Chapter 203
Accidental Surrogate for Alpha
#Chapter 203 â Mother
Ella
After shopping with Cora and napping away the afternoon with the pups in the nursery, I find my way to
Henryâs rooms. The guards told me he just returned from the refugee camp, but when he opens the
door for me heâs all smiles. I give him a hug and a kiss on the cheek, and he welcomes me in. âYou
wouldnât happen to be in the mood for an afternoon snack, would you?â He inquires knowingly.
âBecause personally Iâm starving.â
Iâm fairly certain this is a plot to make sure Iâm feeding myself well, but my stomach growls loudly as I
find a seat on the couch. Still, I try to sound demure as I shrug, âI could eat.â
Henry laughs before calling down to the kitchens and ordering a small feast. As we eat he tells me all
about his day at the refugee camp and I, in turn, share my frustration with my sudden celebrity and
Coraâs news about Roger. He can only shake his head. âThat boy has made some bad choices in his
life, but Iâve been very proud of him these last few months. I never thought Iâd see the day that my sons
would repair their relationship. You know thatâs down to you, donât you?â He asks warmly, an
affectionate twinkle in his eye.
âOh, donât say that. Iâm so tired of getting credit for things that just so happened to occur in my general
vicinity.â I complain, slumping back and rubbing my full belly. âNot that I donât appreciate the
compliments⦠I just⦠perfection is an impossible thing to live up to⦠and I am so far from perfect itâs
laughable. I donât want to end up with a reputation that Iâm destined to fall short of â Iâm only human
after all.â A moment after the words leave my mouth, I realize they arenât true. âI mean, not human, but
Iâm just a person like everyone else.â
âNo one said you were perfect, Ella.â Henry reminds me pointedly. âI said that you brought Dominic and
Roger back together â which is true. If you read more into that then I think youâre projecting at best, and
giving yourself too much credit at worst.â
I canât help but laugh. âFair enough. I suppose no one has said Iâm perfect⦠I just⦠I can see the hope
and the expectation in their eyes. The refugees, the servants, random people on the street⦠even my
guards. Everyone is looking at me as though Iâm the solution to this war, the ruined secrecy pact⦠but
Iâm the same person I was yesterday. I donât have the answers to these problems.â Seeming to sense
thereâs more, Henry stays silent, and I catch a rogue tear slipping from the corner of my eye. âIâm
terrified that Iâm going to fail them all, Henry.â
Henry wheels around the coffee table, which bears the wreckage of our feast, and takes my hand in
his. âDearheart, that is part of being a pack leader. Every Alpha and every Luna has had the same fear,
and I know it feels overwhelming, but itâs also your strength. Duty to your people, the desire to do right
by them will keep you centered, itâs what will guide you forward through the hardest days of your reign.
Now, I know the problems youâre facing are a lot bigger than what most Lunaâs have to deal with, but I
promise you arenât alone in feeling this way. Thatâs why the responsibility is so grave.â
His words ring true, especially as I think about Sinclair. I know my mate struggles with the incredible
weight of caring for all those in his territory, of living up to his title and doing his best for his people, but
it still feels different to me.
âBut most Alphaâs and Lunas have some idea what theyâre doing.â I argue weakly. âThey know this
world, theyâve learned and prepared their whole lives from watching their predecessors. They know the
history, the society and all of itâs challenges. Iâm not even a decent ambassador to human society
because my experiences were pretty damn niche.â
Henry smiles tenderly, âIâm going to give you some advice that will help you as both parent and pack
leader. There are countless days ahead where you will feel uncertain, where youâre overwhelmed and
exhausted and all you can do is pray that youâre not messing up your child or your people in some
irreparable way.â
âIs this supposed to be comforting?â I squeak, cradling my belly protectively and wishing I could keep
my son in the safe haven of my womb until this wretched war is over.
