Over and over I ask myself the same question: where in all of this is papa — the man I knew, the man who married maman, the Cheïkh of Aïn Deb, the man everyone loved and respected, uncle Ali’s oldest, closest friend? Because he did exist, the father we spent all those years missing, he had two healthy sons, Rachel the brainy one and me who was never much good at anything, but I’m smart enough to know right from wrong. Am I supposed to believe the man I called papa and the SS officer are really the same person? How is it possible to blame one and honour the other, to hate the killer he was — a man I never knew — and love the father, the victim he is now, a victim of the same terrorists who are gunning for us? Did my father pay for his crimes? What about us, are we paying because we are his sons? Is this fate, mektoub, is it a curse? “I commend these words to you. / Engrave them on your hearts / When you are in your house, when you walk on your way, / When you go to bed, when you rise. / Repeat them to your children. / Or may your house crumble, / Disease render you powerless, / Your offspring avert their faces from you.” That’s what Primo Levi says: the children are doomed from the start because parents never tell their children about their crimes, if parents told their children everything it would be like killing them in the womb. This Primo Levi guy is crazy. I refuse to believe that God is more evil than man, that children are doomed to their fate.
Some of my mates come by the house from time to time, they say they do it just to annoy me, but actually they’re shit scared that I’m losing it. They come right out and say it too, but when they see how I react, they start joking around, grabbing each other by the sleeve, by the neck, by the dick, calling each other wacko. The crazier you are, the more you laugh, they say, laughing like lunatics. You can’t choose your friends. I play along just to get it over with. After they’ve trashed the place, we collapse on the sofa and talk. We talk for hours. It’s always the same conversation. It starts with me. Why don’t I go out any more? Why am I always going round with a face like an undertaker? Why am I always reading? And what the fuck am I writing in this notebook? Then they start with their stupid questions: Am I eating properly? Who washes my clothes? Who does the cleaning? Who takes out the rubbish? Who’s paying the electric? I don’t bother to try and explain, they’ve all got mothers and sisters who do everything for them. I can’t imagine Bidochon — who’s done, like, three days of work in his whole life — or Momo, who lives off the halal meat from his father’s butcher’s shop, know what a direct debit is, or how to wash a pair of boxers, make an omelette, cut a slice of bread, clean up after themselves, flush the toilet. All they’ve ever done is sit back and wait for everything to be done for them. The only one who can actually think is Idir-Quoi, but he can’t tell you what he thinks because the minute he opens his mouth he starts stammering. There’s no point even talking about Togo-au-Lait, he’s black as the ace of spades, he’s got his hair in cornrows like some gangsta and he thinks he’s clever as a monkey. When you see the way he rolls his eyes as soon as he sees a question mark, you realise he doesn’t know anything about monkeys — a lot of them are incredibly stupid. Raymou’s got two brains that don’t connect, a brain full of working-class common sense he inherited from his dad, and his own brain, which chews up common sense and spits it out. How much sense you get out of Raymou depends on whether you’re talking to the father or the son. Or the Holy Ghost. At the end of the day, Cinq-Pouces is the only one of the lot of them with a clue, his nickname means he’s all thumbs, but he’s a hard worker. He’s the only one of them who’s ever held down a job. He used to work with his father and he can turn his hand to pretty much anything. The things at the end of his arms aren’t hands, they’re Swiss army knives. Like I said, you can’t choose your friends. But I love them the way they are, crazy, dumb, ungrateful, awkward, useless, infuriating, and all out of benefits, even the benefit of the doubt. They’re prisoners. Yeah, I love them.
When they came by today they said they had news — some good, most bad. The good news is that the imam from Block 17 was arrested as an accessory in Nadia’s murder. “That calls for a beer,” I said. “The thing is,” they said, “now the whole estate has gone to shit, we couldn’t stand it anymore, we had to get out.” This was why they had come round, they couldn’t breathe there. On the one hand, you’ve got the people living on the estate playing dead, waiting to see what happens before they make a move, on the other hand you’ve got people running round all over the place: the imam’s suicide bombers, his sleeper cells, Com’Dad’s informants, the cops, the CRS, people from all kinds of organisations, reporters, academics, rubberneckers, counsellors from City Hall, representatives from Sensitive Urban Areas all over France and one or two from Belgium. We’re all over the news. When the sink estates in Paris catch a cold, the whole of France ends up spitting blood. Everywhere you go on the estate you get ambushed. On their way here Momo and the guys were stopped and full-body searched thirty times, questioned fifteen times, interviewed seven times, called in as backup three times, and once they managed to slip through the cordon. They came up with a brilliant way of getting rid of the TV reporters: whenever a journalist tried to talk to them they shoved Idir-Quoi to the front, stood well back and pissed themselves laughing.
“When was the imam arrested?” I shouted.
“Yesterday,” someone, I think it was Momo, said. “Some crack squad from the Rapid Response Unit they sent in from Paris pulled him in.”
“They’ve got him bang to rights, he’ll go down for at least ten, that’s what Babar down the police station said to Rabah — you know, the guy who works in the supermarket.”
“Yeah sure, dickhead!” said Raymou. “My dad says that politicians are bound to get involved, I wouldn’t be surprised if he wound up getting a medal.”
“One of Togo-au-Lait’s cousins who works as a cleaner for some government minister said they’re planning to release him. Apparently banging up an imam is like setting some pedo loose in a primary school, it’s just asking for trouble. Locking them up apparently just turns out more suicide bombers, meanwhile the imam’s inside phoning round every sleeper cell in France and getting them out on the streets, that’s right isn’t it Togo?” said Manchot.
“Yeah, swear to God, my cousin heard the minister talking on the phone to some guy and pleading with him to make a conciliatory gesture.”
“What does that mean?” asked Momo.
“It means what it means,” said Manchot.
“They should just kill the fucker,” concluded Momo.
“I agree, Momo, you’re a butcher like your father, I’ve no bone to pick with you.”
“They j. . ju. . just going to c. . c. . cover up the in. . in. . ”
“Cover up the incident?”
“Y. . yeah.”
“We’ll make them fucking sit up and take notice if they try. They’ve got him, they can keep him.”
“They could send him back where he came from with only one eye.”
“Or one arm, like Manchot here.”
“Well, if that’s the good news, the bad news must be a world fucking war. Spill. . ” I said.
“The first thing is there’s a new emir on the estate, a guy called Flicha.”