“What else does he deserve?”

“Nothing,” Anders said. “Not⁠—not after what he did.”

On the way out they passed the place where Julia lay. Bemmon had knocked her against the wall with such force that a sharp projection of rock had cut a deep gash in her forehead. A woman was wiping the blood from her face and she lay limply, still unconscious; a frail shadow of the bold girl she had once been with the new life she would try to give them an almost unnoticeable little bulge in her starved thinness.

The lookout point was an outjutting spur of the ridge, six hundred feet from the caves and in full view of them. A lone tree stood there, its dead limbs thrust like white arms through the brown foliage of the limbs that still lived. Craig and Barber waited under the tree, Bemmon between them. The lowering sun shone hot and bright on Bemmon’s face as he squinted back toward the caves at the approach of Lake and the other two.

He twisted to look at Barber. “What is it⁠—why did you bring me here?” There was the tremor of fear in his voice. “What are you going to do to me?”

Barber did not answer and Bemmon turned back toward Lake. He saw the rope in Anders’ hand and his face went white with comprehension.

“No!”

He threw himself back with a violence that almost tore him loose. “ No⁠—no! ”

Schroeder stepped forward to help hold him and Lake took the rope from Anders. He fashioned a noose in it while Bemmon struggled and made panting, animal sounds, his eyes fixed in horrified fascination on the rope.

When the noose was finished he threw the free end of the rope over the white limb above Bemmon. He released the noose and Barber caught it, to draw it snug around Bemmon’s neck.

57