AC. You Have 3 Choices: The Cruel Ultimatum of a German Commander to a Young Prisoner!

The silence in my small house near Chalon-sur-Saône is often heavy, but today it is necessary. My name is Arianne Daveau. I am 82 years old, and to my neighbors, I am merely a quiet old woman who tends to her hydrangeas and offers a polite nod to passersby. They see the silver hair and the weathered hands, but they do not see the weight I have carried for over sixty years—the weight of a secret involving two lives I might have saved, and the memory of a man who offered me three ways to lose my soul.

I have never told my children or my late husband what happened in 1943. I kept it locked away, buried deep like a body in a shallow grave. But as I sit here before this microphone, I realize that time does not absolve the monsters of the past, and if I die in silence, the truth dies with me.

Most people believe the Great War was fought only in trenches and on distant battlefields. They forget that evil has a habit of knocking directly on the door. For me, it arrived on a cold November dawn.

The Shattering of a Life

In 1943, I lived with my mother and my little brother, Henry, in Saint-Jengoux-le-National, a peaceful village in Burgundy. My father had passed away from pneumonia two years prior, leaving my mother to work as a seamstress while I dreamed of becoming a nurse. I was naive enough to believe that war didn’t happen to people like us.

I was wrong.

The sound of the trucks sliced through the village silence like a blade. My mother was mending a coat by candlelight when the door burst open. Four soldiers in impeccable uniforms stood there, their stares empty and cold. One of them called my name—Arianne d’Avoldt. He mispronounced it, but there was no mistake.

My mother tried to intervene, her voice trembling as she insisted I had done nothing wrong. A soldier struck her hand with the butt of his rifle to move her aside. I can still hear the sound of the bone cracking and her stifled cry. They dragged me outside into the freezing night, not even allowing me to grab a coat or sturdy shoes.

I was thrown into a covered truck with sixteen other girls from the surrounding area. We were all young, between sixteen and twenty-two. We sat in the dark, breathing in a thick cloud of fear and sweat as the truck rumbled for hours toward an unknown destination.

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The Nameless Camp

When we finally stopped, we found ourselves in an improvised encampment. It wasn’t an official prisoner-of-war camp; there were no registers, no flags, and no Red Cross presence. It was a “black hole” of the occupation—a hidden place where bureaucracy didn’t reach.

An older officer greeted us. His name was Commander Erich Stolz. He was well-groomed, his grey hair perfectly combed, and he was smiling. That smile was the most terrifying thing about him; he observed us the way a merchant might assess rare merchandise.

We were led to damp barracks where straw mattresses lay on the hard earth. A woman named Gerda, who spoke French with a harsh, mechanical accent, explained the new reality: “Here, you are no longer people. You are resources.”

She marked our wrists with black ink. I became Number 11. My friend Simone was Number 9.

At first, we were put to work cleaning and cooking. We thought we were just cheap labor, but we soon learned the camp’s cruel mathematics. Every few nights, Gerda would collect a girl and take her to the commander’s quarters. Some returned broken and silent; others never returned at all. Stolz used small privileges—an extra piece of bread, a bit of soap—to create a toxic hierarchy among us. To refuse his “requests” meant to disappear, just as Number 6 had after she fought back.

The Three Choices

One morning in December, Gerda came for me. My blood turned to ice as I followed her across the muddy courtyard to the commander’s office. Inside, Stolz sat behind a solid wood desk. He pushed a glass of clear, clean water toward me—a luxury we hadn’t seen in weeks.

“You’re afraid, aren’t you, Number 11?” he asked, his voice smooth and conversational. “Fear is useful; it keeps you alive. But fear is not enough. You must also know how to choose.”

He stood up, towering over me, and held up three fingers, counting out an ultimatum that allowed for no dignity.

  1. Betrayal: “Give me the names of the girls planning an escape. I know there are some. In exchange, you receive double rations, a mattress, and warmth.”

  2. Service: “Become useful to me and my officers. Do what is asked without resistance. You will survive better than the others.”

  3. Oblivion: “Disappear like Number 6. Cleanly, without a sound. No one will ever look for you.”

He leaned in, the scent of tobacco and cologne filling my senses. “What do you choose?”

