She agrees to more or less give in and consent because she knows the alternative - brutal sexual assault - as it's apparently happened to her before.
I think that's basically it, but I think it's even more complicated than that. Her line to Bennie,
"You don't know the way," is her way of telling him that she knows how badly this might end up if she doesn't go and still thinks of Bennie as a sort of innocent. (He won't be for long.)
Even more telling is when she approaches Kristofferson and says,
"Please don't." I interpreted that as meaning she's asking him not to kill Bennie, and is willing to give "herself up" so to speak to save Bennie's life. (And the look back mentioned in other posts, I think, is just a reponse to the violence she's witnessed, and the surprise that Bennie has become a killer. Moments later, she recognizes what Bennie means to do with Alfredo Garcia's grave, and asks to leave. In fact, she's never the same after that.)
I'll admit it's not Peckinpah's clearest sequence in terms of logic, and it would have helped if Kristofferson were a more expressive actor so we could read what he
really intended to do.
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