I
remember well the first series of the British American Missing with James Nesbitt seeking to recover an abducted boy so I
decided to watch the second series which commenced on October 12 with the 3rd
episode on October 26th. I am covering some of the work of James Nesbitt when writing
about the latest series of Cold Feet after an absence of over a decade.
As
with Ivy in Thirteen, a daughter Alice, aged 11 years who disappeared while her
father, an army officer was stationed in Germany in 2002, dramatically
reappears when she walks out of a forest 12 years later and where it emerges
she has held with another girl Sophie Giraux, a crime investigated by a French Police
detective Julien Baptiste. He had promised to do everything to find the child
but without success, he had failed to prevent Mrs Giraux committing suicide
from a building in the presence of her husband who understandably has never
forgiven Baptise for his failure, something which Bapriste has also failed to do.
Alice
is disorientated and in bare feet when she is discovered and from the outset
there are questions about her and her story. The father is played by the
established actor David Morrissey who has had a long and outstanding stage, TV
and film career and plays an officer no longer on active duty because of incident
which has left him disfigured from burns. While he is immediately convinced the
girl is Alice, his partner is not convinced.
As with Ivy the father and the victim want to return to their home but her
behaviour is intended to alert us that something is not right. She persuades her
brother to lock her in the garden shed at night she cannot cope with the
normality of heated room, soft bed and family sleeping times. I briefly had a
similar experience after months of hard bed in a cell with a light always on so
a check could have been at intervals throughout the night. It also brings back
the hours I spent as child kept in room and told to be silent while visitors
from the homeland of my birth and care mothers were in their home and were not
to know of existence.
With
help in which the Amy can join forces with the German police the place in which
for a time the two girls are believed to have been held together in a WWII
bunker. There is a private meeting at one point between Alice and the commanding
senior officer and from their conversation it is possible to say that he was
somehow involved with the disappearance. A receipt discovered at the bunker
leads them to a local butcher whose wife had served in the army with history yet
to be revealed but where the commanding officer appears to have some hold over
her. Alice identifies the butcher from a series of photos. The man is arrested
and subsequently convicted and imprisoned.
The
French Detective retired and suffering from terminal cancer abandons his wife
determined to fulfil his promise to Mrs Giroux and her husband and persuades
the parents to allow him to talk to Alice and given the similarity between the
two girls when they were abducted he begins to question which girl has
reappeared, doubts which the mother has already tried to voice. He speaks to the
girl in French but she appears not to understand. He suggests to the mother a
DNA test which Alice overhears. Baptiste contacts Mr Giroux to persuade him to
go with him to Germany. Understandably he refuses. Alive kills herself by setting fire to the
garden shed with herself inside.
The
series switches between 2002, 2014 and the present when the son appears to have
become embittered and right wing carries out a request from Alice to visit the
man she accused in prison and say sorry on her behalf. Baptiste is in Iraq in
search of an army officer who he had met at the time of the original disappearance
and who has joined one of the warring groups.
He persuades a journalist with connections to take up into an area of conflict
and on their way from a deserted
village where there was evidence the army officer had been present they
are taken by the Peshmerga soldiers and brought to their frontline where they
meet up with the army officer who although appears to know something refuses to
help. Back in Germany the mother comes across a video which appears to show her
daughter, alive. The first series had eight episodes.