Chapter 206
Accidental Surrogate for Alpha
#Chapter 206 â Panic
Ella
I stare at the black phone screen in shock and confusion, trying not to jump to the wrong conclusion.
One moment Sinclair was there, talking to me as if everything was normal, and the next I heard a
terrible boom and saw a blinding light. Then the line disconnected. It didnât look or sound like a car
crash⦠it seemed⦠it seemed like some sort of explosion.
Maybe it was just the call getting interrupted, some sort of weird static⦠or a sound on the radio. My
wolf suggests, even as I frantically attempt to call him back. The line doesnât even ring, I simply hear an
error tone and a voice telling me the call canât be completed.
I untangle myself from the sleeping pups, waking a few of them but too alarmed to pause and
apologize. My heart stops beating, and my lungs stop pumping. This isnât happening. This canât be
happening. Itâs just a problem with the phone. I think desperately, stumbling out of the blanket fort,
gasping for air. Isabel looks over when she hears one of the rudely awoken pups emit a cranky cry, her
attention quickly zeroing in on me.
âElla, what is it?â She asks, looking between me and the pups. âIs it the baby? Are you sick?â
âI ca⦠I canât breathe.â I wheeze, pressing my hands to my breast in a feeble attempt to make my body
start working again.
Isabel tries to guide me to a chair but I push her off, gasping. âGet the King.â I beg, âHenry⦠get
everyone.â The room is spinning before my eyes, and I reach out to the she-wolf to steady myself,
certain Iâll topple over at any moment. Isabel shouts an order to one of the guards and he takes off at a
run.
âYouâve got to calm down, Ella.â Isabel says sternly, pushing me into a chair and forcing my head
between my knees. âYouâre alright, youâre just having a panic attack.â Though her voice is cold, warm
hands rub my back.
I shake my head violently. âNo⦠you donât understand.â I hiss, between gulps of air. âItâs Dominic⦠I
think⦠I think something happened.â
She goes very still, âwhat do you feel?â
âNothing,â I reply hurriedly, trying to feel him through our bond even though I know heâs too far away to
sense. âI mean, not⦠not different.â Tears are spilling from my eyes, and my voice is shaking over
every syllable. âWe were on the phone and then there was this huge boom and a flash of light⦠like an
explosion and the call dropped, I canât get him back. It says the line is dead.â
Isabel exhales a breath I hadnât realized she was holding. âThat could be nothing. And when my mate
died, I felt like my soul had been ripped out of my body and torn to pieces.â
âWere you together, when it happened?â I ask urgently, âwere you chosen or fated?â
âWe were together.â Isabel admits reluctantly, as if Iâm forcing her to remember things sheâd rather not.
âI saw it happen, and yes, we were fated.â
âIâm sorry.â I hiccup, âI didnât mean⦠Iâm just trying to figure this out.â
âItâs okay.â Isabel answers, though her shoulders are rigid. âI understand.â
A few minutes later Gabriel comes rushing into the nursery, followed closely by Roger. âElla whatâs
wrong?â
Iâm still heaving and gasping, worse now that my tears have taken hold, so Isabel explains for me. Both
men immediately tense, their faces growing grave and serious. âIâll call the doctor for something to calm
you down.â Gabriel says to me, âAnd Iâll deploy a drone to fly over the road they were traveling, reach
out to the Storm Forest Alpha to see if there have been reports of crashes or explosions.â
âI donât want the doctor.â I argue, rising to my feet and wrapping my arms around my middle. âIâm not
taking or doing anything until I know whether or not Dominic is alright.â The baby flutters and kicks
inside me, and I feel a rush of sadness and confusion through our bond. I hate knowing that my
emotions are causing him distress, but I also donât know how to help it. I try to send waves of calm
back to him, letting him feel my love and commitment to protect him, but it doesnât help much.
In the end I take a step I never have before, and cut him off from my feelings completely. This was
never possible when I was in the depths of hypnosis because I wasnât even present myself, and the
other times Iâve shielded him from things, Iâve had the presence of mind to allow the good things
through our bond. But now Iâm too out of control to regulate anything, so it will have to be all or nothing.
