by Erin Hunter
“We will tell Firestar about RiverClan, though, won’t we?”
he prompted.
“We might as well.” Leafpool paused. “But please don’t mention how you found out.”
Jaypaw didn’t reply. It was just like the WindClan dream.
He hadn’t cared then whether the other cats knew what he could do or not. He didn’t care now. But he didn’t like Leafpool making the decision for him. He hurried ahead, familiar now with the ground beneath his paws. They were almost back at camp. He broke into a run and heard Leafpool’s paws pattering on the fallen leaves behind him.
She was right on his tail as he burst into the camp.
“Leafpool?” Firestar’s mew sounded from the Highledge.
“Is something wrong?”
“I need to talk to you,” Leafpool called. She whisked past Jaypaw, heading toward the tumble of fallen rocks.
We need to talk to you! He followed her up to Highledge.
“Come inside.” Firestar led the two cats into his cave.
Jaypaw could scent Sandstorm and hear the steady lapping of her tongue.
“Good morning, Leafpool.” Sandstorm paused from her washing. Her voice softened as she addressed him. “Good
morning, Jaypaw.” A twinge of resentment stabbed his belly.
She still thinks I’m a kit.
“I had a dream—” he began.
“—about RiverClan.” Leafpool quickly finished his sentence. “Jaypaw dreamed they were in trouble. There seemed to be a problem with their home.”
Firestar’s tail swished over the ground. “Was there any message about ThunderClan?”
“ThunderClan wasn’t involved,” Leafpool meowed carefully.
“And there was no clear sign about what their problem is?”
Firestar queried.
“Not exactly,” Jaypaw admitted.
“Then I don’t see what we can do,” Firestar concluded.
“Shouldn’t we try to help them?” Leafpool’s mew was brittle with surprise.
“If they need help, they’ll ask for it.” Firestar shifted his paws. “It’s none of our business.”
“Why not?” Jaypaw bristled with frustration.
“I haven’t forgotten the last time you came to me with a dream,” Firestar growled. “It’s not part of the warrior code to attack every Clan that seems weak!”
Jaypaw’s ears burned. “I never said anything about attacking them! We could help them.” If ThunderClan helped now, RiverClan would be in their debt.
“Perhaps we could pay them a friendly visit,” Leafpool suggested.
“No.” Firestar was firm. “We have our own Clan to worry
about. I don’t know why StarClan can’t send you dreams about us instead of announcing every other Clan’s problems!”
Leafpool took a step forward. “You could send a patrol though, just to see. If they stayed near the shore, it wouldn’t break the—”
“They live on the other side of the lake!” Firestar cut her off. “I think Onestar has had enough of our meddling. And Blackstar is always looking for an excuse to get even with ThunderClan. StarClan knows why! I’m tired of acting for the best and then finding I’ve only made ThunderClan the focus of every resentment and jealousy in the other Clans.”
Jaypaw felt disappointment pulse from his mentor. Her paws scuffed the earthen floor of the cave as she padded out.
He followed her, scrabbling down the rockfall.
“Aren’t you going to argue with him?”
“I tried,” Leafpool sighed.
“But he has to listen to you! You’re the medicine cat.”
“He’s the leader.” Leafpool started to pad away. “I want to check on Daisy,” she meowed. “You go and sleep.”
Jaypaw flicked his tail. He wished his dream had been clearer. Then Firestar might have acted. Warm sunshine dappled his pelt as he padded toward the medicine den. He was tired after the long trek to the Moonpool. He needed rest before he could think of doing anything.
“Jaypaw, wait!” Hollypaw’s voice rang from the apprentice den. She skidded to a halt beside him. “Was Willowpaw there? Did you talk to her?”
“No.” Jaypaw wanted to sleep, not chat.
“She wasn’t there?” Panic edged Hollypaw’s mew.
“She was there. I just didn’t talk to her.”
“Did you find anything out? Perhaps Mothwing told Leafpool something.”
“RiverClan is definitely in trouble,” Jaypaw mewed.
“What’s wrong? How can you be sure?” Hollypaw paced around him.
“I saw Willowpaw in a dream. She’s worried that she has to find a new home.”
