Ivypaw blurted out the first words that came to her. “I dreamed that I was standing at the edge of ThunderClan territory…on that strip of grass beside the place where Twolegs come in greenleaf.” She tried to read the warriors’ expressions. Were they taking her seriously? “The place that used to belong to ThunderClan. The place you gave to ShadowClan.”
Firestar narrowed his eyes. “How did you know that? It was before you were born.”
“Probably heard it from Mousefur,” Brambleclaw muttered.
Ivypaw shook her head. “It was all in the dream. How you gave it to ShadowClan because it was useless hunting, not worth defending.”
“Go on.” Firestar was leaning forward now, his ears pricked.
“I saw the stream and it was running with blood.” Ivypaw felt her words coming quickly. Now that she’d started, this was easier than she’d thought. “
As Ivypaw took a steadying breath, she realized that the three warriors were staring at her, captivated. Encouraged, she went on. “So I ran back to the hollow, but ShadowClan cats were everywhere: all through the forest, hiding behind bushes, hunting for squirrels, training for battle, all the way up to the Twoleg nest. They were gathering Jayfeather’s herbs and saying ShadowClan would never be sick again.” She ran out of words. Had they believed her?
Graystripe’s eyes were half closed. “There may be some truth in it.” He glanced at Firestar. “You used to have dreams that came true when you were an apprentice.”
Brambleclaw flexed his claws. “Young cats also have vivid imaginations.”
“But her sister warned us about the beavers,” Graystripe reminded him. “That wasn’t imagination.”
“Is it worth risking trouble with ShadowClan?” Brambleclaw questioned. “We have no real evidence. I’ve already told you that ShadowClan cats have stopped crossing the border.”
Graystripe shifted his paws. “That may be part of their strategy,” he suggested. “To lull us into a false sense of security.”
Ivypaw didn’t take her gaze from Firestar. The ThunderClan leader wrapped his tail over his paws. “Who else knows about this dream?”
“No one,” Ivypaw assured him. “I came straight to you.”
“Were there any other cats in it besides you and ShadowClan warriors?” His leaf green stare was unwavering. “Any cats from StarClan?”
“She’s too young to know any,” Graystripe pointed out.
“Longtail?” Firestar wondered.
Ivypaw shook her head. “Just ShadowClan warriors.”
“Did you recognize any of them?” Firestar pressed.
“Crowfrost…er…Scorchfur.” Ivypaw’s heart pounded as she tried to remember cats she’d seen at the Gatherings. It couldn’t be wrong to lie, not when she was doing it to save her Clan. Anything to make them believe her.
“Okay.” Firestar turned to Graystripe and Brambleclaw. “What do you think?”
Excitement itched beneath Ivypaw’s pelt.
“It would explain why they were crossing the border,” Graystripe growled. “They might have been looking for the best places to fight.”
“And it’s interesting that she saw the Twolegplace.” Brambleclaw glanced at Ivypaw. “Surrendering it did make us seem vulnerable.”
“It was a good decision,” Graystripe defended his leader hotly. “It saved bloodshed. And we were never going to hunt in such an open space. Especially not if it’s crawling with Twolegs when prey is richest.”
“But giving it up may have sent the wrong message,” Firestar conceded. “Maybe I shouldn’t have handed it over so easily. That act of kindness seems to have left echoes of weakness.”
Firestar stood up. “Thank you, Ivypaw,” he meowed. “We’ll need to discuss this with the other warriors, and until we do I want you to keep it to yourself.” He brushed past her. “Don’t even tell Dovepaw.”
Ivypaw nodded earnestly while the warriors filed past her out of the cave.
Firestar glanced over his shoulder. “Tell me if you have any more dreams,” he ordered.
“I will.” Ivypaw’s heart was pounding. She’d done it! They were thinking about attacking ShadowClan! She couldn’t wait to tell Tigerstar the good news.
Chapter 21
The roughness in her mew that had begun last night had developed into a heaviness in her chest that Jayfeather could hear growing thicker every time he lowered his head to listen.
“Here,” he mewed, pushing another pawful of herbs toward her. “Swallow these.”
“No more,” she complained. “I couldn’t swallow a thing.”
“I’ve flavored them with mouse,” Jayfeather coaxed.
Briarlight let out a low moan, as if the thought of food made her feel worse. Jayfeather pushed away Littlecloud’s dark memory of Wildfur’s slow decline after his accident. He wasn’t going to let the same thing happen to Briarlight.