World War II began in 1939 and British language students ceased coming to the chateau. In May 1940, Nazi Germany invaded France. On 14 June, the Germans dropped bombs near the chateau. Hundreds of thousand of French people fled their homes and headed south, attempting to escape the advancing German army. On 17 June, the Gardnor-Beard family joined the exodus, with family and servants packed into three automobiles. Stymied by the clogged roads, a week later they returned to the chateau. Both French and German soldiers had sacked the place. Two companies of the German army were camped out on the grounds and German officers occupied some of the bedrooms. The family resumed their life as best they could. Souris became a volunteer for the
Red Cross which gave her an all-important pass permitting her to travel in the region. The family sheltered a Jewish refugee and persuaded the French authorities to leave English woman "Nanny" Cox off the list of foreigners in the area, a list required by the Germans. That prevented Nanny from being interned as a foreign enemy. Two days after their return to the chateau, Souris married Count Pierre Marie Marcel de Bernard de la Fosse, known as Berbert.
The Resistance In November 1940, Souris was approached in Blois by a man she didn't know who asked her if she would help England fight Germany. She said yes and was given a password, "Urbain vingt-six" (Urbain 26). Early in 1941, she was approached by a "funny little man" named
Pierre Culioli, a former
prisoner-of-war of the Germans. He asked her for help to get him to England to join the British fighting the Germans. She said she couldn't help him. Nothing more happened until late 1942, when a man on a bicycle arrived at the chateau and said "Urbain vignt-six." This was
Gilbert Norman, an agent of the British Special Operations Executive (SOE). He asked her for help locating landing grounds for clandestine air flights from England. She contacted the owner of a nearby chateau who declined to allow flights to land on his property. In early 1943, Pierre Culioli came back to the chateau. He brought with him
Yvonne Rudellat, code named "Jacqueline", who had recently arrived from England. She was the first female saboteur sent by SOE to work in the Sologne. Norman, Culioli, and Rudellat were frequent visitors to the chateau during the next few months. Souris helped Culioli and Rudellat find landing sites for clandestine SOE flights and for locations where arms and equipment could be parachuted in to be used by the Resistance for what was to be a future uprising against the German occupation. Due to the large hunting estates and forests in the Sologne it became a favorite location for SOE flights and Culioli and Rudellat were successful in creating several groups of resisters who carried out small-time sabotage operations. They called themself the Adolph Network, a mocking reference to
Adolf Hitler. They were affiliated with the much larger
Prosper network headed by SOE agent
Francis Suttill. The downfall for Souris, Culioli, and Rudellat began on the night of 12/13 June 1943. Souris was at the site, east of Chateau Nantueil where arms and ammunition were dropped by parachute. One of the containers exploded on contact with the ground. The sound was heard by "Nanny" at Nanteuil. Souris and the twenty people at the drop site quickly dispersed, afraid that the Germans in the area would be alerted by the explosion. Souris made it home "filthy and soaked." The explosion was the beginning of the end of the end for the Adolph network. Culioli asked Suttill to suspend the near-nightly flights to the Solongne due to the attention caused by the explosion. Suttill declined and the flights continued. On the morning of 21 June Culioli and Rudellat were captured by the Germans. Rudellat was wounded by a bullet to the brain which impacted her cognitive ability. Their capture was the first in arrests of dozens of SOE agents and hundreds of Frence resisters in most of northern France. On 9 September, Souris's husband Bebert was arrested by the Germans and the chateau was searched. He had been little active in the Resistance. On 16 September Souris journeyed to Blois to inquire of the Germans about the fate of her husband. She was arrested. ==Imprisoned==