Samuel stopped to look at the dirt he was digging into, then stared at wiin. “Death is always needless. But I’m tired of being in the middle of this absurdity. I wish I could just let Catholics and Protestants slit each other’s throats and leave me in peace.”
After pushing Bridget into the tomb, they started moving earth back in. “Samuel, come with me.”
“Where?”
“To my people. I have to talk to them anyway. The French aren’t really my concern either, but I can’t let the Ojibwe be unprepared for what’s coming.”
Samuel’s hands paused as he let every strand of his being accept the invitation. “I’d love to go with you. What you have showed me is worth more than all I thought I’d learned.”
“Is that behind you now?”
“Yes. Even in the middle of all this death, even knowing that more death will descend on this land, I’m ready to let go of all of it. I’m ready to go with you.”
Wiin stepped in front of him, embraced him closely, and gave him a kiss. And the two of them, after burying Bridget by the end of the demolished bridge by Lake St. Louis, started the walk to the nearby lands of the Ojibwe, where Odahingum relayed what wiin’d seen while visiting the French, and Samuel, for the years that remained of his life, could finally forget about murderous quarrels and warships and slavery and greedy empires and disputes of faith.
Part 2: Setback
Things that appear unrelated actually have some sort of natural link.
It is beneath God’s majesty to know how many gnats are born every second.
Night, June 7 (Gregorian), 1610
La Flèche
Every student was required to attend the Mass for the assassinated king.
A four-day procession had brought his heart from Paris, as the late Henri had wished. The school had been chosen as the last stop in the nation’s public act of mourning, as well as a posthumous gesture of reconciliation in a hard time. No higher endorsement could have been made in favor of the Jesuit Order than handing over to their custody the heart of a repentant Huguenot. The years of royal banishment had ceased; the standing of the Order was secure.
Upon walking out of the school chapel, his ears numb from an entire week of hymns, René du Perron saw Father Charlet standing alone in the playground, thinking. A distant relative of his mother’s, the rector had been a caring mentor, even granting René dispensation from morning prayers and exercises out of consideration for his health. The young René would never be quite weaned from that penchant for having his elders make exceptions to the rules for his sake.
He approached Father Charlet with slow steps, curious but fearful of disturbing what looked like a deeply private moment. An evening drizzle had showered the school, and the earth, under the waning moonlight, shone with the muddy footprints of the boys who were still leaving Mass for their bedrooms. They went past Charlet without noticing the worried expression shown on his face. It occurred to René that, were it not for the sound of shoes against slushy ground, he might almost hear what the man’s thoughts were.
René waited for the others to leave and walked toward the rector with caution. “Good evening, Father,” he ventured, before realizing he had been seen coming.
“Good evening, Monsieur du Perron. You want to tell me something? A moment ago it seemed to me that His Majesty’s death must have particularly saddened you.”
René didn’t know what to say to that. He wasn’t expecting to be the one whose personal feelings would be discussed. It was true that the school existed due to the late king’s generosity, and the building itself had once been his home. But to a student, or to anyone who was his same age, that mattered little.
“It is written that we all have to die,” he replied, staring firmly at his shoes.
The rector’s shadow on the ground shifted and René looked up. He was smiling now. “This isn’t catechism. You don’t need to parrot an answer I already know if you didn’t hear me ask in Latin.”
René liked it when teachers respected his intelligence as an equal’s, but one part of him had grown mature enough to question whether he might be getting a bit too accustomed to such treatment. “Forgive me, Father. I thought you might be pondering mysteries in the heavens.”
Charlet gave a reluctant nod. “Death is the one mystery we can’t contemplate.”
That answer did not satisfy René; he had seen him at other funerals. “If death is always unfathomable, why is a king’s stranger than a peasant’s?”
“Because peasants are not chosen by God, but kings are. It pleased God to save Henri when one of my Order tried to kill him, and it pleased Him to allow a poor lost soul to succeed at the attempt this time. Since ours is not a God of disorder, His decrees always carry some meaning.”
“But don’t all of us die by His decree? Surely my death will have a meaning, too?”
The priest closed his eyes. The only reason he had wanted fresh air in the first place was that the king’s death had reminded him of another, less significant one, that should not have troubled anyone’s mind, but had obsessed philosophers for years. The tale might benefit René, but first he needed to remember his duties. Even a true teaching at the wrong time could put his soul in eternal danger. “Quae sunt virtutes contra superbiam?”
“Sunt humilitas et obedientia.”
“Good. Now that we’re done with formalities, I have a tale for you, and a lesson. Before I begin, I must warn you that this is very advanced theology, but I feel it may be what you need now.”
“It won’t harm me, Father. I’m listening.”
The rector wished that René didn’t have so much eagerness to know things beyond his comprehension. Faith, as defined by Trent, precluded all curiosity. He asked himself whether it would be wise to go ahead and tell the story, but seeing the effect of its mere promise, not telling it seemed now the worse option. “Have you heard about the Congregatio de Auxiliis?”
“I have not, Father.”
“Few books exist discussing that topic. There was a disagreement, years ago, between the Order of Preachers and us, about free will and predestination. We hold that humans are free to accept or reject God’s gift of salvation, but the Dominicans have been deceived by the lies of Luther, who denied free will.”
“I would have liked to hear that discussion.”
“No, it went on for too long. It was cause for much bitterness. We even accused each other of heresy. In the end, the Pope decided to cease the debate. He forbade all new books on the matter. But he declined to say which side had won.”
“Why? The answer was clear. Your position was supported by natural reason.”
“Yes, but they had Augustine and Thomas.”
René bit his tongue to avoid saying that high authorities should not matter. “It must have been hard to argue with them.”
Charlet nodded. “Hard indeed. Moreover, the debate branched out to germane issues. To prove or disprove predestination, we had to cover the nature of time, the properties of divine foreknowledge, the number of types of the gift of grace, the limits of unaided human choice, the truth value of counterfactual claims, every shred of Scriptural evidence, and the other side’s counterarguments. It was fascinating, but exhausting.”
“Were any new doctrines formulated?” asked René, with evident excitement.
“That is not what philosophy is for! Now pay attention, Monsieur du Perron, to what I’m trying to explain to you.”