Henry chuckles good-naturedly. âThe advice is just to keep putting one foot in front of the other. If you
step back and think about everything at once, the weight will crush you. Just take it one day at a time,
and before you know it, youâll realize that you had what it takes all along. It wonât be easy â but I
promise you, nothing is more rewarding.â
âThank you.â I profess tearily, reaching forward to hug him. âThat isnât even what I came to talk to you
about, but I guess I needed to get it out.â
âExactly.â He purrs, patting my back. âPoor little mother, Iâm sorry youâre dealing with all this alone.â
âBut Iâm not alone.â I correct him with a watery smile. âI have a family for the first time in my life â and I
donât mean the one who gave me up.â I clarify, wiping my eyes. âIâm so grateful to you all. I admit, itâs
been one hell of a learning curve to figure out how to talk about my feelings, but I have to admit
Dominic was right â it helps.â I glance at my father-in-law. âDonât tell him I said he was right.â
âI wouldnât dream of it.â Henry promises, swiping his fingers over his lips and throwing away the key.
âSo what did you want to talk to me about?â
âOh.â I say, my face falling. Iâm half tempted to brush it aside and save this conversation for another
day. Weâve ended on such a lovely note, and Iâm not eager to mess it all up. Still, when I glance up at
Henry heâs giving me an expectant look like he knows exactly what Iâm thinking and wonât let me get
away with it. Not for the first time, I see where my mate gets his bossiness. Taking a deep breath, I
forge ahead. âDominic told me who my parents are.â
Henry nods in understanding, âIt must have been quite a shock⦠Are you disappointed, that you wonât
be able to meet your father?â
I shake my head fiercely, squeezing his hand as hard as I can. âI already have the only father I need.â I
proclaim, and suddenly Iâm not the only one who has tears in my eyes. âBut Iâm horrified to think that
my â that Xavier might have ripped your family apart.â I confess, my tears returning. âThat he stole your
mate â Dominic and Rogerâs mother. I donât want to belong to his bloodline.â
Henry clucks and brushes my hair back from my face. âNone of us can change where we come from,
Ella.â He states softly. âBut your upbringing taught you a lesson most of us donât learn until much later
in life: the family you choose can be a thousand times better than the one you were born into. Blood
may be thicker than water â but so are a lot of things⦠mayonnaise, frosting, gravyâ¦â
A giggle breaks through my heavy emotions, and Henry smiles in return. âThe point is that your father
doesnât have to define who you are â you have more power to decide that than most.â He continues,
turning my chin up to look into my face. âI knew your parents fairly well, and I can tell you right now that
I donât see any of Xavier in you â I never have.â
âAnd my mother?â I inquire shakily, not sure whether I truly want the answer to this question.
âYour mother was one of the kindest women Iâve ever met.â Henry shares. âShe was unlucky in her
fated mate, but like you, she loved her pack, and she dreamed of children. It canât have been easy for
her to give you up.â
âDo you think he knew â Xavier, I mean?â I ask. âThe Goddess said he wanted an heir⦠would he have
even cared about a girl? Would she have just told him the child died and kept the secret for herself?â
âXavier was much like Aimon.â Henry reveals, referring to Damonâs father. âHe was a ruthless king,
though his bloodline was much older and stronger than the Tyrantâs. He was willing to sacrifice a few
for what he believed was the good of the pack, but he wasnât without a conscience. He wasnât mad. If
he knew the Goddess had ordained it that you be taken into hiding, he never would have disobeyed
her. If anything it would have given him great pride to think his child would be so important down the
line.â
I nod, grappling with so much knew information. âDominic also said⦠he said my mother is alive.â
âShe devoted herself to the Goddess once Xavier died.â Henry confirms, âWhich makes a lot of sense
now that we know about you. Iâm not sure where she went. But the Goddessâs temples tend to be in
very remote, sacred places.â
âDo I look like her?â I inquire, feeling strangely vulnerable now.
Henry purses his lips. âI have a feeling that the parent you take after most is the one youâve already
met.â
It takes me a moment to realize heâs referring to the Goddess, and I have to blink a few times, trying to
recall the memory. I want to say I disagree â after all, my hair isnât made of starlight and my eyes are
not the endless cosmos. But the more I think about it, the more I can see similarities â albeit very dulled
and downplayed ones. My pearly white skin, eyes and hair in shades of gold Iâve never seen on
another person, my light, willowy limbsâ¦
Still, the Goddess wasnât the one who wanted me. She might have needed me, in the same way Xavier
needed a son to carry his legacy. But my mother, the one who carried and birthed me⦠sheâs the one
who wanted me.
âI want to find her.â I tell Henry suddenly. âDo you think we can track down the temple where my mother
became a devotee?â
His warm gaze observes me with more understanding than I can bear. âWe can try. And weâll keep
trying until we succeed.â