Bastille Day — -2016-
At first, there was confusion. The truck was moving slowly, weaving slightly. Some thought it was a drunk driver. Others thought it was a mechanical failure. A man named Samir, a cigarette dangling from his lip, saw the grille of the truck approaching and dove over a low wall into a planter of oleander. He was the first to understand.
The driver floored the accelerator.
That was Bastille Day. Not the celebration of liberty, equality, and fraternity, but the night a white truck turned a holiday promenade into a battlefield. It was the moment the sweet sugar of a chichi turned to ash on the tongue. It was the summer the French Riviera learned that the devil does not need a bomb—just a steering wheel, a rented truck, and a long, straight road full of innocent people heading home. Bastille Day -2016-
Eighty-six people were dead that night. Two hundred and fifty-eight were wounded, some losing limbs, others losing their minds. The youngest victim was a two-year-old boy. He had been watching the fireworks from his father’s shoulders. At first, there was confusion
For nearly two kilometers—the length of twenty football fields—the truck plowed through the crowd. The driver, a 31-year-old Tunisian man named Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel, leaned out the window and fired a pistol several times, adding the crack of gunfire to the chaos. Police officers on motorcycles gave chase, their sirens a futile, wailing chorus behind the beast. Others thought it was a mechanical failure
