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 CHAPTER 17



       Sunhigh came and went as the cats made their way

       through WindClan’s old hunting grounds. Their heavy

       silence showed that they were stil sore after the rat fight.

       Firepaw felt scratched and bitten al over. He could see

       Graypaw was limping, occasional y hopping on three legs

       to protect his injured back leg. But it was Bluestar who

       worried him most. Her pace was even slower now, but she

       refused to stop and rest. The grim look on her face,

       clouded by pain, told Firepaw how much she wanted to

       reach the ThunderClan camp.

       “Don’t worry about ShadowClan warriors, ” she meowed

       through gritted teeth as Tigerclaw paused to sniff the air.

       “You won’t find any here today. ”

       How could she be so sure? Firepaw wondered.

       They picked their way careful y down the steep, rocky

       hil side that led to Fourtrees and joined the familiar trail that

       led home. It was late afternoon, and Firepaw began to think

       longingly of his nest, and a plump helping of fresh-kil.

       “I can stil smel the stench of ShadowClan, ” Graypaw

       muttered to Firepaw as they trekked through ThunderClan’s

       hunting grounds.

       “Perhaps the breeze has carried it down from

       WindClan’s territory, ” Firepaw suggested. He could smel it

       too, and his whiskers were trembling.

       Suddenly Ravenpaw stopped. “Can you hear that? ” he

       mewed in a hushed voice.

       Firepaw strained his ears. At first he heard only the

       familiar sounds of the forest—leaves rustling, a pigeon

       cal ing. Then his blood ran cold. In the distance he could

       hear battle-hungry yowls, and the shril squeal of terrified

       kits.

       “Quick! ” Bluestar howled. “It is as StarClan warned me.

       Our camp is being attacked! ” She tried to leap forward, but

       stumbled. She pushed herself up and limped onward.

       Tigerclaw and Firepaw pelted forward side by side.

       Graypaw and Ravenpaw fol owed, their tail fur bristled to

       twice its usual size. Firepaw forgot his soreness as he

       charged toward the camp. His only concern was to protect

       the Clan.

       The sounds of battle grew louder and louder as he

       neared the camp entrance, and the stench of ShadowClan

       fil ed his nostrils. He was right behind Tigerclaw as the cats

       dashed through the tunnel and into the clearing.

       They were met by a frenzy of fighting, ThunderClan cats

       battling furiously with ShadowClan warriors. The kits were

       battling furiously with ShadowClan warriors. The kits were

       out of sight, and Firepaw hoped they were safely hidden in

       the nursery. He guessed the weakest elders would be

       sheltering inside the hol ow trunk of their fal en tree.

       Every corner of the camp seemed alive with warriors.

       Firepaw could see Frostfur and Goldenflower clawing and

       biting at a huge gray tom. Even the young tabby queen

       Brindleface was fighting, though she was very close to

       kitting. Darkstripe was locked in a fierce tussle with a black

       warrior. Three of the elders, Smal ear, Patchpelt, and One-

       eye, were nipping bravely at a tortoiseshel that fought with

       twice their speed and ferocity.

       The returning cats hurled themselves into the battle.

       Firepaw caught hold of a tabby warrior queen, much larger

       than him, and sank his teeth deep into her leg. She yowled

       with pain and turned on him, lashing out with sharp claws

       and lunging at his neck with her teeth bared. He twisted and

       ducked to avoid her bite. She couldn’t match his speed,

       and he managed to grasp her from behind and pul her

       down into the dirt. With his strong hind legs he clawed at

       her back til she squealed and struggled away from him,

       running headlong into the thick undergrowth that surrounded

       the camp.

       Firepaw glanced around to see that Bluestar had

       arrived. Despite her injuries, she was fighting another

       tabby. Firepaw had never seen her fight before, but even

       wounded, she was a powerful opponent. Her victim

       struggled to escape but she held him tightly and clawed him

       so fiercely that Firepaw knew he would bear the scars of

       this fight for many moons.

       Then he saw a white ShadowClan cat with jet-black

       paws dragging a ThunderClan elder away from the nursery.

       Firepaw remembered those unusual dark paws from the

       Gathering. Blackfoot! The ShadowClan deputy made quick

       work of kil ing the elder, who had been guarding the kits,

       and began to reach into the bramble nest with one massive

       paw. The kits were squealing and mewling, undefended

       now as their mothers wrestled with other ShadowClan

       warriors in the clearing.

       Firepaw prepared to spring toward the nursery, but a

       claw sliced painful y down his side and he whipped around

       to see a scrawny tortoiseshel leap on top of him. As he

       slammed into the ground, he tried to cal out to the other

       ThunderClan cats that the kits were in danger. Fighting with

       al his strength to escape the tortoiseshel ’s grip, he

       wrenched his head around so he could see the bramble

       nest.

