A thin, scrubby snow lies over Sedgeclan territory, heralding the start of High Dark. Even early in the season, the days are noticeably short. Coniferstar returns from afternoon patrol to find the light already turning gold; the sun a low, dull eye on the horizon.
There is a sound of scuffling in camp; Coniferstar frowns, and creeps around a boulder, his claws unsheathedâ only to see Harebolt and Snowstreak sparringâ laughing, as they swipe pack and forth across the camp.
Harebolt aims a paw at Snowstreakâs head, claws sheathed, and Snowstreak drops to her belly to roll away, quick as a rabbitâ even on her injured leg.
Harebolt laughs, surprised, and drops down onto Snowstreakâs back, pinning her easilyâ the two go rolling, stirring up a cloud of snow.
âI hope Iâm not interrupting anything,â Coniferstar says, amused. âIt seems like Iâve walked in on quite the battle.â
The two mollies scramble to their paws, at his voice, with matching expressions of embarrassment.
Coniferstar laughs. âYouâre not in trouble. I wouldnât mind a bit of sparring practise myself. I suspect Iâve grown a little out of form.â
âOh!â Snowstreak brightens. âWouldâ you like to join in, then? I donât mind! If you want to.â
Coniferstar feels himself brighten; how pleasant, just to be among clanmates. Among these cats; loyal, and healthy, as few as they still are. If only he can keep them this way. If onlyâ
âConiferstar?â Snowstreak is looking at him, worry fluffing up her pelt. âIâm sorry. You donât have to.â
âNo.â Coniferstar shakes himself; purrs, appreciatively. âI would be happy to. If youâre sure Iâm not interrupting.â
âOf course you arenât,â Snowstreakâs tail waves, loose and friendly.
ââNo,â Harebolt agrees, after a moment.
Coniferstar looks at her, ear twitching. Sees himself reflected, briefly, in her pupils; wide in the dimming light.
He canât quite read her expression.
âMy pleasure, then,â he says, anyway, and drops low, rocking on his haunches in an exaggerated lunge.
Snowstreak mrows with pleasure, and leaps away before he can pounce, Harebolt right on her heels; Coniferstar wonders if he hadnât been imagining her hesitation, after all.
Harebolt leaves them, later, to their sparring, excusing herself to gather herbs.
Winter is on them, now, in full; its sharp, white teeth close over Sedgeclan with the bite of frost, and ice, and wind. Harebolt hunches her shoulders, walking with her head ducked low. Every breath stings the inside of her nose; it really is a foul day.
In camp, Snowstreak says something, unintelligible, and Coniferstar laughs. Harebolt should be with them, in truth.
But disquiet has been gnawing at her, dug beneath her pelt like fleas. She needsâŚ
Her paws carry her south, walking sideways, braced against the howling wind.
Dry, sandy snow swirls up in drifts, and blows across the tundra without pause, pelting Harebolt in the eyes, and nose.
But still, she walks. The moon rises. A wolf cries, far away; a lonely, mournful noise, unanswered.
She is almost right against the treeline, before she sees it, eyes squinted nearly shut. The tall pines loom up, dark, out of the blowing snow, and Harebolt backpedals, catching now the faint and fading scent of border-marks.
The gravel road winds past, just southeast, twisting from between the trees.
Harebolt pauses, and glances back over her shoulder.
The tundra is a wide and cold expanse, behind her; empty. Harebolt might be the only cat left in the world.
She turns, and pads along the road, hearing Coniferstarâs warning all the time.
But no cars come hissing past; no headlamps split the swirling snow. Whatever danger lurks there, to the south, where Coniferstar had come fromâ itâs hiding away from the wind, the same as Harebolt should be.
She pauses, as the road twists up towards the twoleg place, sniffing along the shoulder; in the dry, sterile air, scents are strangely dulledâ hard to detect.
She lifts her head, to look aroundâ and then, all at once, the wind cuts off; dead still. Hareboltâs ears ring, in the sudden silence. She glances back, uneasy.
The world is still, and dark, and quiet. Blown snow drifts back down to earth, gently now, and settles, soft, over the land.
The smooth surface is interrupted by a clawhook bend in the road; a strange lump.
Harebolt looks at it, for a quiet moment, and then pads forward; her head still bowed, though thereâs no wind now, to push against.
Yesâ sheâs found what she came looking for.
