special equipment that included explosives and extra fuel to destroy ‘terrorist

support bases’. The curator, cross-checking with the records of the Force

Mobile’s pay office, found a record of Boudiaf’s promotion to squad leader in

May, after one of Villanova’s trucks was destroyed in a Resistance ambush. The

promotion listing included a new Milice pay book and identity card, complete

with photograph, that had never been collected by Boudiaf. The Milice records

stopped in June 1944, with the Allied invasion of Normandy and the complete

collapse of the Vichy regime.

Bruno and Isabelle went through the Force Mobile mission reports, the punitive

sweeps – staged from the Périgueux base – north into the Limousin region, west

to the wine country of St Emilion and Pomerol, east toward Brive and south into

the valleys of the Vézčre and the Dordogne. They hit the region around St Denis

in late March of 1944, raiding farms where the sons had failed to appear for

forced labour service. They hit again in early May, based on intelligence from

interrogations of Resistance prisoners after a Wehrmacht anti-partisan force,

the Bohmer division, had surprised and destroyed a Maquis base in the hills

above Sarlat. Bruno noted the names of the interrogated prisoners, who had all

been shot; the names of the families listed as having sons who failed to appear

for the

STO

, and the names of the towns and hamlets where the Force Mobile had

been deployed. St Denis was not among them, but the surrounding hamlets of St

Félix, Bastignac, Melissou, Ponsac, St Chamassy and Tillier had all been raided.

They spread out the photographs on the curator’s desk and compared them. There

was no doubt that Hussein Boudiaf the footballer was also Hussein Boudiaf the

newly promoted squad leader of the Force Mobile. And if he was not also Hamid

al-Bakr then it was his double. But all bureaucracies tend to operate in the

same way. The French Army pay book contained two thumb prints of al-Bakr, and

the Milice pay book had been designed in precisely the same format and contained

two thumb prints of Boudiaf. They were identical. The dates and place of birth

were also identical, 14 July 1923, in Oran, Algeria. Only the addresses were

different. Boudiaf’s address was given as the police barracks in Périgueux, not

as Marseilles.

‘So that’s our murder victim,’ said

J-J

. ‘The bastard.’

‘Just one moment,’ said the curator, and went to a large bookshelf where he

removed a fat volume. He began leafing through the index, and then looked up

with satisfaction. ‘Yes, I thought I remembered that. Rue des Poissoniers was

part of the Vieux Port of Marseilles that was destroyed in the bombing before

the invasion, which makes it a useful address for someone who wanted to hide his

true identity.’

They went back to the Force Mobile mission reports, signed by Villanova. The

raids around St Denis on May the eighth had included squad leader Boudiaf’s

unit. They claimed to have destroyed fourteen ‘terrorist supply bases’, which

meant farms. May the eighth 1944, thought Bruno, the day that France celebrated

her part in the victory that came exactly a year after the Force Mobile raided

the outlying hamlets of the Commune of St Denis. He would never think of the

annual May parade at the town war memorial in quite the same way again.

Suddenly, a memory came to him in a series of distinct but clear images, almost

like the frames of a comic book or a film in slow motion. This year’s parade,

just three days before Hamid’s murder, and Hamid in the crowd with his family,

proudly watching Karim carry the flag to the war memorial. Hamid, who had been a

recluse, never seen in the town, never going to the shops or sitting in the café

to gossip or playing petanque with the other old men. Hamid, who had mixed only

with his own family and kept himself carefully out of sight. And then

Jean-Pierre from the bicycle shop and Bachelot the shoemender, the two

Resistance veterans who never spoke but who carried the flags side by side at

each May the eighth parade … In his mind’s eye, he clearly saw them at this

year’s parade, saw that moment when he noticed them staring intently at one

another in unspoken communication. He saw the Englishman’s grandson playing the

Last Post, remembered the tears it brought to his eyes, and recalled his

conclusion that Jean-Pierre and Bachelot had connected through the music and the

memory. Perhaps that was not the connection at all

Bruno played each scene back carefully in his mind, then he went to the

interrogation reports that came from the prisoners taken by the Bohmer division.

He examined the list of captured men who were to be shot. The third name was

Philippe Bachelot, aged nineteen, of St Félix. Jean-Pierre’s family name was

Courrailler, but he found no Courrailler in the list of prisoners. There was

still a branch of the Courrailler family, though, in Ponsac, where they kept a

farm, and a daughter who ran the kennels, breeding Labradors. He knew the farm,

because it was one of the few places new enough and wealthy enough to have

installed a special barn with white tiles that met European hygiene codes. Bruno

excused himself and stepped out from the Archives and down the stairs, through

the museum and into the open air of the square. There he took out his mobile

phone to call the Mayor.

‘It’s him all right, Sir,’ Bruno told Gérard Mangin. ‘Photograph and thumb

print. Hamid al-Bakr was also Hussein Boudiaf of the Force Mobile, a squad

leader who burned a lot of farms in our Commune in May of 1944. There’s no

question about it, the evidence is solid. But it gets worse. One of the farms

that was hit was that of Bachelot’s family, after they interrogated his elder

brother. Another was in Ponsac, and I think it was the Courrailler farm, but

could you get someone to check the compensation records in the Mairie archives?

I remember that the families all got some kind of compensation after the war.’

‘That’s right,’ said the Mayor. ‘There was a lawsuit in the Courailler family

about who got what after the Germans paid over a lot of money for war damages.

All I recall is that half the family still doesn’t speak to the other half

because of the lawsuit, but I’ll get hold of the full list and call you back. Is

this leading where I think it is, towards Bachelot and Jean-Pierre?’

‘It’s too soon to say, but I’m not with the police team now. I’m taking a walk

outside on my own. This part is between you and me; it’s town business. When I

go back into the Archives I assume we’ll just collate all the evidence, make

copies and get them certified by the curator. And of course we’ll collect the

names of families who were victimised by the Force Mobile. We could end up with

a long list of possible suspects and it could take some time. A lot of potential

witnesses have died and memories aren’t what they were.’

‘I understand, Bruno. You will be back in time for tomorrow’s parade?’

Tomorrow was the eighteenth of June, the anniversary of the Resistance, of de

Gaulle’s message from London in 1940 for France to fight on, for she may have

lost a battle but she had not lost the war. Bachelot and Jean-Pierre would carry

the flags, just like always.

‘I’ll be there, Sir. And everything is in order for the firework display

tomorrow night.’

‘Let’s hope those are the only fireworks we get,’ said the Mayor. With a

heaviness in his step but a sense of justice in his heart, Bruno went back into