permanently.

Pierre had introduced us. And since, for the duration of that term, Carlos lived as a bachelor in the men’s residence on campus, he and I met regularly and became close friends.

Carlos was fascinating. Aside from the impressive fact that he was fluent in Spanish, Italian, French and English and could read German, Latin and Greek, that he was competent in Law, Politics and Philosophy, that he was a deeply committed family man, that he was a professor loved by most students and respected by most of his Faculty colleagues, Carlos was simply a loveable man. He also generously allowed me to regularly proclaim Danielle's virtues and to wail over her parents' tyranny. He understood the former and reserved judgement on the latter.

Satisfied with his winter term, Carlos had opted to stay at Laval University and had now brought his family to live here.

I had arrived well before the beginning of classes. I was in my room. There was a knock at the door. I answered. A beaming Carlos proudly presented to me: "Jose, Maria and Cecilia."

Jose was four. Maria was three. Little Cecilia was two. Their younger brother Pablo had stayed at home with their mother, Maria-Martha. How pleasant to meet an old friend again, but how strange it was to see him transformed into a father, a house-bound human being with whom there would no longer be all those nightly chats, who would no longer be a free companion for lunch and long philosophical wanderings. Yet he thus became a fuller man. He was no longer just a friend of ideas. He was a loving man.

Danielle and I were soon invited over to sup with the family. Maria-Martha was charming and energetic, lovely (a slim dark beauty) and generous. We arrived when she was icing a cake especially made for the occasion. Children all around — it seemed to us — were begging for a lick of the spoon. Maria-Martha welcomed us with a Latin jubilation that conquered Danielle, instantly even though se was more accustomed to the reserve natural to the Swiss-bred. Quickly, the men began to toy with abstractions. Danielle immersed herself in Maria-Martha's life full of children, of meal service, of family responsibilities, of permanent selfless presence to all. She admired those beautiful children, despairing of ever having any of her own as beautiful.

After supper. while the evening was young, Jose, Maria, Cecilia and lovely Pablo were off to bed. First, they thanked God, with their father, for life, family, and love. Then they hopped into bed for the night. At least, that was the idea, though Carlos had to return to their room a few times till finally noises subsided and stopped.

The two couples could then have the pleasure of adult conversation for a few hours till parting time. Carlos and Maria-Martha treated us as a united couple. And we witnessed real life in them. No marked incident or great discovery ever came of meeting them. But our affection for Carlos and Maria-Martha grew so strong that we must have drunk there an elixir of verity far beyond any of our mind's insights. Being a young and inexperienced couple, we often took note of the "evident" failings of other couples and families. Yet this never happened towards Carlos and Maria-Martha. Somehow, we only thought of them as a family, a true to the word family, a family as it should be lived.

* * *

In the weeks following our reuniting, I entered in a direct campaign in favour of matrimony: ours. Danielle and I were evidently in love. We cherished and coveted our mutual companionship. We were each other's joy. It stood to reason that we were heading towards total everlasting commitment to one another. So I thought. So I argued. So I forced Danielle to agree. She conceded that we must be on such a course. She could find no words to cause me to swerve from such a conclusion. She could only insist that the time was not ripe for the ultimate commitment, which I readily admitted as long as it should eventually come.

The logical inference from her acquiescence was to inform her parents formally of our decision to wed. I told Danielle so. She recognised the fact. Yet she would argue that it was not yet time to do so — not just now. I finally made definite demands that she take that step on a given day. The evening of that day, she confessed that she had not yet told her parents, and had a particular reason to stall till the morrow. And so again on the morrow.

I became impatient and uncompromising. Each time we talked things over, Danielle would admit each logical link, but it always ended, in the realm of reality, beyond words, in her failure to act.

I realised I would have to do it myself. Danielle admitted that she simply could not make herself do it. She agreed that the Sunday next, we should together inform her mother and father of our desire to wed. Following my plan, Danielle would ask permission to sleep late on Sunday morning, leaving her parents to go alone to their regular Mass, whereas she would go to the eleven o'clock Mass. I would meet her there. Afterwards, Danielle and I would come to her home together and say what had to be said.

I felt no qualms. Our wish to marry was founded on the fact that we were now so great a part of each other's life. Also, our lives being ours, her parents could really have no say in the matter. Courtesy alone made this formality a necessity. Indeed, I could not in the least understand why Danielle had not gone through it on her own.

The morning came: October 31. At nine, Danielle's parents would be arriving at their church. I could call Danielle. I rang her up. I hear the ring. Then I froze.

"Yes? Quéloz residence", a sleepy voice answered.

A man's voice. Her father's voice. I was put off. I panicked. I put the phone down without a word. The plan was not working. What could I have done? I had been left utterly speechless. It now appeared that Danielle's parents had chosen to attend the later mass, with their daughter. Or had I been a victim of an impossible illusion? I was wracked with uncertainty.

A half hour later, I reasoned that Danielle's parents must have been late in leaving for mass. I knew this was utterly unlike them. But that could be the only logical explanation of the fact. I rang again. Danielle's father answered again. I could not repeat my previous performance. I had to inquire whether I could be allowed to speak to Danielle. Mr Quéloz answered Danielle was sleeping and would rise late.

That part of my plan was working. Why, I anxiously asked myself, was the other part failing? I thanked Mr Quéloz and cut short.

