[Image ID: Ravenweaver sits beside Rabbitjoy, who is curled in a nest, dead. Ravenweaver says, "You almost missed Harvest Moon⊠thanks for holding on."]
(Ravenweaver: 34, female, artisan, nervous, den builder, very clever)
Puddlewhisper assures her kits that the scar their mother gave her is just a reminder of how much she loves them. Meanwhile, Honeybuzz worries as Stormjump develops an infection, not recovering as she should from birth.
[Image ID: Puddlewhisper now has two pink scars looping around the tip of her tail. She says to Icepaw and Pearpaw, "I want you both to enjoy talking to her. Don't hold this against her." Under her, it reads - CONDITION: MANGLED TAIL. In the back, Honeybuzz escorts Stormjump to the medicine den. When Beekit tries to follow, Honeybuzz says, "We'll play later, Beekit." Under Beekit, it says - CONDITION: BRUISES. Under Stormjump, it says + INFECTION.]
(Puddlewhisper: 65, trans female, codekeeper, righteous, keen eye, ghost sense)
Gingerpawâs charm earns him the name Gingerspring.
[Image ID: Estherfern says to the newly named Gingerspring, "Keep complaining like you have been and I'll take the name right back." Under Gingerspring, it says LEVEL UP! GINGERPAW â GINGERSPRING, CURIOUS ABOUT HUMANS â HUMAN EXPERT, MOSS-BALL HUNTER â GOOD HUNTER.]
(Gingerspring: 15, male, cleric, charismatic, human expert, good hunter)
(Estherfern: 133, female, cleric, adventurous, great mediator, prophecy seeker)
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When the mediators visit SlugClan to discuss the issue with Icekit and Pearkit, Nimblestep asks them to at least tell them about their family if they wonât give them back yet. No one... really knows what to say.
[Image ID: Paleseed, Spikecrash, Sandhollow, and Slushtrail speak with Lettucestar and Nimblestep. Slushtrail has juniper berries tucked by her ear. Under her, it reads + ACCESSORY: JUNIPER. Nimblestep says, "Quickkit and I have been learning how to make pottery⊠she's so good at it. Do Icekit and Pearkit like art?"]
Weevilsight is sorry, but she still isnât ready for a romantic relationship with Anchovystrike, despite caring for him too. Anchovystrike slinks off, rejected. He goes hunting with Currentsmoke, Billowhaze, and Whitepaw to calm down.
[Image ID: Whitepaw, Billowhaze, Anchovystrike, and Currentsmoke speak in a group. Under Billowhaze, it says - CONDITION: RUNNY NOSE. Under Currentsmoke, it says LEVEL UP! SKILLED TOOLSMITH â INVENTOR AND INNOVATOR. Behind Whitepaw and Billowhaze, a gray and white kit with green eyes approaches, yowling "Clan cats!" Under him, it says NEW PLAYER: DOVEKIT, 4, MALE, IMPULSIVE, ACTIVE IMAGINATION.]
---
"Um, Mr. Anchovystrike?" Whitepaw gulped from the back of the patrol. "I don't want to be rude, butâŠ"
"You're making us all depressed," Billowhaze huffed. "You might be taking this a bit too hard."
The mentor and apprentice weren't wrong. As Anchovystrike led the pair and Currentsmoke toward the heart of the territory to hunt, he couldn't help but let his ears dip and his tail slag. Even the bright bird song and glittering glow of early afternoon couldn't uplift his heart. Anchovystrike knew he'd been through worse, but that didn't stop his chest from hurting and his teeth aching with the tension in his jaw.
"We don't have to call each other mates," Anchovystrike muttered, staring at the grass as he walked. "I just want to take her out of camp sometimes."
"You've been best friends as long as any of us can remember," Currentsmoke purred, rubbing against his brother. "Weevilsight obviously loves you, or at least cares! It'll be alright."
"I have to be blunt here, Anchovy," Billowhaze sighed. He looped around his brothers and stood in front of them, his pelt dappled with the light passing between budding branches. "Do you really expect Weevilsight to be interested in mates right now? Her parents have barely been dead a season." Whitepaw stayed at his mentor's side like the dutiful apprentice he was. With bright green colors breaking through tan grass and colorful flowers peeking out from the bases of old trees, Whitepaw's pelt burned against the land like the pale center of a flame.
"I thought it would take her mind off everything," Anchovystrike mumbled as his ears grew red.
"Give her a little time," Currentsmoke said. "Just being her friend can be enough for now, right?" Anchovystrike let our a mrrow of laughter. Currentsmoke and Billowhaze were right. Of course they were. Anchovystrike was just being a mouse-brain about it all. Whitepaw shuffled his paws, uncertain of his place in the brotherly conversation.
"Maybe we can at least catch some birds for her?" Anchovystrike suggested. "She lovesâ"
"Clan cats!" Whitepaw jumped at the sudden yowl, back arched high. A figure stomped through the young growth behind Whitepaw and Billowhaze, tail high. The wind finally carried the scent of a young tom to Anchovystrike's nose. Shiny green eyes blended into the blooming foliage. A gray and white face plunged into view. Every muscle in the tom's soft face pointed itself toward the RippleClan patrol. He had no Clan scent, but he was certainly younger than any wandering loner Anchovystrike had met. He was likely still a kit!
"Hello?" Currentsmoke gulped. He blinked wildly, laughing as the gray and white tom marched toward the group with huge pawsteps.
"Greetings!" the kit chirped, shimmering in the dappled light. Anchovystrike snorted at the strange choice of words. "I've come to join the Five Clans! Which one is this?"
"UmâŠ" Anchovystrike snorted, trying to hide his laugh by clearing his throat. "You're in RippleClan, kit."
"I've come to join you as one of your fearsome warriors!" the kit declared. "Take me to your camp!" The four older toms stared at the loner kit. The kit stared back, blissfully unaware of the awkwardness choking the air.
"Alright, let us handle this," Billowhaze muttered to his brothers. He nudged them back with his hind leg. Billowhaze and Whitepaw moved closer to the kit. "Where did you come from, then?"
"Why does that matter?" the kit scoffed. "I'm a RippleClan cat now!" The kit's voice broke as he made his dramatic declaration, sounding more like a weasel than a warrior. Anchovystrike couldn't hide his snort at that.
"What Mr. Billowhaze is asking," Whitepaw quickly said, "is where your mother might be."
"I don't know," the kit chirped with a dismissive flick of an ear. "My humans adopted me ages ago. No idea where Mom is!"
"You're like me," Whitepaw muttered, eyes widening.
"I want to be!" the kit said. "All the Witch Hunters were talking about how big and strong the Clans were. You make a lot of stuff and trade it with the Witch Hunters. You must be really smart! I want to big and smart too! I could be a great warrior! That's way better than sitting in a human's lap all day!" Billowhaze hummed, tilting his head at the proud little kit.
"Well, you heard him," Billowhaze chuckled, glancing back at his brothers. "He could be a great warrior."
"Shouldn't we make sure no one's looking for him?" Currentsmoke asked.
"Who would be looking for me?" the kit asked, mimicking Billowhaze's head tilt.
"If he has a mother looking for him," Billowhaze muttered so the kit couldn't hear, "I'm sure the Witch Hunters will come by the border and ask for him. Besides, we should take him to camp. He's onlyâŠ" Billowhaze paused, a thought catching his attention. He turned back to the kit and asked, "How old are you?"
"I don't know," the kit said innocently.
"Alright," Billowhaze groaned. "Whitepaw! Do you remember age markers? Can you figure out this kit's age?"
"UmâŠ" Whitepaw said, tail twitching back and forth. "Have you lost any of your teeth, little one? Have they fallen out of your mouth?"
"Yesterday I ate the food my human left out," the kit explained in one breath. "My tooth fell out of my mouth but I just ate it with the rest of my food."
"Well," Whitepaw chuckled, "you still have kitten fur, so⊠I think you're four moons old."
"Good job," Billowhaze purred. "I agree. It's better to take him back to camp."
"I'm still going to ask Oilstripe if I can lead a patrol to the river," Currentsmoke sighed. "I don't want this to be a repeat of our problem with Nimblestep."
"Can we go hunting?" the kit asked, bouncing around Billowhaze.
"You need to see our leader first," Billowhaze said. He stopped the kit from wandering by placing his paw in front of him. "If you really want to join the Clans, there's a few things you'll need to do. What's your name, anyway?"
"I heard what Clan names sound like," the kit said, jumping onto a small root. "I picked my own! Doveclaw the warrior!" The gray and white kit dropped into a playful battle pose, growling.
"That's a nice name!" Whitepaw chirped as Anchovystrike once again laughed. "You'll have to earn that name, though. When you're young, we would call you something like Dovekit. Then you can become Dovepaw, like how I'm Whitepaw!"
"I can't be Doveclaw?" the kitâsoon to be known as Dovekitâhuffed.
"With hope," Billowhaze hummed, nudging Dovekit toward the rest of the patrol, "you will some day."
Anchovystrike took the lead back home while Currentsmoke, Whitepaw, and Billowhaze walked along Dovekit, prying him for more information and laughing at the kit's strange arrival. Anchovystrike couldn't stop laughing at Dovekit's random comments and insistence he could become a warrior as soon as he entered camp.
It seemed there would always be something to take Anchovystrike's mind off heartache and frustration.
(Whitepaw: 11, male, historian apprentice, nervous, active imagination)
(Billowhaze: 29, male, historian, loyal, good kit-sitter)
(Currentsmoke: 29, male, cartakr, loving, good climber, inventor and innovator)
(Dovekit: 4, male, kit, impulsive, active imagination)
A skirmish with LynxClan cats stealing crabs leaves Yarrowclaw with a mangled leg and Downstar with a mangled tail.
[Image ID: Yarrowclaw and Downstar face off against a black masked tabby with blue eyes and a scar across their muzzle. Under Downstar, it says + CONDITION: MANGLED TAIL, while under Yarrowclaw, it reads + CONDITION: MANGLED LEG. Oilstripe runs towards them, yowling, "Get off of my leader!" Under her, it says - CONDITION: GRIEVING.]
(Downstar: 153, female, leader, wise, trusted advisor, very clever)
(Yarrowclaw: 29, female, warrior, cold, fire master)
Washington finally passes from his shipwreck injuries, but at least he died in a safe and loving home. Rabbitjoy decides to retire as a result, but since Downstar is weak, Oilstripeâs the one to give Frostpaw to Ravenweaver for the rest of her training.
[Image ID: Oilstripe watches over Rabbitjoy, Ravenweaver, and Frostpaw. Ravenweaver and Frostpaw face each other, now mentor and apprentice, while Rabbitjoy watches, pleased.]
(Washington: 222, male, elder, nervous, good mediator)
The Clan collectively celebrates Weedfoot as everyone finds a way to move on. Potterypool, Wolfgaze, Currentsmoke, and Yarrowclaw join their littermates in the warriorâs den.
[Image ID: Potterypool, Wolfgaze, Currentsmoke, and Yarrowclaw are adults and graduates. Under Potterypool, it says LEVEL UP! POTTERYPAW â POTTERYPOOL, INSECURE â SNEAKY, LOVES TO SING â GREAT SINGER. Under Wolfgaze, it says LEVEL UP! WOLFPAW â WOLFGAZE, CURIOUS ABOUT STARCLAN â CONNECTION WITH STARCLAN, CONFIDENT WITH WORDS â GOOD SPEAKER. Under Currentsmoke, it says LEVEL UP! CURRENTPAW â CURRENTSMOKE, CONSTANTLY CLIMBING â GOOD CLIMBER, HAS LOTS OF IDEAS â SKILLED TOOLSMITH. Under Yarrowclaw, it says LEVEL UP! YARROWPAW â YARROWCLAW, THOUGHTFUL â COLD, STARES AT FIRE â TALENTED FIRE-STARTER.]
"I'm still awake, I promise," Wolfgaze yelped, blinking wildly and shaking the exhaustion from her thick fur. Thank StarClan she didn't fall over. She'd claimed a spot on the Resting Place immediately after her ceremony, providing a great vantage over the camp. Yet the lulling waves behind her and the empty, clouded sky above were the perfect recipe for a long nap. Weevilpaw stood with her front paws on the log, her entire body standing straight with excitement.
"Downstar said I could fetch you," Weevilpaw chirped. "You made it! Your codekeeper's vigil! How did it feel?"
"Long," Wolfgaze yawned. She stumbled off the Resting Place, licking her lips. "Where are the others?" Potterypool, Currentsmoke, and Yarrowclaw had been sitting outside the camp the last time Wolfgaze looked. Now the entrance was barren, all thorns, brambles, and stones.
"They already fell back into camp," Weevilpaw chuckled. "Currentsmoke was so tired, I thought he would fall on his face!"
"I'm ready to see my graduation gift," Wolfgaze sighed as Weevilpaw rubbed against her. The tortoiseshell cleric helped her sister into camp, laughing as Wolfgaze's eyes drifted shut. With the sun peeking over the sea, Wolfgaze expected the Clan to set out for the day's patrols, but to her surprise, she found most of RippleClan gathered in the center of camp. Downstar sat on the Shiprock, gazing down at the activities below her. Potterypool, Currentsmoke, and Yarrowclaw stood at the edge of the crowd, trying to see what caught their kin's attention.
"What's going on?" Wolfgaze asked, morning clarity clearing her thoughts. She and Weevilpaw joined the newly graduated cats, who were all largely ignored by the rest of the Clan.
"The artisans are doing something," Yarrowclaw explained.
"I think it has something to do with that big chunk of wood they brought in last night," Currentsmoke pointed out. "Remember? Elmsprout and the artisans pulled the sled out and came back to camp with a huge piece!"
"It was a slow night, Currentsmoke," Potterypool hummed, gently nudging her friend. "I think she remembers." Wolfgaze did not, in fact, remember, but she pretended she did.
Wolfgaze braced herself and squeezed between Splashtuft and Wildclaw. She weaved around her Clanmates until she broke into the center of the circle. Mitespark, Elmsprout, Rabbitjoy, and Rattlepelt stood around a wooden sculpture. Ravenpaw sat near them, listening carefully as Rattlepelt explained what they were doing. They picked at the wood with their claws, their teeth, and a few specialized tools; sharp stone picks that could be wrapped around the paw with leather straps, perfect for detailed work on pottery and woodwork. Elmsprout was the first to notice Wolfgaze.
"Wolfgaze!" she called, gently stepping back from the sculpture. "You finished your vigil! Congratulations! Your sisters made your nest in the warrior's den. I'm certain you'll like their gift."
"What are you doing, though?" Wolfgaze asked.