“A new home!” Hollypaw froze. “That’s dreadful! What’s Firestar going to do?”
“Nothing,” Jaypaw reported. “He doesn’t want to interfere.”
“But he must!” Hollypaw gasped. “RiverClan is in trouble.”
“Firestar says it’s their problem.” Jaypaw’s pelt itched with annoyance as he remembered the way the Clan leader had dismissed him. Again.
“So we have to stand by and watch?”
“Look, I’m tired.” Jaypaw began to pad toward the medicine den. “Go and argue with Firestar. He’s the one that makes the decisions.”
He left Hollypaw, feeling her gaze follow him across the clearing, sensing the indignation prickle from her pelt, hear-ing her shift her paws as she wondered whether to confront Firestar or not.
It wasn’t like Hollypaw to be so indecisive. Would she be more certain if he shared what he knew about the three cats who held the power of the stars in their paws? Not yet.
Something held him back, some pleasure in saving the knowledge for himself, some fear that speaking his destiny out loud might change it.
Right now all he wanted to do was rest his aching paws and sleep.
Chapter 4
“I’m still really tired,” Jaypaw complained.
Leafpool was leading him down to the lake. “But sunhigh’s the best time to collect mallow, when the leaves are dry.”
Jaypaw yawned. His paws were still sore and he felt as if he’d hardly closed his eyes before Leafpool nudged him awake. At least the day was warm. There was no chance of newleaf being driven back by the long claws of leaf-bare now.
The sunshine striking through the new foliage was hot enough to make his pelt itch as they padded through the trees. Birds called to one another, and far off he could hear the shrieks and splashes of Twolegs playing in the water.
Jaypaw shivered, remembering his fall into the lake when Crowfeather had rescued him. He wasn’t going to get his paws wet again if he could help it.
Water babbled nearby. He had only been this way once before. A brook ran down out of the forest and into the lake.
Like the stream that led up to the Moonpool, it carried the scent of the mountains. Leafpool led him along the edge, weaving around the trees that lined its path. The grass felt soft and cool on his pads and he was sorry when Leafpool
veered off the grassy bank and down onto the pebbly shore.
“The lake’s higher than I’d hoped,” she meowed, stopping.
“We won’t be able to collect all the herbs I wanted, but I can see a clump over there.” She darted away toward a sweet scent, and Jaypaw began to pad after her.
Suddenly, in the forest behind him, leaves fluttered and paw steps beat quick and light on the forest floor.
A squirrel!
Tiny paws skittered along the bank of the stream behind him and scrabbled up a tree, rustling its leaves. Then splashing. A hunting patrol was plunging toward him, down the shallow stream.
“Did you hear where it went?” Birchfall’s excited mew sounded from the trees.
Jaypaw flicked his nose toward where the squirrel was leaping along a low branch.
“I’ll get it!” Pebbles rattled and water splashed as Mousepaw scooted from the stream and up the tree trunk. Jaypaw ducked and blinked as shards of bark sprayed him, gouge
d out by Mousepaw’s eager claws. The branch overhead creaked, and Jaypaw heard a surprised squeal.
But it wasn’t the squirrel. It was Mousepaw.
The apprentice tumbled off the branch and crashed onto the pebbles beside Jaypaw.
“Fox dung!” Mousepaw scrambled to his paws, embarrassment flashing from his ruffled pelt.
“Catch it?” Jaypaw inquired.
Leaves rustled above them as the squirrel made its getaway.
“Nice try!” Spiderleg called from the stream.
“Next time, I’ll get it!” Mousepaw called back to his mentor.
The scent of the stream had confused Jaypaw, but as the ThunderClan patrol clambered out, shaking water from their paws, he recognized their distinctive smells. Ashfur and Lionpaw were with Birchfall, Spiderleg, and Mousepaw.
Lionpaw bounded down onto the shore. “Hi, Jaypaw.”
“Good morning for hunting,” Jaypaw replied, flicking his brother’s pelt with his tail.
“Mmm.”
Jaypaw stiffened, curious. Lionpaw was distracted, his mind not entirely on the hunt.
“What are you doing down there, Jaypaw?” Birchfall called from the bank.
