Ignite Me: Chapter 33
Ignite Me (Shatter Me Book 3)
âI have to leave in seven minutes.â
Warner and I are both fully dressed, talking to each other like perfect acquaintances; like last night never happened. Delalieu brought us breakfast and we ate quietly in separate rooms. No talk of him or me or us or what mightâve been or what might be.
There is no us.
Thereâs the absence of Adam, and thereâs fighting against The Reestablishment. Thatâs it.
I get it now.
âIâd bring you with me,â heâs saying, âbut I think itâll be hard to disguise you on this trip. If you want, you can wait in the training roomsâIâll bring the group of them straight there. You can say hello as soon as they arrive.â He finally looks at me. âIs that okay?â
I nod.
âVery good,â he says. âIâll show you how to get there.â
He leads me back into his office, and into one of the far corners by the couch. Thereâs an exit in here I didnât see last night. Warner hits a button on the wall. The doors slide open.
Itâs an elevator.
We walk in and he hits the button for the ground floor. The doors close and we start moving.
I glance up at him. âI never knew you had an elevator in your room.â
âI needed private access to my training facilities.â
âYou keep saying that,â I tell him. âTraining facilities. Whatâs a training facility?â
The elevator stops.
The doors slide open.
He holds them open for me. âThis.â
Iâve never seen so many machines in my life.
Running machines and leg machines and machines that work your arms, your shoulders, your abdominals. There are even machines that look like bikes. I donât know what any of them are called. I know one of these things is a bench press. I also know what dumbbells look like, and there are racks and racks of those, in all different sizes. Weights, I think. Free weights. There are also bars attached to the ceiling in some places, but I canât imagine what those are for. There are tons of things around this room, actually, that look entirely foreign to me.
And each wall is used for something different.
One wall seems to be made of stone. Or rock. There are little grooves in it that are accented by what look like pieces of plastic in different colors. Another wall is covered in guns. Hundreds of guns resting on pegs that keep them in place. Theyâre pristine. Gleaming as if theyâve just been cleaned. Thereâs a door in that same wall; I wonder where it goes. The third wall is covered in the same black, spongelike material that covers the floors. It looks like it might be soft and springy. And the final wall is the one weâve just walked through. It houses the elevator, and one other door, and nothing else.
The dimensions are enormous. This space is at least two or three times the size of Warnerâs bedroom, his closet, and his office put together. It doesnât seem possible that all of this is for one person.
âThis is amazing,â I say, turning to face him. âYou use all of this?â
He nods. âIâm usually in here at least two or three times a day,â he says. âI got off track when I was injured,â he says, âbut in general, yes.â He steps forward, touches the spongy black wall. âThis has been my life for as long as Iâve known it. Training,â he says. âIâve been training forever. And this is where weâre going to start with you, too.â
âMe?â
He nods.
âBut I donât need to train,â I tell him. âNot like this.â
He tries to meet my eyes and canât.
âI have to go,â he says. âIf you get bored in here, take the elevator back up. This elevator can only access two levels, so you canât get lost.â He buttons his blazer. âIâll return as soon as I can.â
âOkay.â
I expect him to leave, but he doesnât. âYouâll still be here,â he finally says, âwhen I return.â
Itâs not exactly a question.
I nod anyway.
âIt doesnât seem possible,â he says, so quietly, âthat youâre not trying to run away.â
I say nothing.
He exhales a hard breath. Pivots on one heel. And leaves.