She brushes snow, gently, from the small catâs skull. There is still patchy fur, clinging to the bones; scraps of black pelt, stark in the silver, winter day.
Hareboltâs breath steams, as she works, carefully unearthing the body; not sure why sheâs doing it. Her mind is strangely still, and calmâ even her uneasiness is gone. Perhaps the cold has numbed that, too.
She sits back, when sheâs done, and looks down on the body of a large black cat, mummified by frost. The resemblance isn't exact; but Harebolt feels the rightness of it. Knows him, the way a rabbit knows to run, or a wolf to hunt.
She sniffs him over, gentle as she would be with a kit. But warped by moons of death, itâs impossible to tell what happened to him; the body half-decayed, and gnawed on, here and there. Hareboltâs not sure what she had been expecting; what she had hoped- or feared- to find.
âWell, Rookpaw." Her voice is very quiet, in the face of that wide and silent night. âIâm listening. What was the message?â
The territory is utterly still, around her. The thin, bright claw of the moon turns all the snow to silver. Stars glitter, like catsâ eyes watching in the dark.
Harebolt shivers, and- without quite knowing why- touches her front paw, gently, to the dead catâs shoulder. But still; there is no answer.
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Sedgeclan has no deputy!
Sedgeclan has no healthy medicine cats
Coniferstar meets a pair of loners named Streak and Bolt. Streak has been badly wounded by another cat. Coniferstar offers them shelter, on the condition they take on clan names.
Mated pair Harebolt and Snowstreak join the clan.
Harebolt- Female - 102 moons
Former Loner
Confident
Lore Keeper & Great Teacher
The year has been unusually harsh; a hard, cold wind races down the open plain, kicking up drifts of dry, icy snow.
Bolt peeks her head from their hollow, eyes squinted almost shut. The blowing snow cuts through her pelt like needles; slices the inside of her nose, as she tries to scent the sterile, freezing air.
But the den at her back is over-warm; even half-outside, Bolt can feel the feverish heat of Streak's pelt. Even in the wind, she can smell the other mollyâs sickness; a carrion-scent. Vulture-food.
Bolt glances back at her mate, huddled in a ball around her injured leg. Her mouth is open, panting, her green eyes clouded.
âYou need water,â Bolt says; a useless fact, if true.
âIâll be alright.â Streakâs voice is an awful rasp; almost swallowed up by the tearing, howling wind. âItâsâ itâs foul out, Bolt, you canât. Iâll be fine until the wind lets up.â
âAnd how long âtil then?â The wind gusts; Bolt shivers, pelt fluffed against the cold.
From outside the burrow, someone says: âWell. It could be days, at this rate.â
Boltâs head snaps around, at the strange voice; a dark, marbled tom sits just a hare-leap away, watching her with cool, blue eyes.
She bristles, automatically, baring her teethâ but the stranger seems unperturbed.
âPeace,â he says, voice strangely high, and touched with an accent Bolt canât place. âI believe we can help one another.â
âWe can help ourselves.â Bolt unsheathes her claws, heart pounding. Sheâs aware of every shift, in the den behind her; Streak slow and stiff with her injury. Helpless even to stand. âLeave us alone. Orââ
But the stranger only dips his head. âIâll go,â he says, soothingly, âif thatâs truly what you want. Itâs onlyââ he scents the air, mouth
opening to show sharp, even teeth. âI thought I smelled infection.â
A shiver goes through Boltâs fur, that has nothing at all to do with the coldâ though the wind howls, still, all around them, as if set to tear her paws from the earth. âItâs just carrion. Our dinner. And weâre not sharing.â
âIs that so.â The stranger studies her, for only a moment more; and then shrugs, seeming to buy her story. Relief buzzes up through Boltâs stomach, like sheâs eaten honeybees. âWell then. I suppose I should go.â
And the stranger turns, as if to leave, stretching his hind legs, languidly. His claws flex sharp as thorns, just for a moment. âA shame,â he says, offhand. âI must have been wrong, about the signs.â
Bolt frowns, but says nothing to encourage him; he doesnât seem to need it, carrying on: âif you do see a cat named Bolt, struggling with her mateâs infection in this stormâ tell them Coniferstar is searching for them. I believe theyâre meant to join my clanâ and Iâve been sent the knowledge to heal them.â
Bolt freezes, The fur prickling along her spine. âHowââ she says, softly.
