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Alpha's Regret After the Divorce by Christina novel Chapter 26

Chapter 26

Kira’s Perspective

I sank to my knees, my fingers trembling uncontrollably as I gathered the files scattered across the cold floor. My mind clung desperately to the image of my father I had held dear for so many years. To me, Dad was the embodiment of kindness and generosity—the Alpha who consistently sponsored young wolves striving to find their place in human society, who quietly donated to werewolf relief funds without ever seeking praise or recognition. In my eyes, he was flawless, one of the rare true leaders among our kind.

“Look at them, Kira,” Rocco’s voice cut through the silence, eerily calm as he loomed over me. “See what your perfect father really did.”

With trembling hands, I opened the first file, and my heart nearly stopped. Inside were records—countless documents spanning the last ten years. Receipts, photographs, emails—all chronicling my father’s relationships with young female wolves.

“This can’t be real,” I whispered, though doubt was already creeping into my thoughts.

My gaze locked onto a photograph of my father. Despite his age, he still carried the commanding physique of an Alpha wolf—distinguished, wealthy, charming. The same man who had once read me bedtime stories was now smiling down at a young she-wolf, no older than twenty.

“Your father specifically targeted female wolves from fringe packs or lower bloodlines,” Rocco said flatly, his tone cold and clinical. “All that sponsorship? It wasn’t out of kindness. They were his hunting ground.”

My palms grew clammy as I flipped through more pages. “No, that can’t be true. He helped so many—”

“Look at the statistics,” Rocco interrupted sharply. “Ninety percent of the recipients were female, only ten percent male. Just enough males to cover his tracks.”

I checked the numbers. They matched perfectly. It was unsettling, but I recalled how Dad always emphasized that female wolves needed extra support in our patriarchal society. The gender imbalance alone didn’t make him a predator.

“Sixty percent of the females he sponsored ended up in his bed,” Rocco continued, his voice detached, almost clinical. “Once he grew bored, he moved on to the next. Many couldn’t handle the rejection—depression, self-harm. Some even took their own lives.”

Chapter 26 1

Chapter 26 2

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