Idol

Chapter 622,153 wordsCompleted

Snowman raids the abandoned Paradice storeroom, taking dried food, tins, a flashlight, batteries, maps, matches, candles, ammunition, duct‑tape, water bottles, painkillers, antibiotic gel, sun‑proof shirts, a small scissors‑knife, and his spray‑gun. He slips past the silhouettes of Crake and Oryx, locks the air‑lock and steps into the predawn mist. Using a pre‑drawn map he cuts across the main artery and the golf course, stops to drink, then moves through a residential block and a schoolyard. At a side gate he shoots a lone pigoon scout, skirts a locked watchtower, and passes through “No Man’s Land,” wary of shifting weeds and unseen movement. He enters the pleeblands, wanders narrow streets, and climbs a tree to rest, eating a tin of SoyOBoy wieners and drinking water while treating a throbbing, infected leg wound with antibiotic gel. From the tree he muses on mortality, arboreal instincts Crake praised, and the futility of his own death, slipping into dark humor about purgatory. After sheltering briefly in an empty condo during a storm, he limps onward along the “Snowman Fish Path” toward the coastal village of the Crakers. Arriving, he encounters a semi‑ceremonial gathering around a scare‑crow‑like effigy made of a jar‑lid eye, a black eye, and a mop on the chin. The Crakers chant with hub‑caps, metal rods, bottle‑spoons, and an oil drum, producing a rhythm that sounds like “Mun… Amen?” but is not a hymn. The children recognize Snowman, touch his floral sarong, and proudly display a picture they have crafted of him from the effigy’s parts. Snowman worries that any symbolic art could trigger Crake’s anti‑symbolic doctrine, but the Crakers are ecstatic. When asked where Crake is, a exhausted Snowman tells them he is “in the bubble” (Paradice) and has turned himself into a “tree,” which the children misunderstand, asking whether Crake can talk or be eaten; Snowman improvises, describing a “tree with a mouth.” The Craker women notice his swollen foot, fetch a cooked fish wrapped in leaves, and feed it to him; he eats despite fever, trying not to alarm them. The Crakers explain that after an object has served its purpose it must be returned to its origin, and they begin dismantling the picture‑idol, intending to carry its parts back to the beach, symbolizing Oryx’s teaching that used things must go home. Snowman watches his symbolic “beard” and “head” being taken apart, mirroring his own physical deterioration, and lies half‑conscious as the Crakers tend him and celebrate his return.