Brambleberry glanced at the RiverClan leader. “Why don’t you go and ask him?”
Stormkit scowled. “Maybe later.” He’d asked Hailstar if they could leave the camp before: once if they could help Shellheart hunt, twice if they could shadow Rippleclaw’s patrol, but the answer had always been the same: “Wait until you’re apprentices.”
Stormkit stared enviously at the apprentices’ den, tasting the air. There was no warm scent of sleep drifting from it. Softpaw and Whitepaw must have left with the dawn patrol. “Lucky furballs,” he muttered.
Oakkit shrugged. “I thought we were going hunting.”
“We are.”
“Where?” Oakkit scanned the camp. “In the sedges?”
Stormkit fluffed out his fur. “I want to catch more than butterflies!”
“We could try hunting for minnows with Ottersplash and Timberfur,” Oakkit suggested.
Stormkit rolled his eyes. “Minnows?”
“What’s wrong with minnows?”
“Do you
“We have to.”
“Oh, come on.” Stormkit butted his brother with his head. “Let’s sneak out and hunt like real warriors.”
“What if we get caught again?” Oakkit lowered his voice. “Hailstar said he’d make us wait an extra moon to get our apprentice names if we got into any more trouble.”
“He didn’t mean it!” Stormkit scoffed. “RiverClan needs warriors. Hailstar’s not a frog-brain. The sooner we’re out patrolling and fighting, the better it’ll be for the Clan.” He flicked his tail. “When I’m leader I’ll let kits go out of camp whenever they want.”
“Hey!” Oakkit jabbed him with a paw. “Rainflower says I was born first so
“You? Leader?” Stormkit ruffled his brother’s ears. “You wanted to hunt
“Thanks a lot.”
“Come on! Let’s go and hunt.”
Before Oakkit could answer, mewling filled the clearing. Volekit and Beetlekit were tumbling noisily out of the nursery.
“Wait for me!” Petalkit scrambled after them, pawing at their tails as they scooted across the clearing and skittered to a halt by the reed bed.
Beetlekit thrust his nose into the stalks beside Ottersplash, making the reeds tremble. “Have you seen any fish?”
“Don’t scare them off!” Ottersplash grumbled, not taking his eyes from the patch of water beneath his nose.
Stormkit nudged Oakkit. “Come on, before Beetlekit starts asking
“Which way?” Oakkit asked. “We can’t just walk through the entrance tunnel.”
“Dirtplace. Then we can squeeze through the sedges out on to the marsh.”
Stormkit headed toward dirtplace. He ducked through the fronds, Oakkit on his tail. Through the gap lay a sandy clearing, clumped in places and stinking. Oakkit poked his paw through a clump of sedge. “Through here?”
“Let me see.” Stormkit pushed past and nosed his way through the stems. They were sharp and grazed his nose but he pushed on, eyes half-closed, until he broke out into sunshine. A wide marshy plain stretched ahead of him, grassy and lush, filled with patches of reed and sedge and white billowing flowers.
“It’s huge!” Oakkit slid out behind Stormkit and stared at the green wetland. It stretched far along the riverbank and sloped up toward a smooth meadow where horses grazed.
“Let’s head for the river,” Oakkit suggested.
Stormkit tilted his head on one side. “Don’t you want to cross the marsh?”
“I thought we were going to find prey,” Oakkit reminded him. “What lives in the marsh?”
“Frogs?” Stormkit guessed.
“If you want to spend your morning hopping after a frog, then go ahead, Storm
“Okay!” Stormkit’s paws sank into watery moss, cool and springy beneath his pads. He bounced along behind Oakkit, following the sedge wall.
“Wait!” Oakkit halted.
Stormkit stumbled into him. “What?”
“We’re near the camp entrance,” Oakkit whispered.
Stormkit recognized the well-trod grass track that led out from the sedges and weaved between the thick bushes and grasses that swathed the riverbank.
“Follow me.” Stormkit slid ahead, and pushed his way into the rich greenery at the side of the path. Nosing his way through the soft leaves, he kept to the bushes. Where water puddled the path, he crossed deliberately through it, hoping the mud would disguise their scent. Then, glancing over his shoulder to make sure Oakkit was following, he plunged into the long grass on the other side of the path. The ground fell away from beneath his paws and he tumbled down the bank.
He landed with a thump on a muddy flat at the river’s edge. Water lapped his pelt as he scrambled to his paws. He moved just in time. With a yelp, Oakkit tumbled after him.
Jumping up, ruffled, Oakkit shook out his fur. “Nice route,” he muttered.
“It’s not my fault I don’t know the whole territory yet,” Stormkit defended himself. “Hailstar won’t let us explore, remember?” He gazed downriver, watching the water flow away in a lazy brown flood that moved with such ease it was hard to imagine the same river had once destroyed the camp.