God of Ruin: Chapter 8
God of Ruin: A Dark College Romance (Legacy of Gods Book 4)
The idea of a muse has often eluded me.
I understand the concept and the general consensus, but the overrated obsession of artists with the existence of a muse has always left me in a rare state of bewilderment.
And thatâs coming from someone who used sand to sculpt at the age of two. It was a female devil with a long, pointy tail, inspired by a painting in Grandpaâs house. I recall that first time I created a sculpture and the raw feeling of the wet sand slithering between my small fingers.
I also recall the unperturbed emotions that ran through me when I watched that she-devil get washed away by a wave.
It was only later that I found out my apathetic reaction to the destruction of my first creation wasnât the norm and that I was, in fact, the definition of neurodivergent.
My steady relationship with art in general, and sculpting in particular, has been persistent throughout my twenty-three years of life. My world-renowned artist mother calls it a natural talent. The world labels it as genius genes.
For me, itâs been the sole method I could use to cope with my beast, his demon friends, and dull humanity without resorting to an extreme. Like transforming someone into stone, for instance.
Every artist has a museâor so they say.
Since Iâm a very importantâif not the most importantâmember of a family of artists, I have come to the realization that I donât share Mumâs, Branâs, or Glynâs over-idolization of their imaginary friends.
In my mind, thatâs what a muse is all aboutâan imaginary childhood friend whose constant chatter they couldnât lose during adulthood, so they decided to give them a fancy name.
The idea of a muse has always been redundant, useless, and categorically ridiculous.
But since Iâm a master of blending in and fitting societal expectations, whenever someone has asked me about my muse, Iâve said geniuses donât talk about their muse, as if itâs some sort of MI6 intelligence.
Now, donât get me wrong. Thereâs no doubt that Iâm the definition of an artistic genius who brings the sculpting community to literal tears. However, Iâve partaken in the absolute nonsense of the nonexistent muse and fake superstitious rituals to divert the hordeâs attention.
I also figured my muse manifested in the massive creative energy thatâs impossible to satiate.
She was the inner sadism of my outward charm.
The violence that burst at the seams whenever my plans faced an obstacle.
But that lousy half-arsed explanation lasted until yesterday.
Not in my wildest dreams did I figure that a muse could manifest at the most random time.
When I was facing an enemy, no less.
When I saw the youngest Sokolov running toward the car park like her little arse was on fire, I figured Iâd toy with her and provoke those wildflower eyesâto tears if I felt like it.
After I left her tending to her crushed pride, I had a fleeting curiosity about how her eyes would look when she was crying and begging for my nonexistent mercy.
Since the blasphemous blood bath incident, Iâve been concocting a multi-phase plan, all dedicated to her demise. In a nutshell, Iâd start by tormenting her and end with using her against her brother and cousins.
While those plans remain in the background, thereâs a slight hitch in the process.
The way she froze up when I approached her.
Iâve never seen a human go so completely stillâprofessional art models included. Thereâs always the rise of a chest here, the flaring of nostrils there, and micro-movements to remind me that the fools arenât really stones.
Mia, however? She was the definition of a lifeless statue.
It was my sign that itâs never too late to find the perfect human stone.
I release a long puff of smoke and then stub the cigarette in the middle of the crowded ashtray. My cancer-inducing habit has been going on since my name started making the rounds in the art circles about eight years ago.
The prodigy.
The special one.
The gifted child.
Itâs by no means due to pressure. If anything, the sudden surge of marketing my name experienced has stroked my ego in all the right places and given me better pleasure than a pro choking on my cock.
Smoking simply gives me the right balance while Iâm using both hands to produce peopleâs next favorite sculpture.
My fingers hover over the countless pieces of clay Iâve created since I retreated to my studio after Mia ran away.
At that time, I had two optionsâfollow her or purge the burst of inspiration that suddenly crashed into my skull.
I opted for the second, and ever since then, Iâve been modeling miniature sculptures in search of the right image of the inspiration I had at that exact moment.
A million mini sculptures later, Iâve exhausted my clay supply and Iâm still not satisfied with any of them. Iâm certainly not using them on a real sculpture.
If my art professors at REU were to see them, theyâd fall arse over tits and call them masterpieces like everything Iâve made with my supremely gifted hands.
I donât.
Something is missing.
If that little fucking shit had just remained still for a few more minutes, I wouldâve gotten the full image. But she was more pressed about escaping me.
Granted, I might not have stopped at just touching if she hadnât run away.
I grab the last miniature and throw it against the raw stone opposite me. My details were the sharpest in the first ones, but they dwindled as I made more.
The last ones are absolute rubbish and a staggering disgrace.