But the stranger is already leaving. His long, black-tipped tail swishes behind him, as he walks away, pace leisurelyâ unbothered, despite the terrible wind.
Bolt swallows, her mouth dry as scoured stone. Behind her, Streak shiversâ her teeth chatter, audibly, despite the feverish heat of her pelt.
âWait!"
The stranger- Coniferstar?- pauses, and glances back over his shoulder.
âYouââ Bolt squares her shoulders. âWhat does that mean. Who sent you?â
The strange tom purrs, and turns around. âCurious after all,â he says. âWell. Iâm very glad you asked.â
Cats talk, low, in the camp outside her den. Their voices rise and fall, half-audible under the sounds of wind, and distant waves; the nighttime calling of the owls.
Wormturn is saying, âBoss took him, I know he didââ
And Harebolt comes all-the-way awake with a jolt.
She pushes her way out of the medicine den. All of the other cats of Sedgeclan- even the kittens- are already awake.
âIf it was,â Coniferstar says, âthen we can find him. Weâre not so few, now. Weâllââ
âFind who?â Snowstreak, Coniferstar, and Wormturn all turn to face her. Harebolt resists the inexplicable urge to blanch. âNotâ Boss?â
âPinekit,â Wormturn says, distraught.
âPineââ Hareboltâs eyes snap to the kittens.
Oh. Notâ everyone in the clan is here without her. Three of Wormturnâs kitsâ speckled Saltkit, ginger Murekit, and pale, broad-shouldered Timberkit- are huddled, blinking, just outside the nursery.
But the darkest ginger kittenâ the little tom, with bright, rich amber eyesâŚ
Hareboltâs hackles bristle. âWhat would Boss want with a kitten?â
âA kit,â Snowstreak corrects, softly, and Wormturn says,
âTheyâre his,â her voice a low and wretched thing.
Harebolt stares at her. âYouâreââ
âWhatâs important,â Coniferstar says, his voice cutting and clear, âis finding our missing kit. Wormturn can explain the situation after heâs home. Safe.â
Harebolt dips her head. Of courseâ heâs right.
âWeâll have one warrior with each groupâ Snowstreak, you take Wormturn. Go south.â Coniferstar looks at Harebolt. âYou and I will head north. Our groups will sweep towards each other to the east. I can't imagine heâs gone up the cliffs.â
Snowstreak straightens, importantly. âYes, Coniferstar.â She glances to Wormturn.Â
Wormturn, after a moment, nods. She fixes her gaze on her kittens. âSaltkit. Timberkit, Murekit. Babiesâ stay in camp. Promise you'll stay here until weâre back.â
âI want to help.â Murekitâs voice is still a high, kittenish treble, though heâs starting to look like a real cat; lanky with recent growth. âMaââ
âNo.â Coniferstar shakes his head, firm. âThis is one of the rules that comes with being a clan cat. You will stay in camp- safe- and let the Warriors handle their duties.â His tone brooks no argument.
Murekit ducks his head, with a quick, âyes, Coniferstar,â and herds his littermates back towards the nursery.
Coniferstar nods. âQuickly, now,â he says.Â
And all the cats of Sedgeclan scatter out, into the dark, to search for their missing kit.
Snowstreak hops lightly down the rocky slope. Her paws are tougher, these days, with daily patrolling; Wormturn minces her steps, a little, following, though doesnât make any noise of complaint.
âWeâll find him,â Snowstreak says, encouragingly. âI know itâs all still⌠new, for you, butââ
âNoââ Wormturn lifts her head, sniffing at the wind. âI know. I just hope we donât find Boss with him.â
Snowstreak eyes her, as the molly picks up her feet again, trotting purposefully for the border. The wind ruffles up her ginger fur, a fiery mane bristling, for just a moment, up around her face.Â
âHeâs⌠their father?â Snowstreak ventures. âI knew him. I meanâ we did. Me and Harebolt. I neverâŚâ
âYou wouldnât have seen me. I wasn't in his⌠group. Justâ he. Ah, visited me. On the sideâ There is a brief, unpleasant pause. âBut I knew about you two. Streak, right? He wasâ angry. When you left.â
That bare statement hangs, heavy, between them. He was angry.
Yes. He would have been angry. He was an angry cat; it's why she and Harebolt had left, all those moons ago.
