At just twenty years old, a woman calmly walked into a Nazi Gestapo building and asked for forty prisoners. The guards believed her. Then she freed them. Her name was Andrée de Jongh. In 1941, Belgium was under Nazi occupation. Arrests were constant. Resistance fighters disappeared daily. Walking into a Gestapo office usually meant you were not walking back out. Andrée did it anyway. Disguised as a Red Cross worker, she carried forged documents and absolute confidence. She told the guards that forty prisoners were scheduled for transfer. No shouting. No panic. Just authority. The paperwork looked official. Her composure made it convincing. The guards handed the prisoners over. Andrée walked them out of the building, past armed soldiers, and down the street. When they turned a corner and were out of sight, she leaned in and whispered one word. Run. Most of them escaped. This was not luck. It was practice. Andrée was the founder of the Comet Line, a resistance network that helped downed Allied pilots escape occupied Europe. She personally guided hundreds of people across Belgium, France, and the Pyrenees mountains into Spain. She did it on foot. Again and again. Eventually, she was captured. The Nazis never believed she was the leader. They thought a young woman could not possibly be running such an operation. That disbelief saved her life. She survived imprisonment and lived to see the war end. Andrée de Jongh never carried a gun. She carried nerve, preparation, and the ability to look evil in the eye without blinking. She did not fight with weapons. She fought with courage and walked people straight out of hell. Story based on historical records. This post is for educational purposes.