Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Window into "FLASH OF THE SUN", a geopolitical thriller and a historical saga about a lurking mafia




 

Chapter One

 

 

 

 

New York, spring 1958

 

 

 

 

Renault’s “princess”—the 1956 Renault Dauphine—filled René Roccard with pride, a sentiment shared by millions across France. So when he purchased one from the first shipment sent to the United States, his colleagues were hardly surprised. But they began to raise eyebrows when he took to chanting verses of La Marseillaise or honking in salute whenever he passed another Dauphine.

To René, the car was more than metal and machinery—it was France reborn, a symbol of resilience after humiliation, defeat, and four long years under German occupation.

Yet that afternoon in New York City, the Dauphine stirred none of that pride.

A grim determination had taken hold of him. Only as he left East 48th Street and merged into Broadway’s sluggish traffic did the tension in his face ease—slightly. His mind, consumed by the precision of his self-assigned mission, barely registered the skyscrapers looming on either side. He was so distracted that he nearly plowed into a blue Ford Fairlane ahead, slamming the brake just in time. The Renault jerked violently to a stop, pitching him forward, his forehead coming dangerously close to the steering wheel.

“Merde… merde, les salopards!” he spat, striking the wheel in frustration.

The angry chorus of horns behind him snapped him back. He moved forward again, inching along with traffic. Sweat slicked his palms as he glanced at them, exhaled sharply, and narrowed his eyes. Only when he turned onto First Avenue toward United Nations Plaza did his expression begin to settle.

“Cette circulation est agaçante,” he muttered under his breath.

He hadn’t anticipated the suffocating heat—ninety-seven degrees—or the crawling traffic. Nothing will ruin this, he told himself.

In Turtle Bay, he finally parked. Calm returned—on the surface. He stepped out, opened the trunk, and lifted a guitar case. Inside, carefully concealed, lay the disassembled parts of a rifle.

As he shut the trunk, the melody of “La Bastringue” flickered in his mind. He began to hum it softly only after locking the car.

“You’ve got yourself a fine little beauty there,” came a voice behind him, thick with a Boston accent.

A chill ran down René’s spine. He froze, then turned slowly, irritation flashing across his face.

“What did you say?” he asked coldly.

“Beautiful machine,” the American grinned, running a hand along the Dauphine’s hood. “My wife’s buying one tonight.”

René forced a tight smile. “She will love it, I assure you,” he replied, his French accent unmistakable. After a brief, assessing glance, he added curtly, “Excuse me—I must be on my way.”

He left without looking back, striding across the park toward Tudor City. Sweat spread across his back as he quickened his pace.

“Ignore it,” he whispered to himself.

By the time he reached the apartment facing the United Nations complex, he was nearly running. He fumbled briefly with his keys before unlocking the door and slipping inside.

“What am I doing?” he murmured, breath ragged, hands trembling.

The apartment belonged to Giuseppe Matteotti, an Italian painter René had charmed weeks earlier in a bar. A casual visit, an invitation, a copied key—and now, the perfect vantage point.

Within three minutes, the rifle was assembled.

He positioned himself at the window and waited. Fifteen minutes passed. Then thirty. Forty.

Finally—movement.

His target emerged with a cluster of diplomats from the United Nations building. But frustratingly, never for more than a fleeting second did the man linger in René’s scope.

Even with the beard, René was certain: Ruben Um Nyobè. The insurgent. The agitator. The enemy of French authority in Cameroun.

A virus, René thought bitterly. One that must be removed.

Through the scope, he watched the man laugh, gesture confidently, command attention. The sight filled René with a rising bitterness that stung the back of his throat.

Then—the group began to move.

René steadied his breathing. His finger tightened on the trigger. This was the moment—for France, for his brother.

But just as he was about to fire, the target shifted—placing a diplomat squarely in René’s line of sight.

“Merde!” René gasped.

The view vanished. Bodies closed in around the man. In seconds, he was ushered into a waiting car.

And gone.

A wave of rage overtook him. His body trembled as the failure sank in. He collapsed to the floor, striking his thighs with clenched fists, low grunts escaping him in uneven bursts. Leaning back against the wall, he shut his eyes and cursed under his breath, banging his head lightly against the plaster.

Then—stillness.