Things were badly off. I knew Danielle's father to be no fool. He must have realised that I was responsible for the previous phone call. And Sunday morning was off dating limits. With Danielle's parents present with her at mass, dared I happen along? How should I manage the impossible feat of being invited over to their home with them? I certainly could not simply explain our project of matrimony in the church-yard, with people streaming all around us.

The only idea that came to me was to invite a friend to come with me to the Mass. Two of us would seem slightly less conspicuous, I forced myself to believe. It would be more of a coincidence than my popping up alone. I charged up to my friend's room. Breathlessly, I knocked at his door. He awakened and did not seem quite happy with the ruckus I had made. I begged him to come with me to Danielle's Mass. My life was at stake. He looked at his watch and asked me what as all the rush since it was only quarter to nine. Mass was only at eleven. I could at least have let him sleep a little longer.

"No, no!", I said. "It's quarter to ten. Hurry!"

"Quarter to nine", he repeated stubbornly. "Don't you know we have put the clock back one hour during the night? We are going to standard time."

Since that day, I have never forgotten to change my clocks on the correct day of Autumn and Spring.

My heart slowed its rhythm. My head gradually levelled. I apologised profusely for needlessly wakening him and bade him sleep again, and left. I had made foolish phone calls, but the seriousness of our matter might yet cover them up.

At nine o'clock, the real nine o'clock, I phoned Danielle. She answered. Her parents had left for Mass. Danielle asked me why I had twice phoned her house. I lamely apologised and explained. She confirmed she was going at eleven o'clock Mass.

And there she was. We prayed together. I had regained my confidence and composure. We walked back to her home hand in hand. We entered her house together.

Her mother was surprised to see me. I explained Danielle and I would like to say something to both her and her husband.

Then we were four in the living-room. Mr Quéloz gave us an inquiring look. I began: "You probably know what it is we wish to say."

"No", they answered honestly.

"Danielle and I would like to be married", I said.

There was sheer astonishment on their faces. I was myself stunned by their surprise. They asked Danielle if this was true. She admitted it was. They told us of their surprise and said they would have to think things over before giving an answer. And that was it. I had been dismissed. I left.

I left Danielle in hell. Her parents felt she had lied to them. She had never told them there was anything serious. Had they known, they would certainly have put an end to it.

How could Danielle defend herself? She had not lied, but had also not confessed. Her silence was damning and she was being damned. Now she had to bear the genuine hurt and anger her parents felt and the reproaches they poured upon her.

I was no great consolation to her. Though her feelings made me suffer, I was mainly angry at the treatment she was subjected to. I adhered deeply to the fundamental principle that these people had no rightful say in our lives. They had been told of our intention. Their God-defined role was to accept facts to be facts and not to torture their daughter, the person I loved. This I said over and over again to Danielle, thus adding torture to torture.

Yet, the situation was so deeply dramatic, that I was brought beyond revolt towards decency. Something had to be done. A compromise must be struck. An extended hand had to be offered.

That Saturday was November 6: Mr Quéloz's birthday. I wrote him a letter. My written word generally compensates for the awkwardness of my spoken word. I wished him a happy birthday. I expressed my deep regrets for the suffering we had given him and his wife while we had hoped to bring them joy. I offered my sincere apology and asked for their forgiveness. I sent him the letter by taxicab.

The next day, Danielle's parents gave us their answer. They would allow us to date seriously.

Ties had been repaired, but the parties were still miles apart. While thanking them for their gesture, I felt incredulity mounting within me. We had been dating seriously for nine months. We were far beyond that point. We now wanted to be married. We did not need a permission to do in the future what had already been done by the divine right of falling in love. The time had come for wedding dates, not for preliminary dating. So I felt. So I told Danielle. Once again, she vainly tried to make me understand her parents' view in the matter. I wouldn't since I was right.
I was bitter. So were her parents. For they now saw all my shortcomings in a frightful new light: that of their daughter's possible ordeal for life. They lost no chance to point out each and every shortcoming to her.

* * *

Fred was an intellectual. But a courageous one. A U.S. citizen ignorant of the French language, he had chosen to take his Ph.D. in Philosophy at the totally French-speaking Laval University in a foreign country. He had laboured ceaselessly and was doing quite well. But, though rational thought was the important part of his life, he was a man of heart and felt a need for a foray into the world occupied by the other half of humanity. So he asked Georges whether Danielle might have a girl-friend in whose company he could delight.

January had come. Danielle had inquired about Fred's tastes, and urged her friend Hélène to respond to his invitation. Hélène was a happy and reserved girl, distinctly of the serious kind, the kind in whom — contrary to folklore — mirth is best found.

After the fateful week-end of his first date with Hélène, Fred met an inquiring classmate, Georges, who made him confess that Hélène had been a very charming, attractive and pleasant companion.

"You will be calling her tonight," asked Georges, "to thank her for the good time you had together?"

Fred was not a man of experience.

"Do you think I should?" he asked.

"Of course", said Georges (more knowledgeable in the theory of practice than in its application). "It would be the polite thing to do."

Fred telephoned.

