Unravel Me: Chapter 58
Unravel Me (Shatter Me Book 2)
âWhat?â
âHeâs not dead,â Warner says, âthough he is severely injured. I suspect they should be able to revive him.â
âWhatââIâm panicking, panicking in my bonesââwhat are you talking aboutââ
âPlease,â Warner says. âSit down. Iâll explain.â He folds himself onto the floor and pats the place beside him. I donât know what else to do and my legs are now officially too shaky to stand on their own.
My limbs spill onto the ground, both our backs against the wall, his right side and my left side divided only by a thin inch of air.
1
2
3 seconds pass.
âI didnât want to believe Castle when he told me I might have a⦠a gift,â Warner says. His voice is pitched so low that I have to strain to hear it even though Iâm only inches away. âA part of me hoped he was trying to drive me mad for his own benefit.â A small sigh. âBut it did make a bit of sense, if I really thought about it. Castle told me about Kent, too,â Warner says. âAbout how he can touch you and how theyâve discovered why. For a moment I wondered if perhaps I had a similar ability. One just as pathetic. Equally as useless.â He laughs. âI was extremely reluctant to believe it.â
âItâs not a useless ability,â I hear myself saying.
âReally?â He turns to face me. Our shoulders are almost touching. âTell me, love. What can he do?â
âHe can disable things. Abilities.â
âRight,â he says, âbut how will that ever help him? How could it ever help him to disable the powers of his own people? Itâs absurd. Itâs wasteful. It wonât help at all in this war.â
I bristle. Decide to ignore that. âWhat does any of this have to do with Kenji?â
He turns away from me again. His voice is softer when he says, âWould you believe me if I told you I could sense your energy right now? Sense the tone and weight of it?â
I stare at him, study his features and the earnest, tentative note in his voice. âYes,â I tell him. âI think Iâd believe you.â
Warner smiles in a way that seems to sadden him. âI can sense,â he says, taking a deep breath, âthe emotions youâre feeling most strongly. And because I know you, Iâm able to put those feelings into context. I know the fear youâre feeling right now, for example, is not directed toward me, but toward yourself, and what you think youâve done to Kenji. I sense your hesitationâyour reluctance to believe that it wasnât your fault. I feel your sadness, your grief.â
âYou can really feel that?â I ask.
He nods without looking at me.
âI never knew that was possible,â I tell him.
âI didnât eitherâI wasnât aware of it,â he says. âNot for a very long time. I actually thought it was normal to be so acutely aware of human emotions. I thought perhaps I was more perceptive than most. Itâs a big factor in why my father allowed me to take over Sector 45,â he tells me. âBecause I have an uncanny ability to tell whenever someone is hiding something, or feeling guilty, or, most importantly, lying.â A pause. âThat,â he says, âand because Iâm not afraid to deliver consequences if the occasion calls for it.
âIt wasnât until Castle suggested there might be something more to me that I really began to analyze it. I nearly lost my mind.â He shakes his head. âI kept going over it, thinking of ways to prove and disprove his theories. Even with all my careful deliberation, I dismissed it. And while I am a bit sorryâfor your sake, not for mineâthat Kenji had to be stupid enough to interfere tonight, I think it was actually quite serendipitous. Because now I finally have proof. Proof that I was wrong. That Castle,â he says, âwas right.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âI took your Energy,â he tells me, âand I didnât know I could. I could feel it all very vividly when the four of us connected. Adam was inaccessibleâwhich, by the way, explains why I never suspected him of being disloyal. His emotions were always hidden; always blocked off. I was naive and assumed he was merely robotic, devoid of any real personality or interests. He eluded me and it was my own fault. I trusted myself too much to be able to anticipate a flaw in my system.â
And I want to say, Adamâs ability isnât so useless after all, is it?
But I donât.
âAnd Kenji,â Warner says after a moment. He rubs his forehead. Laughs a little. âKenji was⦠very smart. A lot smarter than I gave him credit forâwhich, as it turns out, was exactly his tactic. Kenji,â he says, blowing out a breath, âwas careful to be an obvious threat as opposed to a discreet one.