"Oh, that's right, no one told you," Elmsprout gasped softly. "Mitespark, let her see!" Mitespark carefully pulled her carving pick from the wood's surface and moved to the side. It was a bust, a cat's face from the tip of their ears to their collarbone. They were a smooth-faced cat with round features, shaped almost like a triangle sitting on its tip.
"We debated whether to carve in her stripes or paint them," Rabbitjoy explained, "but I think we're going to paint them."
"Is this someone I'm supposed to recognize?" Wolfgaze asked.
"We carved it from memory," Mitespark admitted, "but imagine gray fur and deep blue eyesâŠ"
"James and Scaleripple are making paint for her," Rattlepelt explained. "We told James he could rest and enjoy the finished product, but I guess he wanted to lend a paw for once."
"But why carve Weedfoot?" Wolfgaze asked, glancing at the crowd. "Why is everyone so excited?"
"A Clan's leader and deputy carry all of us on their backs," Rabbitjoy said, brushing against the newly named codekeeper. "They affect all of us, and we all grieve them when they pass. It's a part of our history fading away. The whole camp was up last night sharing memories of Weedfoot, and Paleseed came up with this idea. We're thinking of doing the same for future leaders and deputies after they pass."
"We'll find a place to store them where the paint won't decay," Rattlepelt promised.
"It will be lovely," Wolfgaze purred. A yawn slipped through her words, despite her efforts to hold it back.
"It will still be here when you wake up," Mitespark laughed. "Go to sleep!" Wolfgaze bowed her head, her exhaustion flooding back with Mitespark's simple order. She moved back through the crowd, who passed along a few more congratulations.
"Wolfgaze!" Billowhaze stepped out of the swarm just as Wolfgaze breached the horde. His whiskers twitched in casual mirth. "Anchovy and I are planning abig battle-training session with Estherfern's litter this evening. You should join us! With all the Spirits of Shadow out there, those five could practice against that stare of yours."
"I'm not sure," Wolfgaze gulped, her ears suddenly growing hot under Billowhaze's charming stare. "It might be too dangerous to leave camp just for a training session. With what happened to SilverpawâŠ" Silverpaw should have been sitting vigil with Wolfgaze that night. Wolfgaze shouldn't have had to spend those long moments wondering what happened to her sister, what Spirit of Shadow pulled her under, never to be seen again.
"That's why training will be good for them," Billowhaze insisted. "We can even bring Weevilpaw along if that makes you feel better. The Spirits of Shadow wouldn't match claws with our three star-blessed warriors, would they?" Billowhaze winked and turned back to Weedfoot's bust, trying to gaze upon the former deputy's face. Even through the chaos of recent moons and the overpowering desire to sleep, Wolfgaze still felt her heart flutter at Billowhaze's stare.
It seemed her life as a codekeeper was off to a good start.
(Weevilpaw: 13, female, cleric apprentice, adventurous, curious about StarClan)
(Wolfgaze: 13, female, codekeeper, thoughtful, connection to StarClan, good speaker)
(Billowhaze: 13, male, historian, loyal, good kitsitter)
Boughpaw found a forget-me-not flower growing in the frost and decided to keep it.
[Image ID: Boughpaw now wears a forget-me-not flower. Under her, it reads + ACCESSORY: FORGET-ME-NOTS.]
(Boughpaw: 10, female, historian apprentice, righteous, constantly climbing)
While collecting samples of ichor for a banishing ritual with Estherfern, Anchovystrike, and Mosspounce, Foampaw swears she hears Shrewkit crying in the distance. When she and Mosspounce go to investigate, only Mosspounce returns alive with horrified tales of a manykit and a new spirit composed of frost-covered leaves.
Slushtrail knew, as soon as Downstar ordered everyone to stay in camp unless absolutely necessary, Longest Night would truly be a long, long night.
Three torches sat before the main bonfire, separate from the other memorials. A withered dandelion sat in front of the tallest. A silver stone necklace hung from the second. Salt crusted the base of the third, dipped in sea foam. It was a lot like the Longest Night Slushtrail remembered from her kithood. The artisans danced and sang, the historians told stories, the caretakers prepared a late night meal. The fire still roared against the never-ending night, a refusal to bow to the cold and decay. Slushtrail could tell, however, that it hurt some of her Clanmates to keep up the fight. Estherfern ranted to her remaining kits, relaying all she had learned in those last few moons about the Spirits of Shadow and their dangers. Mosspounce laughed a bit too loud at one of Lemmy's comments. Lavendertwist sang just loud enough to hurt Slushtrail's ears. Rattlepelt fought to keep Ravenpaw's attention, trying to demonstrate a special dance. RippleClan was clawing at the edge of a cliff, trying to pull themselves back up, unable to think anything but "it will be okay" when their hearts spoke the opposite.
Honeybuzz brushed his tail against Estherfern's shoulder mid-rant. She paused, and Slushtrail could see Estherfern's breath catch and fog around her. She touched her nose to each of her kits and followed Honeybuzz to the side, where Troutpool and Weevilpaw waited. Slushtrail couldn't hear them, but they sat close and carried torches in their eyes. Best to leave them be for now.
The rest of Slushtrail's family sat in front of the nursery. Tallowheart worked with Oilstripe on an old story; a great war between WheatClan and SlugClan and a friendship that healed their wounds. Carnationspeckle listened closely with Rattlepelt and Wildclaw while Shrewkit hid under Rattlepelt's fox pelt, shivering. With one more look over the rest of the Clan, Slushtrail joined her mothers and siblings.
"How do you like Longest Night, Shrewkit?" Slushtrail asked.
"I don't like the cold," he huffed, pulling his face under the fox pelt. "My mom's probably freezing her flank off tonight."
"I'm sure wherever your birth mother is," Carnationspeckle sighed, lifting the kit's cover away, "she's just happy you're growing up somewhere safe and warm. Can I warm you up?" Shrewkit nodded and crawled closer to his grandmother. Carnationspeckle licked Shrewkit's fur the wrong way, warming his blood.
"So can leaders really give cats whole new names?" Shrewkit asked, turning to Tallowheart and Oilstripe. "Like the warrior in your story?"
"I'm a living example of that!" Wildclaw chirped, gently bunting her son. "Have we told you I used to called Graythroat? Downstar gave me a new name because of how fiercely I defend RippleClan."
"More like because you have a death wish," Oilstripe chuckled. Tallowheart hid a snicker.
"I've outgrown it!" Wildclaw insisted with a laugh.
"Mostly," Rattlepelt hummed, rolling her eyes. Wildclaw batted her mate's muzzle, and Shrewkit laughed.
"Well I never want to lose my name," Shrewkit declared. "My mom named me Shrew, and that's who I'll be, forever. The kit part is extra." When he sat taller, he nearly head-butted Carnationspeckle's jaw into her skull.
(Tallowheart: 14, male, historian, nervous, good swimmer)
Troutpool hopes Trumpetspore notices her.
[Image ID: Troutpool stares at Trumpetspore.]
---
Troutpool stared at Trumpetspore from the medicine den as Trumpetspore and Brightpaw showed Shrewkit how to perform a hunter's crouch. There wasn't a lot of room to practice, since almost everyone was in camp, safe under the divine protection Troutpool and her peers summoned. It was the same protective ritual they performed during Harvest Moon. The clerics could only pray it would guard the Clan long enough for them to strike back against the Spirits of Shadow. Yet despite her chronic fear of them, Trumpetspore proved more confident in Troutpool's rituals than the cream cleric was.
"Keep your flank a little lower," Trumpetspore said, nudging Shrewkit's high flank down. "You're doing well." Troutpool didn't care if others laughed at Trumpetspore's nervousness or groaned at her panic. There was a keen-eyed warrior under that blanket of anxiety; a warrior Troutpool wanted to know more. Troutpool's eyes softened as she watched the black warrior move with such ease between Shrewkit and Brightpaw, eager to train despite the danger.
"You're staring." Troutpool startled a bit. Scaleripple stood outside the den, expressionless. He held a paw to his chest. A large thorn jutted out from his pads.
"I was just marveling at how well Shrewkit's adapted to Clan life," Troutpool stammered with a lick of her chest. "Here, that thorn looks awful, I'll help you get it out." That was obviously why Scaleripple was there, why did Troutpool have to say it like that?
Troutpool led Scaleripple into the shadow of the den. She grabbed a few cobwebs from the shelves (no need to waste a bandage on a simple thorn). She held Scaleripple's paw out and gripped the thorn between her teeth.
"You were staring at Trumpetspore," Scaleripple said right as Troutpool ripped the thorn out of his paw. Scaleripple hissed and licked the fresh flowing blood. Troutpool moved his paw back down and placed cobwebs on the small wound.
"Stay here for a while, and keep your paw off the sand," Troutpool said. "I'll take the cobwebs off soon. A wound that size will close quickly." Troutpool licked a strand of cobweb off her paws. Scaleripple stared at her, barely blinking. Did he want to talk about Trumpetspore? Well, if he did, he could just ask. Troutpool had no reason to be embarrassed by it. "You know Trumpetspore well. If I were to ask her on a dateâ"
"No," Scaleripple said so suddenly that Troutpool once again startled. They both stared at each other, one confused, the other certain in an unknowable, detached way. No? What did Scaleripple mean by 'no'? He wasn't Trumpetspore's mentor. Troutpool didn't need his permission! She must not have been able to hide her thoughts as well as Scaleripple did, for the gold and white warrior continued. "You told Trumpetspore her littermate was an omen. Why would she be your mate?"
"Scaleripple," Troutpool huffed, finding what little confidence she possessed and hardening her voice. "I only reported StarClan's sign. I didn't want to make Tempestshade's life hard. I revealed it at their trial because I didn't want them to be found guilty of murder."
"Instead you made everyone avoid them," Scaleripple said. He glanced at his bandaged paw with a soft huff. He tore off the red-stained cobweb and spat the wad onto the middle of the floor. "So, no. You don't get to ask Trumpetspore on a date. You don't deserve that." Scaleripple licked his paw once more and walked out of the den. It didn't seem to matter that he left Troutpool spinning, a dormant pressure rising in her chest. No, Scaleripple sauntered back into the packed clearing like nothing had happened.
RippleClan prepares a ritual to fight back against the Spirit hordes.
[Image ID: Troutpool, Honeybuzz, and Weevilpaw stand in a circle around Estherfern. Anchovystrike, Wolfgaze, Oilstripe, and Scaleripple watch from the sides.]
---
In Estherfern's faith, there was her God, who did His best to watch over her home, but there were also the Six Predators. The Wolf, The Fox, The Owl, The Hawk, The Rat, The Cougar. These vengeful, vindictive deities loved to toy with catkind, so Estherfern's home developed a dozen ways to combat their influence. Somewhere in the back of her heart, Estherfern wondered if they were the ones who tormented the souls of the Dark Forest, who gave birth to the Spirits of Shadow. Maybe they were the ones to kill Foampaw. Maybe they were laughing somewhere, saying "Look at Esther. Stepping above her station, making friends with the damned. Shouldn't she have known better? It's so fun to watch her destroy her family."
That night, Estherfern would spit in the faces of the Six Predators, of the Spirits of Shadow, of everything supernatural that roamed her new home, because no one got away with hurting her kits. Not even her.
"Estherfern, we don't have to tell anyone," Honeybuzz whispered as the procession trailed toward the beach. Honeybuzz and Estherfern kept to the back of the group, carrying baskets of supplies. Troutpool walked inside a circle composed of Weevilpaw, Anchovystrike, and Wolfgaze. Oilstripe and Scaleripple kept a sharp eye for strange shadows, ready to fight and protect the untrained clerics.
"What sort of justice would that be?" Estherfern huffed.
"The sort that keeps the peace," Honeybuzz said.
"Peace built on lies is no peace at all," Estherfern sighed. "When this is done⊠we're telling the Clan. May your ancestors and my God forgive me." Estherfern stared at the clouded sky. If StarClan was as strong as her Clanmates claimed, their presence would not be dulled by simple clouds hiding Silverpelt from view.
As the patrol approached the beach, it began to snow. Flakes danced on Estherfern's nose. Wolfgaze rubbed her fluffy pelt against her sister's thin fur as Weevilpaw shivered. Honeybuzz ran into the thicker circle of cats, quietly begging for extra warmth. Estherfern soaked in the cold. The cold meant she was alive. She was free. It was this freedom she sought to protect ever since she escaped the cat-minded human. Yet in seeing her kits as imprisoned in their bodies, had she not denied them freedom? Whenever she spoke with Wolverinepaw, the long-furred duplicate of Estherfern still stared a bit too hard. Thunderpaw still didn't ask Estherfern to repeat herself if she didn't catch what she said. Brightpaw squirmed in Estherfern's company, and Boughpaw stayed silent, forgotten in her normalcy. The truth would be the only thing that could fix their bonds, even if it destroyed them in the process.
"This is the place," Troutpool finally said. The patrol stood where the river met the ocean, dissolving into branches. Sand melted into mud and clay. A salt pool sat in the sand, the artisan's precious system to separate out the water and harvest the pure white crystals. The sea was nothing more than churning shadow. Estherfern and Honeybuzz set their baskets down.
"StarClan is watching," Oilstripe whispered, head spinning. "There are so many cats. I see Mousesong, and Weedfoot, Silverpaw⊠Estherfern, Foampaw is here." Estherfern steadied herself. She swallowed the rock in her throat.
"This is for you, Silverpaw!" Wolfgaze called into the dark, still pressed against Weevilpaw.
"They aren't saying anything," Oilstripe said. "I think they're just bearing witness."
"Foampaw, forgive me," Estherfern whispered.
"Oilstripe, Anchovystrike, Wolfgaze, Scaleripple," Honeybuzz said, taking dry mushrooms out of his basket, "you'll patrol around us while we work. Anchovystrike, how do we look?"
"There's ichor everywhere," Anchovystrike groaned, sneering at the sand. "The spirits roam the entire territory."
"It shouldn't be hard to draw them in," Weevilpaw huffed, standing taller. "I'll call out if I predict any of them attacking."
"This will take some time, so stay alert," Honeybuzz said. "Weevilpaw, help me build this side of the circle. Troutpool, Estherfern, take the other half." Estherfern gently grabbed a mouthful of mushrooms, which grew damp in the snow, and started on her side of the circle.
The circle would be far bigger than the one in Estherfern's cursed den. Yes, it was similar to that original circle, composed of the same mushrooms that connected the living world to the Dark Forest. Yet here, the design was not based on those damned traditions, but Estherfern's faith. While the mushrooms formed the curves of the circle, rather than filling the interior with an herbal sludge, Estherfern's basket held a purer replacement; the spirit-rebelling charms from Harvest Moon. In Estherfern's home, the charms would have had the gentle face of God, with tufts of fur representing each of the Six Predators replacing the mushrooms.
