Nobody

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Nobody Page 8

by Jennifer Lynn Barnes


  “It doesn’t work that way.”

  “How do you know?” Claire pressed. “Have you ever met another Nobody?”

  Nix paused.

  “You haven’t, have you?”

  Nix refused to shake his head, but Claire saw the answer in the set of his jaw.

  “Think about it, Nix. You talked about energy, right? And everybody has it? And people exchange it, but for whatever reason, Nobodies can’t give their energy to anyone else. Maybe it’s because we’re weak. Maybe everyone else’s energy is like a laser beam, and ours is a cloud of smoke. So when you put us with someone whose energy is normal, we’re practically invisible. But when you put us together …”

  She’d felt his stare that first day. Before she’d seen him, before she’d had any reason whatsoever to believe that somebody was there, she’d known. Because she wasn’t used to being looked at, and he’d been staring.

  She’d never met another person who felt so right.

  “You’re not a Nobody,” he said—like he could falsify her claim just by denying it out loud.

  “Yes, Nix, I am.”

  “No, you’re not. Nobodies don’t matter, Claire, and I’ve never met somebody who matters as much as you.”

  Claire wanted to jump on his words, to say aha and victoriously explain that it made sense to think that smoke could leave its mark on smoke, but she couldn’t make the words come, because there were no words. No thoughts. Nothing but a tightening in her throat and a loosening of the muscles in her chest. She swallowed, hard, trying not to let the stinging sensation in her mouth spread to her eyes, but the effort was useless.

  She mattered. Maybe. Almost. Kind of.

  Not to her parents. Not to the endless string of people she’d tried to befriend. Not to the towel boy at the pool or any of the teachers who forgot her name on a regular basis. She didn’t matter to any of them, and she never would, but she maybe almost kind of mattered to Nix.

  It was funny. The resurrection of a dream was almost as hard as watching it die.

  Claire is crying.

  Nix didn’t know what he’d said to make her cry. Every time he touched her, he hurt her. He didn’t deserve her, and now that she knew that truth, she must hate him. She had to.

  “I’ll go.” He said the words quietly, hoping to ease her distress.

  “Don’t leave.” She sounded panicked. “Not again.”

  Claire swallowed, and his eyes traced the motion down her throat before flickering back up to her face.

  “Please don’t leave.”

  For a moment, Nix thought that she’d retreat or crumble. Instead, she stalked toward him, her tightly balled fist the only remaining cue to the anxiety he’d heard in her voice.

  “You can’t tell me I matter and then leave like I don’t.” She didn’t stop until she was standing directly in front of him, and even though he knew he should take a step back—for her sake—he couldn’t.

  Claire, unaware of how close to the pit she trod, coaxed her fingers out of their fist. Put her hand on his chest and shoved—not hard enough to move him, but hard enough that he could feel the warmth of her hand through his shirt. She might as well have reached into his chest and ripped out his heart.

  “If I matter, then you stay,” she said, her voice low, her hand unmoving. “You don’t leave something that matters. You don’t throw that away.”

  “You shouldn’t touch me, Claire.”

  “And you shouldn’t say my name like that—like it matters. Like it’s more than just a word that belongs to thousands of other girls.”

  It wasn’t just a word. Not to Nix. It was her. She was Claire, the one and only.

  “Don’t you get it, Nix?”

  He didn’t. He didn’t understand why she was still touching him. Why his heart was beating faster and faster under her palm. He didn’t understand why the sound of his name on her lips made it difficult to stand.

  “I’ve never been anybody, Nix. I’ve never mattered—not to anyone. My parents barely even remember I exist. When I was little, they were always leaving me places. At the mall. At the store. They’d take me to the park and then forget and go home without me, and I’d sit under a tree or on a swing and just wait for them to come back. They used to have this big note on the back door that said CLAIRE in all capital letters, so that if they came home without me, they’d remember to go back.