I regret this as soon as I do it, because the moment Rafe stops sensing me, he panics. Stress and fear
unlike anything Iâve ever felt from him pummels my heart, and I immediately drop the shield I put up.
âItâs okay,â I say aloud, running my hands over my belly â it must have felt like I disappeared
completely, and with Sinclair so far away too, he must have thought he was all alone. âIâm here. Iâm
here, angel. Iâm sorry.â
The baby calms at once, and I feel the first pulse of anger heâs ever directed at me, as if his tiny mind is
demanding where I went â how I could leave him like that. âIâm sorry, I love you so much. Iâm hereâ I
repeat over and over.
The sensations make the loss of my own parents loom larger in my heart, but when it happened to me I
was too young to remember. Still, I must have felt this way⦠only instead of a terrified flash it was
permanent. Iâm all too aware that Iâm still in the nursery, surrounded by a number of children who were
old enough to remember the pain and fear of being suddenly, viciously alone â their souls cut off from
the only bonds theyâd ever forged. The thought makes my knees go weak.
Gabriel and Roger are still looking at me with obvious concern, and Isabel is wearing an expression
that makes me think she understands exactly what just happened. She nods bleakly, and slides a
steadying arm around my waist, looking at the men, âIf you donât let her come with you, sheâs only
going to be worse.â
I could hug her⦠assuming she would let me, but Gabriel and Roger exchange a wary glance before
agreeing. âFine, but Iâm putting the doctor on call, just in case.â
âIâll go get Dad.â Roger announces, taking off towards the palace entrance.
An hour later Iâm doing breathing exercises while we watch one of Gabrielâs aerial drones zoom across
the foreign landscape. Any other time I would be fascinated to discover the secrets of the hidden
territories, but now I can only wring my hands and pray. The search seems to go on forever, and my
nerves are fraying more and more with every moment that passes. Finally a few specks appear in the
distance, and I recognize the salt flats Sinclair had shown me out the window on his drive. The specks
grow larger and larger as the drone flies⦠and then we see the flames.
The room is deathly silent as the cars come into view⦠whatâs left of them at least. Where there were
once shiny SUVs, there are now only mangled and charred husks of metal, centered in the middle of a
blasted crater of earth. âNo.â I gasp, counting them, trying to figure out if there was any way the men
might have escaped. The drone flies lower, and when I see the burnt outline of an arm hanging out of
one of the shattered windows, I clench my eyes shut. Iâm rocking back and forth on the sofa, refusing to
look at the screen, to witness the horror tearing through the room.
Pounding footsteps charge for the door, and when Rogerâs scent fades I understand he must have
stormed out. I peek at Henry, hoping heâll tell me this isnât real. But when I look⦠I barely recognize
him. His face is grey and pallid, and all the strong steadiness Iâve come to expect from him is gone.
Heâs sunk in on himself, his expression one of a man whose just had his whole world shattered. I swing
my gaze to Gabriel for help, but the King stands in front of the screen with his hands in tight fists and
tears in his eyes. They all believe it. They all think heâs gone.
âNo.â I insist, refusing to accept this. âNo, he might have escaped somehow. Heâs notâ¦â I canât bring
myself to say the word. Itâs too terrible to contemplate.
âIâm so sorry, Ella.â Gabriel says, in a voice like gravel. âI donât want to believe it either, but Iâm afraid
heâs gone.â
âNo!â I cry, shaking my head. âWhy are you saying that! He canât be gone! Do you have any idea what
heâs survived? What heâs overcome? Heâs not dead!â I explode, spinning in place, searching for anyone
who will agree with me. When I find none, I stop and dig my heels into the ground. âI wonât lose him, I
canât!â
Before I can say another word, pain rips through my belly, clenching and white hot. My lips part on a
silent cry as I double over, clutching my stomach. Black spots take over my vision, and the carpet
zooms up to meet my face. Then all is quiet.