Ignite Me: Chapter 6
Ignite Me (Shatter Me Book 3)
âI suppose you could call it that.â Warner shrugs. âWe call it a simulation chamber.â
âYou made me torture that child,â I say to him, the anger and the rage of that day rising up inside of me. How could I forget what he did? What he made me do? The horrible memories he forced me to relive all for the sake of his entertainment. âI will never forgive you for that,â I snap, acid in my voice. âI will never forgive you for what you did to that little boy. For what you made me do to him!â
Warner frowns. âIâm sorryâwhat?â
âYou would sacrifice a child!â My voice is shaking now. âFor your stupid games! How could you do something so despicable?â I throw my pillow at him. âYou sick, heartless, monster!â
Warner catches the pillow as it hits his chest, staring at me like heâs never seen me before. But then a kind of understanding settles into place for him, and the pillow slips from his hands. Falls to the floor. âOh,â he says, so slowly. Heâs squeezing his eyes shut, trying to suppress his amusement. âOh, youâre going to kill me,â he says, laughing openly now. âI donât think I can handle thisââ
âWhat are you talking about? Whatâs wrong with you?â I demand.
Heâs still smiling as he says, âTell me, love. Tell me exactly what happened that day.â
I clench my fists, offended by his flippancy and shaking with renewed anger. âYou gave me stupid, skimpy clothes to wear! And then you took me down to the lower levels of Sector 45 and locked me in a dirty room. I remember it perfectly,â I tell him, fighting to remain calm. âIt had disgusting yellow walls. Old green carpet. A huge two-way mirror.â
Warner raises his eyebrows. Gestures for me to continue.
âThen . . . you hit some kind of a switch,â I say, forcing myself to keep talking. I donât know why Iâm beginning to doubt myself. âAnd these huge, metal spikes started coming out of the ground. And thenââI hesitate, steeling myselfââa toddler walked in. He was blindfolded. And you said he was your replacement. You said that if I didnât save him, you wouldnât either.â
Warner is looking at me closely now. Studying my eyes. âAre you sure I said that?â
âYes.â
âYes?â He cocks his head. âYes, you saw me say that with your own eyes?â
âN-no,â I say quickly, feeling defensive, âbut there were loudspeakersâI could hear your voiceââ
He takes a deep breath. âRight; of course.â
âI did,â I tell him.
âSo after you heard me say that, what happened?â
I swallow hard. âI had to save the boy. He was going to die. He couldnât see where he was going and he was going to be impaled by those spikes. I had to pull him into my arms and try to find a way to hold on to him without killing him.â
A beat of silence.
âAnd did you succeed?â Warner asks me.
âYes,â I whisper, unable to understand why heâs asking me this when he saw it all happen for himself. âBut the boy went limp,â I say. âHe was temporarily paralyzed in my arms. And then you hit another switch and the spikes disappeared, and I let him down and heâhe started crying again and bumped into my bare legs. And he started screaming. And I . . . I got so mad at you . . .â
âThat you broke through concrete,â Warner says, a faint smile touching his lips. âYou broke through a concrete wall just to try and choke me to death.â
âYou deserved it,â I hear myself say. âYou deserved worse.â
âWell,â he sighs. âIf I did, in fact, do what you say I did, it certainly sounds like I deserved it.â
âWhat do you mean, if you did? I know you didââ
âIs that right?â
âOf course itâs right!â
âThen tell me, love, what happened to the boy?â
âWhat?â I freeze; icicles creep up my arms.
âWhat happened,â he says, âto that little boy? You say that you set him on the ground. But then you proceeded to break through a concrete wall fitted with a thick, six-foot-wide mirror, with no apparent regard for the toddler you claim was wandering around the room. Donât you think the poor child wouldâve been injured in such a wild, reckless display? My soldiers certainly were. You broke down a wall of concrete, love. You crushed an enormous piece of glass. You did not stop to ascertain where the blocks or the shattered bits had fallen or who they mightâve injured in the process.â He stops. Stares. âDid you?â
âNo,â I gasp, blood draining from my body.
âSo what happened after you walked away?â he asks. âOr do you not remember that part? You turned around and left, just after destroying the room, injuring my men, and tossing me to the floor. You turned around,â he says, âand walked right out.â
Iâm numb now, remembering. Itâs true. I did. I didnât think. I just knew I needed to get out of there as fast as possible. I needed to get away, to clear my head.
