He dies professing his love for Sephy and hearing the echo of her loving words in his ear. So they choose Callum's death over losing their child and he's executed. Sephy is given the same choice but the pair decide their baby must live. While awaiting his hanging, Sephy's extremist father visits him and says that if he can convince Sephy to have an abortion, his sentence will be commuted to a prison stay instead. Callum has been arrested for his involvement in kidnapping Sephy and, as a result, sentenced to death. In the final chapters of Malorie Blackman's novel Noughts & Crosses, protagonists and star-crossed lovers Callum and Sephy are left with an impossible decision after she becomes pregnant. Those who're keen on a surprise at the end of the show should stop reading now. Many viewers will have already devoured the book cover to cover, but for those who haven't, there may be a few questions about the Noughts & Crosses book ending and whether it matches up to what the BBC series portrays. Alongside BBC Three's Normal People and Netflix's To All The Boys sequel, Noughts & Crosses is one of the most hotly anticipated adaptations of the year. But some adaptations get more hype than others. Novels being adapted for TV isn't exactly a new phenomenon.
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