Chapter 236 – To Catch a Spy
Accidental Surrogate for Alpha
3rd Person
Rogerâs wolf was â to say the least â not amused by Coraâs decision to accompany Ella on her journey.
He knew that her heart was in the right place and that she was strongly motivated by the desire to
support her sister, but he also knew that wasnât the only reason she was going.
The obstinate human had been avoiding him like the plague ever since he comforted her in the medical
tent, and he hadnât missed the way sheâd been watching him just before declaring her intentions. While
Ella had been placating Isabel and answering Dadâs questions, Cora had been eyeing Roger like a
wary rabbit. She knew that she wouldnât be able to resist him much longer, and Ella had just given her
the perfect opportunity to flee rather than face her feelings.
Roger stalked out of the opulent guest suite in a minor rage, working to get his wolf under control. Stop
being so self-centered, think about how hard this must be for Dorn. Think about how much it will
comfort Ella to have her sister along for the trip. He scolded his wolf. Itâs a family mission after all, and
theyâre family. Itâs right that Cora should go.
If that were the only reason I wouldnât object. His wolf snarled back. But sheâs mine. She knows sheâs
mine and sheâs running away.
Sheâs been running since this all began, itâs no surprise that this is her choice. Roger countered, taking
deep breaths in and out. This was the very last thing heâd needed today. Heâd dedicated the morning to
searching for the spy who planted the bomb for Sinclairâs convoy, now he was going to be completely
distracted.
I donât care if itâs no surprise. Sheâs being naughty and she knows it! His wolf sniped ferociously,
grumbling wordlessly as he pictured all the delightful ways he might teach her a lesson.
Roger rolled his eyes, cut it out, I donât need an absent mind and an erection. Get your head in the
game.
Giving himself a violent shake, Roger made his way to the palaceâs security headquarters. Heâd alerted
the urban surveillance team to the spyâs presence in the hidden territories as soon as they confirmed
the likely suspect. Every day since, heâd started his routine by stopping in to see if any positive IDs
were made with Vanaraâs superior facial recognition software. He wasnât expecting to actually find the
spy this way, but he had to exhaust every possibility.
So it was no small surprise, when the guards in charge of monitoring security cameras around the
capital came rushing to meet him this morning. Before he could even enter the office, a junior enforcer
was eagerly bouncing up and down in front of him, âSir, weâve got a positive ID!â
âYou do?â He asked, aghast. âWhere, when?â
âIt just came through, I was on my way to find you!â The young wolf reported, âHe was caught on a
camera in the moonflower district, coming out of an apartment building.â
âTake me there.â Roger ordered, gesturing for a few other guards to join them. âNow! Thereâs not a
moment to waste. If heâs in the city, itâs because heâs upto something.â
Fifteen minutes later they pulled up in front of a modest building which Roger now recognized from the
high definition photos the young enforcer displayed on a shiny tablet. There was no doubt this wolf was
the same man who arrived on Jamesâs transport only to immediately disappear, and the Betaâs
adrenaline was surging as they neared their target.
âHow will we know which apartment heâs in?â The excited enforcer inquired.
âWeâll have to check with the landlord.â Roger explained. âI donât want to go through this place knocking
on every door and alert the suspect.â
It wasnât difficult to find the building owner, and soon they were standing in front of flat number 4,
silently signaling as they prepared to enter. The landlord confessed that heâd taken a new renter just
last week and hadnât bothered with the usual background checks, and now they had to hope that the
suspect was still inside. Roger could smell a fellow Moon Valley wolf through the door, and it was all he
could do to keep his temper in check. Heâd expected a rogue, not one of their own. Then again, Damon
had friends in very low places.
When Roger finally gave the signal, Gabrielâs top enforcers crashed through the door, a few of the men
shifting in case they needed to fight. Roger marched through the wreckage on two legs, quickly setting
his sights on his target. The spy was cowering in the corner, his paws still clenching a tightly shut
window. Heâd clearly smelled them and attempted to escape, but he was not fast enough.
