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 CHAPTER 15



       Bluestar stood and began to pad toward Mothermouth.

       Tigerclaw walked beside her, matching her strides step for

       step.

       “Come on, Ravenpaw! ” cal ed Graypaw. Ravenpaw was

       stil sitting on the rock, staring up at the rocks. At Graypaw’s

       mew, he stood and began to fol ow slowly. Firepaw realized

       his friend had hardly said a word the whole journey. Is he

       just worried about ShadowClan, or is there something else

       troubling him? Firepaw wondered.

       It took the cats only a few moments to reach

       Mothermouth. Firepaw stood on the threshold and peered

       inside. The blackness beyond the stone archway was

       darker than the cloudiest night. Firepaw narrowed his eyes,

       trying to see where the tunnel led, but he couldn’t see a

       thing.

       Beside him, Graypaw and Ravenpaw craned their

       heads nervously around the entrance. Even Tigerclaw

       seemed unsettled by the black hole ahead of them. “How

       wil we find our way in such darkness? ” he asked.

       “I wil know the way, ” answered Bluestar. “Just fol ow my

       scent. Ravenpaw and Graypaw, you wil remain on guard

       outside. Firepaw, you wil accompany me and Tigerclaw to

       the Moonstone. ”

       Firepaw felt a thril jolt through him. What an honor!

       Firepaw glanced sideways at Tigerclaw. The warrior sat

       with his chin boldly raised, but Firepaw could detect a

       subtle fear-scent coming from him. It grew stronger as

       Bluestar stepped forward into the blackness.

       Tigerclaw shook his mighty head and padded after

       Bluestar. With a brief nod to the other apprentices, Firepaw

       fol owed.

       Inside the cave, his eyes stil detected nothing. The

       complete and utter blackness felt strange, but he was

       surprised to find that he wasn’t frightened. His eagerness to

       discover what lay ahead was stronger.

       The cold, damp air reached through his thick fur and into

       his bones, stiffening his muscles. Even the coldest nights

       did not hold the same chil as the air here. This ground has

       never known the warmth of the sun, thought Firepaw,

       feeling the rock smooth like ice beneath his paws. Freezing

       air fil ed his lungs with each breath, until he felt light-

       headed.

       He fol owed Bluestar and Tigerclaw through the

       darkness, judging his way by scent and feel alone. They

       were walking along a tunnel that sloped down and down,

       winding first one way and then the other. Firepaw’s

       whiskers brushed the side of the cave, tel ing him where to

       walk and where to turn. His nose told him that Bluestar and

       Tigerclaw were only a tail-length ahead of him.

       On and on they went. How far have we come? Firepaw

       wondered. Then he felt a tingle in his whiskers. The air in

       his nostrils seemed fresher than before. He sniffed again,

       relieved to smel the familiar world above. He could smel

       peat, and prey, and the scent of heather. There must be a

       hole somewhere in the roof of the tunnel. “Where are we? ”

       he mewed into the darkness.

       “We have entered the cavern of the Moonstone, ” came

       Bluestar’s soft reply. “Wait here. It wil be moonhigh soon. ”

       Firepaw folded his hind legs under him on the chil y

       stone floor and waited. He could hear the steady breathing

       of Bluestar and the more rapid, fear-scented panting of

       Tigerclaw.

       Suddenly, in a flash more blinding than the setting sun,

       the cave was lit up. Firepaw’s eyes were wide open after

       the blackness of the tunnel. He closed them quickly against

       the cold, white light. Then slowly he opened them into tiny

       slits and peered ahead.

       He saw a gleaming rock, which glittered as if it were

       made from countless dewdrops. The Moonstone! Firepaw

       looked around. In the cold light reflected from the stone, he

       could make out the shadowy edges of a high-roofed

       cavern. The Moonstone rose up from the middle of the floor,

       three tail-lengths high.

