Bound to the Triplet Alphas-Chapter 47: Through the Darkness

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Chapter 47: Chapter 47: Through the Darkness

ARIA POV

"Jaxon!" I screamed, lunging toward his crushed body as the dark barrier shimmered between us and our enemies.

Blood dripped from his nose and ears. His golden eyes fluttered open, unfocused.

"I’m fine," he mumbled, clearly not fine at all.

Kael and Lucien ran to their brother, lifting him gently. The dark energy had hit him hard, and I could see the gold thread of our bond flashing dangerously.

"We need to keep moving," Lucien said quickly. "The barrier won’t hold them for long."

"But how?" Mira asked, her voice shaking. "Darius and Elira are ahead of us."

I spun around, desperate. The cave behind us had disappeared, replaced by solid stone. We were stuck.

"There," Kael pointed to a small opening in the wall that hadn’t been there before. "The Chamber is testing us."

"Testing us?" I asked.

"The Moon Chamber reshapes itself," Lucien explained, bolstering Jaxon. "It challenges those who enter."

I looked at the dark tunnel, fear crawling up my spine. But what choice did we have?

"Stay close," I said, taking the lead.

The moment I stepped into the tunnel, the others vanished. The hole sealed shut behind me with a grinding sound. I was alone in complete darkness.

"Kael? Lucien?" I called, fear rising in my throat. "Mira?"

No answer. Just silence.

Then, slowly, light began to grow around me. I stood in a forest clearing under a full moon. But something was wrong. The trees were too still, the light too harsh.

"Hello, Aria."

I whirled around. A woman stood before me, her face both familiar and strange—like looking in a mirror that showed my future self.

"Mother?" I whispered.

She shook her head. "I wear this form because it brings you comfort. I am the Chamber."

"What have you done with my friends?" I asked.

"They face their own trials," she said. "As must you."

The clearing changed, melting into a different scene. I was a kid again, hiding in a closet while voices shouted outside.

"This isn’t real," I said strongly.

"All trials contain truth," the Chamber replied, its voice now coming from everywhere. "Face yours."

The closet door opened. I expected to see my youth tormentors, the pack members who had bullied the lowly omega.

Instead, I saw Kael, Jaxon, and Lucien walking away, their backs to me.

"They’re leaving you," the Chamber whispered. "Everyone always does."

My heart squeezed painfully. "No. They wouldn’t."

"Wouldn’t they?" The scene changed again. Now I saw the triplets with Elira, laughing as she took her place as Luna.

"She’s the better choice," Chamber-Kael said coldly. "Pure bloodline. No curse."

"We never really wanted you," Chamber-Jaxon added with a wicked smile.

"It was duty, nothing more," Chamber-Lucien ended.

Tears burned my eyes. "This isn’t real," I repeated, but my voice faltered.

"Isn’t it your greatest fear?" the Chamber asked. "Being abandoned? Left behind? Just like your parents left you?"

The words hit hard because they were true. All my life, I’d been the unwanted one, the forgotten omega.

"Yes," I admitted, my voice small. "I’m afraid they’ll leave me."

"Then you fail," the Chamber ruled. "The Moon Goddess has no use for weakness."

Something inside me hardened at those words. "Admitting fear isn’t weakness," I said, standing taller. "It’s honesty."

"Pretty words won’t save you," the Chamber mocked.

"I’m afraid," I continued, finding strength in the truth, "but I still choose to trust them. I choose to believe in our link."

The false triplets swayed like smoke in the wind.

"Even knowing they share your blood?" the Chamber pushed. "That your bond crosses nature’s lines?"

"The Moon Goddess chose us," I said firmly, echoing Lucien’s words. "Who am I to question her wisdom?"

The entire scene shattered like glass, leaving me standing in a circle room of white stone. In the middle stood a pedestal with a silver chalice.

"The first trial is passed," the Chamber said, its voice softer now. "Honesty before pride."

The bowl glowed with moonlight. I approached carefully.

"Drink," the Chamber ordered.

I paused. "What will happen?"

"Understanding," it answered simply.

I took the chalice and drank. The liquid inside tasted like starlight—if starlight had a taste. Cold and bright and ancient.

Instantly, information poured into me. I saw the past of my bloodline—the powerful Moon Alpha females who had led the original packs. I saw how men, jealous of their power, had plotted to bind and suppress the female Alphas.

I saw my mother, fighting against that heritage. And I saw the Moon Goddess herself, a being of light and knowledge, guiding events across generations to restore balance.

"She’s been with me all along," I gasped, understanding filling me.

"Every step," the Chamber verified. "Every hardship. Every joy. Preparing you for this moment."

The room changed again, and a door appeared.

"The others await their trials," the Chamber said. "Will you help them?"

"Yes," I said without doubt.

The door opened, showing Kael trapped in a cage of fire, fighting invisible enemies.

"His trial is courage in the face of helplessness," the Chamber stated. "Something the strong rarely learn."

Beyond him, Lucien knelt in a pool of blood, trying desperately to heal a cut that wouldn’t close.

"His trial is accepting that not everything can be fixed."

And furthest away, Jaxon stood frozen before an exact copy of himself, the two locked in silent fight.

"His trial is confronting his true nature."

"How do I help them?" I asked.

"The bond," the Chamber said. "Use it."

I focused on the colored threads linking me to each brother. Taking a deep breath, I pulled on them gently, sending my strength, my hope, my love.

Kael’s fires faded. Lucien’s wound began to heal. Jaxon’s double faded.

One by one, they turned toward me, eyes clearing as they recognized me.

"Aria?" Kael called, his voice faraway.

"Follow the bond!" I shouted back. "Come to me!"

The room spun wildly, and suddenly we were all together again, standing in a vast hall with a domed ceiling painted with phases of the moon. Mira was there too, looking shaken but unhurt.

"We made it," Jaxon said, sounding better.

"Not all of you," a cold voice repeated.

Darius stepped from the shadows, pulling someone behind him—Elira, her face bruised, her hands bound.

"She failed her trial," he said with disgust. "Betrayed by her own jealousy."

"Let her go," I ordered.

"I think not," Darius answered. "I still need her blood for the ritual."

His eyes shifted to something behind us. I turned to see a raised altar in the middle of the room, bathed in moonlight streaming from an opening in the ceiling.

"The final lock," Darius said, pointing toward the altar. "Your mother’s spirit, trapped between worlds."

I could feel her presence now, a gentle pull on my heart.

"All I need is blood from both Moon Alpha daughters," Darius added, "and the curse transfers to me. I’ll control all three of my kids forever."

"That’s not how the ritual works," I said, remembering what I’d learned from the chalice. "The blood must be given freely, with love."

Darius laughed loudly. "Love has nothing to do with power."

"It has everything to do with it," I replied. "The Moon Goddess’s power comes from love, not fear."

Something flashed in Darius’s eyes—uncertainty, perhaps. He pulled Elira closer, putting a blade to her throat.

"Let’s test your theory," he growled. "Give me your blood willingly, or watch your sister die."

I felt the triplets tense beside me, ready to attack. But something held me back—a feeling, a sense.

"Elira," I said softly, ignoring Darius. "Did you see her too? During your trial?"

Elira’s eyes widened with surprise. "The Moon Goddess?"

Darius pressed the blade harder. "Silence!"

But it was too late. A single tear slid down Elira’s cheek, glowing with an inner light.

"She showed me the truth," Elira whispered. "About what I’ve done. What I’ve become."

The tear fell, striking the ground with a sound like crystal breaking.

And suddenly, the chamber filled with blinding light.