Page 54 of Fallen Gods

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The way these humans coexist with no clue of the war that shaped the world.

The way they can hope and dream. And I never will.

I’ve been trapped and isolated with my father for years, but I’ve never felt lonelier than I do in this moment.

Feelings have no place here, I remind myself. So I bury them. I bury them deep.

The round-robin continues until we land on Eira Helian. She arches a brow at me. “We already know each other, Rey,” she tells me.

We do?

“My father works at Odin Enterprises.”

My father’s company, of course, but a fact I would’ve preferred not to be widely known. Ziva leans closer to me. But I easily deflect. “I’m not involved much in my father’s business.”

Lie.

“But it’s really nice to meet you.” I give my Aethercall a stronger push, and the students around me shift their attention away. “Tell us more about yourself, Eira.”

She takes a long, steadying breath. Though not to steady her nerves or prepare her thoughts, I discover—she’s drawing air so she can launch into what might be one of the longest speeches known to humanity. Okay, that’s hyperbole. But you know the type. Addicted to the sound of their own voice. Desperate for constant attention.

“Well, my day started off like complete shit, for one. We wereout of bananas…”

Just once, I’d like to be wrong about these kinds of things.

She rolls her eyes. “Naturally, I fired the housekeeper. Not just because of the bananas; I’m not a total monster. She knew it was my move-in day and forgot the grocery list again. She texts her family nonstop! She has one job.”

“The audacity,” I whisper under my breath. I mean, to text family, the horror.

“Right?”she yells. “Thank you!”

Doesn’t understand sarcasm. Got it.

“Anyway.” She takes what I’m assuming is a soothing breath. “The moving crew dropped two of my favorite succulents, shattering them into pieces—I’ve had them at least six months.”

Dear God, give this woman a medal.

“Then I came here… Nobody seems to understand how important this is to me, my parents included, and my room is all wrong, not even close to how big it looked in the brochure, and I’m pretty sure the girl next door hissed at me.”

She leaves so many openings, it’s hard not to respond. I bite my tongue and nod, then, along with everyone else, say, “Hi, Eira.”

Another rough exhale escapes her bright red lips. “Hi, whatever, oh, my food’s almost here.” She starts tapping away on her phone like Bananagate never happened and the world is right again.

“You can’t make this shit up,” I whisper to Ziva.

“Preach.”

By the time Sigurd calls the assembly back to order, my right eye is starting to tick. The students quiet around me as he resumes talking, and I completely tune out. The relative silence after all that socializing is bliss.

Ziva hands me a sleeve of Oreos. “I think I love you,” I say.

“I hear that often.”

I tear into the cookies and barely keep my moan at bay.

I’ve finally started to relax when my phone buzzes in my pocket. Mid-chew, I use a free hand to grab it and stare at the screen.

Odinfather:Ticktock.