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AliNovel > Accidental Surrogate > Chapter 243 – Cora’s Determination

Chapter 243 – Cora’s Determination

    Chapter 243 – Cora’s Determination


    E


    As per usual the news about mytest hypnosis session is all over the pce by the time Sinir and I


    surface from our rooms. Thankfully not the details about my teenaged despair, rather the premonition


    of our potential victory. I’ve realized how important it is to give people hope in this conflict ever since my


    early days visiting the refugees, but it really is remarkable the difference it can make in morale. In fact,


    the increase in public and political optimism is palpable as we attend the days’ scheduled summit


    events, the Alphas have even agreed to fly to the coast to witness the continental front of the refugee


    crisis first hand.


    RêAdt??St chapters at Novel(D)ra/ma.Org Only


    Unfortunately, there’s at least one person who isn’t thrilled by these revtions: my sister. I’m dressing


    for dinner when Cora ambles into my dressing room, her feet dragging with exhaustion. She slumps


    onto the chaise as I try on gowns, watching me with begrudging amusement. “You know, just once I’d


    like toe home after a long day of surgeries and not discover that my little sister has aplished


    some impossible feat yet again. What’s next, E? Are you going to grow a tail?”


    “I think you’ll find I’ve already done that.” I joke as my wolf wags her tail in my mind’s eye, eager to


    show off the beautiful rose-gold appendage.


    “Har har,” Cora quips, rubbing her sore neck. “Come on then, tell me all about it.”


    Sighing, I slip out of the red dress I was attempting to stretch over my belly and exchange it for a green


    number that will match Sinir’s eyes. I’m not particrly eager to linger on this particr subject, but


    if she’s going to hear the story from anyone, it ought to be me. I gradually share the details, stopping


    and starting as the emotions catch up to me, using my wardrobe dilemmas as an excuse to dy the


    inevitable. It’s a relief when the tale is finallyplete. “So it turns out those priests weren’t all bad,” I


    conclude, “for everything they put me through, they also kept me going when I was ready to give up.”


    I peek at Cora for the first time since I started talking and discover her cheeks streaked with tears. “You


    never told me.” She states hoarsely, and I feel as though I’ve been punched in the gut. I guiltily search


    my sister’s lovely face, hating the pain in her deep brown eyes. There’s a sh of betrayal, but also a


    deep hurt I understand all too well.


    “I didn’t even remember myself.” I answer, my voice barely louder than a whisper. “I never wanted to


    leave you Cora, you and the other kids were the one thing that kept me hanging on.”


    “Is that supposed to make me feel better?” She asks, a bitter note in her melodic voice. “You only got


    that low because you were bearing the brunt of the hardship for all of us, and now you say we’re also


    the reason you couldn’t find peace.”


    “Because of how much I loved you.” I beseech her, taking a seat near her hip. “And it wouldn’t have


    been true peace, because I’d known I would be leaving so much pain behind for the people I cared


    about most. I would have missed out on my future – on seeing you be a doctor, on finding my own


    passion and meeting Sinir… having this baby, waking my wolf.”


    “I understand that.” Cora replies stiffly, “and I understand why you felt like you couldn’t confide in me


    then when you were in the thick of it, but I never knew you got depressed at all. You always seemed to


    have it all together.”


    Wincing, I rest my hand on her arm, gently stroking her soft skin with the pad of my thumb. “I think


    you’re rewriting history a bit there… you’re the one who was always cautioning me not to bottle things


    up, to deal with our past.”


    “Yes, once we were adults and I realized that the only way you could have stayed soposed was to


    repress everything.” Cora exins with obvious frustration. “It took a lot of therapy for me to reach that


    point – when we were children I truly thought you weren’t fazed by any of it. It made me feel even


    weaker than I already did.”


    “I’m sorry.” I profess earnestly. “I never wanted you to feel that way, and I hope you know that I was the


    weak one for avoiding my pain rather than facing it.”


