âYou have a house?â Iâm too shocked for manners.
Adam laughs and pulls out of the field. The tank is surprisingly fast, surprisingly swift and stealthy. The engine has quieted to a soothing hum, and I wonder if thatâs why they switched their tanks from gas to electric. Itâs certainly less conspicuous this way. âNot exactly,â he answers. âBut a home of sorts. Yeah.â
I want to ask and donât want to ask and need to ask and never want to ask. I have to ask. I steel myself. âYour fatheââ
âHeâs been dead for a while now.â Adamâs not smiling anymore. His voice is tight with something only I would know how to place. Pain. Bitterness. Anger.
âOh.â
We drive in silence, each of us absorbed in our own thoughts. I donât dare ask what became of his mother. I only wonder how he turned out so well despite having such a despicable father. And I wonder why he ever joined the army if he hates it so much. Right now, Iâm too shy to ask. I donât want to infringe on his emotional boundaries.
God knows I have a million of my own.
I peer out the window and strain my eyes to see what weâre passing through, but I canât make out much more than the sad stretches of deserted land Iâve grown accustomed to. There are no civilians where we are: weâre too far from Reestablished settlements and civilian compounds. I notice another tank patrolling the area not 100 feet away, but I donât think it sees us. Adam is driving without headlights, presumably to draw as little attention to us as possible. I wonder how heâs even able to navigate. The moon is the only lamp to light our way.
Itâs eerily quiet.
For a moment I allow my thoughts to drift back to Warner, wondering what must be going on right now, wondering how many people must be searching for me, wondering what lengths heâll go to until he has me back. He wants Adam dead. He wants me alive. He wonât stop until Iâm trapped beside him.
He can never never never know that I can touch him.
I can only imagine what heâd do if he had access to my body.
I breathe in one quick, sharp, shaky breath and contemplate telling Adam what happened. No. No. No. No. I squeeze my eyes shut and consider I may have misjudged the situation. It was chaotic. My brain was distracted. Maybe I imagined it. Yes.
Maybe I imagined it.
Itâs strange enough that Adam can touch me. The likelihood of there being 2 people in this world who are immune to my touch doesnât seem possible. In fact, the more I think about it, the more Iâm determined I must have made a mistake. It couldâve been anything brushing my leg. Maybe a piece of the sheet Adam abandoned after using it to punch through the window. Maybe a pillow thatâd fallen from the bed. Maybe Warnerâs gloves lying, discarded, on the floor. Yes.
Thereâs no way he couldâve touched me, because if he had, he wouldâve cried out in agony.
Just like everyone else.
Adamâs hand slips silently into mine and I grip his fingers in both my hands, suddenly desperate to reassure myself that he has immunity from me. Iâm suddenly desperate to drink in every drop of his being, desperate to savor every moment Iâve never known before. I suddenly worry that thereâs an expiration date on this phenomenon. A clock striking midnight. A pumpkin carriage.
The possibility of losing him The possibility of losing him The possibility of losing him is 100 years of solitude I donât want to imagine. I donât want my arms to be devoid of his warmth. His touch. His lips, God his lips, his mouth on my neck, his body wrapped around mine, holding me together as if to affirm that my existence on this earth is not for nothing.
Realization is a pendulum the size of the moon. It wonât stop slamming into me.
âJuliette?â
I swallow back the bullet in my throat. âYes?â
âWhy are you crying . . . ?â His voice is almost as gentle as his hand as it breaks free from my grip. He touches the tears rolling down my face and Iâm so humiliated I almost donât know what to say.
âYou can touch me,â I say for the first time, recognize out loud for the first time. My words fade to a whisper. âYou can touch me. You care and I donât know why. Youâre kind to me and you donât have to be. My own mother didnât care enough toât-toââ My voice catches and I press my lips together. Glue them shut. Force myself to be still.
I am a rock. A statue. A movement frozen in time. Ice feels nothing at all.
Adam doesnât answer, doesnât say a single word until he pulls off the road and into an old underground parking garage. I realize weâve reached some semblance of civilization, but itâs pitch-black belowground. I can see next to nothing and once again wonder at how Adam is managing. My eyes fall on the screen illuminated on his dashboard only to realize the tank has night vision. Of course.
Adam shuts off the engine. I hear him sigh. I can hardly distinguish his silhouette before I feel his hand on my thigh, his other hand tripping its way up my body to find my face. Warmth spreads through my limbs like molten lava. The tips of my fingers and toes are tingling to life and I have to bite back the shiver aching to rock my frame.
âJuliette,â he whispers, and I realize just how close he is. Iâm not sure why I havenât evaporated into nothingness. âItâs been me and you against the world forever,â he says. âItâs always been that way. Itâs my fault I took so long to do something about it.â
âNo.â Iâm shaking my head. âItâs not your faultââ
âIt is. I fell in love with you a long time ago. I just never had the guts to act on it.â
âBecause I couldâve killed you.â
He laughs a quiet laugh. âBecause I didnât think I deserved you.â
Iâm one piece of astonishment forged into being. âWhat?â
He touches his nose to mine. Leans into my neck. Wraps a piece of my hair around his fingers and I canât I canât I canât breathe. âYouâre so . . . good,â he whispers.