Wednesday came. Georges was surprised that Fred had not yet thought where he would take Hélène on the week-end. Fred confessed that he had not thought of taking her out. But Georges was convincing, and Fred put his mind to the matter. Unfortunately, that evening, Hélène answered that she regretfully could not accept his invitation because her mother was ill and needed her help.

On Friday Georges awakened Fred's sense of decency and responsibility. There was no reason not to ask Hélène how her mother was coming along. That was logical. And Fred followed suit.

On Saturday morning, Georges called Danielle. Fred and Hélène were a common subject of conversation, being each a friend of each. And Georges told of his crime: "Fred has phoned Hélène three times this week."

Danielle was horrified. She knew how level-minded Hélène was. Such a rash behaviour would certainly have been ill-received. But Georges insisted: "There is no problem. Each call was for a very good reason."

Georges explained. Then their conversation roamed among many subjects — talking for the sole purpose of being together. Unfortunately, Danielle eventually had to end this idyll. Georges never found reasons to stop. He had even once managed to distract Danielle's attention, despite regular summons from her mother, for two full hours. This time the call was vastly shorter, rather reasonable in length.

Some ten minutes of solitude later, Georges' phone was ringing. He answered. The world started spinning. The impossible was happening. His princess' voice. Danielle had always respected the feminine privilege of having her man make the first move. Of course, Georges had responded enthusiastically to this responsibility — too much so. Danielle had never had the chance to feel a need to call him. She regularly had to fight him off the phone.

Yet there she was. Happy as a clam!

"Hélène just phoned me", said she. "Guess what she told me. She said Fred had called her THREE times during the week. I expressed shock. But", and here Danielle laughed joyfully, "Hélène immediately replied: 'Oh, but each call was for a VERY GOOD reason!'"

This had been too much for Danielle. She had had to tell me about it.

This was certainly a good joke on Fred and Hélène, but the goodness won out over the joke. Their friendship was to mature into a permanent and faithful love.

Danielle had innocently taken a step further in her growing commitment. She had come to Georges on her own.

* * *

A full year had passed since last St. Valentine's day. February 14 was back. When Danielle arrived home from school, there were twelve red roses in a box waiting for her. An enthralling gift from a silly boy, Georges. This was their first anniversary. Danielle's heart spilled over with happiness, a happiness that could only bring sadness to her mother, who bitterly remarked: "He may have made you happy. But he has made us terribly unhappy."

Danielle went to her room and wept.

That evening they dated at a restaurant, feasting on filet mignon. Danielle managed to show the happiness the roses had given her. But, unbeknownst to Georges, she had to force herself to eat each bite. Within her, her soul was wrung with pain, the pain of living love.

* * *

Carlos often heard Georges' acidic remarks concerning Danielle's tyrants. But he also noticed Danielle's silence, Danielle's unspoken anguish. So, one day, he called her. Danielle was at last free to speak out, to reveal her bruised heart and her confused mind. Carlos was a friend who knew Georges, who accepted their love, who put no pressure upon her. She told Carlos that she saw kindness in Georges, though the whole world seemed to agree to paint him black, cold and harsh. Was she right and everyone else wrong? Could she expect this same kindness in the future, could she expect it to last? Was it insight or illusion?

Carlos said she saw Georges truly. The failings were all there, to be sure. So were the good qualities, the generosity. He believed this generosity to be Georges' true nature. Danielle would be able to trust her man.

This talk gave her peace. For the first time, a mature and friendly voice did not flog her. Some light finally began to shine at the end of the tunnel of horror she had come through.

* * *

All that time, Danielle's parents never used force against her. They never pulled rank on her. They were faithful to their promise that Danielle would be allowed to go out seriously with Georges. But they freely passed judgement upon him, because they honestly believed they should do so. And they tried to place before her the consequences of her choice.

One major consequence would be the end of the family dream: the return to their homeland and relatives. Further, Mrs Quéloz warned Danielle: "You must realise that if you marry him, you shall never see Switzerland again."

Danielle knew this to be true. Georges fear of society struck out against any place he did not know. He disliked travelling. He was not interested in seeing Europe. He expressed prejudice on a high level, as a protective barrier against the unknown world. Danielle knew there was no ill-will in senseless words. But she also knew that he had no will to alter his prejudices. And she loved her birth-place. There had always been talk of the day they would all return there. Though she remembered little of her first years when she lived in Switzerland, she had gone over visit her relatives when she was thirteen. It had been a grand experience to be without accent and with uncles and aunts and cousins and a grand-mother and a grand-father. Was her heart now so full of someone else that she would accept the forgoing of all this? Would she really forsake her true country for a young man to become her own?

Her parents allowed her to live the moment of truth. They would pay for her to have a two-months' summer vacation in Switzerland.

Georges was naively sure of himself and saw nothing in that to fear. He simply rejoiced that Danielle could have the kind of holiday she loved. Other than that, things seemed to be following his set course.

All parties concerned now apparently admitted that Danielle and he were to be wed in a year's time or less. By then, he would have got his Master's degree in philosophy and be ready to teach for a few years at the college he had graduated from in Manitoba. At the end of the present school year, her last at Jesus-Marie College, Danielle symbolically chose the colour of philosophy — no longer mathematics — to indicate her change of heart and her new commitment. "Symbolically", for she would not go on to university. Indeed, she and Georges had benefited from the personal dedication and constant presence of their mothers and wished the same for their own children. When married, Danielle would be a wife for her housebond (husband) and a mother for her children. There would be enough philosophy in the house with Georges' diploma. On the other hand, Danielle's father insisted that his daughter get a touch of adult responsibility before taking on that of matrimony. She should earn her own pay for a while. The Sisters of her college accepted her to teach part-time a class of seventh-graders the following year.