âHe was always getting into troubleâdemanding extra portions at meals, fighting with the other soldiers, breaking curfew. He broke simple rules in order to draw attention to himself. In order to trick me into seeing him as an irritant and nothing more. I always felt there was something off about him, but I attributed it to his loud, raucous behavior and his inability to follow rules. I dismissed him as a poor soldier. Someone who would never be promoted. Someone who would always be recognized as a waste of time.â He shakes his head. Raises his eyebrows at the ground. âBrilliant,â he says, looking almost impressed. âIt was brilliant. His only mistake,â Warner adds after a moment, âwas being too openly friendly with Kent. And that mistake nearly cost him his life.â
âSoâwhat? You were trying to finish him off tonight?â Iâm still so confused, trying to make an attempt to refocus the conversation. âDid you hurt him on purpose?â
âNot on purpose.â Warner shakes his head. âI didnât actually know what I was doing. Not at first. Iâve only ever just sensed Energy; I never knew I could take it. But I touched yours simply by touching youâthere was so much adrenaline among the group of us that yours practically threw itself at me. And when Kenji grabbed my arm,â he says, âyou and I, we were still connected. And I⦠somehow I managed to redirect your power in his direction. It was quite accidental but I felt it happen. I felt your power rush into me. Rush out of me.â He looks up. Meets my eyes. âIt was the most extraordinary thing Iâve ever experienced.â
I think Iâd fall down if I werenât already sitting.
âSo you can takeâyou can just take other peopleâs powers?â I ask him.
âApparently.â
âAnd youâre sure you didnât hurt Kenji on purpose?â
Warner laughs, looks at me like Iâve just said something highly amusing. âIf I had wanted to kill him, I would have. And I wouldnât have needed such a complicated setup to accomplish it. Iâm not interested in theatrics,â he says. âIf I want to hurt someone, I wonât require much more than my own two hands.â
Iâm stunned into silence.
âIâm actually amazed,â Warner says, âhow you manage to contain so much without finding ways to release the excess. I could barely hold on to it. The transfer from my body to Kenjiâs was not only immediate, it was necessary. I couldnât tolerate the intensity for very long.â
âAnd I canât hurt you?â I blink at him, astonished. âAt all? My power just goes into you? You just absorb it?â
He nods. Says, âWould you like to see?â
And Iâm saying yes with my head and my eyes and my lips and Iâve never been more terrified to be excited in my life. âWhat do I have to do?â I ask him.
âNothing,â he says, so quietly. âJust touch me.â
My heart is beating pounding racing running through my body and Iâm trying to focus. Trying to stay calm. This is going to be fine, I say to myself. Itâs going to be fine. Itâs just an experiment. Thereâs no need to get so excited about being able to touch someone again, I keep saying to myself.
But oh, I am so, so excited.
He holds out his bare hand.
I take it.
I wait to feel something, some feeling of weakness, some depletion of my Energy, some sign that a transfer is taking place from my body to his but I feel nothing at all. I feel exactly the same. But I watch Warnerâs face as his eyes close and he makes an effort to focus. Then I feel his hand tighten around mine and he gasps.
His eyes fly open and his free hand goes right through the floor.
I jerk back, panicked. Iâm tipping sideways, my hands catching me from behind. I must be hallucinating. I must be hallucinating the hole in the floor not 4 inches from where Warner is still sitting on the ground. I mustâve been hallucinating when I saw his resting palm press too hard and go right through. I must be hallucinating everything. All of this. Iâm dreaming and Iâm sure Iâm going to wake up soon. That must be it.
âDonât be afraidââ
âH-how,â I stammer, âhow did you d-do thatââ
âDonât be frightened, love, itâs all right, I promiseâitâs new for me, tooââ
âMyâmy power? It doesnâtâyou donât feel any pain?â
He shakes his head. âOn the contrary. Itâs the most incredible rush of adrenalineâitâs unlike anything Iâve ever known. I actually feel a little light-headed,â he says, âin the best possible way.â He laughs. Smiles to himself. Drops his head into his hands. Looks up. âCan we do it again?â
âNo,â I say too quickly.