My mind was a whirlwind of terror. To betray or to serve were both forms of death; I would be a shadow of a human being. I thought of my mother’s broken wrist and my little brother. My voice broke as I whispered, “I cannot betray.”

“So, you serve?” he asked.

I shook my head, tears finally spilling over. “I can’t.”

I closed my eyes and waited for the guards to drag me to the pit. But the commander merely looked at me with a twisted sense of curiosity. “Interesting,” he mused. “You prefer to disappear rather than give in. Go back to the barracks.”

I stumbled out, alive but confused. For weeks, I felt his gaze on me every time I crossed the courtyard. It was a game to him—he was waiting for me to crack.

The Weight of Silence

Meanwhile, a new girl named Claire arrived. She was full of fire and spoke of justice and escape. Simone and I tried to warn her that “doing something” meant certain death, but she wouldn’t listen. She began organizing a plan with four others to dig under the fence and flee into the forest.

A week later, Stolz summoned me again. This time, his smile was gone. “Five girls are planning an escape,” he said flatly. “I want their names. Give them to me, and you live. Refuse, and you join them in the pit.”

It was the same ultimatum, but this time, the third option felt final. I thought of my family. I thought of the cold mud. My resolve shattered. I opened my mouth and gave him two names—not all of them, but two. I chose two girls I barely knew, hoping to sacrifice a few to save the rest.

Stolz nodded, satisfied. “You’re learning,” he whispered.

That night, those two girls were taken away. Claire and the others attempted their escape three days later, but they were caught and executed before they reached the trees.

Simone looked at me the next morning. She didn’t say a word, but her eyes told me everything. She knew I had bought my life with the lives of others. The choice I had made destroyed me more thoroughly than anything Stolz could have done with a rifle.

The Shadow of the Past

For the rest of the winter, I was a ghost. I worked, I ate, I breathed, but the girl who had entered that camp was gone. Stolz summoned me occasionally just to talk, philosophizing about how war reveals the “monsters” already buried within people. “You and I are the same,” he told me once. “We do what is necessary.”

I wanted to scream that he was wrong, but a part of me feared he was right.

In April 1944, as Allied forces drew near, the Germans fled in the night. We were found by the Red Cross and Allied soldiers. I was “free,” but freedom is a hollow word when you are broken from the inside.

I returned to my village. My mother and Henry were alive, but they didn’t recognize the hollowed-out woman who stood before them. I eventually married a kind man named Paul and had children, but I lived behind a mask. For sixty years, I saw the eyes of those two girls every time I closed my own.

In 2006, I received an anonymous envelope from Berlin. Inside was a photo of Stolz, smiling in his uniform. On the back, a note indicated he was still alive, having never faced justice. It was then I realized that if I didn’t speak, he would win. He would disappear into history as a “normal” man, and his victims would remain nameless numbers in a black hole.

The Final Testimony

I am 82 years old now. My heart is tired, and the doctors say my time is short. I have finally recorded my truth—not for redemption, for I do not believe I earned it, but so that those girls are not forgotten.

I carried two deaths on my conscience for sixty-three years. People wanted to rebuild after the war, to move on and forget. But you cannot rebuild on a rotten foundation.

Stolz told me we were the same because we both did what was necessary to survive. But he was wrong. He never regretted a single moment. I have regretted every breath I took since that December night.

To those of you listening: I ask you the question that has haunted my every waking hour. If you had been in my place, with the cold mud beneath your feet and a monster smiling at you, what would you have done? Would you have held onto your soul at the cost of your life? Or would you have given a name just to see the sunrise one more time?

I still don’t know the answer. All I know is that Number 11 survived, but Arianne Daveau died in that camp.

Arianne Daveau passed away in 2011, five years after recording her testimony. Her voice serves as a fragment of humanity rescued from the silence of history—a reminder that the scars of conflict do not vanish when the treaties are signed. They remain in the memories of those who had to make impossible choices in a world that had lost its mind.

Historical Reflection: The Unofficial Camps

While major concentration camps are well-documented, hundreds of “unofficial” or “administrative” camps existed across occupied Europe. These sites often lacked proper records, making it difficult for survivors to prove their experiences or for perpetrators to be brought to justice.

How can modern society ensure that the “unofficial” histories of individuals like Arianne are preserved when no formal records exist to validate them?