"Is this safe?" Scaleripple asked. He sat in the branches of a chokecherry, carefully watching the shore.
"We're summoning Spirits of Shadow and sending them back to the Dark Forest," Weevilpaw scoffed as she set down a few more charms. "There's a lot of risk involved here. But it's what we have to do if we have any hope to get rid of them all."
"I don't mean the spirits," Scaleripple said softly. "These gods that Estherfern fears⊠are they real?"
"Of course they are," Estherfern snapped, almost knocking a mushroom out of its place. "They may not dwell over your lands, but they dwell over mine."
"What if we summon both the spiritsâŠ" Scaleripple said, "and your Predators?" Estherfern's paw clenched over a charm. Was the white-speckled warrior right? Estherfern knew so many tales of the Six Predators and the way they destroyed lives. They did not need to feed, they did not have that excuse for their mayhem. It was fun for them. They spread their domains with no care for each other or any living creature. Was Estherfern repeating her earlier mistakes? Was she, in her effort to fix one problem, inviting something far worse?
"Esther," Honeybuzz said. He met Estherfern's eyes from the other side of the circle. He set the last mushroom in its place. "It's our best option. There are too many." Estherfern nodded. She settled the last of her charms in the circle and turned to Troutpool. The head cleric nodded in return.
"Everyone, stay back, and stay quiet," Troutpool called as Estherfern stepped into the circle. "Honeybuzz, Weevilpaw, are you ready?"
"I'm not a very good singer," Weevilpaw chuckled. She rubbed snow out of her eyes and settled at the edge of the circle.
"You don't have to be," Estherfern said. "Just say the names clearly."
"I've never heard names like these," Troutpool muttered, tucking her tail over her paws.
"You wouldn't have," Estherfern said with a flick of an ear.
Weevilpaw, Honeybuzz, and Troutpool sat equal distance from one another, poised outside the circle. Scaleripple jumped out of the tree and joined Oilstripe. Wolfgaze and Anchovystrike lingered near Weevilpaw. Snow dusted the mushrooms and charms.
"The ichor isn't happy, I can already tell," Anchovystrike muttered. Wolfgaze put her tail to his muzzle.
"Predators of the Great Glowing Lands," Estherfern yowled into the snowy night. "We bind you to this place with your true names!" The four clerics closed their eyes. The song came naturally to Estherfern, embedded into her very being. It wasn't hard to teach it to her compatriots.
Luponthoth
Vulpo Thun
Strigart
But-oro
Rapendazera
Punai'kema
The gentle voices of the clerics rose through the snow in a soft, yet tense melody, like bird song. Estherfern dropped out of the song and opened her eyes. Oilstripe and Anchovystrike's hackles rose, their heads bouncing to sights only they could see.
As Honeybuzz, Troutpool, and Weevilpaw carried on the song, Estherfern yowled, "We know of your appetites! We know of your boredom! This land is filled with wicked spirits! We have formed their path to safety, and they'll think they can escape. Have fun!"
The cleric's song cut off as a violent gush of wind battered their voices, flinging snow into their eyes. Wolfgaze yowled, bracing herself against Anchovystrike. The leaves that decorated Oilstripe's pelt flew off. Estherfern's heart raced as the snow bit her nose. Yet a few moments later, the wind receded. Estherfern breathed deep. Scaleripple shook out his pelt while Honeybuzz shivered. The humming ocean made Estherfern's ears ring.
"Stay where you are," Estherfern warned her companions. Her fur spiked when a sudden realization washed over her. "Anchovystrike, close your eyes."
"Why?" Anchovystrike asked.
"Foxdung!" Weevilpaw suddenly cried, jumping with her back arched. "They're⊠from the forest! Watch out!"
"Anchovystrike," Estherfern yowled as something tumbled through the trees, "you see the unseen influence of the supernatural. If you see the Predators as they really are, you will go mad! Now close your eyes!" Anchovystrike obeyed just in time.
Terrified howls echoed through the forest. Black sludge dripped from the grass onto the sand. It tumbled faster and faster like a newly formed river, racing toward the circle. Oilstripe and Scaleripple scrambled back as the ichor slammed into the circle. It launched at Estherfern with a steaming, bubbling sound. Estherfern held her ground. The ichor plunged into the sand around her like a fox leaping into snow. It stained the sand black and burrowed deep, deep, deep.
Then the monsters came. They howled and shrieked and cauterwauled, running through the trees as fast as they could. There were darkhounds, thundering along with massive paws and bloody jaws, yipping like pups. There was forsaken prey, decayed and rotten yet moving and squealing just as they did in their final moments. Leatherwaste flopped and flew about, and something new, something without a proper name, some storm-spun bundle of dull brown leaves and glistening frost, slithered toward the circle.
"Stay down!" Weevilpaw yowled, belly dropping to the sand. All except Estherfern mimicked the cleric apprentice. The Spirits of Shadow raced alongside the trail of ichor and into the circle. They dug and clawed at the sand, following their lifeblood back into the depths. But they were the lucky ones.
Estherfern could not see them, but she could see their power unfold. Unseen talons snatched spirits by their backs and flung them into the sky. Eager, invisible jaws snapped and bit into the sticky flesh of the spirits. Something dragged unlucky spirits into the shadows, screaming. They sank into the earth before they reached the circle. They dissolved into steaming piles of ichor with torturous wails.
The world went white. The loudest, strongest clap of thunder Estherfern had ever heard reverberated through her skeleton and stayed singing in her ears. She couldn't see, she couldn't hear. Her skin buzzed. In a moment of clarity tucked within the chaos, Estherfern wondered if this is what her kits felt. A path without sight, without sound, heart pushing out of your chest, is a blessing compared to the fate that awaits the rot.
It took some time for Estherfern's vision to clear. She and her Clanmates were still standing, unharmed. The ichor and spirits were gone. There was no sign they had been there at all, save for a few mushrooms missing from the circle. The other cats groaned, rubbing their ears and eyes. They were alive. The spirits had left RippleClan.
Something drew Estherfern's gaze up. Clear shapes formed within the clouds, backed by a pale glow. Each cloud looked perfectly like its subject; a wolf, a fox, an owl, a hawk, a rat, and a cougar. Where their eyes would have been were balls of lightning, sparking and dancing, glaring down at the Clans in hunger.
The creatures of the glowing sky do not rule this land, but visitors cannot be denied. The stars shall extend their power, and the beasts shall fill their bellies. So it has been for you, so it shall be for all.
"Foampaw?" Estherfern gulped, barely capable of hearing herself.
"Can I open my eyes now?" Anchovystrike gulped. He still had his paws over his face.
"They're gone!" Weevilpaw cried. She ran into the circle and plowed into Estherfern. The old molly looked back to the clouds, but they were now a simple sheet of gray against black. Honeybuzz and Troutpool joined them, pressing against Estherfern.
"Is StarClan still watching over us?" Wolfgaze asked, hopping into the circle.
"They left when the ritual began," Oilstripe stammered, staring across the river, "but they've returned. They're watching from afar. I can't tell what they're thinking."
"They're on our side," Honeybuzz promised, waving the others into the circle. "I petitioned them myself at the last half-moon. We wouldn't have done this if StarClan disapproved."
"They may not have disapproved," Estherfern muttered, "but that does not mean they are proud."
"I think they are!" Troutpool chirped. "It was scary, but we've banished the spirits. We can walk our lands freely again. We wouldn't have saved the Clan without you, Estherfern." Troutpool nuzzled Estherfern, but the old molly still stared at the clouds.
"I don't understand you, StarClan," she whispered, not caring whether the cats pressed into her overheard. "You ask my God to send me here, you stand by while I summon your enemies, you allow me to draw the gaze of something far worse on your descendants. Why?" The stars shall extend their power⊠the voice in Estherfern's head had been as clear as when Foampaw last stood by Estherfern's side. Was it somehow better for the Clans to attract the attention of the Six Predators? Was it an earnest decision, made for the betterment of the five Clans? Did StarClan desire more power, more control, more souls?
Estherfern sighed. She would find no answers that night. She would be the one providing answers soon enough.
(Estherfern: 112, female, cleric, bloodthirsty, great mediator, prophecy seeker)
(Honeybuzz: 26, male, cleric, daring, skilled toolsmith, good teacher)
As Wildclaw moves on from grieving Clammask, she and Rattlepelt go for a walk together.
[Image ID: Rattlepelt and Wildclaw approach two black newborns. Under the leftmost kit, it reads NEW PLAYER: VALLEYKIT, 0, MALE, QUIET. Under the rightmost, smoky kit, it reads NEW PLAYER: MIDNIGHTKIT, 0, MALE, POLITE. Under Wildclaw, it reads - CONDITION: GRIEVING.]
Rattlepelt typically despised winter. The snow was beautiful, Longest Night was lovely, and she always purred when kits played in the snow. But her Clanmates had fur. They could handle the cold. The winter wind didn't sting their bodies and quickly numb their limbs. They could safely leave camp! Meanwhile, Rattlepelt stayed huddled in the artisan's den, tucked under extra leather pelts while she, Rabbitjoy, and Frostpaw fixed baskets.
The artisan's den was packed with supplies and tools; leather wraps for managing hot stoves, drums, dry ferns and grass for basket weaving, and more. All those supplies trapped heat within the rocks and brambles. There was just enough work for the three artisans to sit and do their work.
"Trust your claws," Rabbitjoy said as Frostpaw pulled twine through the stakes of her basket, weaving it back and forth. "Your claws are made to snag material like this. Let them hook the twine and treat it as an extension of your paw."
"My wrist keeps getting stuck," Frostpaw muttered. She tried to hook her paw around the next stake, but since she was repairing a hole in the side of the basket, her paw had little room to move. The twine kept slipping off Frostpaw's claws in her effort to pull it through without breaking the basket further.
"Repairing a basket is harder than weaving it from scratch," Rabbitjoy assured her. "Don't worry if you can't make it tight. Try your best."
"How do humans do this?" Frostpaw groaned as she finally pulled her thread back around.
"Malformed paws," Rattlepelt explained with a chuckle, tying off the broken base of her basket. She waved her paw, flexing her pads. "Their paws are flexible and good at crafts, but they barely feel a thing."
"They also don't have claws!" Gingerpaw suddenly stuck his big fluffy head into the aritsan's den, his maple seed necklace bouncing on his chest. Estherfern lingered behind him with a bundle of bark, but her apprentice was ignorant to his mentor's shoving. "They just have hard rocks on top of their paws!"
"Gingerpaw, go away!" Frostpaw whined. "We're working! Don't eavesdrop!" Estherfern finally knocked Gingerpaw away from the artisan's den and back to his chores. As Gingerpaw walked off, laughing, Frostpaw groaned and threw her paws over her ears. "I hate him sometimes!"
"He's just being silly," Rabbitjoy said, patting Frostpaw's back. Rattlepelt placed her repaired basket against the den wall. As she stretched her front legs, Wildclaw peeked into the den. Her amber eyes seemed brighter than they had in a few moons.
"Rattlepelt, come outside!" Wildclaw chirped. "It's finally a bit warm. I want to go on a walk."
"I should really help Rabbitjoy finish the basket repairs," Rattlepelt chuckled, snatching loose twine in her claws.
"You've been trapped in camp for ages," Rabbitjoy scoffed. "If it's warm, go outside! We only have one other basket to repair. Frostpaw and I can fix it." Rabbitjoy rolled the remnants of a broken basket toward her. Wildclaw kneaded the sand, eyes glowing. Rattlepelt purred. It was hard to resist that face.
"Let's go, then," Rattlepelt sighed, fixing her lavender-lined fox pelt onto her back. Frostpaw grumbled under her breath as she searched for fresh twine and Rattlepelt joined Wildclaw outside of the artisan's den.
Wildclaw was right; it was so unseasonably warm that the Clan didn't need a bonfire in the center of camp. Snow clung in piles along the dark and cool corners of the rocks and wood, but RippleClan could once again relax against the cool sand of their home. The land beyond camp was no longer white and brown, but a strange, gray-tinted mixture of tan and green. Though Rattlepelt's skin still danced under the soft chill, it was a pleasurable chill. It was a fool's spring, the sort that RippleClan would usually take full advantage of.
But RippleClan was not, in fact, taking advantage of the good weather. Instead, Wolfgaze, Weevilsight, Ravenweaver, and Trumpetspore hovered around the medicine den. They quietly shared tongues and muttered soft encouragement. Some of their friends and mates (Billowhaze, Anchovystrike, Brightreed, Scaleripple) comforted them, glancing into the shadows of the medicine den and quickly looking away.
"It's Mosspounce," Wildclaw sighed when she noticed her mate's confused look. "Honeybuzz just told his daughters. The infection is getting bad. They aren't sure how much longer he has."
"Should we visit?" Rattlepelt gulped.
"Later," Wildclaw quietly promised, heading for the camp exit. "The walk might give me time to think of what to say." Rattlepelt watched as Honeybuzz trailed out of the medicine den, merging into the small crowd. Trumpetspore scrambled into the medicine den as Honeybuzz spoke softly to Wolfgaze, Weevilsight, and Ravenweaver. Rattlepelt dipped her head, allowing her fox pelt to cover her eyes. She ignored the rest of the Clan and pressed into the false spring.
The birds hesistantly tested the warm weather, chirping their questions to one another, as though their fellow feathered friends could provide an answer. The mid-morning light offered the land a chance to stretch and feed itself before the explosion of frost and snow that would mark the remainder of the year. Twigs and branches, reminders of summer's rich foliage, rubbed against Rattlepelt's fox pelt. Her paws sank into the wet earth. Wildclaw strolled beside her, quiet, her ever-present guardian.
The silence stretched on for longer than Rattlepelt expected. The pair journeyed deeper into the forest, simply basking in the light. At one point, they spotted Tallowheart and Splashtuft, going over a few tales. Wildclaw raised her tail in greeting and passed them by. The two mates wandered over boulders and roots. All the while, Rattlepelt thought and thought and thought.
A twig snapped deep within the trees. Rattlepelt froze, eyes locking on the sound. A great buck stared at Rattlepelt and Wildclaw. Its magnificent crown of antlers snagged leaves that refused to fall from their trees despite the pressure of snow and time. Its brown coat blended into the forest. It flicked a round ear at Rattlepelt, blinking thoughtlessly.
"Wonder if it thinks you're a cat or a fox," Wildclaw hummed. The buck slowly lost interest in the two cats. It bent back down and chewed on a twig just beginning to bud, tricked by the heatwave. Rattlepelt took a deep breath. Her chest still hurt from the shock.
