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Now reading: Chapter 52 – What You Tell Me Changes Everything from The Alpha Who Regrets Losing Me, a Fantasy novel by ThGirlOutOfHerPack.

The forest did not feel empty anymore. It felt watched.

Not in the imdiate, suffocating way Kael’s presence had filled the space, nor in the calculated stillness Adrian carried like a shadow. This was sothing more distant, more patient, as if the world itself had started paying attention.

Elara walked beside Rowan without speaking at first, her senses stretched wider than before, catching things she would have missed only days ago. The shift still unsettled her, not because it felt wrong, but because it felt... permanent.

Whatever had awakened inside her wasn’t going back to sleep. Rowan didn’t rush her. He stayed slightly ahead at tis, then beside her again, adjusting without drawing attention to it, as though he had already adapted to her pace without needing to ask.

That alone said more than anything he had spoken.

Elara let out a quiet breath.

"I need to tell you sothing," she said.

Rowan didn’t stop walking.

"Then tell ," he replied.

Elara glanced at him briefly, then looked ahead again, her thoughts aligning into sothing more structured than they had been before.

"I wasn’t alone before you found ," she said. "Not just... like now."

Rowan’s posture shifted slightly. His body seed to be on alert.

"What do you an?" he asked.

Elara slowed just enough that he matched her instantly.

"There was soone else," she continued. "He knew things about . About what happened. About the bond."

Rowan’s gaze sharpened.

"Kael?"

"No."

That single word carried weight.

"He called himself Adrian. Adrian Vale.."

The na settled between them, unfamiliar but imdiately significant. Rowan didn’t interrupt. He didn’t ask question and he waited.

Elara swallowed once, steadying herself as she continued.

"He knew exactly when my energy surfaced. He said they felt it... about a month ago."

Rowan stopped walking. Elara did too. The forest seed to pull tighter around them, the quiet stretching as sothing in Rowan’s expression changed in a way she hadn’t seen before.

"Who is ’they’?" he asked.

Elara t his gaze.

"The World Governnt."

The silence that followed wasn’t empty. It was heavy. Rowan’s jaw tightened slightly, his eyes narrowing as if he were pulling pieces of sothing together in his head.

"You’re telling there are people outside the packs... tracking this?" he said.

"Not just tracking," Elara replied. "Controlling. Or trying to."

Rowan exhaled slowly, his focus shifting for a mont, not away from her, but inward.

"And this Adrian," he said. "What is he?"

Elara hesitated for the smallest second.

"He said he was human," she answered. "Once."

Rowan’s eyes flicked back to hers imdiately.

"Once?"

Elara nodded.

"He said he’s an Alpha now. And a witch."

Rowan didn’t react the way she expected. He didn’t look surprised or scared. He was just calm. That made it worse.

"How old is he? " he asked. It was clear from his face that dozens of questions were swirling in his head.

Elara held his gaze.

"He said one hundred and eighty-seven."

That was the mont Rowan’s control shifted.

"That’s not possible," he said.

"He didn’t seem like soone who lies about things he doesn’t need to," Elara replied.

Rowan’s gaze moved slightly, as if reassessing everything around them.

"And what did he want?" he asked.

Elara’s expression hardened slightly.

"."

The word landed clean. Rowan didn’t move. But sothing in him did.

"What kind of ’want’?" he asked, quieter now.

Elara crossed her arms lightly, not defensively, but to contain the tension rising again.

"He said he was sent to control ," she said. "But he didn’t hide that he wanted the power for himself."

Rowan let out a slow breath.

"That makes more sense," he muttered.

Elara’s eyes narrowed slightly.

"That makes sense to you?"

Rowan looked at her again.

"Power like yours doesn’t stay unnoticed," he said. "And it doesn’t stay unclaid for long."

The word echoed. Unclaid. Elara felt sothing tighten slightly in her chest.

