Read Unwind Online

Authors: Neal Shusterman

Unwind (21 page)

Finally, after what feels like forever, the quietest of them all speaks.

“Unwound,” Diego says. “I'd rather be unwound.”

Even though it's been a long time since Hayden posed the question, Connor knows immediately what it refers to.
Would you rather die or be unwound?
It's like the question has hung in the cramped darkness all this time, waiting to be answered.

“Not me,” says Emby. “Because if you die, at least you go to Heaven.”

Heaven?
thinks Connor. More likely they'd go to the other place. Because if their own parents didn't care enough about them to keep them, who would want them in Heaven?

“What makes you think Unwinds don't go?” Diego asks Emby.

“Because Unwinds aren't really dead. They're still alive . . . sort of. I mean, they have to use every single part of us somewhere, right? That's the law.”

Then Hayden asks the question. Not
a
question,
the
question. Asking it is the great taboo among those marked for unwinding. It's what everyone thinks about, but no one ever dares to ask out loud.

“So, then,” says Hayden, “if every part of you is alive but inside someone else . . . are you alive or are you dead?”

This, Connor knows, is Hayden bringing his hand back and forth across the flame again. Close enough to feel it, but not close enough to burn. But it's not just his own hand now, it's everyone's, and it ticks Connor off.

“Talking wastes our oxygen,” Connor says. “Let's just agree that unwinding sucks and leave it at that.”

It shuts everyone up, but only for a minute. It's Emby who talks next.

“I don't think unwinding is bad,” he says. “I just don't want it to happen to me.”

Connor wants to ignore him but can't. If there's one thing that Connor can't abide, it's an Unwind who defends unwinding. “So it's all right if it happens to us but not if it happens to you?”

“I didn't say that.”

“Yes, you did.”

“Ooh,” says Hayden. “This is getting good.”

“They say it's painless,” says Emby—as if that were any consolation.

“Yeah?” says Connor. “Well, why don't you go ask all the pieces of Humphrey Dunfee how painless it was?”

The name settles like a frost around them. The jolts and rattles of turbulence grow sharper.

“So . . . you heard that story too?” says Diego.

“Just because there are stories like that, doesn't mean unwinding is all bad,” says Emby. “It helps people.”

“You sound like a tithe,” says Diego.

Connor finds himself personally insulted by that. “No, he doesn't. I know a tithe. His ideas might have been a little bit out there, but he wasn't stupid.” The thought of Lev brings with it a wave of despair. Connor doesn't fight it—he just lets it wash through him, then drain away. He doesn't
know
a tithe; he
knew
one. One who has certainly met his destiny by now.

“Are you calling me stupid?” says Emby.

“I think I just did.”

Hayden laughs. “Hey, the Mouth Breather is right—unwinding does help people. If it wasn't for unwinding, there'd be bald guys again—and wouldn't that be horrible?”

Diego snickers, but Connor is not the least bit amused. “Emby, why don't you do us all a favor and use your mouth for breathing instead of talking until we land, or crash, or whatever.”

“You might think I'm stupid, but I got a good reason for the
way I feel,” Emby says. “When I was little, I was diagnosed with pulmonary fibrosis. Both my lungs were shutting down. I was gonna die. So they took out both my dying lungs and gave me a single lung from an Unwind. The only reason I'm alive is because that kid got unwound.”

“So,” says Connor, “your life is more important than his?”

“He was already unwound—it's not like I did it to him. If I didn't get that lung, someone else would have.”

In his anger, Connor's voice begins to rise, even though Emby's only a couple of feet away at most. “If there wasn't unwinding, there'd be fewer surgeons, and more doctors. If there wasn't unwinding, they'd go back to trying to cure diseases instead of just replacing stuff with someone else's.”

And suddenly the Mouth Breather's voice rings out with a ferocity that catches Connor by surprise.

“Wait till you're the one who's dying and see how you feel about it!”

“I'd rather die than get a piece of an Unwind!” Connor yells back.