Snowstreak looks at Wormturn. Her breath mists in the cold, drawing up a fog between them.
âI⌠know how he was,â she says, after a moment. âWhen he was angry. My legâ that was him.â
Wormturn looks, as if by reflex, at the nasty scar just-visible through Snowstreakâs Highdark coat. âI thought so. Iâdâ heard he killed you. Itâs why I wasnât sure.â She looks away again, scanning the dark, empty land. âThatâs when I leftâ when you⌠well, not died. But. I didn't want to raise the little ones around someone like that.â
Snowstreak nods, a warmth kindling in her chest, despite the bitter cold. âYou won't have to.â She veers sideways, bumping Wormturnâs shoulder with her own. âWeâll find Pinekit. Thisâ I think this is what being in a clan is all about.â
Wormturn swallows, but her shoulders square. âRight,â she says, and picks up the pace.
Harebolt pauses by a desiccated, woody trunk; the spine of some old shrub, flayed bare by the season. She sniffs around the base, carefully, but detects no kitten-scent over the sterile, frigid winter air.
She looks up at Coniferstar; shakes her head.
He huffs, and leads them wordlessly further north, his easy lope eating up the distance.
In the bleak, colourless expanse of the winter tundra, his black coat shines with undertones of blues, rich-dark like ravenâs wings.
Harebolt looks away, straining her eyes out into the night, instead. âBoss's cats come out this way, sometimes,â she says, recognizing the place. âBut they mostly went south inâ uh, Highdark. Like birds.â
âYes,â Coniferstar says. âThis is the place where they attacked Snowstreak, is it not? If they have taken Pinekitââ
âSnowstreak told you that?â
âNo,â Coniferstar says, and thenâ hesitates, just briefly. âThat isâ I saw it.â
Harebolt stops, dead, turning to stare at him.
Conifer stops, too, after a pace, seeming to realise sheâs not following.Â
âYou saw us? Fighting? And you didn'tââ
And Snowstreak had so nearly died. Could have been saved so much pain. Harebolt smells, strong as if itâs there before her, the rotting stink of the infected wound. âYouââ
âNo!â Is Coniferstarâs tail slightly bushed? âHareboltâ of course not. Starclan showed me. Thatâ it's how I knew to find you. I've told you this.â
ââRight.â
Coniferstar makes to start walking againâ Harebolt doesnât.
âConiferstar,â she says.
He looks at herâ really looks. His eyes, that glacial blue, cut into hers.
âStarclan. Whatâ when they talk to you. Whatâs it like.â She sees, in some hazy space between memory and life, a big, black tomcat, looking on them sadly, in the dark.
Coniferstar tilts his head. âI donât think now is really the time.â
âPlease,â Harebolt saysâ and hears, a voice from moons ago, Rookpaw say, heâs lying to you.Â
There is a pause; the winter night is still, and dark, around them, silver-wide.
âHave you seen something?â Coniferstarâs voice is very soft. His pupils are huge and black, ringed by hair-thin iris; so bright itâs nearly white, in the light of the full moon.Â
Harebolt tries to read the expression on his face. âI donât know.â
There is another little silence.Â
Coniferstar says, âThen⌠Starclan cats. They look just as they did in life. Sometimes with stars, caught in their pelts. Butâ Hareboltââ
âHe was after you,â Harebolt blurts. âI did see him. Iâ Rookpaw. He saidââ
âBut,â Coniferstars voice rises, drowning hers. âNot all the cats we see are good. Thereâ Starclan is not the only territory, after life.â
On the point of interrupting him, Hareboltâs mouth snaps shut again. âWhat?â
âYouâŚâ Coniferstar sighs. âPerhaps I should have told you earlier. I hadnât realised⌠that the Dark Forest may be trying to reach you.â
âThe Dark Forest,â Harebolt echoes. âHowâ what? How do you knowââ
âYou donât.â Coniferstar shakes his head. âYou can never know, for certain.â The energy comes back into his eyes; as if heâs hit upon a good idea. The fur on his tail smooths down, again; his shoulders relax. âBut if you have another visionâ come to me. We can make sense of it, together. Puzzle out whatâs true, and⌠what isnât.â
ââof course,â Harebolt says, unease turning in her stomach.
