Chapter 265 To the Temple
Accidental Surrogate for Alpha
Ella
As soon as the boat pulls up to the dock, Iâm by the gangplank, eagerly waiting for the sailors to lowes
it. One of my hands rests on the underside of my swollen belly, holding my child close. The doctor that
Sinclair assigned to come with us examined me the moment we stepped foot onboard after our trek
home from the desert and confirmed that Rafeâs heartbeat is still there, though fainter than heâd like.
I need to get of this boat, now, I think, my eyes wide as I watch the sailors hurry to lower the plank so
that I can scurry off of it. I have a job to do, and the sooner itâs done, the sooner I can rest.
Stop, my wolf begs inside of me a word I donât think Iâve ever heard her say. Sheâs usually run!, or fly!
or go! Never stop, caution, wait. But today, I can feel her pacing inside me, worried.
We are weak, she cautions. The pupâ¦
I canât, I growl back at her, impatiently watching the plank finally touch the dock next to us. We have a
job to do â we have to help everyone survive
âElla!â Cora calls, running out of the boatâs small cabin. âElla, wait!â
I turn to her, my face fierce. âEither come with me or stay here, Cora,â I warn, my eyes flashing. But you
canât hold me back ââ
â
âElla,â she says, grabbing my arm as I put my foot on the gangplank, ready to rush forward.â Please,
you barely made it out of the desert â you are not well enough for this â your doctor ordered you onto
bedrest weeks ago â he told you to walk no more than forty minutes a day! Youâre risking your health,
your child!â
âAnd if I donât?â I bite out, spinning on her. âHow many will die, if I donât get to that temple and deliver
the Goddessâs gift?â My eyes fill with tears and my lip trembles as I look my sister in the eye, my hand
still pressed against my poor child. âAre their lives worth less than mine? Worth less than my child?â
âYes,â Cora says, and I can see her guilt as she utters the word. âAt least, to me â Ella, I canât see you
harmed like this ââ
âThen stay,â I declare, ripping my arm from her hand. âDonât watch. But you canât stop me.â
Cora is right, of course I am weak, perhaps too weak to do this. But I canât not not anymore, not
knowing what I know. I can do so much good if I can only get to those temple stepsâ¦
Free of her grasp, I hurry down the gangplank and am surprised to hear footsteps following me. When I
stand firmly on the dock, I turn, my eyes going wide when I see Cora hurrying after me.
She shrugs when her feet too hit the wood.
âI canât let you go alone,â she protests. âIf you insist on killing yourself, Iâm going to be there to witness
it. You idiot.â
I nod, ignoring the insult, and feel honestly a little lighter now that I have my sister at my side. I turn and
as one we head out into the streets.
âCora! Ella!â We hear Rogerâs voice call out behind us, but neither of us turn. If he wants to stop me,
â
heâs going to have to chase me, and damn it â weak or not â Iâm faster than him. Cora and I pick up our
pace, determined not to waste any more time on negotiations.
We plunge through the city, which is filled with smoke and rubble. Iâm horrified by what I see. Some
houses look almost untouched while others are in total ruin. Whole neighborhoods which I used to walk
through are demolished, their beautiful treeâline streets ripped to shreds. Itâs horrible to see what
Damon has done to this place, what the humans have been pushed to in order to keep hold of their
freedom.
But if I do this right, if I can get thereâ¦.damn it, but I can make a difference.
I caught a little sleep on the boat on the way here. My anxiety kept it light, kept me from the dream
state that would have allowed me to speak to Sinclair if he, too, were dreaming. It was a huge
disappointment, not to have been able to talk to him. Just one word from him, one embrace, one press
of his hot mouth to mine
â
It would have given me such strength.
Instead, I feel my weakness in each of my steps. I feel as if I could sleep for days, my adrenaline the
only thing thatâs keeping me going. And of course â of course I know that my poor baby is the one
paying the price of all of this. Itâs the cause of all of my anxiety, the only thing that I thought about
during the long trip here. The allâencompassing question that kept me up at night: was my child the
price we would pay for peace? And then, was it a price I was willing to pay?
Every motherly atom within me screams no, but the human in me â And yes, the human. Biologically, I
am wolf, but I was raised as a human on purpose, so that in this moment I would know the meaning of
the word. The human in me feels the suffering of thousands and knows that I must do this.
In the end, it comes down to my faith. My faith that my mate and I are strong, that our love is strong,
that our bodies are strong, that the child we have made is strong. My son is the grandson of a Goddess
â he is not made of tender stuff. He will not be snuffed out by the bringing of peace. And so, with clear
eyes and a steady heart, I plunge through the war zone towards the temple. know is at the center of the
city.
We arrive what feels like hours later, our breath coming short, our mouths wide as we pant. The
Goddessâs temple is a shining white building that stands across the street from the palace.
Itâs so obviously a temple, I think, leaning on Cora and catching my breath as we look across the
palace square at it. What on earth did I think it was, before I found out about werewolves and wolf
society? I shake my head clear of the question, though itâs not important now.
â
âOh my god,â Cora gasps, grabbing my hand and pointing up at a huge screen on the left side of the
square. Itâs on the side of one of our cityâs mega news organizations, a screen as wide as a billboard.
And there, on it â
âOh my god,â I echo, my eyes going wide as I see the graphic image of the princeâs corpse laying on a
board room table. Beneath it, text scrolls:
Prince Damon declared deadâ¦forces requested to cease fireâ¦.Sinclair declared leader of all werewolf
kindâ¦.peace talks to beginâ¦
âWhy,â Cora demands, looking around at the stillâsmoking city which still echoes with the sound of
gunfire and bombs. âWhy havenât they stopped, if the prince is dead?â
âBecause,â I pant, my breath just now starting to come back to me. âThe humanâs war was never with
the prince â it was with all of us.â I shake my head at her. âItâs humans versus werewolves now. This
war has just begun.â My voice is desperate, shaking.
âUnless we can stop it,â Cora whispers, taking my hand. Her face takes on a new, determined look as
she sets her jaw and then looks towards the temple. âCome on, Ella,â she demands, tugging me
forward into the chaos of the square. âLetâs end this.â