Stone went aboard Expansive and ran down below. In a moment he had the satellite phone up and running and a call in to Bill Eggers’s home.
“Hello?”
“Thank God you’re there,” Stone said.
“Stone! What’s up? How did the trial go?”
“She was convicted.”
“What?”
“I’m not kidding, Bill, and we’ve got less than twenty-four hours to save her life. Here’s what I want you to do.”
“I’ve got a pencil; shoot.”
“Start with the State Department: call the duty officer and ask him to alert the Caribbean desk that an innocent American citizen is about to be hanged in St. Marks. Demand that they call the secretary of state and have him bring to bear every ounce of influence he can muster. No, wait—first call the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee—it’s Jesse Helms, God help us—and get him to call the secretary of state. Call Senators Dodd and Lieberman of Connecticut and get them onto him as well. Hell, tell them to call the president.”
“You think they’ll do that?”
“They might; we have to try. Call both Phil Woodman and Max Weld and see if you can get them to make some calls. Then call your PR people and tell them to start calling reporters at home and the wire services. We need an all-out mobilization between now and tomorrow morning. Everything should be directed to the prime minister of St. Marks; it’s all in his hands now. Tell the PR people to call travel editors, too; we’ve got to let them know that hanging Allison will kill their tourist business. Jim Forrester is calling a couple of them.”
“Who?”
“Forrester is down here doing a piece for The New Yorker, but he’s done a lot of travel writing.”
“Okay. Anything else?”
“Anything you can think of, Bill. I’m absolutely desperate, and we don’t have a minute to waste. I want the prime minister to wake up tomorrow morning to the sound of his phone ringing; I want his fax machine flooded with indignant letters; I want to scare the living shit out of him.”
“I’m on it.” Eggers hung up the phone.
Stone switched off the satellite phone and started getting Allison’s things together.
It was nearly midnight when Stone drove up to the jail door and found it locked. He rang the bell for three minutes before a sleepy, barefoot cop opened the door. “What do you want, mister?” he demanded.
“My name is Barrington; I’m Mrs. Manning’s lawyer. I want to see her.”
“You can’t do that, man; we’re shut down for the night. Anyway, she’s asleep; you don’t want to wake her up, do you?”
Stone shoved the duffel through the door. “Will you see that she gets these things, then?”
“Okay, I’ll do that first thing in the morning.”
“Thank you, and will you tell her I was here? Tell her not to worry; everything is going to be all right.”
The man looked surprised. “You want me to tell her that? Everything ain’t going to be all right, you know.”
“Just tell her what I said, please.”
“Okay, okay. Good night now.” He closed the door and shot the bolt.
Stone got back into Thomas’s car and drove back to the marina, worried, exhausted, and barely able to keep his eyes open.
Chapter
59
Stone got five fitful hours of sleep aboard Expansive, then threw himself into a cold shower so that he would be fully alert. He made some coffee, ate a muffin, and started making lists of things to do. At 7:00 A.M. he called Bill Eggers.