Takeout

Chapter 551,481 wordsCompleted

The chapter opens with Snowman (Jimmy) alone in his small dwelling, haunted by the memory of a conversation with Oryx that he has replayed countless times. Oryx arrives soaked from a shower after teaching the Crakers, wearing a kimono patterned with red‑and‑orange butterflies and a braid tied with pink ribbon. Jimmy greets her breathlessly, immediately asks where Crake is, and learns that Crake is outside Paradice in a meeting and does not want intimacy while he is “thinking.”

Their exchange turns to the question of love. Jimmy asks Oryx if she loves him; her laugh and cryptic response leave him unsettled and questioning what love even means in their constrained world. Impulsively, Jimmy suggests they run away together, away from Paradice and Crake. Oryx dismisses the idea, insisting that Crake needs them both and that they are already together, reinforcing her loyalty to Crake’s vision.

As the dialogue continues, Jimmy’s paranoia escalates. He worries that Crake may be watching them through hidden microphones or micro‑cameras. He recalls a past Crake remark—“Would you kill someone you loved to spare them pain?”—and a later “standing order” that, should anything happen to Crake, Jimmy must take charge of the Paradice Project. Jimmy feels incompetent, lacking scientific skill, and doubts his ability to lead.

Crake’s manipulation is rehearsed in Jimmy’s mind: Crake calls Jimmy a “generalist” capable of sitting around and still leading, implying specialists would lack empathy for the Crakers. Crake also jokes that if he disappears, Oryx would “commit suttee,” a dark hint at his hubris.

Oryx extracts a promise from Jimmy: if Crake is gone and she cannot be there, Jimmy must look after the Crakers, treating them like children who need kindness. Jimmy reluctantly swears the promise, viewing it as purely theoretical and costing him nothing.

Underlying tensions surface: jealousy (Jimmy suspects Crake may be jealous of his relationship with Oryx, while Oryx claims jealousy is a human flaw Crake rejects), power dynamics (Oryx appears both lover and servant of Crake’s ideology), and Jimmy’s insecurity (he feels like a “toy‑boy” or court jester, doubting his value and marketable skills).

The chapter closes with Snowman alone again, replaying the conversation for the millionth time, wondering how much Oryx truly guessed about his future, and contemplating the weight of the promise he just made. The take‑out food he intended to order remains an unattainable comfort.