Accidental Surrogate For Alpha Novel Free -Chapter 108
Accidental Surrogate for Alpha
Ella
Sinclair and I stay up late into the night talking, reveling in this new discovery. Iâd believed our dream
date would give us closure, but it turns out it wasnât the end at all â it was the beginning.
âItâs no wonder youâve been feeling so off-kilter.â Sinclair consoles, trailing his fingers up and down my
naked back.
When heâd started stripping me, I thought we were going to make love again â something I was only
too eager to experience outside of my dreams. Unfortunately heâd informed me that his wolf wouldnât
be able to resist marking me for real, so weâd better wait until we know itâs safe. Of course as soon as
he mentioned claiming me, the little voice in my head had gone wild with excitement.
Iâd attempted to change his mind, showing off my curves and plying him with kisses. However when my
hand snuck down to close around his hard length, heâd put a quick stop to my tricks, seizing the
offending limbs and pinning me in place. Iâd whined and growled, but he only growled back, giving my
bottom a few hard swats. Now Iâm sprawled across his chest, chastised and sulking, and he clearly
thinks he can make me feel better by sympathizing â the tyrant. âItâs not just the pregnancy or the
stress. Youâve finally found your own kind, and your inner wolf has been coming out more and more.â
I sniff, preparing to argue, but then his words sink in. My inner wolf⦠the little voice in my head⦠sheâs
the one thatâs been urging me to behave so oddly lately. I can never recall her being so vocal before, or
so unreasonable. I always assumed it was my conscience, but in hindsight⦠are consciences usually
so defiant? Do they usually have personalities of their own, and feel separate and part of you at the
same time?
Suddenly I remember how that same inner voice had cried out her joy at being free when I shifted in
the dream. Conscience? I think hesitantly. Are⦠are you my wolf?
Well duh. She responds dryly. It certainly took you long enough to figure it out.
Why didnât you tell me! I exclaim in reply, exasperated.
I thought you knew! Youâre always talking to me! She counters hotly.
Sinclair is watching me closely, a knowing look on his face. âWolves can be very contrary at times.â
âI⦠Iâve always had this voice.â I share softly, my eyes wide, âI had no idea.â
He nods. âWhen you grow up among wolves your elders teach you that voice is your inner animal,
thatâs part of why itâs so important that shifters are raised among their packs.â
âI still donât understand.â I admit, feeling completely overwhelmed. âIf this is all real, then why did I ever
shift when I was old enough, why is she only coming out now?â
âI hate to say it, Ella.â Sinclair begins gravely. âBut I think itâs likely that someone did this to you⦠that
they bound your wolf so she couldnât get out.â
âWhat do you mean?â I inquire, my muscles tensing nervously.
âYou have to understand that if a pack knows a child exists and something happens to their parents,
then the pup will be placed with a relative or a shifter family willing to foster them. Our children are
incredibly important to us, and it would be neglect of the worst kind to knowingly let them be raised
among humans. The only time it happens is when the parents didnât have any connections in the shifter
world, usually theyâre rogues or outside their own territory. Every case Iâve ever heard of a dormant wolf
begins with a child being found by humans at the sight of an accident, or wandering unattended in the
wilderness or a strange city.â Sinclair explains, stroking my hair with a pitying expression.
âOkay.â I nod, not sure where this is going. âSo maybe my parents were from a different pack?â
He shakes his head. âSweetheart, I looked into your records at the orphanage when all this began. You
werenât found by the humans⦠you were given to them. Your parents surrendered you directly to the
orphanage. There werenât any names in the file â which shouldnât have been allowed, but itâs part of
why I never entertained the idea that you might be a wolf. I thought if you were dormant it would have
shown years ago, and that no shifters would ever give their pup to the humans.â
It surprises me how badly this information hurts. Iâd never known my family history â I left the
orphanage before I reached adulthood, and it wasnât the institutionâs policy to share details like this with
children. Still, I donât know any orphan who hasnât concocted a fantasy that their parents would come
for them one day. No one wants to believe they were just abandoned⦠unwanted. âWhy didnât you tell
me?â
âBecause I thought it was in the past, and that it would only hurt you.â Sinclair frowns, using the pad of
his thumb to wipe away a rogue tear. âBut now that we know the truth⦠it suggests that something
much bigger is going on here, Ella. I think your parents must have been trying to hide you for some
reason, and they cut you off from your wolf to make sure you wouldnât be found.â
âSo how do we find out for sure?â I ask, not sure how to feel about this idea. Is it worse to just be
abandoned, or for people who are supposed to love you most, to intentionally cut you off from your true
soul?