  “I made up this game to pass the time while I waited for them. I’d think up different scenarios, things that could happen, and I played them out in my mind. It was like watching a movie, but I controlled it. And in that world, I mattered. People never forgot me. They cared.”

  He could see her as a little girl, sitting on a swing, pretending that she was somewhere else. He could see her talking to friends who weren’t there and reacting with the entire gamut of emotions to the situations in her head.

  “I still do it. I still pretend that I’m somewhere else, that I matter, but I don’t, Nix. Nobody even sees me. I’m a ghost in my own house. Most of the time, my parents aren’t even there. I didn’t come home last night, and they probably aren’t even looking for me. And my friends haven’t noticed I’m gone, because I don’t have any friends.”

  He didn’t believe her. He couldn’t imagine anyone forgetting Claire, couldn’t imagine losing her and not moving mountains to get her back. If the Sensors had taken her from him that day, he would have destroyed everything and everyone that stood between them to get her back.

  “Do you know what I thought when you tried to kill me? The first time? I thought, How can somebody want me dead when no one even knows I’m alive?” Claire’s voice broke, and the sound of it broke him. “I thought, He’s the most beautiful boy I’ve ever seen. I thought, Is this what it’s like to be looked at? And then you left, and I was nothing again. The police, my parents, my neighbors—nobody even believed me about you. They sent me out into the world, even though I knew you’d be back.”

  Claire coming out of her house. Claire walking down the street. Claire’s eyes snapping up as he slipped out of the bushes.

  Claire running toward him.

  It couldn’t be true. He’d believed she was a Null because the effect she had on him wasn’t natural. He’d believed she could manipulate people into loving her, because he couldn’t stop himself from feeling that pull. He’d saved her from the Sensors, because he couldn’t let them take her.

  The Sensors.

  Nix stiffened. The day that they’d tried to take Claire away from him, to kill her themselves, the Sensors had missed. They’d tried to run her over, and they’d clipped her in the side instead.

  Claire was hard to kill—not because she had the powers of a Null, but because she escaped notice altogether. The Society had sent Nix to kill her, because even a team of Sensors couldn’t quite pinpoint where she stood.

  To find the girl there, in his zone, lazing about a swimming pool, right under his nose—Cyrus was embarrassed to have missed something like this up until now. Richard and Ione’s conversation at the institute floated back into Nix’s mind, slamming the door on all other possibilities. Well, these things do happen.

  Why hadn’t he listened more closely to what they were saying? Nulls didn’t have a way of flying under the Sensors’ radar. Ione wouldn’t have shrugged off a Sensor living side by side with a Null for fifteen years and never recognizing her for what she was. Pure energy, unmarked by any human interaction, was a flaming beacon over a Null’s head. Nulls weren’t a challenge for a Sensor’s ability.

  Nobodies were.

  “We’re the same, Nix. You can’t leave me, because if you do, I won’t matter, and I can’t leave you, because you matter too much.”

  Too much?

  He was still overwhelmed by the idea that he could provoke a reaction in her. Make her mad or sad. But mattering?

  The only way you can make a difference in this world is to kill.

  Nix pushed the voices out of his head. He bit the inside of his cheek—ro
ughly—and put his hand on Claire’s chest, exactly where her hand lay on his. He felt her heart beat. He felt its steady rhythm loosening his teeth’s grip and warming him from the inside out.

  It was wrong. Impossible. It couldn’t happen.

  It can’t not.

  Nix became highly aware of his own body: skin and heat and the rush of blood. He couldn’t stop his body from moving toward hers, the space between them closing inch by inch, heartbeat by heartbeat, until his lips brushed softly over hers.

  Nix. Nix. Nothing but Nix.

  For Claire, there was nothing else, nothing but the warmth of his hand through the thin fabric of her worn yellow sundress. Nothing but the feel of his breath on her face. His lips touched hers, and if his hands hadn’t found their way to the small of her back and the back of her neck, the contact would have sent her to her knees.

  No one touches me. No one ever touches me.

