Triple Moon Rising: An Omega's Destiny
Chapter 56: Luna’s Redemption
CHAPTER 56: LUNA’S REDEMPTION
Luna POV
My claws were inches from little Sarah’s throat when her frightened whimper broke through the shadow magic clouding my mind.
"Please don’t hurt me, Luna," the six-year-old omega pup whispered. "I thought you were my friend."
The words hit me like a slap. Sarah was my friend. I’d taught her how to braid her hair just last week. Why was I trying to hurt her?
The black fog in my thoughts suddenly cracked, and memories came rushing back. Morrigan’s power. The dark magic spreading through our pack. My own desperate efforts to resist before the darkness took over fully.
I jerked my hand away from Sarah and stumbled backward, shocked by what I’d almost done.
"Sarah, run!" I gasped, fighting against the shadow magic that was already trying to pull me back under its control. "Get to the safe house!"
The little girl didn’t need to be told twice. She ran toward the pack houses while I pressed my hands to my head, trying to stay myself instead of becoming Morrigan’s tool again.
All around me, other controlled dogs were doing terrible things. Beta Marcus was trying to lock his own mate in their house "for her safety." Alpha Thompson from the River Pack had tied up his teenage son to "protect him from making bad choices." Parents were fighting their own children, sure they were saving them.
This wasn’t random bloodshed. Morrigan was using our love against us, twisting our protective feelings into something cruel and possessive.
But I knew these dogs. I’d grown up in pack politics, learning how each family connected to the others, which dogs respected which leaders, who listened to whom when times got tough.
"Marcus!" I called out to the beta who was fighting with his struggling mate. "Remember your wedding vows! You promised to trust her judgment, not control her choices!"
Something sparked in Marcus’s black eyes. For just a moment, the real him pushed through Morrigan’s impact.
"Elena?" he said uncertainly, looking at his mate like he was seeing her clearly for the first time in hours.
"That’s right," I said quickly, moving toward them while trying to avoid the shadow magic clawing at my own thoughts. "She’s not your property. She’s your partner."
Beta Marcus freed his mate’s hands, shaking his head in confusion. "What was I doing? Why was I..."
"Shadow magic," I explained quickly. "It makes us think power equals love. But real love means trusting the people we care about to make their own choices."
Marcus nodded, his eyes clearing completely. "How do we fight it?"
"Help me reach the others. Use what they respect about you to tell them who they really are."
I’d never thought my years of studying pack politics would be useful for anything like this. Growing up as the Beta’s daughter, I’d learned which wolves responded to authority, which ones needed gentle persuasion, and which ones would only listen to peers they admired.
Alpha Thompson was still trying to tie up his son, sure the teenager would run away and get hurt if given freedom. But I knew Thompson had always been proud of having an independent kid.
"Alpha Thompson," I called out, using my most official voice. "Your son Jake just won the pack youth leadership contest last month. Remember? You said he was ready to make his own decisions."
The alpha paused, confusion flashing across his controlled features. "Jake did win, didn’t he? He’s... he’s grown up now."
"That’s right," I said gently. "And grown wolves make their own choices, even when we worry about them."
Alpha Thompson slowly untied the ropes around his son’s arms. Jake instantly hugged his father, and I saw both their eyes return to normal as the shadow control broke.
It was working. By telling the controlled wolves of their real relationships and values, I could help them break free from Morrigan’s twisted version of love.
But fighting the shadow magic was hard. Every time I helped someone else, the darkness in my own mind grew stronger. It whispered that I was making a mistake, that these wolves needed firm direction, that freedom would only lead to chaos.
You know better than they do, the dark voice said. You’ve always been smarter, more capable. They need you to make choices for them.
For a frightening moment, I almost believed it. I had always thought I knew what was best for our pack. That’s why I’d been so angry when Lily became the Triple Moon carrier instead of me.
But watching the freed wolves hug their family members, seeing the relief and thanks in their eyes, I realized something important. Being a good boss didn’t mean controlling people. It meant helping them become their best selves.
"Mrs. Chen," I called to an older wolf who was trying to force her adult daughter to come back home. "Remember when you taught us that the strongest families are the ones where everyone chooses to stay together?"
The shadow control cracked, and Mrs. Chen stepped back from her daughter with tears in her eyes. "I’m sorry, honey. I don’t know what came over me."
One by one, I worked my way through the controlled pack members, using everything I knew about their personalities and relationships to reach their real selves. It was like solving a complicated puzzle where each piece was a person’s heart.
But just as I thought we were winning, I felt a new wave of shadow magic crash over the area. This one was different - stronger and more focused. Through the pack bonds, I could feel something terrible happening at the Sacred Grove.
The newly freed dogs around me suddenly stiffened, their eyes going black again. But this time, the power felt different. More personal. Like Morrigan was speaking directly to each of them through links they couldn’t break.
"No," I whispered, reaching out with my own powers to try to help them resist.
But the dark magic was too strong now. One by one, the wolves I’d just freed fell back under Morrigan’s power. And this time, they looked at me not with confusion, but with calculated hate.
"You tried to turn us against our protector," Beta Marcus said, his voice cold and wrong. "But now we see the truth. You’re the real threat to our pack."
All the wolves I’d saved were now advancing on me, their motions perfectly coordinated. Through their black eyes, I could see Morrigan watching, using them like cameras to study my face.
"Hello, Luna," Morrigan’s voice came from a dozen mouths at once. "Thank you for showing me exactly how these links work. Now I know exactly how to make sure they never break again."
The controlled wolves surrounded me, and I realized with increasing horror that my success had taught Morrigan how to create unbreakable control. She’d watched me free the wolves, learned from my ways, and now she could prevent anyone from ever escaping her influence again.
I’d helped her become invincible.
But as the controlled wolves reached for me, I felt something unexpected - a new kind of connection forming between me and the frightened pups hiding in the pack houses. Not the twisted control Morrigan used, but something clean and strong.
They were counting on me to protect them, and for the first time in my life, that duty didn’t feel like a burden.
It felt like hope.
"You want to know what real leadership looks like?" I shouted at Morrigan through her dolls. "It’s not about power. It’s about sacrifice."
And then I did something that surprised even me. Instead of fighting the controlled wolves or trying to run away, I opened my mind fully to their attacks.
If Morrigan wanted to study how pack bonds worked, she was about to learn something she hadn’t expected.