Needlepaw began to feed the black-and-white kit, and soon both tiny creatures were sucking eagerly at the pulp, desperate to fill their bellies.
“They would have starved without us,” Needlepaw murmured, sounding unusually gentle as she blinked affectionately at her kit.
Unexpected warmth spread through Alderpaw.
“Now we need to get them warm,” he mewed, when finally the kits stopped eating, their little bellies distended. They were already cuddling up to him and Needlepaw, drawn by the heat of their bodies. “Ow!” Alderpaw yelped as the gray kit batted him on the nose. “Your claws are sharp!”
He began to lick the gray kit, his tongue stroking backward from tail to head, to get her blood flowing. Needlepaw did the same for the black-and-white kit. Soon both kits were purring and sinking into sleep.
“It’s a good thing we found them when we did,” Alderpaw told Needlepaw. “I don’t think they would have survived out here much longer.”
Needlepaw murmured agreement. “I wonder what happened to their mother. Do you think a monster got her on the Thunderpath?”
Alderpaw shuddered at the idea. “I’m not sure. But I think we should bring these kits back to camp, where they can be cared for.”
“Great idea,” Needlepaw meowed. “And I think we should give them names. How about Violetkit for this little one?” she continued, stroking the black-and-white kit’s head with the tip of her tail. “I’m picking up the scent of violets; I think their mother must have used some of the leaves for the nest.”
“That’s a good name,” Alderpaw purred.
“And I’m going to call this little one…
Twigkit. She’s as tiny as a twig!”
Needlepaw let out a
“Twigkit it is!”
As they rose, preparing to pick up the sleeping kits by their scruff, Needlepaw turned to Alderpaw with a smirk on her face. “When are you going to thank me for leading you into the tunnel?” she asked.
Alderpaw, still concentrating on the kits, gave her a confused stare. “What are you talking about?”
“Isn’t it obvious?” Needlepaw looked even more smug. “These kits are
Chapter 23
Alderpaw gently set her down in the rough grass.
“We’re almost home!” he breathed out.
After they’d left the tunnel, he and Needlepaw had journeyed on until night fell, when they’d made a temporary den near the place where they had seen the Twolegs and eaten their food. Needlepaw had caught a couple of mice, and they had fed the kits again.
Now the woods and moorland around the lake stretched in front of them, and before sunhigh they would be back in their own camps.
Needlepaw toiled up to the ridge and stood beside him, letting Violetkit down into the grass next to her sister. “Made it!” she panted.
“I guess we ought to say good-bye,” Alderpaw began, feeling slightly awkward.
“You’ll want to go through RiverClan to get back to your territory—it’s the quickest way.”
“Yeah, I suppose so,” Needlepaw agreed.
“Uh… Needlepaw…” Feeling even more awkward, Alderpaw turned to face her. “Maybe you could keep quiet about what happened in the gorge, at least until I’ve had the chance to talk to Bramblestar. I told you, the whole
SkyClan thing is kind of a secret.”
He cringed inwardly as he spoke, knowing how unlikely it was that Needlepaw would keep a secret to oblige a ThunderClan cat. He expected her to hiss at him in anger, but she simply stared at him, her mouth clamped shut.
“Okay, then.” Alderpaw realized the best he could hope for was a quick getaway. “If you could just help me get Violetkit onto my back…”
Needlepaw’s jaws gaped open at that. “What are you talking about?” she demanded. “I’m not leaving the shadow kits here. I helped find them! And which cat says that they’re going to ThunderClan?”
Alderpaw could hardly believe what he was hearing.
Needlepaw’s neck fur began to rise and she flattened her ears. “If it weren’t for me,” she pointed out, “and my idea to go through the tunnel, you would still be standing in front of that stupid Thunderpath trying to figure out what different