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    The chap­ter opens with the nar­ra­tor’s haunt­ing mem­o­ry of Aunt Har­ri­et, whose death is shroud­ed in silence and mys­tery. Her final words, “I am not ashamed—I am only beat­en,” linger in the nar­ra­tor’s mind, along­side vivid night­mares of her life­less body in a riv­er. The tragedy is linked to her baby, deemed a “mutant” for being slight­ly dif­fer­ent, a devi­a­tion from the rigid soci­etal Def­i­n­i­tion. This inci­dent instills deep fear in the nar­ra­tor, who begins to grap­ple with their own hid­den dif­fer­ences, pray­ing des­per­ate­ly to be “nor­mal” but wak­ing each day unchanged.

    The nar­ra­tor’s ter­ror is com­pound­ed by the com­mu­ni­ty’s vehe­ment con­dem­na­tion of mutants, echoed in reli­gious rhetoric like “Accursed is the Mutant!” Mutants are por­trayed as threats to divine order, likened to the chaos of the Fringes or the “unname­able crea­tures” of the South. The baby’s “lit­tle thing”—a minor anomaly—becomes a sym­bol of the per­il of dif­fer­ence, ampli­fy­ing the nar­ra­tor’s anx­i­ety. The kitchen pan­el’s accusato­ry mes­sage, “ACCURSED IS THE MUTANT IN THE SIGHT OF GOD AND MAN,” tor­ments them, rein­forc­ing their iso­la­tion and fear of dis­cov­ery.

    Seek­ing solace, the nar­ra­tor con­fides in Uncle Axel, recount­ing Aunt Har­ri­et’s fate and their own dread of being exposed. Uncle Axel reas­sures them that their secret is safe, cit­ing the death of anoth­er boy, Wal­ter Brent, as a plau­si­ble expla­na­tion for a past close call. How­ev­er, the nar­ra­tor remains unset­tled, ques­tion­ing the fate of Sophie, anoth­er child marked by dif­fer­ence. Uncle Axel avoids specifics but urges cau­tion, empha­siz­ing the impor­tance of self-con­trol to avoid detec­tion.

    Uncle Axel chal­lenges the com­mu­ni­ty’s dog­ma, ques­tion­ing the blind adher­ence to the “true image” of human­i­ty. He dis­miss­es nos­tal­gic myths about the Old Peo­ple’s per­fec­tion, point­ing out the futil­i­ty of rigid­ly fol­low­ing their path. When the nar­ra­tor cites reli­gious doctrine—“God sent Tribu­la­tion upon them”—Uncle Axel hints at the incom­pre­hen­si­ble scale of the cat­a­stro­phe, sug­gest­ing it was more than nat­ur­al dis­as­ters. His cryp­tic remarks leave the nar­ra­tor with lin­ger­ing uncer­tain­ty, under­scor­ing the chap­ter’s themes of fear, dif­fer­ence, and the strug­gle against oppres­sive norms.

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