“I’m helping Leafpool collect herbs,” Jaypaw told him, nodding toward Leafpool, who was farther down the shore scuffling among the mallow stems.
“What’s she doing?” Lionpaw asked.
“Digging up mallow,” Jaypaw told him. “Can you see any more of it about?”
“There’s a clump of it by an old stick over there.” Lionpaw nudged his brother in the right direction. “Look out though, there are lots of twigs and lumps of wood washed up on the shore. Don’t trip.”
“Come on,” Ashfur called impatiently. “Let’s get back to the hunt!”
“Can you manage?” Lionpaw wound around Jaypaw.
“Of course!”
“Okay. See you later.” Lionpaw bounded away, making the pebbles clatter.
Jaypaw listened to the patrol disappear back into the trees, envying his brother a little. In this weather, hunting would be way more fun than gathering leaves. He turned with a sigh toward the patch of mallow Lionpaw had spotted. He could smell it now, its sweet rose scent warmed by the sun. Carefully, he picked his way over the shore, avoiding the rubbish left washed up by the floodwater. He stretched out his nose, touching a mallow leaf and sniffing deeply.
His front paw bumped into something hard. Was this the stick Lionpaw had mentioned? He leaned down to sniff it and felt it smooth on his nose. The bark had been stripped away, the wood beneath it bone-dry. It could not have been in the water long, or it still would be sodden despite the newleaf sunshine. Jaypaw ran his paw over it. The exposed wood felt sleek beneath his pad.
He could feel something odd, too: scars scratched across the branch, too neat and regular to be natural. Some of them were crossed by other lines, like two paths going in different directions.
“What’s that?” Leafpool’s voice close behind him made him jump. He had been so absorbed that he hadn’t heard her approach.
“A stick.” With an effort, he rolled it from beneath the mallow plant where it had lodged. “Look at the lines.”
She sniffed it. “No scent,” she commented. “From by the lake, I expect.”
“But the lines feel strange,” Jaypaw prompted. “They’re too even.”
“You’re right,” Leafpool agreed. “I wonder what made them? A fox, maybe a badger?”
“They’re too fine to be badger or fox marks.”
“Perhaps it’s some Twoleg thing,” Leafpool suggested. She flicked her tail. “Come on. I’ll dig up some roots from this plant to add to the others I’ve collected.”
Jaypaw could smell the fishy stench of lake mud on her paws.
“You start stripping off some leaves,” Leafpool went on. “If we’re lucky, they’ll dry before the next rain.”
Why wasn’t she more interested in the stick? They had never come across anything like this before. Reluctantly, Jaypaw slid his paws from the branch. His pads felt warm where they had been touching it. He stripped a pawful of leaves from the mallow plant while Leafpool dug around a root and plucked it from the waterlogged earth with her teeth.
“Let’s get this stuff back to camp,” she meowed. “I left the other roots over there.” She bounded away and Jaypaw picked the leaves up with his teeth and began to head up the beach.
He paused. What about the stick? He couldn’t leave it lying where it was. It might get washed away. He dropped the mallow leaves, turned back, and began to roll the stick up away from the waterline with his paws.
“We can’t carry that home as well,” Leafpool meowed,
returning to his side. The roots she was holding in her teeth muffled her mew.
“But we can leave it somewhere safe.” I want to come back and look at it again.
“Okay, but hurry. I want to lay the leaves out while the sun’s still warm.”
Jaypaw tugged at the stick, rolling it over the pebbles and heaving it past the lumps of wood and rubbish that cluttered the shore. At last, panting, he felt grass brush his pelt. He had reached the bank that edged the stream. He felt around until he found a gap behind a twisted root and shoved the stick into it, hoping it would hold fast if the water rose more. A spark of anxiety flickered in his chest at the thought of losing the stick to the lake.
“Come on.” Leafpool sounded impatient.
Jaypaw darted back to pick up the leaves he had dropped and followed her into the trees. His paws felt heavy and unease fluttered in his chest. Leaving the stick felt wrong. He wanted to understand why.
I’ll be back, he promised.
Chapter 5
Lionpaw stiffened when he saw Hollypaw’s eyes flash in the darkness, even though they had closed by the time he reached his nest.
