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LILY POV

The dinsional fall shattered around us like broken glass.

Instead of destroying everything, our united power turned the Council’s weapon into sothing else entirely. The collapsing realities didn’t disappear - they folded into each other, forming bridges where there had been barriers.

Caleb and I fell through the chaos, still holding hands as worlds spun past us like colorful ribbons. I could feel his mind linked with mine, sharing the weight of dinsional energy that would have torn either of us apart alone.

We landed hard on familiar ground - the area where Silver Peak Pack held their etings. But sothing was wrong. The air shimred like heat waves, and I could see through the trees to other worlds beyond.

"We did it," Caleb breathed, sitting up beside . "We stopped the collapse."

But as I looked around, my heart sank. "We’re not really here," I realized. "This is just an echo of our ho world."

Through our link, I felt Caleb’s confusion. "What do you an?"

I stood up slowly, feeling the ground beneath my feet. It felt solid, but when I reached for a tree branch, my hand passed right through it.

"We’re between dinsions now," I explained. "Not fully in any reality, but able to see all of them."

The woman hunter’s words echoed around us, though I couldn’t see her anywhere. "Lily? Caleb? Can you hear ?"

"We’re here!" I called out. "But I don’t think you can see us."

"The dinsional network worked," her voice continued, sounding amazed. "You connected hundreds of worlds together. The Council’s collapse couldn’t break through the ties."

Relief flooded through . We’d saved everyone. But as the joy faded, I understood what we’d lost.

"We can’t go ho," I whispered to Caleb. "We’re stuck between worlds forever."

He squeezed my hand tighter. "Then we’re stuck together. That’s not so bad."

Despite everything, I smiled. Even spread across dinsions, Caleb was still trying to make feel better.

"The echo bond," he said suddenly. "It’s different now. Stronger."

He was right. Before, our connection had let us sense each other’s feelings. Now I could feel his thoughts, his mories, even his dreams. And through him, I could feel sothing else - the network we’d created linking all the dinsional refugees.

"We’re not alone," I realized. "We can still help people."

"How?" Caleb asked.

I closed my eyes and reached out through our link to the network beyond. Imdiately, I felt them - Crystal hiding in a crystal cave, Ghost flickering between worlds as hunters chased him, little Pip crying in a corner sowhere dark and cold.

"They’re still being hunted," I said angrily. "The Council isn’t giving up."

"Then we don’t give up either," Caleb said strongly.

Through our shared dinsional awareness, I could see the paths between worlds more clearly than ever before. And I could see sothing the Council couldn’t - their hunters were using dinsional trackers that followed a specific energy signature.

"I have an idea," I said. "But it’s dangerous."

"Everything we do is dangerous," Caleb pointed out. "What are you thinking?"

"The hunters track dinsional energy," I explained. "But what if we could give them fake signals? Make them think refugees are in one place when they’re really sowhere else?"

Caleb’s eyes lit up with understanding. "A dinsional shell ga. Use our situation between realities to confuse their tracking."

"Exactly. But to do it, we’d have to split our awareness across multiple dinsions simultaneously. We could lose ourselves completely."

Caleb was quiet for a mont, thinking. Then he smiled that gentle smile I’d fallen in love with.

"Rember what you said back in the canyon? Wherever you go, I go. That’s what mates do."

Before I could argue, he opened his mind completely to our bond. I felt his consciousness rge more fully with mine, forming sothing new - not just Lily or just Caleb, but both of us together.

The impact was incredible. Suddenly I could be in multiple dinsions at once, appearing as energy signatures in dozens of different worlds while keeping my real self safe between realities.

"It’s working!" I said excitedly, watching as confused hunters chased false tracks across the multiverse.

But our victory ca with a price. Each ti we split our awareness, it beca harder to rember which thoughts were mine and which were Caleb’s. We were becoming sothing new, sothing that had never existed before.

"Lily," Caleb’s voice sounded strange, distant. "I can’t feel my body anymore."

I looked down and gasped. We were both becoming translucent, our physical forms dissolving as we spread ourselves across too many worlds.

"Pull back!" I said desperately. "We’re losing ourselves!"

But as we tried to gather our scattered mind back together, sothing went wrong. The network we’d built to save everyone suddenly felt like a trap. Every bond we’d ford with other refugees was pulling at us, demanding more and more of our energy to keep.

"The network is feeding on us," Caleb realized in fear. "We’re not controlling it anymore - it’s controlling us."

I felt fear rising in my chest. We’d saved everyone else but dood ourselves to be slowly devoured by our own creation.

That’s when I heard a familiar voice calling through the dinsional chaos.

"Mom! Dad! Hold on!"

My son - the void entity - was reaching through worlds to find us. But he wasn’t alone. I could feel Kestrel with him, and soone else who felt like pack family.

"Aiden?" I gasped, recognizing my previous mate’s energy signature.

"We’re coming to get you," Aiden’s words echoed across dinsions. "But you have to trust us completely."

"How are you even here?" I called back.

"The pack bonds," Aiden stated. "When you broke the Council’s collapse, it didn’t just save our reality - it awoke sothing that’s been sleeping in all werewolves for generations. We can all move between dinsions now."

Hope flared in my chest, but it was mixed with fear. "It’s too scary! The network will eat you too!"

"Not if we work together," Kestrel’s voice joined in. "I’ve figured out how to shut down the network safely. But we need you and Caleb to anchor us while we do it."

"What do you need us to do?" Caleb asked softly.

"Rember who you are," my son said earnestly. "Rember your love for each other, for your pack, for everyone you’ve saved. Use that to hold your mind together while we break the network’s hold on you."

I felt Caleb’s hand slip into mine - or maybe it was just the mory of his hand, since we barely had real forms anymore.

"Together?" he asked, just like he had when we’d first chosen to stop the collapse.

"Together," I agreed.

We focused on our mories - the Winter Moon Festival, the Triple Moon mark showing on my wrist, the first ti Caleb had looked at like I was soone special. Each mory felt like an anchor, pulling our separated selves back together.

Around us, the dinsional chaos began to calm as our rescues worked to dismantle the network. I could feel pieces of myself and Caleb returning from across the universe.

But just as I thought we might make it, sothing else reached through the collapsing network.

A huge presence, ancient and angry, that had been waiting for exactly this mont.

"The Devourer," Kestrel’s voice was filled with fear. "We’ve freed sothing that was stuck in the network. Sothing that feeds on dinsional energy."

Through our bond, I felt Caleb’s fear spike to match my own. We’d thought the Council was the worst threat to the universe.

We’d been wrong.

The Devourer’s hunger washed over us like a tidal wave, and I understood with growing horror that our entire struggle - the dinsional hunters, the Council’s collapse, even our rescue - had all been orchestrated to lead to this mont.

We hadn’t saved the multiverse.

We’d just served it up on a silver plate to sothing far worse than the Council had ever been.

And now it was too late to stop it.

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