"We should go home," Rattlepelt suddenly said.
"What?" Wildclaw scoffed. "We're barely past mid-morning. Why turn back now?" Rattlepelt couldn't answer her mate. Did she even have an answer?
"Do you ever have a feeling that something bad is about to happen?" Rattlepelt asked. She jumped onto a large, mossy rock and spun in circles, trying to get comfortable among the limp leaves.
"Define 'something bad' for me," Wildclaw said. She joined Rattlepelt on top of the rock.
"We've had a lot of good in our lives lately," Rattlepelt groaned. "You've been a great mother to the toms."
"Now that I don't have a death wish anymore?" Wildclaw chuckled.
"You still get into some good scraps," Rattlepelt hummed, gently bunting her mate. "No, I just mean that even with⊠what happened with Lemmy, the two of us, we've been alright."
"Don't tell the rest of the Clan this," Wildclaw muttered, batting at the wet leaves under her, "but I get where Lemmy came from with killing Achilles and everything. It all spun out of control for her. I feel bad for her, even if she killed our Clanmates."
"It just makes me think," Rattlepelt groaned, "is it our turn next? When am I going to suffer some major loss again?"
"What do you mean?"
"When will tragedy strike the ones I love? Will one of my moms die? Will something happen to Shrewflame, or Whitepaw?" Rattlepelt pulled her fox pelt off. She was almost panting under its heat. "I feel like something's standing right behind me. Like I'm going to ruin everything."
"Is this about the Shardling? We keep telling you that wasn't your fault. It's not like you wanted to be possessed."
"It still happened, Wildclaw. It nearly broke me. Something's telling me that it will happen again. I know I sound crazyâ"
"You don't sound crazy." Wildclaw leaned against Rattlepelt. "It's been a hard few moons. You've been stuck in camp. You're stressed. Why do you think I wanted to go on a walk with you?" Rattlepelt sighed. She forced the ripping, anxious itch in her chest out with her breath.
"You're right, you're right," Rattlepelt groaned.
"I always am," Wildclaw chirped.
"Don't gloat," Rattlepelt chuckled, shoving Wildclaw's muzzle down. Rattlepelt dragged her fox pelt back over her sensitive skin as a breeze made the bare branches dance. Rattlepelt could still smell the deer on the wind, but she smelled something else too, something pungent and stranger than any deer.
"Humans?" Wildclaw muttered, tasting the air. "Oh, those are definetely humans. Yuck." Wildclaw sneered at the smell.
"I hope they aren't setting more traps," Rattlepelt gulped. "Frostpaw almost stepped in one last moon!"
"Let's see if they are," Wildclaw suggested, hopping off the rock. "Keep low, alright?" Rattlepelt nodded. She and Wildclaw crept through the twigs and leaves, letting their noses lead them closer to where the WheatClan and AshClan borders met. As they pushed deeper into the forest, the humans soon became audible. There were two of them, with gangly meows that wavered in pitch. Rattlepelt kept low, the tail of her fox pelt dragging on the undergrowth. Wildclaw, nimble as ever, slipped silently closer to the noisy humans.
The two humans stomped around the corner of the three Clans. They were young from their size, with the tight-fitting leathers that typically marked males. Rattlepelt marveled at the leather's bright colors and strange patterns, unlike anything artisans could achieve. The smaller of the two held his front limbs close to his chest, keeping two small forms steady while his taller friend followed and yowled.
"I've never seen humans fight each other," Wildclaw muttered as the smaller human hissed at his companion. The black masses resting in the human's embrace shifted. Tiny mews broke through the human screeching. Rattlepelt held her breath when two sets of baby blue eyes peeled over the leather. The small human had two black kits!
The storyteller in Rattlepelt imagined what the humans could be doing. Were they yowling about the kits? Who were the kits? Did the humans take them from their mother? Did they even know their mother? Rattlepelt's anxieties slipped away, overshadowed by overwhelming curiosity focused on the strange unknowable creatures called humans.
The small human suddenly made a quick, snappy hiss at his companion. His strange eyes focused on the undergrowth⊠the undergrowth where Rattlepelt and Wildclaw lurked. The pair stayed utterly still, eyes locked on the smaller human. The small human slowly crouched, still staring at the two mollies. He made a soft, mouse-like chirp that drew all of Rattlepelt's attention. It made her stomach growl, as though she spotted a mouse shuffling through the leaves. Her ears turned straight on to the human. Rattlepelt caught herself before she slipped a paw out of her hiding spot. Whatever strange magic the human was wielding, Rattlepelt could not give in!
The human continued making that alluring sound as he carefully placed the two kittens on the ground. They couldn't have been more than half a moon old. The kits crawled on top of each other, stunned by the sudden lack of warmth. The human crept back like a hunter. He crouched at the side of a tree fox-lengths away from the kits.
"Is this some type of trap?" Rattlepelt asked.
"What kind of trap uses kits?" Wildclaw muttered. "I think⊠they want us to take the kits."
"I thought humans loved kittens."
"Maybe they don't want to take care of them."
"So they leave them in the forest? How cruel."
"But they aren't, they see us. I think they're looking for Clan cats." Did the humans know about the Clans? Did they know about RippleClan?
The tall human snapped at his smaller friend and grabbed his shoulder. The human spun and shoved him off, sneering. They yipped and growled at each other, with their mangled paws waving wildly at the kits. Rattlepelt steadied her jaw. She crept out of the undergrowth. The nose of her fox pelt touched the light first. Wildclaw snuck alongside her. The humans no longer noticed them.
Rattlepelt snatched the scruff of the bulkier kit, a tom with a slight smoky pattern across his pelt. Wildclaw grabbed his brother, who looked nearly identical. As soon as they had a good hold of the kits, Wildclaw and Rattlepelt ran. The two humans startled, finally aware of what the cats were up to, but they had no chance of catching them.
Rattlepelt and Wildclaw only slowed down when the ocean peeked between the trees. They skidded up to a sandy beach and dropped the kits. Both toms were shockingly quiet, merely huffing at the sudden stop and trying to get their bearings. Rattlepelt panted hard. Wildclaw groaned, stretching her hind legs.
"Well," Wildclaw huffed, "I think we found your bad feeling." She waved a paw at the kits.
"You know this isn't what I meant," Rattlepelt muttered. She sat beside the two black kits. Her fox pelt slipped off from all that running. The tail floated on top of the kittens' heads. The bulky tom's permanently unsheathed claws snagged one of the dried lavender petals woven into the fur. So much like Shrewflame.
"I don't know about you," Wildclaw hummed, slipping next to her mate, "but this feels like one of those moments StarClan designs just for us." Wildclaw dipped her paw in front of the smaller black tom, who instinctively crawled to it. He latched his tiny muzzle onto Wildclaw's toe. "The next step seems pretty clear to me. Ready to be a mom again, Rattle?"
(Wildclaw: 83, female, caretaker, fierce, trusted advisor, good fighter)
(Midnightkit: 0, male, kit, polite)
(Valleykit: 0, male, kit, quiet)
Mosspounce died of an infected wound.
[Image ID: Ravenweaver, Trumpetspore, Washington, Wolfgaze, and Weevilsiht crowd around Mosspounce.]
---
"Lemmy better get here soon," Mosspounce muttered. His bandaged, sightless eyes gazed out of the medicine den. "She'll be⊠very upset if she misses this."
Mosspounce laid in the back of the medicine den, surrounded by his daughters and Trumpetspore. The other clerics all left the den, giving the family their privacy. Washington was still there, though; Mosspounce had insisted the old tom not leave. The glow of a yellow sunset dripped between the thin gaps in the wood, dappling Mosspounce's pelt. Trumpetspore practically laid in the nest with Mosspounce, curling around him. She whimpered as though he had already died. Whenever her voice rose to a cry, Weevilsight had to close her eyes and push back her sudden rage. She couldn't even think about her father. All she wanted was for her aunt to shut up.
When Mosspounce made his comment, Ravenweaver looked ready to join Trumpetspore in her pre-mature vigil. Wolfgaze's hazel eyes tightened. Weevilsight stuck her nose into Mosspounce's ear. For a moment, she was just a cleric again, checking on her sick patient. Mosspounce's ear burned.
"If she wanted to be here she wouldn't haveâŠ" Wolfgaze growled.
Wolfgaze bit her tongue, however, when Ravenweaver quietly snapped "She's still our mom, Wolf." Wolfgaze paced around the empty nests of the medicine den, keeping her supernatural gaze off her father. Ravenweaver crawled to the edge of Mosspounce's nest and rested her head by his sickly-smelling wounds. Her lavender crown fell onto Mosspounce's head. Mosspounce shifted just enough to nose Ravenweaver's forehead.
"Your old molly's just off hunting, Mossy," Washington suddenly coughed from his nest. "She's on her way." Mosspounce purred softly and groomed his daughter's head, unable to lift his own and properly share tongues. All the mollies in the den stared at the old gray tom.
"I don't know if we should lie to him, Washington," Wolfgaze muttered, squirming under Washington's wizened eye.
"He can't understand what's happening anymore," Weevilsight quietly explained. "He's too far gone."
"Don't say that, stop saying that," Trumpetspore whimpered. She buried her face in Mosspounce's back.
"It's happening, Trumpetspore!" Weevilsight suddenly hissed, the petals in her fur fluttering out as she turned to her grieving aunt. "And⊠and there's nothing else we can do for him." Weevilsight stepped back, forcing her sneer off her face as Trumpetspore wailed again. Trumpetspore clawed at the edge of Mosspounce's nest and shook so hard that Mosspounce moved as well. A painful buzz filled Weevilsight's chest and made her limbs ache. Her head burned with too many thoughts. There was nothing she could do. Not for Mosspounce, not for Lemmy. She was losing both of them in less than a moon.
"I'm not trying to intrude," Washington croaked, shaky paws pushing out from his nest, "but could you help me close to him?" Weevilsight took a while to move, even as Washington groaned under the simple yet mountainous effort of standing. Washington's groaning mixed with Trumpetspore's moans in a painful chorus that threatened to undo Weevilsight's remaining sanity. The tortoiseshell cleric slipped beside Washington and supported his large weight. With Weevilsight under him and his broken leg stiff and splinted at his side, Washington limped to Mosspounce's nest.
"You're a funny old flea-feast," Mosspounce whimpered as Washington fell next to him.
"I'm glad I could make you laugh," Washington purred, "even if we haven't known one another long." Washington set his paw against Mosspounce's shoulder. "I'm sorry to see you go. But this is a good death, in my eyes."
"A good death?" Wolfgaze huffed, marching in front of Washington. "What would be 'good' is if my father wasn't dying at all!"
"But he's dying with his family around him," Washington groaned, waving at the mollies crowded around Mosspounce. "That's more than many get."
"Hi again, Tempest," Mosspounce muttered, lifting his head slightly. "Have you met my mollies? They're good kits." Weevilsight's paws inched toward the exit. She needed to stay, she had to stay, yet her body pushed her outside. Still, she stayed long enough to catch her father's last words.
(Trumpetspore: 52, female, warrior, nervous, makes the best pottery, good storyteller)
(Weevilsight: 26, female, cleric, daring, deep StarClan bond)
(Wolfgaze: 26, female, codekeeper, thoughtful, connection to StarClan, great speaker)
(Ravenweaver: 26, female, artisan, den builder, very clever)
(Washington: 219, male, elder, nervous, good mediator)
Mitespark and Wolverineheart have grown closer over time, relying on one another through the recent chaos. They decide to become mates. Wolverineheartâs littermates celebrate with the pair.
[Image ID: Mitespark speaks with Wolverineheart while Boughfur, Thundergale, and Brightreed stand behind their sister in support. Under Mitespark, it says + MATE: WOLVERINEHEART. Under Wolverineheart, it says + MATE: MITESPARK.]
(Mitespark: 33, female, artisan, charismatic, great mediator)
(Wolverineheart: 23, female, warrior, troublesome, student of science)
(Boughfur: 23, female, historian, righteous, great climber)
(Thundergale: 23, female, teacher, adventurous, great hunter, good speaker)
(Brightreed: 23, female, warrior, righteous, student of art)
Moontide and Cobaltchaser don't move in time to avoid a large fir tree falling right on top of them. A patrol doesn't find them until they've both moved on to StarClan.
[Image ID: Moontide and Cobaltchaser are both StarClan spirits. Moontide says, "We need to see our sisters."]
With soup for getting food and water to Currentsmokeâs stomach and ointment to fight the infection growing in his jaw, Troutpool wracks her mind for anything else that might help her patient. At least Yellowburstâs yellowcough is gone.
[Image ID: Troutpool treats Currentsmoke with Robinkit's ghost standing behind the latter. Under Troutpool, it reads LEVEL UP! GHOST SENSE â GHOST SIGHT. Under Currentsmoke, it reads + INFECTION. Yellowburst walks away, with - CONDITION: YELLOWCOUGH under her.]
"I know it stings," Troutpool cooed as she rubbed ointment along Currentsmoke's fracture, "but this will help kill the infection." Currentsmoke whined softly, but did not speak. There wasn't much he could say clearly; ever since Yarrowclaw carried him into camp after the accident, the clerics kept his muzzle wrapped in bandages and soft leather, preventing it from moving. Currentsmoke had to keep his mouth still if he didn't want to live with a crooked jaw the rest of his life.
Troutpool should have been able to prevent the infection. Currentsmoke hardly left the medicine den, had never thought of leaving camp. Troutpool and her denmates groomed the large gash across his face well, they kept track of what treatments they gave him. How did he develop an infection? What did Troutpool do wrong?
Pawsteps trapsed through the sand outside just as Troutpool smeared the last of the infection-kiling ointment. Yellowburst entered the otherwise empty den, carefully carrying a bowl of soup. Steam gently flew off the broth's glistening surface.
"I strained the solid bits out, just like you asked," Yellowburst said, placing the bowl in front of Currentsmoke's nest.
"You're wonderful, Yellowburst," Troutpool purred. She rubbed the remaining ointment on her paws off onto a scrap of leather. "When you're finished with your meal, can you ask my mother which caretakers are free? I have a bundle of bandages and leather that need washed."
"I'll pass it along," Yellowburst promised. "Are you feeling any better, Currentsmoke?"
"I guess that's all we can ask for," Yellowburst chuckled awkwardly. "I'll see if Sandhollow would tell you any stories to pass the time later. Stay strong!" Yellowburst gently touched Currentsmoke's forehead and retreated from the den.