âWhat do you want?!â He cried, feigning ignorance. âWhat is this? Iâm just a refugee.â
âShut your mouth before I shut it for you.â Roger snarled, prowling forward.â We know exactly who you
are and what youâve done.â It wasnât entirely true, but at their core interrogations were exercises in
psychological manipulation, and Roger was willing to lie to get the information he required.
âI donât know what youâre talking about.â The wolf insisted, holding his hands up defensively.
âYouâre a spy for Emperor Damon.â Roger cut back, âYou set the bomb that killed all of the Alphaâs best
men â his Beta. Your Beta. You committed treason.â
âI swear I didnât!â The man repeated desperately.
âThen what is all this?â Roger turned, following the voice of the enforcer who spoke. The guard in
question was standing over a cluttered work table, complete with a scale model of Gabrielâs palace.
While they watched, the enforcer pulled back an accordion screen, revealing an array of weapons and
chemicals. It was obvious what was happening â the assassin had failed to kill Sinclair once, it only
made sense that heâd try again.
âItâs not what it looks like.â The spy squealed, sounding truly frantic.
âIt looks like youâre planning for a second attack.â Roger assessed coldly.â What took you so long? All
the increased security for the summit?â Suddenly everything that had seemed overcautious in the
preceding days felt necessary, imperative even.
âPlease you have to believe me!â The assassin begged, still refusing to admit his guilt.
âThe only question is whether youâre planning this to get out of Damonâs bad books, or because you
havenât reported in yet.â Roger analyzed, circling on the spot as he took in every detail of the room.
âDoes Damon know Sinclair still lives?â
âI donât-â The man started to lie.
âEnough!â Roger roared, throwing all of his power into the command.â There is no escaping this â we
know youâre guilty. The only chance you have now is to cooperate with us. So do you want to play ball
and maybe salvage your worthless life, or do you want to die here and now?â
The spy blanched, his skin suddenly seeming very gray. âDamon doesnât know. If Sinclair lives, I donât
get paid, Iâm not reporting back until the job is done.â
âHow many of you are there?â Roger questioned sharply.
âAs far as I know itâs only me, but then Damon wouldnât be likely to tell me if there were others, would
he?â the spy replied, his eyes flitting around the room anxiously.
âHow did you get here?â Roger asked, just to see if the spy would tell the truth.
âI snuck in on one of your refugee transports.â He confessed, âit wasnât hard.â
âDid Damon direct you to the transports, or did you find them yourself?â Roger pressed, needing to
know exactly how knowledgeable their enemy was about their operations.
âDamon directed me, but I was probably the last spy who got through before he had to shift his forces
to meet the humans.â The wolf explained.
Roger didnât trust that this was actually true, but he wasnât foolish enough to admit it. âJoin us, turn on
Damon, and Iâll double whatever he paid you.â
âWhy would you do that?â The spy demanded suspiciously.
âBecause we need every advantage we can get over Damon â and you should agree because he is
going to lose this war. You must have seen how badly heâs floundering.â Roger persuaded, making his
offer again. âCall your boss and tell him that Sinclair is dead, and you have my word Iâll double your
fee.â
âHow do I know you wonât just kill me once I have?â The assassin questioned shrewdly.
âYou donât, but you can be sure Iâll kill you now if you donât.â Roger threatened.
The spy hesitated for a long moment, the gears visibly turning in his head. He was smart enough to
know he was a dead man, but hope was a tricky thing. It had the power to persuade even the most dire
pessimists, and when it came to life and death⦠well, only a fool would turn down a lifeline, no matter
how unlikely.
Roger and the enforcers watched as the traitor pulled out his phone and dialed the emperor. A moment
later they heard Damonâs voice cut off the dial tone, âIs it done?â
âItâs done.â The spy lied, shaking where he stood.
âThen your payment will be sent before the dayâs end.â Damon announced.â Stay available. I may need
you again.â
âYes sir.â The spy hung up, looking anxiously towards Roger.
The Beta confiscated his phone, double checking that the call was actually complete. âVery good.â He
praised, his wolf salivating over the imminent kill. âBut any wolf who is loyal only to the highest bidder
cannot be trusted.â He stalked forward, bearing his fangs, âAny last words?