Chapter Forty-Two

Chapter 421,721 wordsCompleted

The chapter opens with the tolling bell on a bleak morning in which the women have been denied breakfast. Offred and the other Handmaids file two‑by‑two through the main gate, surrounded by a heavy cordon of “Angels” in riot gear and armed “Salvagers.” The Wall’s hooks are empty because this is a women‑only district Salvaging, announced only the day before.

They walk the former student pathways past lecture‑hall buildings now called the Eyes, onto the lawn before the old library. A makeshift wooden stage has been erected, marked by three wooden posts and looping brown rope that smells of tar, which runs from the front of the stage like a fuse. On the stage sit the three condemned: two Handmaids and a Wife, each on a folding chair, hands folded, apparently sedated.

The women are ordered into their prescribed seating: Wives and daughters on chairs at the back, Econowives and Marthas around the edges and steps, and Handmaids at the front on small red‑velvet cushions (instead of kneeling on the ground). The weather is clear, and the narrator notes a dandelion in front of her.

A procession arrives: three women led by Aunt Lydia at the front, flanked by two black‑hooded Salvagers, followed by other Aunts. Lydia clears her throat, smiles nervously, and steps to the microphone. The PA system emits a screeching feedback; the crowd laughs uneasily. She repeats her greeting in a tinny voice and delivers the usual Gileadean platitudes about duty, but then announces a procedural change: previously, Salvagings were preceded by a public recital of the condemned’s crimes, but to prevent “outbreaks” of similar offenses, they will now proceed without such disclosures.

A murmur spreads as the women speculate about the crimes of the three condemned. The first condemned—described only by a cut hand on a prior conviction—might be guilty of unchastity, an attempted murder of her Commander, or of the Commander’s Wife. The Wife is presumed to have committed adultery or attempted escape. Aunt Lydia calls the first condemned “Ofcharles,” a name no one recognizes.

The condemned woman is brought forward, visibly drugged, with a groggy smile and a lopsided wink at the camera. Two Salvagers tie her hands behind her back. Offred hears retching behind her and hears Janine whisper that the woman is likely Janine. The woman is fitted with a white bag over her head, lifted onto a high stool, the noose placed around her neck like a vestment, and the stool is kicked away. Aunt Lydia covers the microphone to muffle the sounds. Offred reaches out and touches the tar‑smelling rope, places her hand on her heart, and silently signals her “unity” and “consent” with the Salvagers, despite the horror of the scene. The two black‑cloaked Salvagers seize the condemned’s kicking feet and pull her downwards. Overwhelmed, Offred looks away at the grass and focuses on describing the rope, its texture, and its symbolic presence as the chapter ends.