âGood.â Coniferstar sighs, as if with relief, and bumps his head against hers. âIâm very glad you told me about this. I would hateâ oh, Harebolt, above all things I would hate if the Dark Forest twisted your mind, because I failed to warn you of them.â
âMe too,â Harebolt says, glad heâs too close to read her face. âIfâ I was getting lied to. I wouldn't like that, either.â
Coniferstar pulls back, at last, eyes glowing. âIâm glad,â he says, again, and shakes himself. âLetâs find Pinekit. Iâm sure that together, we wonât have any trouble.â
âPinekit!â
Snowstreak swivels, at Wormturnâs voiceâ loud, in the still dawn.
Their search has stretched on very long, the sky shading into hazy, muddy greys; a fog rising as the earth begins to warm.
Itâs hard to make out much, in the mist; the uncertain light.
Except the trees, beyond their southern border; dark outlines, looming.
And a small, flame-bright shape, growing larger as it weaves between the trunks.
âMama!â The shape calls, voice high.
âPinekit!â Wormturn takes a step towards himâ Snowstreak stops her, bodily.
âWe don't go south,â she says. Where they touch, she can feel Wormturn trembling. âItâsâ forbidden, Wormturn. Itâs not allowed.â
And anyway, Pinekit is still moving towards them, faster the closer he gets, as if the sight of his mother is lending him new strength.
Wormturn doesnât try to move, again, but strains towards him, leaning forward on her paws. Her eyes are hungry, watching him.
His shape resolves out of the mist just moments before he barrels into Wormturnâs chest, gangly with adolescenceâ but his pelt, fluffed up in alarm, looking soft as a kitâs.
âMama,â he says, again.
Snowstreak steps back, giving the two space.
Wormturn licks the top of her kitâs head, her eyes squeezing shut with joy. A purr rumbles in her chest. âPinekit,â she says, achingly soft. âAre you okay, baby? Is your papa around? He didnât hurt you?â
Pinekit shakes his head; his amber eyes shine huge; confused. âWhy would papa be here?â
Wormturn looks down at him. âPinekitâ why else would you leave camp? He didnât come to get you?â
âNo, mama. I justâŚâ he looks back, towards the dark woods, looming through the fog. âI couldn't sleep, was all, and the others are always sleeping, all the time, and I thoughtââ
âKits aren't allowed to leave the camp,â Snowstreak says. She follows Pinekitâs gaze, back south towards the forest.
Trees make black cutouts in the fog; the startling line where they begin, like fur bristling up beside a nasty scar. Forbidden territory.Â
The others say something; Snowstreak doesnât quite hear them, somehow.
She shuts her eyes. In the dark space inside her head, she sees a young, black tom; hardly older than Pinekit, now. Heâs splayed out, in her memory, beside the thunderpath. A snowflake, drifting, melts on his glassy, open eye; he does not blink to clear it.
Dead.Â
Young, and dead, when she and Coniferstar find him, on his aborted crossing from the south. Frost glitters on his pooling blood. His body lies mangledâ twisted, like a piece of prey toyed with by a kittypet. His mouth is open, redâ his teeth are bared. Heâ
âSnowstreak?â Wormturn says.
Snowstreak shakes herself, the memory falling away; an unease lingering, prickly, in her pawpads. âYes. Iâm sorry. Weâllââ She looks up, at the trees again. âConiferstar will want to know, though. Where he was.â
And so he does.
When they return to camp, the story spilling out from Pinepawâs mouth, unwary, Coniferstar ducks his head.
âThe southern territories,â he says, softly.
His small clan is gathered all around him; the kits are drooping, with exhaustion, but perk up to listen to him speak.
Coniferstar hesitates, and then leaps up onto a tumbled, flat-topped boulder in the centre of their camp. As he jumps, the wind catches him, ruffling his fur where it howls above the stone walls all around them.
âCats of Sedgeclan.â His voice is grave. âGather near. Today, we have faced a trial, and through the perseverance of our clanmates- and the will of Starclan- we have come through unscathed. Snowstreak, Wormturnâ I commend you, for returning Pinekit to our camp.â
Snowstreak straightens, a warmth kindling in her chest; like sheâs swallowed down a hot, fresh piece of prey.Â
âBut,â her leader carries on, âOur good news, this morning, comes with ill. Pinekitâ is it true you ventured past the southern boundary?â
Pinekit steps forward; a red and shining little scrap, in the bleak grey morning. He looks up at their leader. Nods, mutely.