Georges would himself gradually begin his career as a teacher of philosophy. During the coming summer, he would be giving a course of Ancient and Medieval Philosophy at his own college back in Manitoba. Then, thanks to Carlos' influence, he would teach Ethics part-time at a Quebec college while he copmpleted his last year of classes at the university. These jobs would allow him to put some money away for the first days of married life.

All these projects convinced Georges that he could confidently expect, at summer's end, a happy return of his bride-to-be from Switzerland.

School term was ending. Danielle's prom dance had been announced. It became evident that Georges — ever true to himself — could not be got there by any means. But as it became clear that the event would be high-class and as various girls began suggesting that hard liquor be brought along to make the fun start sooner, Danielle was finally quite happy to forgo it. Instead, Danielle and her class-mate, Hél ne, went out with Georges and Fred. They had club-sandwiches and whopping strawberry shortcakes at a restaurant. Then they went bowling. Since Hél ne had never bowled before, the boys kindly gave her the basics. And, of course, with Danielle laughing uncontrollably, Hél ne beat and humiliated every one... especially the boys. The girls never regretted their choice for prom's night out.

Summer arrived. Georges went as a young teacher to his college in Manitoba. Danielle left for Switzerland and relatives.

* * *

There was something weird yet flattering to start an academic career by teaching a summer course. I was now twenty-two and many of my students were older than me, adults who wished to complete or take their college diploma.

I was full to the brim with the assurance given me by some teachers that the salvation of the mind and the world could be had through the Wisdom they had given me. Regarding content, I spoke with marked assurance. As for pedagogy, I came to realise that I would carry through life a marked failing which had not troubled me too much till then, the lack of memory for names and even faces. I simply could not retain them — save for the exception which confirms the rule. Thus, from the beginning of my teaching encounters, I addressed myself mainly to the idea rather than to the people present. This succeeded tolerably. Needless to say, I was soon humbled with respect to my supposition that teaching was a breeze, that I should be better than all of my own teachers whose shortcomings I knew. I soon felt as if I had made all those shortcomings my own.

In my first period, I entered with prepared teaching notes. I must have rushed through them as a nervous beginner does when speaking in public for the first time. Including the ten-minute break, I should have lasted two hours. I suddenly realised, fifteen minutes before the end, that I had nothing more to say. I looked at the students and apologised lamely: "I am sorry, but I have nothing else to add for today."

They were understanding and said it was all right and readily left class, as might be expected of students unexpectedly given leave before time. Somehow, they were not a bit upset — though I was.

Painfully at first, I managed to cruise through sixty hours of class in six weeks, during which time I tried best as I could to impart some wisdom to my students.

A friend of my father wondered that a certain young man (older than I by a few years) had changed so suddenly that summer. Till then he had been unstable and needlessly agitated (even revolutionary). He was now showing signs of definite maturity and responsibility. My father answered: "Well, he took Georges' course this summer."

"That must be it", said the friend.

I was flattered. But I saw this as the logical result of the Eternal Philosophy I had transmitted.

My rise to adult responsibility did not distract me from my predominant passion. I kept on writing my daily letter to God's foremost creature, to my Lady, my Princess. Indeed, lately, I had called her "Princess" so regularly that an old friend of her family had also begun to call her by that title.

As time went on, I suggested to Danielle that she buy her engagement ring in Switzerland from her uncle and godfather who was a jeweller in Bern. Once again, my unbridled nature jostled with her regulated one. She wrote back describing three different rings and prices to discuss them. She personally hesitated between the two least expensive ones and mentioned the more expensive only for the sake of comparison. I answered that she must take the latter and immediately sent her the money by international exchange. She refused. I was so unreasonable. It was of course the most beautiful, but...

As the decision and the paying were mine to be, I gave the direct order that she buy the ring I had chosen to give her. She gave in, but when the time came to pay for it, she looked so pained to her godfather, that he added a final rebate to the one he had already offered her. The payment having been made, and all matters of reason being dutifully accomplished, Danielle leaped with joy over the beautiful gift.

We still had to decide upon a date for the formal engagement. But with the ring, I knew the end was near — the end of the waiting for the beginning.

Yet Danielle had not arrived in Switzerland with complete assurance. Before her departure, her parents had asked her to think over seriously her decision about Georges. At the end of her school year, Danielle had been so exhausted by the ceaseless war Georges and her parents carried on within her that she simply ran off to Switzerland for some peace. She swore to herself that, should she decide not to marry, she would never come back to Quebec, never see Georges again and ask her parents to return to their homeland. She knew they would gladly do so.

Now in Switzerland she was free. Her relatives were all kind and loving. None put pressure on her, though they all knew the return of their brother or sister or daughter, Mr and Mrs Quéloz, depended upon Danielle's decision. If she chose Quebec, her parents would also stay there.

When Danielle's grandmother saw that Georges' letters arrived one a day, two on Monday because of the Sunday holiday, she sighed with relief: "This boy is not serious. Such impetuosity cannot last."

