In the back of this volume Frances Itani shares with readers how she came upon the seeds for this novella while gathering research for another book. In the archives she found the records of an event that occurred in France towards the end of World War I and has fictionalized the facts to tell the story of a Canadian pilot downed over France by German fighter planes and the young boy who watched it happen.
Luc Caron is twelve years old, living in a small village in a part of occupied France. His mother is a widow, his father a soldier who died two years ago in the war. The village, damaged by the fighting and shelling is occupied by German soldiers who seem to be everywhere. They imposed a curfew requiring everyone to be off the streets by eight o’clock at night and groups are forbidden to meet except to attend church. There are not many left in the village. The young men are all gone, lost in the war or taken to Germany to work in the factories. Those left, the old men, the children and the women carry on as best they can, farming the fields and tending their shops.
Luc was a curious boy who liked to saunter around the village and find out what was going on, all the while keeping an eye out for small treasures. Like every young boy he liked to collect things and display them in his bedroom. The best find in his collection so far was a German coin dropped by one of the soldiers.
One day out walking about, Luc heard the distinctive sound of machine gunfire overhead. Looking up he saw two German planes and a British plane in a gunfight. He watched in awe, hoping the British pilot would get away, but knew the odds were against him. It was two against one. Suddenly the British plane turned upside down and Luc saw a dark black object fall rapidly from the sky into the nearby pond. He ran to the scene and found the pilot had landed on the ice on his back. He did not move and with just one look, Luc knew he was dead. Luc felt terrible and was crying beside the body when the German soldiers suddenly arrived and ordered him to leave. Luc watched from a distance as they dragged the body off the ice and threw it in a cart during which he distinctly heard one of the Germans say the pilot was a Canadian.
Luc raced to where he had seen the plane go down, hoping to get there before the soldiers and grab a souvenir. When he got there the plane was in pieces but he picked up two pieces of canvas, a piece from the wooden propeller and a torn card before the Germans arrived. They grabbed the torn card from his hands and once again sent him off. They did not see the two pieces of canvas or the small piece of wood from the propeller that he had hidden in his jacket.
The Germans took the body of the downed pilot to the village church and the next day there was a large funeral attended by many German soldiers and a General from a nearby village. There was even a marching band. It was a long held custom to honour pilots who died in the act of duty, even if they fought on opposite sides of the war. Following the service the pilot was buried in the church cemetery and the grave was marked with the name Jack Green RFC (Royal Flying Squad).
Luc was forever marked by this childhood experience. As time went on, the war ended and he married and had a child, Luc always remembered the pilot who he considered a hero. He knew he was the only one who had witnessed his death and felt badly that his family never knew what happened to him. He honored him by regularly visiting his grave and kept the treasures he had retrieved from the crash site.
From there the story continues revealing how Jack’s family finally came to know how their son died and how Luc connected with them many years later.
Itani calls this work a novella but to me it is more like a short story. Neither the novellas nor the short story are my favourite literary genres. They usually have interesting plots but are too short with little time or place to explore the characters in any depth and it is the characters which bring a plot to life. I think there was a framework for a great novel in this short, very moving story and having read Frances Itani’s other work, I think she would have done an excellent job if she had decided to take that route. When you consider the young boy Luc, Jack’s parent’s Peggy and Will Greenwood, John Bolten, Jack’s commanding officer, Mr. Harvey from the War Graves Office in Ottawa and even the German soldiers reverently attending Jack’s funeral in war town France, there is so much there to elaborate on and explore.
I enjoyed this effort, but was disappointed that the opportunity was not used to make this so much more than what it turned out to be, a novella instead of a full length novel. Perhaps Itani was not as excited as I was about the potential of this real life event to become what I thought it could be. I also understand writers cannot go off on tangents that might prove interesting while they are researching another book. They must have focus and practice discipline or they would never finish even one novel!
Despite my criticism, I can appreciate what Itani has done.
It is a very short but informative read.