Breezepelt’s voice came from close by. “Crowfeather, are you okay?”
Crowfeather shook his head as if he could drive out the images. “I’m fine,” he rasped, and padded on.
But the horrible visions still attacked Crowfeather’s mind, fierce as the warriors of the Dark Forest. He had to keep reminding himself that if the foxes had gotten Nightcloud, there would be blood and maybe even a body.
Or parts of a body. Please, StarClan, not that.
He shivered, but the chill had nothing to do with the frosty air of the snow-covered forest.
Eventually, Crowfeather could pick up the familiar tang of the ThunderClan scent markers; they had reached the border of ThunderClan territory. The fox trail led straight across it.
“Are you going any farther?” Ivypool asked.
“Of course!” It was Breezepelt who replied. “We’re not giving up until we find Nightcloud.”
Ivypool dipped her head; Crowfeather thought he could see a trace of approval in her eyes. “Then we’ll leave you here,” she continued. “And I give you permission to cross our territory again on your way back — but not to take prey. Of course, we will have to report this to Bramblestar.”
More trouble to come. Surely Bramblestar will discuss all this with Onestar. And Onestar will think even worse of me — if that’s possible. Aloud Crowfeather mewed, “Of course. And you might report the foxes, as well.”
“We know about the foxes,” Ivypool retorted. “We’re keeping an eye on them.”
Not a close-enough eye, Crowfeather thought, though he wasn’t about to start an argument. “Then thank you for your help,” he responded with a polite nod.
“May StarClan light your path,” Ivypool meowed. “I hope you find Nightcloud.”
As she spoke, there was genuine concern in her eyes and her voice. Crowfeather felt even more worried, guessing that Ivypool didn’t really believe that they had much chance of tracking Nightcloud down.
Ivypool turned, jerking her head for Bumblestripe to follow her. The ThunderClan tom gave the WindClan cats a last suspicious look as he turned away, and both cats disappeared into the undergrowth. Crowfeather let out a sigh of relief to see them go.
“Okay,” he meowed. “Let’s get going.”
His head held high, he crossed the ThunderClan border markings, and his Clanmates followed him into unknown territory.
For some time, the fox trail led on in a straight line as before, until the trees thinned out and Crowfeather began to pick up a new, acrid scent. “Monsters!” he exclaimed. “Of course… There’s a Thunderpath up ahead.”
“Fox dung!” Breezepelt hissed.
Crowfeather shared his anger. Picking out Nightcloud’s scent was hard enough; it would become even harder when the scent of monsters was added to the mix. And the Thunderpath was one more hazard that Nightcloud had faced. Crowfeather shuddered, wondering if she could have been killed by a monster.
One of them might have caught her after she met Yew.
Still, the scent of the Thunderpath meant that they were drawing close to the Twolegplace. And the fact that Nightcloud seemed to have made it this far made Crowfeather more certain that Yew had been right. He was determined not to give up.
Soon the acrid tang grew stronger, and now and again Crowfeather could hear the roar of a monster prowling along the Thunderpath. The fox scent was growing stronger too, and for a moment Crowfeather wondered if more foxes had joined the ones they had tracked from the pool.
Then he realized that he was wrong. The fox scent isn’t just strong — it’s fresh! There are foxes here right now!
Chapter 23
Crowfeather spun around at a flicker in the undergrowth and found himself face to face with a fox as it emerged from behind a bramble thicket: an old dog fox with a graying muzzle and a malignant look in its berry-bright eyes. Crowfeather slid out his claws and let out a growl from deep in his throat.
“Back off, mange-pelt!” he snarled.
But before he had finished speaking, two more foxes leaped out from behind the thicket; they were young and strong, with parted jaws and pointed fangs.
“Run!” Gorsetail yowled.
She took the lead as the cats pelted away through the trees. Crowfeather pounded along, shoulder to shoulder with Breezepelt, aware of Heathertail hard on their paws. The sound of the Thunderpath ahead grew even louder.
Crowfeather’s pelt prickled with fear. Which was worse — to die from the bite of a fox, or crushed by the huge round paws of a monster?
Then Crowfeather heard a terrified wail from behind him. “Help me!”
Glancing back, he saw that Hootpaw was falling behind, almost in the teeth of the leading fox. The fox kept snapping its jaws, getting closer and closer to Hootpaw’s tail.
“Hootpaw, I—” Crowfeather began, only to break off as he slammed into something hard. All the breath was driven out of him.
Struggling to his paws, Crowfeather realized that he had run straight into a tree. “Fox dung!” he hissed. He began racing back to help Hootpaw, claws extended, ready to fight the fox.
But before he reached the terrified apprentice, Crowfeather realized something else. “Climb the trees!” he screeched.
He reached Hootpaw as he spoke and barreled into him, boosting him up into the nearest tree. Hootpaw dug his claws into the bark and scrambled up higher. Crowfeather followed him, feeling the hot breath of a fox on his hindquarters as he swung himself up onto the lowest branch. Hootpaw crouched, trembling beside him.
“Thanks, Crowfeather!” he panted.
Looking around, Crowfeather spotted Gorsetail in a nearby beech tree, her fur fluffed up as she spat defiance at the foxes below. And where were you when your apprentice was in danger? Crowfeather wondered.
Heathertail and Breezepelt had found refuge in an oak tree a little farther off.
“We’re WindClan cats. We don’t do trees,” Breezepelt complained loudly.
Crowfeather gazed down from his branch to see the other two foxes catching up and skidding to a halt. All three of them began prowling around the trees, glaring up at the cats and letting out vicious snarls between gleaming bared teeth.
“Neither do foxes,” Crowfeather responded to his son. “At least, not usually.” He had heard now and again of foxes that climbed trees, but they mostly stayed on the ground. If any of these foxes tried it, he’d just slash his claws across their muzzles as they drew close.
That would make them think twice!
Hootpaw shuddered. “What are we going to do?”
“We’ll be fine,” Crowfeather reassured him. “Look — if you walk along this branch, you can cross into the beech tree where Gorsetail is.”
Hootpaw crept forward hesitantly, but as soon as he moved, the branch gave a lurch, and he halted, trembling even harder.
“I don’t think I can.” He gave Crowfeather a scared look. “I might fall.”
“No, you won’t. I’ll be right behind you. I won’t let you fall.”
Hootpaw took a deep breath and rose to his paws, once again digging his claws into the bark. Paw step by careful paw step he crept along the branch, then briefly froze again as the branch grew thinner toward the end and began to bounce gently under the cats’ weight.
“Go on. You’re doing fine,” Crowfeather encouraged him. “Don’t look down.”
The reek of foxes was wafting up to Crowfeather from underneath the tree. He risked a quick glance down and saw that all three foxes had gathered below them, obviously hoping that one or more of them would lose their balance. But Hootpaw carried on steadily, then half leaped, half scrambled into Gorsetail’s tree. Gorsetail was waiting to grab him by the scruff and set his paws firmly on a thicker branch.