Unravel Me: Chapter 24
Unravel Me (Shatter Me Book 2)
Kenji finds me first.
Heâs standing in the middle of my training room. Looking around like heâs never seen the place before, even though Iâm sure that canât be true. I still donât know exactly what he does, but itâs at least become clear to me that Kenji is one of the most important people at Omega Point. Heâs always on the move. Always busy. No oneâexcept for me, and only latelyâreally sees him for more than a few moments at a time.
Itâs almost as if he spends the majority of his days⦠invisible.
âSo,â he says, nodding his head slowly, taking his time walking around the room with his hands clasped behind his back. âThat was one hell of a show back there. Thatâs the kind of entertainment we never really get underground.â
Mortification.
Iâm draped in it. Painted in it. Buried in it.
âI mean, I just have to sayâthat last line? âI wish I could love you lessâ? That was genius. Really, really nice. I think Winston actually shed a tearââ
âSHUT UP, KENJI.â
âIâm serious!â he says to me, offended. âThat was, I donât know. It was kind of beautiful. I had no idea you guys were so intense.â
I pull my knees up to my chest, burrow deeper into the corner of this room, bury my face in my arms. âNo offense, but I really donât want to t-talk to you right now, okay?â
âNope. Not okay,â he says. âYou and me, we have work to do.â
âNo.â
âCome on,â he says. âGet. Up.â He grabs my elbow, tugging me to my feet as I try to take a swipe at him.
I wipe angrily at my cheeks, scrub at the stains my tears left behind. âIâm not in the mood for your jokes, Kenji. Please just go away. Leave me alone.â
âNo one,â he says, âis joking.â Kenji picks up one of the bricks stacked against the wall. âAnd the world isnât going to stop waging war against itself just because you broke up with your boyfriend.â
I stare at him, fists shaking, wanting to scream.
He doesnât seem concerned. âSo what do you do in here?â he asks. âYou just sit around trying to⦠what?â He weighs the brick in his hand. âBreak this stuff?â
I give up, defeated. Fold myself onto the floor.
âI donât know,â I tell him. I sniff away the last of my tears. Try to wipe my nose. âCastle kept telling me to âfocusâ and âharness my Energy.ââ I use air quotes to illustrate my point. âBut all I know about myself is that I can break thingsâI donât know why it happens. So I donât know how he expects me to replicate what Iâve already done. I had no idea what I was doing then, and I donât know what Iâm doing now, either. Nothingâs changed.â
âHold up,â Kenji says, dropping the brick back onto the stack before falling on the mats across from me. He splays out on the ground, body stretched out, arms folded behind his head as he stares up at the ceiling. âWhat are we talking about again? What events are you supposed to be replicating?â
I lie back against the mats, too; mimic Kenjiâs position. Our heads are only a few inches apart. âRemember? The concrete I broke back in Warnerâs psycho room. The metal door I attacked when I was looking for A-Adam.â My voice catches and I have to squeeze my eyes shut to quell the pain.
I canât even say his name right now.
