“Redscar! Redscar! Come quickly!”
Redscar shot out of his nest and pushed his way into the open.
Flowerstem was staring at him as if all the foxes of the forest were on her tail. “I can’t wake Brightwhisker!” she wailed.
Every hair on Redscar’s pelt stood on end. He’d left her only one poppy seed, barely enough for a whole night’s sleep.
“Come see,” Flowerstem pleaded, but Redscar was already pushing past her, heading for the leader’s den. It was dark inside, and Redscar had to blink and wait impatiently for his eyes to adjust. Slowly he made out Brightwhisker’s sleeping shape. She didn’t seem to have moved since he last checked on her.
Oh, StarClan, don’t let her be dead!
Redscar pushed his nose into her neck fur, but there was no sign of the telltale throb of life beneath the skin, and her fur was as cold as frost.
“Redscar?” Flowerstem was standing in the entrance to the den.
He turned to her and shook his head. Another leader had died, before she’d had a chance to receive her nine lives.
“Oh, no!” Flowerstem wailed.
A tortoiseshell head appeared behind her. “What’s wrong?”
“Oh, Mossfire!” Flowerstem turned to face her littermate.
“Brightwhisker’s dead!”
Redscar padded out of the den, his paws heavy as stone. “She must have developed greencough in the night. She died in her sleep.”
Mossfire stared at him. “But… she never chose a deputy! Who will be our leader now?”
Redscar knew he had to help his Clan find a way out of this terrible darkness. “I’ll call the cats together,” he meowed.
He chose to stay on the ground rather than stand on the fallen log that the leaders had used to address the Clan. Brightwhisker had taken her place there only once, to greet her Clan for the first time since Snowstar’s death; a fit of coughing had stopped her, and Redscar had ordered her back to her den. I should have known it was greencough! There must have been something else I could have done.
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Like let her appoint a deputy? a small voice inside him challenged.
Redscar pushed it away. “Cats of ShadowClan, Brightwhisker is dead. There will be time to grieve for her, but first we must choose a new leader. Are there any cats who wish to volunteer?”
His Clanmates shifted restlessly and there were worried murmurs, but no cat spoke out until Jumpfoot stepped forward.
His muscles rippled under his black pelt, and his green eyes were somber. “I will lead ShadowClan, if my Clanmates wish it.”
There were several yowls of approval, but some murmurs of disagreement. “We think Mossfire should be leader,” called one of the queens. “Jumpfoot is too quick to go into battle. We want peace for our kits.”
Mossfire walked forward to stand beside Jumpfoot. She dipped her head to Redscar. “My Clanmates honor me, and I would be willing to be their leader.”
“Not all of them want you,” snarled Jumpfoot. “Who’d want a
Clan full of cowards, too frightened to defend their borders?”
“Not rushing into every battle doesn’t make me a coward,” Mossfire retorted. “I can fight as well as you any day.”
“Prove it,” Jumpfoot challenged.
“This is no way to choose a leader!” Flowerstem cried.
Jumpfoot glared at her. “We’ll fight, and whichever cat
StarClan favors will be victorious.”
Flowerstem looked pleadingly at Redscar, but he felt frozen.
What was happening to his Clan?
Jumpfoot and Mossfire started circling each other; the other cats moved back to give them more room. Mossfire struck first, with an easy swipe that Jumpfoot sprang away from with a contemptuous hiss. “You’ll have to do better than that!”
“Very well,” spat Mossfire, and she leaped at him, front legs outstretched, claws glinting in the frosty sun. She raked a set of scratches into Jumpfoot’s flank, leaving scarlet beads of blood.
With a yowl, Jumpfoot spun around and slashed at her face, then sank his claws into her shoulder and rolled her onto the ground, pummeling at her with his hind legs.
Redscar turned away. He could not believe StarClan wanted two warriors to fight like this in order to lead their Clan. He winced as he heard Mossfire gasp with pain and the sound of ripping fur as she retaliated. There was a thud as Jumpfoot went down and a gasp from the watching cats. Then another, softer thud as Mossfire crumpled beside him.
“Mossfire! No!” That was Flowerstem.
The stench of blood told Redscar what he would see. He turned around. The two cats were lying still as their lives ebbed away from blows struck too close, too hard. Redscar felt numb. He had failed, again.
Three elders were already shuffling forward to rearrange the bodies for their Clanmates’ vigil. It would last all night, and then what? ShadowClan still had no leader. The cats were silent, moving slowly as if their limbs had frozen, none quite meeting another’s eye. The blood of these cats stains all our paws.
Flowerstem alone seemed to have her voice; she wove among the stunned cats, comforting them, sending them to the fresh-kill pile to eat: “We have to keep up our strength. There is still sickness in the air; no more cats must die.” Quietly she asked two of the senior warriors to take out hunting patrols with all the apprentices. “There is no need for them to spend all day looking at these fallen warriors. Keep them busy, but battle training would not be appropriate, I think.” Her Clanmates nodded and led the younger cats silently out of the clearing.
Then Flowerstem approached Redscar. Her eyes looked dull with shock, but she spoke calmly. “Is there anything I can do for you, Redscar? Fetch herbs or water?”
Redscar shook his head. There was nothing any cat could do. “I’ll be in my den,” he told her and headed for the thicket of hawthorn that screened his nest and his store of herbs. He stumbled into his nest, feeling many seasons older than he had when he last lay down, and closed his eyes.
“Redscar? Redscar, wake up.”
He opened his eyes. He was lying in a clearing among beech trees, their branches black and sharp against the snow-colored sky. The grass beneath him was crisp and cold; he jumped up, shivering.
“Redscar, you must find a new leader for ShadowClan.”
“Snowstar?”
The gray cat nodded. “I have been watching my Clan, and I grieve for every one of my cats. Most of all, for Brightwhisker, who would have been a great leader, and for Jumpfoot and Mossfire who let ambition cloud their senses and sharpen their claws. You must put this right, my friend.”
“What can I do?” Redscar wailed.
“You will choose a new leader,” Snowstar meowed. “And that cat must choose a deputy at once. A Clan must never be left like this again, a headless creature that wades into blood because it cannot see. At the next Gathering, the new leader must introduce a new rule for the warrior code: Deputies must be replaced by moonhigh, so a leader will never be alone for more than half a day.
Now tell me, who would you choose as your next leader?”
Redscar started to protest that he couldn’t, wouldn’t, choose, but the look in Snowstar’s eyes silenced him. “Flowerstem,” he meowed. “She watched her sister die in front of her, but her only thoughts were to make the Clan feel safe and keep them occupied before tonight’s vigil.”
“A wise choice. So tell the Clan.”
Redscar stared at him. “Why should they listen to me? I’ve done nothing for them, nothing.”