Alderpaw and the others followed Sandstorm on the tough climb up to the ridge.
She led them past the clustered Twoleg dens of the horseplace, then alongside a fence made of some shiny Twoleg stuff.
“Look!” Sparkpaw whispered excitedly to Alderpaw. “Horses!”
Alderpaw recognized the huge animals from how Daisy had described them in the nursery.
There were two of them—one dark brown and one mottled gray—standing together in the shade of a tree, gently whisking their tails to and fro.
“They’re not dangerous unless you bother them,” Sandstorm mewed briskly. “And they won’t come on this side of the fence.”
All the same, Alderpaw was relieved when they left the horses behind and scrambled up the last few tail-lengths to the top of the ridge.
Reaching it, he halted, his paws frozen to the ground.
“Wow!” Sparkpaw breathed out, coming to stand beside him. “I didn’t know the world was so big!”
Gazing out in front of him, Alderpaw saw that the ground fell away sharply, sweeping down into a wide valley with stretches of woodland and what looked like a hard black snake winding across it. Beyond it were masses of trees, the huddled dens of an enormous
Twolegplace—far bigger than the one by the lake where they had gone to collect catmint—and fields and hills stretching away on every side until they became hazy with distance.
A shiver passed through Alderpaw, as if he were being stabbed by masses of icicles, all at once. Glancing back, he could still see the lake with the Clan territories around it, the only place he had known all his life. Ahead, everything was unknown. It was even more frightening than his journey to the Moonpool, because then he had been following a path the other medicine cats had traveled before him.
Now he was taking his Clanmates where there were no familiar paths.
“Can you see the place in your vision?”
Sparkpaw asked him. Her eyes were bright with excitement as she took in the vast landscape.
Alderpaw peered around, trying to make out the rocks of the gorge, but it was Sandstorm who replied.
“Of course not. That place is much too far away.”
“Great StarClan!” Sparkpaw squeaked. “You mean there’s more of it?”
“Much more,” Sandstorm told her. “And the sooner we get going, the sooner we’ll arrive.
Come on: I’d like to cross the Thunderpath down there before nightfall.”
Alderpaw realized she meant the black snake-thing. It was so different from the little
Thunderpath that ended at the lake, separating ShadowClan territory from RiverClan.
Glittering objects, which looked like tiny beetles at this distance, were speeding back and forth along its length.
“When we get there,” Sandstorm went on, “you will not cross before I tell you to. Is that quite clear?” she added, with a hard look at Sparkpaw.
Sparkpaw nodded, as cheerful as ever after her earlier scolding. “Sure, Sandstorm.”
With Sandstorm in the lead, the five cats headed down the slope and soon came to a wide stretch of woodland. Even though it wasn’t as thick as the forest, Alderpaw was grateful to be back under the shade of trees, enjoying the warm scents and the long grass underpaw.
Gradually he became aware of voices from somewhere up ahead. But as they grew louder, he realized they were not the voices of cats, or of any other animal he had come across before.
The hairs on his pelt began to rise.
Sandstorm halted, raising her tail as a sign for the others to do the same. “Twolegs!” she hissed.
“Really?” Sparkpaw’s eyes were alight with interest. “Can we go and see?”
Sandstorm hesitated. “It’s not a bad idea for you to get an idea of what they’re like,” she replied at last. “But we’re not here to gawk at Twolegs, and don’t you forget it.”
More cautiously she led the way forward.
Alderpaw had to admit that he was just as curious as his sister. So far he had only glimpsed Twolegs now and again, mostly near the greenleaf Twolegplaces, and always from a distance. He had never heard their raucous voices, or gotten close enough to discover what they were really like.
Skirting a bramble thicket, Sandstorm stood screened behind a clump of ferns and beckoned with her tail. “Okay, come and look, but don’t let them know you’re here.”
Alderpaw crept forward, with Sparkpaw by his side, and peered through the ferns. A group of five Twolegs, all different sizes, were sitting in a clearing. Just beyond them was a stretch of ground covered by the black Thunderpath stuff, with one of the glittering things—this one bright red—crouching under a tree.
“What’s that?” he whispered to Sandstorm.
“A monster,” Sandstorm murmured in reply.
“They’ll kill you if they catch you with those big black paws. But that one looks like it’s asleep, so it’s probably safe for now.”
“And what are the Twolegs sitting on?”
Sparkpaw asked. “They look like tree trunks, but sort of flat.”
Alderpaw thought that was a good description. There was a bigger flat trunk, too, with big leaf wraps scattered upon it. They must have held prey, because the Twolegs were stuffing something into their mouths.
Sparkpaw passed her tongue over her jaws.
“I’m hungry,” she complained. “And whatever that is, it smells good!”
Alderpaw’s pelt bristled with fear to see the Twolegs so close, to hear their harsh voices and to pick up their weird scent. But he was fascinated too.
“They have hardly any fur,” he murmured.
“Are they sick? I remember Leafpool telling me about a sickness that made cats lose their fur. But these Twolegs all seem to have it.”
Turning to Sandstorm, he asked, “Why don’t their medicine Twolegs help them?”
Sandstorm’s green eyes were gleaming with amusement. “They’re not sick,” she explained.
“That’s just what Twolegs look like.”
Then they look pretty stupid, Alderpaw thought, his pelt smoothing out as he wondered why he had been scared of them at all.
Suddenly the smallest Twoleg kit leaped up from the flat tree, letting out a loud yowl. To Alderpaw’s horror it set off at a stumbling run toward the cats, waving its forepaws in the air.
Its round face was red, and crazy sounds were coming from its mouth.
“It’s seen us!” Cherryfall gasped.
At the same moment Sandstorm snapped out a command. “Don’t run! We’ll get separated. Hide!”
Forcing himself to move, Alderpaw darted back to the bramble thicket and thrust his way into it, feeling the thorns rake through his pelt.
He could hear Sparkpaw burrowing close by.
“StarClan-forsaken thorns!” she muttered.
Molewhisker’s voice came from further away. “We should have known! Twolegs are always trouble.”
Alderpaw could hear the Twoleg kit’s voice rising to a shriek. Then the lower-pitched, adult
Twoleg voices drew closer, and the ground shook with the trampling of their huge, clumsy paws. Alderpaw crouched as small as he could and hoped that all his Clanmates were well hidden.
Finally the sounds died away and the footsteps retreated. Alderpaw worked his way backward out of the thicket and stood shaking his pelt. He felt as if every thorn in the forest were sticking into him.
Then he noticed that Sparkpaw had emerged and returned to the edge of the clearing to peer through the ferns again.
“What do you think you’re doing?” he hissed, creeping up to her side. “Do you want the Twolegs to catch you?”
“It’s okay; they’re leaving,” Sparkpaw replied. “Come and watch. It’s really interesting.”
Curious in spite of himself, Alderpaw parted the fern fronds so that he could see. The three Twoleg kits were climbing into the monster. The adult Twolegs were collecting the leaf wraps from the big flat tree trunk; then they crossed the clearing and dropped them into a Twoleg thing that looked like a rock with a tiny cave at the top.