Chapter 145
Accidental Surrogate
Chapter 145 â Damage Control Sinclair As soon as Hugo walks into the room, I thrust Ella behind me, a vicious snarl on my lips. My wolf is on high alert from having claimed his mate so recently, his possessive instincts spinning out of control and stronger than Iâve ever experienced. Sheâs mine. He thinks angrily, He shouldnât even be allowed to look at her. I canât even process my betaâs words, because Iâm too preoccupied with guarding Ella â despite the fact that I know my old friend isnât any threat. Still thereâs no reasoning with a protective wolf, and all mine knows is that another male is in the vicinity of my precious, breeding mate.
Ella, troublemaker that she is, only wriggles her way back into my lap, putting herself between me and the target of my wrath.
She pulls my glowing eyes down to her own, both of her small hands framing my face. I glower at the insolent creature, not all pleased that sheâs stopping me from attacking the interloper, but Ella stares back with unwavering calm. Stop being ridiculous.
Her silken voice sounds in my head. Itâs only Hugo, and I donât have eyes for anyone but you.
Itâs not your eyes Iâm worried about. My wolf replies grumpily. Heâd be a fool not to want you and he canât have you. I lower my mouth to her fresh, red mark, breathing in her scent and gently nibbling her tender skin. Mine, mine, mine. A noticeable shiver runs down Ellaâs spine, and my wolf puffs out his chest with masculine pride. Naughty mate, I rumble, positively crowing when she shudders again and the scent of her arousal wafts up to me. Her body might be exhausted, but her wolf is as insatiable as my own. Challenging me, pretending to be all can and reasonable when you crave my dominance every bit as much as I need to exert it. Come on, let me bite him just a little â a warning bite, so he remembers who you belong to.
Youâre impossible. Ellaâs amused voice accuses, tempting me to turn her over my knee and remind her whoâs in charge. If I want to attack my Beta, who is she to stop me? Doesnât she realize how special she is, how invaluable? Besides, he said there was a problem. We need to hear him out â what if the Prince is getting ready to stage another attack. He must be furious that we thwarted his plan.
This thought brings reason crashing down, subduing my wolf and focusing my attention back on Hugo, whoâs been watching our silent exchange with understanding but also quickly waning patience. âWhat is it?â I demand, snuggling Ella a little closer.
âWe just got a report that the Current is getting ready to publish a story about Ellaâs background.â Hugo announces, referencing one of the few newspapers in Moon Valley that aligns politically with the Prince. âApparently the Prince sent his spies to the shadow pack to investigate her past... and they figured out that weâve been lying about her identity. They donât know sheâs a human, but they know we havenât been honest.â
âWhat?â I hiss, horrified and devastated by the fear and guilt I feel radiating from Ella. I instinctively begin to purr, but when I look down at my mate sheâs frozen in place, her beautiful gold eyes wide with horror. âHow did this happen?â
âI donât know.â Hugo sighs, âIf I had to guess Iâd say this is another of Lydiaâs schemes â because of the timing if nothing else.â
I let out a volley of ferocious swears, interrupting my purring and startling Ella. My wolf whines in regret and I move my hand to her round belly, checking on our pup. I feel a tiny pulse of unease, and immediately resume my purrs, not speaking again until both mother and child have relaxed. âI should have killed that bitch when I had the chance.â I continue a moment later, âWhatâs the Currentâs angle?â
Hugo looks reluctant to speak, but eventually he says, âthat youâve been running a morality campaign and the entire time youâve been lying to the people and the Alpha council. Theyâre suggesting your entire relationship is a fraud and that Ella is a paid surrogate â they want to know if you have a comment.â
âCan we stop it?â I ask. I own some shares in the paper, but Iâm afraid that my economic holdings wonât do much good if the pack turns against me. âDo you know if anyone else has hold of the story?â
âNot yet.â Hugo relates grimly, âAnd I donât think thereâs anything we can do to convince them not to print it. They have proof that Ella and Aileen arenât related and that no one with her name ever resided in the territory.â
âDamn it.â I murmur, trying to wrap my head around this.
âDominic, what do we do?â Ella looks up at me with so much trust and hope, and I realize that sheâs looking to me for the answer â the solution. This incredible woman, who has only ever been able to rely on herself and fix her own problems, trusts me so much that sheâs giving me that responsibility. I canât let her down.
âWell...â I begin slowly, working through the possibilities. âThe way I see it, we have three options. We can try to get ahead of the story and release it ourselves â say that Ella was a suppressed wolf and our love is real but we hid her past because we were trying to figure out how to wake her wolf. We can deny it, but if we do then theyâll probably start looking closer to home â working backwards to discover how Ella and I met and come to the conclusion that sheâs a human. We can disprove that now, but it will be even messier if they figure out the truth and weâve spent all this time insisting the story is false. Or we can simply say no comment, and hope that the story doesnât make an impact.â
âBut it will make an impact â you know it will.â Hugo counters seriously. âThe other papers will pick it up when they see the evidence, and your refusal to acknowledge the reports will only allow the Prince and anyone else who opposes you to make up more and more outlandish accusations.â He paces back and forth while I absentmindedly croon and pet Ella, who has tears in her eyes for a very different reason than she did a little while ago. I hate that our nascent joy is already coming to pieces... I hate that sheâs known nothing but fear and stress since coming into my life and that yet again, I canât protect her the way I want. The way she deserves.
âI think our only move is to try and get ahead of the story, control the narrative by framing things ourselves.â Hugo advises, looking worried despite his confident tone. âThe pack will be more outraged if they think your relationship is fake, than they will if they believe you were just trying to protect your mate when she couldnât access her wolf.â
âI think Hugo is right.â Ella pipes up, her voice hoarse. âWe can spin this in our favor only as long as we get the word out first.â
I know theyâre correct. The problem is that I have a terrible feeling that this scandal might be my downfall. In many ways the Currentâs reporters are telling the truth. I have been running a campaign on the basis of honesty and virtue, and I have been lying to everyone in the interest of winning. Does it matter that my motives were noble? That my only interest in being King is to keep a tyrant off the throne? That I never asked for this duty, but Iâm not going to shirk the responsibility that comes with my power?
My stomach is in knots, but I slowly nod, knowing that this is the only path forward, even if it leads to a dead end. âCall a press conference.â I instruct Hugo. âWeâll say weâre announcing Ellaâs claiming, that her wolf has been dormant but with the help of the pack elders, we were able to wake it. If they ask about her past weâll admit that we donât have any answers, and weâre just thrilled that weâve finally found each other and that weâre welcoming a son. And if they accuse us of playing politics, weâll say that I believed Ella would have become an even bigger target if people knew how vulnerable she was.â
âAnd the Prince?â Hugo asks, fully aware of the conversation I had with my father before we went to rescue Ella. âDo you want to come out in the open about his misdeeds â distract the press by claiming he was already trying to kill Ella and the babe, that the only reason you risked waking her wolf while she was pregnant was because he kidnapped her?â
For the first time in a very long time, Iâm passed caring about taking the high road. The Prince has been getting away with his crimes for far too long, and itâs time the people knew about it. âFuck it.â I growl, squeezing the sweet bundle in my arms, âLetâs do it.â