Ivy pool gazed at her sy m pathetically. “But it was moons ago, Twigpaw. You can’t hope to find a trace of her.”
Fernsong stopped beside her. “The leaf-bare snows would have washed any scents away.”
Twigpaw stared at them, panic opening like a whirlpool in her belly. White fur caught her ey e.
She glanced past them. A cat was on the Thunderpath! It sat, m otionless, in the m iddle as m onsters thundered past it. “Look!”
Ivy pool snapped her head around, following her gaze.
“What in StarClan!” Fernsong’s m outh gaped open as he saw the stranded cat.
“Why isn’t she try ing to run away?”
Twigpaw hardly heard Ivy pool’s gasp. She hared down the slope. “We have to save her!”
She tore toward the Thunderpath, desperation driving her on. What if that was her mother?
She leaped over the ditch, her paws hitting the Thunderpath as a m onster howled past, a tail-length from her nose. Her gaze flicked across the stretch of gray stone. If she could dodge the m onsters, she could reach the cat and guide her to safety. Her thoughts whirled. Blood pounded in her ears.
She glanced back and forth, searching for a gap to race through.
Suddenly claws gripped her pelt. Her paws scratched over the stone as som eone j erked her backward. Teeth sank into her scruff as the ditch opened below her and Ivy pool hauled her down into its shelter.
“What in StarClan do you think y ou’re doing?” Ivy pool stared at her.
Fernsong landed beside them, his pelt bushed. “Do you want to get y ourself killed?”
“What about the cat?” Twigpaw wailed above the m onsters.
She reared onto her hind legs, peering over the edge. A bright red m onster, far bigger than the rest, pounded toward the helpless cat. “Run!” The shriek tore from Twigpaw’s throat. But the cat didn’t m ove. Horror shrilled though Twigpaw as the red m onster hurtled over it. She stared in disbelief as the cat disappeared.
“They killed her.” Her words caught in her throat.
Ivy pool hopped onto the edge of the Thunderpath and stared across it. Twigpaw j um ped up beside her, her heart pounding as she scanned the stone for blood. But there was none. All that was left of the cat was white fluff, tossed in the wake of the m onsters like thistledown.
Twigpaw stared at it. “That cat wasn’t real.” Her m urm ur was swept away as another m onster tore past.
Ivy pool nudged her down into the ditch. “It must have been som e Twoleg trick,” she meowed as they landed with a crunch on the pebbles.
Fernsong blinked at them. “Let’s get out of here.”
Twigpaw stared at him, hardly hearing. She felt frozen. That could have been her mother.
Realization swept over her like an icy wind. How could her mother still be alive? She’d had kits to feed. She’d had to hunt. She would have had to cross the Thunderpath countless tim es. She was probably hit, like that lifeless ball of fluff, by a m onster. Why else would she have not returned to their nest? Certainty sat in Twigpaw’s belly like a stone. Her mother was dead.
“Come on.” Alderpaw’s soft mew sounded in her ear. She felt his warm m uzzle nudging her forward. Num bly, she let him guide her out of the ditch and back up the slope.
She was dim ly aware of Ivy pool and Fernsong m oving beside them. Her heart ached with every paw step, and then shadow swallowed her. She blinked, realizing they were am ong the trees once more.
She m et Alderpaw’s gaze. “I know she’s dead now,” she m urm ured hoarsely. “Let’s go home.”
Chapter 17
She let sleep drag her into blackness once more.
“Violetpaw.”
A hiss beside her ear m ade her leap to her paws. “Who is it?” Shock pulsed through her as she sm elled unfam iliar scent. This wasn’t a ShadowClan cat. She could make out the shape of a young she-cat in the gloom.
“It’s m e,” the voice hissed again. “Twigpaw.”
Violetpaw froze. “What in StarClan are you doing here?”
“I had to see y ou.”
Violetpaw looked around, alarm spiking her pelt. Thank StarClan Whorlkit, Flowerkit, and Snakekit hadn’t been m ade apprentices y et. She had the den to herself. “You can’t be here!” she whispered anxiously. “If som eone finds y ou, we’ll both be in trouble.” Her Clan was just starting to accept her. She couldn’t be found with a ThunderClan cat. She nudged Twigpaw toward the entrance, her nose wrinkling as she sm elled ThunderClan scent on her sister’s pelt.
“But I have to talk to y ou!” Twigpaw dug her paws in.
Violetpaw shoved her harder. “Not
“Hurry!” Violetpaw led the way quickly and quietly to the dirtplace tunnel.