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Too Late For The Alpha's Regret Novel Cover

Too Late For The Alpha's Regret

I spent seven years in a frozen outpost as punishment for saving my fated mate's life. My family called my sacrifice dark magic, a crime that shamed our name. When I finally came home, I found my adoptive sister, Briar, wearing my life like a stolen dress. She had my parents' love and my mate's devotion, all built on the lie that she was the one who had saved him. They forced me to sleep in the attic and serve champagne at the party celebrating her. My own mother called me a disgrace. My mate, Alpha Ryker, planned to formally reject me and bond with her in front of the entire pack. He demanded I stand by and bless their union. He looked at her feigned weakness and called it a noble sacrifice. He looked at my broken spirit and called it a stain on his honor. Then my brother found the old medical files proving I was the one who nearly died for him. The truth came out at the altar, right as Ryker was about to bond with my sister. But by then, I was already gone, a rogue wolf with nothing left to lose.
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Chapter 2

Three days later, the Thorne Manor gardens were transformed. Fairy lights twinkled in the trees, and the air, thick with the scent of night-blooming jasmine, buzzed with the chatter of the pack's elite. This party was merely the prelude, a lavish celebration for her eighteenth birthday before the formal Luna-choosing ceremony next week. It was a celebration of the girl who was the family's shining jewel.

Elara was dressed in the drab grey uniform of a servant. Her mother, Lyra, had delivered the order herself that morning. "You will serve. And you will not make a scene."

So Elara served. She moved through the crowd, a ghost in plain sight, refilling champagne flutes from a heavy tray. She ignored the curious glances and whispered comments that followed her. "Is that…?" "I heard she was back…" "Looks just like a stray, doesn't she?"

Her face was a placid mask. Her hands were steady. Inside, her stomach was a cold, hard knot.

Her older brother, Finn, cornered her by the bubbling champagne fountain. His handsome face was marred by a familiar, impatient frown.

"Can't you at least pretend to be happy?" he hissed, his voice low. "It's Briar's big day. Stop sulking in the corner and ruining the mood."

Elara didn't look at him. She focused on aligning the glasses on her tray. "My job is to pour drinks, Finn. Not to perform."

He recoiled as if she'd slapped him. "You're impossible," he muttered, before stalking off to join a group of laughing guests.

The main event began. Alden and Lyra led a radiant Briar onto a small, flower-adorned stage. Briar, in a flowing white dress that made her look ethereal and fragile, beamed at the crowd.

After her parents spoke glowingly of her kindness and grace, Briar took the microphone. Her voice was soft and breathy, practiced to perfection. She thanked everyone for coming, for their love and support.

Then, her wide, doe-like brown eyes found Elara in the shadows.

"And I have to thank my sister, Elara," Briar said, her voice catching with just the right amount of emotion. "Even though she… made mistakes, I'm so, so happy she could be here tonight to see this."

A hundred pairs of eyes swung to Elara. They were filled with a mixture of pity, morbid curiosity, and contempt. Briar's words were a masterstroke of cruelty, painting her as magnanimous and forgiving while simultaneously nailing Elara to the cross of her past sins.

Elara's inner wolf snarled, a low, guttural sound of rage in her mind. But Elara simply bowed her head slightly, letting her pale hair fall forward to hide her face.

Later, when the party began to wind down, the core family gathered in a private pavilion at the edge of the garden. Alden, Lyra, Finn, and Briar. Elara was ordered to serve them tea.

As she approached, her father switched languages. He began speaking in the Old Tongue, an ancient, guttural wolf dialect that was rarely used outside of Alpha councils and high rituals. It was a language of power, a language they thought was beyond her.

"Look at her," Alden said in the Old Tongue, gesturing vaguely at Briar. "So perfect. She will make a flawless Luna for Alpha Ryker. Not like that one," his gaze flicked to Elara, "a stain on our bloodline."

Lyra's reply was smooth as venom. "It was necessary for the pack's stability. Elara's weakness would have doomed us all."

Elara's hand, holding the heavy teapot, did not tremble. She moved to her mother's side, pouring the steaming liquid into a delicate porcelain cup.

"I don't understand why she's even allowed to be here," Finn added in the same tongue, not even bothering to lower his voice.

They were all so sure of her ignorance. They thought her a simple Omega, a failure who couldn't possibly comprehend the language of her betters.

They were wrong.

During her seven years of punishment, her primary labor had been a cruel irony. She was forced to spend ten hours a day in a cold, damp chamber, translating crumbling, ancient texts that the pack deemed too tedious for anyone else. It was meant to be a mind-numbing punishment, but she had turned their drudgery into her weapon. She had devoured the forgotten lore, the ancient laws, and the language itself. She knew the Old Tongue better than any of them.

Every word was a shard of glass in her gut. She understood now. This wasn't just a party. It was a performance. A carefully staged play designed for an audience of one. For her.

Briar sat sipping her tea, the picture of innocence. But as Elara moved to pour her a cup, she caught her sister's eye. And in their depths, she saw a flicker of smug, calculating intelligence. Briar, who always watched Elara with the obsessive focus of a rival, had a memory as sharp as a shard of glass. In the weeks leading up to the incident that sent Elara away, she'd seen a page of ancient script peeking from under Elara's mattress. She wasn't sure what it meant then, but she had a delicious suspicion now. Briar knew. She knew Elara would understand. This was the point.

In that moment, something inside Elara finally broke. The last, fragile thread of connection she felt to these people, the faint, lingering hope that blood meant something, snapped.

She had wanted to escape.

Now, she wanted to burn it all down and dance in the ashes.

She murmured an excuse and slipped away from the pavilion, melting into the deep shadows of the garden. She didn't cry. The capacity for tears had been burned out of her long ago.

She leaned against the cold stone wall of the manor and looked up at the full moon, a silver disc in a black sky.

*Moon Goddess,* she thought, the words a bitter prayer in her mind. *Are you watching this? Do you even care?*

The moon gave no answer. And in the silence, the resolve in her heart, which had been a cold stone, was forged into a core of unbreakable steel.

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