Remembered as a light brown tabby with speckled fur. Wispy, feather fur that framed their face like a comfortable nest. Always with a joyful twinkle in their eyes. Kind and watchful. Always thinking of others.
âThe Spirits Beyond and the Spirits to Come are one and the same. They are the cycle of birth, life, death, and rebirth. We are the Spirits, and the Spirits are us, and we are whole.â
Oilstripe, Carnationspeckle, and Clammask have found a way past their grief. Meanwhile, everyone poisoned by the poorly cooked rabbit recovers.
[Image ID: Oilstripe, Carnationspeckle, and Clammask sit together, with - CONDITION: GRIEVING (X3) under them. Under Drumpaw, it says - CONDITION: FOOD POISONING, SHOCK. Under Rapidleaf, it says - CONDITION: FOOD POISONING, SHOCK, WATER IN LUNGS. Honeypaw, Elmsprout, and Leatherpaw are together, with - CONDITION: FOOD POISONING (X3) under them.]
Clammask and Lemmy both announce their pregnancies.
[Image ID: Clammask and Lemmy both sit with + CONDITION: PREGNANT under them.]
---
It was a day after Lemmyâs pregnancy announcement that Clammask entered the medicine den with complaints of weight gain and nausea. Thank StarClan that Honeypaw had been out collecting herbs with the caretakers, because Clammask would not have been able to meet her sonâs eyes as she later left with Troutpoolâs diagnosis.
Perhaps she shouldnât have been surprised. Halibutdusk may not have been a tom, but they had been born one. There was no reason they couldnât get Clammask pregnant. Yet she had forgotten that, too busy finding a new beginning with playful flirting and a few fun outings (and one particular night where Clammask said goodbye to the pain and vengeance in her heart and oh StarClan was that when it happened oh no). It wasnât supposed to be so serious. It wasnât supposed to go this way.
It still felt like summer as Clammask squinted in the brilliance of sunhigh. Lemmy and Mosspounce had a crowd around them, eager to share tongues. While Lemmy mostly kept to Mosspounce, Splashpaw, and the codekeepers, she chatted with her Clanmates with the skill and grace of a mediator, letting everyone know that she felt well and would nest in the nursery when she was ready. Clammask had already had a litter once, why wasnât she as confident as Lemmy? Why did she have to feel like a scared kit?
Spikecrash was one of the cats sharing tongues with Lemmy. Clammask caught bits of their conversation, mixing their old faith in the Other Side with their new homeâs focus on StarClan. Clammask lingered at the edge of the crowd, searching for the right words to draw Spikecrashâs attention. She didnât have to say anything, luckily; Spikecrash glanced around camp as Lemmy listened to Oilstripe and Carnationspeckle share pregnancy tips. Thank StarClan she saw the fear in Clammaskâs silver eyes.
Spikecrash crept around her Clanmates, making her way to Clammask. No one seemed to notice the pair, much to Clammaskâs relief. She flicked her ears toward the camp exit. Spikecrash nodded and led her outside.Â
Autumn had smacked RippleClan upside the head in the last few days. Before Clammask realized it, the trees that lined camp to the west had exploded in tortoiseshell color. The wind coming off the ocean was no longer pleasantly cool, but cold enough to make the golden molly shiver. The bugs had gone silent and heat no longer pushed against Clammaskâs lungs; rather, the cold ocean air soothed her tense heart.Â
Not by much, however.
âIâve lived here long enough to know when someone needs a mediator and doesnât know what to say,â Spikecrash sighed as the pair left camp. âWhat do you need to talk about?â
âLetâs find somewhere we wonât be overheard first,â Clammask gulped.
Clammask and Spikecrash entered the forest. The trees and falling leaves would provide some privacy, just in case the sunhigh patrol wandered past. Spikecrash tried not to stare as they walked further and further from camp. Clammask wasnât sure if her nausea was from her nerves or the life growing inside her. She tried to soak in the crisp, early autumn smell, but the remnants of summer and the weight in her chest made her nose-blind.
âI saw you leaving the medicine den,â Spikecrash said when they were far enough away from camp for Clammask to stop. âDid Troutpool have bad news for you?â Could she even define what was happening as âbad newsâ? She loved being pregnant with her sons, after all. Maybe if this was another litter with Scrubmask, she would be yowling the news across camp, celebrating with Lemmy, laughing at jokes about stealing attention from the former Witch Hunter.
âIâm pregnant,â Clammask said, the word dying part-way out of her mouth. Spikecrashâs face did not reveal her reaction; instead, she cocked her head slightly and studied Clammask, the way her whiskers fell and her eyes looked hollow.
âThis doesnât sound like something you planned,â Spikecrash noted.
âI was still testing how I felt about Halibutdusk,â Clammask moaned, pacing around Spikecrash without realizing it. âI didnât want to have as serious a relationship as I had with Scrubmask at the start, we started a family as soon as we became mates, I only wanted to move on! Halibutdusk talked to me when they realized they werenât a tom, they didnât like what it meant to be a tom, how will they feel knowing they sired kits? I havenât told my sons Iâve been seeing them! Theyâll think Iâm betraying their mother! Does Halibutdusk want kits? Do I want more kits? My sons havenât even graduated! What if I lose another kit?â Spikecrash threw out her paw and stopped Clammaskâs spiral.
âOne thought at a time,â Spikecrash purred. âIt seems youâre nervous about a serious relationship with Halibutdusk.â
âIâm not ready for that,â Clammask whined, sitting. Her tail stirred the leaves around her. âHalibutdusk has always been there for me, but⌠I donât know, this is so much more than I was expecting!â
âAnd you think theyâll be upset theyâve sired kits with you?â Spikecrash asked, nodding.
âWhen Drumpaw told me he was a tom, he went on and on about how much the idea of pregnancy made him sick. Does Halibutdusk feel that way about siring kits? Does it make them feel wrong?â
âHave you asked them?â
âI didnât want to be serious, why would I ask them that?â Spikecrash rolled onto her back, signaling her surrender at Clammaskâs suddenly curled lip. Clammask smoothed her face.
âAll Iâm saying is that if you havenât asked them about that topic, you canât know how theyâll feel,â Spikecrash explained, face upside down. âThe same goes for your sons. Paleseed deals with grief more than I do, but from what Iâve seen of your kits, theyâve each found their way forward from Scrubmaskâs death. They might be happy for you.â
âMaybe. I donât know what to think right now.â
âDo you want a practical response or an emotional one?â Spikecrash got back to her feet. Clammask thought it through, fur growing hot.Â
âPractical,â she eventually decided.
âDo you want to have these kits or not?â Spikecrash asked. Clammaskâs stomach suddenly flipped.
âMove,â she managed to gulp just before she threw up. Spikecrash skittered up a fir. Clammask shivered as the taste settled in her mouth. Her nose curled at the stench of her own bile. Spikecrash jumped from the fir to a tree behind Clammask before she risked climbing down. Leaves fluttered with Spikecrashâs fall. Spikecrash groomed Clammaskâs neck as the pregnant molly shivered.Â
What did Clammask want? Forget Halibutdusk, forget her sons, forget Scrubmask and whatever her spirit must think of her. Did Clammask want these kits or not?
âI want these kits,â Clammask finally whimpered. âI want to be a mother again. I want my sons to have more kin. I want to raise a litter that has two parents at their graduation ceremonies.â
âAlright then,â Spikecrash purred, touching Clammaskâs nose despite the stench in her mouth. âI can help you tell Halibutdusk.â
âWhether weâre actually in love or not,â Clammask gulped, forcing herself to take a deep breath, âIâm raising these kits, and Iâll help Halibut be a part of their lives. Theyâll be a good influence.â
âLetâs get you some water back at camp,â Spikecrash suggested. âWe can wait until you feel a bit better before you tell anyone else about this.â
âIâd like that,â Clammask said with a sniffle. She let her paw dangle near her belly.
Her four sons were big personalities in their own rights. Who would these lovely kits become?
(Clammask: 57, female, caretaker, righteous, lore master, good teacher)
(Lemmy: 39, female, codekeeper, cold, deep StarClan bond)
(Spikecrash: 38, female, mediator, good speaker, lore keeper)
Terracottafoot helps Paleseed, Weedfoot, and Darkkick dream of the Dark Forest during Harvest Moon.
[Image ID: Weedfoot, Darkkick, and Paleseed stare down Newtstream, who is a Dark Forest spirit. Newtstream says, âI just want to spend my damnation in peace, and Autumnstar wants me to help make his curse worse.â]
---
This Harvest Moon was shaping up to be a lively one. As RippleClan settled around the Leaderâs Stone in the early dawn light, setting up the decor of black pelts and with the other Clans, everyone found something to start their day with. Clammask, Lemmy, and Oilstripe joined a gaggle of queens, pregnant and nursing, all bonding over nursery experiences while some of Halibutduskâs warrior friends teased them for their sudden relationship change. Mosspounce argued with the LynxClan artisans and caretakers over how to construct a temporary stove while Tempestshade and Elmsprout eagerly brought out the massive fish Carnationspeckle and Darkkick caught the night before. Rabbitjoy and Rattlepelt reunited with their artisan friends and explained their plans for RippleClanâs show about Leatherwaste and their careless deeds. Rapidleaf explained to her old Clanmates that no, she didnât feel comfortable returning to LynxClan when her only living kin were distant RippleClan apprentices. Downstar happily shared tongues with Gorgestar and Ospreystar while Gentlestar and Eelstar (who bore a wrap over his nose) made sure everyone was settling in for the day.
And Paleseed? She was preparing for the fight of her life.
Most of the clerics were setting up spiritual protections around the clearing, guarding the five Clans from the Spirits of Shadow that would roam the territories that day. Terracottafoot, however, stood far from the rest of the Clans with Paleseed, Weedfoot, and Darkkick.Â
They had a jar of black dye on one side and a pile of early autumn leaves on the other. They rubbed their paw in the dye and gently nudged Weedfootâs chin up. Terracottafoot ran their dyed paw from the base of Weedfootâs chin to the center of her chest, a long black stripe like burnt meat. They did the same to Paleseed and Darkkick.
âNow I just need a spark to ignite these leaves, and weâll begin,â Terracottafoot gulped, rubbing their black paw into the grass. âWhen you fall asleep, your souls will be transported to the Dark Forest. As many of the spirits there wander the forest tonight, you shouldnât encounter as many enemies as you typically would. The burning of the leaves acts as a calling ritual. When you enter the Dark Forest, Autumnstar will feel called to you, even if he doesnât realize it. Youâll find each other eventually.â Darkkick nodded along. Did she know of this ritual from her cleric days? What sort of dark powers did clerics hold in their hearts?
âWhat do we do when we find Autumnstar?â Paleseed asked.
âMake him stop hurting his Clan,â Terracottafoot sighed. âConvince him, fight him, do whatever you have to do. If heâs not stopped, the older generations of AshClan will all be dead by winterâs end.â Paleseed glanced back at the AshClan delegation. Save for Eelstar and Barkfur, every AshClan cat present was no more than a few years old. Would Paleshade leave them to die? No, Paleseed couldnât keep asking what her namesake would do. But that was easier said than done.
