Unravel Me: Chapter 54
Unravel Me (Shatter Me Book 2)
The guards let me into Warnerâs room without a single word.
My eyes dart around the now partially furnished space, heart pounding, fists clenching, blood racing racing racing. Something is wrong. Something has happened. Warner was perfectly fine when I left him last night and I canât imagine what couldâve inspired him to lose his mind like this but Iâm scared.
Someone has given him a chair. I realize now how he was able to dent the steel door. No one shouldâve given him a chair.
Warner is sitting in it, his back to me. Only his head is visible from where Iâm standing.
âYou came back,â he says.
âOf course I came back,â I tell him, inching closer. âWhatâs wrong? Is something wrong?â
He laughs. Runs a hand through his hair. Looks up at the ceiling.
âWhat happened?â Iâm so worried now. âAre youâdid something happen to you? Are you okay?â
âI need to get out of here,â he says. âI need to leave. I canât be here anymore.â
âWarnerââ
âDo you know what he said to me? Did he tell you what he said to me?â
Silence.
âHe just walked into my room this morning. He walked right in here and said he wanted to have a conversation with me.â Warner laughs again, loud, too loud. Shakes his head. âHe told me I can change. He said I might have a gift like everyone else hereâthat maybe I have an ability. He said I can be different, love. He said he believes I can be different if I want to be.â
Castle told him.
Warner stands up but doesnât turn around all the way and I see heâs not wearing a shirt. He doesnât even seem to mind that I can see the scars on his back, the word IGNITE tattooed on his body. His hair is messy, untamed, falling into his face and his pants are zipped but unbuttoned and Iâve never seen him so disheveled before. He presses his palms against the stone wall, arms outstretched; his body is bowed, his head down as if in prayer. His entire body is tense, tight, muscles straining against his skin. His clothes are in a pile on the floor and his mattress is in the middle of the room and the chair he was just sitting in is facing the wall, staring at nothing at all and I realize heâs begun to lose his mind in here.
âCan you believe that?â he asks me, still not looking in my direction. âCan you believe he thinks I can just wake up one morning and be different? Sing happy songs and give money to the poor and beg the world to forgive me for what Iâve done? Do you think thatâs possible? Do you think I can change?â
He finally turns to face me and his eyes are laughing, his eyes are like emeralds glinting in the setting sun and his mouth is twitching, suppressing a smile. âDo you think I could be different?â He takes a few steps toward me and I donât know why it affects my breathing. Why I canât find my mouth.
âItâs just a question,â he says, and heâs right in front of me and I donât even know how he got there. Heâs still looking at me, his eyes so focused and so simultaneously unnerving, brilliant, blazing with something I can never place.
My heart it will not be still it refuses to stop skipping skipping skipping
âTell me, Juliette. Iâd love to know what you really think of me.â
âWhy?â Barely a whisper in an attempt to buy some time.
Warnerâs lips flicker up and into a smile before they fall open, just a bit, just enough to twitch into a strange, curious look that lingers in his eyes. He doesnât answer. He doesnât say a word. He only moves closer to me, studying me and Iâm frozen in place, my mouth stuffed full of the seconds he doesnât speak and Iâm fighting every atom in my body, every stupid cell in my system for being so attracted to him.
Oh.
God.
I am so horribly attracted to him.
The guilt is growing inside of me in stacks, settling on my bones, snapping me in half. Itâs a cable twisted around my neck, a caterpillar crawling across my stomach. Itâs the night and midnight and the twilight of indecision. Itâs too many secrets I no longer contain.
I donât understand why I want this.
I am a terrible person.
And itâs like he sees what Iâm thinking, like he can feel the change happening in my head, because suddenly heâs different. His energy slows down, his eyes are deep, troubled, tender; his lips are soft, still slightly parted and now the air in this room is too tight, too full of cotton and I feel the blood rushing around in my head, crashing into every rational region of my brain.
I wish someone would remind me how to breathe.
âWhy canât you answer my question?â Heâs looking so deeply into my eyes that Iâm surprised I havenât buckled under the intensity and I realize then, right in this moment I realize that everything about him is intense. Nothing about him is manageable or easy to compartmentalize. Heâs too much. Everything about him is too much. His emotions, his actions, his anger, his aggression.
His love.
Heâs dangerous, electric, impossible to contain. His body is rippling with an energy so extraordinary that even when heâs calmed down itâs almost palpable. It has a presence.
But Iâve developed a strange, frightening faith in who Warner really is and who he has the capacity to become. I want to find the 19-year-old boy who would feed a stray dog. I want to believe in the boy with a tortured childhood and an abusive father. I want to understand him. I want to unravel him.
I want to believe he is more than the mold he was forced into.
âI think you can change,â I hear myself saying. âI think anyone can change.â
And he smiles.