It lasted. By the end of Danielle's stay, her grandmother said no more.

Now on her own, Danielle suddenly came to the startling realisation that she had never asked herself what she wanted. She had been too busy arguing her parents' case with Georges and Georges' with her parents. She now wondered what she herself wished. She let time go by: which meant not deciding to stay in Switzerland. She took in her beloved land. She did love it. But her heart was spoken for, not by mountains, glaciers, valleys and pure air; rather by a man who had spoken words of love to her.

She bought the engagement ring. She came home.

* * *

She came back to pressure. Georges was trying to be reasonable on certain points. He had taken the part-time teaching job this year, because he wanted to have some money for their wedding. He tried not to spend his money recklessly. He made generous efforts to strike up conversation with Danielle's parents. But he wanted to be married at Christmas time. This he had written regularly. Danielle's pay and his could get them through till the end of the next summer when he would be a full-fledged teacher at St. Boniface College, in Manitoba.

If they married at Christmas, this meant a formal engagement as soon as they met again in Quebec City.

Danielle was not ready to jump off the plane into an engagement. So she had written. Georges figured he would simply have to wait a week's time. But, when he met Danielle, after the customary embrace, she was her old self again, still postponing. Her parents gave her a reason. They asked us to wait till the endless end of September when an aunt Danielle dearly loved would be present. Georges could not understand the need of the presence of any aunt, however precious. After all, he wasn't getting engaged to Danielle's relatives. But Danielle was firm. Georges gave in, as long as it did not affect his plans to be married by the end of the year.

During this time, Danielle was beginning her short career as a grade school teacher in a class 'scientifically' organised according to… height. She had the grade seven class with the tallest girls. Which meant, of course, that she largely had those who had flunked the previous year: a hard task for any teacher, the more so for a beginner.

During this time, also, Danielle's parents had now hopelessly become resigned to having the son-in-law chosen by their daughter, but would certainly not rush into things. Danielle felt it clearly. So she kept postponing telling them of Georges' imperious wish to be married at Christmas time, when he would still be a student and she would be in the midst of her teaching year. Such a suggestion would simply be inconceivable for her parents.

One evening, Georges and Danielle had gone to the movies. They were seeing The Sound of Music for the fourth time. Both adored that film, delighting in its inspiring love, healthy family life and humorous atmosphere. After the showing, they slowly, ever so slowly, walked back towards Danielle's home, cherishing amorous moments. So it seemed. For Georges suddenly felt tears running down his princess' cheeks. Her silence had not been of passion but of despair. Troubled, he realised: "You can not marry at Christmas?"

"I cannot", she answered.

She could not. And Georges gave in.

Emotionally frustrated and dissatisfied, he would still not break the person he loved passionately but also truly. He accepted that their marriage could come only after he had his degree in philosophy so far down in time. They would soon be engaged. Then, later, much later, Danielle would become Mrs Allaire.

Georges had just given Danielle her best engagement gift.

Of course, he instantly became unruly and unreasonable once again. He covered Danielle with futile gifts of flowers and whatever, and took her rashly to restaurants, and finally spent every dime he had put away for a Christmas wedding. But that was Georges.

Most important, the pressure had stopped. Danielle could now give her all. She was free. The torture of love was over and the peace of loving began.

Part I. Chapter 3. The Princess Becomes Queen

The Princess Becomes Queen

Danielle's aunt was in Québec for a short respite before returning to her missionary and humanitarian work on Turtle Island in Haiti. She was short, lively, charming and adventurous. But, most important of all, hers was the presence required for our engagement. Uncle Oscar, my mother's brother, a Jesuit priest, gave the blessing of our engagement in an informal manner. He insisted on the informality, for he had unfortunately looked up the traditional ceremony of engagement as practised in forgotten times. It had once been something huge and cumbersome implying a social gathering and a public commitment, something far beyond what Danielle and I meant by an engagement. We just wanted to slip a diamond ring on Danielle's left ring-finger as a mutual promissory symbol of the seriousness of our decision to wed. Uncle Oscar was in fact the only person conscious of the drastic changes the form of engagement had gone through. But, as he was himself devoid of pomposity and formality, he was only too happy to comply with our much simpler requirements.

Saturday, October 1, was the day. A day of flowers that swept Danielle off her feet. She received a dozen red roses from her parents and a dozen rose roses from mine. I knew roses would be coming, so I myself had a dozen of red and white carnations sent to her home. Her godmother, from Switzerland, gave her a table floral display, and Danielle's aunt who was present did the same. Then Uncle Oscar arrived with a bouquet of garden flowers snipped from his community's garden.

Danielle was radiant. Her eyes sparkled with happiness. Her bewitching smile became eternal. And though we were not alone, though Danielle's parents and aunt and my uncle were there with us, though a wisp of formality remained, I believe I was happy.

I slipped the ring on Danielle's left hand ring-finger. Uncle Oscar blessed our united hands. And supper was delicious.