"Let me know when you're ready to eat," Troutpool sighed, placing her ointment back on the den's vast shelves. "I know it hurts, but if I help you open your mouth, we can make sure you don't make things worse." The fur on Troutpool's neck tingled. She paused, tail rising. She recognized that feeling, the sort that had lingered since her first days as a cleric, that eery sign of StarClan at work. She felt it at the ritual to weaken the Spirits of Shadow, she felt it when Oilstripe spoke to ghosts of friends passed, and she felt it every time she visited StarClan's Shrine. This time was different, though. This time, Troutpool heard a voice.
"I'll try to lower your pain, Current," the newcomer said. "Mom and I will get you through this, whatever happens." Troutpool turned slowly. A sparkling figure stood behind Currentsmoke, the spirit's transparent tail dancing over Currentsmoke's flank. He was dark red, with deep blue eyes and a splash of white wrapping around his chest and back. Troutpool recognized him. She would never forget the face of a kit she couldn't save.
"Robinkit?" Troutpool muttered. Robinkit jumped, attention wrenched away from Currentsmoke.
"How do you see me?" Robinkit yelped. "You're not supposed to see me!"
"I'm sorry?" Troutpool gulped, thoughts spinning.
"Saah-ry fah what?" Currentsmoke sighed with a slow, soft shake of his head. "Yah're doehng great."
"Oh, no," Troutpool stammered, shaking out her pelt, "sorry, Currentsmoke, I wasn't talking to you, I⊠I'll be back soon." Troutpool scurried out of the medicine den, fur burning. The camp was packed for the mid-day meal, basking in the late spring haze. Troutpool kept her eyes down, trying to look as sane as possible.
"You can see me!" Robinkit ran after Troutpool with silent paws. "I'm supposed to be invisible!"
"Don't look at me!" Troutpool hissed under her breath, sparing a quick glance back at her ghostly pursuer. "I'm not trying to disturb you!"
Near the entrance of camp, not far from the apprentice's den, Oilstripe sat alone, sunbathing. Except Troutpool realized her mother wasn't alone. Two ghosts Troutpool did not recognize sat around Oilstripe. One was a brown tabby who spoke animatedly, tail and paws flying about. The other was a light brown kit who laid on their back, watching the other ghost upside-down.
"So I tell Silverpaw, being dead isn't so bad!" the brown tabby chuckled. "you can fly now! And never aging, that's going to feel great!"
"Says the adult ghost," the kit scoffed. Oilstripe chuckled, hiding her humor under her paw.
"Mom," Troutpool called, unable to smooth her pelt. Oilstripe quickly picked up on her daughter's fear scent.
"What's wrong?" Oilstripe asked, hurrying up. "Is it Currentsmoke?"
"No, it's me," Troutpool whispered, trying and failing to ground her thoughts. "Mom, do you, um⊠please tell me you see Robinkit behind me."
"Hi, Oilstripe," Robinkit sighed. Troutpool closed her eyes and prayed the kit's ghost would go away. This wasn't how clerics communicated with StarClan. It bypassed all the rules Fennelspot taught her, invaded their divine privacy. How could Troutpool respect the traditions of her profession if she saw ghosts?
"Do you see Robinkit?" Oilstripe asked.
"Better question, do you see me?" the brown tabby huffed. Troutpool risked opening one eye. The brown tabby ghost stared at her with giant eyes. They gasped dramatically and cried, "She looked at me, she looked at me!" Troutpool shut her eyes again.
"Troutpool, you're alright," Oilstripe promised. "I see them."
"I'm not supposed to," Troutpool gulped. "I have to respect them. I can't go around the rules."
"Do you think I'm doing something wrong?" Oilstripe scoffed. She gently groomed her daughter's cheek. "Because if you think you're disobeying the code, then I must be. Call the codekeepers, put me on trial." Troutpool risked another look at the brown tabby. Their face was soft, free of judgment or divine wrath.
"I'm Applepelt," the brown tabby said with a friendly twitch of her whiskers. "I'm a friend of your mother's. And I don't think you're disrespecting anyone just by seeing us."
"But how do you see us?" the unknown kit huffed, pacing around Troutpool.
"Twinekit raises a good point," Oilstripe muttered. "If anyone were to inherit my sight, I would have expected Tallowheart or Slushtrail, but Carnationspeckle gave birth to me."
"Does that make you less of a mother?" Applepelt scoffed, slipping beside Troutpool and Oilstripe. Her transparent paw batted Oilstripe's head, but it phased through as though going through air. Oilstripe still flinched, unable to fight back a purr. "If this is something the All-Seeing did, do you think they would care about blood? We aren't talking about pelt patterns."
"It's still important that I respect your work when you visit us," Troutpool gulped, giving Applepelt some room. "I'm afraid I interupptedâŠ" Troutpool looked back to where Robinkit had been, but the dead kit was gone.
"You'll get used to that," Oilstripe promised, nuzzling her daughter's neck. Troutpool sighed, relaxing into Oilstripe.
"Now, if you're finished panicking," Applepelt chuckled, splaying their paws about wildly as they fell on their belly, "I can tell you some of the embarassing things your mother got up to when she was younger."
"You can't embarass me," Oilstripe said, eyes narrowing in a challenge. Applepelt stared at Oilstripe like a victorious hunter.
"Does the phrase 'holy balls' mean anything to you?" Applepelt cooed. Troutpool choked on a laugh.
"You weren't even here for that!" Oilstripe gasped, swatting at Applepelt's ghost. "How do you know about that?"
"StarClan sees all," Applepelt said in a wobbley, dramatic voice. This time, Troutpool set her laughter (and her insecurities) free.
Yarrowclaw stays out all day and brings back one piece of fresh-kill for each main prey species in the territory. Even though Rabbitjoy notes that they may not be able to work through all that prey before it rots, Yarrowclaw insists the hunt was an important ritual to safeguard the Clan.
[Image ID: Rabbitjoy, Halibutdusk, and Elmsprout stare at Yarrowclaw, who yowls "Eat, eat!"]
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Oilstripe wakes up and wails, her dreams haunted by visions of Rustshade.
[Image ID: Oilstripe says to Carnationspeckle, âWe need a fresh start, Carny.â Under her, it says + CONDITION: NIGHTMARES, PREGNANT.]
She saw him. Oilstripe saw her father, a glimmering ghost standing between the trees, heather blue eyes coldly watching as she ran towards him. Why wouldnât he visit? Why did he have to so coldly reject his own daughter? Downstar told her she saw Rustshade in StarClan when she lost her life to the humans, a soft comfort to ease an awkward relationship, so why, why would he see Downstar and not Oilstripe? Why was he always a bit too far away for Oilstripe to reach him? He didnât need to speak! He didnât need to do anything! He just had to be the quiet, comforting backbone Oilstripe grew up with. She needed her father!
Oilstripe woke up in the earliest moments of the new day with a lump in her throat. The dull embers of the campfire glowed against the edge of the den. Oilstripeâs Clan was still asleep, piled on one another in peaceful dreams. Clammask and Halibutdusk were awake, tucked into the same nest, muttering to one another. Oilstripe and Halibutdusk made eye contact, but Oilstripe quickly looked away, trying to breathe., She crawled out of her nest. She tiptoed around Wildclaw and Rattlepelt, gently tucked under their fox pelt. Oilstripe stepped into the cool, salty night.
Scrubmaskâs ghost laid just outside the warriorâs den, startling Oilstripe. The dead warrior did not move, ears still turned to the den. Her eyes passed over Oilstripe and her raised fur. Scrubmask scoffed.
âYouâre so distracted by your dream,â she said, âI would bet you didnât notice your mate was gone.â Oilstripe looked back inside. Sure enough, Carnationspeckleâs spot by Oilstripeâs nest was empty. Oilstripe sniffed. Her mateâs scent was fresh, and still close by. She followed the scent out of camp.Â
Carnationspeckle was on guard duty. Her fur drifted in the soft breeze. When she saw Oilstripe, it was like her soul returned to her body, her usual soft glimmer sparking in her eyes once more. Oilstripe curled up beside Carnationspeckle.
âYou look tired,â Carnationspeckle whispered.
âI am,â Oilstripe mumbled. âIâm not having good dreams.â
âHave you talked to Paleseed?âÂ
âSheâs been⊠I donât know, distracted. Besides, I feel stupid for not knowing how to deal with this. Everyone else is able to grieve. I get to see other spirits all the time, and it might still hurt to know theyâre not here anymore, but I can check in on them. My dad⊠he doesnât want to see me. Heâs making the active decision to not be involved in my life anymore.â
âHe wouldnât be able to see Clammask whether or not he visited. Maybe he wanted to be fair to both of his daughters. Maybe he knew Scrubmask was going to die, and didnât want to make his own passing any worse for Clammask.â Carnationspeckle whimpered a bit as she said Scrubmaskâs name. Oilstripe sat up.
âLifeâs been hard for us lately, hasnât it,â Oilstripe sighed. Carnationspeckle leaned against Oilstripe.
âI donât like being alone in dens anymore,â Carnationspeckle muttered. âI get nervous, no matter how much I talk myself down. I get nauseous when I eat prey as-is, no matter how well-cooked it is. My mind thinks itâs raw, like it was with the Witch Hunters. I got so sick with them.â
âYou havenât told me that before.â Oilstripe nuzzled Carnationspeckleâs shoulder.
âSpikecrash has been helping me. I didnât want to give it power by mentioning it to anyone else. I thought it was getting better, and then Scrubmask⊠do you think it was a Witch Hunter? Do you think weâll ever know? Iâm terrified, Oilstripe. I donât know what to do with myself.â
âMe neither.âÂ
Oilstripe and Carnationspeckle buried their faces in one anotherâs fur, breathing in the otherâs warm scent. All Oilstripe could hear was Carnationspeckleâs soft whimpers. and the breeze in the trees. All they had lost in the past few seasons, friends and family and sleep and normalcy, bit at Oilstripe like a pack of rats. Rustshade was not there, but Oilstripe could feel her father in her heart, his voice springing to life. Youâll lose a lot more before your journeyâs done. Find something to fill the space around that void.
âWe need a fresh start, Carny,â Oilstripe sniffled, stepping back. âWeâve been chasing one tragedy after another, we need something new.â Her words got stuck in her throat. She forced them out like a cough. âWe were trying to get pregnant when you were kidnapped. Letâs try again.â Carnationspeckle stared at Oilstripe like she said the ocean was made of bone broth.
âNow?â Carnationspeckle asked. âI⊠Oilstripe, I donât know if weâre in the right place to do that.â
âAnd I donât know if we can wait!â Oilstripe groaned. She leaned her head against Carnationspeckleâs head. âRaising Troutpool with you has been incredible. Sheâs so much like you, clever and caring and good at what she does. Iâd like a kit or two like me!â
âTroutpool does have your eyes,â Carnationspeckle pointed out, a bit of laughter breaking through her sorrow and shock.
âShe and Rattlepelt are great daughters,â Oilstripe chuckled, mind fuzzy with Carnationspeckleâs scent. âMaybe we can add a son to the pot. We can teach them all about Scrubmask and my dad and, and anyone else we may lose. I want to keep going with you.â Carnationspeckle took a moment. Her breath caught. Her nose touched Oilstripeâs.
âLetâs find a suitor somewhere beside the human settlement,â Carnationspeckle gulped, a sob mixing with her joy. Oilstripe laughed, love pressing against the hole in her life as she pressed against Carnationspeckle.
Halibutdusk has been a comforting presence in Clammaskâs life for as long as she can remember, and with Scrubmask gone, she decides to commit herself to them.
[Image ID: Halibutdusk and Clammask have + MATE: CLAMMASK and + MATE: HALIBUTDUSK written under them respectively.]
---
Clammaskâs shifting and muttering woke Halibutdusk up. It had been a dreamless sleep, easy to disturb and hard to return to, which meant the rest of RippleClan was left in their peaceful slumber despite Clammaskâs state. Halibutdusk had moved their nest closer to Clammask after Scrubmaskâs death, giving them a perfect view of how Clammaskâs back leg twitched and the tip of her claws peeked out of her paws. Halibutdusk scooted to the side of Clammaskâs nest. They quietly watched their friendâs tremors. Their soft breath stirred Clammaskâs whiskers. The golden molly opened her eyes partially, the faint embers outside catching her irises.
âHalibut?â she grumbled, throwing a paw over her muzzle.
âSorry,â Halibutdusk whispered, giving Clammask room to breathe. âI wanted to check on you. Your dreams seemed cruel.â
âIn a way,â Clammask yawned, slowly blinking. She sat up, prompting Halibutdusk to their paws. She hesitated as she spoke. âYouâre a warrior, Halibutdusk. Do you ever dream about killing other cats in battle?â Halibutdusk wondered if the truth was appropriate in Clammaskâs situation. It was Clammask, though; she would understand.
âDo you remember when my littermates and I snuck out of camp to reclaim territory from AshClan?â they asked.
âOf course I do,â Clammask whispered. âDownstar was so scared when my father brought you home.â Halibutdusk felt younger for a moment, an apprentice once more, wrapped up in Wildclaw and Shadowdropâs antics, pulling them into their own. Shadowdrop clawed at Halibutduskâs heart, sticking to them like bitter honey.
âI blinded Heronflank,â Halibutdusk said. âI could have killed him. It was the first serious wound I inflicted on another cat. Outside of a few fights with rogues, I havenât hurt anyone else like that since. Sometimes, when Iâve had a difficult day, Heronflank sneaks into my dreams, and this time, I donât just blind him.â Clammask nodded softly. As she did, Halibutdusk noticed Oilstripe on the other side of the den, bright blue eyes wide. They stared at each other for a moment before Oilstripe slipped out of the den. It seemed Clammask wasnât the only cat having a difficult night.
âSo you regret it in your dreams, then,â Clammask muttered. Her shoulders tensed. âAm I wicked for not feeling regret until I wake up?â
âOnly the dead can control their dreams,â Halibutdusk reminded her. âDreams just happen. You canât be blamed for what your heart does when youâre not in control.â
âWill you judge me if I tell you what I dreamed of?â
âNever.â
âI killed the Witch Hunter that killed Scrubmask.â So it was about Scrubmask. Just not in the way Halibutdusk assumed. Clammask stared at the wall as she spoke. âI know we arenât sure it was a Witch Hunter, but who else could it have been? I dreamed I drowned them like they drowned her, and I didnât regret it.â
âI miss her too.â Halibutdusk laid back down, tucking their paws under them. âHow are the toms taking her death?â
âThey have been asking Rapidleaf for stories of when Scrubmask was an apprentice,â Clammask said. âThey donât have much else to do since three of them are still recovering from that bad rabbit. Theyâll be okay. Iâm proud of them! Theyâre strong toms. They have Scrubmaskâs spirit.â
âAnd you?â Halibutdusk wondered. Clammask was not as quick to reply this time around.