âIf Autumnstar is powerful enough to project a curse on AshClan,â Weedfoot muttered, âheâll be a formidable foe in the Dark Forest.â
âHe might have powers,â Paleseed said, âbut heâll still think like himself, wonât he? If we canât outstrength him, we can outsmart him.â Hmm. Paleshade wasnât much of a trickster. She would just give some grand speech and take Autumnstar down, if Weedfootâs stories had any truth to them. Maybe Paleseed could bring more to the battle than a helpless mediator ready to be slaughtered.
âIâll be right back,â Terracottafoot said, nodding with more enthusiasm than Paleseed had ever seen in the young cat. They hurried toward the main crowd, who continued to bicker about the stove as the sun battered the trees and fought its way into the clearing.
âIt might be selfish to say this,â Weedfoot gulped, resting her tail on Paleseed, âbut Iâm glad youâll be with us. I could use your support. Just promise me youâll run if things get too dire.â Paleseed hesitated. Leave her mother and Darkkick to fight off Spirits of Shadow?
âThat isnât a request,â Darkkick huffed. âI still think you should stay here. The Dark Forest is no place for a non-combatant.â
âI really think I can help,â Paleseed said, raising her tail with false confidence. âIf StarClan saw me with you, thereâs something I can do to stop Autumnstar, something the two of you canât.â To her surprise, Paleseed found herself believing her own words.
âYou put more faith in what StarClan chooses to say than I do,â Darkkick muttered, fluffing her coat against a sudden breeze, âbut so be it. I donât doubt thereâs something you could bring to this patrol.â Paleseedâs heather-blue eyes brightened at the compliment. Darkkick rolled her eyes, earning a chuckle from Weedfoot. At that moment, Terracottafoot slunk around the Leaderâs Stone with a glowing stick in their jaws. Out of sight of most of the crowd, they ran back to Paleseed, Weedfoot, and Darkkick. They angled the stick against the leaves. The breeze sent sparks onto the dry tinder. The orange leaves began to glow.
âLay down, quickly!â Terracottafoot ordered, setting down the stick.Â
âWait,â Weedfoot huffed as smoke drifted from the leaves. âHow are we supposed to get out of the Dark Forest once our job is done?â
âDo you know how you wake yourself up from a bad dream?â Terracottafoot grunted, nudging Paleseedâs flank down. âItâs just like that. Hurry, the leaves wonât burn long!â The three RippleClan cats laid around the smoldering leaves. Terracottafoot sat beside the tiny fire, eyes closed tight. It was hard to imagine falling asleep with the fire in her blood, but Paleseed closed her eyes as well, praying that the Ashes in the Water were standing beside her, guarding her spirit as it shifted from one world to another.
Paleseed thought she would feel the transition. She was literally traveling to another level of existence, why would she not notice when she left the clearing and entered the Place of No Stars itself? But she still felt the small warmth of the burning leaves. She still heard the happy crowd, just beginning to play a few instruments to welcome in the festive day. She could even smell Carnationspeckleâs fish! So how would she know when she arrived?
âOpen your eyes, Paleseed,â Weedfoot whispered. âWeâre here.â
When Paleseed obeyed her mother, the warmth and music and scent of freshly-caught fish evaporated. The sound of the Harvest Moon still rang in her ears, as though occurring deep within the ocean. Yet the grass was gray, like life and light had been sucked out from the roots. Paleseed looked up. Barren branches criss-crossed over a black sky. A huge, yellow full moon watched the land like a vengeful eye. There were no stars in that black ocean, no glow to the world but the harsh, biting moonlight that refracted off the fog. Said fog clung to the ground, nipping at Paleseedâs paws as she stood. The scent of wood-rot and fungus filled her lungs.Â
The Dark Forest was indeed that; dark, cold, absent of all the good in the world. Not a single conifer needle or leaf clung to the trees around the three RippleClan cats; instead, every branch poked and prodded at its neighbor for more room. There wasnât even leaf litter to show there had ever been a summer in that barren land. Instead, mushrooms claimed the trees as their territory; flat, wide things of white and tan and brown. Even more mushrooms whose names Paleseed could not hope to guess sprouted from mounds poking out of the fog. Those mushrooms were the only life in the land. Bramble bushes speckled the shadowy landscape, thorns reaching out like fangs. Paleseedâs claws dug into the dry, red earth as a caterwaul echoed from somewhere deep within the forest.Â
âThe stories were right about this place,â Darkkick scoffed, shaking out the mist and dust collecting on her fur. Paleseed instinctively pressed into Weedfoot. All three cats gathered around each other, taking in the cursed trees and the sharp shadows. Autumnstar was out there, somewhere, instinctively drawn toward the living cats, unaware of the fate that awaited him.
âWhere do we start?â Paleseed gulped.
âYou could start by leaving, if youâre smart.â Weedfoot and Darkkick jumped between Paleseed and the strangerâs voice. Paleseed followed the sound up into a dead pine. A black, mud-like ooze dripped from the ginger molly lounging on the branches overhead. A solid, glistening layer of ice covered her extremities and dulled her monotone fur.Â
âNewtstream,â Darkkick growled. She soothed her bristling fur and huffed, âItâs alright. Sheâll pose no threat to us.â
âTerracottafoot sent you here, didnât they?â Newtstream huffed. She jumped out of the tree and landed beside Darkkick. âThe black marks on your chests, the sudden arrival on Harvest Moon⌠yes, itâs like I taught them. Why send RippleClan cats, however?â
âWeâre here to stop Autumnstarâs curse,â Weedfoot explained, eyes stuck on Newtstreamâs black goop.
âYou were trying to save your Clanmates when you were alive,â Paleseed gulped, taking a risky step closer to the Dark Forest spirit. âThereâs no reason for you to stop us.â
âWhat makes you think Iâm trying to stop you?â Newtstream scoffed. âIâm just trying to spare you. It may be Harvest Moon, but deadly things still wander these woods.â
âWe wonât be here any longer than we have to be,â Weedfoot said. âWeâll take care of Autumnstar and go.â
âI canât say Iâm too surprised to see you here,â Darkkick couldnât help but grumble. âYou did spit in StarClanâs face, after all.â
âI didnât do enough to forgive myself, apparently,â Newtstream sighed, looking at the starless sky. âI just want to spend my damnation in peace, and Autumnstar wants me to help make his curse worse. The only thing keeping him from becoming as terrible as the worst Spirits of Shadow is his hurt ego. He feels his Clanmates, that StarClan himself, gave up on him and the virtues he tried to uphold. He could have led AshClan for many more moons if he let himself be wrong about your Clan. Instead, he spreads his frost across the Dark Forest and curses his Clanmatesâ names. Heâll turn you into ice when he finds you.â As Newtstream monologued, Paleseed examined the dry grass around her. The entire forest looked like the aftermath of a great fire, destroying everything green in the world.
âFrostâŚâ Paleseed muttered, looking back at the icy death wounds covering Newtstreamâs extremities. âAutumnstarâs frostbite scars were some of his most famous characteristics. Thatâs why his curse is some form of eternal frostbite. The power of the Dark Forest exacerbates that legend. But frost has a big weakness. If⌠yes, if we donât draw the attention of Spirits of ShadowâŚâ Paleseed ran her paw against the harsh, rugged bark of a dead tree.
âWhat are you thinking, Paleseed?â Weedfoot asked. Paleseed turned back to the group, her eyes the brightest thing in the land.
âI have a plan to take care of Autumnstar,â Paleseed said.
(Darkkick: 123, trans female, lonesome, talented swimmer, understands nature)
[Image ID: Downstar (now in an elder sprite), Rattlepelt, and Splashpaw look at Gentlestar, a brown tabby with a maple seed accessory, who introduces Asterpaw, a gray apprentice. Gentlestar says, âWeâve decided that if Asterpaw is going to give prey to every loner and kittypet he comes across, he would do better in the Clan thatâs more supportive of that behavior.â Under Asterpaw, it says NEW PLAYER: ASTERPAW, 10, MALE, THOUGHTFUL, HAS LOTS OF IDEAS.]
---
As Paleseed, Weedfoot, and Darkkick dreamed unbeknownst to all but a trusted few, Downstar cheered with the rest of the Clans as WheatClan finished their performance on Shardlings, the broken pieces of destroyed souls fulfilling dark desires on loop. The young apprentices were a great decision to play the part of the Shardlings, even if they lacked an artisanâs acting skills. For who could get mad at excited youths performing with their friends and kin?
âMaybe we should have asked you to help with our Leatherwaste performance, huh Splashpaw?â Rattlepelt, who sat near Downstar, laughed to the purple-ribboned apprentice.
âI suppose you should have,â Splashpaw laughed, âbut Iâm almost a historian. I donât think I would have the same effect as the six moon old apprentices.â Someone on the other side of the swarm of Clan cats called for a race. Suddenly, dozens of furry forms shoved past Downstar, ignorant of her position.Â
âA lot of energy, considering how close we are to sunhigh,â Downstar chuckled, smoothing out her disturbed pelt. âIâm ready for the feast.â
âIt smells amazing,â Splashpaw purred, tasting the air. âWe have this every Harvest Moon?â
âHopefully youâll have a lot more of these feasts in the years to come,â Rattlepelt chirped, picking up her fox pelt from where the excited crowd had shoved it off her back.
âDownstar! A moment, if you would!â Gentlestar weaved through the excited crowd, her maple seed necklace bouncing on her chest. The bright sun made her brown pelt look yellow. A small gray tom followed her, staring at Downstar.
âYour Clan put on an excellent show, Gentlestar,â Downstar purred as the WheatClan leader approached.
âSo did yours,â Gentlestar chirped, touching noses with the RippleClan leader. âHopefully we can share tongues some more later today. First, though, I wanted to introduce you to Asterpaw.â The gray apprentice stood beside Gentlestar, studying the three RippleClan cats before him. His fur was choppy, with a few small tabby markings along his face and tail. He was sleek compared to most WheatClan cats, who enjoyed the extra fat from their various herbs and crops in the bountiful moons.
âGreetings,â he said quietly, nodding to each RippleClan cat in turn.
âAre you a new apprentice?â Splashpaw asked. Asterpaw shifted back.
âHeâs been an apprentice for over a season now,â Gentlestar explained, âbut he hasnât been allowed at Gatherings. I heard you used to be a troublemaker in your youth, Downstar. Asterpaw would want to challenge you for that title. Heâs been the subject of three trials in the span of four moons.â
âWhat in StarClanâs name have you been doing?â Rattlepelt gasped as Asterpaw straightened up against the shocked expressions of those around him.
âIâve been helping cats,â he huffed.
