A two-hour drive brought us instead into the streets of The Hague. The bus stopped in front of a new, functional building; word was whispered back that this was Gestapo headquarters for all of Holland. We were marchedâall but Pickwick, who seemed unable to rise out of his seatâinto a large room where the endless process of taking down names, addresses, and occupations began all over again.
On the other side of the high counter running the length of the room, I was startled to see both Willemse and Kapteyn. As each of the prisoners from Haarlem reached the desk, one or the other would lean forward and speak to a man seated at a typewriter and there would be a clatter of sound from the machine.
Suddenly the chief interrogator's eye fell on Father. “That old man!” he cried. “Did he have to be arrested? You, old man!”
Willem led Father up to the desk. The Gestapo chief leaned forward. “I'd like to send you home, old fellow,” he said. “I'll take your word that you won't cause any more trouble.”
I could not see Father's face, only the erect carriage of his shoulders and the halo of white hair above them. But I heard his answer.
“If I go home today,” he said evenly and clearly, “tomorrow I will open my door again to any man in need who knocks.”
The amiability drained from the other man's face. “Get back in line!” he shouted. “
Schnell!
This court will tolerate no more delays!”
But delays seemed all that this court existed for. As we inched along the counter, there were endless repetitions of questions, endless consulting of papers, endless coming and going of officials. Outside the windows the short winter day was fading. We had not eaten since the rolls and water at dawn.
Ahead of me in line, Betsie answered, “Unmarried,” for the twentieth time that day.
“Number of children?” droned the interrogator.
“I'm unmarried,” Betsie repeated.
The man did not even look up from his papers. “Number of children!” he snapped.
“No children,” said Betsie resignedly.
Toward nightfall a stout little man wearing the yellow star was led past us to the far end of the room. A sound of scuffling made us all look up. The wretched man was attempting to hold onto something clutched in his hands.
“It's mine!” he kept shouting. “You can't take it! You can't take my purse!”
What madness possessed him? What good did he imagine money would do him now? But he continued to struggle, to the obvious glee of the men around him.
“Here, Jew!” I heard one of them say. He lifted his booted foot and kicked the small man in the back of his knees. “This is how we take things from a Jew.”
It made so much noise. That was all I could think as they continued to kick him. I clutched the counter to keep from falling myself as the sounds continued. Wildly, unreasonably, I hated the man being kicked, hated him for being so helpless and so hurt. At last I heard them drag him out.
Then all at once I was standing in front of the chief questioner. I looked up and met Kapteyn's eyes, just behind him.
“This woman was the ringleader,” he said.
Through the turmoil inside me, I realized it was important for the other man to believe him. “What Mr. Kapteyn says is true,” I said. “These othersâthey know nothing about it. It was all myâ”
“Name?” the interrogator inquired imperturbably.
“Cornelia ten Boom, and I'm theâ”
“Age?”
“Fifty-two. The rest of these people had nothing to doâ”
“Occupation?”
“But I've told you a dozen times!” I burst out in desperation.
“Occupation?” he repeated.
It was dark night when we were marched at last out of the building. The green bus was gone. Instead we made out the bulk of a large canvas-roofed army truck. Two soldiers had to lift Father over the tailgate. There was no sign of Pickwick. Father, Betsie, and I found places to sit on a narrow bench that ran around the sides.
The truck had no springs and bounced roughly over the bomb-pitted streets of The Hague. I slipped my arm behind Father's back to keep him from striking the edge. Willem, standing near the back, whispered back what he could see of the blacked-out city. We had left the downtown section and seemed to be headed west toward the suburb of Scheveningen. That was our destination then, the federal penitentiary named after this seaside town.
The truck jerked to a halt; we heard a screech of iron. We bumped forward a few feet and stopped again. Behind us massive gates clanged shut.
We climbed down to find ourselves in an enormous courtyard surrounded by a high brick wall. The truck had backed up to a long low building; soldiers prodded us inside. I blinked in the white glare of bright ceiling lights.
