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Alpha's Regret: The Seventh Time was Forever

Glorious_Eagle
They say seven is the number of perfection. For Luna Seraphine, it was the number that ended her silence. Six times, she tore the divorce papers apart, choosing love over pride, endurance over dignity, surrendering to the cruel demands of the mate who never cherished her. The seventh time, she signed her name without trembling. Alpha Ravyn panicked. His mistress, Daisy, the daughter of Seraphine’s former nanny, laughed it off. She’s only throwing a tantrum, they said. She’ll crawl back. They were wrong. The truth shattered what little remained of her heart: the child she had loved and raised for six years was never hers. That revelation became her breaking point and her rebirth. This time, Luna Seraphine walked away without looking back. As her power rose, so did Ravyn’s regret. The Alpha who once discarded her now slept outside her door, desperate for a single glance. But the woman who opened that door was no longer the Luna he broke. Cold. Untouchable. Unforgiving. Ravyn fell to his knees, begging for her hand, only to realize he was no longer the only one. Men of influence and power now competed for her attention. Because Luna Seraphine was no longer just a Luna. She was a world-renowned business mogul. A shadowed philanthropist. The most sought-after surgeon of her time, and a cyber genius. This time, she is not surviving the story written for her. She is rewriting it. And only she decides how it ends.
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INFINITE COMPREHENSION: THE RAI ASCENDANCY

Zayn ul-Abidin Rai was nobody special. A twenty-two-year-old IT graduate from Lahore, sweating through his cousin's wedding in Kot Addu, dodging marriage questions and stealing cigarettes behind the mango orchard. Then the light came. Not lightning. Just severance—one moment adjusting turbans, the next standing in a white room with nineteen strangers from worlds called Earth, Mars, Avalon, Eden Prime. [WELCOME, SELECTED ZAYN UL-ABIDIN RAI. THE NEXUS AWAITS.] The Nexus is survival entertainment for gods. Abductees thrown into horror films and apocalyptic scenarios—Resident Evil, Alien, The Matrix. Survive, earn points, buy power. Die, and become a statistic. Veterans include cultivators who shatter mountains, mages who speak dead languages, cyborgs with nuclear hearts. They look at Zayn—skinny, brown, claiming to be a "farmer's son"—and see dead weight. They're half right. Zayn is a farmer's son. His bones carry Mughal soldiers and partition refugees. What he hides—what only his System interface confirms—is his Talent: Infinite Comprehension. Absolute understanding of all phenomena. Instant mastery. Evolution beyond theoretical limits. Completely undetectable. He learns anything perfectly. A martial art demonstrated once becomes muscle memory. A spell formula glanced at becomes intuitive. A virus touched becomes data, then cure, then weapon. He improves what he learns—pushes skills past designed limits into something their creators never imagined. The catch? The talent hides itself. To observers, Zayn simply learns fast, gets lucky, has good instincts. Uniqueness is a death sentence in the Nexus. Administrators harvest anomalies. Veterans eliminate threats. The Selectors—cosmic children running this multiversal slaughterhouse—collect rare specimens. So Zayn becomes an actor. The cautious teammate. Tech-savvy support. Lucky survivor. Behind the mask, he devours. Comprehends. Evolves. While others bleed through scenarios, he studies the architecture of their suffering and builds a ladder out. He comprehends the T-virus—becomes immune to all disease. The Predator's cloaking—develops perfect stealth. The Force, magic, cultivation, nanotechnology, divine authority, time itself—weaves them into something hidden behind "I read about it once." He builds the Periphery: misfits from edges of their worlds, bound by knowing the center kills. He builds an economy selling "training guides"—his comprehended knowledge, diluted to seem learnable. He builds enemies: the Wang family young master who sees a rival, the Machine God cult detecting his System's signature, the Selectors noticing suspiciously dropping casualty rates. Through it all, Zayn dreams in Punjabi. Prays unseen. Carries his mother's biryani recipe uneaten—cooking it would mean accepting he's never going home. He is alone inter-narratively—a character who knows he's in a story, hiding from the author. His comprehension extends to tropes, plot armor, the reader's eye. He uses even that. Two thousand chapters. Twenty arcs. The Periphery becomes an army, then a nation, then a multiversal empire. Zayn its phantom emperor—ruling through puppets, always appearing as just another survivor, just another lucky fool. He kills gods by comprehending their divinity, then rewriting it. Breaks systems by understanding their code. Faces alternate versions of himself—chaos, destruction, order—and absorbs them into unity containing all possibilities. He becomes The Arbiter. The Root. The Gardener. The First Comprehender. And returns. Kot Addu. The wedding. Two seconds after he left. His mother's hand still raised. Zayn, who has commanded armies across ten thousand realities, who has rewritten physics when it inconvenienced him, smiles and says: "The turban's fine, Ami. Let me help with the guests." He has comprehended the final secret: power means nothing without context. Infinity is loneliness without sharing. The greatest comprehension is choosing to limit yourself—to be small, human, home
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