"This is a chronicle about the extinction of a bloodline but also about the destruction of a way of life. The cruelty to which all of us without a second chance in life have been condemned." Fire a rifle and the mountain trembles. This is the story of a fratricide that shook the Pyrenees. In 1943, Andorra was doing its best to resist attacks by European fire-power. Spain was immersed in the terrible post-war period, with the Republican exodus underway and Fascism proudly in command; France was occupied by the Nazis, who had a particular interest in the Andorran mountains. This, along with a broken family, was the context for the most notorious crime ever reported in the Andorran press. Months later, the surviving brother was condemned to death and humiliated in the town square. Which death was more unjust? This book attempts to give us the answer.