* * *

During this school term, the limits which had been put to our calls and dates were swept away. Danielle had asked me, one day, whether I went to mass on week days. I replied that I did so occasionally. In return, she told me that she went to Mass each morning before school. There was suddenly an unreligious twinkle in my eyes: not anti-religious, simply non-religious. And I asked whether I could accompany her to daily Mass. Danielle realised that lover Georges had been awakened far more than Christian Georges. But both Georges were still there. Neither was harmful to the other. She consented. Thus, during week days, at quarter to seven in the morning, I should be waiting near Danielle's home for her to come out. We should then hike up the hill towards her parish church where she would adore Christ and I should adore her and Christ, in all due respect for both.

An amusing, yet trying, side-show to the presence of the Eucharistic Christ was a rivalry between two men we called the crows. A fat slushy man was responsible for singing the various responses to the priest's parts. People could join in with him. But he was always off key and rhythm, which quite discouraged any participation from the flock... except for the other crow, a tall thin man with a bass voice who insisted upon correcting his colleague's singing errors. He would sing the required responses loudly and correctly. The duo produced pure cacophony. Luckily the Lord readeth the soul and not the voice. Also, both men were certainly a source of sanctity through the trial of all those who endured with remarkable patience their praises to the Lord. As for the crows, they had the great virtue of persistence.

Whenever Danielle's timetable and mine agreed, I should also walk for thirty minutes to her college, and to have the pleasure of accompanying her, hand-in-hand, back home after her classes. I was generally not invited in, because of her school work and because a Swiss home is simply not an open house. This does not mean that it is not hospitable. It simply means that hospitality there is by invitation only, and is a more definite mark of affection than elsewhere.

* * *

Danielle's teaching challenge was trying. Because a good number of her students were teenage flunkies, the going was quite rough. Apathy and disturbance were their spontaneous contributions to the class. By Christmas time, Danielle was tired out and convinced that her students' failure was largely inevitable and her own fault. She went to see Mother Superior in order to tender her resignation. She was sobbing and desperate. Mother Superior shook her, refused the resignation, refused Danielle's evaluation of her girls' future: "They shall not fail," said she, "because you can and will succeed."

Danielle came back marked with new confidence and the will to carry on. She organised her girls in competing groups, gave responsibilities to group leaders, invented interesting challenges composed school subjects. Gradually there emerged a class spirit that would carry a majority of the girls on to success.

In Danielle's group, there was a beautiful blond girl who presented a painful challenge. This girl was completely closed up within herself. She was in grade seven for the second year. She worked lamely and easily slipped into disturbances organised by the reckless ones, though she was not of their kind. Nathalie was the only child of a thirty-five year old woman married to a sixty-five year old man. The woman had married into money and was patiently waiting for the old man to pass away. At the start of their common bond, some fifteen years before, he had insisted upon being a father. Nathalie was their victim.

Danielle tried persistently to reach Nathalie's heart and mind, to make her receptive to people and knowledge. When the school year ended, Nathalie's last results climbed beyond passing requirements. However the year's average barely kept her just below passing requirements. Danielle then begged the school authorities to allow her to raise Nathalie's average considering the gains she had made. They refused. When Danielle told Nathalie of their common failure, the girl's mask reappeared, shutting off her heart and mind.

Mr Quéloz's decision to give Danielle adult experience in life succeeded.

* * *

This was my last year at Laval University. I was required to write a short thesis. Carlos was my thesis director, and I worked on an author we both loved, the English novelist, biographer, essayist, and all around man of wit and wisdom, Gilbert Keith Chesterton.

While putting together something on Human Nature and Private Property, I was happy to find pertinent observations in Chesterton's writings which clearly illustrated why both Danielle and her mother had the same insight concerning my shortcomings and yet could arrive at opposite conclusions: "Grown-up men are quite unpresentable", Chesterton wrote in What's Wrong with the World, suggesting that males are made liveable and polite either by matrimony or by monastery. "It is true that there are many polite men, but none that I ever heard of who were not either fascinating women or obeying them."

I could not pass judgement on the universal truth of this observation: but it fitted me well. It agreed with my future in-law's view of me. Yet Danielle remained committed to me. Why?

"Love is not blind", Chesterton wrote in Orthodoxy; "that is the last thing that it is. Love is bound; and the more bound the less it is blind." And he added appropriately: "The same women who are ready to defend their men through thick and thin are (in their personal intercourse with the man) almost morbidly lucid about the thinness of his excuses or the thickness of his head." — In other words, Danielle was in love.

And Carlos was satisfied with my work.

* * *

During my last term, tragedy struck Carlos' family. A tragedy that deeply touched us as we were getting more involved in our friendship with Carlos, Maria-Martha and the children.

Maria-Martha was eight-months pregnant when, one evening, Carlos told us that the baby was no longer moving within her. They feared him dead. Being ignorant in such matters, I wondered whether his immobility really meant something. Was it all that serious? Carlos insisted that a baby, in his later months, always moves a lot in his mother's womb. Death was the only conceivable cause of his present immobility. This realisation gave us chills, though we could not comprehend and feel all the horror it is for a mother to carry her dead child entombed within her.

We never understood why, but Maria-Martha's doctor refused to provoke the child's expulsion. He insisted that she wait for nature to do it for her. For three weeks, Maria-Martha carried her dead baby in her. For three full weeks, she had in her the cadaver of a child she loved.

