Exactly four months following Guy’s death, his wife, Lise Lafleur is toughening up one day at a time. In this superb well-established house on Île Bizard, the very delicate beautiful lady is going through a difficult mourning.
• Read also: [PHOTOS] Guy Lafleur’s residence put up for sale for $2.5 million
“I see it everywhere, in every room, in every phase of our lives,” she said Monday.
They had this fold built on their return from Quebec on a magnificent site, 26 years ago.
“Last April 22 was the sudden and heartbreaking end of our exceptional complicity, and since then my existence has not been and will never be the same. I have to get used to it and it’s very difficult, painful. »
Few times in her life has Lise been so open to confiding.
She admits it to us, while kindly collaborating with photographer Chantal Poirier and journalist Jonathan Tremblay.
She wants people to see what she describes as the haven of peace of Guy Lafleur, who loved to walk along the water’s edge and who was proud to have a helicopter landing site on the edge of Lac des Two Mountains.
She also wants to speed up the sale of a paradise that may be too heavy to carry on her own.
“It won’t be easy to fit the contents of this extraordinary house into a four and a half,” she said with a shy smile.
“I will be closer to my children and grandchildren. My new solitude is difficult and I need to recreate our family unit. »
LAFLEUR INTIMACY
Next to Lise, there is Martin whom we end up seeing as a protector. The eldest is very close to his mother and he knows that she is still fragile.
The large dining room table allows us to imagine the beautiful moments with family or friends.
The living room and its large fireplace suggest warm and comforting winter evenings. And when you set foot in Guy’s office, his favorite room is sober. On the wall, a canvas painted from a historic photo of Guy, Maurice Richard and Jean Béliveau in tricolor uniform says it all.
Also, two glass cabinets in which we discover replicas of helicopters.
Strikingly, Guy’s diary is still on the desk.
HE CHANGED HIS MIND
Lise says that Guy had already wanted to sell this house, even thinking of moving to the Laurentians, but following having the poster planted in front, he changed his mind.
A few hours before dying in palliative care, he asked his doctor if he might return to end his life at home.
He was refused. He raised his hand as if to say, “Come on…”
He closed his eyes almost for the last time.
If I had two and a half million dollars lying around in my account, this house would already be sold.