Chapter 322: Cheap Roadside Motel
Accidental Surrogate for Alpha
Cora
Iâm gasping as we burst through the door of the motel, Roger quickly turning to force it closed behind
us as the wind batters us, making his job hard. I pant, looking around, my eyes settling on the startled
eyes of the gnarled little man sitting behind the front desk. I work hard to give him a polite smile as
Roger grunts, finally forcing the door shut behind.
âNasty weather out there, ainât it,â the desk attendant says, giving us a toothless grin.
âBit of an understatement,â Roger murmurs, straightening and looking anxiously over his shoulder as
he moves forward to the desk. I follow him, my hand pressed to the papers under my shirt. Some of
them the outer ones, I think â are probably ones feel dry against my stomachâ¦
â are probably ruined, but the inner
âWell, youâll be good and dry here,â the attendant says, giving us a happy little nod. âYou lookinâ for a
room?â
âSure,â Roger says, shrugging and glancing at me. I nod and shrug back. We could wait it out in this
lobby, I guess, but as I look around and take in the patchworked chairs and the musty smellâ¦honestly,
being able to sit down somewhere a little cleaner sounds good to
1.
âWe got room six,â the attendant says contemplatively, turning to point at a set of keys on the wall.
âThatâs our best room, but you gotta go out into the storm to get to it.â He points to a set of keys labeled
â12â next. âTwelve ainât as nice, but itâs just in the back of this building,â he says. âSo you can stay
inside, if you donât want to get wetâ¦â he turns back to us then and grimaces a little. âOr, wellâ¦wetter.â
âTwelve,â Roger and I say in unison, our faces serious. The attendant smiles at us and hands over the
key. Roger nods and takes his wallet out of his back pocket, sliding some cash out and pushing it
across the counter to the man.
Seeing the line of green bills left in Rogerâs wallet, the attendantâs eyes light up. âWill you be needing
any room service on top of that, then?â he asks.
âNo,â Roger replies firmly and Iâm grateful for it, thinking about what kind of delicacies a place like this
might serve up. My stomach turns over a little at the thought of it. The man nods and tosses the key to
Roger, who catches it in the air. Then, he takes my hand and
a polite smile and he returns it with a naughty little wink which makes me realize â
Oh my god, I think, as Roger leads me firmly down the hall towards the rooms at the back of the main
building. That guy thinks weâre a couple⦠that weâre going in here toâ¦
And then I realize that⦠that Iâm actually in a sleezy motel with Roger Sinclair. And that we were going
to go into a room, alone. With beds. To wait out this storm. Suddenly my heart. begins to pound as I
follow Roger down the hall. Roger, perhaps hearing the change in my heartbeat, or smelling some
physical change in my bodyâs scent, looks over his shoulder at me with a little smirk. I return it with a
glare, but he just tightens his grip on my hand as the numbered rooms pass.
When we arrive at twelve, he deftly puts the key in the lock and twists it, pushing the door open to
revealâ¦
âOh my god,â I murmur, all ideas of scandal wiped from my mind as I go rigid at the sight of the water-
marked ceiling, the rug with the mysterious stains, the television that looks like it might actually be the
first television ever created. A ceiling fan whirls at the center of
the room, wobbling with an ominous threat that it might just give up at any moment and
come plummeting to the ground. There are windows at the far side of the room next to a
door that leads to the parking lot outside and a set of woods beyond that. The window is
slightly fogged, but it clearly shows that the storm outside still rages.
âActually, I kind of like it,â Roger murmurs, looking around, his eyebrows up.
âWhat?!â I gasp, appalled.
âSure,â he says, looking at me with a little grin. âItâs very true crime, very âwill they or wonât they get
murdered.â I like a motel room with a little bit of an edge. Keeps things exciting.â
I somehow manage to roll my eyes and glare at him at once, dropping his hand and sweeping into the
room. Roger laughs behind me as he closes the door. I quickly approach the slim bed in the center of
the room, leaning over to take a good look at the stained.
blanket on the top.
âThis isâ¦not sanitary,â I murmur, grasping the very corner of the blanket between my fingers and then
quickly whipping it off the bed and tossing it to the floor, revealing what actually looks like a set of crisp
white sheets beneath. âThatâs better,â I say, surprised and standing up straight.
âSo eager to get between the sheets, Cora,â Roger says as he crosses the room and sits on a wooden
chair by the window, pulling off his soaked shoes. âI always took you for a girl
âDonât be gross,â I murmur, pulling the papers out from under my shirt and placing them, along with my
phone, on the bedside table. Then I turn my back to Roger and sit down on the bed, working at my own
shoes then, wanting very much to be dry and warm Roger just chuckles and says nothing, though I feel
his weight on the other side of the mattress as I pull my second shoe off and work at my soaked sock. I
turn then, honestly surprised that he came to the bed, and freeze when I see him pulling off his shirt as
well.
âWha âI gasp, my eyes going wide, my forgotten wet sock still dangling from my fingers. I canât help
myself, though, from glancing at the contours of his abs, which I havenât seen. since that night when he
cried in my arms. My mind flashes suddenly to that moment, the intimacy of it â but thatâs all wiped
away when I realize that Roger right now isnât wearing any pants â
âOh my god!â I say, jumping up and turning towards him. âWhere are your clothes!?â
âOver there, Cora,â he says simply, a little frustrated, gesturing to the heap of his pants on
the floor and tossing his shirt on top of them. âTheyâre soaked. Iâm not sitting in wet
clothes all afternoon until this rain stops.â He smirks at me, then I think pleased to see how much heâs
unsettled me with his nearly-naked body. Then, to my shock, he leans back. against the headboard,
lifting one leg lazily onto the bed, bending it at the knee and looking completely relaxed. âBesides,â he
continues, smug. âI donât see you complaining.
And I hate him, in that moment and myself, a little bit as the first thought that pops into my mind is that
he looks like a damn underwear model, laying there like that, his gorgeous tan set off nicely by the
crisp white sheets.
âComplaint registered,â I growl, and, frustrated, I whip my wet sock at him, which smacks. wetly against
his abs. Roger just laughs, brushing the sock away as I stalk towards the bathroom and slam the door
shut behind me.
I take a few deep breaths, then, looking at myself in the mirror. I close my eyes and listen to the storm
raging outside separated from me only by a few inches of brick and drywall. My stomach drops when I
think about it as I wonder about why the hell itâs here, and who sent it, and why. Because I know and I
know Roger does too â that thereâs nothing. natural about this storm
But somehow despite that insane, horrible realization all I can think about is the rain- slicked werewolf
laying on the bed on the other side of that door. I grit my teeth and press my eyes shut, leaning against
the sink and wishing to the death of me that he was just
Justâ¦.
Ugh, just a little less hot.
Or that his particular brand of swaggering arrogance, mixed with occasional
thoughtfulness, didnât sing to me as enticingly as it apparently does.
âCora?â Roger calls with a gentle knock at the door, making my eyes fly open. âAre you all right in
there?â
âFine!â I call back, my voice a little too shrill. âJustâ¦splashing some water on my face!â I reply.
âAll right,â he says, his voice a little worried. But I hear him move away.
I turn to face myself in the mirror again. âCome on, Cora,â I growl, taking a deep breath as I stare into
my own eyes. âYou have to control yourself for one afternoon. Just one afternoon. You have a
boyfriend, after all. You can do this.â
But even as I nod to myself, my face set with determination, as I turn towards the door and put my
hand on the knob?
Something inside of me nudges me, laughing, and whispers no, baby. No, you canât. But why would
you want to?