The first stab of inspiration that hit me has faded, and my mind is now the usual barren black.
Black used to be the standard for me. It was with black that I sculpted and with black that I continued to thrive.
But for the first time ever, this type of black isnât as satisfying.
I want the dash of colors.
The strike of lightning.
The sound of thunder.
None of them come.
âLan!â
I stare up from my distasteful miniatures to find my brother standing in the middle of my kingdom. Brandon is a striking identical picture of me, who canât resemble my sublime character to save his life.
âHow did you manage to get in?â I sound groggy to my own ears, so I pull out another cigarette and jam it between my lips.
My brother doesnât like the smell of cigarettes, but then again, he shouldnât be in my space.
âI helped.â My cousin Eli flashes me a vicious grin as he appears from behind Bran like a horror cliché.
Heâs my second cousin, if weâre being specific, since his dad and mine are cousins. Being a couple years older than me, he takes that as a pass to brag about the King firstborn privileges.
Oh, and he happens to be antagonistic for the fun of it. Yes, Iâm the same, but I donât like competition in my own game. One of these days, heâll take it too far and theyâll find his body mysteriously floating in the Thames.
âWith what?â I deadpan. âGiving yourself a personality?â
âThe only one in this building in need of a personality transplant is you.â
âHe found the master key so we could open the door,â Bran says in his usual attempt at peacemaking. Itâs so disturbing to see him being Mother Teresa and spouting nonsense with my face.
I blow smoke in his direction. âAnd you trespassed in my space becauseâ¦â
He closes his eyes for a beat, but, like a boring nun, he doesnât display any form of anger or even displeasure. âYou werenât answering your phone or the door when I knocked for the past fifteen minutes.â
And the hole of fucking strange keeps widening.
Iâm usually more aware of my surroundings than a predator in a dark African jungle.
âI told you heâs fine,â Eli supplies like an arsehole. âAs unfortunate as it might sound, nothing can hurt the twat.â
âYou, however, could accidentally end up on an MIA list.â I match his grin with my wolfish one. âDonât worry, Iâll console Uncle Aiden and Aunt Elsa after they receive the news.â
âNot if you magically disappear first.â
âCatch me if you can.â
âIs that a challenge?â
âI donât know. Is it?â
âCan you both stop?â Bran shakes his head like a headmistress whoâs sick and tired of her most troublemaking students. âWeâre family.â
Eli and I snort and then we burst into laughter at the same time.
Did I mention that my brother can be the sappiest plain Jane who ever walked the planet?
Eli pats his shoulder. âFamily is what makes this more fun, dear cousin.â
Bran doesnât appear the least bit amused, though his shoulders relax now that heâs figured out Eli and I like to rile each other for sport.
He still wants to kill me for my plan that included his brother, but Iâm sure he wonât do it.
At least, not if he still wants to belong to the King family.
As in, the one that owns the UK and half of the world. My grandfather, Jonathan King, is a ruthless monarch with an iron fist and a sharp sense of business. He built the fortune his brother and father nearly eradicated.
My father, Levi King, and my uncle, Aiden King, have been transforming the business and making it more lucrative than oil princesâ fortunes.
The future of the King empire falls on Eli, me, and probably Creighton. Bran and Glyn were never interested in business and prefer to be artists like Mum.
My art career is just a temporary ruse before I take over the world. Might need to study some business first, but who gives a fuck. Iâm sure Iâll excel at that like everything Iâve done thus far.
Nothing is permanent, and the world is a mere vessel to make my desires come true.
My every whim and want has been catered to, which tends to be boring, for lack of a better term. Someone give me a challenge, for fuckâs sake.
âIs everything okay? Youâve been locked in here for over twelve hoursâ¦â my brother trails off when he sees the miniatures lying on the floor, and his eyes grow in size. âWow.â
Yes, wow. Iâve never made so many useless miniatures in one session.
âWow for the murdered Smurfs heâs been making?â Eli asks with a note of depleted sarcasm.
