“You will have to go now,” the jailer said to Kramer.
The reporter left, leaving Stone, Hewitt, and the priest with Allison. Stone looked at his watch: seven thirty-five.
Finally, Hewitt spoke. “A phone line at the main desk will be kept free,” he said, then he was quiet again.
“Stone,” Allison said, “they asked me to fill out a form, giving next of kin and so forth. I gave them your name to handle any formalities.”
“Of course,” Stone said, “but that’s not going to be necessary.”
She smiled slightly. “It seemed like a good idea at the time.” She smoothed her skirt. “I’ve also left some instructions with Leslie,” she said. “To be opened…” She let the sentence trail off.
“Everything will be done, Allison,” Leslie said. “I feel that I have let you down, you know.”
“Don’t you believe that for a moment,” she said. “Both you and Stone have been perfectly wonderful. I could not have been better represented. I really mean that.” She put her hand in Stone’s.
There was the sound of footsteps in the front hall. Someone, more than one person, had come into the jail. Then it was quiet again. Stone willed himself not to look at his watch, but it was growing dark in the cell. Suddenly, the single bare bulb came on, making them blink.
Then, from down the hall, came the sound of men marching in step. Stone looked up to find four policemen standing outside the cell. One of them unlocked the door. At that moment, Stone heard the telephone ring. The policeman closed the door, turned his back, and leaned on it, nodding to another officer, who strode back down the hall. He was gone for half a minute, then returned. He looked at his senior officer and shook his head.
No, Stone thought, no, this can’t be. That must have been the prime minister. He stood up. “The phone call?…”
The senior policeman opened the cell door. “Not related to these events,” he said. “Mrs. Manning, please step out into the corridor.”
Stone made to follow her, but an officer stepped between them. Behind him, another officer was tying Allison’s hands behind her back.
“Say your good-byes,” the senior officer said to her. She looked at Stone, panic in her face.
“Allison…” he began, then stopped.
“Good-bye,” she said. “You have all been very kind to me.” She was trembling, but she did not cry.
Then, simultaneously, a policeman opened the big door to the inner courtyard while another closed the cell door and locked it, with Stone, Hewitt, and the priest still inside.
“I want to go with her,” Stone said, but the officer shook his head.
“No farther,” he said.
Stone looked out the door and saw a corner of the scaffold in the gloomy light. He tried to speak, but nothing came out.
An officer stood on either side of Allison, took her arm, and marched her into the courtyard. The senior officer slammed the stout door shut behind them.
Stone turned to Leslie Hewitt. “Is there nothing we can do?”
Leslie looked at the floor and shook his head slowly. “We have done all we can.”
Stone looked at the priest, who avoided his gaze. Then, sooner than Stone had expected, he heard the sound of the trap flying open, followed by a thunk, then silence. He leaned his forehead against the bars; he felt like weeping, but he could not.
The outside door opened, the senior officer and one other stepped inside, and the door closed behind them. The cell door was unlocked and the three men were waved out and marched down the corridor to the front desk.
Allison’s duffel sat on the desk, and an officer waited, pen in hand, for Stone to sign for her belongings. Stone signed. “What about the body?” he asked the man.
“The body will be cremated and the ashes scattered at sea,” the officer said. “It’s how we do things here.”
“It is so,” Hewitt said.
Stone picked up the duffel and walked out of the jail into a lovely St. Marks evening. Hilary Kramer and Jim Forrester were sitting on a bench next to the outside door. Kramer jumped up. “What’s happening? Did you hear from the prime minister?”
Stone shook his head. “No.”