Well the chute opened and I came down in a midst of a herd of
Holstein cows and they scattered in all directions, you know.
God, they were, like, you know . . . this big white thing came
down on them, and so the cows scattered in all directions.
And of course we have an escape kit eh, with German money and
Dutch money and Belgian money, and there's chocolate and a,
and a pencil and a pen, and all kinds of stuff for, you know...
because we were told to escape, or try to escape. I had my escape
kit and then the first thing you do is you take your epaulets off
and you take your, your brevets off and you take, you have a
knife in your boot, you take the knife out and you cut the,
the oxfords off, and you take all that stuff and you, all
you leave on is your, your flying suit. You take your helmet and
everything and put it into a, you find a hole or a swamp or
something, I found a swamp. I, I pushed everything in and I got
a long pole, I pushed it down in the water. And then I started to
walk... and I left it there because I thought they would be
looking for me, searching for me. So I left the area and it was
about 3:30 in the morning and I waited until daylight, then I
saw a farm in the distance and I went over to see the farmer.
I thought, I'll go in there and, and see if somebody's awake. So
I went in the house, went into the barn first and there was
a farmer milking a cow. And I thought, jeez, I felt very lucky,
actually, there was nobody else around, he was milking a cow. So
I came up and I said, I tried to tell him who I was, and he knew
right away. And he said "No, no, no, no." And I reached in...
so all I wanted then was directions, eh. I wanted to know where
I was and which way I was going and which way I should, should be
going and so on. So I reached in to get my, my, my escape kit and
he thought I was going for a gun and of course he panicked eh.
And he said "No, no, no, no, no!" And I said, "No, no, no." I
just pulled my escape kit out and put the map on the floor. And
then, "Could you just tell me where I am?" And he said, "Don't go
that way," he said "that's the town of Brielle," he said "there's
a garrison there, Deutsch garrison" He said go the other way.
And I came to this farmhouse and I rapped, banged on the door and
a young man came out, a young fellow about 30, 30 years of age.
And I tried to tell him who I was, but he just slammed the door
in my face, you know. And I thought, uh oh, he's not going to
help me either. And I was just about to walk away when the door
opened, and a little old lady came out, she, "Come on in."
So I came in and she sat me down... it was a very austere
farmhouse, you know, just a table and six chairs. I came inside
and she put me down at the table and she gave me bread, milk
and all this time there's an animated conversation going on
between the, the, as it turns out, the mother and two sons.
And she said she, she wanted to get, to keep me and, and, and
contact the underground, they wanted to turn me in. And, but she
won, fortunately for me she won. And so she said to them, to hell
with you, you take him and put him in the hayloft, she said.
He's had bread and milk now put him in the hayloft, cover him up
with hay and I'm going to do something. And so she did, she had
contacted the underground. And a young man came over, he was a
blonde fellow, tousled hair and he came over and he started
interrogated me, and he grilled the hell out of me, you know.
He, he grilled... he, he peeled back the hay and he interrogated
me and he kept asking me about my squadron, well of course I
wouldn't tell him anything, like, just my rank, my number and,
and... but we were told to do that eh. Eventually he said
"Don’t worry," he said, "I know you're an RCF flyer," he said, he
says, "I know you're not a German." Because that's what they
used to do, they used to plant a German in the stack, and then,
and then, and then, in order to attract the underground.
The underground would come and they would catch 'em,
take 'em away and do away with 'em. So, but he was authentic,
and he said, "Don't worry, go back in there, in the hay," and he
says, "I will go back and I will arrange for you to, for somebody
to come and pick you up." Which he did. And he was gone
for about four hours and Jesus, I waited . . . It seemed like an
eternity to me. He came back. He didn't come . . . and he said, "
You're not to speak to the people who helped you." He says,
'When the guy comes, you walk down this road for about a mile,
about a kilometre." he said, and he says, "When you get to the
end, he says, "you'll see a man there with, leaning on a
bicycle., he'll have a beard." And he says, "He won't talk to you
but he'll look in the direction of the trees." He says, "You go
in there and <inaudible>," he says, "There'll be a bicycle there
and a shovel." And he says, "Then he'll get on his bicycle and
he'll go.He says, "You get on that bicycle, take, put the shovel
on your shoulder and follow him." And that's exactly what I did,
you know I followed him and that was, it was Frans Brall and I
never talked to him all until we got to his home in Oostvoorne,
except for a dog (inaudible) and got In one case, a dog came
after me aI fell down, so he tried to pick me up. I, I couldn't
speak, couldn't say anything. So, I just got back on my
bike and pedalled furiously and caught up to him. But,
eventually, he brought me home and then he asked his wife,
he said, "Can we keep him?" And his wife said, "Well, if my son
had been shot down, I wish some woman somewhere in the
world would've him in, so he can stay."