Virginia and Philippe’s home soon became a safe hiding place. The couple housed as many as 10 airmen at a time. They fed and clothed the men. They also showed them how to blend in and not draw attention from the Germans. Then Virginia and Philippe would help arrange safe passage to the next stop on the Comet Line. In all, they helped 66 airmen.
Unfortunately, Virginia did not escape capture herself. On June 12, 1944, she was stopped by the German police. She was instantly filled with terror. In her purse was a list of people who were part of the Comet Line. While the officers weren’t looking, she tore the paper into pieces and swallowed them.
Virginia was arrested and interrogated by German officers. But she refused to
give up any information.
“I remember feeling quite weak in the knees, but I thought ‘If they shoot me—they shoot me, but I won’t talk,’” she later wrote in a book about the war.