       Blackfoot had scooped two kits from their bedding

       already and was reaching in for a third.

       Firepaw saw no more as the tortoiseshel raked his bel y

       with her hind claws. Firepaw scrabbled onto his feet and

       crouched low, as if in defeat. The trick had worked before

       and it worked now. As the tortoiseshel gripped him

       triumphantly and began to sink her teeth into Firepaw’s

       neck, Firepaw sprang upward as hard as he could and

       flung the warrior away. He spun around and was on the

       winded warrior in an instant. This time he showed no

       mercy, plunging his teeth deep into the cat’s shoulder. The

       bite sent the she-cat howling into the undergrowth.

       Firepaw jumped up, dashed over to the nursery, and

       thrust his head through the nursery entrance. Blackfoot was

       nowhere to be seen. Inside the nest, crouching over the

       terrified kits, was Yel owfang. Her gray fur was spattered

       with blood, and one of her eyes was painful y swol en. She

       looked up at Firepaw with a ferocious hiss, then, realizing it

       was him, she yowled, “They’re okay. I’l protect them. ”

       Firepaw looked at her as she calmed the helpless kits,

       and Brokenstar’s dire warning about the ShadowClan

       rogue flashed through his mind. He didn’t have time to think

       about that now. He would have to trust Yel owfang. He

       nodded quickly and ducked back out of the brambles.

       There were now only a few ShadowClan cats left in the

       camp. Ravenpaw and Graypaw were fighting side by side,

       lashing out at a black tom until he fled howling into the

       bushes. Whitestorm and Darkstripe chased the last two

       intruders out of the camp, sending them off with a few extra

       scratches and bites.

       Firepaw sat down, exhausted, and stared around the

       camp. It was devastated. Blood spattered the clearing, and

       tufts of fur drifted in the dust. The surrounding wal of

       undergrowth was ripped open where the invaders had

       crashed through.

       One by one, the ThunderClan cats gathered beneath the

       Highrock. Graypaw came to sit by him, his sides heaving

       and blood trickling from a torn ear. Ravenpaw flopped

       down and began to lick a wound on his tail. The queens ran

       to the nursery to check on their kits. Firepaw found himself

       waiting tensely for their return, his view blocked by the other

       cats. He relaxed when he heard squeals and purrs of joy

       coming from the bramble nest.

       Frostfur wove her way back through the crowd, fol owed

       by Yel owfang. The white queen stepped forward and

       addressed them. “Our kits are al safe, thanks to

       Yel owfang. A ShadowClan warrior kil ed brave Rosetail

       and was trying to steal them from their nest, but Yel owfang

       fought him off. ”

       “It was no ordinary ShadowClan warrior either, ” Firepaw

       put in. He was determined to let the Clan know how much

       they owed Yel owfang. “I saw him. It was Blackfoot. ”

       “The ShadowClan deputy! ” meowed Brindleface, who

       had fought so bitterly to protect the unborn kits in her

       swol en bel y.

       There was a stir at the edge of the group, as Bluestar

       limped forward and made her way over to the apprentices.

       The grave expression on her face was enough to tel

       Firepaw that something was wrong.

       “Spottedleaf is with Lionheart, ” she murmured. “He was

       injured in the battle. It looks bad. ” She turned her head

       toward the shadow on the far side of the Highrock where

       the warrior lay, a motionless bundle of dusty golden fur.

       A high-pitched wail rose from Graypaw’s throat and he

       raced over to Lionheart. Spottedleaf, who had been leaning

       over the ThunderClan deputy, stepped back to let the young

       apprentice share tongues for the last time with his mentor.

       As Graypaw’s howl of grief echoed around the clearing,

       Firepaw’s fur tingled and his blood ran cold. It was the cry

       he had heard in his dream! For a moment his head swam;

       then he gave himself a shake. He had to keep calm, for

       Graypaw’s sake.

       Firepaw looked at Bluestar, who nodded, and he

       padded over to join his friend by the Highrock. He stopped

       for a moment beside Spottedleaf.

       She looked exhausted and dul -eyed with grief. “I can’t

       help Lionheart now, ” she mewed quietly to him. “He is on

       his way to join StarClan. ” She pressed her body against

       Firepaw’s side, and he felt comforted by the touch of her

       warm fur.

       The other cats looked on in silence as the sun slowly set

       behind the trees. Final y Graypaw sat up and cried out,

       “He’s gone! ” He lay down again beside Lionheart’s body

       and rested his head on his front paws. The rest of the Clan

       walked silently forward to carry out their own grieving rituals

       for their beloved deputy.

