Accidental Surrogate

Chapter 349



Accidental Surrogate Chapter 349-Ella
“It’s been too long,” I mutter, twisting my fingers together with my eyes fixed on the hard iron door of the bunker. I have one hand
on Rafe’s little carrier as he sleeps peacefully beside the two uncomfortable chairs that Cora and I dragged down the hall,
wanting to be as close to the entrance as possible so that we get news as soon as it comes.
“Ella,” Cora seethes through her teeth. “You have got to stop saying that. You’re making me freak out.”
“It’s not me that’s making you flip out,” I retort, angry. “It’s our idiot mates, who insisted on leaving here four hours ago and
haven’t called once to let us know that they’re all right -”
But then, as if my words are magic, the door bangs open and Cora and I instantly leap up from our seats.
I gasp, almost breaking into tears when I see that the first figure through the door is my mate. I hurl myself towards Sinclair,
intent on wrapping him in my arms, but I come to a skidding stop as I realize that he’s carrying one of his men, unconscious and
bloody and
“Oh my god,” I gasp, my hands flying to my mouth as I stop and actually look at my mate 1 notice the burns that have ripped
through his clothes, leaving red welts across his exposed skin
Notice the horrible burned flesh of the man in his arms –
Sinclair’s eyes linger on me for half a longing second before moving sharply to my sister. “Cora,” he gasps, “help – it’s bad -”
She rushes to him in a moment, assessing the soldier, but Sinclair jerks him away, shaking his head. “No, Cora,” he insists,
making her look up at him. “We need – we need space them-” all of
I gasp again, horrified now as I understand what my mate means, as I see my sister’s face go pale. But she snaps immediately
into her professional demeanor, looking to me.
“Ella?” she snaps. “You’re my nurse now, all right?”
“Y-yes,” I hurry to agree, eager to help and reaching down to grab Rafe’s carrier and sling it over my right arm.
“Your largest room,” she demands, turning her attention back to Sinclair. Then she turns, pointing down the hall. “Go, now.”

As Sinclair begins to move, more of the men begin to stumble through the door. The hall is immediately filled with the sound of
pain – moans, and groans, cries –
But to her credit, Cora doesn’t look back, storming forward, ready to get things prepared. I can’t help myself from turning towards
the injured men who stumble through the door, my attention immediately going to the red- haired young man the one who spoke
in the meeting, who noticed that my attackers didn’t shift as he falls hard against the wall, gasping.
I move to him immediately, working to sling his arm around my shoulder, taking as much of his weight as I can. Lean on me,” I
demand, beginning to move forward as I feel his body shift hard against mine. It’s heavy,
struggling under his weight, trying to also balance Rafe’s carrier against my other arm, hoping to hell that he doesn’t collapse
against me and squish the baby when we both fall –
But we make it – following the men who can walk by themselves through the door into what looks more like a
barracks than the small private bedroom that Sinclair and I have to ourselves. I look around swiftly and see my mate settling the
man who cannot walk into a single bed and, seeing other men taking seats on bed and chairs around the room, I move the
young man on my shoulder to the closest bed, holding steady while he takes his weight off of me and collapses there.
“Are you all right?” I ask, leaning over him, worried
“I’ll be fine,” he groans, waving a hand at me. “It hurts but it’s nothing bad – thank you, Luna,” he murmurs, leaning his head back
against the pillow and squeezing his eyes tight in pain.
I nod to him, making a mental note to come check again soon, but I can’t help myself from moving swiftly away, holding my
baby’s carrier in two hands now as I hurry over to my mate who is standing now, talking briskly to Cora.
“Are you all right?” I gasp, unable to stop myself from pressing myself up against him and raising a hand to touch his scorched
cheek.
“I’m fine, Ella,” Sinclair assures me, turning his intense gaze to me for one long, lingering second, clearly relishing the sight of me
before he turns his eyes to Rafe, who cries a little in his carrier. Sinclair lingers, looking at his son, for just for a moment before
looking over to the door. “I’m sorry,” he says, rushed, “I have to go help -”
“Of course,” I say, touching Sinclair lightly on the arm and urging him forward.
But, quick, urgent, Cora stops Sinclair by grabbing his hand. He turns to her, torn, wanting to go and help his men but –

“Roger,” she breathes, her eyes worried.
“He’s fine,” Sinclair replies, brisk, looking steadily into her eyes for a split second. “He’s out helping some of the worst hurt get
out of the cars -”
“Okay,” Cora says, her voice shaking as she exhales a deep breath and stands for a moment with her eyes closed, collecting
herself. “Okay.”
And then, the moment passed, Cora’s eyes fly open again and she’s all business. She nods her chin towards the door, urging
Sinclair forward, and he moves quickly away. Then she turns to me. “I need you to start moving clockwise around the room,” she
says, a calm efficiency setting over her. “You call out to me if anyone looks like they need me desperately – otherwise, you ask
each man his name and what’s wrong. Take notes,” she says, looking around and then grabbing a pen and pad of paper off a
little bookshelf.
“Okay,” I exhale, and as I take the writing materials from her I realize that my hands are shaking.
“Hold it together, sis,” Cora says quietly, stepping close to me for a moment and taking my face in her hands, looking at me
steadily. “You’ve got this. All right?”
I nod to her, anxious, and then we both move at once, her left and me right, to begin to help.
Time passes in a flash as I move from man to man, asking each what they need, getting it for them if it’s in my power but
otherwise writing down what each man says before moving to the next. The only thing that interrupts my attention is Cora’s brief
cry – just once as Roger comes into the room. He, too, is carrying a soldier who cannot walk and Cora is at his side in a second.
There’s a brief moment, after Roger gets the man to a bed, where Cora kisses him, pressing her body flush against his, but then
it’s done –
My sister is the doctor again, ready to care, to help –
And I’m so grateful for her in that moment that I can barely breathe. And as I look at Roger’s face as he takes a second to watch
her, I know that he feels precisely the same.
As I turn to the next man in my rotation, I feel a little hope swell in me, so glad that Roger and Cora found each other. Because
the four of us, as a team? We can do this. I have so much faith that we can.


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