Coniferstar sighs. âAnd you know-â he lifts his head, to survey his gathered clan. âYou all know- that the southern territory is forbidden.â
âConiferstarââ Wormturn steps forward, brushing Snowstreakâs shoulder as she passes. âHeâs young. And new to this. He didnâtââ
Coniferstar raises his tail; Wormturn falls silent.Â
There is a pause; the whole camp seems to hold its breath.
âI understand.â He dips his head; sadness in his bright, winter eyes. âBut the south⌠the dangers there. They are of greater weight than any one cat. Even a brave, young kit of Sedgeclan.â
He blinks at Pinekit, warm. The young cat straightens, chin lifting.
Coniferstar goes on; âI have learned, today, of something very grave. Harebolt told me of a vision. Harebolt?â
Snowstreak turns, surprised. She didnât mention it to me. But of courseâ of course she would go to Coniferstar first. Of course; thatâs right, and good.Â
But Harebolt looks stricken; her pelt, that dappled grey and gold, lifts, slowly, as if blown by some private wind. ââYes,â she says, âButâŚâ
âItâs alright.â Coniferstar looks at her, steadily; straight on. Snowstreakâs pelt pricklesâ a tight, sour sort of feeling in her stomach, like sheâs watching her mother fuss over another kit. Strange. âTell us, Harebolt. You arenât in any trouble.â
Harebolt looks around; meets Snowstreakâs eyes, for a moment, through the crowd of other cats, all staring at her. Snowstreak nods, encouraging.
Harebolt holds her gaze, as she speaks; as if talking only to Snowstreak. âYeah,â she says. âAlright. It was just. A cat. He said he was looking for Coniferstar.â A beat; Hareboltâs lovely, familiar blue eyes bore into Snowstreakâs. âHeâ said he was lying. Coniferstar, I think. The kits werenât here yet, so. I donât know what other he it could have been.â
âWell, of course he isnât lying!â Snowstreak looks up to Coniferstar. âOf course you arenât.â
He nods to her, blinking gratitude. âNo. But there are forces which would like you to believe I am.â His eyes lift from Snowstreakâs- a cold loss, which she tries not to feel- to rake the entire clan. âForces from the south. If Iâm rightâ the cat we found, on the southern border, is the same who visited Harebolt. Dark forcesâ from the Dark Forest.â
Snowstreak, uncertain, looks aroundâ the other cats look as lost as she does.Â
Except for Harebolt. She seems to shrink, inside her pelt, watching Coniferstar speak.
Coniferstar shuts his eyes, as if saying something difficult. âI am sorry. Wormturnâ Pinekit. You are brave clanmatesâ good cats. But the safety of the clan must come before any one cat. If thereâs any chance young Pinekit has been⌠touched, by the Dark ForestâŚâ
âConiferstar!â Hareboltâs pelt is bristling, now; on all four paws, she glares up at their leader. âHeâs a kit! What are you going to do? For this? He wasnâtââ
Coniferstar doesnât reply right away. He looksâ
He looks at Snowstreak. There is a light of expectation, in his eye.
She swallows, understanding. Turns, to meet Hareboltâs eyes. She has to handle this. âI thinkâ Coniferstar is right. Ourâ the clan has to come first.â
Hareboltâs eyes widen; a flash of hurt, in them, that Snowstreak thinks only she could notice. But it clears, swiftly. Her tail lashes. âWouldnât Boss say that? The gang comes first. We couldâve been safe with them, butââ
âConiferstar is not like Boss!â Snowstreak shoots to her paws, outraged. âHow could you say that? He would neverâ Wormturn! You know!â
The ginger molly startles, being called on. She looks at Snowstreak, and then up at Coniferstar. Swallows, once or twice. âIâ Boss wouldnât have taken the kits in. Or Snowstreak. When you were hurt.â She nods at Snowstreak, blinking. âButââ
âBut heâs your kit,â Harebolt interjects. âAnd he didnât know. Whatâ whatâs even the risk, here, that heâs⌠possessed? And then what are you gonna do? Coniferstar?â She turns her blazing eyes up at him. âKill him? Exile him? A kit? In winter like this?â
Harebolt turns to look at her; hurt and shock and disgust all twisting up her face. âRight now?â Her voice is a whisperâ but in the dead, icy silence of the camp, it falls, like a stone from a very great height, and seems almost to echo.
