Unravel Me: Chapter 68
Unravel Me (Shatter Me Book 2)
I wake up in a bed made of heaven and Iâm wearing clothes that belong to a boy.
Iâm warm and comfortable but I can still feel the creak in my bones, the ache in my head, the confusion clouding my mind. I sit up. I look around.
Iâm in someoneâs bedroom.
Iâm tangled in blue-and-orange bedsheets decorated with little baseball mitts. Thereâs a little desk with a little chair set off to the side and thereâs a set of drawers, a collection of plastic trophies in perfectly straight rows on top. I see a simple wooden door with a traditional brass knob that must lead outside; I see a sliding set of mirrors that must be hiding a closet. I look to my right to find a little bedside table with an alarm clock and a glass of water and I grab it.
Itâs almost embarrassing how quickly I inhale the contents.
I climb out of bed only to find that Iâm wearing a pair of navy gym shorts that are hanging so low on my hips Iâm afraid theyâre going to fall off. Iâm wearing a gray T-shirt with some kind of logo on it and Iâm swimming in the extra material. I have no socks. No gloves. No underwear.
I have nothing.
I wonder if Iâm allowed to step outside and I decide itâs worth a shot. I have no idea what Iâm doing here. I have no idea why Iâm not dead yet.
I freeze in front of the mirrored doors.
My hair has been washed well and it falls in thick, soft waves around my face. My skin is bright and, with the exception of a few scratches, relatively unscathed. My eyes are wide; an odd, vibrant mix of green and blue blinking back at me, surprised and surprisingly unafraid.
But my neck.
My neck is one mess of purple, one big bruise that discolors my entire appearance. I hadnât realized just how tightly I was being choked to death yesterdayâI think it was yesterdayâand I only now realize just how much it hurts to swallow. I take a sharp breath and push past the mirrors. I need to find a way to get out of here.
The door opens at my touch.
I look around the hallway for any sign of life. I donât have any idea what time of day it is or what Iâve gotten myself into. I donât know if anyone exists in this house except for Andersonâand whoever it was that helped me in the bathroomâbut I have to assess my situation. I have to figure out exactly how much danger Iâm in before I can devise a plan to fight my way out.
I try to tiptoe quietly down the stairs.
It doesnât work.
The stairs creak and groan under my weight and I hardly have a chance to backpedal before I hear him call my name. Heâs downstairs.
Anderson is downstairs.
âDonât be shy,â he says. I hear the rustle of something that sounds like paper. âI have food for you and I know you must be starving.â
My heart is suddenly beating in my throat. I wonder what choices I have, what options I have to consider and I decide I canât hide from him in his own hideout.
I meet him downstairs.
Heâs the same beautiful man he was before. Hair perfect and polished, clothing crisp, clean, expertly pressed. Heâs sitting in the living room in an overstuffed chair with a blanket draped over his lap. I notice a gorgeous, rustic-looking, intricately carved walking stick leaning against the armrest. He has a stack of papers in his hand.
I smell coffee.
âPlease,â he says to me, not at all surprised by my strange, wild appearance. âHave a seat.â
I do.
âHow are you feeling?â he asks.
I look up. I donât answer him.
He nods. âYes, well, Iâm sure youâre very surprised to see me here. Itâs a lovely little house, isnât it?â He looks around. âI had this preserved shortly after I moved my family to what is now Sector 45. This sector was supposed to be mine, after all. It turned out to be the ideal place to store my wife.â He waves a hand. âApparently she doesnât do very well in the compounds,â he says, as if Iâm supposed to have any idea what heâs talking about.
Store his wife?
I donât know why I allow anything out of his mouth to surprise me.
Anderson seems to catch my confusion. He looks amused. âAm I to understand that my love-struck boy didnât tell you about his beloved mother? He didnât go on and on and on about his pathetic love for the creature that gave birth to him?â
âWhat?â is the first word I speak.
âI am truly shocked,â Anderson says, smiling like heâs not shocked at all. âHe didnât bother to mention that he has a sick, ailing mother who lives in this house? He didnât tell you thatâs why he wanted the post here, in this sector, so desperately? No? He didnât tell you anything about that?â He cocks his head. âI am just so shocked,â he lies again.
Iâm trying to keep my heart rate down, trying to figure out why on earth heâs telling me this, trying to stay one step ahead of him, but heâs doing a damn good job of confusing the hell out of me.
âWhen I was chosen as supreme commander,â he goes on, âI was going to leave Aaronâs mother here and take him with me to the capital. But the boy didnât want to leave his mother behind. He wanted to take care of her. He didnât want to leave her. He needed to be with her like some stupid child,â he says, raising his voice at the end, forgetting himself for a moment. He swallows. Regains his composure.
And Iâm waiting.
Waiting for the anvil heâs preparing to drop on my head.
âDid he tell you how many other soldiers wanted be in charge of Sector 45? How many fine candidates we had to choose from? He was only eighteen years old!â He laughs. âEveryone thought heâd gone mad. But I gave him a chance,â Anderson says. âI thought it might be good for him to take on that kind of responsibility.â
Still waiting.
A deep, contented sigh. âDid he ever tell you,â Anderson says, âwhat he had to do to prove he was worthy?â
There it is.
âDid he ever tell you what I made him do to earn it?â
I feel so dead inside.
âNo,â Anderson says, eyes bright, too bright. âI suspect he didnât want to mention that part, did he? I bet he didnât include that part of his past, did he?â
I donât want to hear this. I donât want to know this. I donât want to listen anymoreâ
âDonât worry,â Anderson says. âI wonât spoil it for you. Best to let him share those details with you himself.â
Iâm not calm anymore. Iâm not calm and Iâve officially begun to panic.
âIâll be heading back to base in just a bit,â Anderson says, sorting through his papers, not seeming to mind having an entirely one-sided conversation with me. âI canât stand to be under the same roof as his mother for very longâI do not get on well with the ill, unfortunatelyâbut this has turned out to be a convenient little camp under the present circumstances. Iâve been using it as a base from which to oversee all thatâs going on at the compounds.â
The battle.
The fighting.
The bloodshed and Adam and Kenji and Castle and everyone Iâve left behind
How could I forget
The horrifying, terrifying possibilities are flashing through my mind. I have no idea whatâs happened. If theyâre okay. If they know Iâm still alive. If Castle managed to get Brendan and Winston back.
If anyone I know has died.
My eyes are crazed, darting around. I get to my feet, convinced that this is all just an elaborate trap, that perhaps someone is going to maul me from behind or someone is waiting in the kitchen with a cleaver, and I canât catch my breath, Iâm wheezing and Iâm trying to figure out what to do what to do what to do and I say âWhat am I doing here? Why did you bring me here? Why havenât you killed me yet?â
Anderson looks at me. He cocks his head. He says, âI am very upset with you, Juliette. Very, very unhappy.â He says, âYou have done a very bad thing.â
âWhat?â seems to be the only question I know how to ask. âWhat are you talking about?â For one crazy moment I wonder if he knows about what happened with Warner. I almost feel myself blush.
But he takes a deep breath. Grabs the cane resting against his chair. He has to use his entire upper body to get to his feet. Heâs shaking, even with the cane to support him.
Heâs crippled.
He says, âYou did this to me. You managed to overpower me. You shot me in my legs. You almost shot me in the heart. And you kidnapped my son.â
âNo,â I gasp, âthat wasnâtââ
âYou did this to me.â He cuts me off. âAnd now I want compensation.â