âBut my handsââ
âHave never done anything to hurt anyone.â
Iâm about to protest when he corrects himself. âNot on purpose.â He leans back. I can just barely see him rubbing the side of his neck. âYou never fought back,â he says after a moment. âI always wondered why. You never yelled or got angry or tried to say anything to anyone,â he says, and I know weâre both back in third fourth fifth sixth seventh eighth ninth grade all over again. âBut damn, you mustâve read a million books.â I know heâs smiling when he says it. A pause. âYou bothered no one, but you were a moving target every day. You couldâve fought back. You couldâve hurt everyone if you wanted to.â
âI donât want to hurt anyone.â My voice is less than a whisper. I canât get the image of 8-year-old Adam out of my head. Lying on the floor. Broken. Abandoned. Crying into the dirt.
The things people will do for power.
âThatâs why youâll never be what Warner wants you to be.â
Iâm staring at a point in the blackness, my mind tortured by possibilities. âHow can you be sure?â
His lips are so close to mine. âBecause you still give a damn about the world.â
I gasp and heâs kissing me, deep and powerful and unrestrained. His arms wrap around my back, dipping my body until Iâm practically horizontal and I donât care. My head is on the seat, his frame hovering over me, his hands gripping my hips from under my tattered dress and Iâm licked by a million flames of wanting so desperate I can hardly inhale. Heâs a hot bath, a short breath, 5 days of summer pressed into 5 fingers writing stories on my body. Iâm an embarrassing mess of nerves crashing into him, controlled by one current of electricity coursing through my core. His scent is assaulting my senses.
His eyes His hands His chest His lips are at my ear when he speaks. âWeâre here, by the way.â Heâs breathing harder now than when he was running for his life. I feel his heart pounding against my ribs. His words are a broken whisper. âMaybe we should go inside. Itâs safer.â But he doesnât move.
I almost donât understand what heâs talking about. I just nod, my head bobbing on my neck, until I remember he canât see me. I try to remember how to speak, but Iâm too focused on the fingers heâs running down my thighs to form sentences. Thereâs something about the absolute darkness, about not being able to see whatâs happening that makes me drunk with a delicious dizziness. âYes,â is all I manage.
He helps me back up to a seated position, leans his forehead against mine. âIâm sorry,â he says. âItâs so hard for me to stop myself.â His voice is dangerously husky; his words tingle on my skin.
I allow my hands to slip up under his shirt and feel him stiffen, swallow. I trace the perfectly sculpted lines of his body. Heâs nothing but lean muscle. âYou donât have to,â I tell him.
His heart is racing so fast I canât distinguish it from my own. Itâs 5,000 degrees in the air between us. His fingers are at the dip right below my hip bone, teasing the small piece of fabric keeping me halfway decent. âJuliette . . .â
âAdam?â
My neck snaps up in surprise. Fear. Anxiety. Adam stops moving, frozen in front of me. Iâm not sure heâs breathing. I look around but canât find a face to match the voice that called his name and begin to panic before Adam is slamming open the door, flying out before I hear it again.
âAdam . . . is that you?â
Itâs a boy.
âJames!â
The muffled sound of impact, 2 bodies colliding, 2 voices too happy to be dangerous.
âI canât believe itâs really you! I mean, well, I thought it was you because I thought I heard something and at first I figured it was nothing but then I decided I should probably check just to be sure because what if it was you andââ He pauses. âWaitâwhat are you doing here?â
âIâm home.â Adam laughs a little.
âReally?â James squeaks. âAre you home for good?â
âYeah.â He sighs. âDamn itâs good to see you.â
âI missed you,â James says, suddenly quiet.
One deep breath. âMe too, kid. Me too.â
âHey, so, have you eaten anything? Benny just delivered my dinner package, and I could share some with yââ
âJames?â
He pauses. âYeah?â
âThereâs someone I want you to meet.â
My palms are sweaty. My heart is in my throat. I hear Adam walk back toward the tank and donât realize heâs popped his head inside until he hits a switch. A faint emergency light illuminates the cabin. I blink a few times and see a young boy standing about 5 feet away, dirty-blond hair framing a round face with blue eyes that look too familiar. Heâs pressed his lips together in concentration. Heâs staring at me.
Adam is opening my door. He helps me to my feet, barely able to control the smile on his face and Iâm stunned by the level of my own nervousness. I donât know why Iâm so nervous but God Iâm nervous. This boy is obviously important to Adam. I donât know why but I feel like this moment is important, too. Iâm so worried Iâm going to ruin everything. I try to fix the ripped folds of my dress, try to soften the wrinkles ironed into the fabric. I run haphazard fingers through my hair. Itâs useless.
The poor kid will be petrified.
Adam leads me forward. James is a handful of inches short of my height, but itâs obvious in his face that heâs young, unblemished, untouched by most of the worldâs harsh realities. I want to revel in the beauty of his innocence.
âJames? This is Juliette.â Adam glances at me.
âJuliette, this is my brother, James.â