"Everyone keeps talking like that," she said, her voice sharpening just a fraction. "Like I’m sothing to be claid."

Rowan’s expression shifted imdiately.

"That’s not what I’m saying."

"It sounds like it," she replied.

The tension rose, subtle but real.

Rowan held her gaze, sothing steady beneath it.

"I’m saying they’ll try," he said. "Not that they should."

Elara didn’t respond imdiately. She studied him. asured the difference. And for the first ti— She saw it clearly. Kael had never separated those two things. Adrian didn’t even pretend there was a difference.

But Rowan— Rowan acknowledged the reality without agreeing with it.

And that changed sothing.

"You didn’t tell everything either," she said after a mont.

Rowan didn’t flinch.

"I know." he said. He didn’t defend himself.

Elara stepped closer, her gaze fixed on him now.

"Why?" she asked.

This ti, Rowan didn’t answer imdiately. Not because he didn’t know. Because he was choosing how much to give.

"I didn’t know if you would stay," he said finally.

The honesty landed harder than anything else he could have said. Elara felt it in the way her breath caught slightly, in the way sothing inside her shifted, not breaking, not resisting—

"You thought I’d leave if I knew everything?" she asked quietly.

"I thought you’d have a reason to," he replied.

There it was. These words weren’t ant for manipulation. Or to control Elara. He understood from those words that Rowan might feel fear.

Elara looked at him for a long mont. Then— She nodded once.

"That’s fair," she said.

Rowan blinked slightly, as if he hadn’t expected that answer.

"You’re not angry?" he asked.

Elara exhaled softly.

"I am," she admitted. "But not for the reason you think."

Rowan’s gaze sharpened slightly.

"I’m angry because everyone keeps deciding what I can handle before I even get the chance to prove it," she continued.

The words ca out steady.

"And I’m done with that."

Rowan held her gaze. Then nodded once.

"You’re right," he said.

And that— That felt different from anything she had experienced before. The tension didn’t disappear. But it shifted into sothing that could actually be built on.

Rowan glanced toward the trees briefly, then back at her.

"If what you’re saying is true," he said, "then this isn’t just about Kael anymore."

"It never was," Elara replied.

Rowan nodded.

"Then you need control," he said.

Elara huffed a quiet breath.

"I figured that part out."

"Not instinct," Rowan added. "Skill."

Elara tilted her head slightly.

"You think that’s sothing I can learn?"

Rowan’s expression didn’t change.

"I think it’s sothing you’ll have to."

The certainty in his voice didn’t feel like pressure. It felt like direction. Elara considered that for a mont.

"And where exactly do you expect to learn sothing like this?" she asked.

Rowan’s gaze shifted slightly, sothing more calculated moving behind it now.

"There’s soone," he said.

Of course there was.

"There’s always soone," Elara muttered.

Rowan almost smiled.

"Not soone you’ll like," he added.

That made her pause.

"Why?"

"Because he doesn’t care who you are," Rowan said. "Only what you can survive."

Elara’s brows lifted slightly.

"That sounds reassuring."

"It’s not," Rowan replied. "But it’s effective."

Elara let out a quiet breath, then nodded once.

"Good," she said. "I’m not looking for easy."

Rowan studied her for a mont.

"Yeah," he said softly. "I know."

The words lingered between them. And this ti— Elara didn’t look away. The space between them felt different now. Less uncertain and more intentional.

She stepped closer again, her hand finding his arm without hesitation this ti, her touch more certain, more grounded.

"This isn’t just about surviving anymore, is it?" Rowan asked quietly.

Elara shook her head slightly.

"No," she said. "It’s about becoming sothing they can’t control."

Rowan’s gaze held hers. And for a mont— That was enough.

Far from where they stood, beyond the trees and the forest line sothing else was already moving. Orders had been given. Decisions had been made. And sowhere, in a place far removed from instinct and territory—

A voice spoke into the silence.

"Bring her in," it said.

"Before she learns how to use it."

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