The forest was quiet tonight, broken only by the soft sounds of the patrol as they made their way along the border. Tigerclaw’s ears could catch nothing but the gentle meows of the tortoiseshell and tabby conversing a tail-length behind him. At his side, a white warrior lowered his head to scent the ground, but Tigerclaw had already gone still.
He lifted his tail, and the warriors behind him quieted instantly.
For a moment, no one moved. The forest was achingly quiet, the only sound the faint ripple of the dark River beyond the stones turned silver by the half-moon. Tigerclaw tilted his ears, searched for the slightest sound of mice in the undergrowth or birds waking from their sleep or the chirp of insects, and heard nothing. He opened his jaws, scenting the air coming off the River, ruffling through his fur, and was hit with the stink of fish.
The tortoiseshell behind him trotted two quick steps to catch up, his fluffy tail caught by the breeze, and the white warrior began to crouch low. Tail curling around him, he turned to the small tom at his side and spoke in a low tone. Redtail peered through the brush, looking for the cause of the scent, his eyes wide in the moonlight.
And then Tigerclaw’s young, stupid apprentice decided to step through the brush barrier to follow the scent. Before he could hiss at her, a yowl came from the River. Tigerclaw’s hackles went up on instinct. From the water came dark silhouettes, still dripping with water from their swim. With every pawstep, the enemy warriors gained speed, unsheathed claws gleaming in the moonlight. Sandpaw stood alone for a moment; she slithered to the ground in fright. Tigerclaw hissed, dug his claws into the earth, and then forced himself through the thorns to reach the tiny cream cat.
Thorns caught on his pelt, sending lines of fire across his skin. He tore his fur off the thorns just in time to meet the first warrior. The black cat had been aiming for Sandpaw. Tigerclaw used his surprise to bowl him over and dig his claws into the smaller cat’s pelt. A flash of white caught his eye as Whitestorm pelted past him and full battle was joined. Tigerclaw raked his claws across the tom’s muzzle, but the shriek the cat let out was not from that. Tigerclaw released him, surprised, and the warrior scrambled to his paws to flee. It was then that he realized: Sandpaw had caught the warrior’s tail in her teeth and bitten as hard as she could.
“Stay close to me!” Tigerclaw commanded. His apprentice was only barely out of kit-hood, and still painfully thin from leaf-bare. Two of her siblings had died from hunger. In his distraction, he had not noticed the gray tom before him. The warrior slashed at his face. Tigerclaw reared back to retaliate, but his opponent was gone in an instant. Mousefur yowling as she pushed him back toward the River.
Beyond her, Redtail fought two cats at once. Tigerclaw charged toward them, the air a flurry of fur and screams. They had not seen his approach. He knocked the tom off his paws with his momentum. Briefly, they were locked together in a ball of limbs. Tigerclaw screeched in pain when the cinnamon tom’s claws raked across his face. His opponent was large for his Clan, but even so Tigerclaw’s sheer size was enough to keep him on his paws. He pushed past the sharp claws and pinned him to the ground.
“Oakheart.” He hissed, claws drawing blood where they dug into his enemy’s chest. “Was leaf-bare so harsh that RiverClan can no longer feed themselves in their swamp?”
The RiverClan deputy bared his fang, confidence almost alarming. “After tonight, Sunningrocks will belong to RiverClan!”
Fury pulsed through him. Tigerclaw lifted a paw to score his claws across the warrior’s face, but before he could a warning yowl sounded from the shore. He recognized Ravenpaw’s shaking voice before he processed the words. “More warriors from the River!”
When Tigerclaw turned to look, Oakheart renewed his struggles, but he wasn’t going anywhere with Tigerclaw’s full weight on him. Out of the River came another patrol, four or five more warriors, with a short furred blue molly at the head. The newcomers flung themselves into battle without so much as pausing to shake the water from their fur. During the brief pause, Tigerclaw realized that his heart was pounding in his ears. His wounds were burning. He glared down at the smaller tom, spitting his rage. “You and your warriors do not belong in this forest!”
