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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 4

The first light of dawn was a dirty grey smear through the attic window when the door was thrown open.

"Get up."

Elara's eyes snapped open. Her brother, Finn, stood over her cot, his face tight with anger. Her gaze flickered to the corner where the soiled mating cloak lay in a crumpled heap, a beautiful, ruined thing. He grabbed her arm, his fingers digging in like talons.

"You have some nerve," he snarled, hauling her to her feet. "Father wants to see you. Now."

He dragged her down the stairs, through the silent halls, and shoved her into Alden's study.

Her father and mother were seated behind the massive mahogany desk. They looked like two grim monarchs on their thrones. Briar was curled on a sofa nearby, wrapped in a thick blanket, looking pale and interesting. A teacup rattled in her trembling hand.

Alden slammed a stack of papers down on the desk. The sound cracked through the silence like a gunshot.

"Look what you've done!" he boomed, his face flushed with rage. "Because of your… your presence, Briar's spirit nearly collapsed! The Healer said it was a miracle she stabilized."

Lyra's eyes, a pale, cold grey so like Elara's own, were filled with disgust. "You are a disgrace to this family, Elara. Why can't you just disappear?"

Elara looked from one furious face to the next, to Briar's artfully pathetic display. A strange sense of calm washed over her. It was like watching a play, a very bad one she had seen too many times.

"Are you finished?" she asked. Her voice was quiet, but it cut through their rage like a razor. "If you are, I have chores to do."

Her composure seemed to enrage them more than any tears or protests could have.

Alden stood, leaning his knuckles on the desk. "After what happened to Briar last night, Ryker and I were up until dawn with the healers. He will not allow her to suffer any longer. He has made his decision," he said, his voice low and dangerous. "He will choose Briar as his Chosen Mate. The ceremony will be on the full moon, next week."

A dull, familiar ache pulsed in Elara's chest. A final confirmation of a truth she already knew.

"For the stability of the pack, and for Briar's health," Alden continued, "you will participate in a formal Rejection."

He slid a single sheet of paper across the polished wood. "You will read this statement in front of the elders. You will accept his rejection, and you will do it gracefully."

Elara picked up the paper. The words were typed in neat, black letters. *I, Elara Thorne, willingly accept the rejection of Alpha Ryker Blackwood. I release him from the bond and offer my blessing for his union with my sister, Briar Thorne.*

It wasn't just a rejection. It was a public confession. An admission of her own unworthiness. A scripted blessing for her tormentors.

From the corner of her eye, she saw the excited, triumphant gleam in Briar's eyes.

Elara looked at the paper. She looked at the hateful, expectant faces of her family.

And she realized they had left her with nothing. And a person with nothing left to lose was a person who was finally free. A strange, liberating coldness filled her. And she smiled. A real smile this time, sharp and dangerous.

Then, slowly, deliberately, she began to tear the paper. Not a quick rip, but a slow, satisfying shredding, first in half, then into quarters, then into a shower of tiny white pieces that drifted onto the expensive Persian rug.

"No," she said. The word was soft, but it held the weight of a mountain.

"How dare you!" Alden roared, his face turning a blotchy purple. "You defy your Alpha and your family?"

Elara stood up straight. The hunched posture of a victim fell away. Seven years of punishment and a lifetime of pain had forged something new in her. Her stormy grey eyes, which had been dull with despair, now glittered like ice.

She switched to the Old Tongue, the language they had used to wound her. Her pronunciation was flawless, archaic, and pure.

"*According to the oldest laws,*" she said, her voice ringing with an authority that stunned them into silence. "*Before any mating ritual—be it a union or a rejection—the standing of both parties must be acknowledged and respected by the pack.*"

Alden, Lyra, and Finn stared at her, their mouths slightly agape. The shock on their faces was almost comical.

Elara's gaze swept over them, cold and dismissive. "*I, Elara Thorne, true-blood of this House, was cast aside by my fated mate without cause and abandoned by my family without mercy. My standing has never been respected.*"

She locked eyes with her father. Her voice rose, still in the Old Tongue, still clear and sharp.

"*Therefore, before I will even consider your ‘Rejection Ritual,' I have a demand of my own.*"

She let the silence stretch, savoring the fear that was beginning to dawn in their eyes.

"*I demand that you, the elders of House Thorne, first perform the Rite of Submission. To me.*"

The room went dead silent. The Rite of Submission—the ultimate act of penance, where a wolf exposes their throat and neck in total surrender to one they have wronged. It was an admission of guilt so profound it was almost never used.

It was the equivalent of asking them to kneel.

Alden's face was a mask of pure, apoplectic fury. Lyra looked like she had seen a ghost.

And Briar… Briar's teacup had stopped rattling. The smile was gone from her face, replaced by a dawning horror. The lamb she had been toying with had just grown fangs.

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