âAsterpaw has been caught numerous times stealing WheatClan resources and giving them to the southern farm cats,â Gentlestar said. A curt glare from the brown leader shut Asterpaw up. His yellow eyes screamed to talk back. âNo matter how many times weâve explained to Asterpaw that our prey and tools belong to us, heâll still give what he can away.âÂ
âThatâs not something a leader would usually admit to another,â Downstar noted as Asterpaw grew stiff as wood, fighting back the urge to defend himself. âThat sort of theft is a serious issue, Asterpaw.â The flood inside of the gray WheatClan tom broke free.
âI donât always take things from camp!â he cried. âI make some of my own stuff, too. The farm cats have their own society to the south, and they donât have our freedom to act with humans constantly watching them. If theyâre struggling to hunt for themselves, I give them a spare mouse or my share of a meal. I only want to take care of them!â
âExcept youâre supposed to take care of your Clanmates, not those outside WheatClan,â Gentlestar reminded him. This time, Asterpaw did not back down, glaring back at Gentlestar with righteous strength. Gentlestar simply sighed, looked back to Downstar, and said, âWeâve decided that if Asterpaw is going to give prey to every loner and kittypet he comes across, he would do better in the Clan thatâs more supportive of that behavior.â
âWait,â Rattlepelt said, âdo you mean you want Asterpaw to join RippleClan?â
âHeâs shown WheatClan that he cannot be trusted,â Gentlestar sighed. âThe only other option after so many repeated offenses in so little time was exile.â
âRippleClan loves to help outsiders, right?â Asterpaw said, stepping away from Gentlestar. âYouâve invited a dozen loners to join your ranks at this point. You understand what Iâm trying to do.â
âWeâre kind to loners, yes,â Downstar said, glancing toward Lemmy in the gaggle of queens, âbut weâre still wise with our resources. Thereâs a border between helping others and hurting your Clan. If you want to be a RippleClan cat, you need to understand that.â
âIf you can teach him that lesson, WheatClan will be impressed,â Gentlestar said. âBeyond his issues, Asterpaw is a good caretaker and minds the camp well. While we will miss him, he and the Clan all agree this is for the best.â Asterpaw nodded along.
âAnother caretaker apprentice from another ClanâŚâ Downstar hummed. She couldnât help but chuckle at history repeating itself. âI trained Elmsprout when she left AshClan. It seems only fair that I train another caretaker.â
âSo I can join?â Asterpaw asked, standing as tall as he could despite his short stature.
âYou canât be stealing from us, though,â Rattlepelt noted. âIâll know if you steal my leather.â She adjusted her fox pelt, rubbing her face into the red fur lining the outer side.
âIf youâre as troublesome as Gentlestar claims you are,â Downstar chuckled, touching noses with Asterpaw, âyou need a more experienced paw to guide you. If this is what you want, you can return to RippleClan with us at the end of Harvest Moon.â Asterpaw hooked his tail high, purring at his new leader.
A hiss slipped through the happy noise of the Harvest Moon. A sharp yelp spun Downstarâs head around. Far away from the rest of the crowd, Weedfoot, Paleseed, and Darkkick slept beside one another. Terracottafoot looped around them, using them as a wall between themself and Waspdawn, whose shortened tail thrashed violently and who bared his teeth like a dog.
âWhat did you do to Paleseed?â Waspdawn yowled. He tried to get around the sleeping cats and strike Terracottafoot, but the nimble cleric led the codekeeper on a loop, staying far from Waspdawnâs angry claws.
âPlease, you canât disturb them!â Terracottafoot begged. âThis is more important than you realize!â Downstar ran toward Waspdawn and Terracottafoot, but Troutpool beat her there.
âWaspdawn, you canât attack a cleric!â Troutpool yowled, grabbing Waspdawn by the scruff and pulling him back. Waspdawn squirmed out of Troutpoolâs weak grasp.
âThey did something to them!â Waspdawn hissed. Cats slipped away from the excitement of the distant race and formed a crowd of onlookers, all eyes on Waspdawn. âNone of them will wake up!â Terracottafoot crouched by Darkkick, who did not wake up despite the chaos around her. Eelstar shoved his way to the front of the crowd. He shivered as he stood, even though the coming sunhigh made it feel almost like summer again.
âTerracottafoot, what is going on?â Eelstar huffed. Terracottafoot rose, gray eyes hardening as they stood down their leader.
âI did what your pride wouldnât let you do,â they snapped. âI got help!â Downstar slipped beside Weedfoot. She nudged her deputyâs shoulder. Weedfoot did not stir. Downstar put her ear to Weedfootâs mouth. She was still breathing. Downstar shook her again, harder, but to the same result.
âWhatâs on their chests?â Rattlepelt called from the crowd. Troutpool joined Downstar and Weedfoot. She lifted Weedfootâs heavy head. Black dye smeared the bottom of her chin, a trail running down her chest. Darkkick and Paleseed had the same marks. Troutpool gasped and dropped Weedfootâs head. Her whiskers pushed back and her wide eyes stared at Terracottafoot.
âI know this ritual,â Troutpool muttered as Rattlepelt joined her little sister, offering a comforting weight at her side. âEvery cleric learns it, even though itâs incredibly taboo. Terracottafoot⌠why did you send them to the Dark Forest?â Fearful gasps and yowls rippled around the Leaderâs Stone. Codekeepers instantly fought to keep RippleClan and AshClan cats alike from swarming the scene, pushing and smacking them back with sheathed claws. Downstar shivered just like Eelstar.Â
âBecause theyâre going to save my Clan,â said Terracottafoot, whose characteristic insecurity vanished like morning mist against the outrage of the five Clans, whose gray eyes continued to stare down Eelstar, almost taunting him to speak against his only cleric.
(Downstar: 122, female, leader, wise, trusted advisor, very clever)
[Image ID: Darkkick and Weedfoot face down Autumnstar, a Dark Forest soul. Weedfoot says, âYou couldnât rest in peace, could you Autumnstar?â]
---
Paleseed would be the one to spring the trap. It was her idea, after all, and it would keep her out of the fight. Newtstream had wandered off, unable (or perhaps unwilling) to assist anymore than she had. That left Weedfoot and Darkkick standing among the trees. Waiting. Watching. Holding their breath at the slightest shift in wind.
âAre we sure Autumnstar will come this way?â Weedfoot asked.
âTerracottafootâs performance of the ritual was sound,â Darkkick huffed. âAutumnstarâs spirit is being pulled our direction as we speak.â Weedfoot peered into the moonlit fog. The trees grew hazy the farther she looked. A distant howl filled the silence between the pair.
âDarkkick,â Weedfoot said softly, âif I donât wake up, make sure my family knows why I did this.â
âIf I donât,â Darkkick said, âtell Spikecrash Iâve enjoyed growing closer to her.â
âIâll tell her you loved her,â Weedfoot purred.
The moonlight in the distance glinted against yellow eyes. Weedfoot froze, and not just out of fear. A thin coat of frost crawled under the fog, lurching from the shadows. It stung at Weedfootâs pads and forced her back. Darkkick shivered through it. Ginger and white paws, sticky with goo and shimmering with frost, stepped out of the haze. Ice ate at his scar tissue. The face that came into view was not one of malice, but shock.
âIs that you, Weedfoot?â Autumnstar gasped. The frost grew thicker and thicker where he stood. The frost collected over Weedfootâs paws, trying to glue her to the dead grass. Weedfoot kept moving, shifting her stance and breaking the ice. âYouâre not a cat I expected to see here. Especially not alive. And Darkkick, of all cats! I never expected to see your face again. So youâve joined up with Weedfoot and her kin. Did you send the pair of you here?â Darkkick raised her hackles, hissing.
âYou couldnât rest in peace, could you Autumnstar?â Weedfoot growled. âDo you even realize youâre hurting your Clan? Your Clanmates are dying, youâve cursed them. You need to undo it.â
âI wondered if my anger held the power so many artisans and historians claimed it did in this place,â Autumnstar muttered, lifting a paw and allowing his cursed goop to drip onto the dead grass. âIf that is how their betrayal manifests, so be it. May StarClan judge their foxhearted ways just as they judged me.â
âI would have thought youâd curse RippleClan,â Darkkick scoffed.
âYou may not believe me, but I know the truth about your Clan now,â Autumnstar snapped. A flick of his tail sent ice sprinkling onto the side of a withered oak. âOur ancestors decided five Clans can exist around StarClanâs Shrine. My fight is not with RippleClan.â
âAshClan is full of your friends, your kin,â Weedfoot yowled. âI remember how much you cared for them. Why hurt them?â
âWhy do you care?â Autumnstar groaned like an impatient apprentice. âYouâre not AshClan anymore. The culture and traditions I fought to uphold mean nothing to you now.â
âI did care!â Darkkick yowled, marching closer. A flash of frost shot out from around Autumnstar. It struck at Darkkickâs legs, leaving crystals on her long fur. She hissed, gritting her teeth as her legs buckled. âI cared about AshClan up to the moment you exiled me for following StarClanâs decree! How is that âupholding traditionâ?â
âI exiled you because I thought you were lying,â Autumnstar growled. âWhy would I believe StarClan would suddenly side with the cats sewing discord into my Clan, working against so many of the values I held dear? I thought it was a conspiracy, that you had been won over. I stopped the war when I learned the truth. I respected RippleClanâs land, became civil to Downstar. And what did I get for changing my ways? StarClan struck me down. The friends and kin I spent my life defending began to curse my name. Of course I cursed them back!â Weedfoot couldnât feel her paws. Her skin burned from the cold. Ice pinned her fur to her skin. It grew thicker and thicker. Pulling away grew harder and harder until all Weedfoot and Darkkick could do was squirm in their crystal chrysalis. âI fight for my Clan, only to be spat on for my efforts. If theyâll call me a curse on their Clan, thatâs just what Iâll be!â
âPaleseed!â Weedfoot yowled. Her eyes turned to the treetops over Autumnstar. Flames danced in front of the giant moon. It licked at the end of a pointy gray branch. Paleseed stood defiant in the lifeless tree, holding the stick high, teeth dug tight into the bark. The fire brightened her spotted fur and burned her heather eyes.
Paleseed set the flame to the tree. The fire eagerly jumped to the dry tinder. Brilliant orange light exploded against the fog. Paleseed ran and jumped from one tree to another, setting each aflame.
âAre you mad?â Autumnstar roared. âYouâll kill yourselves before you kill me!â Blood pooled in Weedfootâs paws in response to the sudden heat. Frost turned to dew. Darkkick lifted herself from the grass, shaking the quickly melting ice off her long black fur like dust. In the shining firelight, Autumnstar seemed like any other opponent Weedfoot had overcome before.
Darkkick attacked first. She head-butted Autumnstar, knocking him toward the flames, now leaping to other trees of its own merit. Weedfoot struck Autumnstar upside the head before he could collect himself. They rolled through the fog, two against one. Weedfootâs pelt grew soaked as she fell on her back, saved only by Darkkick dragging Autumnstar away.
âItâs done!â Paleseed cried. In between flashes of fur and fang, fire consumed every exit. The heat replaced Autumnstarâs supernatural chill entirely. Paleseed stood on the other side of the fire, coughing, eyes watering at the smoke that now ate at the moon.
