The pain of war cannot exceed the woe of aftermath

Early 1944. You are members of the Special Operations Executive (SOE), a British organisation fighting the Axis powers in occupied Europe through espionage, sabotage, reconnaissance, and aiding local resistance groups. The SOE incorporates people of all classes and occupations.

You have been sent to the Camargue region of Southern France because contact with the local resistance organisation has recently been lost. You are also instructed to find out why trains are being sent so frequently from this region to Normandy, and to disrupt this traffic should it prove harmful to the Allied war efforts.

What do you think about that?