Jaypaw woke with a paw prodding him sharply in the side. The sun warmed his fur, and Leafpool’s scent swirled around him.
“Wake up, Jaypaw! What do you think you are, a dormouse?”
Jaypaw blinked drowsily. “Wha…”
“There’s work to be done. I need you to check on Millie and Briarkit.”
“Oh… okay.” Jaypaw staggered to his paws, flinching at a scuffling sound outside the den until he realized it was only Icepaw and Foxpaw dashing past.
He didn’t feel that he had slept at all after the previous night’s expedition. It took an effort to pull his mind away from Sol and the ShadowClan cats, and the terrifying vision of the badger. “What do you want me to do?” he asked.
“I’ve been across to the nursery to check on Millie and Briarkit. Millie needs more catmint. And I’ve made a leafwrap of borage for Briarkit. You can take them over there when—”
Jaypaw stopped listening and flattened himself to the ground at the sound of a throaty bark somewhere out in the forest.
“Jaypaw, what’s the matter with you?” Concern replaced Leafpool’s irritation. “Are you ill?” He heard her sniffing as her nose touched his fur. “You smell a bit funny.”
Jaypaw cringed inside. He didn’t want to discuss his scent, in case it led to more awkward questions. “I’m fine,” he asserted. “That barking startled me, that’s all.”
“But you’ve heard a fox bark before. It was a long way off, and if it comes any closer the patrols will spot it.”
“I know.” Jaypaw scrambled into a sitting position, giving his chest fur an awkward lick. “It’s just… I had this dream last night.” No need to say where I had it. “I saw a badger. I… I wondered if it meant danger.”
“One badger on its own?” Leafpool checked. “Not a whole horde of them?”
Jaypaw shook his head.
Leafpool sat down beside him. He could sense her uncertainty, but she didn’t seem to be afraid. “I think the badger you saw might have been Midnight,” she told him.
“Who’s Midnight?”
Leafpool settled herself more comfortably among the bracken stalks. “Back in the old forest, StarClan called four cats, one from each Clan, to make a long journey to the sun-drown-place to find a badger called Midnight.”
Jaypaw’s ears pricked. “Was that how they knew the Clans would have to leave the forest?”
“That’s right,” Leafpool meowed. “Brambleclaw was chosen from ThunderClan, and Squirrelflight went with him. Midnight warned them that the old forest would be destroyed, and then helped all the Clans to find this home beside the lake.”
Jaypaw felt his neck fur beginning to rise. “StarClan gave a message to a badger? But badgers kill cats!”
“Not Midnight,” Leafpool assured him. “She’s no ordinary badger. Later, when we had settled here by the lake, a horde of hostile badgers invaded our camp and tried to kill us all and drive us out. And Midnight…”
She trailed off. Jaypaw felt a rush of mingled emotions surge through her, fear and regret and grief. He wondered why she should feel so strongly about a battle that had been over and done with before he was born, but he was too curious about Midnight to try to make sense of what she was feeling.
“What happened with the badgers?” he prompted.
“We tried to fight them off.” Jaypaw realized that his mentor was making a great effort to keep her voice steady. “But there were too many. They would have destroyed ThunderClan if Midnight hadn’t brought WindClan to help.”
“A badger helped cats, against her own kin?”
“Yes.” Leafpool drew in a long breath and let it out again.
“There is nothing to fear from her. But she may have been trying to warn us of some other danger. You will tell me if she comes to you again?”
“Of course.” Maybe. Jaypaw knew that if this strange badger appeared again he would find out what she had to say before he decided whether to tell any cat.
“Why do we have to sit around waiting for her?” he asked.
“Brambleclaw knows where she lives, so why can’t we go and visit her?”
“It’s too far,” Leafpool replied firmly. She seemed calmer now that they had stopped talking about the badgers’ invasion. “There’s a lot of tension between the Clans right now, so Firestar would never spare warriors for that sort of journey.
Especially not Brambleclaw. He’s deputy now; he’s needed here.”
“What about—” Jaypaw stopped himself. He had been about to suggest Squirrelflight, but she had only just left Leafpool’s den after being so badly wounded in the battle against WindClan. She wasn’t even back on warrior duties yet; there was no way she could make a long journey. “I guess you’re right,” he muttered.
So, Midnight, if you want me, you’ll have to come and find me.
Chapter 3
A scarlet leaf spiraled lazily down from a branch above Lionblaze’s head. He sprang up, batting at it with his forepaws, then dropped to the ground again, his pelt hot with embarrassment. Had any cat seen him behaving like a kit?
The dawn patrol was heading back to the stone hollow.
The sun had climbed above the trees, but in the shadows the leaves and grasses were still rimmed with frost. Leaf-fall was creeping over the forest, and the harsh days of leaf-bare were not far away.
Ashfur was leading the patrol; he had drawn a few fox-lengths ahead with Thornclaw and Brightheart. Lionblaze drew a breath of relief as he realized none of them had been watching him. He stood still for a couple of heartbeats, jaws parted and ears pricked for any sign of WindClan trespassers.
But the faint traces of their scent all came from their own side of the border.
“Lionblaze!” Ashfur had halted, looking back over his shoulder. “Are you going to stand there until you take root?”
“Coming!” Lionblaze called back, bounding forward to catch up with his former mentor. “I was just checking for WindClan.”
Ashfur gave him an approving nod. “That’s good, but I don’t think we have anything to worry about.”
“We can’t be too careful,” Lionblaze meowed, falling in beside the older warrior as they set off again.
Brightheart and Thornclaw had disappeared through the thick clumps of bracken; Lionblaze realized he had the chance he had been waiting for, to talk to Ashfur alone. Giving him a sidelong glance, he began, “Can I ask you something?”
Ashfur’s whiskers twitched. “Sure.”
“I feel like I need some extra battle training. Will you work with me?”
His former mentor stopped and faced him, his blue eyes stretched wide in surprise. “You’re a warrior now, Lionblaze,” he reminded him. “And one of the best fighters in the Clan.
Do you really think you have any more to learn?”
Ashfur’s praise warmed Lionblaze like a ray of sunlight; sometimes, when he was an apprentice, he had despaired of ever pleasing the gray warrior.
“There’s always something more to learn,” he declared. “I want to stay as strong and fit as I can, so I’ll be ready for the next battle.”
Ashfur blinked thoughtfully. “I’m not sure there’ll be another battle. Not for a while, anyway.”
“WindClan might cause more trouble. And anyway, I still need the practice,” Lionblaze insisted. He flexed his claws, ready to tear frustratedly at the grass, then stopped himself.
He didn’t want Ashfur to know how much this meant to him.
“Please.”
“Okay.” Ashfur still looked unconvinced, but to Lionblaze’s relief he didn’t object anymore. “We could have a session now.