Fish

Chapter 171,973 wordsCompleted

At dusk the sky deepens to indigo as a procession of women and men from the Craker village arrives bearing Snowman’s weekly fish, wrapped in leaves and presented as “the fish Oryx gives you.” The women are described in flawless, fashion‑model terms, while the men kill the fish with rocks, sharing the guilt of the kill. Snowman eats the fish ravenously, savoring eyes and cheeks, then wipes his fingers on his sheet and returns the bones to the sea, claiming Oryx wants the bones for new Children and noting the practical need to keep scavengers away.

The villagers, with luminescent green eyes like the Children of Oryx’s rabbit, gather around the fire, their scent described as a “crateful of citrus” from Crake’s mosquito‑repellent chemistry. Mosquitoes are attracted to Snowman’s fresh blood, but he resists swatting them.

In exchange for the fish, the villagers demand a story about Crake. Snowman performs the customary “Chaos” myth: he retrieves a faded pink plastic pail from his concrete‑slab cache, fills it with earth and water, and demonstrates chaos being poured away. He narrates that humanity’s endless killing of Oryx’s Children led Oryx to ask Crake to eliminate chaos, resulting in the Great Rearrangement and the Great Emptiness, the world the Crakers now inhabit. The villagers chant liturgically, praising Crake and the Children of Oryx, treating him as a deity.

Snowman feels bitter that Crake, who despised gods, is deified, and resents that he himself is not glorified. He realizes he must maintain the myth or lose his audience, even though it feeds his ego. When the women request an origin story for Crake himself, exhausted Snowman rebuffs them, saying “Crake was never born; he came down out of the sky, like thunder,” hinting he may embellish the tale later.

The chapter emphasizes ritualized violence, myth‑making, Snowman’s conflicted role as sustainer and storyteller, and the tension between creator and creation.