  She brought her hands to the sides of his face, needing to touch it, to assure herself that this moment was real. His skin was warm, but her palms felt hot, and slowly, tentatively, she lost herself to the kiss, falling deeper and deeper into it, into him. Her hands moved down his neck and shoulders, and she pulled him closer.

  I don’t know how to do this.

  She tried to close her eyes, but couldn’t. Tentatively, she caught his lip in between her teeth and then let go, and in the moment that their mouths met again, hesitation gave way to something sweet, something pure.

  She stood on the tips of her toes, her hip bone digging into the flesh just below his. She didn’t know what she was doing, hadn’t ever realized that kissing was something you could feel with more than just your lips.

  Nix.

  All there was, was Nix. The way he smelled. The way he tasted. The way he pulled back, dragging his lips away from hers and lightly down her neck.

  No one ever touches me.

  Neither one of them said it, but Claire could see it in his eyes and wondered if he could see it in hers.

  I’m touching you. You’re touching me.

  She ran the tip of her thumb over the scar on his throat, and then, feeling his sadness, his loneliness and hers, she bent her head to his neck and traced her lips along the line her thumb had taken, inch by inch across his scar. Slow kisses, careful kisses, soft and light and from the soul.

  I’m touching you. You’re touching me.

  He sank to his knees, and she sank to hers. There was nothing before this moment and nothing after. No up, no down, no left, no right, no secrets.

  Nix. Nix. Only Nix.

  Together, they were somebody.

  10

  Nix woke the next morning with a weight on his chest. For a moment, he thought that he had been buried alive. They did that with Nobodies sometimes, to teach them the necessity of being able to fade. But a moment’s observation revealed that the weight on his chest wasn’t dirt.

  Back arching—lips on fire—bodies touching.

  It was Claire.

  They’d fallen asleep on the ground, dirt and leaves and damp grass beneath them. Claire’s head was on his chest. As he watched, it lolled gently to one side. And just like that—

  Nix is fifteen. In a strange bedroom. Watching. Waiting.

  His target gasps. Collapses. The Null’s head lolls to one side. His fingers twitch. Eyes roll back in his head—

  Nix kept himself from following the memory any further. That was Three. Warren Wyler. Eleven letters, another body in the morgue.

  From her spot on Nix’s chest, Claire murmured something in her sleep. She was small and warm and his—but Nix couldn’t let this go any further.

  Couldn’t risk bleeding his darkness onto her.

  He knew how to do one thing, only one thing—and when he’d told Claire to kill, she’d said no.

  Wyler’s head lolls to one side. His fingers twitch. Eyes roll back in his head, and a sickly sour smell fills the—

  Eleven targets, and Nix had never said no. Eleven people he’d thought were Nulls, because The Society had said it was so. Claire could have been number Twelve—another line tattooed onto his arm, another job well done.

  He couldn’t do this. Couldn’t look at her. Couldn’t touch her. Couldn’t breathe because he wanted to look at her and touch her and not think about—

  A sickly sour smell fills the room. From the shadows, Nix watches. He watches the man stop breathing, watches the fingers stop twitching, watches—and smiles.

  Nix was sweating and shaking, and Claire just burrowed farther into his side. He couldn’t do this. Couldn’t. He pulled his body away from hers. Laid her head gently on the ground. Stood up.

  I’ve killed. I’m a killer. I will kill again.

  That thought was dull in his mind. Maybe once, he could have been something else. But not now. Never now, never with her. Killing was easy. Walking away from Claire—that was hard. Nix made it a hundred yards before his fingernails began to dig into the skin of his palms.

  Pain didn’t help. He barely felt it. Felt her light touch on his scars instead.

  Keep walking. Don’t look back.

  He and Claire couldn’t happen again. Ever. Eventually, he’d hurt her. He’d sooner cut off his own hands.

  Nix focused on that as he walked away from her. He wouldn’t hurt her, and he wouldn’t let anyone else harm a hair on her head. The Society wanted Claire dead. Nix knew them well enough to know that they wouldn’t stop. Not unless someone stopped them.