âSo what happened to the boy?â Warner insists. âWhere was he when you were leaving? Did you see him?â A lift of his eyebrows. âAnd what about the spikes?â he says. âDid you bother to look closely at the ground to see where they mightâve come from? Or how they mightâve punctured a carpeted floor without causing any damage? Did you feel the surface under your feet to be shredded or uneven?â
Iâm breathing hard now, struggling to stay calm. I canât tear myself away from his gaze.
âJuliette, love,â he says softly. âThere were no speakers in that room. That room is entirely soundproof, equipped with nothing but sensors and cameras. It is a simulation chamber.â
âNo,â I breathe, refusing to believe. Not wanting to accept that I was wrong, that Warner isnât the monster I thought he was. He canât change things now. Canât confuse me like this. This isnât the way itâs supposed to work. âThatâs not possibleââ
âI am guilty,â he says, âof forcing you to undergo such a cruel simulation. I accept the fault for that, and Iâve already apologized for my actions. I only meant to push you into finally reacting, and I knew that sort of re-creation would quickly trigger something inside of you. But good God, loveââhe shakes his headââyou must have an absurdly low opinion of me if you think I would steal someoneâs child just to watch you torture it.â
âIt wasnât real?â I donât recognize my own raspy, panicked voice. âIt wasnât real?â
He offers me a sympathetic smile. âI designed the basic elements of the simulation, but the beauty of the program is that it will evolve and adapt as it processes a soldierâs most visceral responses. We use it to train soldiers who must overcome specific fears or prepare for a particularly sensitive mission. We can re-create almost any environment,â he says. âEven soldiers who know what theyâre getting into will forget that theyâre performing in a simulation.â He averts his eyes. âI knew it would be terrifying for you, and I did it anyway. And for hurting you, I feel true regret. But no,â he says quietly, meeting my eyes again. âNone of it was real. You imagined my voice in that room. You imagined the pain, the sounds, the smells. All of it was in your mind.â
âI donât want to believe you,â I say to him, my voice scarcely a whisper.
He tries to smile. âWhy do you think I gave you those clothes?â he asks. âThe material of that outfit was lined with a chemical designed to react to the sensors in that room. And the less youâre wearing, the more easily the cameras can track the heat in your body, your movements.â He shakes his head. âI never had a chance to explain what youâd experienced. I wanted to follow you immediately, but I thought I should give you time to collect yourself. It was a stupid decision, on my end.â His jaw tenses. âI waited, and I shouldnât have. Because when I found you, it was too late. You were ready to jump out a window just to get away from me.â
âFor good reason,â I snap.
He holds up his hands in surrender.
âYou are a terrible person!â I explode, throwing the rest of the pillows at his face, angry and horrified and humiliated all at once. âWhy would you put me through something like that when you know what Iâve been through, you stupid, arrogantââ
âJuliette, please,â he says, stepping forward, dodging a pillow to reach for my arms. âI am sorry for hurting you, but I really think it was worthââ
âDonât touch me!â I jerk away, glaring, clutching the foot of his bed like it might be a weapon. âI should shoot you all over again for doing that to me! I shouldâI shouldââ
âWhat?â He laughs. âYouâre going to throw another pillow at me?â
I shove him, hard, and when he doesnât budge, I start throwing punches. Iâm hitting his chest, his arms, his stomach, and his legs, anywhere I can reach, wishing more than ever that he werenât able to absorb my power, that I could actually crush all the bones in his body and make him writhe in pain beneath my hands. âYou . . . selfish . . . monster!â I keep throwing poorly aimed fists in his direction, not realizing how much the effort exhausts me, not realizing how quickly the anger dissolves into pain. Suddenly all I want to do is cry. My body is shaking in both relief and terror, finally unshackled from the fear that Iâd caused another innocent child some kind of irreparable damage, and simultaneously horrified that Warner would ever force such a terrible thing on me. To help me.
âIâm so sorry,â he says, stepping closer. âI really, truly am. I didnât know you then. Not like I do now. Iâd never do that to you now.â
âYou donât know me,â I mumble, wiping away tears. âYou think you know me just because youâve read my journalâyou stupid, prying, privacy-stealing assholeââ
âOh, rightâabout thatââ He smiles, one quick hand plucking the journal out of my pocket as he moves toward the door. âIâm afraid I wasnât finished reading this.â
âHey!â I protest, swiping at him as he walks away. âYou said youâd give that back to me!â
âI said no such thing,â he says, subdued, dropping the journal into his own pants pocket. âNow please wait here a moment. Iâm going to get you something to eat.â
Iâm still shouting as he closes the door behind him.