Heâs grinning. âAre you sure?â
âI canâtâI just, I still canât believe you can touch me. That you reallyâI meanââIâm shaking my headââthereâs no catch? There are no conditions? You touch me and no one gets hurt? And not only does no one get hurt, but you enjoy it? You actually like the way it feels to touch me?â
Heâs blinking at me now, staring like heâs not sure how to answer my question.
âWell?â
âYes,â he says, but itâs a breathless word.
âYes, what?â
I can hear how hard his heart is beating. I can actually hear it in the silence between us. âYes,â he says. âI like it.â
Impossible.
âYou never have to be afraid of touching me,â he says. âIt wonât hurt me. It can only give me strength.â
I want to laugh one of those strange, high-pitched, delusional laughs that signals the end of a personâs sanity. Because this world, I think, has a terrible, terrible sense of humor. It always seems to be laughing at me. At my expense. Making my life infinitely more complicated all the time. Ruining all of my best-laid plans by making every choice so difficult. Making everything so confusing.
I canât touch the boy I love.
But I can use my touch to strengthen the boy who tried to kill the one I love.
No one, I want to tell the world, is laughing.
âWarner.â I look up, hit with a sudden realization. âYou have to tell Castle.â
âWhy would I do that?â
âBecause he has to know! It would explain Kenjiâs situation and it could help us tomorrow! Youâll be fighting with us and it might come in handyââ
Warner laughs.
He laughs and laughs and laughs, his eyes brilliant, gleaming even in this dim light. He laughs until itâs just a hard breath, until it becomes a gentle sigh, until it dissolves into an amused smile. And then he grins at me until heâs grinning to himself, until he looks down and his gaze drops to my hand, the one lying limp on my lap and he hesitates just a moment before his fingers brush the soft, thin skin covering my knuckles.
I donât breathe.
I donât speak.
I donât even move.
Heâs hesitant, like heâs waiting to see if Iâll pull away and I should, I know I should but I donât. So he takes my hand. Studies it. Runs his fingers along the lines of my palm, the creases at my joints, the sensitive spot between my thumb and index finger and his touch is so tender, so delicate and gentle and it feels so good it hurts, it actually hurts. And itâs too much for my heart to handle right now.
I snatch back my hand in a jerky, awkward motion, face flushing, pulse tripping.
Warner doesnât flinch. He doesnât look up. He doesnât even seem surprised. He only stares at his now empty hands as he speaks. âYou know,â he says, his voice both strange and soft, âI think Castle is little more than an optimistic fool. He tries too hard to welcome too many people and itâs going to backfire, simply because itâs impossible to please everyone.â A pause. âHe is the perfect example of the kind of person who doesnât know the rules of this game. Someone who thinks too much with his heart and clings too desperately to some fantastical notion of hope and peace. It will never help him,â he sighs. âIn fact, it will be the end of him, Iâm quite sure of it.
âBut there is something about you,â Warner says, âsomething about the way you hope for things.â He shakes his head. âItâs so naive that itâs oddly endearing. You like to believe people when they speak,â he says. âYou prefer kindness.â He smiles, just a little. Looks up. âIt amuses me.â
All at once I feel like an idiot. âYouâre not fighting with us tomorrow.â
Warner is smiling openly now, his eyes so warm. âIâm going to leave.â
âYouâre going to leave.â Iâm numb.
âI donât belong here.â
Iâm shaking my head, saying, âI donât understandâhow can you leave? You told Castle youâre going to fight with us tomorrowâdoes he know youâre leaving? Does anyone know?â I ask him, searching his face. âWhat do you have planned? What are you going to do?â
He doesnât answer.
âWhat are you going to do, Warnerââ
âJuliette,â he whispers, and his eyes are urgent, tortured all of a sudden. âI need to ask you somethiââ
Someone is bolting down the tunnels.
Calling my name.
Adam.