âIt feels wrong to feel better,â she eventually muttered. âIâm always going to miss her, but I donât want her death to be something that keeps me down forever. Iâm sorry, but I donât want to be like Downstar when her mood sours.â
âYou didnât offend me,â Halibutdusk promised. âMy mother knows itâs hard to be around her when sheâs struggling. She doesnât want to be like that either.â
âI never want to let Scrubmask go,â Clammask gulped, fur bristling, âbut I donât want her to keep me stuck, either. I want to carry her with me and start my life again. I want to grow closer to Oilstripe. I want to see my sons through their apprenticeships. I want to fall in love again!â Nearby warriors stirred slightly at the emotion in Clammaskâs voice. Clammask flinched and leaned closer to Halibutdusk. âIs that wrong?â
âWhy would it be?â Halibutdusk asked. Clammaskâs eyes softened. Her breath grew so slow and soft, Halibutdusk could not see her body move.
âCan we go on a walk together?â Clammask asked. Halibutdusk was about to agree when Clammask quickly muttered, âNot as friends.â Halibutdusk cocked their head. Clammask took a giant breath. âI jumped right into having kits with Scrubmask because she won me over so quickly, and I love her, but I want to see what it feels like to flirt and let a relationship grow like Oilstripe and Carnationspeckle did, or like Weedfoot and James, so if youâre interested we can see what itâs like to look at each other as mates rather than friends.â She panted as she finished her anxious rambling. âSorry. I⊠really needed to say that.â
Halibutduskâs mind was still behind. Mates? Romance? With them? Halibutdusk didnât consider themself a handsome or even good looking cat; dusky gray fur without any special markings, about as bland as a tabby could look. They had friends, there wasnât a reason they wouldnât, but for someone to actually take a romantic interest in them⊠especially Clammask, of all cats! This gorgeous golden molly who helped all the caretaker apprentices with their chores and helped Halibutdusk tell stories⊠what else could they say butâ
Parsley wanders out into the territory. She is later found dead, a peaceful expression on her face. Carnationspeckle is hit hardest.
[Image ID: Carnationspeckle and Oilstripe face Parsleyâs ghost.]
---
If RippleClan had not known about Oilstripeâs wonderous ability, they would have called her mad as she yowled at nothing, demanding that Parsley, whose gray-speckled body laid in camp, explain why âin the Dark Forest would you leave camp like that without a word to Carnationspeckle?â Carnationspeckle loved her mate and how fiercely she fought for her, even if a new part of her soul felt empty without the confident former loner in her life. Even though she was sluggish with her recently developed pregnancy, even though she still wasnât sleeping well, Oilstripe insisted she join Carnationspeckle, Rabbitjoy, and Trumpetspore in burying Parsley beside Scrubmask and Fennelspot. If Oilstripe wasnât encouraging her, Carnationspeckle wasnât sure she would have been able to make the journey to the graveyard.
Rabbitjoy had a sense of humor with Parsleyâs burial accessory. She found some parsley leaves and wove them into a wrap around the small remnant of her tail. Parsleyâs ghost was likely laughing at that. Carnationspeckle could hardly imagine Parsley with her tail, and the wrap would have been painfully tight had she been alive.Â
Had she been alive.
Burying Parsley was a quick affair. Her body had been blessed, her memory honored, and all that was left was to put her old, frail form in the dirt. Rabbitjoy and Trumpetspore took up the bearâs share of digging. Oilstripe and Carnationspeckle sat to the side, too tired to contribute. It was just after sunhigh, and it seemed like the sun wanted to treat Parsleyâs body like prey on a fire, cooking everyone else with her. They buried her in the shade, all four mollies silently noting that Parsley would have been upset if she was buried in the middle of the hot sunshine.
According to Oilstripe, Parsley agreed with that. The awkward expressions on Rabbitjoy and Trumpetsporeâs faces silenced any further ghostly discussion.
âStarClan, that took a while,â Rabbitjoy sighed as she kicked the last of the dirt over Parsleyâs body. âEnjoy your rest, Parsley. RippleClan is glad to have met you.â
âI know I have no say in tonightâs meal,â Trumpetspore said, grooming clumps of dirt off her paws, âbut I remember Scrubmask telling me how she convinced Parsley to stay in RippleClan. I believe she won her over with some pemmican. Could we make that for the Clan in Parsleyâs honor?â
âMosspounce and Wildclaw are on stove duty tonight,â Rabbitjoy sighed, âbut if you mention that idea, they should agree. We just have to check the ingredients. What do you think, Carnationspeckle?â
âI like that,â Carnationspeckle said, a bit of life returning to her voice.
âLetâs head home, then,â Rabbitjoy said, patting Parsleyâs grave.
âActually,â Oilstripe said, nuzzling Carnationspeckle, âwe may stay here a while longer.â They would? Carnationspeckle looked back at her mate. Why linger in the loss? Hadnât they promised each other only half a moon before that they would work to grow around the holes in their spirits? But Oilstripe placed her tail over Carnationspeckleâs, and the brown ticked molly remembered how much she trusted her star-sighted mate.
âIf you need to,â Rabbitjoy said. She touched noses with each molly and said, âWeâll be sure to save you both some pemmican. Weâll see you back at camp.â Rabbitjoy flicked her ears at Trumpetspore. The black molly nodded to Oilstripe and Carnationspeckle, then followed Rabbitjoy out of the graveyard, bugs singing them home.
âWhat are you thinking?â Carnationspeckle asked when Rabbitjoy and Trumpetspore were out of earshot.
âThe better question would be, what is Parsley thinking,â Oilstripe awkwardly admitted, laying on her side. Carnationspeckle looked around, as though she expected to develop Oilstripeâs gift and see her tortoiseshell friend standing at her own grave. âIt turns out that my little outburst in camp gave her a few things to say to you before Applepelt takes her away.âÂ
âApplepeltâs here?â Carnationspeckle gasped. âHow are they?â
âAs silly as usual,â Oilstripe chuckled. She gave a performative gasp and scoffed, âDonât make that face at me! You know Iâm right!âÂ
Carnationspeckle purred at that. It was hard to picture Applepeltâs brown face and friendly eyes, but knowing she did her best to stay a part of her friendsâ lives eased the loss a bit. Truthfully, the more Carnationspeckle embraced Oilstripeâs sight, the weaker death struck her vigil after vigil. In some ways, they werenât dead at all; they were just across the border, or on a quest, their reunion with Carnationspeckle guaranteed.
âSo whatâs about to happen?â Carnationspeckle asked, laying next to Oilstripe.Â
âIâll tell you what Parsley says,â Oilstripe explained. Carnationspeckle nodded and closed her eyes. The warmth of the sun acted like a fire on a chilly night. The buzzing bugs quieted the sorrow in her heart and her many questions. âWhat are you doing?â
âIf I donât close your eyes, Iâll just hear you, not Parsley,â Carnationspeckle explained. Oilstripe hummed and scooted closer to Carnationspeckle. To Carnationspeckleâs ears, it was not Oilstripe that spoke next, but Parsley.
âHello again, stranger.â
Carnationspeckle couldnât help it; she gave an undignified, snorting sort of laugh.
âIs that what you think she sounds like?â she laughed, staring at her flushed mate.
âYou all need to stop laughing at me, that is an accurate accent!â Oilstripe whined, her whiskers giving away her shared laughter. The bugs almost sounded like Applepelt and Parsley, laughing at Oilstripeâs odd attempt to translate for Carnationspeckle. Carnationspeckle rested her head in the direction of Parsleyâs grave and closed her eyes once more, purring.
âHi, Parsley,â she said.
âI suppose Ms. Oilstripe was right,â Parsley sighed. âKnowing how the Clans work, I probably shouldnât have just wandered off to die like that. You gotta understand though, Carnationspeckle, some cats⊠we just wanna be alone in our last moments. You can feel death coming up on you, and you donât want everyone crying and screeching over you. Itâs a natural thing, you know. Most cats are solitary folk. Death, it makes you scared. You feel weak, knowing you canât protect yourself. Donât get me wrong, I felt as safe as can be in RippleClan, but itâs not the sort of instinct you can easily ignore.â
âI just wish you went to fetch me, instead,â Carnationspeckle muttered. âYou were old enough to be my mother many times over, but ever since you came to RippleClan, I considered you one of my closest friends. Why else would I trust you to watch Troutpool when she was a kit?â
âAnd I loved that, donât misunderstand me,â Parsley said. âI wasnât seeing clearly. Literally, the world looked covered in fog, and my ears felt like they were full of bugs! You try to think logically when you feel like that.â
âBut if you had been thinking clearly, would you have let me know? I could have been with you. Wasnât it lonely, dying outside of camp like that?â
âOh, it wasnât so bad. I felt a bit better curled up in a bush like that. It was what I needed. But yes, to answer your question, I would have let you know. I might have still wanted to go out on my own, though.â Carnationspeckleâs body tightened.Â
âAll I thought when I was with the Witch Hunters was, I donât want to die away from my family.â She couldnât help it, she was crying again, shaking despite Oilstripeâs pressure on her side. âI hate thinking you might have felt like that. I donât want anyone to feel like that.â
âAnd I didnât, Carnation. I really didnât. I know Iâll be the wild old molly in a lot of catsâ memories, and Iâm happy with that. Donât feel bad for me, really. Iâm excited to see what your afterlife is all about, what with all the recent noise around death and ghosts weâve been through. And apparently, I can come visit whenever Iâd like, so Iâll be doing that a bit. Iâll be lingering around the nursery once your next litter is born, I can promise you that. Now, I know you canât feel it, but Iâm pressing my nose against your head. Just imagine it for me, alright? And donât feel too bad for old Parsley. Sheâs got it under control.âÂ
A cool nose touched Carnationspeckle. She gasped, eyes flying open, only to find it was Oilstripeâs nose on her head, not Parsleyâs. Carnationspeckle leaned into it, purring through her pain.
(Parsley: 156, female, elder, righteous, great speaker)
Paleseed and Darkkick discuss Terracottafootâs proposition.
[Image ID: Darkkick says to Paleseed, âWhy do you think you have to live up to anyone?â]
---
Darkkick did not want to be alone with Tempestshade. The cursed caretaker was an incredible cook and could stir a purr out of even Darkkickâs grumpy old heart with their kit-like antics, but, at no fault of their own, they were still cursed, and Darkkick didnât trust that she would make it home if she left camp with just Tempestshade at her side. So, when Tempestshade invited her to collect a few fresh herbs for a heart-strengthening stew, Darkkick casually dragged Paleseed with her.
Tempestshade trotted ahead with a basket, leading the pair through the humming mid-morning forest toward their favorite herb patches. They sang under their breath, seemingly happy just to have some company as they hunted down fresh thyme. Darkkick and Paleseed walked beside one another, enjoying the sunshine through the trees and the warm dirt under their paws.
âWe donât need you destroying any of these roots, remember that!â Darkkick called to Tempestshade.
âI know better than to do that!â Tempestshade laughed, spinning around and walking backwards. âBesides, who wants thyme roots in their stew? No thank you!â They spun back the right way and continued their happy trot.
âI donât think thyme strengthens the heart,â Paleseed whispered to Darkkick.
âWhatever they have planned, it should taste good at least,â Darkkick sighed. Paleseed hummed in agreement. Her tail twitched with unspoken nerves. Her chin drooped and her eyes grew lost in thought.Â
âHarvest Moon is less than a moon away,â Paleseed muttered. She glanced Tempestshadeâs way, but the young caretaker was too absorbed in their task to hear. âMy mom and I spoke with Terracottafoot, and we agreed to help them with the Autumnstar situation.â
âReally?â Darkkick scoffed, unable to stop the ice in her voice. âThat Clan was going to let Weedfoot die, and now she wants to help them?â
âYou didnât hear her at the Gathering,â Paleseed huffed, head rising to contest Darkkickâs ire. âShe talked to a lot of the AshClan cats there. Theyâre so apologetic. Whether they were alive back then or not, most of the Clan regrets what they did to my mother and her friends. She wonât let Autumnstar hurt more cats.â Darkkickâs pace slowed. Paleseed sounded more like her namesake than herself for a moment. The summer sunâs glimmer on her pelt reminded Darkkick of Paleshadeâs ginger patches.
The moment faded as quick as it came. Paleseed ducked her head once more, her moment of confidence come and gone.
âAnd you?â Darkkick sighed. âYouâre no fighter, Paleseed. I donât know what StarClan expects you to do in the Dark Forest.â
âI donât know either,â Paleseed admitted, âbut I want to be brave. I want to do my part to make a difference in someoneâs life.â
âYou do that just fine already,â Darkkick scoffed, stopping altogether. Tempestshade didnât notice, continuing through the trees without them. Paleseed stood in front of her, confused. âYou donât need to give up your life for a Clan that never wanted you born.â
âMaybe Iâm not just doing it for AshClan, then,â Paleseed suddenly snapped, her tail bristling. âMaybe I want to do more than help grieving cats. How am I ever supposed to live up to Paleshade if I canât do what StarClan asks of me?â Darkkickâs scarred tail pointed down. Her small ears tilted to the sides.Â
âWhy do you think you have to live up to anyone?â Darkkick growled. âYou think you have to be a hero to be important? You think you have to be Paleshade? If you werenât aware of it, you arenât Paleshade. Youâre your own cat, you can do nothing else with your life and still be as important as she was.â Paleseedâs frustrated warped to shock as her bristling tail slid between her legs. âBy the stars, donât be scared! You think Iâm mad at you? Iâm just trying to tell you that forcing yourself to live up to what others want of you will just make you miserable. Being a cleric, a tom, an AshClan cat, that was what everyone else wanted for me. My family, Autumnstar, even StarClan! If I donât have to be those things, what makes you think you have to be Paleshade? Do you think Waspdawn believes he has to live up to a long dead apprentice? Does Lavendertwist have to pretend to be the molly Rabbitjoy fell in love with? You shouldnât be going on a dangerous quest like this just because itâs what Paleshade would have done!âÂ
By the end of it all, Darkkick was out of breath. Paleseedâs eyes were huge, staring at the old molly as she panted and tried to smooth her pelt. Paleseed gulped, forcing her tail out from under her. Darkkick sat, the rain-hungry trail exploding in dust and coating her flank.
âMediators would call that a breakthrough,â Paleseed muttered, slightly out of breath.Â
âWell,â Darkkick huffed with a lick of her chest, âit needed to be said.â
âI still want to do it,â Paleseed said. âI promised Terracottafoot I would help. I think you should help too.â
âYou think you can convince me?â Darkkick sighed.
âItâs not exactly the sort of reason a mediator should give for something like thisâŠâ Paleseed groaned, tail circling overhead as she approached, âbut spite. Do it out of spite.â
âSpite,â Darkkick said, monotone.