He bared his fangs, meaning to hurt the RiverClan warrior enough that he would be forced to retreat. Before he could strike, the desperate shriek of a ThunderClan cat pierced through the caterwauling around them. Tigerclaw looked up to see a brown molly flat on her belly. A RiverClan tom stood above her, his pelt red with her blood. As Tigerclaw watched, he lowered his jaws, still dripping with water from his swim, toward her throat.
Tigerclaw hurtled himself across the clearing. The cuts from Oakheart’s claws seared white hot with pain, his muscles ached with stress, but he hooked his claws into the enemy’s pelt and threw him bodily aside. He pressed his square head to the molly’s shoulder and pushed her to her feet. “Mousefur, run! Tell Bluestar!”
She staggered, leaning on him as she panted with exhaustion. Blood from the deep wound on her shoulder was already dripping down her pelt and across the ground. Once she was steady, she hared away. Tigerclaw turned back to the tom. He was too late, for all he saw was a blur of claws and fur before fire spread through his face. On instinct, he rose up to meet the warrior. They battled on their hind legs for a moment, before he overpowered his opponent. Pure adrenaline drove him past thorn-sharp claws to dig his teeth into the other cat’s throat.
The taste of blood spread over his tongue as the smaller warrior thrashed. Then the warrior wailed. His struggles turned from furious to frantic, and Tigerclaw let go. Once free, the tom scrambled toward the River, his blood joining Mousefur’s on the ground.
In the brief pause between cats, Tigerclaw could see that the warriors in both Clans were dwindling. Tigerclaw batted at a particularly small apprentice, and the smaller cat fled from him in fright. He could make out Redtail and Whitestorm nearby. He did not see his apprentice. He was about to go to Redtail when he heard a terrible shriek. Tigerclaw twisted to find Sandpaw abandoning Ravenpaw to rush a warrior twice her size. Tigerclaw charged after her, but her target did not fight. When the warrior pulled away from Sandpaw, Tigerclaw could see the source of his apprentice’s distress: a gray tabby lay lifeless on the forest floor.
“Brindleface!” Redtail had been struggling with a leopard-spotted warrior, but with one movement he threw her off. The deputy forced himself through the battle and rushed toward his mate. Tigerclaw stopped as the deputy darted past him, to see if he would be pursued, but the RiverClan warrior was as surprised as they were.
As he slowed, a shriek sounded from his left. Ravenpaw was backed against a rock by a ginger-and-white warrior. Together with Sandpaw, he had been formidable, but alone he stood no chance against a fully trained warrior. Tigerclaw leapt forward, and slammed a paw over the RiverClan cat’s ears. Ravenpaw slid around the cat’s paws and joined him in the fight. The cat would have had trouble with Tigerclaw alone. With the apprentice behind her she knew she was beaten.
“Sunstream!” The golden spotted molly rushed toward them, and Tigerclaw turned to meet her. Ravenpaw hassled the ginger warrior away from his flank. Claws unsheathed, the molly battered his muzzle, yowling defiance as he knocked her paws aside with one blow. She sprang at him. He fell backward with her. As they tumbled, he brought his hind paws up and kicked upward into her belly with all his strength, feeling a rush of pride as she shrieked in surprise as she was thrown over his head.
In that instant, the air filled with a deep, earth-shaking rumble that made Tigerclaw’s every instinct scream to run. Sunstream fled past him, back toward the water, and Tigerclaw rolled to his paws as the rumble turned into a roar. Ravenpaw wailed. As the earth shook under his paws, he looked up just in time to see two cats fall over the far edge of Sunningrocks: Redtail and Oakheart. Still locked in battle.
As the two Clans looked on in horror, battle forgotten, the boulders of Sunningrocks came free from their places, following the shrieking toms into nothingness.