Chapter Summary: Chapter 49 Close As Brothers – The Alpha's Regret Return Of The Betrayed Luna (Addison) by GoddessKM
In Chapter 49 Close As Brothers, a key moment in the Romance novel The Alpha's Regret Return Of The Betrayed Luna (Addison), GoddessKM delivers powerful storytelling, emotional shifts, and critical plot development. This chapter deepens the reader’s connection to the characters and sets the stage for upcoming revelations.
Greg had intentionally increased the portion size. As an Alpha, Zion was larger than the average wolf, and his body demanded more food to sustain both his size and power. Alphas possessed incredible brute strength, but that strength came with a cost—it consumed an enormous amount of energy. If Zion didn’t eat properly, he wouldn’t be able to perform at his best on the battlefield.
The meat used in the soup had been either smoked or sun-dried—preservation methods necessary for their current circumstances. To make it more palatable, it had to be either boiled longer or soaked before cooking; otherwise, it would be too dry and tough to eat.
Still, they had little choice. Their meals had to rely on ingredients with long shelf lives likepotatoes, flour, preserved meats, and other hardy supplies that wouldn’t spoil easily.
With limited ingredients, they had no choice but to get creative with their meals, using the same basic supplies in different ways. Fortunately, Addison had anticipated this and made sure to send a variety of goods with each shipment.
If she sent flour one time, the next delivery might include rice. If they received beef jerky or smoked beef in one batch, the next might bring smoked bacon or cured pork ham. Thanks to this rotation, Zion and his people could enjoy some variation in their meals, unlike other packs who had to swallow their dissatisfaction and make do with whatever they were given.
Still, the improvement in supplies did little to stop the bullying of Beta Greg. In fact, he grew more resentful. He hated the other packs—and he hated Addison even more. In his eyes, everything was her fault.
He believed that if their former Alpha hadn’t died, none of this would have happened. He wouldn’t have been humiliated, and neither would the others. Not even once.
Beta Greg had turned a blind eye to everything Addison was doing for the pack, not because he wasn’t aware, but because he was drowning in his own suffering and didn’t have the time to understand others. Aside from his Alpha, only his Alpha and himself mattered; then, his pack and Addison were the last of his concerns.
Zion couldn’t help but feel a deep sense of guilt, knowing that his Beta had suffered in silence, and that he, too, had unknowingly allowed it to happen.
Perhaps that was why Greg never said anything—why he kept quiet about the bullying until Zion accidentally witnessed it himself. Maybe Greg didn’t want to burden his Alpha any further.
Zion was still young, after all, yet already facing off against seasoned Alphas who tried to intimidate and undermine him. If Greg had added his own pain to the growing pressure on Zion’s shoulders, it might have pushed him too far.
Zion’s wolf, Shura, was already volatile under stress. If pushed too hard, there was a risk of Shura going berserk—a dangerous loss of control that would damage Zion’s reputation even more and, worse, signal to others that he was unfit to lead. In their world, an Alpha who couldn’t control his wolf was considered weak, and that was the last thing Zion could afford to be.
So when Beta Greg entered his tent unannounced, Zion didn’t get angry or feel disrespected. Normally, even a beta was expected to ask permission before entering an alpha’s space, because a strict hierarchy demanded it.
But Zion had never been rigid with Greg. He saw him more as a close brother than just a subordinate, and because of that bond, he allowed Greg certain liberties that others weren’t granted.
This leniency gave Greg the confidence to make decisions on Zion’s behalf, even without explicit orders. It was also the reason he acted so boldly toward Addison. In Greg’s mind, he had placed himself above Addison in the chain of command—second only to Alpha Zion himself.
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