I side-eye him. âYouâre an uncultured swine with not an artistic bone in your miserable body. Donât pollute my studio with your lack of taste.â
âI do have taste. It just doesnât include your ugly art.â
âItâs far from ugly,â Bran says without looking at Eli, then lowers himself to his knees to inspect them closely. âThese are some of your finest work. Theyâre stunning.â
âAll of my work is stunning.â
Bran stares at me. âYou havenât sculpted a thing in months, Lan.â
âThese arenât sculptures.â
âYou havenât done any model miniatures either.â
âTheyâre doodles. They mean nothing.â
âYouâre such an arrogant fool. If others⦠No, if I could make something like this while doodling, I wouldnât ask for anything else.â
âYou need to stop painting happy-go-lucky nature scenes and youâll be able to do better than this. Youâre welcome for the free advice from a genius.â
âI told you not to meddle with my artistic choices.â
âCry me a river.â I kill my half-finished cigarette and crack my neck. âWhat time is it?â
âPast your beauty bedtime,â Eli says. âDark circles look hideous on you.â
âAnd that striped jacket gives you a fantastic grandpa vibe. Have better fashion sense before patronizing me about my looks.â I point at the door. âNow, out of my space, and Iâm going to need that master key so no one trespasses again.â
Eli leans forward and whispers, âNo,â before he buggers off to make the world a worse place than it was an hour ago.
âYou need some sort of an escorting service?â I ask when Bran lingers behind, still staring at the miniatures.
He reaches a hand to one of them but thinks better of it and retracts it. Good. That hand might have been accidentally broken if heâd put it on my possessions.
Though I might not be as murderous if he asks for permission. Heâs always wanted to touch my sculptures after Iâve given him the green light. Now, he doesnât even ask if he can.
My brother stands to his full height and faces me with a furrowed brow. âAre you going to sculpt any of them?â
âNo. Theyâre not worth it.â
âHave you positively lost your mind? These are yourâ¦â
âFinest work. Stunning. A stroke of a genius,â I finish for him. âWe obviously have a different definition of excellence. What you see as extraordinary is mediocre at best to me.â
âWell, excuse me for not understanding the genius genes.â
âNonsense. You have them as well, but as Iâve mentioned a million times, youâre shackling them to the best of your abilities.â I prop an elbow on his shoulder and grin. âWant my help to bring out the side you buried so deep, you almost forgot it existed?â
âIf by help, you mean to drown me in your blood-flavored activities, then no thanks.â
âOne day, youâll take me up on my offer.â
âNot even if youâre reincarnated as a saint.â
âBloody hell, Bran. Donât go manifesting pure torture over a small disagreement.â I pat his cheek with the back of my hand.
Itâs a gesture he used to like when we were growing up. Now, however, he drops his shoulder, making me lose my balance, and steps out of the way.
âNo disagreement with you has ever been small, Lan.â
âOh, for fuckâs sake. Is this one of those times when you turn sappy on me as if Iâm your imaginary therapist? If thatâs going to be the case, I get paid by the hour and in advance, thank you.â
He releases a long breath and shakes his head with the surrender of an old man in the last stages of cancer.
âJust call Mum when you get the chance. She asked about you when I talked to her earlier.â
Saint Bran.
The peacemaker who thinks heâs holding our family together by a thread Bran.
Sometimes I wonder if the fact that he of all people happens to be my twin is some form of a calamity.
After one last lingering look at the miniatures, he leaves the studio as if his arse is on fire.
Itâs no secret that Bran doesnât like me. Might have to do with the number of treacherous, elicit activities Iâve been conducting over the years.
As Mum likes to say, weâre like night and day, and while she means that as a compliment, the truth remains, itâs impossible for us to meet halfway.
But Bran and his righteous shenanigans can wait another day.
Iâve already missed half a day in my attempts to retain the vision from last night. I donât have enough time or inspiration to resurrect it.
One thingâs for sure. My next course of action starts with a certain little muse whoâs gotten herself into the deepest clusterfuck of her life.
To say Iâm entering unfriendly territory would be an understatement.
Letâs say The Kingâs U college and I share the same level of disagreement of right- and left-wing politics.
In fact, I wouldnât be surprised if the Heathens have put a bounty on my head and a wanted poster at the entrance of every class.
My track record with Killian, Nikolai, and even Jeremy doesnât help. The only member I havenât harmed, at least not directly, is Gareth, but I doubt heâd be interested in having a cheeky drink and smuggling me onto their grounds.
Which is why I came in partial disguise.
The saving grace of being among the unpolished, rowdy Americans is that there are so many of them. Definitely more than the students at REU. Therefore, wearing sunglasses and a hoodie is enough to conceal me from the unholy masses.
According to my extensive research on the Heathens and, after the blood episode, on Mia Sokolov herself, I know sheâs studying business.
So I make my way to that school and wait by the corner outside her classroom like a perfect gentleman. Thankfully, her clone studies law, so they donât take the same classes.
I check my watch and count the seconds until sheâs out. After this, Mia still has one more class, but sheâs going to have to take a rain check on that.
The students buzz around me, their chatter clashing with the seconds on my watch.
I donât mind the wait. In fact, a sensation of calm overtakes me at the prospect of catching prey.
Iâm good at camouflaging myself when need be and waiting for the right moment.
