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She noticed that Frau Ochs and the five children were not in their usual places in the front pew.

As they sang the last hymn Carla vowed that she would not give up, scared though she was. She still had allies: Frieda and Werner and Heinrich. But what could they do?

She wished she had solid proof of what the Nazis were doing. She had no doubts, herself, that they were exterminating the handicapped--this Gestapo crackdown made it obvious. But she could not convince others without concrete evidence.

How could she get it?

After the service she walked out of the church with Frieda and Werner. Drawing them away from their parents, she said: "I think we have to get evidence of what's going on."

Frieda immediately saw what she meant. "We should go to Akelberg," she said. "Visit the hospital."

Werner had proposed that, right at the start, but they had decided to begin their inquiries here in Berlin. Now Carla considered the idea afresh. "We'd need permits to travel."

"How could we manage that?"

Carla snapped her fingers. "We both belong to the Mercury Cycling Club. They can get permits for bicycle holidays." It was just the kind of thing the Nazis were keen on, healthy outdoor exercise for young people.

"Could we get insi

de the hospital?"

"We could try."

Werner said: "I think you should drop the whole thing."

Carla was startled. "What do you mean?"

"Pastor Ochs has obviously been scared half to death. This is a very dangerous business. You could be imprisoned, tortured. And it won't bring back Axel or Kurt."

She stared at him incredulously. "You want us to give it up?"

"You must give it up. You're talking as if Germany were a free country! You'll get yourselves killed, both of you."

"We have to take risks!" Carla said angrily.

"Leave me out of this," he said. "I've had a visit from the Gestapo, too."

Carla was immediately concerned. "Oh, Werner--what happened?"

"Just threats, so far. If I ask any more questions I'll be sent to the front line."

"Oh, well, thank God it's not worse."

"It's bad enough."

The girls were silent for a few moments, then Frieda said what Carla was thinking. "This is more important than your job, you must see that."

"Don't tell me what I must see," Werner replied. He was superficially angry, but underneath that, Carla could tell he was in fact ashamed. "It's not your career that's at stake," he went on. "And you haven't met the Gestapo yet."

Carla was astonished. She thought she knew Werner. She would have been sure he would see this the way she did. "Actually, I have met them," she said. "They arrested my father."

Frieda was appalled. "Oh, Carla!" she said, and put her arm around Carla's shoulders.

"We can't find out where he is," Carla added.

Werner showed no sympathy. "Then you should know better than to defy them!" he said. "They would have arrested you, too, except that Inspector Macke thinks girls aren't dangerous."

Carla wanted to cry. She had been on the point of falling in love with Werner, and now he turned out to be a coward.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com