There is a long, long pause.
Snowstreak and Harebolt look at one another, across the camp. Hareboltâs pelt settles flat, by slow degrees. Her eyes are wide, and almost glow, as the sun at last breaks over the horizon. Snowstreak hears herself breathing, in the quiet. The distance, across their small camp clearing, feels suddenly very great.
Finally- finally- Coniferstar speaks. âPossession is precisely what Iâm concerned about. Corruption. Infiltration. The dark influences that dwell in the south- and the Dark Forest- can creep into any cat. And it only takes one, to bring the whole clan down around our ears.â
Wormturn makes a small and wounded noise. Presses close to Pinekit- wide-eyed and silent, in the midst of all this tumult.
âBut,â Coniferstar nods to Harebolt. âI am not so monstrous as that. And after allâ your kits, Wormturn, were born in Highsun, were they not? Who can be surprised, that the corruption of the warmth, and sun, touches more easily their minds? We cannot blame any cat, for the circumstances of their birth.â
There is a little pause; and then Wormturn starts, seeming to realise Coniferstar is waiting on an answer. âYes,â she says. âIn the longest days. I wouldnât have run, ifâ it not. But I thought we could survive. It was warm. And there was prey.â
âPrudent of you.â Coniferstar nods. âI am glad, to have a cat so thoughtful in our clan. And not unsensibleâ it would be hard indeed, for a kit to survive with the days as dark as this. We are closest to Starclan, in this time of long nightsâ but that doesnât put prey in young mouths.â
Wormturn nods. Relaxes, a little, where she sits still pressed into her kitâs shoulder. âHe wonât leave again, Coniferstarâ you wonât, Pinekit.â
He shakes his head, mutely.
Coniferstar sighs. âHe might. No matter what he says. I am sorry to say itâ the risk of corruption still threatens Sedgeclan. I proposeâ an exile deferred. Let Pinekit train with us, until he earns his warrior name. Until he knows to hunt, and fight, as well as any clan cat might. Only then will he be asked to leave.â
Wormturn takes a sharp breath in; Snowstreak looks at her.
The rest of the clan does, too. After a beatâ she dips her head, her eyes screwed tight with pain. âThank you, Coniferstar.â
And maybe only Snowstreak hears it; a low noise. A note of disbelief.Â
Harebolt, sitting all alone across the clearing. Saying, softly, âThank you?â
Streak- no, Snowstreak- Harebolt has to keep reminding herself of their new names- is curled in the hollow, her breathing more even than it had been a moon ago.
The camp is dug out beneath a series of tumbled boulders, tucked up against the side of a bare, clean rockface; the side of a hill split open like preybones, exposing the stripey stone below.
Harebolt imagines what could have possibly broken open the earth like that. The sound it must have made, when the ground split- when all that stone came crashing down and breaking apart below. She shivers, her pelt fluffing.
But the fallen rocks are all furred with lichen, now, and the sharp edges worn soft by scouring tundra wind; the disaster must have happened a long time ago. And the fallen boulders make for good windbreaks. The burrows dug beneath them are unlovely, but dry, and they warm up quickly with bodyheat. Sedgegrass grows, struggling in the summer- the Highsun, she reminds herself- taller than a catâs shoulder, obscuring them from prying eyes.
Harebolt watches Snowstreak sleep, in the rocky hollow that makes up the medicine den. Leans forward to press her nose to her mateâs pawpad; still warm to the touch.
âGood,â Coniferstar says, creeping up behind her in his strange, silent way. Harebolt manages not to startle. âIs she still feverish?â
âOnly a little.â
âSheâs a strong cat.â Coniferstar looks down at Snowstreak, his striking, blue eyes thoughtful. âAnd youâve done what you can for her; youâre learning very quickly.â
Harebolt blinks, grateful. Snowstreakâs bite-wound did look better than it had, the wound carefully cleaned and dressed, the awful carrion smell now only a memory. She shrugs. âIâve got a good teacher.â
Coniferstar laughs, softly. Pads forward to look Snowstreak over himself. âNot so, Harebolt. I only pass on what is passed to me.â
Harebolt canât disguise her sceptical expression; Coniferstar catches it. âI know you donât believe, yet; thatâs perfectly alright. Your paws walk the path, regardless. But Starclan put us here, for a reason; you, and your mate, and I. I hope you will see that, someday.â
Harebolt huffs. âIt wasnât your spirits that saved Snowstreak. It was a living cat.â She nudges Coniferstarâs shoulder. âHeâs the one I believe in.â
Confierstar purrs, and nudges her back, his pelt thick and soft. âAnd he believes in you, Harebolt.â He pauses, and then his eyes seem to kindle with an inner light, as if hitting on some clever pointâ or struck by a joyful memory. âAfter this sufferingâ this frost, a great thaw will comeâ this is what Starlclan has shown to me. This is- it will be- the way of our clan; hold on to that.â
Harebolt huffs. âIâm sure I will.â But her voice has no real bite, in it. Whatever else there was to say about Coniferstar; he had saved Snowstreakâs life. Surely Harebolt can stand a little strangeness, in exchange for that.
