Unravel Me: Chapter 20
Unravel Me (Shatter Me Book 2)
Warner is standing not 20 feet away from me.
His suit is tailor-made and closely fitted to his form in a shade of black so rich itâs almost blinding. His shoulders are draped in an open peacoat the color of mossy trunks 5 shades darker than his green, green eyes; the bright gold buttons are the perfect complement to his golden hair. Heâs wearing a black tie. Black leather gloves. Shiny black boots.
He looks immaculate.
Flawless, especially as he stands here among the dirt and destruction, surrounded by the bleakest colors this landscape has to offer. Heâs a vision of emerald and onyx, silhouetted in the sunlight in the most deceiving way. He could be glowing. That could be a halo around his head. This could be the worldâs way of making an example out of irony. Because Warner is beautiful in ways even Adam isnât.
Because Warner is not human.
Nothing about him is normal.
Heâs looking around, eyes squinting against the morning light, and the wind blows open his unbuttoned coat long enough for me to catch a glimpse of his arm underneath. Bandaged. Bound in a sling.
So close.
I was so close.
The soldiers hovering around him are waiting for orders, waiting for something, and I canât tear my eyes away. I canât help but experience a strange thrill in being so close to him, and yet so far away. It feels almost like an advantageâbeing able to study him without his knowledge.
He is a strange, strange, twisted boy.
I donât know if I can forget what he did to me. What he made me do. How I came so close to killing all over again. I will hate him forever for it even though Iâm sure Iâll have to face him again.
One day.
I never thought Iâd see Warner on the compounds. I had no idea he even visited the civiliansâthough, in truth, I never knew much about how he spent his days unless he spent them with me. I have no idea what heâs doing here.
He finally says something to the soldiers and they nod, once, quickly. Then disappear.
I pretend to be focused on something just to the right of him, careful to keep my head down and cocked slightly to the side so he canât catch a glimpse of my face even if he does look in my direction. My left hand reaches up to tug my hat down over my ears, and my right hand pretends to sort trash, pretends to pick out pieces of scraps to salvage for the day.
This is how some people make their living. Another miserable occupation.
Warner runs his good hand over his face, covering his eyes for just a moment before his hand rests on his mouth, pressing against his lips as though he has something he canât bear to say.
His eyes look almost⦠worried. Though Iâm sure Iâm just reading him wrong.
I watch him as he watches the people around him. I watch him closely enough to be able to notice that his gaze lingers on the small children, the way they run after each other with an innocence that says they have no idea what kind of world theyâve lost. This bleak, dark place is the only thing theyâve ever known.
I try to read Warnerâs expression as he studies them, but heâs careful to keep himself completely neutral. He doesnât do more than blink as he stands perfectly still, a statue in the wind.
A stray dog is heading straight toward him.
Iâm suddenly petrified. Iâm worried for this scrappy creature, this weak, frozen little animal probably seeking out small bits of food, something to keep it from starving for the next few hours. My heart starts racing in my chest, the blood pumping too fast and too hard and
I donât know why I feel like something terrible is about to happen.
The dog bolts right into the backs of Warnerâs legs, as if itâs half blind and canât see where itâs going. Itâs panting hard, tongue lolling to the side like it doesnât know how to get it back in. It whines and whimpers a little, slobbering all over Warnerâs very exquisite pants and Iâm holding my breath as the golden boy turns around. I half expect him to take out his gun and shoot the dog right in the head.
Iâve already seen him do it to a human being.
But Warnerâs face breaks apart at the sight of the small dog, cracks forming in the perfect cast of his features, surprise lifting his eyebrows and widening his gaze for just a moment. Long enough for me to notice.
He looks around, his eyes swift as they survey his surroundings before he scoops the animal into his arms and disappears around a low fenceâone of the short, squat fences that are used to section off squares of land for each compound. Iâm suddenly desperate to see what heâs going to do and Iâm feeling anxious, so anxious, still unable to breathe.
Iâve seen what Warner can do to a person. Iâve seen his callous heart and his unfeeling eyes and his complete indifference, his cool, collected demeanor unshaken after killing a man in cold blood. I can only imagine what he has planned for an innocent dog.
I have to see it for myself.
I have to get his face out of my head and this is exactly what I need. Itâs proof that heâs sick, twisted, that heâs wrong, and will always be wrong.
If only I could stand up, I could see him. I could see what heâs doing to that poor animal and maybe I could find a way to stop him before itâs too late but I hear Castleâs voice, a loud whisper calling us. Telling us the coast is clear to move forward now that Warner is out of sight. âWe all move, and we move separately,â he says. âStick to the plan! No one trails anyone else. We all meet at the drop-off. If you donât make it, we will leave you behind. You have thirty minutes.â
Kenji is tugging on my arm, telling me to get to my feet, to focus, to look in the right direction. I look up long enough to see that the rest of the group has already dispersed; Kenji, however, refuses to budge. He curses under his breath until finally I stand up. I nod. I tell him I understand the plan and motion for him to move on without me. I remind him that we canât be seen together. That we cannot walk in groups or pairs. We cannot be conspicuous.
Finally, finally, he turns to go.
I watch Kenji leave. Then I take a few steps forward only to spin around and dart back to the corner of the compound, sliding my back up against the wall, hidden from view.
My eyes scan the area until I spot the fence where I last saw Warner; I tip up on my toes to peer over.
I have to cover my mouth to keep from gasping out loud.
Warner is crouched on the ground, feeding something to the dog with his good hand. The animalâs quivering, bony body is huddled inside of Warnerâs open coat, shivering as its stubby limbs try to find warmth after being frozen for so long. The dog wags its tail hard, pulling back to look Warner in the eye only to plow into the warmth of his jacket again. I hear Warner laugh.
I see him smile.
Itâs the kind of smile that transforms him into someone else entirely, the kind of smile that puts stars in his eyes and a dazzle on his lips and I realize Iâve never seen him like this before. Iâve never even seen his teethâso straight, so white, nothing less than perfect. A flawless, flawless exterior for a boy with a black, black heart. Itâs hard to believe thereâs blood on the hands of the person Iâm staring at. He looks soft and vulnerableâso human. His eyes are squinting from all his grinning and his cheeks are pink from the cold.
He has dimples.
Heâs easily the most beautiful thing Iâve ever seen.
And I wish Iâd never seen it.
Because something inside of my heart is ripping apart and it feels like fear, it tastes like panic and anxiety and desperation and I donât know how to understand the image in front of me. I donât want to see Warner like this. I donât want to think of him as anything other than a monster.
This isnât right.
I shift too fast and too far in the wrong direction, suddenly too stupid to find my footing and hating myself for wasting time I couldâve used to escape. I know Castle and Kenji would be ready to kill me for taking such a risk but they donât understand what itâs like in my head right now, they donât understand what Iâmâ
âHey!â he barks. âYou thereââ
I look up without intending to, without realizing that Iâve responded to Warnerâs voice until itâs too late. Heâs up, frozen in place, staring straight into my eyes, his good hand paused midmovement until it falls limp at his side, his jaw slack; stunned, temporarily stupefied.
I watch as the words die in his throat.
Iâm paralyzed, caught in his gaze as he stands there, his chest heaving so hard and his lips ready to form the words that will surely sentence me to my death, all because of my stupid, senseless, idioticâ
âWhatever you do, donât scream.â
Someone closes a hand over my mouth.