story about the rebellion against Daladierâs government. February 6, a rainy day. The Fascists had announced a colossal demonstration in front of the Palais Bourbon, and, in response, the Left organized several counterprotests of their own. It resulted in a pitched battle.
âI was able to get to Cours-la-Reine in Hugâs car and afterward continued on foot to the Place de la Concorde, trying to cross the bridge to the Assemblée Nationale.â André had begun to speak German, in which he was much more fluent. He was leaning on the edge of the table, his arms crossed. âThere were more than two hundred policemen on horseback, six vans and police cordons in columns of five. It was impossible to cross. The people began surrounding a bus filled with passengers and thatâs where it all began: the fire, the stone-throwing, the broken glass, a head-to-head between Fascists from the Action Française and the Jeunesses Patriotes, against us. It only worsened throughout the night. None of the streetlamps worked. The only visible light came from torches and the bonfires people began creating.â He brought his cigarette to his lips and looked straight at Gerta. He spoke with passion but with something else as well: vanity, habit, male pride. Itâs something that gets into menâs heads and makes them behave like boys, right out of a scene from a western.
âIt was raining and there was smoke everywhere. We knew that the Bonapartists had been able to get close to the Palais Bourbon, so we regrouped in an attempt to try and block them. But the police opened fire from the bridge. Several snipers had taken post up in the horse-chestnuts of Cours-la-Reine. It was a bloodbath: seventeen dead and more than a thousand wounded,â he said, blowing out a fast stream of cigarette smoke. âAnd the worst part of it all,â he added, âwas not being able to take one damn photograph. There wasnât enough light.â
Gerta continued looking at him closely, elbow at the edge of the table, chin resting in hand. Werner Thalheim had been detained that day and they ended up sending him back to Berlin, like many other comrades. The Socialists and the Communists kept brawling it out in their war of allegiances. Andréâs friend Willi Chardack wound up with a broken collarbone and his head cut open. All the Left Bank cafés were converted into makeshift infirmaries ⦠but this presumptuous Hungarian considered the fact that he couldnât take his goddamn photograph the biggest tragedy of all. Right.
Chim watched her with eyes that appeared smaller due to the thickness of his lenses, and she knew that in that very moment he was watching her think, and that perhaps he didnât agree with her, as if behind his pupils there lived the conviction that no one has the right to judge another. What did she really know about André? Had she ever been inside his head? Had they gone to school together? Did she ever sit beside him on the back steps of his house, petting the cat until sunrise, in order not to hear his family fight because his father had thrown away an entire monthâs salary in a card game? No, Gerta evidently did not know anything about his life or about Pestâs working-class neighborhoods. How was she to know? When André was seventeen years old, two corpulent individuals in derby hats went and fetched him from his home after a series of disturbances by the Lánc Bridge. At police headquarters, the commissioner, Peter Heim, broke the boyâs four ribs, never pausing to interrupt his whistling of Beethovenâs Fifth Symphony throughout. His first swing went straight for the jaw, and André gave it to him with his cynical smile. The commissioner retaliated with a kick to the balls. This time, the boy didnât smile but gave him the dirtiest look he could muster. The beating continued until he lost consciousness. He remained in a coma for several days.