âYouâve weakened him!â Weedfoot cheered as she freed Darkkick from Autumnstarâs strong hold. âThereâs nothing else you can do here, Paleseed. You need to wake up.â
âI donât know how!â Paleseed yowled. âThis doesnât feel like a dream!â
âYou can see, but your eyes feel closed, donât they?â Darkkick snapped, dodging Autumnstarâs strike. âYou can still hear Harvest Moon in the distance. Thatâs how it is for us. Force your eyes open! Listen to the crowd!â
âI love you both!â Paleseed cried. Her wide gaze held Weedfootâs attention, even as she scratched and clawed at Autumnstar. The fire blossomed, rising like the tide and receding just as fast. Paleseed was gone. Paleseed was safe.
A lucky blow; Weedfoot kicked her leg back, only for Autumnstar to lock his fangs deep into her ankle. He was a rattlesnake, injecting cold poison into Weedfootâs blood. The deputy yowled and shivered as Autumnstarâs icy claws continued to spread his mouthâs icy venom. That close to the flesh, the fire could do nothing to stop his dark power. Weedfoot dug into Autumnstarâs face, even as her leg remained stuck in the dead leaderâs vicious bite.Â
Darkkick slid on her back, appearing under Autumnstarâs stomach. She pushed up, hard as she could. Autumnstarâs fangs lifted from Weedfootâs ankle with a vibrant spurt of blood. Weedfootâs spasming muscles kicked Autumnstar away.
Here are the fallen Ashes in the Water, the AshClan cats who stood against their Clanmates and asked for a different life; Lavenderleaf, Redcloud, Sprucespring, Wasppaw, Finstrike, Burdockstream, and Paleshade. StarClan knew of their mission and accepted their cause, welcoming the group into StarClan despite how they turned against their Clan. This is for them!
Weedfoot slashed at Autumnstarâs eyes. Autumnstar shrieked, trying to blink the blood away. Darkkick fulfilled her namesake; she kicked, hard, right against Autumnstarâs side, sending the suddenly blinded leader stumbling into Paleseedâs flames.
The effect was nearly instant. As Autumnstar caterwauled, form flailing in the fire, sharp-angled shadows bounced off his silhouette. Shardlings. The living shadows, with too pointy ears and fang-tips for tails, the broken remnants of a Dark Forest soul, dead twice-over. They scattered with the smoke, mimicking their hostâs fading screams. Autumnstar grew smaller and smaller in the fireâs glow.
Weedfoot turned to Darkkick, wondering, praying, screaming inside, still absorbing the pain in her leg and everything unfolding around her. But Darkkick was gone. Darkkick was safe.
But Weedfoot bore witness. She was still a historian. This was her duty.
The last shadow of Autumnstar shifted and danced in the fire, with only its ears and tail suggesting a feline shape. But this Shardling did not bounce into the Dark Forest to search for its broken kin. No, this Shardling stared at Weedfoot. Bright yellow eyes glared at her with more hatred than any soul, dead or alive, could muster. It screeched with a sound like screaming wind. Flames reaching out to restrain it, the Shardling launched at Weedfoot.
Weedfoot was not safe.
[Image ID: Darkkick, Paleseed, and Weedfoot sit together as Rattlepelt tells Weedfoot, âIâve got you, Weedfoot!â Under Weedfoot, it says + CONDITION: MANGLED LEG. Under Rattlepelt, it says LEVEL UP! FIERCE -> BLOODTHIRSTY.]
Weedfoot screamed. She spasmed against the gray⌠no. The green grass. The grass was green again. The voices that once whispered far in the distance were now up close and yowling. The sun. The sun had returned, dancing directly over the Leaderâs Stone. A huge crowd surrounded Weedfoot, gasping and yowling in response to her sudden panic.
âIâve got you, Weedfoot!â Rattlepelt sat at Weedfootâs side. She wrapped her prized fox pelt around Weedfootâs burning leg. It was still bleeding, even though Weedfootâs body never entered that cursed forest. âTroutpool and the other clerics are making emergency bandages.â Rattlepelt pressed both front paws into Weedfootâs wounds. A bit of blood stained her gray skin.
âWe werenât putting on a show here.â Darkkick! She and Paleseed sat with Terracottafoot, cleaning the black dye off their chests with wet moss rather than groom it and get sick.
âI did try to send them away,â Terracottafoot gulped.
âMove, thatâs our mother!â Weedfootâs four other kits pushed through the crowd, Waspdawn in the lead. The golden tom ran into Weedfoot. Puddlewhisper and Lavendertwist wrapped around their mother. Even Scaleripple, sensitive as he was, laid his head on Weedfootâs tail, purring. Paleseed left Darkkick and Terracottafoot to join her family. Waspdawn tackled his sister, trying to hold both kin close. James trailed after them, lucious tail tucked under his legs.
âWhere are you hurt?â James asked. He noticed Rattlepeltâs bloody paws and groaned, closing his eyes. âNo, donât tell me, I donât want to look. Iâm just grateful youâre awake.â Weedfoot couldnât help but laugh; even as she awoke from a battle in the Dark Forest, James was still the snob she knew and love. James pressed into Weedfootâs neck.
âWeedfoot.â Weedfootâs family shifted to reveal Downstar, standing with Eelstar at the front of the crowd. âTerracottafoot told us of their vision and your quest. You should have told me about this.â
âThis wasnât your problem to solve,â Eelstar said. His voice lacked its usual bite as he stared at the fox pelt around her leg.
âIâm sorry, Downstar,â Weedfoot gulped, voice shaky from the experience, âbut this was too important to let you stop us. StarClan said we were the best ones to handle Autumnstar.â
âIt was terrifying to see,â Lavendertwist gulped. âMom, you and Darkkick were just laying there, shivering! And then all these scratches and bruises began to appear, even though no one was touching you! And then your leg opened up, it was⌠I donât even know what to say! What happened in the Dark Forest?â
Yes⌠what had happened? The Shardling had had its jaw around Weedfootâs throat. It should have killed her. It wasnât a thinking being, it was a bundle of lost emotion and instinct, a small piece of what used to be Autumnstar. It didnât have the capacity to spare. So why did it? All five Clans stared at Weedfoot, awaiting her answer. What could she say? Only the truth.
Sandhollow and Brightreed join their littermates in the warriorâs den.
[Image ID: Sandhollow and Brightreed are graduated adults. Under Sandhollow, it reads LEVEL UP! SANDPAW â SANDHOLLOW, LOYAL â AMBITIOUS, INTERESTED IN CLAN HISTORY â LORE KEEPER. Under Brightreed, it says LEVEL UP! BRIGHTPAW â BRIGHTREED, LONESOME â RIGHTEOUS, LOVER OF ART â STUDENT OF ART.]
Even though spring had officially arrived, snow still covered RippleClan camp as the Clan gathered under the Shiprock. It stood out like paint on gray stone in the dark of late dusk. It dampened the cheers that reverberated around the clearing, capturing the new names of the two toms standing beside Downstar.
"Brightreed! Sandhollow! Brightreed! Sandhollow!"
Sandhollow politely licked Downstar's shoulder and stood tall beside her while his family and friends cheered him on. Spikecrash preened beside her mother, her proud gaze warming Sandhollow's pelt. While Yellowburst was stuck in quarantine, Waspdawn and Stormjump still cheered Sandhollow on, tails high. Bandages still wrapped around Brightreed's shoulders, covering the hunting dog's vicious bite, but he was more than healthy enough to stand before the Clan and accept his name.
"Alright, Brightreed," Wolverineheart laughed, charging out of the crowd and nudging her brother. "Time for your vigil! We suffered, now you suffer!" Brightreed glanced back at Sandhollow while Wolverineheart led him to the camp entrance. Ha! Like Sandhollow would do anything to help him out. He was a mediator. He had no vigil to attend. Sandhollow stood even taller as the newly named warrior left camp.
"Enjoy the warrior's den, Sandhollow," Downstar declared with a deep nod. She slunk into the crowd, which now faded out to finish the day and prepare the Clan to nest. Cats touched noses with Sandhollow, passing along their personal congratulations as they returned to their business. Waspdawn and Stormjump squirmed through the crowd.
"We built your nest next to Yellowburst and I," Stormjump chirped, rubbing against her brother. "I think Spikecrash and Slushtrail worked on your gift. Let's see what they made!"
"Tomorrow, we'll do something fun together," Waspdawn promised, touching his son's forehead. "Whatever you'd like. Consider it a father and son day."
"Alright, Dad," Sandhollow purred. "I love you!" Sandhollow waved his tail goodbye and headed for the warrior's den, Stormjump stuck to his side.
"We're stuck against the rock wall," Stormjump explained as Sandhollow peered inside. It still felt like he was doing something forbidden as his paws found empty spaces between the thick, well-loved nests. His memories found him back in the apprentice's den, setting up his new nest surrounded by the other apprentices, trying not to let his kithood crush on Thundergale show. Speaking of Thundergale, she and Clammask tidied an untouched nest further back along the rock wall. Brightreed's nest, no doubt.
Stormjump tilted her brother's head toward his new nest. Duck down peeked from the curling moss. A small clay rattle sat like an egg in a bird's nest. Sandhollow purred and picked the rattle up. Sand shifted inside. It sounded like the ocean. He chuckled and placed the rattle at the edge of his nest. He settled into the down and moss and gently batted the rattle between his paws.
"I have to fix the clerics' oven," Stormjump said, drooping as she glanced outside. "One of the stones cracked, and Oilstripe assigned me to find a solution before I go to sleep. Sorry we can't lounge around for a while, Sandhollow! Enjoy the new nest, though. I'm glad you're with us." Sandhollow bid his sister farewell with a soft flick of his tail. The rolling sand inside the rattle soothed the joy smashing through his blood. He purred and scooted deeper into the nest.
As Thundergale and Clammask finished with Brightreed's nest and left the den, Sandhollow found himself almost entirely alone. For a moment, the den didn't seem like the warrior's den. It felt more like the apprentice's den had over the last moon, with Brightreed in the medicine den and Cobaltpaw and Lightningpaw busy with patrols. Luckily, he was almost alone, not entirely. Yarrowclaw laid in her nest near the far back of the den, facing the wall.
"Yarrowclaw," Sandhollow called. "You missed my ceremony! I'm Sandhollow now."
"Good for you," Yarrowclaw yawned, rolling over. Her dead eye stared blankly at Sandhollow, her good eye pressed into the moss.
"I'm not very tired yet," Sandhollow admitted, giving his gift another playful smack. "Want to share tongues for a bit?" Yarrowclaw purred. A flick of her ear invited Sandhollow closer. The newly named mediator crept around his Clanmates' nests. He had to sit in Anchovystrike's nest in order to groom Yarrowclaw. Yarrowclaw sat up with a soft groan and moved closer to Sandhollow. Sandhollow raked his tongue along Yarrowclaw's coarse pelt. Sandhollow's tongue caught tangle after tangle, easing them straight with a few focused licks.
