Bastille Day — -2016-
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.
At 22:34, a white 19-ton Renault Midlum truck turned onto the Promenade from the Boulevard de Lorraine. It did not stop at the pedestrian crossing. It did not turn toward the sea. It aimed straight down the center of the crowded boulevard. 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. For nearly two kilometers—the length of twenty football
The truck did not stop. It zigzagged, chasing the fleeing. It crushed a baby stroller, then a bicycle, then a man who had just called his wife to say he was on his way home. The screams—a sound witnesses would later describe as an animal, high-pitched, inhuman—rose above the still-smoky air. The front of the truck, once white, was now a gruesome collage of metal and flesh. The tires left not tracks, but smears. At 22:34, a white 19-ton Renault Midlum truck
At 22:30, the first rocket shot into the black velvet sky. For twenty-three glorious minutes, the crowd gasped and applauded. The finale was a thunderous cascade of gold and silver, a weeping willow of light that seemed to hang in the air for a long, silent moment before fading to smoke. The symphony orchestra on the stage by the Jardin Albert 1er struck up a triumphant “La Marseillaise.” People began to gather their blankets and children. The party was over. The long walk home began.
It was a night for liberté , for the simple, fierce joy of being alive and French, or simply being human on a beautiful coast. Families were out: fathers with toddlers on their shoulders, teenagers with sparklers, old couples holding hands on benches. The annual fireworks display, set to launch from the sea, was the crown jewel of the evening. People craned their necks, phones held high, waiting for the first red, white, and blue starburst.
In the hours that followed, the blue-white lights of ambulances and gendarmerie vans painted the palm trees in stroboscopic flashes. The bodies were laid in rows, covered in white sheets, like a terrible laundry left out by the tide. On the ground, scattered among the shards of glass and pools of blood, were the relics of a summer evening: a tiny sparkler, a melted ice cream cone, a single child’s sandal.