Unravel Me: Chapter 35
Unravel Me (Shatter Me Book 2)
He appears in a doorway directly across from where Iâm now standing and he looks exactly as I remember him. Golden hair and perfect skin and eyes too bright for their faded shade of emerald. His is an exquisitely handsome face, one I now realize heâs inherited from his father. Itâs the kind of face no one believes in anymore; lines and angles and easy symmetry thatâs almost offensive in its perfection. No one should ever want a face like that. Itâs a face destined for trouble, for danger, for an outlet to overcompensate for the excess it stole from an unsuspecting innocent.
Itâs overdone.
Itâs too much.
It frightens me.
Black and green and gold seem to be his colors. His pitch-black suit is tailored to his frame, lean but muscular, offset by the crisp white of his shirt underneath and complemented by the simple black tie knotted at his throat. He stands straight, tall, unflinching. To anyone else he would look imposing, even with his right arm still in a sling. Heâs the kind of boy who was only ever taught to be a man, who was told to erase the concept of childhood from his lifeâs expectations. His lips do not dare to smile, his forehead does not crease in distress. He has been taught to disguise his emotions, to hide his thoughts from the world and to trust no one and nothing. To take what he wants by whatever means necessary. I can see all of this so clearly.
But he looks different to me.
His gaze is too heavy, his eyes, too deep. His expression is too full of something I donât want to recognize. Heâs looking at me like I succeeded, like I shot him in the heart and shattered him, like I left him to die after he told me he loved me and I refused to think it was even possible.
And I see the difference in him now. I see whatâs changed.
Heâs making no effort to hide his emotions from me.
My lungs are liars, pretending they canât expand just to have a laugh at my expense and my fingers are fluttering, struggling to escape the prison of my bones as if theyâve waited 17 years to fly away.
Escape, is what my fingers say to me.
Breathe, is what I keep saying to myself.
Warner as a child. Warner as a son. Warner as a boy who has only a limited grasp of his own life. Warner with a father who would teach him a lesson by killing the one thing heâd ever be willing to beg for.
Warner as a human being terrifies me more than anything else.
The supreme commander is impatient. âSit down,â he says to his son, motioning to the couch he was just sitting on.
Warner doesnât say a word to me.
His eyes are glued to my face, my body, to the harness strapped to my chest; his gaze lingers on my neck, on the marks his father likely left behind and I see the motion in his throat, I see the difficulty he has swallowing down the sight in front of him before he finally rips himself away and walks into the living room. Heâs so like his father, Iâm beginning to realize. The way he walks, the way he looks in a suit, the way heâs so meticulous about his hygiene. And yet there is no doubt in my mind that he detests the man he fails so miserably not to emulate.
âSo I would like to know,â the supreme says, âhow, exactly, you managed to get away.â He looks at me. âIâm suddenly curious, and my son has made it very difficult to extract these details.â
I blink at him.
âTell me,â he says. âHow did you escape?â
Iâm confused. âThe first or the second time?â
âTwice! You managed to escape twice!â Heâs laughing heartily now; he slaps his knee. âIncredible. Both times, then. How did you get away both times?â
I wonder why heâs stalling for time. I donât understand why he wants to talk when so many people are waiting for a war and I canât help but hope that Adam and Kenji and Castle and everyone else havenât frozen to death outside. And while I donât have a plan, I do have a hunch. I have a feeling our hostages might be hidden in the kitchen. So I figure Iâll humor him for a little while.
I tell him I jumped out the window the first time. Shot Warner the second time.
The supreme is no longer smiling. âYou shot him?â
I spare a glance at Warner to see his eyes are still fixed firmly on my face, his mouth still in no danger of moving. I have no idea what heâs thinking and Iâm suddenly so curious I want to provoke him.
âYes,â I say, meeting Warnerâs gaze. âI shot him. With his own gun.â And the sudden tension in his jaw, the eyes that drop down to the hands heâs gripping too tightly in his lapâhe looks as if heâs wrenched the bullet out of his body with his own 5 fingers.
The supreme runs a hand through his hair, rubs his chin. I notice he seems unsettled for the first time since Iâve arrived and I wonder how itâs possible he had no idea how I escaped.
I wonder what Warner must have said about the bullet wound in his arm.
âWhatâs your name?â I ask before I can stop myself, catching the words just a moment too late. I shouldnât be asking stupid questions but I hate that I keep referring to him as âthe supreme,â as if heâs some kind of untouchable entity.
Warnerâs father looks at me. âMy name?â
I nod.
âYou may call me Supreme Commander Anderson,â he says, still confused. âWhy does that matter?â
âAnderson? But I thought your last name was Warner.â I thought he had a first name I could use to distinguish between him and the Warner Iâve grown to know too well.
Anderson takes a hard breath, spares a disgusted glance at his son. âDefinitely not,â he says to me. âMy son thought it would be a good idea to take his motherâs last name, because thatâs exactly the kind of stupid thing heâd do. The mistake,â he says, almost announcing it now, âthat he always makes, time and time againâallowing his emotions to get in the way of his dutyâitâs pathetic,â he says, spitting in Warnerâs direction. âWhich is why as much as Iâd like to let you live, my dear, Iâm afraid youâre too much of a distraction in his life. I cannot allow him to protect a person who has attempted to kill him.â He shakes his head. âI canât believe I even have to have this conversation. What an embarrassment heâs proven to be.â
Anderson reaches into his pocket, pulls out a gun, aims it at my forehead.
Changes his mind.
âIâm sick of always cleaning up after you,â he barks at Warner, grabbing his arm, pulling him up from the couch. He pushes his son directly across from me, presses the gun into his good hand.
âShoot her,â he says. âShoot her right now.â