"Too busy to clean yourself lately?" Sandhollow hummed as Yarrowclaw bit an itch on her leg.
"I guess so," Yarrowclaw huffed. "I went on a lot of patrols."
"Avoiding Currentsmoke?" Sandhollow guessed. Yarrowclaw's brother hadn't left the medicine den since Yarrowclaw brought Currentsmoke into camp a few days prior, face crunched and bleeding. Yarrowclaw groomed Sandhollow's shoulder rather than answer. "We have four clerics looking after him. If there's any chance he might survive, he'll survive."
"Truthfully, Sandhollow?" Yarrowclaw grunted as she groomed. "That entire day is a blur. Lately, I've gone on so many patrols, the days started blending into one another."
"No wonder you're so tired," Sandhollow chuckled. "You're probably exhausted. You're not the only warrior in the Clan, though."
"I know that," Yarrowclaw huffed, pulling back. "It's just hard to sit still lately. I wake up, and there's so much I need to do."
"If you need time to rest," Sandhollow reminded her, puffing his chest out a bit, "I am a mediator now. I can tell Downstar and Oilstripe to let you off patrols for a couple of days. Considering how much you've done lately, I don't think they'll mind."
"I think I need that," Yarrowclaw admitted, laying back down. "StarClan, for a while there, it felt like I could do anything. I think Anchovystrike was right. I am too much of an overachiever."
"I'm the same way," Sandhollow promised, touching noses with Yarrowclaw. "Tomorrow, you should join me in the nursery! Splashtuft and I are telling this grand story about Clan history to Shrewkit, help him decide what he wants to train as. You're welcome to sit and listen."
"If I fall asleep, don't blame me," Yarrowclaw scoffed.
"Considering Shrewkit's attention span?" Sandhollow laughed. "I don't think you'll be alone in that."
RippleClan, WheatClan, AshClan, and LynxClan discuss SlugClan.
[Image ID: Downstar meets with Ospreystar, Gentlestar, and Eelstar.]
---
WheatClan agreed to escort Downstar and her entourage through WheatClan territory rather than along the border with SlugClan. It simply wasn't safe, especially with a group their size. Downstar picked Wolverineheart, Thundergale, Lemmy, Splashtuft, and Lavendertwist to accompany her to her meeting at the Leader's Stone. With SlugClan's recent behavior, a patrol that size could have been considered a war party.
Downstar's patrol met with Gentlestar and her warriors at the border. The two groups melded together, with both leaders at the front. Spring frost melted under their paws as they crossed through WheatClan's more open land. Sunhigh slowed their progress as everyone ached for their nests, but a tiring time like that was perfect for such a secretive meeting. The warriors muttered amongst themselves, sharing recent news about SlugClan.
"Weevilsight's tail looks awful. How could they do that to a cleric?"
"Who knows what's going through Gorgestar's mind lately."
"He's so apologetic after attacking Honeybuzz and Venturedapple, but doesn't even bother to show up to the Gathering after Weevilsight's attack? I thought Gorgestar was supposed to be a kind leader."
"He's the oldest leader now. Maybe age has changed him."
"My mother became a different cat after she became an elder. By the time she died, I barely recognized her."
"So what, he's old so now he's evil?"
"That's an oversimplification. Gorgestar could have a reason for changing his border policy."
"That doesn't excuse attacking two clerics."
"I know that! Don't act like RippleClan's the only one they've been aggressive towards. Try sharing a border with them. We've gotten into, what, three border skirmishes with them in the last two moons? That's not to mention all the encounters that didn't end with fangs flying."
"All of you, that's enough," Gentlestar called back to the two patrols. "We're working together, not against each other. I don't want to hear another word until we're at the Leader's Stone."
"Yes, Gentlestar," the WheatClan patrol muttered, bowing their heads.
"That applies to RippleClan as well," Downstar noted. Lavendertwist groaned. but Lemmy smacked the back of his head and shut him up.
The path to the Leader's Stone was easier in WheatClan territory. With fewer trees to navigate around and less threat of catching your paw in some muddy crevice, the two Clans arrived faster than Downstar had ever managed on a typical trip to the Leader's Stone. Even when she was in SlugClan, it took a Gathering patrol longer to reach the festivities.
The Leader's Stone seemed harsh and dull in the light bursting through the thin, hazy clouds. Without the usual light of a fire or the joyful chatter of celebrating warriors, the entire clearing had an air of mourning to it. Unsurprisingly, LynxClan was already there when WheatClan and RippleClan arrived. Ospreystar paced around the Leader's Stone. Bandages wrapped around his front leg.
"Ospreystar," Downstar called. Ospreystar pulled himself from his thoughts. He and his entourage focused on the arriving patrol. Downstar and Gentlestar joined the youngest leader by the Leader's Stone. "What happened to your leg?"
"A bite from an eager SlugClan apprentice," Ospreystar sighed, showing off his wound. "Their mentor insisted they didn't know who they were attacking, but I don't think I believe them."
"This is getting ridiculous," Gentlestar huffed, shaking her head. "We have our conflicts, but border aggression typically makes sense. We see the reasons demonstrated at Gatherings. But we're getting conflicting reports from Gorgestar and his warriors."
"We'll figure out a solution," Downstar promised, climbing onto the Leader's Stone. "We've brought along some of our smartest historians and codekeepers. We should find the best way forward if we all discuss the situation."
"Speaking of historians and codekeepers," Ospreystar said, glancing back at Downstar's entourage, "those two are neither, if I recall." Wolverineheart and Thundergale sat with two LynxClan codekeepers, with Wolverineheart signing for her sister.
"I told you about Thundergale at the last Gathering, remember?" Downstar sighed. "Thundergale is experimenting with a new role devoted to teaching her Clanmates. I wanted her to come along and understand the advisory aspect of the historian role. Wolverineheart offered to accompany her and interpret our conversation, as Thundergale is partially deaf."
"Yes, the 'teacher' role, as you call it," Gentlestar hummed. "If you believe Thundergale could add something to our conversation, I'm happy to have her. I'm curious how this experiment will go."
"So am I," Ospreystar sighed, "but let's get back to the topic of the day."
"I hope you weren't planning to start without me!" Eelstar marched into the clearing, furless paws shining with melted frost. His patrol of codekeepers and historians followed behind, heads held high.
"Just getting our bearings, Eelstar," Downstar promised her gray-furred counterpart. "Did you have any trouble on your way here?"
"We followed the river around SlugClan and down along the LynxClan border," Eelstar explained. "Gorgestar shouldn't find out we passed through."
"Then let's begin," Downstar sighed. She flicked her tail high and called, "You all know why we're here. SlugClan's recent unchecked aggression along their borders has resulted in unfair attacks on all four of our Clans. SlugClan warriors have attacked two of my clerics, one of them on the night of the half moon meeting."
"SlugClan's not getting away with attacking my brother!" Splashtuft yowled. The codekeepers around him hissed, silencing his fervor.
"No, no they will not," Downstar declared. "SlugClan's recent behavior will not go unchecked, for the good of us all." Downstar jumped off the Leader's Stone and sat among her fellow leaders. "Now let's figure out the best way to confront Gorgestar and stop this madness before it kills someone."
(Downstar: 140, female, leader, wise, trusted advisor, very clever)
(Lavendertwist: 47, male, historian, playful, great singer, good storyteller)
(Lemmy: 57, female, codekeeper, cold, deep StarClan bond, good mediator)
(Wolverineheart: 13, female, warrior, troublesome, student of science)
(Thundergale: 13, female, teacher, adventurous, great hunter, good speaker)
(Splashtuft: 29, male, historian, adventurous, fast runner, student of art)
The four Clans send a war patrol to SlugClan.
[Image ID: Downstar and Puddlewhisper approach Gorgestar, who says "Downdapple, there you are." Under Puddlewhisper, it reads LEVEL UP! NATURAL INTUITION â KEEN EYE.]
---
Downstar won the right to lead the war patrol. Sure, the other three Clans had their fair share of skirmishes with SlugClan, but none had been as insulted as RippleClan. SlugClan's attacks against two clerics could not go unanswered. Downstar picked her most trusted codekeepers and warriors (Puddlewhisper, Waspdawn, Rapidleaf, Halibutdusk, Scaleripple, and Leathermask) and set off for SlugClan two days after the secret meeting.
They chose the dead of night for their assault. The chosen warriors could better ration their energy throughout the day, and there would be a few less warriors in SlugClan's camp upon arrival. Winter's chill still dug its claws into the land, frost coating everything living in a cocoon. It was the work of an Autumnfrost, those new spirits born of Autumnstar's Shardlings, Downstar was certain of it. They were mocking Downstar, rejoicing in her newfound warlust. What they didn't know was that there was no lust for war in Downstar's heart. Necessity drove her paws through the frost that night.
When Downstar stepped across the SlugClan border, she stepped across time. The weight of dozens of moons faded like snow melting across the territories. For a moment, she was Downdapple, a young caretaker, exploring her home with Fennelspot at her side, pulled into whatever hijinks Downdapple had planned for the day. A youthful vigor stirred her muscles as the smell of her kithood home filled her senses. Yet a wave consumed Downstar's nostalgia with a sickening reminder; she would be leading a war patrol into SlugClan's camp, the place she had been born, where she held vigil for her mother, her father, her littermates. She prayed their spirits would forgive her.
"I can smell AshClan's patrol," Puddlewhisper noted as they trailed along the SlugClan border. "They'll be at the meeting place before us." Downstar nodded, her thoughts too focused on the past to fully take in Puddlewhisper's report.
The four Clans decided to meet in a large dip along the SlugClan border. More than a few cats found themselves tumbling into the dip on their way to Gatherings, so everyone would know of it. Warriors from WheatClan, AshClan, and LynxClan were already waiting for RippleClan within the dip. It was a sizable group, able to match SlugClan's numbers. Oh StarClan, why was this the solution? The RippleClan war patrol merged with the other Clans as Downstar stood at the lip of the dip.
"Your leaders have all agreed," Downstar said, voice low and caught within the dip, "that for tonight, for this mission, you are to treat me as your leader, regardless of your Clan. As such, I expect everyone to follow my commands. Under no circumstance is any warrior to target the nursery. You'll answer to me if any harm comes to a kit during this attack. Allow noncombatants to leave camp freely, we are not taking prisoners."
"They attacked your clerics," an AshClan warrior hissed. "They attacked one of our artisans. Why shouldn't we attack theirs?"
"Because we are following the code," Downstar snapped, fur bristling. "Our four Clans have allied with each other because SlugClan's behavior has broken our code again and again. We are not going to return codebreaking with codebreaking. We are going to find Gorgestar and force him to Warriors⌠follow me." Downstar marched past the SlugClan border and deep into the territory itself. The war patrol climbed out of the dip and slunk after her, each Clan putting their unique training to use.