Hollypaw had been watching for him to slip back into the apprentices’ den.
“It’s okay,” he hissed into her ear. “I only went to make dirt.” He flexed his claws. Why did he have to explain every movement to her? She rolled over without replying. He curled down into his nest, his back to Hollypaw.
Outside the moon was high, the sky clear, the wind warm.
He longed to sneak out of camp and meet Heatherpaw. She didn’t watch him with that narrowed gaze like she was waiting to prove he was a traitor to his Clan. She knew they were just playing, not swapping Clan secrets. Lionpaw closed his eyes, anger like a hard knot in his belly, and buried himself in sleep. He began to dream.
Hollypaw blinked at him. Her eyes shone from the darkness of a burrow. They were full of warmth and excitement as they had been when they played as kits. Lionpaw crept closer to the entrance. What was she doing in there?
“Hollypaw?”
“I’m going to get you,” she mewed teasingly.
So that was it.
A game.
Lionpaw crouched and crept closer. Hollypaw twitched her whiskers mischievously, her amber eyes glittering in the darkness.
Lionpaw’s blood turned to ice.
Amber? Hollypaw’s eyes were green!
Lionpaw stepped backward. The eyes had lost their play-ful glint. They fixed him with a vicious stare. This wasn’t Hollypaw. A growl sounded from the burrow. Fox! Lionpaw tried to run but his paws seemed to have turned to stone.
Snarling, the creature shot out at him, teeth bared and red with blood.
Lionpaw woke and leaped to his feet. Pale light filtered through the branches of the den, speckling the sleeping cats.
Hollypaw’s head shot up. “Are you okay?”
“Just a nightmare,” Lionpaw panted.
Hollypaw leaned toward him. “What about?”
“A fox,” Lionpaw breathed.
“There are no foxes in here.” Cinderpaw padded from her nest and blinked encouragingly at him.
Lionpaw bristled. Wasn’t anywhere safe from this prying pair? He barged past them. “I’m going to get some food,” he mewed, stalking out of the den.
> Brambleclaw was watching the camp from Highledge.
Firestar must be on patrol, Lionpaw guessed. Jaypaw was washing himself beside the halfrock that jutted from the
earth on the farside of the clearing. He paused as Lionpaw crossed the camp.
“Are you okay?” Jaypaw tipped his head to one side.
“I had a nightmare, that’s all,” Lionpaw grumbled. He padded to the fresh-kill pile, picked up a small, stiff mouse and carried it back to Jaypaw.
They shared it in silence. At least Jaypaw didn’t seem to want to poke his nose into everything Lionpaw had done in the last moon.
“Lionpaw!” Ashfur padded out of the warriors’ den. “We’re training with Brackenfur and Hollypaw in the hollow this morning.”
Oh, great! Can’t I ever get away from her?
The thorn barrier trembled as an early hunting patrol raced into camp. Firestar and Sandstorm were both holding prey in their jaws. Spiderleg and Mousepaw each carried a mouse, and Whitewing gripped a plump thrush between her teeth.
“Is everything all right?” Brambleclaw called down.
Firestar dropped his prey on the fresh-kill pile. “All quiet and as you can see, the prey is running.”
Berrypaw was already at the fresh-kill pile, sniffing the thrush Whitewing had dropped. He picked it up and carried it to the nursery.
“Hi, Jaypaw.” Hollypaw was bounding across the clearing with Cinderpaw. “Any food left?”
“You can eat later, Hollypaw!” Brackenfur was pacing up and down in front of the camp entrance. “Training first.”
Lionpaw gulped down the last of his mouse, feeling a twinge of satisfaction. Hollypaw had probably been gossiping about him. Serves her right if it means she goes hungry. He got to his paws and hurried toward Brackenfur. Ashfur bounded across the clearing to join them.
“I’m starving!” Hollypaw complained, catching up.
“We’ll hunt after battle training,” Brackenfur promised.
The golden warrior darted through the tunnel. Lionpaw fell in beside Ashfur, leaving Hollypaw to hurry after them.
They padded to the training hollow in silence. Sun was slant-ing through the bright green leaves, and the air trembled with birdsong. Lionpaw saw Hollypaw lick her lips.