Itâs a slow, delighted smile. The kind of smile that breaks into a laugh and lights up his features and makes him sigh. He closes his eyes. His face is so touched, so amused. âItâs just so sweet,â he says. âSo unbearably sweet. Because you really believe that.â
âOf course I do.â
He finally looks at me when he whispers, âBut youâre wrong.â
âWhat?â
âIâm heartless,â he says to me, his words cold, hollow, directed inward. âIâm a heartless bastard and a cruel, vicious being. I donât care about peopleâs feelings. I donât care about their fears or their futures. I donât care about what they want or whether or not they have a family, and Iâm not sorry,â he says. âIâve never been sorry for anything Iâve done.â
It actually takes me a few moments to find my head. âBut you apologized to me,â I tell him. âYou apologized to me just last nightââ
âYouâre different,â he says, cutting me off. âYou donât count.â
âIâm not different,â I tell him. âIâm just another person, just like everyone else. And youâve proven you have the capacity for remorse. For compassion. I know you can be kindââ
âThatâs not who I am.â His voice is suddenly hard, suddenly too strong. âAnd Iâm not going to change. I canât erase the nineteen miserable years of my life. I canât misplace the memories of what Iâve done. I canât wake up one morning and decide to live on borrowed hopes and dreams. Someone elseâs promises for a brighter future.
âAnd I wonât lie to you,â he says. âIâve never given a damn about others and I donât make sacrifices and I do not compromise. I am not good, or fair, or decent, and I never will be. I canât be. Because to try to be any of those things would be embarrassing.â
âHow can you think that?â I want to shake him. âHow can you be ashamed of an attempt to be better?â
But heâs not listening. Heâs laughing. Heâs saying, âCan you even picture me? Smiling at small children and handing out presents at birthday parties? Can you picture me helping a stranger? Playing with the neighborâs dog?â
âYes,â I say to him. âYes I can.â Iâve already seen it, I donât say to him.
âNo.â
âWhy not?â I insist. âWhy is that so hard to believe?â
âThat kind of life,â he says, âis impossible for me.â
âBut why?â
Warner clenches and unclenches 5 fingers before running them through his hair. âBecause I feel it,â he says, quieter now. âIâve always been able to feel it.â
âFeel what?â I whisper.
âWhat people think of me.â
âWhatâ¦?â
âTheir feelingsâtheir energyâitâsâI donât know what it is,â he says, frustrated, stumbling backward, shaking his head. âIâve always been able to tell. I know how everyone hates me. I know how little my father cares for me. I know the agony of my motherâs heart. I know that youâre not like everyone else.â His voice catches. âI know youâre telling the truth when you say you donât hate me. That you want to and you canât. Because thereâs no ill will in your heart, not toward me, and if there was I would know. Just like I know,â he says, his voice husky with restraint, âthat you felt something when we kissed. You felt the same thing I did and youâre ashamed of it.â
Iâm dripping panic everywhere.
âHow can you know that?â I ask him. âH-howâyou canât just know things like thatââ
âNo one has ever looked at me like you do,â he whispers. âNo one ever talks to me like you do, Juliette. Youâre different,â he says. âYouâre so different. You would understand me. But the rest of the world does not want my sympathies. They donât want my smiles. Castle is the only man on Earth whoâs been the exception to this rule, and his eagerness to trust and accept me only shows how weak this resistance is. No one here knows what theyâre doing and theyâre all going to get themselves slaughteredââ
âThatâs not trueâthat canât be trueââ
âListen to me,â Warner says, urgently now. âYou must understandâthe only people who matter in this wretched world are the ones with real power. And you,â he says, âyou have power. You have the kind of strength that could shake this planetâthat could conquer it. And maybe itâs still too soon, maybe you need more time to recognize your own potential, but I will always be waiting. I will always want you on my side. Because the two of usâthe two of us,â he says, he stops. He sounds breathless. âCan you imagine?â His eyes are intent on mine, eyebrows drawn together. Studying me. âOf course you can,â he whispers. âYou think about it all the time.â
I gasp.
âYou donât belong here,â he says. âYou donât belong with these people. They will drag you down with them and get you killedââ
âI have no other choice!â Iâm angry now, indignant. âIâd rather stay here with those who are trying to helpâtrying to make a difference! At least theyâre not murdering innocent peopleââ
âYou think your new friends have never killed before?â Warner shouts, pointing at the door. âYou think Kent has never killed anyone? That Kenji has never put a bullet through a strangerâs body? They were my soldiers!â he says. âI saw them do it with my own eyes!â
âThey were trying to survive,â I tell him, shaking, fighting to ignore the terror of my own imagination. âTheir loyalties were never with The Reestablishmentââ
âMy loyalties,â he says, âdo not lie with The Reestablishment. My loyalties lie with those who know how to live. I only have two options in this game, love.â Heâs breathing hard. âKill. Or be killed.â
âNo,â I tell him, backing away, feeling sick. âIt doesnât have to be like that. You donât have to live like that. You could get away from your father, from that life. You donât have to be what he wants you to beââ
âThe damage,â he says, âis already done. Itâs too late for me. Iâve already accepted my fate.â
âNoâWarnerââ
âIâm not asking you to worry about me,â he says. âI know exactly what my future looks like and Iâm okay with it. Iâm happy to live in solitude. Iâm not afraid of spending the rest of my life in the company of my own person. I do not fear loneliness.â
âYou donât have to have that life,â I tell him. âYou donât have to be alone.â
âI will not stay here,â he says. âI just wanted you to know that. Iâm going to find a way out of here and Iâm going to leave as soon as I have the chance. My vacation,â he says, âhas officially come to an end.â