The Mouth Breather tries to shout something else, but instead goes into a coughing fit that lasts for a whole minute. It gets so bad, it frightens even Connor. It's like he might actually cough up his transplanted lung.

“You okay?” asks Diego.

“Yeah,” says Emby, trying to get it under control. “Like I said, the lung's got asthma. It was the best we could afford.”

By the time his coughing fit is over, it seems there's nothing more to say. Except this:

“If your parents went to all that trouble,” asks Hayden, “why were they having you unwound?”

Hayden and his questions. This one shuts Emby down for a few moments. It's clearly a tough topic for him—maybe
even tougher than it is for most Unwinds.

“My
parents
didn't sign the order,” Emby finally says. “My dad died when I was little, and my mom died two months ago. That's when my aunt took me in. The thing is, my mom left me some money, but my aunt's got three kids of her own to put through college, so . . .”

He doesn't have to finish. The others can connect the dots.

“Man, that stinks,” says Diego.

“Yeah,” says Connor, his anger at Emby now transferred to Emby's aunt.

“It's always about money,” Hayden says. “When my parents were splitting up, they fought over money, until there was none left. Then they fought over me. So I got out before there was none of me left, either.”

Silence falls again. There's nothing to hear but the drone of the engine, and the rattle of the crates. The air is humid and it's a struggle to breathe. Connor wonders if maybe the Fatigues miscalculated about how much air they had.
We're all gonna die in here.
That's what Emby said. Connor bangs his head back sharply against the wall, hoping to jar loose the bad thoughts clinging to his brain. This is not a good place to be alone with your thoughts. Perhaps that's why Hayden feels compelled to talk.

“No one ever answered my question,” Hayden says. “Looks like no one has the guts.”

“Which one?” asks Connor. “You've got questions coming out of you like farts on Thanksgiving.”

“I was asking if unwinding kills you, or if it leaves you alive somehow. C'mon—it's not like we haven't thought about it.”

Emby says nothing. He's clearly been weakened by coughing and conversation. Connor's not interested in volunteering either.

“It depends,” says Diego. “Depends on where your soul is once you're unwound.”

Normally Connor would walk away from a conversation like this. His life is about tangibles: things you can see, hear, and touch. God, souls, and all that has always been like a secret in a black box he couldn't see into, so it was easier to just leave it alone. Only now, he's inside the black box.

“What do you think, Connor?” asks Hayden. “What happens to your soul when you get unwound?”

“Who says I even got one?”

“For the sake of argument, let's say you do.”

“Who says I want an argument?”


Ijolé!
Just give him an answer, man, or he won't leave you alone.”

Connor squirms, but can't squirm his way out of the box. “How should I know what happens to it? Maybe it gets all broken up like the rest of us into a bunch of little pieces.”

“But a soul isn't like that,” says Diego. “It's indivisible.”

“If it's indivisible,” says Hayden, “maybe an Unwind's spirit stretches out, kind of like a giant balloon between all those parts of us in other places. Very poetic.”

Hayden might find poetry in it, but to Connor the thought is terrifying. He tries to imagine himself stretched so thin and so wide that he can reach around the world. He imagines his spirit like a web strung between the thousand recipients of his hands, his eyes, the fragments of his brain—none of it under his control anymore, all absorbed by the bodies and wills of others. Could consciousness exist like that? He thinks about the trucker who performed a card trick for him with an Unwind's hand. Did the boy who once owned that hand still feel the satisfaction of performing the trick? Was his spirit still inexplicably whole, even though his flesh had been shuffled like that deck of cards, or was he shredded beyond all hope of
awareness—beyond Heaven, Hell, or anything eternal? Whether or not souls exist Connor doesn't know. But consciousness
does
exist—that's something he knows for sure. If every part of an Unwind is still alive, then that consciousness has to go somewhere, doesn't it? He silently curses Hayden for making him think about it . . . but Hayden isn't done done yet.

