Unravel Me: Chapter 29
Unravel Me (Shatter Me Book 2)
The morning is a blur.
Thereâs so much to do, so much to prepare for, and there are so many people getting ready. But I know that ultimately this is my battle; I have unfinished business to deal with. I know this meeting has nothing to do with the supreme commander. He has no reason to care so much about me. Iâve never even met the man; I should be nothing more than expendable to him.
This is Warnerâs move.
It has to be Warner who asked for me. This has something and everything to do with him; itâs a smoke signal telling me he still wants me and heâs not yet given up. And I have to face him.
I only wonder how he managed to get his father to pull these strings for him.
I guess Iâll find out soon enough.
Someone is calling my name.
I stop in place.
Spin around.
James.
He runs up to me just outside the dining hall. His hair, so blond; his eyes, so blue, just like his older brotherâs. But Iâve missed his face in a way that has nothing to do with how much he reminds me of Adam.
James is a special kid. A sharp kid. The kind of 10-year-old who is always underestimated. And heâs asking me if we can talk. He points to one of the many corridors.
I nod. Follow him into an empty tunnel.
He stops walking and turns away for a moment. Stands there looking uncomfortable. Iâm stunned he even wants to talk to me; I havenât spoken a single word to him in 3 weeks. He started spending time with the other kids at Omega Point shortly after we arrived, and then things somehow got awkward between us. He stopped smiling when heâd see me, stopped waving hello from across the dining hall. I always imagined heâd heard rumors about me from the other kids and decided he was better off staying away. And now, after everything thatâs happened with Adamâafter our very public display in the tunnelâIâm shocked he wants to say anything to me.
His head is still down when he whispers, âI was really, really mad at you.â
And the stitches in my heart begin to pop. One by one.
He looks up. Looks at me like heâs trying to gauge whether or not his opening words have upset me, whether or not Iâm going to yell at him for being honest with me. And I donât know what he sees in my face but it seems to disarm him. He shoves his hands into his pockets. Rubs his sneaker in circles on the floor. Says, âYou didnât tell me you killed someone before.â
I take an unsteady breath and wonder if there will ever be a proper way to respond to a statement like that. I wonder if anyone other than James will ever even say something like that to me. I think not. So I just nod. And say, âIâm really sorry. I shouldâve told yââ
âThen why didnât you?â he shouts, shocking me. âWhy didnât you tell me? Why did everyone else know except for me?â
And Iâm floored for a moment, floored by the hurt in his voice, the anger in his eyes. I never knew he considered me a friend, and I realize I should have. James hasnât known many people in his life; Adam is his entire world. Kenji and I were 2 of the only people heâd ever really met before we got to Omega Point. And for an orphaned child in his circumstances, it mustâve meant a lot to have new friends. But Iâve been so concerned with my own issues that it never occurred to me that James would care so much. I never realized my omission wouldâve seemed like a betrayal to him. That the rumors he heard from the other children mustâve hurt him just as much as they hurt me.
So I decide to sit down, right there in the tunnel. I make room for him to sit down beside me. And I tell him the truth. âI didnât want you to hate me.â
He glares at the floor. Says, âI donât hate you.â
âNo?â
He picks at his shoelaces. Sighs. Shakes his head. âAnd I didnât like what they were saying about you,â he says, quieter now. âThe other kids. They said you were mean and nasty and I told them you werenât. I told them you were quiet and nice. And that you have nice hair. And they told me I was lying.â
I swallow, hard, punched in the heart. âYou think I have nice hair?â
âWhy did you kill him?â James asks me, eyes so open, so ready to be understanding. âWas he trying to hurt you? Were you scared?â
I take a few breaths before I answer.
âDo you remember,â I say to him, feeling unsteady now, âwhat Adam told you about me? About how I canât touch anyone without hurting them?â
James nods.
âWell, thatâs what happened,â I say. âI touched him and he died.â
âBut why?â he asks. âWhyâd you touch him? Because you wanted him to die?â
My face feels like cracked china. âNo,â I tell him, shaking my head. âI was youngâonly a couple of years older than you, actually. I didnât know what I was doing. I didnât know that I could kill people by touching them. Heâd fallen down at the grocery store and I was just trying to help him get to his feet.â A long pause. âIt was an accident.â
James is silent for a while.
He takes turns looking at me, looking at his shoes, at the knees heâs tucked up against his chest. Heâs staring at the ground when he finally whispers, âIâm sorry I was mad at you.â
âIâm sorry I didnât tell you the truth,â I whisper back.
He nods. Scratches a spot on his nose. Looks at me. âSo can we be friends again?â
âYou want to be friends with me?â I blink hard against the stinging in my eyes. âYouâre not afraid of me?â
âAre you going to be mean to me?â
âNever.â
âThen why would I be afraid of you?â
And I laugh, mostly because I donât want to cry. I nod too many times. âYes,â I say to him. âLetâs be friends again.â
âGood,â he says, and gets to his feet. âBecause I donât want to eat lunch with those other kids anymore.â
I stand up. Dust off the back of my suit. âEat with us,â I tell him. âYou can always sit at our table.â
âOkay.â He nods. Looks away again. Tugs on his ear a little. âSo did you know Adam is really sad all the time?â He turns his blue eyes on me.
I canât speak. Canât speak at all.
âAdam says heâs sad because of you.â James looks at me like heâs waiting for me to deny it. âDid you hurt him by accident too? He was in the medical wing, did you know that? He was sick.â
And I think Iâm going to fall apart, right there, but somehow I donât. I canât lie to him. âYes,â I tell James. âI hurt him by accident, but nowân-now I stay away from him. So I canât hurt him anymore.â
âThen whyâs he still so sad? If youâre not hurting him anymore?â
Iâm shaking my head, pressing my lips together because I donât want to cry and I donât know what to say. And James seems to understand.
He throws his arms around me.
Right around my waist. Hugs me and tells me not to cry because he believes me. He believes I only hurt Adam by accident. And the little boy, too. And then he says, âBut be careful today, okay? And kick some ass, too.â
Iâm so stunned that it takes me a moment to realize that not only did he use a bad word, he just touched me for the very first time. I try to hold on for as long as I can without making things awkward between us, but I think my heart is still in a puddle somewhere on the floor.
And thatâs when I realize: everyone knows.
James and I walk into the dining hall together and I can already tell that the stares are different now. Their faces are full of pride, strength, and acknowledgment when they look at me. No fear. No suspicion. Iâve officially become one of them. I will fight with them, for them, against the same enemy.
I can see whatâs in their eyes because Iâm beginning to remember what it feels like.
Hope.
Itâs like a drop of honey, a field of tulips blooming in the springtime. Itâs fresh rain, a whispered promise, a cloudless sky, the perfect punctuation mark at the end of a sentence.
And itâs the only thing in the world keeping me afloat.