Still water pooled throughout SlugClan territory; leftovers from spring showers and runoff from the Great Northern River, forming thick, permanent puddles and tiny ponds. Downstar could almost hear the slugs and snails worming along the muddy shores and along the giant protruding roots. Downstar jumped from root to root, avoiding the algae-filled water. She hoped the other warriors were wise enough to know about leeches. How many times did Downstar go back to SlugClan camp as an apprentice with those disgusting creatures sucking on her legs? At least RippleClan copied their leader, following her path through the territory.
Downstar's mediators and artisans had been to SlugClan's camp since the founding of RippleClan; they often visited for trade and diplomacy's sake. Yet Downstar herself had not seen her birthplace since she set off with her fellow founders. How would it look now? How would Downstar's memories, her glories and tragedies, melt into the battle yet to come?
"Downstar!" a LynxClan codekeeper hissed from the back of the patrol. "I saw movement, racing past us. I think a patrol's seen us."
"That was bound to happen eventually," Halibutdusk muttered.
"Then we move quickly," Downstar huffed. She jumped off a buldging root and let her memories carry her to SlugClan's camp. The paws of her war patrol thundered behind her.
Thorn bushes marked out the walls of SlugClan's camp. Two willows, only just showing signs of spring growth, sheltered the Clan, with one standing amongst the thorny walls and another blossoming from the camp's heart. The nearly full moon danced through the fuzzy tendrils of the willow trees, dappling the area. Downstar could already hear warning yowls ring out inside the camp, stirring the sleeping warriors. The warriors on guard arched their backs, eyes darting about for signs of the incoming swarm.
Scaleripple and Leathermask lunged past Downstar. They tackled the two guards, spinning into one another. Two WheatClan warriors followed suit, pinning the guards down. With a flick of her tail, Downstar and her patrol stormed into SlugClan's camp.
If it weren't for the well-formed walls, it wouldn't have been strange to assume SlugClan's camp was just another part of the forest. All their artisan tools and ovens were hidden in a small grove away from the main part of camp, leaving just the giant willow tree and a series of thick bushes visible. The camp was too crowded for even a fire to warm the warriors through the night. Each bush marked the entrance to one of SlugClan's many dens, with the warrior's den right near the camp entrance. This meant, as Downstar and her war patrol breached the safety of SlugClan's camp, a horde of warriors met them before they got a tail-length in.
"Gorgestar!" Downstar yowled as her claws dug into a SlugClan caretaker. This particular caretaker was a bulky mass, shoving Downstar back into the swarm of intruding warriors. An AshClan codekeeper helped Downstar up and lunged at the offending caretaker. Downstar couldn't help but laugh; had she ever imagined an AshClan cat helping her in battle?
The tendrils of the willow tree that formed part of the camp wall shook. Waspdawn's gray eyes beamed from the branches. He, Puddlewhisper, and the rest of the AshClan warriors launched from the willow, landing on the SlugClan warriors. Tufts of fur flew across the clearing. The war patrol streaked around Downstar, finding the closest SlugClan scent and digging into their pelts. The queens scrambled out of the nursery, standing guard in front of their beloved kits. Elders who still had fire burning in their pelts stalked toward the chaos, daring the intruders to strike. Young, skinny warriors ushered mediators and artisans across camp. None of them were important to Downstar, not that night. No, her focus rested on the thick bush at the base of the central willow. The leader's den.
Downstar pounced on a SlugClan warrior. She tore into his ear, just as one of SlugClan's ranks had ripped into Honeybuzz. The warrior threw his head forward, flipping Downstar onto her back. Downstar's back paws slashed at the warrior's belly. The warrior yowled, stumbling back, giving Downstar enough time to get back on her paws. Her patrol tumbled and caterwauled across the camp, pinning down any SlugClan warrior they could get their claws on. One of the mediators burst from the procession of retreating noncombatantsâVoleflake, that was his name, he was the go-to mediator to visit RippleClanâand raced into Gorgestar's den. Fine. Having a mediator during this confrontation would be better. There wasn't a hair on Downstar's pelt that wanted to draw blood from her old friend.
Downstar ran for the leader's den. She jumped over Waspdawn and a SlugClan codekeeper, teeth buried deep into one another. Downstar was just a few tail-lengths from the den. A pale gray blur slammed into Downstar's side. The tortoiseshell leader stumbled, but stayed on her feet. A pale gray tabby tom sneered at her with glistening green eyes. The huge scar along his chest, an infamous mark from a roaming wolverine, identified the muscular tom as Lettucecloud, the deputy of SlugClan.
"Downstar, why are you doing this?" Lettucecloud yowled, claws bracing for Downstar to pounce. "Why would you attack us?"
"Why would we attack you?" Downstar spat. "Why would you attack us? SlugClan has been out of control, Lettucecloud! I can't let you maul my clerics and go unpunished."
"Clerics?" Lettucecloud snapped, rearing back. "As in more than one? I only know about Honeybuzz."
"Weevilsightâ" Downstar hissed, but a screeching mass of lilac fur smacked into her face. A long-furred SlugClan warrior pinned Downstar into the frosty ground.
"Carvingfur, we are talking!" Lettucecloud yowled. The warrior, Carvingfur, froze with a paw raised to claw at Downstar's eyes.
"Well forgive me for fighting an intruder," Carvingfur hissed.
"You've been attacking everyone you see by the border!" Downstar yowled. She shoved Carvingfur off, loosing a chunk of fur in the process. "You've mauled noncombatants! You tried to kill Weevilsight at StarClan's Shrine!" Lettucecloud's eyes bulged. Downstar stood tall, keeping an ear pricked for another would-be attacker.
"Call off your patrol," he gulped. "Stop the fight. We need to talk."
"YouâŚ" Downstar muttered, her ears ringing from the battle cries around her. "You don't know what I'm talking about." Downstar scurried up the central willow. She jumped onto the lowest sturdy branch and yowled, "Warriors! Halt! Halt!" Lettucecloud hurried up the tree beside Downstar. He yowled as loud as his lungs could manage. Slowly, the bloody warriors filling SlugClan's camp slowed in their bloodshed. Waspdawn hacked out another cat's blood and fur. Scaleripple and Leathermask limped into camp, covered in scratches and bruises. A SlugClan historian stepped off Halibutdusk. Warriors slipped on melting frost, which diluted the blood dripping from long claw marks. All eyes turned to the central willow.
"Give Downstar and I a moment to talk!" Lettucecloud yowled. "We⌠we will resolve this peacefully." Outrage tore through the warriors. SlugClan warriors hissed and batted at their camp's intruders, while the war patrol demanded SlugClan's heads.
"Remember why we came here!" Downstar snapped. "We've made SlugClan listen. We will draw no more blood tonight. I expect the codekeepers in our ranks to keep the peace. Puddlewhisper, with me."
Downstar's war patrol crept to one side of the camp, licking their wounds. The two clerics of SlugClan hurried to their Clanmates, sniffing their pelts for serious wounds. Codekeepers and the cooler heads of the war patrol held back vengeful warriors with a few curt words. Puddlewhisper slipped around the grumbling cats and scaled the willow. She eyed Lettucecloud closely and sat beside her leader.
"What's going on, Lettucecloud?" Downstar sighed.
"I have a theory," Lettucecloud sighed, staring down at the leader's den. Downstar suddenly realized that despite the chaos of the battle, Gorgestar had not shown his face since the war patrol's arrival. Sure, he couldn't fight, but he should have at least confronted Downstar.
"Start with why you attacked our clerics," Puddlewhisper huffed.
"One of your patrols told us they had orders to increase their aggression at the border," Downstar said. "Did Gorgestar give those orders?"
"He must have," Lettucecloud admitted. "I thought I stopped it after the incident with Honeybuzz. Gorgestar must have encouraged our warriors behind my back."
"You're trying to say your warriors got into skirmishes and you never knew of them?" Puddlewhisper said with a less-than-convinced sneer.
"In a cruel twist of fate," Downstar chuckled with a sad shake of her head, "that's the most believable part of this story. Gorgestar loves to handle patrol duties, he was that way when I was a caretaker here." Downstar's battle hardiness returned as she set her face and continued, "The rest of what you're saying, now that is less than believable. Gorgestar is a just leader who has always sought peace along his borders. He wouldn't change overnight." Lettucecloud's ears sunk low. He jumped out of the willow, in front of the leader's den. Downstar and Puddlewhisper followed him down.
"Talk to him yourself," Lettucecloud muttered. "You'll understand then." Lettucecloud peered into the leader's den and said, "Voleflake, Downstar and her codekeeper are coming in. They don't mean Gorgestar any harm." With that, Lettucecloud stepped back, giving the mollies room to enter.
The last time Downstar saw Gorgestar's den, she had been bidding her Clan farewell, preparing to take the lead over RippleClan and start a new story for the Clans. The cocky youth that still stirred in Downstar's chest laughed at the den's simplicity; the shipwreck and the overturned human basket Downstar nested in were far superior. Gorgestar's nest was the only thing of note within the bushy den, pressed against the trunk of the central willow. Voleflake sat beside the nest, whiskers twitching rapidly as he watched the two leaders meet. Gorgestar himself stood in his nest, trying to slide himself into his sled. Moss tore from his nest and collected on his motionless hind legs. He muttered something unintelligible, sparing nary a glance toward Downstar and Puddlewhisper.
"Gorgestar?" Downstar called. Gorgestar jolted from his work, eyes glazed. It took him a moment to settle on Downstar. The tension in his neck relaxed and his entire face softened.
"Downdapple, there you are," Gorgestar sighed. "What's the situation out there? Who attacked us?" Dread dripped down Downstar's throat and drowned her voice. "It was Autumnstar, wasn't it? Who else would come into camp like this?"
"They're gone, Gorgestar," Voleflake promised, touching his nose to Gorgestar's shoulder. "Down⌠Downdapple is just making sure you're alright." Voleflake's long, tense stare clued the two RippleClan mollies in.
"Yes, yes, of course," Gorgestar muttered. "You're a devoted caretaker, Downdapple, even if you turn a few of my hairs gray." He chuckled as he shuffled himself into his sled. "Tie me in, Downdapple. I should address the Clan, check on our warriors."
"Fennelspot is taking care of everything," Downstar said quickly, hurrying to Gorgestar's side. "He wants to focus on his work. Maybe you can address SlugClan once he's finished?"
"Clever molly," Gorgestar chuckled. His eyes caught on Puddlewhisper, who still lingered near the entrance. "Downdapple, I didn't realize, I should have known you wouldn't stumble in here without cause. We have a prisoner! Puddlespeckle, isn't it?" Puddlewhisper suddenly seemed too big for her pelt. "Good work, Downdapple. Make sure the codekeepers keep a close eye on this tom."
"I'll take care of the prisoner right now," Downstar said, backing up. "I just wanted to check on you." Downstar brushed against Puddlewhisper, easing the unnerved codekeeper out of the leader's den. "Don't strain yourself⌠sir." Downstar escorted Puddlewhisper out of the den before she could face more of Gorgestar's delusions.