       Bluestar was staring upward, her fur bleached white in

       the glow of the Moonstone. Even Tigerclaw’s dark pelt

       shone silver. Firepaw fol owed Bluestar’s gaze. High in the

       roof was an opening that revealed a narrow triangle of night

       sky. The moon was casting a beam of light through the

       hole, down onto the Moonstone, making it sparkle like a

       star.

       Beside him, Firepaw smel ed Tigerclaw’s fear-scent

       growing, until it became overpowering. Firepaw felt

       startled. Could the warrior see something else here,

       something dangerous? He saw a flash of movement, felt fur

       rush past him, and heard the fleeing pawsteps of Tigerclaw

       racing back to the entrance.

       “Firepaw? ” Bluestar’s voice was quiet and calm.

       “I’m stil here, ” he answered nervously. What had

       frightened Tigerclaw?

       “Bluestar? ” Firepaw mewed again when she didn’t

       answer. His heart was beating fast, making the blood roar

       in his ears.

       “It is al right, young warrior; don’t be afraid, ” Bluestar

       murmured. Her calm voice settled him a little. “I think

       Tigerclaw was surprised by the power of the Moonstone. In

       the world above, Tigerclaw is a fearless and mighty warrior,

       but down here, where the spirits of StarClan speak, a cat

       needs a different kind of strength. What do you feel,

       Firepaw? ”

       Firepaw sniffed the air deeply, and forced his body to

       relax. “Only my own curiosity, ” he admitted.

       “That is good, ” Bluestar replied.

       Firepaw looked back at the Moonstone. His eyes had

       gotten used to its light and he was no longer dazzled.

       Instead, it soothed him. With a twitch of his tail, he

       remembered his dream. This was the bril iant bal of light he

       had seen!

       Spel bound, Firepaw watched as Bluestar padded up to

       the stone and lay down beside it. She reached her head

       forward and touched the Moonstone with her nose. Her blue

       eyes sparkled with its reflection for a moment before she

       closed them. Now she rested her head on her paws, her

       eyelids flickering, her paws twitching occasional y. Was

       she sleeping? Then Firepaw remembered Graypaw’s

       words: “new leaders have to sleep near the stone, and as

       they sleep, they have special dreams. ”

       He waited. The chil was not so intense here, but stil he

       found himself shivering. He had no idea how much time had

       passed, but suddenly the rock stopped glowing. The cavern

       was plunged into darkness once more. Firepaw looked up

       to the opening in the roof of the cavern. The moon had

       passed on, out of sight. Al that remained were tiny stars

       shimmering in blackness.

       Firepaw could just make out the pale shape of his

       leader, lying beside the Moonstone. He wanted to cal out

       her name, but did not dare break the silence.

       After more endless moments, she spoke to him.

       “Firepaw? Are you stil there? ” Her voice sounded remote

       and agitated.

       “Yes, Bluestar. ” Firepaw heard Bluestar’s pawsteps

       approaching.

       “Hurry, ” she hissed. He felt her fur brush past him. “We

       must return to camp. ”

       Firepaw raced after her, astonished by the speed with

       which she rushed through the blackness. He fol owed her

       scent blindly, up and up the stone tunnel, until she led him

       safely back to the outside world.

           

       Tigerclaw was waiting at the opening beside Graypaw

       and Ravenpaw as Bluestar and Firepaw climbed out of the

       cave. His expression was cold and his fur was slightly

       ruffled, but he sat motionless and dignified.

       “Tigerclaw. ” Bluestar greeted him but did not mention

       the warrior cat’s flight from the depths.

       Tigerclaw relaxed a little. “What did you learn? ”

       “We must return to camp immediately, ” Bluestar

       meowed briefly.

       Firepaw saw a look of desperation in his leader’s eyes.

       Now the horror of his dream forced its way back into his

       memory: the fleeing cats; the great, dark warriors; the ear-

       splitting wail of distress. Firepaw tried to ignore the cold

       fear that gripped his muscles, and fol owed Bluestar as she

       and the others raced down the dark slope away from

       Mothermouth. Was his nightmare vision about to come

       true?



  

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