“Ferncloud!” Icepaw mewled. “Where are you? I can hardly see!”
“Everybody keep calm!” Firestar ordered. “I don’t know what’s happening. But we are warriors, and we must face it with courage.”
Slowly the Clan began to quiet.
He padded toward Leafpool. “Can you tell us what is happening?”
“StarClan hasn’t spoken to me directly,” she mewed.
Jaypaw flexed his claws.
“This must be an omen,” Leafpool continued. “To stop the battle.”
“But the battle wasn’t our fault!” Hazeltail wailed.
“WindClan started it,” hissed Whitewing.
“Why do
Leafpool’s tail stirred the air. “But it
That must be what StarClan intended.”
“Are we going to live in darkness from now on?” Thornclaw sounded more outraged than scared.
“Wait!” Leafpool called. “It’s getting lighter. The sun’s coming back!”
Chapter 17
She turned to ask Jaypaw. If StarClan had hidden the sun, surely he must know something. But he was hurrying away to join Leafpool as she weaved among the anxious and wounded cats.
“Can you stretch out your forepaws?” Leafpool asked Brackenfur. The golden tom winced as he tried.
“Shoulder wrench,” Leafpool concluded. “Go and wait by the halfrock. I won’t be long.” She moved on to Whitewing.
The warrior’s snowy pelt was darkened by patches of blood.
“Any sprains or wrenches?”
“Just scratches,” Whitewing answered.
“Then wait beside the warriors’ den,” Leafpool ordered.
“We’ll bring you ointment as soon as we can.”
“Thornclaw’s sprained a hind paw,” Jaypaw called.
“Help him over to the far end of the clearing and let him rest below Highledge,” Leafpool told him. She moved on, sending Hazeltail and Poppyfrost to wait with Whitewing.
Hazeltail dropped into a crouch beside Whitewing. “How could the sun disappear?”
“The sky was clear blue, so it couldn’t have been a cloud,” Poppyfrost breathed.
“Clouds never make it dark and cold like that,” Whitewing added.
Leafpool looked at them sharply. “You should be licking those scratches, not chattering like finches!” She nudged Birchfall and then Berrynose toward Thornclaw. “Wait over there.”
Birchfall limped across the clearing, keeping his swollen forepaw off the ground. “I don’t see why StarClan should hide the sun from
Berrynose hopped alongside him, a hind paw held out gingerly behind him. “WindClan should never have started the battle. It serves them right if StarClan are angry with them.”
Hollypaw glanced at her brother. He was watching the Clan. “Are you okay?”
“Fine,” he mewed.
Didn’t he want to talk about the vanishing sun? “You’re very quiet.”
“Yeah.” Lionpaw glanced up at Highledge, where Millie was picking her way down the tumble of rocks. Briarkit swung from her jaws. Daisy followed, holding Toadkit.
“Let’s help them,” Lionpaw suggested. He darted away toward Highledge.
How did he have so much energy left? Hollypaw felt weighted with exhaustion, and the scratches and bites that covered her body, though not deep, were stinging. Sighing, she followed.
“I could have walked down myself!” Toadkit flailed his paws crossly.
“Keep still, or we’ll both fall!” Daisy’s rebuke was muffled by his scruff. She jumped down the last few paw steps and looked back at Millie. “Are you okay?”
Millie nodded. Briarkit was dangling wide-eyed under her chin.
Lionpaw reached out a forepaw to steady Millie as she scrabbled down into the clearing, stones cracking behind her.
“We’ll bring the others,” he promised.
“Thanks.” Daisy put Toadkit down and he bounced away, fluffing up his fur.
“Watch out!” Daisy shut her eyes as he careered straight toward Graystripe.
The gray warrior sidestepped him. “Why don’t you go make sure there’s enough moss in Millie’s nest, little one?” he meowed.
“Okay!” Toadkit raced away to the nursery.
Graystripe blinked at Daisy. “He’s obviously not too shaken.”
Daisy’s pale eyes darkened. “He just thinks it’s an adventure.” She sighed.
“Perhaps it’s better that he does.” Graystripe took Briarkit from Millie and followed Daisy to the nursery. Millie padded beside him, pressing her pelt to his.
Lionpaw was already bounding up the rocks. Hollypaw scrambled wearily after him and followed him into Firestar’s den.