"I've had a few cats misgender me in my life," Puddlewhisper groaned as they rejoined Lettucecloud outside, "but somehow, that was the worst." SlugClan glared at Downstar and Puddlewhisper, but most were too busy licking their wounds to speak up. Downstar's patrol tried to approach her, but Waspdawn and the other codekeepers kept them at bay.
"You'll have to forgive Gorgestar," Lettucecloud insisted in a soft voice. "His mind is caught in the past. It's anyone's guess what he'll think is real. He's been like this for some time now. It was managable for a while, at least I thought."
"He shouldn't be leader," Downstar growled, the fog of shock and grief fading. "He should have retired as soon as his mind began to fade. Surely your clerics and mediators would agree."
"He only has one life left," Lettucecloud sighed, lowering himself before the furious leader (much to the shagrin of Lettucecloud's Clanmates). "I've taken over most of his duties and keep him comfortable. I didn't want to disgrace his legacy by forcing him into the elder's den. How would it have looked to the other Clans? Do you think Eelstar, Gentlestar, or Ospreystar would respect my leadership if I ousted my predecessor?"
"He's been organizing patrols behind your back," Puddlewhisper huffed. "I've heard how age can cripple the mind, make one paranoid. StarClan knows what he's been telling his Clan, Downstar."
"It stops tonight," Lettucecloud declared. "I'm calling together a vote to officially remove Gorgestar from leadership. If I had realized what he was having SlugClan do, I would have ousted him moons ago, Downstar."
"You let your sentimentality endanger your Clan and mine," Downstar growled, ears and tail high as she spoke. "I speak for the other four Clans when I say this. When you come to the Gathering in a few days, I expect to be calling you Lettucestar. We will not tolerate any more skirmishes along your borders. It's up to you to keep your Clan in check, Lettucecloud, or the other leaders will do your job for you." Downstar looked back into the leader's den. Voleflake spoke softly to Gorgestar, but the paralyzed leader's eyes were far away.
Truthfully, the war patrol could only be called a success, Downstar knew that. But somehow, it would have been better if Gorgestar had some secret plan for Downstar to thwart. She couldn't thwart her old friend's mind.
All Downstar could do was grieve.
(Downstar: 140, female, leader, wise, trusted advisor, very clever)
(Puddlewhisper: 47, trans female, thoughtful, keen eye, ghost sense)
Drumpaw realizes heâs really a tom and Lemmy recovers from her yellowcough.
[Image ID: The image features Drumpaw and Lemmy. Under Drumpaw, it says LEVEL UP! FEMALE -> TRANS MALE. Under Lemmy, it reads - CONDITION: YELLOWCOUGH.]
(Drumpaw: 8, trans male, caretaker apprentice, loyal, moss-ball hunter)Â
(Lemmy: 36, female, codekeeper, cold, deep StarClan bond)
Trumpetspore notices Rapidleaf sulking around camp again.
[Image ID: Parsley, Trumpetspore, and Leatherpaw watch Rapidleaf. Under Leatherpaw, it says LEVEL UP! VENGEFUL -> CONFIDENT.]
---
Something about Rapidleaf unnerved Trumpetspore.
Perhaps it was her unusual arrival, interrupting her own cousinâs vigil in a daze. Perhaps it was her refusal to be escorted back to LynxClan, even though she could make the journey and recover at home. Perhaps it was her silence, despite question after question from Puddlewhisper and Waspdawn. Trumpetsporeâs best guess? It was her eyes, blue and haunted, as she crouched near the back of the medicine den and sculked to the dirtplace.
âMs. Downstar and Weedfoot would never dream of forcing Ms. Rapidleaf out, not after whatâs happened,â Parsley said as Trumpetspore and Leatherpaw shared some broth with her before the Gathering. âBut I donât like how shifty sheâs been.â
âCould LynxClan be planning an attack?â Leatherpaw wondered.
âAnd they drowned one of their warriors as what, a threat?â Parsley scoffed. Leatherpaw dipped his head back into the bowl, drowning his embarrassment in food.
âThere she is,â Trumpetspore whispered, eyes locked on the medicine den. Rapidleaf stepped into the setting sun. She let out a watery cough and slowly crossed camp. It was the furthest Trumpetspore had seen her from the medicine den since the vigil. Rapidleaf approached the stove, where Rabbitjoy and Tempestshade were giving everyone their share of broth. Rapidleaf spoke quietly to the pair, too quiet for Trumpetspore to hear. Soon though, she had a bowl of her own, which she carried back to the medicine den.Â
âShe doesnât seem that odd,â Leatherpaw noted.Â
âI just donât like how she showed up,â Parsley huffed. âLike sheâs replacing my old friend.â
âNo oneâs going to replace Scrubmask,â Trumpetspore promised, her paw touching Parsleyâs. âOilstripe is already calling her the Celestial of RippleClan Warriors!â
âAll cats old enough to catch their own prey, gather below the Shiprock for a Clan meeting!â Trumpetspore had a few more licks of broth as the Clan gathered below Downstar, who looked far stronger than she had been in recent moons. Soon, Trumpetspore, Parsley, Leatherpaw, and many of their Clanmates were on their way to the Gathering, welcoming in the warm summer.
Trumpetspore helped carry a pot she sculpted at the end of spring, the perfect sort for boiling. She wasnât an artisan, of course, but sheâd developed some friendships through trading at Gatherings and other holidays, so she could trade the pot with WheatClan for good picks of their early summer crops. She carefully carried the pot on her back, strapped down with some of Rattlepelt and Rabbitjoyâs well-crafted leather straps. Trumpetsporeâs back ached from the long walk to the Leaderâs Stone, but it would be worth sampling some of WheatClanâs wonderful delicacies.Â
As the RippleClan delegation neared the cliff leading to the Leaderâs Stone, Trumpetspore noted that the crowd above seemed quieter than usual. It was only noticeable to more attentive cats, but Trumpetspore was sure of it; the Clans werenât as chatty as they typically were. RippleClan was almost always the last Clan to arrive, considering their distance, so surely all the other Clans were there. Trumpetspore kept her ears perked as she carefully followed the trail up, eyeing her pot.
The answer became clear when Trumpetspore broke through the thick summer growth and into the fire-lit clearing. LynxClan typically sat on the far western side of the clearing, closer to their own borders. To Trumpetsporeâs surprise, there were only a few cats sitting over there. The other three Clans kept glancing LynxClanâs way, muttering amongst themselves, but no one had the courage to ask their burning questions yet. The mystery deepened when Trumpetspore turned her attention to the Leaderâs Stone itself. A white tom with green-yellow eyes and a few small brown spots sat below Eelstar (who looked shockingly frostbitten, despite the season), Gorgestar, and Gentlestar (Sanderlingstar had passed moons ago), his stance tall despite his position on the bottom level of the rock. Trumpetspore recognized him; it was Ospreytongue! He was a LynxClan mediator. Trumpetspore had gotten to know him a few times while escorting Rabbitjoy or Spikecrash to meetings. What was he doing on the Leaderâs Stone? He wasnât deputy, and Trumpetspore was certain Mistlestar still had a few lives left. Yet Fluttertooth, a LynxClan warrior, sat with the other deputies (Barkfur, Lettucecloud, and Ratbreeze).Â
âI donât like the look of this,â Parsley grumbled as RippleClan set out their goods and took their spot on the far eastern side of the clearing. Downstar climbed to the top of the Leaderâs Stone, sitting just below Gorgestar. She glanced up at her old friend and former leader, but Gorgestar looked as confused as everyone else.
âI say we donât waste time on proper introductions tonight,â Eelstar barked once Downstar was settled. âOspreytongue, where in the Dark Forest are your leader and deputy? Whereâs the rest of your Clan?â
âItâs Ospreystar now,â the white tom sighed. Every cat in the clearing tensed as they awaited whatever awful news the new leader had in store. The few faces from LynxClan cast their heads down. âEsteemed members of the five Clans, I am afraid a deep and unspeakable tragedy has befallen LynxClan, the likes of which has not been seen in many moons.â Eelstar shifted uncomfortably. âLess than a moon ago, a cougar appeared in LynxClan territory. It broke into our camp and decimated our numbers. Kits, elders, every rank of our Clan felt a hard loss. Our deputy was the first to die. Mistlestar gave the rest of their lives to drive the beast away. TheâŚâ Ospreystarâs voice broke for a moment. âThe cats you see here represent half of our remaining population.âÂ
Mournful wails and gasps broke through the crowd. Half? That couldnât be! The LynxClan delegation was smaller than RippleClanâs caretakers and codekeepers alone! Only that many cats survived? Their Clan had been so big beforeâŚ
âYouâre hardly a year old yourself, Ospreystar,â Gentlestar whined, her long brown fur blowing in the sudden cold wind. âHow did a young mediator end up the new leader of LynxClan?â
âOur only remaining cleric, Curlglow, interpreted StarClanâs will,â Ospreystar explained. âOur ancestors believe I am the best fit to help LynxClan recover from this tragedy. We ask for whatever aid you can provide us in the coming moons. Medicine, food, weâll take all the help weâre offered.â
âSlugClan shall do what it can,â Gorgestar promised.
âSo will RippleClan,â Downstar said. âWords canât describe the horror youâve gone through, Ospreystar. I can only hope my Clan can offer a shred of good news. One of your warriors, Rapidleaf, is still alive and recovering in RippleClanâs camp.â The LynxClan cats lit up like blazing fires. Hope sparked in their eyes as they got to their paws, itching to yowl their questions.
âHow long has she been there?â Ospreystar gasped, lips curled. âWhy didnât you tell LynxClan prior to tonight?â
âWe tried, Ospreystar,â Downstar groaned. âI sent two different patrols to your border, and both times they returned empty-mouthed. They never encountered your warriors.â Ospreystar shrunk slightly, giving his chest an embarrassed lick.
âOur patrols have been sporadic while weâve regained our footing,â he explained.Â
âHow exactly did a LynxClan warrior make it all the way to RippleClan?â Gentlestar hummed. âItâs far from a simple journey.â
âShe had water in her lungs when she stumbled into our camp,â Downstar said. âShe was half-drowned and delirious. Sheâs still recovering under the care of Troutpool and Honeypaw.â
âMost of LynxClanâs border with the Great Northern River is lined with cliffs,â Ospreystar mumbled, eyes searching through his memory. âItâs the only real water source she could have drowned in. Last we saw of Rapidleaf, she joined Mistlestarâs patrol to chase out the cougar. No one made it home. What has she told you?â
âMay I make an educated guess as to what happened?â Gentlestar asked. âIt seems to me that in the battle against the cougar, Rapidleaf must have fallen into the Great Northern River and been swept all the way to RippleClan. The trauma of the situation combined with her near-death experience would be enough to rattle anyoneâs memory. Itâs possible she wonât explain the situation because she has no answers for you.âÂ
âWhen can she return home?â Ospreystar asked Downstar. âWe need all the paws we can.â LynxClan yowled their agreement, sharing the joy of a lost friendâs homecoming with the other Clans. Trumpetspore and Leatherpaw glanced at each other awkwardly.
