
In the late summer of 1690, the stone walls of Château Saint‑Louis overlook a dawning Québec, where Governor Frontenac starts each day amid the crisp air and the quiet confidence of his command. A sudden, elegant bouquet appears on his desk, a silent provocation that seems linked to two scathing letters questioning his wife's reputation and his own authority. Troubled but resolute, Frontenac summons his loyal valet Duchouquet, ordering a discreet inquiry into the source of the flowers and the motives behind the anonymous attacks.
The investigation points to a striking young widow, Madame DeBoismorel, whose beauty and ambition have already earned her a reputation in the colony. Determined to undermine the governor’s marriage and perhaps replace his absent wife, she weaves a web of rumors from across the Atlantic, aided by a conspiratorial brother in Paris. As Frontenac balances his duties to the Crown with the growing suspicion in his own court, the listener is drawn into a tense portrait of power, intrigue, and the fragile loyalties of New France.
Language
fr
Duration
~1 hours (104K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Rénald Lévesque
Release date
2007-01-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1854–1922
A Quebec poet and novelist from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, remembered for lyrical, reflective writing and works such as Le vieux muet. His books belong to the rich tradition of French-Canadian literature and still circulate in digital editions today.
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