Like the night, Iâm silent, overpowering, andâunder the right circumstancesâdeadly.
Students start flowing like ants in a disorganized colony, but Iâm not concerned about missing Mia in the crowd.
That wonât be possible after the alien sensation I experienced during last nightâs meeting.
Sure enough, I catch a glimpse of her blonde hair and blue ribbons flying in the wind as she checks her cat-themed backpack.
Sheâs wearing another black dress thatâs fit for a luxurious funeral, and a certain detail stands out. The upper half has a few straps that stop at a choker around her delicate throat.
My, my.
She even dressed for the auspicious occasion.
Mia Sokolov is a beautiful goddess without putting in any effort. She barely wears any makeup or tries to doll up like most girls. She also adopts a troublemaking personality thatâs designed to put a damper on her physical superiority.
Iâve barely seen her offer a genuine smile, and that includes all the footage Iâve gathered on her in my attempts to dig her a hole sheâll never get out of.
However, she excels at offering fake socially accepted smiles and pretending to be a naive cute girl to draw the right peopleâs attention.
And while she might argue that weâre different, sheâs wearing the same version of the mask I do. Which means she might have a beast inside her, too.
And I will have to murder and cut it into pieces because I only need her as a statue.
Not flesh and bones. Thoughts and opinions. Words and existence.
Still rummaging through her bag, she walks in my direction as clueless as innocent prey.
There, little muse. I might give you a treat after I turn you into a statue.
âMia!â
Sheâs only a few meters away from where Iâm lurking when she comes to a halt and turns around.
I curse under my breath upon detecting the last two people I need in this situation.
The first is none other than Killianâthe guy who stole my sisterâs heart despite my explicit refusal of the damned relationship. The other is Nikolai, Miaâs older brother, who might be out to slice my throat the moment he sees me.
Both needless presences catch up to her and I have to change my position to get a better view of the situation.
Logically, I should leave before those two catch a glimpse of me and choose to give me a taste of my own torture medicine. And itâll be much worse than I could imagine, considering I trespassed on their turf.
The risks Iâm willing to take for the sake of my muse are irritatingly stunning.
She signs something to them that I believe means, âWhat are you doing here?â
I might have looked at some sign language videosâASL, not BSL since there are significant differences. And by some, I mean dozens of them. It was enough to become proficient. What? Itâs not my fault that Iâm not only an effortless polyglot but also a fast learner.
âIâm taking Niko on a stroll,â Killian replies with an easy grin.
His cousin kicks his foot. âIâm not your dog, motherfucker.â
Killian doesnât seem perturbed in the least. Heâs probably the one who resembles me the most from that bunch of little fuckers. The only difference is that Iâm culturally superior and have a more prominent penchant for anarchy.
As Iâm contemplating the best way to dump his body in the ocean without permanently losing my sister, something happens that derails my whole thought process.
Miaâs eyes twinkle as her lips pull in a genuine, happy smile. Itâs the wildest look Iâve ever seen on her face. And, coincidentally, theyâve all happened around her family members.
As if theyâre the only ones who deserve this side of her.
âWanted to check on you,â Nikolai says and pushes a cup in her hand. âBought your favorite Frappuccino. Double espresso shot with caramel syrup and cream on top.â
âI, unavoidably, helped him,â Killian says.
âYou did not,â Nikolai retorts.
âMy presence was in itself a massive help. If I hadnât been there, you wouldâve been kicked out by the cashier, who was scared to death by your grim, unconsciously frightening presence.â
Mia signs a thanks and accepts the cup, then she leans in for a quick hug with both her brother and cousin.
A hugger. A blasphemous, absolutely distasteful habit with no practical meaning whatsoever. Itâs not needed for sex and, when used, can lead to an awkward angle.
But then again, Iâve never appreciated touching people when my cock isnât involved.
âWant to grab something to eat before we continue our stroll?â Killian asks her.
She shakes her head and signs that she has a class.
Nikolai pats her head as if sheâs still a child. âDonât make any trouble, and if you do, for all thatâs unholy, tell me about it.â
âAnd me.â Killian points a thumb at himself. âWe can turn mere trouble into a tornado.â
She signs an âOkay,â then they finally part ways.
Thankfully, Killian and Nikolai go in the opposite direction, while Mia continues toward me as she slurps her drink.
She reaches into her dress pocket and retrieves her phone, completely oblivious to the trap sheâs walking right into.
I donât make myself noticeable when sheâs near. No.
I wait and bide my time for the right moment.
Once she passes me, I stand behind her and whisper, âSo you do use your phone, and yet you left me on Read. Where are your manners, little muse?â