Chapter 149: Luna’s Growth
Chapter 149: Luna’s Growth
LUNA POV
The vampire landed right in front of me, teeth bared and eyes glowing red.
I didn’t even pause. My hand connected with his jaw, sending him flying backward into a tree. Six months ago, I would have screamed and run. Tonight, I stood my ground and prepared for the next attack.
"River Pack, form defensive line!" I yelled to the wolves behind me. "Protect the children!"
More vampires dropped from the sky like dangerous rain. The vampire council had arrived at Silver Peak in force, and they weren’t here to talk. As pack diplomat, it was my job to handle this problem before it turned into a war.
"Stand down!" I commanded, using every bit of power I’d learned over the past months. "This is neutral territory under supernatural law!"
The head vampire, an ancient-looking man with silver hair, laughed coldly. "Laws mean nothing when reality itself is breaking apart, little wolf."
He had to be Viktor, the vampire council leader Dmitri had named. The vampire who wanted to stop all dimensional fixes and let the world burn.
"Then let’s talk about solutions instead of threats," I said, stepping forward despite every instinct telling me to run.
Viktor’s eyes narrowed. "You would negotiate with the very beings whose feeding created this crisis?"
"I would negotiate with anyone willing to help save innocent lives," I replied firmly.
Behind me, I heard gasps from my own pack members. Luna Morrison, the spoiled beta’s daughter, talking back to one of the most powerful vampires in existence. A year ago, I wouldn’t have believed it myself.
But I wasn’t that girl anymore.
"The dimensional tears are spreading," I continued, pulling out the reports I’d been studying all week. "Every big supernatural territory is affected. If we don’t work together, we all die together."
"Perhaps death is preferable to serving human interests," Viktor said with a sneer.
"This isn’t about humans," I shot back. "This is about life. Look around you. The sky is actually cracking. The walls between worlds are failing. Do you really think vampire pride is worth the end of everything?"
Viktor stopped, and for a moment I thought I might actually be getting through to him. Then his face hardened again.
"You speak of cooperation, but where is your precious Guardian?" he asked. "Hiding in her basement while others fight her battles?"
"Lily is holding reality together with her bare hands," I said, anger flashing through me. "She’s sacrificing herself to buy us time to find a real solution."
"And what solution is that?" Viktor demanded.
I took a deep breath. This was the moment I’d been preparing for, the reason I’d spent weeks learning dimensional theory and supernatural law.
"A Convergence Ritual," I revealed.
The vampires went silent. Even my own pack members looked shocked.
"That’s impossible," Viktor said. "Convergence Rituals require willing involvement from all major supernatural species. Vampires, werewolves, witches, and Fae must work together as equals."
"Exactly," I said. "Which is why I’ve been reaching out to all of them."
"You’ve been what?" Aiden’s voice came from behind me. The new Alpha pushed through our defensive line, looking both impressed and worried.
"I’ve been doing my job," I answered. "As pack diplomat, it’s my responsibility to build alliances during crisis situations."
Viktor laughed again, but this time it sounded less sure. "Even if you could convince the other species to join, a Convergence Ritual has never been successfully performed. The magical conditions are beyond current understanding."
"Not beyond Lily’s understanding," I said quietly. "She’s connected to all dimensions now. She can guide the process from the inside."
"At the cost of her own life," Viktor pointed out.
"Maybe," I admitted. "But definitely at the cost of her life if we do nothing."
I pulled out my phone and showed Viktor the pictures I’d taken through dimensional viewing crystals. Images of Lily getting more transparent each hour, her life force burning away as she tried to hold infinite dimensional tears closed.
"She’s dying anyway," I said. "At least this way, her death might save everyone else."
"You would sacrifice your former rival so easily?" Viktor asked, studying my face for deceit.
"I would honor her choice," I corrected. "Lily decided to become a Guardian to protect others. I’m just trying to make sure her sacrifice actually works."
Viktor was quiet for a long moment, considering my words. Around us, the other vampires waited for his choice. I could feel my own pack’s tension as they watched their former problem child deal with creatures who could kill us all.
"Show me your ritual plans," Viktor said finally.
I pulled out the thick folder I’d been carrying everywhere for weeks. Inside were charts, diagrams, and thorough explanations of how a Convergence Ritual could stabilize dimensional barriers permanently.
"The basic theory is sound," I explained as Viktor studied the papers. "We need leaders from each supernatural species to channel their unique magical signatures into a unified spell matrix. The combined power would be enough to repair the damage and avoid future tears." noveldrama
"The power requirements alone would kill most participants," Viktor noted.
"Not if we do it right," I said. "The rite doesn’t require individual sacrifice. It needs unity. When all species work together, the magical load is shared evenly."
Viktor’s eyes widened as he read deeper into my research. "You found a way to change the classical Convergence structure. This is... actually amazing."
"I had good teachers," I said, thinking of all the hours I’d spent in the pack library, all the talks with Elder Iris about forgotten supernatural history.
"Even so," Viktor added, "you still need willing participation from the Fae Court. And they’ve never worked with anyone."
"About that," I said, checking my watch. "Prince Ash should be arriving any minute with Queen Morrigan’s answer."
As if called by my words, the air shimmered with ice crystals. A door opened, and Prince Ash stepped through, his face grim.
"Luna," he said quickly. "We have a problem. My mother agreed to the Convergence Ritual, but she’s added her own terms."
"What conditions?" I asked, though I was afraid I already knew.
"She wants Lily transferred to Fae custody immediately," Ash replied. "And she wants to be the one controlling the ritual."
Viktor snarled. "Unacceptable. The Winter Queen cannot be trusted with such power."
"It gets worse," Ash continued. "The Void Walkers have discovered our dimensional viewing. They know we’re planning something, and they’re accelerating their own invasion timeline."
"How much time do we have?" I asked.
"Hours," Ash said. "Maybe less."
Before anyone could react, the ground beneath us started shaking. Through the cracking sky, I could see huge dark shapes pushing against the dimensional barriers, trying to break through.
"They’re here," Viktor whispered, all his earlier confidence gone.
As the first Void Walker tore through reality into our world, I realized my careful diplomatic plans might be useless. We were out of time for talks.
But as I watched the ancient evil emerge from between dimensions, I felt something I’d never experienced before - total certainty about what I had to do.
"Change of plans," I announced, pulling out my backup phone. "I’m calling in every favor, every alliance, every promise I’ve made over the past months."
"What are you doing?" Aiden asked.
I smiled grimly as supernatural members from a dozen species answered my calls. "I’m starting a war. And we’re going to win."
But even as I spoke, more Void Walkers poured through the dimensional tear, and I wondered if faith alone would be enough to save us all.
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