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Chapter 593,284 wordsCompleted

After the air‑lock showdown, Snowman seals the inner door, leaves Crake and Oryx dead, and retreats to his room where he drinks Scotch to numb himself. His swollen foot improves; he eats cold ravioli, a half Jolt‑bar, and later forces himself to eat soy‑toast while discarding his clothes as “bondage gear.” A buzzer announces the return of two groups (White Sedge and Black Rhino), which he ignores. A high‑ranking CorpSeCorps operative calls demanding Crake’s help with a mysterious microbe outbreak; Snowman dismisses the caller with profanity and learns the operative suggests looking for Crake in Bermuda. He checks on the engineered Crakers three times daily, observing their grazing, sleeping, mating dances, and occasional uneasy murmurs about Oryx’s presence, but concludes he cannot help them. Over two weeks he follows news of riots, transport breakdowns, supermarket raids, fires, mass exoduses, and the rise of “God’s Gardeners.” Media treats the chaos like sport, while street preachers lament the lack of apocalyptic signs. A hyper‑virulent virus called JUVE (Jetspeed Ultra Virus Extraordinary) spreads worldwide; broadcasts show panic, conspiracy theories, and official advisories, while health systems collapse. Snowman’s attempts to contact anyone—hotline, his father, email—fail; all lines are dead. He survives on Crake’s emergency frozen meals, skunk‑weed, and increasing amounts of alcohol, talking aloud to himself and oscillating between denial and despair. He revisits Crake’s nihilistic sayings about limited human empathy and the speed of change, questioning whether Crake engineered JUVE as a final experiment, whether he intended Snowman to kill him, and whether a vaccine ever existed. In a moment of purpose he finds blank paper and writes a hand‑written “To whom it may concern” note stating he has little time, that JUVE was created inside the Paradice dome, embedded in the BlyssPluss product, timed to spread in waves, and that Crake had made and destroyed a vaccine, being the only one fully aware of the plan. The note ends abruptly; Snowman crumples the pages. He reflects on the futility of his situation: the Crakers will eventually run out of food and air, the world outside is dying, he may be immune to the virus but not to the ensuing madness, and his empty computer screen looks back like a discarded girlfriend. He wonders if anyone will ever read his final words.