When, finally, the dead child had been expelled, Danielle and I visited the bereaved mother at the hospital and offered her our deeply felt condolence. We were surprised by Maria-Martha's profuse thanks. She told Danielle: "You are the only one who has spoken to me this way. All the others insisted that our child was nothing. They tried to console me by saying how lucky we were to have the four others. As if it was a matter of numbers and not of a person who has died."
It had never occurred to us that the death of one's child could not be considered a tragedy by everyone. Maria-Martha was the first person to show us there are people who could consider a child as something rather than someone.

After her ordeal, Maria-Martha slid into a state of depression and clung to the idea that she must leave Québec and return home to Argentina.

Carlos' professional life and future had never been so promising as now at Laval University. His working conditions permitted him time to study and think, whilst in Argentina he would be overtaken by hustle and bustle. His personality was sufficiently appreciated for some of his colleagues to suggest that he might become the next Dean of the Faculty of Philosophy.

But Maria-Martha's illness was irretrievable. It was not a matter of will but of physical and psychological depression. Maria-Martha could not change her heart and mind. The hurt was too deep in her flesh. She was not free to do otherwise than beg for her homeland, her home.

Carlos was a free man, a man free to be bound. He had freely chosen to bind himself to a woman he loved. And he freely chose to forgo a successful personal career in favour of the good of Maria-Martha.

This seemed normal to us. It would only be a few years later that we realised how many would say, on such occasions: "Damn the woman. You've got your own self to think of."

* * *

Our wedding was set for Saturday, May 6. It would be one week after the end of my exams, and a month and a half before the end of Danielle's school year. Sweet reason would have us wait till the end of June. But I argued that I would not simply wait around all that time, playing tiddly-winks or whatever. I had given in for a whole term. That was enough. And Danielle agreed. Her college would allow her to take a week off for our honeymoon. After which she would finish off her school year and then we should leave for Manitoba.

We had to buy our wedding rings and find an apartment for our short marital stay in Quebec City. The wedding reception was to be Danielle's parents responsibility. As I was utterly devoid of social awareness, I had told Danielle that I should be quite content to butter a few sandwiches for our friends and guests. Such remarks made it certain that I should never be bothered by anything pertaining to the social aspects of our wedding.

Danielle's parents suggested to us a jeweller of Swiss origin who might be expected to sell us our wedding rings at a reasonable price. After having chosen our white-gold bands fitted for our ring-fingers, Danielle — raised to be money-conscious — tried to negotiate with the jeweller to bring his price down. Finally he did so, all the while discoursing on the value of craftsmanship and his commitment to non-profiteering. This made us a bit ill-at-ease. As I disliked wrangling over money matters, especially for objects close to our hearts, I mailed the man the original amount he'd asked for our rings. I believe the man was honest. And we were proud of our acquisition.

We showed our rings to all our friends. I slipped mine on and Danielle put hers on, both of us feeling flutterings of anticipation for the great day.

It was harder to find an apartment in which we would stay only a short while. Apartments for the summer were readily available, vacated between the university's winter and autumn terms. But that was too long for us. Finally, through an advertisement in the paper, we found an awkwardly arranged two-and-a-half-room apartment at above average price. It was awful and we loved it, for it would be our love-nest. The street name was unforgettable: it was "Forget".

* * *

A few years before, back at St. Boniface college, a student had imagined, in adolescent morbidity, a humorous sketch of a wedding true to its debilitating nature: the death of freedom. Consequently, the bride along with the groom would be dressed in black. The priest's vestments and the altar cloth would also be black. Organ music would play a funeral march. And at the end, the couple would solemnly exit to a waiting hearse and their dark-of-the-moon honeymoon.

I was that student. Somehow, now that the fatal day was at hand, I had undergone a change of mind and heart, for that scenario was quite forgotten.

The nearest I came to recalling it was the eve of the wedding day when, for a half-minute, I felt a slight twinge of nostalgia in realising that my roaming days with a friend of mine were over. Neither he nor I could simply drop by at any time at either's place without prior notice to the missus. This bit of nostalgia disappeared a moment later and never came back.

May 6 was a beautiful spring day, sunny and cloudless; just a bit cool. My parents had arrived from Manitoba and stayed at our new apartment. At 8:30 that morning, my father came to get me at my room on campus.

"Before going to the apartment and get Mother, I must go the shopping centre," I told him.

"Why?", he asked me.

"I must buy a tie that matches with my new suit."

I think he was nervous, because he was slightly cross at this piece of news. I explained to him that there was nothing to worry about as the stores opened at nine thirty and the wedding was not till eleven. And I did have to buy my tie.

As soon as the first store opened, we rushed to the men's clothing section. We bought an unsatisfactory tie, slipped into a second store, found the tie made to fit my suit and bought it. Then we went to our apartment to pick up Mother.

All the while, Danielle slept peacefully till the time came for her to get up rested, have breakfast and go to the hairdresser. Back home, she put on the simple yet attractive and radiant wedding gown skilfully and affectionately made by her mother.

As they boarded the family car to leave for church, some neighbours came over with good wishes for Danielle and her parents. The car then cruised to the end of the street, its occupants full of the gravity of the moment. Suddenly, Mrs Quéloz squeaked: "My slippers!"

Danielle and her father stared inquiringly at her.

"I still have my slippers on," she explained. "We must go back. I forgot to put my shoes on."

There is no doubt that her slippers would have given an entertaining touch to her chic, cream, two-piece suit.