Kenji grunts. I feel him nodding his head on the mats. âAll right. Well, what Castle told me is that he thinks thereâs more to you than just the touching thing. That maybe you also have this weird superhuman strength or something.â A pause. âThat sound about right to you?â
âI guess.â
âSo what happened?â he asks, tilting his head back to get a good look at me. âWhen you went all psycho-monster on everything? Do you remember if there was a trigger?â
I shake my head. âI donât really know. When it happens, itâs likeâitâs like I really am completely out of my mind,â I tell him. âSomething changes in my head and it makes me⦠it makes me crazy. Like, really, legitimately insane.â I glance over at him but his face betrays no emotion. He just blinks, waiting for me to finish. So I take a deep breath and continue. âItâs like I canât think straight. Iâm just so paralyzed by the adrenaline and I canât stop it; I canât control it. Once that crazy feeling takes over, it needs an outlet. I have to touch something. I have to release it.â
Kenji props himself up on one elbow. Looks at me. âSo what gets you all crazy, though?â he asks. âWhat were you feeling? Does it only happen when youâre really pissed off?â
I take a second to think about it before I say, âNo. Not always.â I hesitate. âThe first time,â I tell him, my voice a little unsteady, âI wanted to kill Warner because of what he made me do to that little kid. I was so devastated. I was angryâI was really angryâbut I was also⦠so sad.â I trail off. âAnd then when I was looking for Adam?â Deep breaths. âI was desperate. Really desperate. I had to save him.â
âAnd what about when you went all Superman on me? Slamming me into the wall like that?â
âI was scared.â
âAnd then? In the research labs?â
âAngry,â I whisper, my eyes unfocused as I stare up at the ceiling, remembering the rage of that day. âI was angrier than Iâve ever been in my entire life. I never even knew I could feel that way. To be so mad. And I felt guilty,â I add, so quietly. âGuilty for being the reason why Adam was in there at all.â
Kenji takes a deep, long breath. Pulls himself up into a sitting position and leans against the wall. He says nothing.
âWhat are you thinkingâ¦?â I ask, shifting to sit up and join him.
âI donât know,â Kenji finally says. âBut itâs obvious that all of these incidents were the result of really intense emotions. Makes me think the whole system must be pretty straightforward.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âLike there has to be some kind of trigger involved,â he says. âLike, when you lose control, your body goes into automatic self-protect mode, you know?â
âNo?â
Kenji turns so heâs facing me. Crosses his legs underneath him. Leans back on his hands. âLike, listen. When I first found out I could do this invisible thing? I mean, it was an accident. I was nine years old. Scared out of my mind. Fast-forward through all the shitty details and my point is this: I needed a place to hide and couldnât find one. But I was so freaked out that my body, like, automatically did it for me. I just disappeared into the wall. Blended or whatever.â He laughs. âTripped me the hell out, because I didnât realize whatâd happened for a good ten minutes. And then I didnât know how to turn myself back to normal. It was crazy. I actually thought I was dead for a couple of days.â
âNo way,â I gasp.
âYup.â
âThatâs crazy.â
âThatâs what I said.â
âSo⦠so, what? You think my body taps into its defense mode when I freak out?â
âPretty much.â
âOkay.â I think. âWell, how am I supposed to tap into my defense mode? How did you figure yours out?â
He shrugs. âOnce I realized I wasnât some kind of ghost and I wasnât hallucinating, it actually became kind of cool. I was a kid, you know? I was excited, like I could tie on a cape and kill bad guys or something. I liked it. And it became this part of me that I could access whenever I wanted. But,â he adds, âit wasnât until I really started training that I learned how to control and maintain it for long periods of time. That took a lot of work. A lot of focus.â
âA lot of work.â
âYeahâI mean, all of this takes a lot of work to figure out. But once I accepted it as a part of me, it became easier to manage.â
âWell,â I say, leaning back again, blowing out an exasperated breath, âIâve already accepted it. But it definitely hasnât made things easier.â
Kenji laughs out loud. âMy ass youâve accepted it. You havenât accepted anything.â
âIâve been like this my entire life, KenjiâIâm pretty sure Iâve accepted itââ
âNo.â He cuts me off. âHell no. You hate being in your own skin. You canât stand it. Thatâs not called acceptance. Thatâs calledâI donât knowâthe opposite of acceptance. You,â he says, pointing a finger at me, âyou are the opposite of acceptance.â
âWhat are you trying to say?â I shoot back. âThat I have to like being this way?â I donât give him a chance to respond before I say, âYou have no idea what itâs like to be stuck in my skinâto be trapped in my body, afraid to breathe too close to anything with a beating heart. If you did, youâd never ask me to be happy to live like this.â
âCome on, JulietteâIâm just sayingââ
âNo. Let me make this clear for you, Kenji. I kill people. I kill them. Thatâs what my âspecialâ power is. I donât blend into backgrounds or move things with my mind or have really stretchy arms. You touch me for too long and you die. Try living like that for seventeen years and then tell me how easy it is to accept myself.â
I taste too much bitterness on my tongue.
