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Seraphina’s POV

The kitchen called to , but sothing felt wrong before I even stepped inside. Instead of the familiar warmth of fresh bread or the rich sll of evening broth that usually filled the air at this hour, an overwhelming mixture of scents hit . Too many dishes cooking simultaneously, creating an almost suffocating blend.

My footsteps rang against the stone floor as I entered the Parkhouse kitchen. The space buzzed with frantic energy. More than ten won moved about, their hands busy with chopping and stirring, their movents creating a symphony of clattering tal and bubbling pots.

Then my eyes found her. A petite woman with her back turned toward , working at a large pot with focused concentration. My heart practically soared with recognition.

"Ma?" The word slipped from my lips as barely a whisper, yet sohow it sliced through all the kitchen noise.

She whirled around instantly, her eyes going wide with shock before a sharp gasp escaped. "Seraphina!"

Without hesitation, she abandoned her station and rushed toward . Her apron billowed behind her as she crossed the distance between us, her arms already reaching out. I dropped down to et her embrace, catching her as she threw herself against .

Her grip around my neck was fierce, almost desperate in its intensity. I pressed my face into her familiar hair, drawing in her scent that perfect combination of cooking spices, woodsmoke, and sothing indefinably comforting that belonged only to her.

"My precious girl! I’ve missed you beyond words!" Her voice broke with emotion as she cried against my shoulder.

Tears threatened to spill from my own eyes. "I missed you too, Ma! More than you know!" The weight of those months apart suddenly crashed over . Half a year. Six endless months of separation. It had stretched like a lifeti. Ma and Pa, being fully human, had always harbored deep fears about traveling between different pack territories. The dangers seed too great, the risk of not belonging too real. That’s exactly why our face-to-face etings had beco so rare. Though we maintained almost daily phone conversations, nothing compared to holding her like this.

She stepped back just enough to fra my face with her hands, her eyes bright with unshed tears and pure joy. "Just look at you, sweetheart. You’re absolutely glowing." Her fingers squeezed mine gently.

Mixed feelings swirled through about finding her working in this kitchen, but I also recognized sothing important. She seed genuinely happy here, happier than I’d seen her in ages. They’d even constructed a proper ho for my parents on the grounds.

I managed a real smile, one that ca straight from my heart, before carefully pulling away from Ma’s loving hold. "That makes so happy, Ma. Truly it does." I turned my attention to the other won throughout the kitchen, noting how they’d stopped their tasks to watch our reunion with expressions I couldn’t quite read. "Good afternoon, everyone," I announced, making sure my voice carried authority and confidence.

Imdiately, every head bowed in unison, a wave of respect flowing through the group. "Luna," they responded together, their voices subdued. The familiar acknowledgnt reminded of my position and the power that ca with it.

But as I surveyed the bustling scene again, that nagging sense of wrongness returned. The massive amount of food preparation, the frantic pace of cooking, and especially the timing. "Is sothing special happening today?" I questioned, confusion creeping into my voice. "So kind of celebration or feast?"

A small spark of hope flickered in my chest. Perhaps they’d organized a welco-back dinner as a surprise? A thoughtful gesture to mark my return after such a long absence?

One of the won, heavyset with a stern expression, moved forward slightly. "No, Luna," she replied, her tone completely flat and lacking any warmth. "This is simply our normal dinner preparation ti."

That hopeful spark died instantly, replaced by sharp irritation and a cold weight settling in my stomach. "Three o’clock?" I demanded, unable to keep the edge from my voice. "Since when exactly? Before I left, I established clear guidelines that dinner preparation begins at four-thirty. Any earlier interferes with everyone’s other responsibilities, their training sessions, their family ti.

Nobody wants to eat food that’s gone cold either. I specifically wanted to prevent that kind of waste and show proper respect for everyone’s efforts."

The woman shared a aningful look with another cook, and I caught the hint of a smirk crossing her features, along with sothing rebellious flickering in her gaze. "Well, Luna," she drawled, deliberately stretching out each word with calculated slowness, "this has been our standard routine for months now."

The way she delivered those words. That pointed emphasis on "months now." This wasn’t simply an explanation. It was a deliberate provocation. A thinly disguised insult masquerading as compliance. It was a direct challenge, clear evidence that my rules, my decisions, my very authority had been completely ignored the mont I’d stepped away. Anger began building in my veins, a slow but dangerous fire. I held the position of Luna. I refused to be disrespected by my own pack mbers, especially not here in my own territory, in my own kitchen.

My eyes narrowed as I studied each face, watching them all suddenly find the floor fascinating. "Who," I said, dropping my voice to a nacingly quiet level, each word hitting like a physical blow in the sudden, oppressive silence, "gave you permission to make such changes?" The kitchen atmosphere grew dense and suffocating. Cooking sounds ceased completely. Every woman froze in place, their eyes darting around nervously like cornered animals.

Then, cutting through that heavy silence from the kitchen’s far end, ca a voice that was smooth and dripping with insufferable confidence. "I did."

I spun around, my pulse racing as cold shock washed over , drowning out the anger with pure disbelief. There, casually leaning against a counter with an expression of triumph and smugness, stood soone I hadn’t laid eyes on in over nine years. Her red hair was twisted into a careless bun, and those eyes, so similar to my own, held sothing I couldn’t imdiately identify a blend of defiance and sothing much darker.

This couldn’t be happening.

Cordelia. My cousin from my mother’s family and, more significantly, my childhood torntor.

My thoughts spun wildly, struggling to make sense of what I was seeing. What possible reason could she have for being here? Why was she standing in my kitchen acting like she belonged? And most importantly, what made her think she had any authority to make decisions in my pack?

You are reading Alpha's Regret: Claiming My Stolen Twins Chapter 172 Cordelia Takes Control on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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