âWeâll discuss that in private,â Downstar assured the young leader. âRippleClan will give what we can to help LynxClan rebuild itself.âÂ
The rest of the Gathering continued on in some vague semblance of normalcy, but Trumpetspore couldnât stop thinking; from the way Rapidleaf acted, she remembered something about how she arrived in RippleClan. Was her silence a way to avoid returning to a home filled with tragedy and mourning?
(Trumpetspore: 21, female, warrior, nervous, excellent potter, good storyteller)
(Downstar: 119, female, leader, wise, trusted advisor, very clever)
Lavendertwist wants to better remember lost friends, and decides to quietly become a historian.
[Image ID: Lavendertwist stands proud on screen.]
(Lavendertwist: 26, male, historian, playful, great singer, good storyteller)
Terracottafoot asks to speak with Weedfoot, Darkkick, and Paleseed privately.
[Image ID: Terracottafoot, now an adult, says to Weedfoot, Paleseed, and Darkkick (now in an elder sprite), âIâm not going to reject help just because it doesnât come from AshClan.â]
---
âPaleseed, do you have any idea what this meeting is about?â Weedfoot hummed as she, Darkkick, and Paleseed made their way to the AshClan border, following the setting sun.Â
âI know as much as you do, Mom,â Paleseed sighed. âTerracottafoot is a good kit. Whatever they want to talk about, they mean no harm.â
âI would have thought their mentor would have poisoned them against me,â Darkkick muttered. Old age had smacked her across the face like a tidal wave; it seemed she sprouted a Gatheringâs worth of gray hairs in a single night.
âMaybe we shouldnât speak ill of the dead,â Paleseed suggested. The announcement about Newtstreamâs death had slipped through the chaos of the Gathering as the Clans all gathered together to support poor LynxClan. After all, it seemed AshClan had a notice of death to give every other moon, so why would Newtstreamâs death be anything of note?
While the Clans busied themselves after the announcements with comforting words and plans for LynxClan, Terracottafoot had slipped away from the other clerics and asked Paleseed to bring herself, her mother, and Darkkick to the AshClan border the following sunset. They hadnât said anything more before other AshClan cats pushed by them, still focused on LynxClan. A day later, as the three RippleClan cats made their way to the border, Paleseed had a theory. She kept quiet for now, waiting to see what Terracottafoot actually thought.
The ginger cat was waiting for the group when they arrived. Terracottafoot paced the border, fur raised, meowing under their breath. Their head and tail shot up when they heard the RippleClan cats approach. Their worry escaped in a loud sigh.
âYou came!â Terracottafoot gasped. âThank you, thank you! We need to be quick about this. Eelstar and Barkfur will be furious if they find out Iâm meeting you.â
âIâve never had a chance to speak with you,â Darkkick muttered, eyes narrowed at the young cleric, âbut you were Newtstreamâs apprentice. How could someone who trained under her do something she would have despised?â
âBecause I love my Clan, Warrior Darkkick,â Terracottafoot gulped, standing as tall as they could, âand StarClanâs told me you can help. Iâm not going to reject help just because it doesnât come from AshClan.â
âWeâre listening,â Weedfoot said, taking a seat by the border. Paleseed sat beside her mother, but Darkkick remained standing.
âThis is about what Waspdawn and I saw, isnât it?â Paleseed asked softly. âThe early autumn frostbite. Eelstarâs absences from Gatherings. All the deaths of the last year.â Terracottafoot, despite having their name for a few moons by then, still looked like the nervous, tiny apprentice Paleseed met by the border a year ago. It took them a minute to find their words.
âI donât want things to be like this,â Terracottafoot finally grunted. âI donât want to be caring for my entire Clan all the time! You might not believe this, but Iâm actually a rather well-spoken and confident cat most of the time. I would like to be like that more of the time. I just⌠I canât be that cat while Autumnstar is haunting us!â Weedfoot and Darkkick moved in closer. Paleseed shrunk into herself slightly at the old leaderâs mention. He never harmed you personally, Paleseed, remember that, youâre reacting in empathy with your mother and all she lost.
âIt would be best to start from the beginning,â Weedfoot huffed. Terracottafoot nodded, almost shaking their head off.
âAutumnstar got sick during my kithood,â Terracottafoot explained. âHe kept losing lives, and he would have these fits where he couldnât leave his den for days. Eelstar and Newtstream kept it secret, no one else knew about it. Newtstream tried performing a ritual with some rosemary blessed carvings, but it didnât work. He still died. Newtstream said StarClan punished him for being angry toward RippleClan. She said he couldnât fight you anymore knowing you had StarClanâs guidance, but he got mad at everyone else instead.â Terracottafoot could have been a historian in another life, Paleseed noted as her heartbeat filled her ears.
âAfter he died, Newtstream thought that was the end of it,â Terracottafoot gulped. âBut then cats started shivering, and they couldnât stop. It was like they were freezing to death, no matter how many pelts we put on them or how big our fire was. Newtstream asked StarClan what was happening and⌠they said it was Autumnstar. He was in the Dark Forest, and he was angry at his Clan and punishing them.âÂ
âGood,â Darkkick snapped, making the other three cats jump. âAs soon as Autumnstar denied StarClanâs vision of RippleClan, I knew he was too absorbed in his own image of Clan stability to make it to StarClan some day.â Paleseedâs pelt burned at the thought of praising someoneâs imprisonment in the Dark Forest. Weedfoot stayed still.
âStarClan gave Newtstream a ritual to perform with items representing things Autumnstar hated,â Terracottafoot said. âThatâs when I met you, Paleseed. We needed RippleClan horsetail to represent his hate of RippleClan. It would work for a bit to slow down symptoms or cure cats for a bit, but they would eventually freeze again. It hit Eelstar the worst. He⌠no, I shouldnât say that.â Heâd lost more than one life. Paleseed was certain that was the hidden message. âThe curse only targets cats who were alive during the war with your Clan, so Iâve been immune. Iâve been working myself to death helping with the ritual and treating cats, and I can only do so much. My Clan is dying.â
âWhy did you ask for our help, then?â Weedfoot asked.
âNewtstream passed not long ago,â Terracottafoot said, voice dropping. âI didnât know what to do without her. At the last half-moon meeting, I met someone in StarClan. Celestial Paleshade.â A shiver creeped up Paleseedâs spine. âShe showed me a vision. I saw the three of you running through a frost-covered forest as leaves fell around you. When you passed a tree, the frost melted off the bark. I believe you three are what my Clan needs to stop Autumnstar.â
âBut Autumnstarâs dead, Terracottafoot,â Paleseed gulped. âWe canât fight him. We arenât clerics. We donât have your connection to StarClan. He isnât even in StarClan.â Terracottafoot glanced at the sky, where the first few stars showed their face. Paleseed felt a hundred eyes on her pelt.
âThere is a way,â Terracottafoot whispered. âItâs forbidden except in the most hopeless of situations, but if Celestial Paleshade showed me this vision, I believe we have StarClanâs approval. When Harvest Moon arrives, the border between the living world and the Dark Forest is at its weakest. I can put the three of you to sleep and send your souls to the Dark Forest. From there, you can find Autumnstar and stop this.â Paleseed couldnât stop shaking. The Dark Forest? Where the worst souls of the Clans stalked the trees? Where Spirits of Shadow lurked around every bush?
âMy daughter is a mediator,â Weedfoot growled, pushing against Paleseed. âShe doesnât fight. It would be mouse-brained to send her there.â
âBut she bears Celestial Paleshadeâs name!â Terracottafoot whined. âAnd the two of you were two of his greatest enemies. I believe you have a spiritual power against him that no AshClan cat could match. If I sent anyone else there, they wouldnât wake up again, I know it. StarClan wants it to be you three. You have to save my Clan.âÂ
Paleseed glanced at Weedfoot and Darkkick. Both seemed moons away, eyes unseeing. Darkkickâs tail thrashed. Weedfoot licked Paleseedâs shoulder.
âYou would want to do this during Harvest Moon?â Weedfoot said. âWhen the Spirits of Shadow are strongest?â
âThey focus their attention on the living world, not their own,â Terracottafoot stuttered. âVisiting them in the Dark Forest would⌠well, there would be fewer spirits to contend with, to begin.â
âWe need some time to think about this,â Weedfoot huffed. âYou canât expect us to agree to such a dangerous mission for the sake of a Clan that tried to kill us. Not immediately, at the very least.â Darkkick growled under her breath, shaking her head.
âYou have a whole season to decide,â Terracottafoot said. They glanced behind them and said, âI need to return to camp. I have a lot of cats to care for. I⌠I pray you say yes, Deputy Weedfoot. I donât know what AshClan would do without you.â They met Paleseedâs eyes. The hope and fear in their gaze slashed at Paleseed like claws. With that, Terracottafoot ran into AshClan territory, leaving the three RippleClan cats with their new burden.
can we know more about the other clan leaders, like Gorgestar, Sanderlingstar and Mistlestar? they've been mentioned only like 1-2 times in the whole story
Just remember all of these details are as of Moon 48!
Gorgestar:
Old name: Gorgefall
Old position: Historian
Just about two years older than Downstar, he became a leader at a fairly young age
As of Moon 48, he has three lives left.
While his paralysis has not healed despite losing a few lives since the injury, Gorgestar is still a pretty respected leader. His deputy does a lot of out-of-camp duties so Gorgestar doesn't have to drag himself around all the time.
He got a new deputy last moon, a young tom named Lettucecloud whom he hopes will be SlugClan's next leader.
He still considers himself good friends with most of RippleClan's founding cats
He's a pretty good natured and peaceful leader, although he and Mistlestar argue a lot and have had their fair share of battles
Sanderlingstar:
Old name: Sanderlingheart
Old position: Warrior
So, I haven't said it in the lore, cause it just hasn't really applied yet, but, uh, by Moon 48, Sanderlingstar is dead.
WheatClan has a new leader, Gentlestar, formerly Gentlestream. She's still finding her footing as a leader, but she should prove good
Sanderlingstar was a curious and sometimes troublesome cat who settled into a "cheeky grandma" stereotype in her old age
She lost her last life to the same strain of greencough that killed Burdockcreek.
Sanderlingstar is a semi-distant relative of Sunstrike, Oilstripe's mother
Sanderlingstar had a bit of an inappropriate penchant for pranks.
Mistlestar:
Old name: Mistlefrost
Old position: Caretaker
Mistlestar was the only nonbinary/trans cat among the five leaders until Sanderlingstar died and Gentlestar (a trans molly) joined the lineup
Mistlestar was the last leader to gain nine lives before Downstar. With Eelstar and Gentlestar, they are now the second oldest leader in terms of length of leadership
Mistlestar is as no-nonsense in camp as they were during the Moon 11 Gathering.
Mistlestar has five lives left as of Moon 48.
Mistlestar once had to bear a dishonor title (Burnwaste) for half a moon as punishment for their careless cooking resulting in mass food poisoning
As a result, Mistlestar despises dishonor titles and honor titles alike. They believe a cat should always keep their prefix.