Itâs new for me.
âListen,â he says, his voice noticeably softer. âIâm not trying to judge, okay? Iâm just trying to point out that because you donât want it, you might subconsciously be sabotaging your efforts to figure it out.â He puts his hands up in mock defeat. âJust my two cents. I mean, obviously youâve got some crazy powers going on. You touch people and bam, done. But then you can crush through walls and shit, too? I mean, hell, Iâd want to learn how to do that, are you kidding me? That would be insane.â
âYeah,â I say, slumping against the wall. âI guess that part wouldnât be so bad.â
âRight?â Kenji perks up. âThat would be awesome. And thenâyou know, if you leave your gloves onâyou could just crush random stuff without actually killing anyone. Then you wouldnât feel so bad, right?â
âI guess not.â
âSo. Great. You just need to relax.â He gets to his feet. Grabs the brick he was toying with earlier. âCome on,â he says. âGet up. Come over here.â
I walk over to his side of the room and stare at the brick heâs holding. He gives it to me like heâs handing over some kind of family heirloom. âNow,â he says. âYou have to let yourself get comfortable, okay? Allow your body to touch base with its core. Stop blocking your own Energy. Youâve probably got a million mental blocks in your head. You canât hold back anymore.â
âI donât have mental blocksââ
âYeah you do.â He snorts. âYou definitely do. You have severe mental constipation.â
âMental whatââ
âFocus your anger on the brick. On the brick,â he says to me. âRemember. Open mind. You want to crush the brick. Remind yourself that this is what you want. Itâs your choice. Youâre not doing this for Castle, youâre not doing it for me, youâre not doing it to fight anyone. This is just something you feel like doing. For fun. Because you feel like it. Let your mind and body take over. Okay?â
I take a deep breath. Nod a few times. âOkay. I think Iâmââ
âHoly shit.â He lets out a low whistle.
âWhat?â I spin around. âWhat happenedââ
âHow did you not just feel that?â
âFeel whatââ
âLook in your hand!â
I gasp. Stumble backward. My hand is full of what looks like red sand and brown clay pulverized into tiny particles. The bigger chunks of brick crumble to the floor and I let the debris slip through the cracks between my fingers only to lift the guilty hand to my face.
I look up.
Kenji is shaking his head, shaking with laughter. âI am so jealous right now you have no idea.â
âOh my God.â
âI know. I KNOW. So badass. Now think about it: if you can do that to a brick, imagine what you could do to the human bodyââ
That wasnât the right thing to say.
Not now. Not after Adam. Not after trying to pick up the pieces of my hopes and dreams and fumbling to glue them back together. Because now thereâs nothing left. Because now I realize that somewhere, deep down, I was harboring a small hope that Adam and I would find a way to work things out.
Somewhere, deep down, I was still clinging to possibility.
And now thatâs gone.
Because now itâs not just my skin Adam has to be afraid of. Itâs not just my touch but my grip, my hugs, my hands, a kissâanything I do could injure him. Iâd have to be careful just holding his hand. And this new knowledge, this new information about just exactly how deadly I amâ
It leaves me with no alternative.
I will forever and ever and ever be alone because no one is safe from me.
I fall to the floor, my mind whirring, my own brain no longer a safe space to inhabit because I canât stop thinking, I canât stop wondering, I canât stop anything and itâs like Iâm caught in what could be a head-on collision and Iâm not the innocent bystander.
Iâm the train.
Iâm the one careening out of control.
Because sometimes you see yourselfâyou see yourself the way you could beâthe way you might be if things were different. And if you look too closely, what you see will scare you, itâll make you wonder what you might do if given the opportunity. You know thereâs a different side of yourself you donât want to recognize, a side you donât want to see in the daylight. You spend your whole life doing everything to push it down and away, out of sight, out of mind. You pretend that a piece of yourself doesnât exist.
You live like that for a long time.
For a long time, youâre safe.
And then youâre not.