“Nasen gegen Mauer!”
(Noses to the wall!)
I felt a shove from behind and found myself staring at cracked plaster. I turned my eyes as far as I could, first left and then right. There was Willem. Two places away from him, Betsie. Next to me on the other side was Toos. All like me standing with their faces to the wall. Where was Father?
There was an endless wait while the scars on the wall before my eyes became faces, landscapes, animal shapes. Then somewhere to the right a door opened.
“Women prisoners follow me!”
The matron's voice sounded as metallic as the squealing door.
As I stepped away from the wall, I glanced swiftly around the room for Father. There he wasâa few feet out from the wall, seated in a straight-backed chair. One of the guards must have brought it for him.
Already the matron was starting down the long corridor that I could see through the door. But I hung back, gazing desperately at Father, Willem, Peter, all our brave underground workers.
“Father!” I cried suddenly. “God be with you!”
His head turned toward me. The harsh overhead light flashed from his glasses.
“And with you, my daughters,” he said.
I turned and followed the others. Behind me the door slammed closed.
And with you! And with you! Oh Father, when will I see you
next?
Betsie's hand slipped around mine. A strip of coconut-palm matting ran down the center of the wide hall. We stepped onto it off the damp concrete.
“Prisoners walk to the side.” It was the bored voice of the guard behind us. “Prisoners must not step on the matting.”
Guiltily we stepped off the privileged path.
Ahead of us in the corridor was a desk, behind it a woman in uniform. As each prisoner reached this point, she gave her name for the thousandth time that day and placed on the desk whatever she was wearing of value. Nollie, Betsie, and I unstrapped our beautiful wristwatches. As I handed mine to the officer, she pointed to the simple gold ring that had belonged to Mama. I wriggled it from my finger and laid it on the desk along with my wallet and paper guilders.
The procession down the corridor continued. The walls on both sides of us were lined with narrow metal doors. Now the column of women halted: the matron was fitting a key into one of the doors. We heard the thud of a bolt drawn back, the screech of hinges. The matron consulted a list in her hand, then called the name of a lady I didn't even know, one of those who had been at Willem's prayer meeting.
Was it possible that that had been only yesterday? Was this only Thursday night? Already the events at the Beje seemed part of another lifetime. The door banged shut; the column moved on. Another door unlocked, another human being closed behind it. No two from Haarlem in the same cell.
Among the very first names read from the list was Betsie's. She stepped through the door; before she could turn or say good-bye, it had closed. Two cells farther on, Nollie left me. The clang of those two doors rang in my ears as the slow march continued.
Now the corridor branched and we turned left. Then right, then left again, an endless world of steel and concrete.
“Ten Boom, Cornelia.”
Another door rasped open. The cell was deep and narrow, scarcely wider than the door. A woman lay on the single cot, three others on straw ticks on the floor. “Give this one the cot,” the matron said. “She's sick.”
And indeed, even as the door slammed behind me, a spasm of coughing seized my chest and throat.
“We don't want a sick woman in here!” someone shouted. They were stumbling to their feet, backing as far from me as the narrow cubicle would allow.
“I'm . . . I'm so very sorryâ” I began, but another voice interrupted me.
“Don't be. It isn't your fault. Come on, Frau Mikes, give her the cot.” The young woman turned to me. “Let me hang up your hat and coat.”
Gratefully I handed her my hat, which she added to a row of clothes hanging from hooks along one wall. But I kept my coat wrapped tight around me. The cot had been vacated and I moved shakily toward it, trying not to sneeze or breathe as I squeezed past my cellmates. I sank down on the narrow bed, then went into a fresh paroxysm of coughs as a cloud of choking black dust rose from the filthy straw mattress. At last the attack passed and I lay down. The sour straw smell filled my nostrils. I felt each slat of wood through the thin pallet.