    “Oh don’t say that.” Cora grumbles in typical contrary fashion. “You were in survival mode. It’s not your


    fault you never felt safe enough toe out of it.” An unidentified emotion shes across her features,


    “besides, you’ve been the emotionally brave ely.”


    “Oh?” I inquire, waggling my brows. “I don’t suppose you’re referring to a certain wolf with a sly smile


    and bedroom eyes?”


    Cora glowers at me, “You know smug really isn’t a good color on you.”


    “I’m not trying to be smug.” I reply apologetically, leaning my shoulder against hers. “I’ve just never


    seen you like this.”


    “Like what? Annoyed?” Cora bites back, and I wonder if she’s being intentionally contrary or if her


    emotions are simply so tangled and confused that she doesn’t realize she’s contradicting herself from


    one sentence to the next. “At my wits end over how to shake him off?”


    “Cora you obviously like him.” I reply in exasperations. “Scowl at me all you like, I’d have to be blind not


    to notice. The reason you can’t shake him is because you don’t really want to, and you can’t lie to a


    wolf about your feelings. He’s not going to give up when you’re obviously denying yourself something


    you need.”


    “I’m so tired of that nonsense.” Corashes out, surging up from the chaise. “So I find him attractive –


    maybe I even care about his well being. That doesn’t mean I want to be in a rtionship. It doesn’t give


    him the right to overrule my decision.”


    I observe her for a long moment, trying to decide on the right response. It hasn’t escaped my notice


    that the women in my life seem to be uniquely scarred when ites to love, and it breaks my heart to


    see brilliant figures like Cora and Isabel so skittish of being hurt. “How do you know you don’t want a


    rtionship when you’ve never been in one – never even attempted to form that kind of connection


    with a lover?”


    “It’s not brussel sprouts, I don’t need to try it to know I won’t like it.” Cora snaps, crossing her arms over


    her chest. “I’m not like you, E. I don’t need a partner to feelplete, I love myself exactly as I am.”


    “I’m d to hear that.” I say, ignoring her barbedment. “But I’m curious, if you don’t want anything


    more, why did you say you haven’t been bravetely?” Cora freezes like a deer in headlights, and I


    press, “Did all that therapy you did ever address why you don’t let anyone get close to you?”


    “It addressed the fact that I have legitimate reasons to fear intimacy.” Cora replies stiffly, neatly


    sidestepping my first question. “And I also have legitimate reasons to distrust Roger, in case you’ve


    forgotten.”


    I shake my head as my patience with this game runs thin. “You should have been awyer.” I remark


    dryly, pinning her in my crosshairs. “You started this conversation, big sister, not me. You obviously


    want to talk about it and it’s frankly annoying that you’re being so stubborn and evasive. You say you


    aren’t brave, you say you have reasons to be afraid… so at least do us both the courtesy of being


    honest about what you want.”


    Cora’s lower lip quivers. “I want to know what it feels like to love and be loved in return.” She answers,


    staring at her feet. “But I don’t want to risk having my heart broken.”


    “Then you will never know.” I inform her, as gently as I can. “You can’t experience real love if you don’t


    ever let yourself fall, Cora. There is no reward without first taking a risk.”


    “Well that’s just stupid!” Cora exims indignantly, beginning to pace. “Why should I have to expose


    myself to harm in order to be happy?” She doesn’t give me time to respond, nor does she acknowledge


    that she essentially just admitted to being unhappy despite her earlier words. Instead she carries on as


    if she’s having a conversation with herself.


    “This entire thing is messing with my head, maybe I don’t even like him and I’m just confused because


    of everything else that’s going on.” She muses, working herself up further. “In fact, now that I say it, I


    know that’s right.” She nods, turning back to me. “This trip is going to be a good thing – I need some


    time away to clear my head, to get Roger out of my system.”


    My eyes roll into the back of my head, but a knock sounds at the door before I can tell her what a


    blockhead she’s being. “Come in!” I call, scenting my father-inw.


    Henry wheels inside and offers me a broad grin, looking so much like Sinir that my heart pangs. “I


    think I’ve found your mother.”
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