  That, he could do.

  Claire woke up with swollen lips, a crick in her neck, and a smile on her face. She felt older. Wiser.

  Special.

  Like the Claire she’d been before kissing Nix was another girl. Like that girl was the one who people talked over and bumped into and stared through. And then she turned over onto her side, her fingers fanning out, one by one, exploring the crevices of the forest floor. Stretching her hand toward the place Nix should have been.

  Stretching farther.

  Claire opened her eyes.

  The dawn had come and gone. And so had—no. She wouldn’t go there, couldn’t think that. She scanned the woods around her. Nervous hands found each other, her fingers interlocking.

  Trees. Leaves. Dirt. Sticks. Bugs. Birds.

  No Nix.

  Interlocked fingers pulled Claire’s knees tight to her chest. The longer she sat there, the more her thoughts began working their way up to a deafening roar, white noise that threatened to start saying things—horrible things—about girls who touched boys and boys who lied to get exactly what they wanted from stupid, stupid girls.

  You’re here, and he left, and this time, he isn’t coming back. You know he’s not.

  “Situation.” Claire said the word out loud, and her teeth chattered, even though she wasn’t cold. “Situation: What if—”

  What if he’s the only one? The only person physically capable of really looking at you, seeing you, caring about you, remembering you? What if you’re the only two Nobodies in the whole world, and he’d rather be alone than spend one more hour with you?

  “Situation.” Claire couldn’t think of one. The sole thing she could think about was Nix. Touching her. Kissing her. Hands on either side of her face.

  All she could think was that he’d left her lying on the ground. Leaves in her hair. Lips swollen. He’d left her. The cacophony of emotion in her head receded, leaving only one emotion, only one thought.

  You don’t get to leave me.

  The road leading up to the institute was long and straight. Gravel crunched under Nix’s feet as he walked the familiar path.

  There’s a knife in his right hand. His left is coated with blood. His body feels heavy.

  He can’t fade. Not now. Not after—

  Nix shook off the memory. Not Three this time. Seven. He could feel the images fighting to take hold of his mind. Darkness dotted his field of vision. He forced himself to keep walking. Closer to the institute. Closer to the people who’d sent him to kill Claire.<
br />
  There’s a knife in his right hand. His left is coated with blood. His body feels heavy. He can’t fade. Not now. Not after what he’s done. Not this time.

  He should feel something. Triumph, nausea, fear—anything. But he doesn’t. His arms hang listlessly by his sides. The blade in his right hand swings gently as he walks.

  He’s never used a knife on a living, breathing being before, but this time, his orders were different.

  This time, The Society told him not to fade. No poison, no guns, no “accidental” drownings.

  This time, his orders said to make it messy.

  With hard-won, painful effort, Nix banished the memory of his seventh kill, the blood. He focused on one thing and one thing alone.

  At the end of this road and past the gates, through twisted hallways and beyond the security checkpoints—that was where he’d find Ione. The Sensors. The scientists.

  The people who’d sent him after Claire.

  11

  Situation: You wake up in the woods with no memory. No name. No idea how you got here. There’s a white index card beside you on the ground, telling you that you have until nightfall to find your way to civilization—if you want to get out of this forest alive.

  As far as Situations went, it was closer to a horror movie than a daydream, but that was nothing new. Claire had imagined her way out of worse. The only difference was that this time, it was real. Not the amnesia, or the index card, or the imminent threat of death—but the problem.

  She was alone in the woods. She had no idea how Nix had brought her here, no idea which direction to walk to find the closest town—or how far she’d have to go. The day before, she’d stalled. She’d given up. She’d wallowed in the fact that he left her—but Claire was done with wallowing now.

  Done with hoping things would get better.

  Done with being sad that they weren’t.

  Now Claire was angry. She’d spent so long trying to be so sweet, trying not to make trouble, waiting for something to happen—but something was never going to happen. Anything she wanted out of life, she’d have to take.

 

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