Sandstorm’s eyes glowed with a mixture of pity and affection. “I was dying,” she reminded Alderpaw. “You knew that, didn’t you?”
“No—you’re going to get better!” Alderpaw retorted, even though deep within him was the cold certainty that she was right. “I’m going to make sure of it!”
Sandstorm gave a sad shake of her head.
“There was nothing you could have done to save me. It was my time to die. No cat lives forever.
This is one of the most important lessons that you—or any medicine cat—will ever learn.”
On the last few words her voice began to fade, while the starry light around her blazed brighter and brighter, until Alderpaw couldn’t go on looking at the dazzling glory. A moment later he jerked awake in his nest under the elder bushes.
Scrambling to his paws, Alderpaw turned to nudge Sandstorm awake. But as soon as his pads touched her fur, he knew that he hadn’t been dreaming. Sandstorm’s fur was limp, the body beneath it cold, and her ribs weren’t rising and falling with her breath.
Alderpaw backed away in horror, his fur pricking up and his belly clenching. He couldn’t keep back a wail of distress. “No!
Cherryfall’s head popped up from her nest.
“Alderpaw? What’s happening?”
The other cats were waking, too, confused and questioning. A shocked silence fell over them as Alderpaw pointed to Sandstorm’s body with his tail. Slowly they all padded over to Sandstorm and stood looking down, a tail-length away from the huddle of cold fur.
Sparkpaw was the first to break the silence.
“She’s… she’s dead, isn’t she? Now what do we do?”
“Sandstorm was the only one who knew the route,” Molewhisker pointed out gloomily. “We were relying on her to help us complete the journey. Is her death telling us that the quest is doomed?”
Murmurs of agreement, with a note of fear, came from the other cats.
In spite of his grief, Alderpaw felt a surge of purpose flooding through him from ears to tail-tip. “Sandstorm wouldn’t want us to stand around like this, wondering what to do,” he told the sad and confused cats in front of him. “She would want us to sit vigil with her, and then bury her, before we decide what to do next.”
“You’re right,” Cherryfall meowed. “Let’s do that.”
Together the ThunderClan cats dragged Sandstorm out of the nest and laid her on the grass, gently stroking her fur and fluffing up her tail. It was dark; the sky was studded with stars, as if all the spirits of their warrior ancestors were waiting to welcome Sandstorm and to honor her.
As they began to settle down around her, Needlepaw padded up to Alderpaw. “I know Sandstorm wasn’t my Clanmate,” she murmured; to Alderpaw’s surprise she sounded almost shy. “But I traveled with her long enough to know what a great cat she was. May I keep vigil with you?”
“Sure,” Alderpaw replied, warming once again to the silver she-cat. “Come and sit by me.”
Sparkpaw crouched down beside
Sandstorm’s head, and gave her ears a lick.
“We’ve come all this way,” she mewed sorrowfully. “We’ve come so close to being killed by monsters or foxes; we’ve fought so hard to survive… It doesn’t seem fair that Sandstorm died anyway.”
“I know,” Cherryfall sighed. “She deserved so much more than this.”
“What do you think, Alderpaw?”
Molewhisker asked, turning to him. “Do you still want to go on?”
Alderpaw bit back a sharp retort.
“Maybe StarClan will send you a sign,” Cherryfall suggested.
The questing cats gathered around
Sandstorm’s body, staying there throughout the night. Sustained by the day spent drowsing in the den, Alderpaw didn’t find it hard to keep awake. He tried to focus on the future, but he couldn’t help wondering if there was anything he could have done to keep Sandstorm alive.
Eventually he dozed, and he roused to hear the voices of the other cats. Blinking his eyes open, he found himself surrounded by the gray light of dawn.
“Back in camp,” Cherryfall was mewing, “the elders bury our dead Clanmates.
Molewhisker and I are the oldest cats here, so we ought to do it.”
“But I want to help,” Sparkpaw protested, raw grief in her voice. “She was my mother’s mother.”
“Okay, you can,” Molewhisker told her comfortingly.