Unravel Me: Chapter 36
Unravel Me (Shatter Me Book 2)
Warnerâs gaze is locked onto mine.
Heâs looking at me, eyes raw with emotion and Iâm not sure I even know him anymore. Iâm not sure I understand him, Iâm not sure I know what heâs going to do when he lifts the gun with a strong, steady hand and points it directly at my face.
âHurry up,â Anderson says. âThe sooner you do this, the sooner you can move on. Now get this over withââ
But Warner cocks his head. Turns around.
Points the gun at his father.
I actually gasp.
Anderson looks bored, irritated, annoyed. He runs an impatient hand across his face before he pulls out another gunâmy other gunâfrom his pocket. Itâs unbelievable.
Father and son, both threatening to kill each other.
âPoint the gun in the right direction, Aaron. This is ridiculous.â
Aaron.
I almost laugh in the middle of this insanity.
Warnerâs first name is Aaron.
âI have no interest in killing her,â Warner Aaron he says to his father.
âFine.â Anderson points the gun at my head again. âIâll do it then.â
âShoot her,â Warner says, âand I will put a bullet through your skull.â
Itâs a triangle of death. Warner pointing a gun at his father, his father pointing a gun at me. Iâm the only one without a weapon and I donât know what to do.
If I move, Iâm going to die. If I donât move, Iâm going to die.
Anderson is smiling.
âHow charming,â he says. Heâs wearing an easy, lazy grin, his grip on the gun in his hand so deceptively casual. âWhat is it? Does she make you feel brave, boy?â A pause. âDoes she make you feel strong?â
Warner says nothing.
âDoes she make you wish you could be a better man?â A little chuckle. âHas she filled your head with dreams about your future?â A harder laugh.
âYou have lost your mind,â he says, âover a stupid child whoâs too much of a coward to defend herself even with the barrel of a gun pointed straight at her face. This,â he says, pointing the gun harder in my direction, âis the silly little girl youâve fallen in love with.â He exhales a short, hard breath. âI donât know why Iâm surprised.â
A new tightness in his breathing. A new tightness in his grip around the gun in his hand. These are the only signs that Warner is even remotely affected by his fatherâs words.
âHow many times,â Anderson asks, âhave you threatened to kill me? How many times have I woken up in the middle of the night to find you, even as a little boy, trying to shoot me in my sleep?â He cocks his head. âTen times? Maybe fifteen? I have to admit Iâve lost count.â He stares at Warner. Smiles again. âAnd how many times,â he says, his voice so much louder now, âwere you able to go through with it? How many times did you succeed? How many times,â he says, âdid you burst into tears, apologizing, clinging to me like some dementedââ
âShut your mouth,â Warner says, his voice so low, so even, his frame so still itâs terrifying.
âYou are weak,â Anderson spits, disgusted. âToo pathetically sentimental. Donât want to kill your own father? Too afraid itâll break your miserable heart?â
Warnerâs jaw tenses.
âShoot me,â Anderson says, his eyes dancing, bright with amusement. âI said shoot me!â he shouts, this time reaching for Warnerâs injured arm, grabbing him until his fingers are clenched tight around the wound, twisting his arm back until Warner actually gasps from the pain, blinking too fast, trying desperately to suppress the scream building inside of him. His grip on the gun in his good hand wavers, just a little.
Anderson releases his son. Pushes him so hard that Warner stumbles as he tries to maintain his balance. His face is chalk-white. The sling wrapped around his arm is seeping with blood.
âSo much talk,â Anderson says, shaking his head. âSo much talk and never enough follow-through. You embarrass me,â he says to Warner, face twisted in repulsion. âYou make me sick.â
A sharp crack.
Anderson backhands Warner in the face so hard Warner actually sways for a moment, already unsteady from all the blood heâs losing. But he doesnât say a word.
He doesnât make a sound.
He stands there, bearing the pain, blinking fast, jaw so tight, staring at his father with absolutely no emotion on his face; thereâs no indication heâs just been slapped but the bright red mark across his cheek, his temple, and part of his forehead. But his arm sling is more blood than cotton now, and he looks far too ill to be on his feet.
Still, he says nothing.
âDo you want to threaten me again?â Anderson is breathing hard as he speaks. âDo you still think you can defend your little girlfriend? You think Iâm going to allow your stupid infatuation to get in the way of everything Iâve built? Everything Iâve worked toward?â Andersonâs gun is no longer pointed at me. He forgets me long enough to press the barrel of his gun into Warnerâs forehead, twisting it, jabbing it against his skin as he speaks. âHave I taught you nothing?â he shouts. âHave you learned nothing from meââ
I donât know how to explain what happens next.
All I know is that my hand is around Andersonâs throat and Iâve pinned him to the wall, so overcome by a blind, burning, all-consuming rage that I think my brain has already caught on fire and dissolved into ash.
I squeeze a little harder.
Heâs sputtering. Heâs gasping. Heâs trying to get at my arms, clawing limp hands at my body and heâs turning red and blue and purple and Iâm enjoying it. Iâm enjoying it so, so much.
I think Iâm smiling.
I bring my face less than an inch away from his ear and whisper, âDrop the gun.â
He does.
I drop him and grab the gun at the same time.
Anderson is wheezing, coughing on the floor, trying to breathe, trying to speak, trying to reach for something to defend himself with and Iâm amused by his pain. Iâm floating in a cloud of absolute, undiluted hatred for this man and all that heâs done and I want to sit and laugh until the tears choke me into a contented sort of silence. I understand so much now. So much.
âJulietteââ
âWarner,â I say, so softly, still staring at Andersonâs body slumped on the floor in front of me, âIâm going to need you to leave me alone right now.â
I weigh the gun in my hands. Test my finger on the trigger. Try to remember what Kenji taught me about taking aim. About keeping my hands and arms steady. Preparing for the kickbackâthe recoilâof the shot.
I tilt my head. Take inventory of his body parts.
âYou,â Anderson finally manages to gasp, âyouââ
I shoot him in the leg.
Heâs screaming. I think heâs screaming. I canât really hear anything anymore. My ears feel stuffed full of cotton, like someone might be trying to speak to me or maybe someone is shouting at me but everything is muffled and I have too much to focus on right now to pay attention to whatever annoying things are happening in the background. All I know is the reverberation of this weapon in my hand. All I hear is the gunshot echoing through my head. And I decide Iâd like to do it again.
I shoot him in the other leg.
Thereâs so much screaming.
Iâm entertained by the horror in his eyes. The blood ruining the expensive fabric of his clothes. I want to tell him he doesnât look very attractive with his mouth open like that but then I think he probably wouldnât care about my opinion anyway. Iâm just a silly girl to him. Just a silly little girl, a stupid child with a pretty face whoâs too much of a coward, he said, too much of a coward to defend herself. And oh, wouldnât he like to keep me. Wouldnât he like to keep me as his little pet. And I realize no. I shouldnât bother sharing my thoughts with him. Thereâs no point wasting words on someone whoâs about to die.
I take aim at his chest. Try to remember where the heart is.
Not quite to the left. Not quite in the center.
Justâthere.
Perfect.