âAutumnstar hurt you,â Paleseed said, sitting. âIt might help you if you got to show him how much youâve grown since then.â Darkkick thought it over, rolling the word on her tongue. Spite. Spite.
âYou should have someone else go with you anyway,â Darkkick conceded. âIf I need to go with youââ
âWhatâs slowing you down?â Tempestshade trotted back down the path, ears tilted down. âHow long have you been standing there?â
âSorry, we got distracted,â Paleseed said, slinking to Tempestshadeâs side. âWe just⊠had to talk something through. I think weâre in agreement now.âÂ
That they were.
(Darkkick: 122, trans female, lonesome, talented swimmer, understands nature)
Downstar calls for a Clan meeting and declares Mousepaw to be a codekeeper. She is now called Mousesong.
[Image ID: Mousepaw, now Mousesong, faces Rattlepelt. Mousesong says âThanks, I suppose.â Under Mousesong, it says LEVEL UP! MOUSEPAW -> MOUSESONG, ODDLY OBSERVANT -> KEEN EYE.)
---
Rattlepelt wanted to start a new tradition in the warriorâs den. Rabbitjoy was all for helping her collect the needed materials, so all the pair had to do was wake up early and prepare. It gave Rattlepelt something else to think about other than Shadowdrop.
It wasnât that Rattlepelt disliked him. He was a fine codekeeper and helped Rattlepelt improve some recipes on occasion. But he was not the right fit for Carnationspeckle. Carnationspeckle was selfless, kind, talented, and understanding. Shadowdrop simply wasnât. Carnationspeckle assured Rattlepelt that she was just friends with Shadowdrop, and while Rattlepelt believed her mother, she didnât think Shadowdrop felt the same. That, combined with her sisterâs codekeeper ceremony the night before, made it hard for Rattlepelt to sleep. So, she worked.
âI donât think sheâll like it,â Rabbitjoy muttered as dawn rose. The brown molly plucked down from between her claws. She and Rattlepelt sat outside the warriorâs den. Their Clanmates walked around them
âWe might as well see,â Rattlepelt sighed just as the newly named Mousesong entered camp. The name did not fit the way the white molly held her head high and walked through camp without a glance at anyone else. Rattlepelt swallowed hard as Mousesong trudged to the warriorâs den.
âMousesong!â Rattlepelt called as the newly named codekeeper approached. âCongratulations on your ceremony.â
âThanks,â Mousesong muttered. âWhere can I sleep?â
âThatâs what we wanted to show you,â Rabbitjoy explained. She slipped behind Rattlepelt and into the den. She stopped beside Mousesongâs new nest. There was an odd, furry lump sitting in the nest. It was made of mouse pelts, held together with twine. Mousesong pawed the bundle and it squished under the pressure. It fluffed back up when she moved her paw.
âWhat is this?â Mousesong asked.
âSomething we invented,â Rattlepelt chirped. âI tanned some mouse leather and Rabbitjoy tied them together. We stuffed down and moss in between the two. You can lay your head on it, and itâs like resting on someoneâs side. I picked mouse pelts since I know you like mice.â Mousesong crawled into her new nest and slowly put her head on the fluff-ball. âIâm hoping we can make little gifts like these for new graduates in the future.â
âWhy?â Mousesong huffed, lifting her head.
âBecause it shows that we appreciate everything youâve done,â Rattlepelt insisted. Mousesong eyed both Rattlepelt and Rabbitjoy. Rabbitjoy squirmed under Mousesongâs cold eyes, but Rattlepelt stood firm.
âThanks, I suppose,â Mousesong muttered. âYou didnât have to do that. Either of you.â She laid back down and said, âIâll catch something good for you both after I sleep.â
âThatâs a promise,â Rattlepelt chirped. âWeâll let you rest. Sweet dreams, Mousesong!â Mousesong stared at her the whole way out of the warriorâs den. Rabbitjoy glanced back a dozen times as she and Rattlepelt made their way to the âartisanâs cornerâ of camp, where they had their tanning rack and other crafting tools set up.
âI canât tell if she liked the fluff-ball,â Rabbitjoy sighed. âIâm impressed she didnât rip into you.â
âShe cares, even if she doesnât admit it,â Rattlepelt said. âI know she does. It scares her, thatâs all.â
âYou show her more grace than I can,â Rabbitjoy said, shaking her head with a soft chuckle.
âSheâs my sister,â Rattlepelt huffed. âOf course I do.â
Palekit found a hole in the rocks and, curious as all kits are, stuck her paw inside. The whole camp comes running when she screeches in pain. It seems a snake was living in that hole.
[Image ID: Weedfoot, Fennelspot, and Scrubmask run toward Palekit, who is screaming âMomma!â Under Palekit, it says + NEW SKILL: PICKY NEST BUILDER. + CONDITION: SNAKE BITE,]
---
Palekitâs scream stirred a sleeping fear in Weedfoot that she thought had long since faded.
She had been sharing stew with Fennelspot and Scrubmask, admiring the petals the former now kept tucked into his white patch. Clammask was on nursery duty, and Weedfoot could hear her childrenâs giggles from the other side of camp. There shouldnât have been a reason to be on edge. And yet, as Weedfoot dipped her muzzle into the bowl for another sip of soup, a kittenâs wail pierced the peace hovering over camp.
Weedfoot was running before she even processed what she saw. Palekit, whose eyes were shifting to match her father and whose strong legs had been the first of her litter to walk, now cradled one leg close as a slick black snake stuck its head out of a hole in the rocks.
âMomma!â Palekit wept. Fear-scent flooded her tiny body as she stared at the snake. Even with Weedfootâs head start, Fennelspot was faster. He snatched Palekit by the scruff and dragged her away from the snake. Carnationspeckle had been sharing tongues with Downstar and bolted out of the leaderâs den at the little kitâs cry. The young caretaker spotted the snake and pounced. Her fangs sunk into the snakeâs neck. She shook the snake wildly and flung it over the rocks and out of camp.
âPalekit, when did you leave the den?â Clammask hurried out of the nursery. Weedfootâs four other children lingered behind her. Poor Weedfootâs attention was solely focused on her oldest daughter, who shook as she wailed.Â
âMommaâs here, Palekit,â Weedfoot cooed as Fennelspot examined the bite on Palekitâs leg.
âWhat do you need?â Downstar barked, already running for the medicine den.
âItâs not venomous!â Fennelspot yowled, waving Downstar off. âThe bite is not venomous.â
âHow do you know?â Scrubmask asked as the rest of RippleClan gathered around Fennelspot and Weedfoot.
âDo you see how the bite wound forms an arch?â Fennelspot explained as Weedfoot groomed Palekitâs head. âThat means the snake does not have venom. I believe it was a black ratsnake. They can hurt, but they arenât deadly.â
âIs she okay?â Downstar huffed, glaring at Fennelspot with more fire in her eyes than Weedfoot had seen in moons.
âShe will be,â Fennelspot promised. âWe just need to clean the bite and make sure it doesnât get infected.â
âI want my dad,â Palekit cried, burying her little face in her motherâs fur.
âHas anyone seen James today?â Scrubmask called to the crowd.
âHe took a walk with Parsley and Rustshade,â Carnationspeckle said, spitting snake blood out of her mouth. âI can find them.â
âGo,â Downstar huffed, nodding. Carnationspeckle looped around the crowd and jogged out of camp.
âI donât like this,â Palekit moaned.
âIâll be with you the whole time,â Weedfoot promised, picking Palekit up by the scruff. As she did so, her head swam. She steadied her paws and shoved the dizziness back. She may have still been weak from the difficult birth, but stars-damn it, she was going to carry her daughter to the medicine den.
[Image ID: Waspkit, Lavenderkit, Ripplekit, and Puddlekit hog the screen. Under Ripplekit, it says + NEW SKILLS: AVID PLAY-FIGHTER, SPLASHES IN PUDDLES. Under Puddlekit, it says + NEW SKILL: MORBID CURIOSITY. Under Lavenderkit, it says + NEW SKILL: LOVES TO SING. Under Waspkit, it says + NEW SKILL: INTERESTED IN CLAN HISTORY.]
As Weedfoot and Fennelspot brought Palekit into the medicine den, four pairs of blue-tinted eyes watched them from the nursery. Clammask stood in front of them with her tail running over each of their little backs.
âDid any of you notice Palekit leave the nursery?â Clammask sighed, turning back to the kits.
âShe was playing with Puddlekit,â Waspkit immediately said, pointing his tail at his younger brother.
âI didnât think we had to stay in the nursery,â Puddlekit whined. Without his white blaze and deep blue eyes, he would look just like his injured sister, albeit a bit more pathetic (in Waspkitâs eyes at least).
âPuddlekit is in trouble,â Lavenderkit sang, trotting around Puddlekit. âPuddlekit is in trouble!â
âNo he isnât!â Ripplekit whined, smacking her white-splashed brotherâs flank. âItâs no oneâs fault!â
âRipplekit is right,â Clammask added. âThis was a bad accident. The snake could have bitten anyone. If anything, Iâm to blame for not keeping an eye on your sister.â
âClammask is in trouble, Clammask is in trouble,â Lavenderkit sang, throwing himself on Clammaskâs leg.
âIâm going to sit outside,â Clammask sighed, gently shoving Lavenderkit off. âKeep yourselves entertained, you four.â She stepped off the leather floor and onto the warm sand. She laid across the entrance, trapping the four remaining kits inside the nursery.
âListen!â Waspkit yowled. He waved his tail wildly to catch his littermatesâ attention. âPalekitâs hurt! No more getting hurt, everyone.â
âI promise,â Puddlekit said quietly.
âIâll do what I want!â Lavenderkit huffed. He launched himself on his front paws, but his headstand attempt proved futile. He tumbled forward and his flank landed right in Waspkitâs face. Waspkit growled and launched into a full assault on his brother. Ripplekit squealed and joined the fight. Puddlekit watched from the sidelines.Â
Unbeknownst to any of the small kits, their laughter warmed the frigid air suffocating the camp.
(Puddlewhisper: 20, trans female, codekeeper, righteous, natural intuition, ghost sense)
Curious and adventurous, Oilstripe and Carnationspeckle travel to the human settlement to hunt.
[Image ID: Carnationspeckle faces down Madeline, yowling, âJust run, Oil!â while Oilstripe obeys.]
---
There was something eerily exciting about entering the human settlement. Oilstripe couldnât help but shiver as she and Carnationspeckle trekked further north, following Darkkickâs advice on what to look for. The world of humans was an unknown frontier to Oilstripe, and she was exploring it with her mate on a noble mission. How could she not be excited?
âAre you sure about carrying the kits this time?â Carnationspeckle asked as she walked alongside her mate. âTroutpool alone was exhausting. I donât think weâll get just one kit again. Iâm worried about how youâd handle it.â
âBut thatâs just it,â Oilstripe purred. âI want to be a mother again, but this time, you wonât be worn down, and we wonât have⊠Shadowdrop to deal with.â Carnationspeckleâs tail patted her flank as she sneered. StarClan clearly decided he did enough to get in, since Oilstripe occasionally saw him looking after his kits or siblings or mother (she didnât speak with him. She wasnât sure he would want to anymore than she did). None of that was enough to wash out the bile that filled Oilstripeâs mouth at the thought of Shadowdropâs creepy, selfish behavior.
âIf youâre sure, Iâm sure,â Carnationspeckle promised. She rubbed against Oilstripeâs cheek.Â
âIn that case,â Oilstripe chuckled, âwhat do you think of focusing on a brown tom for a sire? That way the kits might look more like you.âÂ
âIâll take whomever seems kind,â Carnationspeckle sighed as the smell of the human settlement stung the coupleâs noses. Oilstripe could see traces of the shipwreckâs design in the towering dens and sluggish monsters. It made the foreign land feel a little less foreign and pushed Oilstripeâs paws on.
She had seen a couple spirits on her way to the settlement (Twinekit watching after her lively cousins, Locustseeker and Burdockcreek play fighting along the river), but the human settlement stole Oilstripeâs breath when she realized that her mate did not see the many cats wandering the streets. Most of them were translucent like water, as taut and strong as they likely were in life. They looked just like Cinderellaâs spirit had before she stopped appearing. Each spirit moved quickly and with purpose or lingered around a living cat.Â
Oilstripeâs curiosity spun. How did these cats work? Where did they go when they were finished in the mortal world? What were the details of their beliefs? She wanted to stop a spirit and ask them everything, but she bit her tongue. She had barely convinced Cinderella to testify during Shadowdropâs trial, and the entire time she muttered, âThis isnât right.â Oilstripe hadnât added that to her translated testimony, and Cinderella always ignored her after that. The spirits of the human settlement would probably act the same.Â
âOilstripe,â Carnationspeckle whispered, âhow many dead cats are we walking around right now?â
âMore than I expected,â Oilstripe admitted. One of the spirits had been only a few fox-lengths away from the couple when Oilstripe made the comment. Their green eyes met Oilstripeâs with a sudden realization that made the ginger molly feel too big for her pelt. The spirit slipped between two dens in a hurry.
Oilstripe and Carnationspeckle continued on, looking for a suitable tom. The humans ignored the pair, so long as they stayed out from under their feet. Their odd pelts reminded Oilstripe of Rattlepeltâs fox leather. Humans didnât have fur either; was that why they wore such odd pelts? Oilstripe had no time to ponder, however. She was on a quest!
âRabbitjoy told me about a group of young toms she spent a moon with during her traveling days,â Carnationspeckle said. âWe could see if theyâre still around. They may be willing to help.â
âI like that,â Oilstripe said. A crow cawed loudly from the roof of a tall den. The bird stared at Oilstripe, head cocked slightly. Spirits sat around the crow, watching Oilstripe and Carnationspeckle. Oilstripe nudged her mate onward. The crow cawed again and flew overhead.