Sedgeclan has no deputy!
Sedgeclan has no medicine cat!
On patrol, Coniferstar encounters a band of rogues, and flees.
Coniferstar - Male - 23 moons
Leader - Remaining lives: 9
Charismatic
Clever & a great hunter
Another long day on the tundra; Coniferstar looks up at the strange, bright sun. Eerie, how long it dallies in the sky.
The dawn had come very early; the dusk, he knows, will linger late. It must be almost High Sun; the tundra has exploded with life, plants taking full advantage of the too-short growing season, kits trailing prey-beasts from their burrows.
Coniferstar opens his mouth to taste the air; a fat, unwary groundsquirrel, just a rabbitleap away, snuffles at some grasseed. A meal and then some.
Coniferstar takes a slow step forwardâ and then his head pops up, at just the same time as the ground squirrelâs does.
It dashes for cover, and Coniferstar makes no move to catch it.
The wind had changed; and it carries, now, the scent of blood, and the yowling, hissing sounds of cats at war.
Downwind of the terrible racket, they wouldnât smell Coniferstar coming- even if they werenât preoccupied. He swivels, and stalks uphill, towards the noise.
The fight is already breaking up, as Coniferstar crests a small hill, and spies the cats facing off below.
Nearest him, a cat in marbled grey and gold stands, bristling and spitting, guard over another. The cat beneath her, cowering, is smaller; ginger, with blood matted a shocking, vibrant red into her fur.
Opposite them, a gang of rouges- and they must be rouges, thin and rough and ragged- lash their tails, claws still unsheathed. Four of them, to the two mollies. The tom in the lead, lean and ginger, has a deep scratch across his brow, and keeps blinking, hard, to clear the oozing blood from his eye.
Coniferstar purrs in private approval; one of the mollies must have landed a good hit, even as outnumbered as they are.
âI see you around again, Bolt, youâre getting worse than that.â The skinny tom's voice is a vicious, rasping hiss. âYou ran offâ you did. I never wanna catch you slinking back.â
The tortoiseshell- Bolt, Coniferstar supposes- doesnât flinch. âWe were just passing through, Boss.â Her voice is only slightly tight. âTrust me. I didnât want to see you again, either.â
The ginger tom hisses, crouching as if to spring, and Bolt stiffens to meet him, her claws unsheathing. The injured molly tucks herself into a tighter ball, eyes squeezing shut, as though bracing for a blowâ
but one of the other rogues presses himself between them, his tail bushed. âBoss, pleaseâ she ainât worth the trouble, you know that. Ainât that enough?â He gestures to the oozing bite-wound on the huddled ginger molly.
Boltâs eyes narrow; so do the big roguesâ- âBossâ.
He lifts his chin. âYouâre right. Dirty sorta wound, that. Youâd better find someone to clean it out.â
Bolt does flinch, nowâ only a little. Medicine cats must be hard to find, out here.
Coniferstar watches, thinking, as the two groups break apart.
Only once the rogues are gone does Bolt turn, and help the other molly to her feet. They speak, too quietly to hear, heads bowed close together. And then, hissing with pain, the ginger molly leans against Boltâs shoulder, and the two of them go limping away, in the opposite direction of the rogues.
Coniferstar trails them, through the grasses, until they stop to shelter in a burrow; abandoned by some rabbit, no doubt, long ago.
Very interesting.
Coniferstar studies the burrow, for a long time, marking the place; until his growling stomach herds him back to the hunt.
But maybe heâd be backâ the ginger rogue was right. That wound would have to be cleaned out; or infection might set in.Â
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