French President Jacques Chirac gave a D-Day veteran a lift back to Paris in one of his jets after the New Zealander got lost following Sunday's ceremonies in northern France.
Mr Keith Coleman (86) hopped on a coach after the main international ceremony in Arromanches to mark the 60th anniversary of the D-Day landings in Normandy, but instead of taking him back to the French capital he ended up at a remote military airfield where all the other veterans got on a plane.
"There was this important looking guy wearing gold braid who I told my story to and I guess he must have felt sorry for me, because he made a few phone calls and told me he thought he could get me back to Paris," Mr Coleman, who speaks no French, told the Guardian.
The former gunner with the Royal Air Force was whisked by car to another airfield where two jets were waiting. A cavalcade pulled up and the French president got out.
"He came over . . . I snapped to attention and gave him a little salute . . . he put his arm round me," he told the paper.
"He said he would be happy for me to travel in one of the aeroplanes and gave instructions that I was to be driven to the door of my hotel."