In this frightening scene, Eva murders her own son, seemingly the child she loved most. It’s impossible to fully grasp why Eva would do such a thing—the complexity of motives behind the act is too great—but even here, there’s an element of harsh mercy in her behavior. She knows that Plum is in pain, and she can’t stand to see him that way. It’s also slightly comforting that we see this from Plum’s perspective, and recognize that he feels his death as something pleasant and welcome. This scene introduces fire as an important symbol in the book: something simultaneously comforting, purifying, and destructive. It also foreshadows another tragic scene of a mother killing her child out of mercy—the central act of Morrison’s famous novel
Beloved.