Purring

Chapter 262,764 wordsCompleted

Morning ritual: a line of men, led by Abraham Lincoln, urinate along a prescribed perimeter twice daily, a practice derived from Crake’s theory that male urine repels wolvogs, rakunks, bobkittens and pigoons. Snowman observes the ritual, notes the men’s statuesque, baroque appearance, and briefly considers stealing saturated earth for protection before rejecting the idea.

Healing scene: at the circle’s centre three women and a man tend a child bitten by a bobkitten (a “Child of Oryx”). They use “purring,” a frequency engineered by Crake from feline ultrasound, to accelerate bone and skin repair. Snowman recalls Crake’s costly experiments to embed purring in the Crakers and reflects on the successful application.

Bobkitten attack: the child’s bite is attributed to a bobkitten that has begun hunting the Children of Oryx. Adults discuss driving the predator away with rocks and plan an apology ritual to Oryx, invoking a prayer‑like communion that Snowman suspects Crake tried to suppress by removing a “G‑spot” in the brain.

Daily life: women tend a central fire fed with dung patties and care for the children; men perform the scent‑marking. The Crakers’ diet includes caecotrophs—re‑eaten semi‑digested plant material borrowed from leporid biology. Snowman remembers arguing with Crake about this practice, which Crake dismissed as “eating your own shit,” though he justified it as nutritionally essential.

Journey announcement: surrounded by the attentive community, Snowman declares he will embark on a longer expedition (two to three days) to try to find Crake and report the bobkitten incident. Children beg to accompany him; Snowman refuses, insisting only he can see Crake. Abraham Lincoln and other men offer to join for protection, but Snowman declines, citing safety, the children’s mental fragility, and his desire to remain the sole authority.

Authority reinforcement: Snowman invokes Crake’s watch (“Crake says he’ll be watching over you”) to cement his command. Adults repeat affirmations of Crake’s and Oryx’s guardianship (“Crake watches over us in the daytime, Oryx at night”). Simone de Beauvoir, resembling Dolores, and other women echo gratitude toward Crake.

Inner monologue: as Snowman walks back along the Snowman Fish Path, he feels vexation, envy, and self‑pity. He curses Crake (“Crake, you dickhead”), hears a child‑like “boohoo” echo, and is chastised by an imagined voice of his father urging him to be the man of the place. He forces himself onward, battling his own emotional turmoil while maintaining the façade of unshakable authority.