His lips stopped moving. His brow furrowed. Slowly, he nodded, as if answering a voice only he could hear.

He would try again.

A third time.

And if he failed again… he would follow the man to Cameroun and finish it there.

But the memory would not let him rest— Monday, January 6, 1958, headline in the New York Times, seared into his mind:

France Sends Troops to Crush Red-Led Uprising in Cameroons; Acts to Prevent New 'Algeria' in African Territory Where Rebels Burned 60 Villages.

Les idiots, les imbéciles!” he growled and pulled his hair, “The rebellion in our Cameroun isn’t different from the one in Algeria. That’s why Marc is dead,”

His voice broke.

The anger dissolved into quiet sobbing. Soon, it softened into a trembling hum—“La Complainte du Partisan.” He sang under his breath until he reached the final line:

“…I took my gun and vanished.”

René went to bed that night seething with self-disgust and woke the next morning weighed down by a dull, lingering defeat. The mood clung to him like humidity—thick, suffocating. He was still brooding over it as he brushed his teeth when, without warning, he froze. Something shifted.

A low hum escaped him—La Complainte du Partisan.

He didn’t stop.

He carried the song with him into the shower, letting it roll under his breath, steady and haunting. He hummed it while dressing, while preparing breakfast, repeating it all the way through, over and over again, as if the melody were stitching together the frayed edges of his mind.

The song soothed him—if not entirely, then enough.

By the time he sat behind his office desk, the sharp edge of his despair had softened into a stern, controlled solemnity. He was no longer broken—only quiet, withdrawn.

But even that fragile calm did not last.

Barely an hour into his morning, news arrived from Paris: General Charles de Gaulle had returned to power.

The effect was immediate.

Something lit behind René’s eyes—something fierce, something alive. By the afternoon, as confirmations poured in, a real smile—his first in days—finally broke across his face. 

 

 

                               **************

 

 

May 1958 would carve its place deep into French history—a month of upheaval marked by the second and most decisive Algiers Putsch, an audacious attempt launched from the heart of French Algeria to topple the government in Paris.

The revolt did not emerge in a vacuum. Years of political paralysis had exhausted the French public. Governments rose and fell in rapid succession, crippled by endless cabinet crises that eroded confidence both at home and across the empire. Nowhere was this disillusionment felt more sharply than among the army and European settlers in Algeria. Under the Fourth Republic’s fragile parliamentary system, France had cycled through twenty prime ministers in just eleven years—a dizzying instability that left the nation unsteady and uncertain.

For the army, patience had run out.

They had watched successive governments falter—first in Indochina, then in North Africa, and increasingly in French Cameroun. To them, each hesitation in Paris felt like surrender disguised as policy. The fear now was that even the current right-wing government under Pierre Pflimlin would follow the same path—retreating under pressure, abandoning territories, and, in their eyes, diminishing French honor as had been done in Indochina in 1954.

It was this simmering frustration that ignited the call for change.

From the balconies of Algiers to the streets of Yaoundé, and deep within the corridors of power in Paris itself, a single name began to rise above the disorder—Charles de Gaulle. The demand for his return built with a fervor that bordered on the spiritual, as though the nation were calling upon a redeemer rather than a politician.

And in many ways, that is how he was seen.

Charles de Gaulle had become the embodiment of French resilience. During the dark years of German occupation, he had stood as a symbol of defiance and dignity, preserving the nation’s honor when it seemed all but lost. Yet, in 1946, he had stepped away from power, rejecting the very system that now stood exposed in its weakness—the Fourth Republic he believed was fundamentally flawed.

Now, history seemed to be vindicating him.

Across France, among the restless and disillusioned, hope began to stir again. And among them was René Roccard.

Like countless others, René saw in Charles de Gaulle not merely a leader, but a solution—a man capable of restoring direction, discipline, and purpose to a drifting nation. To him, de Gaulle represented the possibility of a renewed France—one that could reclaim its stature on the world stage and reassert control over its troubled colonies.

More than that, René believed something larger was unfolding.

France, he felt, stood on the cusp of a new era—one that would demand action, sacrifice, and unwavering resolve. It was an era that would call men like him to step forward, to pursue their self-appointed missions in the name of the fatherland—and, perhaps, to be remembered as the patriots who saved France from slipping into irrelevance.