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Excerpt from The Lovers of Algeria
Aurès, 1955
The day is hot, and yet, in the bus, everybody is shivering with
fear. From time to time, a nervous cough, a resigned sigh, breaks
the silence. Outside, spring is exploding in splendour. The
yellow of mimosa is everywhere. Myriad poppies and wild roses dot
the hillsides, lending an air of gaiety to the austere landscape beyond
the vehicle’s dusty windows. But no one has the heart to
notice. The passengers have just caught sight of the massive
roadblock ahead. “Good God, there’s even a chopper!” someone
exclaims. A long-bodied, twin-rotor helicopter is surrounded by
army lorries, jeeps and large groups of soldiers, a mixture of infantry
and Red Berets. Sentries stand, rifles cocked, behind walls of
sandbags. Anna shrugs and tightens her grip on her bag. It
contains all the essential documents. In the eyes of the world,
whether people like it or not, the man sitting on her right is now her
husband. To Arabs and French alike she would be seen, at best, as
a naïve girl who has taken leave of her senses; at worst, as a slut who
has managed to find a husband, but at what price! She repeats the
word husband to herself, comparing it to lover, unable to decide which
she prefers. She would like to have talked it over with
Rina. Or with her real mother. Both are dead and gone, lone
since reduced to small piles of bones…Her companion, dark-skinned,
moustached, “a typical Arab,” as she sometimes tells him, looks at her
fondly. He guesses that she is thinking of their official papers
from the town hall, and forces himself to smile at her. Yet
again, he pats the inside pocket of his jacket with the flat of his
hand. His fingers crack with anger. Yet again, he curses
himself for having agreed to carry this damned letter. What’s
more, he doesn’t even know whom it’s for: they had told him that
somebody would introduce himself once they arrived at his mother’s
house. The roadblock is coming within earshot. He steels himself
to mask a sudden onset of panic, for he has just caught sigh of the
figure lurking on the fringe of the first group of soldiers, slightly
stooped, the head shrouded in the loathsome black hood of an informer…
~
The previous day had been horrendous. The rickety Algiers bus had
had to stop overnight in the last Arab village before the mountain
douars. A major offensive was in progress a few kilometres away,
and from what they could gather there had been heavy losses on both
sides. The road was choked by half-tracks and GMC lorries
carrying, aloft, soldiers on the alert, tense, heavily laden, their
faces lined with fatigue. T6s and P28s flew over the Arab
village, launching rockets and bombs at the crests barring the
horizon. The army herded the terrified villagers on to the main
square, outside the mosque. Beside himself with fury, a sergeant
screamed at the bus passengers, who didn’t seem to think that the
assembly order applied to them. When he noticed a woman aged
about 30 or 35, modestly attired, staring at him apprehensively, the
soldier took her for a compatriot. Giving her a conspiratorial
wink, he growled that, naturally, the order didn’t apply to the French
and she could stay on the bus. As he left his seat, Nassreddine
discreetly patted his wife’s hand. This raised her spirits.
But her anxiety returned when she saw him roughly handled by an
infantryman. Dry-mouthed, she watched as, one by one, the
passengers dismounted, helped along by an occasional kick. The
interminable waiting had begun.
Now they are almost at the barrier, close enough to see the chains
strung taut across the road. Infantrymen and paratroopers, some
of them at the ready, rifles cocked, behind their half-tracks, watch
with displeasure as the vehicle grinds to a halt with loud groans from
its worn axles. Anna, her stomach knotted in an onrush of
anxiety, sees that her husband is doubled up, as if needing to be
sick. Even though he has turned away from her, towards the
window, she has caught sight of the gleam of sweat on the Algerian’s
tense face.
A heady scent rises from the landscape which, in all
its glory, is utterly contemptuous of soldiers, of their quarry, to the
sordid ugliness of their combined fear and rage. An occasional
breeze wafts over the roadblock, like drifts of perfumed mist with
complex associations of wisteria, lavender, and wild roses.
The passengers are lined up, hands on head.
Anna watches, white-faced, standing a little apart. A soldier
examines her Swiss passport and her brand-new family dossier from the
town hall. He spits on the ground in disgust: “Madame, you are a
traitor to your race!” At that moment, Anna hates everybody: she
hates these military men with blood on their hands and a crushing
contempt for anyone who doesn’t bear arms; she hates these cringing
Arabs literally shaking with fear; she hates her husband, who can only
stand there, his hands on his head like the rest, and allow her to be
insulted. To calm herself (“My God, my God, what am I doing in
this damned country?”), she closes her eyes and, under her breath,
calls on her children, her beloved children…The hooded man limps
forward, breathing loudly behind the cloth. Evidently, each step
is an effort. Nassreddine guesses that he has been beaten
up. The informer has just pointed a finger at two people, a man
of about 40 dressed in a white gandoura and cheche, and a terrified
adolescent who is sobbing like a child. Two Red Berets drag them
roughly out of the line and, with a kick in the buttocks, direct them
to one of the lorries. The man, who has the air of a rich
cattle-dealer with his stout walking-stick, turns round to
protest. A paratrooper grabs the stick and hits him across the
face. There is an unmistakable sound of breaking bone.
Blood spurts out almost immediately, spotting the immaculate
gandoura. The man, grim-faced, pulls out a large checked
handkerchief, calmly wipes his face, then climbs of his own accord into
the lorry indicated by the soldiers. Whimpering, the adolescent
follows him docile as a puppy.
The informer is now within a few steps of
Nassreddine. The sergeant in charge of the checkpoint waits,
visibly impatient, for him to pick out someone else. As if
regretfully, the hunched figure points a finger at the man next in line
to Nassreddine. The toothless peasant, half paralysed by
stupefaction and terror, sees the Red Beret with the walking-stick
approach and makes a run for the lorry.
Now the hooded man is staring at Nassreddine.
Something in his attitude has changed. Nassreddine feels his
tongue grow wooden and scrape against his palate like a foreign object
in his mouth. He sees the dark eyeholes light up as the informer
abruptly raises his head then quickly turns away. It is as though
Nassreddine’s heart had been seized in flight by the talons of an
animal: he knows those eyes, despite not having seen them for
years! Astounded, he hears himself say, “Is it you, Hadj Slimane?”
Eagerly, the sergeant grunts: “How about him?”
The informer shakes his head and moves on swiftly to the next
man. The sergeant grabs him by the sleeve, barking: “Don’t play
games with me, you stinking jackal’s arse, why didn’t you point out
that man there? One of yours, is he?”
Copyright 1998 by Calmann-Levy. English translation copyright 2001, 2004 by Joanna Kilmartin. All rights reserved.
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