The neighbours wondered seeing the car back around and return towards them. Embarrassed, Mrs Quéloz went through the little group to correct the result of forgetfulness.

By that time, my parents and I, and a growing number of guests, were waiting outside St. Yves' parish church. A ten o'clock wedding was ending. The married couple came out with their cheering crowd. The new spouses climbed into a waiting horse-and-buggy rented for the occasion. As they drove off, a friend asked whether we also would leave in style with a buggy.

"No," said I. "We will be content with a Cadillac."

For Mr Quéloz had asked one of his friends to take us from the church to the reception hall in the latter's prestigious motor-car.

As Danielle was arriving with her parents, her best girl-friend — who had failed to save her from her coming fate — told me: "Well, Georges Allaire, you wanted her. Now you have her!"

The officiating priest was Cadillac-style in priesthood, as he was a bishop (auxiliary bishop of the diocese of Montreal). He had previously been the pastor of St. Boniface parish in Manitoba, and my mother had worked a few years as his secretary. A good man, devoid of unctuosity or self-importance, he had readily accepted our invitation to be the man of Christ who would receive our mutual oaths of love and fidelity.

There was a special gift for our wedding: the breads to be consecrated had been specially baked for us by a cloistered nun far away in the province of Saskatchewan: Sister Veronica, my mother's sister, my aunt.

Danielle was calm, peaceful and happy. When we met, I whispered to her: "I've forgotten everything about the ceremony."

"Never mind", she answered.

The disquieting aspect of a wedding is its uniqueness for the main actors. They cannot have had sufficient experience in it to stride effortlessly through it. Added to the amateurish situation of the bride and groom, there are the inevitable quirks of chance.

The moment was solemn. Danielle and I faced each other near the alter, in front of everyone. Invited by the priest, to take one another as wife and husband, we readily spoke the irrevocable words committing our freedom to one another.

"I do", said I.

"I do", said she.

A woman among the guests noticed a twinkle of light in Danielle's eye.

"Poor girl," she thought. "She is overcome by emotions. There is a tear in her eye."

There was no tear. Danielle felt (and I saw) a contact lens falling onto her eyelash. What could we do with everyone staring at us at this unique moment in our live?

The lens fell. I tried, in vain, to snatch it with my hand. The lens was now in between my feet. Danielle did not know that I had noticed it. She thought in horror that I might shift a foot and crush it. As the bishop turned aside to put on his mitre, Danielle quickly stooped down and picked up her lens. What next? She would need her right hand to slip Georges' ring on. She put the lens in her left hand. But must she always keep it in her hand till all was over? Whereas she usually needed a mirror and proper attention to fit a lens back in her eye, this time instinct took over: she briskly popped it into place. Her best girl-friend, who also wore contact lenses, smiled in recognising the gesture.

Now was the time for Georges to put Danielle's ring on. He picked up a ring from the platter. The wrong ring! Each was used to show around his own ring. Habit had taken over. I now had my large ring. Crushed by the solemnity of the moment, I dared not change it. I wondered if I could get away with it by simply slipping my ring on Danielle's finger. There was no problem. I did it. But I also realised that she could never slip her small ring on my large finger. During the while that I was mentally sorting these things out, Danielle was smiling at my mistake, then wondering that I did nothing about it, then was horrified to find my ring on her finger. She whispered a shout: "It's not the right one, wise guy!"

Those were her first words as my adoring wife.

Of course, I had arrived at the same conclusion as her and rapidly took off that ring, put it back on the platter and slipped hers onto her gentle hand.

Two years, two months, three weeks, and one day after the eventful avowals, "I love you" ... "I love you too", I had won: Danielle had caught her man.

After the wedding, some of Danielle's students crowded around her joyously. One tried to get her attention: "Madmoiselle, madmoiselle...." she said.

"Madame, it’s Madame....!" other voices corrected.

There was general laughter all round and Danielle felt proud.

The wedding reception was at a hotel outside Québec City, near a small lake. My father-in-law generously offered us — and some forty guests, all very good friends — a filet mignon dinner. Before this, I had alighted with a happy leap down three short steps, landing bodily upright with a right foot slant-ways. A slight pain was rapidly dismissed. But after a few hours, I was feeling an ever-swelling ankle. For the first time in my life, I had a sprained ankle.

When Danielle and I arrived at Québec's magnificent hotel, the Chateau Frontenac, and entered our bridal suite, I phoned the hotel clerk to have a doctor sent up. The doctor bandaged my foot. His bill was our first expense paid as Mr and Mrs Allaire. He suggested that I do not walk too much the following days... whereas our honeymoon was to consist in visiting, on foot, the pavilions of Montreal's International Exposition. Luckily, my foot followed my heart's desire rather than the doctor's orders.

Thanks to the lame foot, and the wait for the doctor, Danielle had time to fit her heart into the peaceful bliss of her committed love before being swept over by Georges' eager passion.

They had ordered and eaten supper (club-sandwich for milady and hamburger steak for her wooer) before time came for a trickle of loving blood to flow and their entry into the foolishness of life.

* * *

"And they had many children and they lived happily ever after."

Well that is the way stories ended when we were little. Somehow, these stories were but the first page to human adventure. They ended at the beginning. We had just begun.