On Aiden's end, he can help young Jodie sleep by making her shadow puppets, fetch her a cookie when her parents aren't looking, help her perform miracles for a group of homeless people, and put his own justified animosity towards Ryan aside to let Jodie experience her first perfect date.
Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other: As much as she gripes about Aiden's presence in her life and they tend to butt heads, the two do have Pet the Dog moments towards one another:.
Thankfully for her, he returns in all of the endings except "Zoey", where she really is forced to move on without him. If she chooses to live rather than enter the Beyond in "Black Sun", she is separated from Aiden, who remains in the Infraworld, and spends months grieving him she describes it as though a part of her has been cut away. Technically, Jodie didn't even know her twin before he died, but his death brought her lots of angst not through the death itself, but through everything that happened as a result of it. At one point, using her psychic powers to help a group of homeless people who saved her life results in them calling her a miracle.
All-Loving Hero: You can play Jodie as a compassionate girl with enough Heroic Willpower to rise above what was done to her and save the whole of mankind.
Age-Gap Romance: She can develop a romance with Ryan, who is thirteen years older than her.
Affectionate Nickname: Cole called her "princess" when she was a child.
Action Girl: A reluctant one, but it still counts.
One scene depicts him about to physically hit her, and he later explicitly tells her mother that he views her as an " it" and a demon.
Abusive Parents: When she was young, Jodie was verbally abused by her adoptive father to the extent that he flat-out calls her a monster to her face.
The protagonist, a young woman who is bound to a spectral entity named Aiden and has endured much pain and suffering because of it. It made me the person that I am today, a freak, a mistake, someone to hate." "I was born with a gift, or what they called a gift.