Remnant

Chapter 601,883 wordsCompleted
  • First contact with the Crakers – On the second Friday of March, Jimmy (now insisting on the name Snowman) appears before the Crakers for the first time, wearing the standard‑issue Rejoov khaki tropical uniform and fake‑leather sandals. The Crakers, who have never seen textiles, ask who he is; Snowman declares his new name, rejects all his former identities (Jimmy, Jim, Thickney) and says he has been sent by Crake and Oryx to “take you to a new place.”
  • Teaching the Crakers – Snowman answers their blunt questions about his loose skin, his “feathers” (the stubble on his chest), and invents a story that Oryx gave him those feathers. He treats the Crakers like “blank pages,” feeling both amused and bored by his ability to shape their belief.
  • Planning the migration – He maps a route from the dome (Paradice) to a seashore and a park near an arboretum, promising more food and a better life. He gathers a light cache of supplies, loads his spray‑gun with virtual bullets, and rehearses a marching order (tallest men in front, women and children behind, the rest of the men behind) that he claims comes from Crake. He warns the Crakers to report any moving things immediately.
  • Leaving Paradice – At dawn Snowman punches the final door code, opens the bubble and leads the Crakers out. They see the corpses of Crake (a husk on the ground) and Oryx (face‑down, wrapped in silk). Snowman tells the Crakers the bodies are “part of the chaos” that Crake and Oryx are clearing away for them.
  • Violent encounters – While crossing the ruined RejoovenEsense Compound, a man in the terminal stage of the disease shouts “Take me with you!” Snowman, fearing contagion, shoots him. A weeping woman then lunges at a child; Snowman shoots her as well. The Crakers watch, not linking the gunfire to the deaths, and Snowman explains the victims as “bad dreams” of Crake.
  • Guiding through the wasteland – Snowman continues to shepherd the Crakers through No Man’s Land and the pleeblands, improvising answers to their questions about smoke, dead children, and the ruined buildings (“It is a thing of Crake”). He admits his own fatigue, shakes, and the need for a drink, but persists in the role of reluctant shepherd.
  • Reaching the shore – By evening the procession arrives at the coast. The sea is calm, the sunset paints the water pink and red, white sand stretches out, and towers loom over the surf with birds perched. The Crakers marvel at the feathers they see and ask what the place is called. Snowman answers simply, “It is called home.”
  • Underlying tone – Throughout the chapter Snowman oscillates between a bored, manipulative narrator who enjoys his power over the naïve Crakers and a weary caretaker who feels the weight of responsibility for their safety in a world where his creators are dead and the world is collapsing.