I will never be able to sleep on such a bed,
I thought, and the next thing I knew it was morning and there was a clattering at the door. “Food call,” my cellmates told me. I struggled to my feet. A square of metal had dropped open in the door, forming a small shelf. Onto this someone in the hall was placing tin plates filled with a steaming gruel.
“There's a new one here!” the woman called Frau Mikes called through the aperture. “We get five portions!” Another tin plate was slammed onto the shelf. “If you're not hungry,” Frau Mikes added, “I'll help you with it.”
I picked up my plate, stared at the watery gray porridge, and handed it silently to her. In a little while the plates were collected and the pass-through in the door slammed shut.
Later in the morning a key grated in the lock, the bolt banged, and the door opened long enough for the sanitary bucket to be passed out. The wash basin was also emptied and returned with clean water. The women picked up their straw pallets from the floor and piled them in a corner, raising a fresh storm of dust which started me coughing helplessly again.
Then a prison boredomâwhich I soon learned to fear above all elseâsettled over the cell. At first I attempted to relieve it by talking with the others, but though they were as courteous as people can be who are living literally on top of one another, they turned aside my questions and I never learned much about them.
The young woman who had spoken kindly to me the night before, I did discover, was a baroness, only seventeen years old. This young girl paced constantly, from morning until the overhead lightbulb went off at night, six steps to the door, six steps back, dodging those sitting on the floor, back and forth like an animal in a cage.
Frau Mikes turned out to be an Austrian woman who had worked as a charwoman in an office building. She often cried for her canary. “Poor little thing! What will become of him? They'll never think to feed him.”
This would start me thinking of our cat. Had Maher Shalal Hashbaz made his escape into the streetâor was he starving inside the sealed house? I would picture him prowling among the chairlegs in the dining room, missing the shoulders he loved to walk on. I tried not to let my mind venture higher in the house, not to let it climb the stairs to see if Thea, Mary, Eusieâno! I could do nothing for them here in this cell. God knew they were there.
One of my cellmates had spent three years here in Scheveningen. She could hear the rattle of the meal cart long before the rest of us and tell by the footstep who was passing in the corridor. “That's the trustee from medical supply. Someone's sick.” “This is the fourth time someone in 316 has gone for a hearing.”
Her world consisted of this cubicle and the corridor outsideâand soon I began to see the wisdom of this narrowed vision, and why prisoners instinctively shied away from questions about their larger lives. For the first days of my imprisonment, I stayed in a frenzy of anxiety about Father, Betsie, Willem, Pickwick. Was Father able to eat this food? Was Betsie's blanket as thin as this one?
But these thoughts led to such despair that I soon learned not to give in to them. In an effort to fix my mind on something, I asked Frau Mikes to teach me the card game that she played hour after hour. She had made the cards herself with the squares of toilet paper that were issued two a day to each prisoner; all day she sat on a corner of the cot endlessly laying them out in front of her and gathering them up again.
I was a slow learner, since no cards of any kind had been played at the Beje. Now as I began to grasp the solitaire game, I wondered what Father's resistance to them had beenâsurely nothing could be more innocent than this succession of shapes called clubs, spades, diamonds. . . .
But as the days passed I began to discover a subtle danger. When the cards went well my spirits rose. It was an omen: someone from Haarlem had been released! But if I lost. . . . Maybe someone was ill. The people in the secret room had been found. . . .
At last I had to stop playing. In any case I was finding it hard to sit up so long. Increasingly I was spending the days as I did the nights, tossing on the thin straw pallet trying in vain to find a position in which all aches at once were eased. My head throbbed continually, pain shot up and down my arms, my cough brought up blood.
I was thrashing feverishly on the cot one morning when the cell door opened and there stood the steel-voiced matron I had seen the night I entered the cell two weeks before.
“Ten Boom, Cornelia.”
I struggled to my feet.
“Bring your hat and your coat and come with me.”
I looked around at the others for a hint as to what was happening. “You're going to the outside,” our prison expert said. “When you take your hat you always go outside.”