Saturday morning. The sun shone warm. Here, too, I had the feeling that the sun smells differently on a Saturday, just like at home. I walked to a kind of meadow, let’s say, with Anni Havas, who came with a different transport. (…) girls went for a walk. In the meantime, Kitty and Éva joined, and Anni went away, so I stayed in their company. I think there were beans for lunch. My mother prepared them very well, back then we were not yet used to the fat- and spice-free food for everyone. In the afternoon, we met, as planned, at the same spot as in the morning. The boys also joined us. We flirted and laughed together, that’s how the afternoon passed. The wagons stood only four metres away from us, but we still felt like laughing. Towards evening, other citizens were deported. Kitty jumped up with a pale face, ran away, and left me with the boys. They looked at me questioningly, what might have happened, surely my face also turned pale. So I told them that Kitty’s family was affected, because they weren’t local citizens. I ran after Kitty, but she already came towards me and said that her family wouldn’t be deported.