“Here's a little brain clot for you,” says Hayden. “I knew this girl back home. There was something about her that made you want to listen to the things she had to say. I don't know whether she was really well-centered, or just psychotic. She believed that if someone actually gets unwound, then they never had a soul to begin with. She said God must know who's going to be unwound, and he doesn't give them souls.”

Diego grunts his disapproval. “I don't like the sound of that.”

“This girl had it all worked out in her head,” continued Hayden. “She believed Unwinds are like the unborn.”

“Wait a second,” says Emby, finally breaking his silence. “The unborn have souls. They have souls from the moment they get made—the law says.”

Connor doesn't want to get into it again with Emby, but he can't help himself. “Just because the law says it, that doesn't make it true.”

“Yeah, well, just because the law says it, that doesn't make it false, either. It's only the law because a whole lot of people thought about it, and decided it made sense.”

“Hmm,” says Diego. “The Mouth Breather has a point.”

Maybe so, but the way Connor sees it, a point ought to be sharper than that. “How can you pass laws about things that nobody knows?”

“They do it all the time,” says Hayden. “That's what law is: educated guesses at right and wrong.”

“And what the law says is fine with me,” says Emby.

“But if it weren't for the law, would you still believe it?” asks Hayden. “Share with us a a personal opinion, Emby. Prove there's more than snot in that cranium of yours.”

“You're wasting your time,” says Connor. “There's not.”

“Give our congested friend a chance,” says Hayden.

They wait. The sound of the engine changes. Connor can feel them begin a slow descent, and wonders if the others can feel it too. Then Emby says, “Unborn babies . . . they suck their thumbs sometimes, right? And they kick. Maybe before that they're just like a bunch of cells or something, but once they kick and suck their thumbs—that's when they've got a soul.”

“Good for you!” says Hayden. “An opinion! I knew you could do it.”

Connor's head begins to spin. Was it the plane's banking, or a lack of oxygen?

“Connor, fair is fair—Emby found an opinion somewhere in his questionable gray matter. Now you have to give yours.”

Connor sighs, not having the strength to fight anymore. He thinks about the baby he and Risa so briefly shared. “If there's such a thing as a soul—and I'm not saying that there is—then it comes when a baby's born into the world. Before that, it's just part of the mother.”

“No, it's not!” says Emby.

“Hey—he wanted my opinion, I gave it.”

“But it's wrong!”

“You see, Hayden? You see what you started?”

“Yes!” Hayden says excitedly. “It looks like we're about to have our own little Heartland War. Pity it's too dark for us to watch it.”

“If you want my opinion, you're both wrong,” says Diego. “The way I see it, it's got nothing to do with all of that. It has to do with love.”

“Uh-oh,” says Hayden. “Diego's getting romantic. I'm moving to the other end of the crate.”

“No, I'm serious. A person don't got a soul until that person is loved. If a mother loves her baby—
wants
her baby—it's got a soul from the moment she knows it's there. The moment you're loved, that's when you got your soul.
Punto!

“Yeah?” says Connor. “Well, what about all those babies that get storked—or all those kids in state schools?”

“They just better hope somebody loves them some day.”

Connor snorts dismissively, but in spite of himself, he can't dismiss it entirely, any more than he can dismiss the other things he's heard today. He thinks about his parents. Did they ever love him? Certainly they did when he was little. And just because they stopped, it didn't mean his soul was stolen away . . . although sometimes to admit that it felt like it was. Or at least, part of it died when his parents signed the order.

“Diego, that's really sweet,” Hayden says in his best mocking voice. “Maybe you should write greeting cards.”

“Maybe I should write them on your face.”

Hayden just laughs.

“You always poke fun at other people's opinions,” says Connor, “so how come you never give your own?”

“Yeah,” says Emby.

“You're always playing people for your own entertainment. Now it's your turn. Entertain
us
.”

“Yeah,” says Emby.

“So tell us,” says Connor, “in
The World According to Hayden
, when do we start to live?”

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