When the guards escorted her into the room, silence fell. The woman who had once terrified an entire community now stood before the witnesses — calm, collected, and completely unshaken. The air was heavy, the clock ticking loudly as she was asked if she had any final words.
For a moment, she said nothing. Then she lifted her head, looked straight at the warden, and said in a cold, steady voice:
“You can take my life, but you’ll never take the truth. They only believed what they wanted to believe.”
Gasps rippled through the small crowd. Even the officers who had stood firm for years looked uneasy. She didn’t ask for forgiveness. She didn’t shed a tear. Instead, she gave a faint smile — the kind that chilled everyone watching.
A priest whispered a prayer beside her, but she turned away. Her eyes stayed fixed on the glass, where the victims’ families watched. “You wanted me gone,” she said quietly, “but after tonight, you’ll still see me in your dreams.”
Those were her final words. Seconds later, the chamber went silent. But that eerie sentence — filled with defiance and mystery — still echoes for those who were there. Some say it was her last act of control. Others believe it was the final proof that she had no remorse at all.
One thing’s certain: no one present that night ever forgot what she said.