THE BLACK-HAIRED sergeant, in the gray-green uniform of the army of Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich, sat smoking his pipe on the stone steps of the house. Beside him was a boy of eight or nine in a faded polo shirt, a ragged pair of dark blue shorts, and sneakers so frayed that both his big toes stuck out of them.
The sergeant and the boy were discussing a subject that each considered important and their serious faces reflected this.
“Was that the time, Feldwebel Hans, when you scored the only goal for Hamburg against Stuttgart?” asked the boy.
“Noooo...” responded the young soldier. “No, as I remember now,” he went on in excellent French, “that was the year....”
“I know, I know. Don’t tell me,” the boy cried, excitement in his voice. “I have an account in my scrapbook. Can I show you my scrapbook sometime, Feldwebel Hans? I can? I know; it was the year Hamburg was tied by the Racing Club of Paris, thanks to Bonvallet’s last-minute goal. Am I right?”
“Right! Only actually I didn’t play in that particular match. A bad knee. And bad luck, too. It was the spring before the war and that knee kept me out of service for thirteen months. Psst... come here... here....”
He snapped his fingers and held out one hand. A dog was coming toward them, a white and black, short-haired distant relative of a fox terrier. He was a kind of Grande Rue dog, an animal born in the street, heaven knows where and when, a dog of most uncertain heritage. He approached with caution as the big man took the square pipe from his mouth and leaned forward encouragingly.
The dog edged nearer. One glance told you it was a long while since anyone had stroked him, given him a good meal, said a kind word to him. The sergeant reached out and kneaded the back of the animal’s neck. Immediately the dog responded by coming in closer. Then he sat on his haunches, seemingly content, for once befriended.
Finally the German rose, knocked his pipe on the stone steps, and stretched. “Yes, of course you can show me your scrapbook. I’d be interested. Bring it along anytime in the afternoon. Well, we must get the morning report from the blockhouse. It hasn’t come yet and the Herr Hauptmann will be annoyed.”
Together they walked down the Grande Rue, the main and only street of the village of Nogent-Plage, the tawny-haired boy in the ragged shorts and the tall Feldwebel. The dog walked between them, his tail wagging.
Since it was a lovely morning in early June, the street was full of people. It seemed as though everyone they met greeted the sergeant. Old ladies in black carrying half-empty shopping bags, housewives with long loaves of grayish bread under their arms, children, especially the boys who invariably appeared when the Feldwebel was around, all wished him good day, addressing him as Colonel and speaking in German.
“Guten Tag, Herr Oberst. Guten Tag....”
Although he had told them all a hundred times that he was not an Oberst, a colonel, but a Feldwebel, a sergeant, and a supply sergeant at that, he responded to their words with an old-fashioned courtesy, speaking in French as a rule, touching one finger to the brim of his stained forage cap in a most unsoldierly gesture, and wishing them good day in return.
“Eh... bon jour, Madame Dupont. Bon jour.”
The old lady in the faded black dress bobbed and ducked her head. “Guten Tag, Herr Oberst. Guten Tag....”
There it was once again! How often he had spelled it out for them, sometimes severely.
“Nein, nein, bitte. Ich bin ein Feldwebel, ein Unteroffizier, nicht ein Oberst....”
The people of the village simply smiled and went on addressing him as Herr Oberst.
At first he felt this was intentional. After all, with these tricky French one could never tell. Perhaps it was their cynical way of sneering at the fact that the son of a baron, from an old army family, should be merely a sergeant. Occasionally at night when he could not sleep due to the roar of the guns along the coast spattering antiaircraft fire into the heavens, he wondered whether the French were stubborn, stupid, or insolent. As time went on, however, he realized that to the people in Nogent-Plage he represented authority. For them he was a person to whom they could protest, appeal, with whom they could discuss their grievances. It was the Feldwebel who listened to their objections to what they felt were unfair regulations of the German High Command along the coast.
Occasionally these regulations were changed. More often they were just ignored by the sergeant and his superiors. It was easier that way. Hence he accepted the greetings of the villagers, and although the military rank they conferred upon him amused his men and not infrequently annoyed his commanding officer, there was little anyone could do with the stubborn French.
The only person who did not call him Herr Oberst was the boy in the ragged blue shorts. He felt immediately that the sergeant disliked this and always addressed him as Feldwebel Hans. Perhaps this was how the big German first noticed him. It drew them together; their passion for football cemented the bond.
That day, the fourteen hundredth and fifth day of the occupation of the village of Nogent-Plage by the Germans, a day that was to explode in such violence and change forever the lives of the boy, the Feldwebel, and everyone in town, began in calm and quiet. During the long months of the occupation, people in the village had passed and repassed the same troops for days without end. Often even their first names were known to the townsfolk—harsh sounding Teutonic names such as Helmut, Gottfried, and Gerhardt. Over the years, many regiments had visited this hamlet by the sea, the men sunning themselves along the waterfront, or playing football under the direction of the Feldwebel on the hard, sandy beach below the cliff. Never was anyone else accorded recognition by the villagers. In fact, they often made fun of the other Germans, not infrequently to their faces. Of all the soldiers, only the Feldwebel Hans was a friend.
He was a friend above all to the boys of the village, because he was a former football player, and especially to young Jean-Paul Varin. Wherever the sergeant went the boy attached himself, following from place to place, often with his pal, René Le Gallec, slightly older and also a fervent of football. When the German sergeant played or coached his men, the two boys could not take their eyes off him. The younger, especially, watched with a furious intentness. Unconsciously even his body moved, swung, stopped short, riposted as the big German athlete’s did. In vain his mother rang the bell for dinner. You spoke to him and he did not hear. The boy watched, listened to the football talk, played and practiced, went so far as to learn German so that he would fully understand the soldiers talking. Football was his life, his passion, his existence. And the Feldwebel Hans was his god.