PARIS (Reuters) - Serving at a juice bar at an unusually quiet central Saint-Lazare train station, 24-year-old Parisian student Laura Stern admitted to being "a little bit scared" a day after the worst attack on the capital in decades.
But the attack by suspected Islamist militant gunmen who killed 12 people at the office of a satirical weekly on Wednesday - followed by the still unexplained killing of a policewoman in a shootout in southern Paris on Thursday morning - didn't stop her going to work.
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