Page 128 of God of Ruin


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But then I called Uncle Aiden. He’s Eli and Creighton’s father, but we’ve always been close because I’m that loveable.

Well, that’s a lie. He’s one of the few people who doesn’t judge me, despite my extreme chaos-oriented nature.

He also encouraged my dad to just let me be when I was developing my holier-than-thou personality.

Uncle Aiden has always treated me and Eli with respect, even though we’re different from everyone else.

Possibly because he shares some of our traits.

I put in my AirPods, fingers splaying on an unremarkable piece of clay that will definitely make it to the bin collection.

Uncle Aiden picks up after the first ring. “Why, hello, Landon. Is it just me or have you been avoiding me?”

“Me? Avoiding you? Not in a million years.”

“And here I thought you were reflecting about your recent reckless involvement in Creigh’s incident.”

“You know I didn’t mean to, Uncle.”

“Doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.” He pauses, then sighs. “You might think yourself a god, but your clear disregard for consequences will catch up to you sooner rather than later.”

I stroke the hip of my creation, then pause. “Maybe it already has.”

“Oh?”

“Hey, Uncle.” Stroke, swipe, stroke. “You always told me it’s okay not to be like the other kids and that I’m not broken. You said that just because my mind is wired differently doesn’t mean I’m any less than them. In fact, it means I’m more special.”

“That’s true.”

“So why the fuck doesn’t she see that?”

“She?”

“A certain thorn in my side who’s accusing me of being empty and a disaster to the tedious emotion called empathy.”

“And you care about her opinion?”

“No…I don’t know.”

“Then you probably do.”

“How do I stop caring?”

Uncle laughs.

I narrow my eyes. “This isn’t funny.”

“It is to an extent. You sound childlike with your emotions. But at any rate, if you want to keep her, you need to practice empathy.”

“No, thanks.”

“Then let her go and go back to your shallow encounters with people you barely remember come morning. That way, you won’t have to care for the rest of your life and will be able to wear the emptiness she previously filled as a badge.”

My movements stop, fingers resting on the hip. “How do you know she filled the emptiness?”

“Your Aunt Elsa does that for me. In fact, so does your mother for your father.”

“Really?”

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