âAre you feeling alright?â Carnationspeckle asked. She stopped to study Oilstripeâs face. âAre you having second thoughts?â
âNo, I want kits,â Oilstripe insisted, trying to focus on her mate over the prickling of her fur. âIâm just starting to wonder if this isnât the right place to look for a sire. I have a bad feeling about the spirits here.â
âThey canât do anything to us,â Carnationspeckle reminded her.Â
âWell, there are those rogues you saw a while ago,â Oilstripe said. A crow landed on the roof right above Oilstripe. âWeâve had some reports of them lingering by the river.â
âThis is a big place,â Carnationspeckle said, leading Oilstripe toward a shadowy path away from the stomping humans. âIf theyâre here, itâs unlikely we would see them.â Another crow landed across the horse path behind Oilstripe with a loud caw. Oilstripe scurried down the path. There were no cats or humans between the dens, giving Oilstripe a moment to breathe. Carnationspeckle let out a meow of laughter and said, âAre you scared of a few crows, Oilstripe?â
âItâs not the crows that worry me,â Oilstripe gulped. âItâs what they mean.â
âAlright, youâre too nervous to keep going,â Carnationspeckle sighed, stopping. âLetâs go home. Weâll try the farmland to the south tomorrow. If itâs about being pregnant, I can carry the kits again, Oilstripe, you donât have to lie for my sake.â
âCarny, Iâm not lying to you!â Oilstripe groaned, unable to keep her fur flat. âThereâs something wrong with this place. I never lie about what I see, and I donât lie to you.â
âWhat exactly is it that you see?â Oilstripeâs back arched high. She hissed, turning to the newcomer at the end of the path. Carnationspeckle matched her stance, all traces of humor or annoyance gone. A black and white molly sat half in shadow, half in sunlight. Crow feathers wrapped around her neck and decorated her pelt.Â
âI see a molly who needs to back away from my mate and I,â Oilstripe growled. A chorus of cawing made Oilstripe jump once more. Crows lined the edges of the rooftops overhead, staring at Oilstripe and Carnationspeckle. Spirits watched from beside the crows with burning eyes. One large crow flew down and landed beside the strange molly. It cawed in her ear, and the stranger nodded.
âA molly who claims to see the dead,â the stranger said. Her lips curled as she got to her paws. âThat may be even worse than your blasphemous clerics. Who are you to poke your nose into the business of the dead? What gives you the authority to meddle with their affairs?â The stranger flicked her tail, and three more cats appeared behind her, claws out. Carnationspeckle moved in front of Oilstripe.
âOilstripe, I want you to run,â she growled, her fur making her look twice as big as she was.
âIâm not leaving you!â Oilstripe gasped. âWhy would you say that? We can take them on together!â Oilstripe stood beside Carnationspeckle, even as her mate tried to nudge her back.
âThey want you dead, Oilstripe, not Carnationspeckle.â Oilstripe turned around once more. Applepelt shimmered and glowed at the other end of the short path. The crows screamed, wings flapping wildly. The spirits watching from above hissed and yowled, backing away from the ghost that did not belong to them. âAs your friend, and as someone whoâs learned a thing or two since dying, let your mate stall for time and get out of here.â The crow beside the black and white stranger cawed so violently that Oilstripeâs ears burned. The cool anger in the strangerâs blue eyes shifted to bloodlust.
âGet the witches!â she screeched. Carnationspeckle reared on her front paws and kicked Oilstripe back.
âJust run, Oil!â she yowled. Carnationspeckle launched at the feather adorned stranger with a battle cry. The crows swarmed down in sync with the living cats, sharp beaks diving toward the Clan cats. Oilstripe rolled back on her paws. Applepelt was at her side, hissing at the approaching crows.
What else could Oilstripe do? She ran back toward the crowd of humans and horses. The crows were on her tail, screaming with such fury Oilstripe thought her ears would bleed. But Applepelt was at her side too, matching her pace. When the crows reached Applepelt, they squawked and fluttered back, bumping into one another.
âWho are these cats?â Oilstripe yowled. She weaved between strolling humans, who panicked at the sight of a dozen crows flying so low to the ground. Their high-pitched yowls drowned out the crows and the sounds of battle.
âYou know how those of us in StarClan like to help when we can?â Applepelt huffed. âThey are the exact opposite.â
[Image ID: With Mosspounce behind her, Lemmy speaks in the background, saying âThe Witch Hunters see the Clans as a threat to the safety of the Other Side, our afterlife. Theyâll pry what information they can out of your friend and use it to kill you all. They may even turn her against you.â In the foreground, Troutpool, Oilstripe, and Spikecrash stand to the left together, while Downstar, Weedfoot, and Wildclaw stand to the right together.]
---
âIf you donât see her, then she has to be fine, right?â
âNo, Rabbitjoy, because if I saw her, I would at least know she wasnât suffering. I would know who to kill. Something far worse could be happening to her. You spent moons traveling, how did you not know about these cats?â
âI never heard of them!â
âWhy are we standing around talking about this? We should be storming the settlement and rescuing Carnationspeckle!â
âWe donât know where she is. We canât run through the human settlement without a plan or the humans may take us. I wonât lose anymore warriors. Is that understood, Lavendertwist?â
The Clanâs frantic ideas all melted together in Mosspounceâs head as he stood just outside camp. Downstar didnât trust that Oilstripe returned to camp unfollowed and wanted someone on guard while the rest of the Clan discussed what happened. Mosspounce had already been on guard duty when Oilstripe ran panting past him, so he was asked to stay there. Probably for the best. His guilt would have been painted across his fur.Â
If he had known Oilstripe and Carnationspeckle were going to the human settlement, he would have stopped them, even if it meant revealing his connection to Lemmy. It was Madeline, Oilstripeâs description matched her perfectly. She really could speak to the crows. The crows really spoke to the dead. It wasnât that Mosspounce didnât believe Lemmy, but it was so different from what he knew. But it was true. Oilstripeâs abilities would make her seem worse than clerics in the eyes of the Witch Hunters. So what would they do with the mate of such a blasphemous cat?Â
Maybe Carnationspeckle was already dead and her spirit was hurrying home to let her mate know. Carnationspeckle was the last cat to deserve that. She nursed Mosspounce and his littermates, even though they were born because she spurned their father. Mosspounceâs heart ached like he had thrown Carnationspeckle to the Witch Hunters himself. He should have told the Clan about Madeline moons ago. It was his fault.
The wind carried a familiar scent to Mosspounce, but not the familiar scent Mosspounce wanted to smell. Lemmy? Mosspounce glanced into camp. Everyone had gathered around the Shiprock, debating with Oilstripe and Downstar. Mosspounce snuck away from his spot and looped around the rocky, bramble-lined walls of camp. Sure enough, when he turned the corner, just as he had last season in the human settlement, he saw Lemmy, sniffing at the rocks.Â
âLemmy!â Mosspounce gasped, hurrying to his friend. Lemmy bristled at the sound, but her fur relaxed when she saw Mosspounce.
âMosspounce, thereâs a ginger molly, Oilstripe,â Lemmy huffed. âDid she make it home?â
âYes, sheâs talking to the Clan right now,â Mosspounce stammered. âHow did you find our camp? Did you follow Oilstripeâs scent?â
âShe was smart enough to mask her scent in the river,â Lemmy explained, shaking her head. âThe Witch Hunters wonât be able to track her.â
âSo how did you get here?â Mosspounce asked again. Lemmy rubbed a paw into the sand speckled dirt. Her expression sunk inward, her usual icy confidence chipped.
âHey!â Mosspounce and Lemmy jumped. Wildclaw stood behind Mosspounce, back arched and lips curled. Bandages covered her left shoulder, protecting the large dog bite that nearly took out a chunk of her flesh. Despite the injury, she still showed her claws and readied herself for a fight.
âWait!â Mosspounce yelped. He stood between Lemmy and Wildclaw like he was trying to hide the tortoiseshell. Lemmy didnât need his protection, he knew that; she was already showing her claws and bracing herself for Wildclaw to strike. âWildclaw, hold on, she isnât here to hurt anyone.â
âMosspounce, I need an explanation before I start biting,â Wildclaw growled.Â
âDo you want to know whatâs happening to Carnationspeckle?â Lemmy pushed past Mosspounce, deep blue eyes locked onto Wildclawâs burning amber stare. âBecause I know what the Witch Hunters will do to her, and I have an idea how to get her back. But if you want to try and kill me, go ahead.â Mosspounce puffed himself up behind Lemmy. Wildclaw stayed tense, glaring at Mosspounce with a look of hurt that felt like an old memory.
âRattlepelt!â Wildclaw called. âWe have a guest.â She flicked her tail sharply. Mosspounce followed Wildclaw back to the camp entrance, with Lemmy trailing behind. Rattlepelt waited at the entrance. Her eyes widened when she saw Lemmy. She hurried back into camp and Mosspounce braced himself for a very long day.
âThatâs one of the Witch Hunters!â Tempestshade yowled as soon as Lemmy entered camp. All of RippleClan rioted. Rabbitjoy looped around Rattlepelt and shoved her toward Spikecrash and Paleseed, who quickly backed up. Downstar jumped off the Shiprock, with Weedfoot immediately slipping to her side. James had to grab Parsley by the scruff to stop her from attacking Lemmy. Even the kits copied their elders in untrained battle stances, despite Clammask and Scrubmaskâs efforts to get them into the nursery.
âWait, please!â Mosspounce yowled. âSheâs my friend! Sheâs not here to hurt us!â
âUm, Mossy, she literally tried to kill you,â Tempestshade huffed. Scalepaw crept beside them, puffing up his long fur to the point that he looked like a moss ball. Lavendertwist protected his little brother, sneering at Lemmy.
âWhy are you friends with someone who's been haunting our borders for moons?â Wildclaw hissed, muzzle a mouse-length from Mosspounce.
âLemmyâs not like the others,â Mosspounce insisted. âShe listens and she really wants to do the right thing. She came here to help us.â Mosspounce stepped so close to Lemmy, their pelts were almost touching.
âWhere is Carnationspeckle?â Oilstripe hissed. She shoved past her Clanmates, Troutpool in tow. Lemmy cooly eyed the Clan. Mosspounce couldnât understand how she kept her fur smooth when everyone looked ready to slice her throat open.
âThat, I donât know yet,â Lemmy said. âMadeline, my leader, is keeping her location contained to herself, Achilles, the Witch Finders, and a few older enforcers. I havenât been let in.â
âThen what help could you be?â Oilstripe snapped. âWhat are they doing to my mate?â
âOilstripe,â Downstar huffed. Oilstripe glanced back at her leader. Troutpool nuzzled under her chin. She gently guided her mother back. Downstar and Weedfoot approached Lemmy. âLemmy, is it? What exactly can you tell us about the Witch Hunters?â RippleClan seemed to settle down slightly. Spikecrash joined Oilstripe and Troutpool, offering comforting whispers to them both. Wildclaw stood behind her mother, glaring at Lemmy and Mosspounce.Â
âThe Witch Hunters see the Clans as a threat to the safety of the Other Side, our afterlife,â Lemmy explained. âTheyâll pry what information they can out of your friend and use it to kill you all. They may even turn her against you.â
âThatâs not happening,â Oilstripe said.Â
âYour leader is a mouse-brain if she thinks she can take on all five Clans,â Elmsprout scoffed from her spot by Darkkick. âI may not have been in AshClan since my father became leader, but heâs not leading a Clan of kits. They alone could wipe out a lot of Witch Hunters.â
âYou didnât see how many cats follow them,â Mosspounce said. âIt was a Gatheringâs worth!â
âAnd you know this how, Mosspounce?â Downstar asked.
âIâŠâ Mosspounce gulped, âmay have visited the human settlement a few moons ago looking for Lemmy. I saw their meeting. They were celebrating how they murdered Bubblemoon.â
âTheyâre the rogues who killed Bubblemoon?â Troutpool gasped. A new wave of righteous shock flooded over RippleClan. The Clans had heard about Bubblemoonâs death at a Gathering two moons back. They had all known it was a strange rogue attack, Mosspounce knew some cats theorized it was the Witch Hunters, but they had no proof, and it wasnât their Clan. Mosspounce found himself grateful that Fennelspot was sick in the quarantine den; he didnât have to see his grief. Should Mosspounce have said something back then? Would that have stopped Oilstripe and Carnationspeckle from visiting the human settlement?
âMadeline isnât stupid, despite what you may think,â Lemmy huffed. âThe Witch Hunters may have strong numbers, but they wonât launch a full-on assault on anyone without information. That isnât how we operate. We study witches and we pick off the guilty. And now that they know RippleClan has a molly who can speak with the dead whenever she wants, theyâll focus their efforts on taking your colony out first.â Lemmy glared at Oilstripe like a misbehaving apprentice.
âSo theyâre interrogating Carnationspeckle to find our weaknesses,â Halibutdusk muttered. Trumpetspore pressed into them, the fear in her eyes as clear as sunshine on the water.
âWhat can we do?â Downstar asked. âHow can you help us?â
âMore like why do you want to help us?â Wildclaw snapped. âWhy did you befriend someone you tried to kill?âÂ
Troutpoolâs fur stood on edge. Oilstripeâs gaze broke off Lemmy and onto an empty spot behind her. Her eyes slowly drifted back toward Lemmy, but rather than looking at the tortoiseshell visitor, Oilstripe stared at her paws. Mosspounce knew that look. Back in the nursery, Carnationspeckle would call that her âhauntedâ look. There was a spirit in camp, sitting right in front of Lemmy, Mosspounce was sure of it. Could Troutpool see them too? She seemed unnerved, but looked around like she expected a surprise attack. Lemmy, meanwhile, sat and let tension ripple from her neck down through her tail.
âThere is an afterlife where the dead must be respected and crows guard the boundary,â Lemmy sighed. âBut I have learned that there is also an afterlife where the dead work tirelessly to guide the living. Your afterlife. I believe that over the course of the last year, I have been visited by a resident of your afterlife in my dreams, asking me to stop my community from hurting yours. This visitor, this little black kitten, has encouraged me to befriend Mosspounce, lie to my fellow Witch Hunters, and find out where they are holding Carnationspeckle so I can bring her back to you.â
âDuskkit,â Oilstripe gasped. âDuskkit is visiting you.â Troutpool enthusiastically nodded. Downstar squirmed at the mention of her daughter.
âYouâve been talking to my aunt?â Mosspounce gasped, staring at Lemmy.
âWhy would Duskkit be visiting a Witch Hunter?â Rattlepelt asked.
âMaybe StarClan sees something in Lemmy no one else has before,â Troutpool muttered. RippleClan glanced at one another. Mosspounce sat with Lemmy. His tail slowly shifted towards hers. When the tip of his tail touched Lemmy, she did not flinch.Â
âIf I can win over Madelineâs trust,â Lemmy explained, âI may be allowed to see Carnationspeckle. When I find her, we can free her. Until then, Iâll keep an ear out for plans against the Clans and warn you when I can. Make sure there are cats by the river around sunhigh each day, thatâs when I would share news if I have any.â Lemmyâs tail wrapped itself over Mosspounceâs tail. If they were alone, Mosspounce would have melted into purrs. âThe Clans have their own afterlife. Thereâs no reason for Madeline and the Witch Hunters to interfere with you.â
âAnd we can trust you?â Downstar asked, carefully studying Lemmyâs face. Mosspounce stepped forward.
âIf you trust me,â he declared, âthen you can trust her.â