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Alpha’s Regret After Our Pup Died Novel Cover

Alpha’s Regret After Our Pup Died

After serving a three-year prison sentence to protect her lover, Ivy is treated as an outcast by the very Alpha who promised her a future. Despite bearing his child, she is denied a mating ceremony and left destitute without basic necessities. When their daughter Lily falls dangerously ill, Ivy seeks help only to discover the Alpha has secretly mated with Serena. Betrayed and abandoned, she realizes the man she sacrificed her freedom for has traded her for status and a new partner.
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Chapter 3

The healer pulled down his mask under my hopeful gaze and bowed his head. "We did everything we could."

I collapsed to the floor. Lily's sweet face floated through my mind.

"Lily was such a good girl. How could this happen? How?"

They wheeled out her small body. I grabbed her and held her, sobbing like a madwoman.

"Lily, this is Mama's fault. If Mama had been just a little more careful with money, then maybe you wouldn't have — you wouldn't —"

This time, Lily didn't answer me.

I carried Lily through the streets. Rain soaked us both. Through the haze, I thought I heard her call out "Mama" from my arms.

I answered her, wild with joy. But when I looked down, all I saw was her pale, still face.

Something inside me snapped. I dropped to my knees in the rain and howled.

After I laid Lily to rest, I went to the Whitmore Pack House.

Laughter rang out from inside. My hand froze in the air, mid-knock.

My Lily was dead, and they were in there laughing.

I wiped my tears and knocked on the door.

The second it opened, Catherine's voice hit me. "What are you doing back here? This isn't your home. Take that cursed child of yours and get out."

Serena put on a show, dabbing at tears that weren't really there. "Mom, why is she so selfish? She stole twenty years of my life, and now she's trying to steal my parents too."

I ignored her. I walked straight to Zane and slapped him hard across the face.

I stared at him, teeth clenched. "You're a monster. You watched your own daughter die and did nothing. You don't deserve to call yourself a father."

Zane stared back at me, indignant. "Have you lost your mind?"

I stared at him blankly. I checked again and again. He wasn't the Zane I used to know. That Zane never raised his voice at me.

Catherine pulled Serena behind her, shielding her.

"Your father and I have seen how Zane treats you all these years. How can you stand there and say that?"

I let out a bitter laugh and threw her words right back at her.

"Treats me well — so he had a ceremony with Serena behind my back?"

"Treats me well — so he manipulated me into staying home as his unpaid servant?"

"Treats me well — so he set me up to take the fall and let me rot in the dungeon for three years?"

Catherine's eyes blazed. She slapped me and snapped, "You stole Serena's life. Everything you had should have been hers."

"Besides, you've done time. How could you ever be worthy of a mate like Zane? You should be thanking Serena."

Her words cut into me. So they all knew about the ceremony. Every single one of them. I was the only one who didn't.

I looked at them all. I felt nothing.

I had nowhere to put all the pain. I didn't go home. I went to the Pack cemetery instead.

A place that used to terrify me from a distance now felt like the only place that welcomed me.

When I got home, Zane was sitting in the living room waiting for me. That never happened.

It was just like the early days, when we first got together. He'd sit right there, waiting for me to come home.

"What's your problem? You didn't pick up the pup, you didn't cook dinner — are you trying to starve me?"

His words dragged me back to the present. The old Zane, no matter how useless he was in the kitchen, would at least have a bowl of noodles waiting for me when I got home. Then he'd sit there, waiting for me to praise him.

"What are we, Zane? We're nothing. And this is my house. Get out."

He stared at me, his frown deepening. "Just because I cut off your money, you're going to act like this?"

"I was trying to teach you a lesson. Break that spending habit of yours. You think money grows on trees?"

I let out a hollow laugh. Right. Money doesn't grow on trees.

When we were together, I used to transfer him fifty thousand a month for pocket money. I bought him gifts every other week.

Now he knew money didn't grow on trees.

"Get out."