Sinclair hugs me close, seeing how badly I need his comfort. âWe get a DNA test, to start.â He
proclaims. âAnd then we take it one step at a time.â
____________________
The next morning I find myself sitting in the familiar doctorâs office, with two very serious looking wolves
towering over me. The nearest one, Sinclair, looks as if heâs trying to glower the physician into the
ground, and I suspect heâs feeling particularly protective after watching the man withdraw my blood.
Apparently his wolf canât stand seeing me bleed, even if itâs just for a test. I lean into his side, not sure
whether itâs to soothe him or myself.
âWell, itâs confirmed.â The doctor confirms, âYouâre a wolf, Ella.â
Sinclairâs arm squeezes my shoulders, and I feel his lips graze my hair. âThen why didnât I know, why
canât I shift?â I inquire, only sounding a little petulant.
âI donât know.â He purses his lips regretfully. âAll this test tells us is that you have shifter DNA. I can
refer you to a geneticist to try and decipher a particular family line, traits, whether youâre an alpha or
omega, but unless someone else in your family has given samples, we wonât know who you are or how
this happened. Thatâs probably something youâll have to figure out yourself.â
âDo you know how we can wake her inner wolf completely?â Sinclair questions. âItâs obviously been
coming out since we met, especially with the baby, but itâs still buried deep.â
âWell the bad news is that youâll probably have to wait until your pup is born.â The physician informs us.
As soon as your wolf does wake, youâll probably go into your first shift. Normally itâs perfectly safe for
breeding she-wolves to shift because itâs instantaneous. But a first shift breaks all the bones and tears
muscles â as you know, Alpha. Thereâs no telling what it would do to the baby.â
âBut I shifted in the dream, and that was instant.â I remind Sinclair.
âItâs not the same, sweetheart.â Sinclair shakes his head sadly. âPups can dream as their wolves too,
the first time is still awful.â
âYou mean I have to give birth and have all my bones broken sometime in the near future?â I demand
indignantly.
Before Sinclair can reply, the doctor chimes in, âletâs just hope itâs not the same day, Ella.â
âWhat?â both of our heads jerk towards the man, and my heart stalls in my chest.
âWell, uh â thatâs the thing.â The doctor hedges, watching Sinclair warily. A low growl is rumbling
steadily in the Alphaâs chest, and I wonder if it wasnât meant to be a purr to calm me, only he wasnât
calm enough himself to manage it. âA couple of things could wake her wolf naturally. If you were to
claim her as your mate, or giving birth. Itâs also possible that neither of those things will do it and youâll
have to find another way.â He holds up his hands. âThese are just guesses mind you, but the fact that
her wolf has been coming out in response to you and the baby would indicate that her mate or her child
might be enough to break whatever binds her wolf. So if birth triggers it, it might be⦠well, back-to-
back.â
âWhy would you tell her that with so little tact.â Sinclair snarls. âSheâs already under enough stress.â
âIâm sorry, Alpha, these are uncharted waters for all of us.â The doctor says, tucking an invisible tail
between his legs. âIt just came out.â
âAnd I suppose you have no idea how we might bring out her wolf if those things donât work?â Sinclair
interrogates through gritted teeth.
âNo. Iâve never seen a case like this. I think you need to go to the elders, if anyone knows about this
kind of magic, itâs them.â
Sinclair growls, scooping me up off the table. âThen weâll go to the elders.â