       Firepaw joined them. He licked Lionheart’s neck and

       murmured, “Thank you for your wisdom. You taught me so

       much. ” Then he sat down beside Graypaw and began

       gently to groom his friend’s ears.

       Bluestar waited until the other cats had left before

       padding quietly up. Graypaw didn’t even seem to notice his

       leader’s presence. Firepaw looked away as Bluestar

       spoke her last words to her old friend.

       “Oh, what am I going to do without you, Lionheart? ” she

       whispered. Then she limped back to her den and crouched

       down outside, staring grief-stricken into the distance. She

       didn’t even try to lick clean her bloody, matted fur. It was the

       first time Firepaw had seen her look utterly defeated, and

       he felt a chil run through him.

       He sat with Graypaw and Lionheart until the moon rose

       high. Ravenpaw joined him and together they kept

       company with their grieving friend. Tigerclaw strode over

       and briefly shared tongues with Lionheart. Firepaw waited

       to hear what words he would share with his warrior friend,

       but Tigerclaw remained silent as he licked the matted fur.

       To Firepaw’s confusion, the dark tabby’s eyes seemed to

       be fixed on Ravenpaw rather than the fal en deputy.

       Spottedleaf padded lightly around the camp, tending to

       wounds and battered nerves. Firepaw watched her

       approach Bluestar twice, but each time the leader sent her

       away to see to the others. Only when Spottedleaf had

       attended to the wounds of al the other cats did Bluestar

       al ow her to treat her bites and scratches.

       When she had finished, Spottedleaf turned and walked

       back to her den. Bluestar stood and slowly hauled herself

       up onto the Highrock. The Clan cats seemed to have been

       waiting for her. As soon as she had settled herself in her

       usual spot, they began to gather in the clearing below,

       unusual y silent and somber-faced.

       Firepaw and Ravenpaw got stiffly to their paws and

       joined them, leaving Graypaw behind with Lionheart’s body.

       The gray apprentice was stil lying with his nose resting

       against Lionheart’s cooling golden pelt. Firepaw guessed

       Bluestar would excuse Graypaw from the Clan meeting this

       time.

       “It is nearly moonhigh, ” meowed Bluestar as Firepaw

       slipped into place next to Ravenpaw. “And it is once more

       my duty—much, much too soon—to name ThunderClan’s

       new deputy. ” Her voice was tired and cracked with

       sadness.

       Firepaw looked from warrior to warrior. They were al

       looking expectantly at Tigerclaw. Even Whitestorm had

       turned to watch the dark tabby. From the bold expression

       on his face, and the way his whiskers twitched in

       anticipation, Tigerclaw seemed to agree with them.

       Bluestar took a deep breath and continued. “I say these

       words before the body of Lionheart, so that his spirit may

       hear and approve my choice. ” She hesitated. “I have not

       forgotten how one cat avenged the death of Redtail and

       brought his body back to us. ThunderClan needs this

       fearless loyalty even more now. ” Bluestar paused again

       and then meowed the name loud and clear. “Tigerclaw wil

       be the new deputy of ThunderClan. ”

       There was a yowl of approval, with the loudest voices

       belonging to Darkstripe and Longtail. Whitestorm sat

       calmly, his eyes closed, his tail wrapped neatly around him.

       He was nodding slowly and approvingly.

       Tigerclaw lifted his chin proudly, his eyes half-closed as

       he listened to the Clan. Then he stalked through the crowd,

       accepting tributes with the smal est of nods, and leaped up

       onto the Highrock beside Bluestar. “ThunderClan, ” he

       yowled, “I am honored to accept the position of Clan

       deputy. I never expected to gain such high rank, but by the

       spirit of Lionheart, I vow to serve you as best I can. ” He

       gravely dipped his head, fixing the crowd with his wide

       yel ow eyes, and jumped down from the Highrock.

       Firepaw heard Ravenpaw murmur, “Oh, no! ” under his

       breath beside him. He turned to look curiously at his friend.

       Ravenpaw’s head was hanging low. “She should never

       have chosen him! ” he muttered.

       “Are you talking about Tigerclaw? ” Firepaw whispered.

       “He’s wanted to be deputy ever since he took care of

       Redtail—” Ravenpaw mewed. He stopped abruptly.

       “Took care of Redtail? ” Firepaw echoed. His mind

       suddenly raced with questions. What did Ravenpaw know?

       At the Gathering, had his account of the battle with

       RiverClan been true? Was Tigerclaw responsible for

       Redtail’s death?



  

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