doctors had suggested psychoanalysis. He suspected that he was

comfortable in his fear; and that possibility sickened him. 'I'm afraid

of my own shadow.

I'd be no good to you out there.

Dem P- Koontr 'You're not so frightened today as you were yesterday,'

she said tenderly. 'Tonight, you've coped damned well.

What about ' the elevator shaft? This morning, the thought of going

down that ladder would have overwhelmed you.'

He was trembling.

'This is your chance,' she said. 'You can overcome the fear. I know

you can.'

He licked his lips nervously. He went to the pile of gear in front of

the photographic backdrop. 'I wish I could be half as sure of me as you

are.'

Following him, she said, 'I understand what I'm asking of you. I know

it'll be the hardest thing you've ever done.'

He remembered the fall vividly. He could close his eyes any time-even

in a crowded room-and experience it again: his foot slipping, pain in

the chest as the safety harness tightened around him, pain abruptly

relieved as the rope snapped, breath caught like an unchewed lump of

meat in his throat, then floating and floating and floating.

The fall was only three hundred feet, and it had ended in a thick

cushion of snow; it had seemed a mile.

She said, 'If you stay here, you'll die; but it'll be an easier death.

The instant Bollinger sees you, he'll shoot to kill. He won't hesitate.

It'll be over within a second for you.' She took hold of his hand. 'But

it won't be like that for me.'

He looked up from the equipment. Her gray eyes radiated a fear as

primal and paralyzing as his own.

'Bollinger will use me,' she said.

He was unable to speak.

'He'll cut me,' she said.

Unbidden, an image of Edna Mowry came to him. She had been holding her

own bloody navel in her hand.

'He'll disfigure me.'

'Maybe-'

'He's the Butcher. Don't forget. Don't forget who he is.

What he is.'

'God help me,' he said.

'I don't want to die. But if I have to die, I don't want it to be like

that.' She shuddered. 'If we're not going to make the climb, if we're

just going to wait for him here, then I want you to kill me. Hit me

across the back of the head with something. Hit me very hard.'

Amazed, he said, 'What are you talking about?'

'Kill me before Bollinger can get to me. Graham, you owe me that much.

You've got to do it.'

'I love you,' he said weakly. 'You're everything. There's nothing else

for me.' She was somber, a mourner at her own execution.

'If you love me, then you understand why you've got to kill me.'

'I couldn't do it.'

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