“You’ll remember,” Leopardpaw reassured him. “Besides, we won’t let WindClan make it as far as here. The most trouble you’ll have is keeping Thistlekit quiet.” She purred. “That might take a battle move or two.”
Bluepaw was suddenly very aware that she knew no battle moves at all. Perhaps she should learn one, just in case. She watched Stormtail on the far side of the clearing showing Dappletail how to roll and then jump with her forepaws extended in a vicious attack.
“Remember,” he was telling her, “keep your claws sheathed until the leap.”
Dappletail tried the move again, sitting up afterward and looking pleased.
“Good.” Stormtail nodded. “But you need to be faster. We’re bigger and heavier than WindClan cats, but they are nimble and will take advantage of any slowness.”
“Not hungry?”
Pinestar’s mew made her jump.
He stood at the tree stump and looked over the apprentices. “A good meal tonight will mean a good battle tomorrow.”
Bluepaw lowered her gaze. What kind of warrior was too scared to eat on the eve of a battle?
Pinestar’s eyes glowed in the half-light. “I remember my first battle,” he meowed. “Sweetbriar insisted I eat a shrew, but I hid it when her back was turned and then told her it was delicious.”
“Really?” Bluepaw couldn’t decide what startled her more: that the ThunderClan leader had ever been afraid or that he had lied to his mother.
“Really,” he purred. “She didn’t believe me, of course. All cats fear their first battle.”
“Does that mean we don’t have to eat?” Bluepaw mewed hopefully.
“Not if you don’t want to.” Pinestar flicked his tail. “It’s natural to be nervous. Only a mouse-brain would rush into battle without fear.” Was he glancing at Adderfang as he spoke? “But remember: You are ThunderClan cats, natural-born warriors. Trust your instincts. And we’ll be fighting Clan cats, not loners or rogues. They won’t go out of their way to harm youngsters like you.”
Snowpaw stood up, fluffing out her fur. “We don’t need special treatment.”
Pinestar’s whiskers twitched. “And you won’t get any,” he assured her. “I’m relying on you two to stay alert and do exactly as you’re told, as
Bluepaw’s heart began to pound again.
“But,” Pinestar went on, “I know you’ll do your best and StarClan will guide your paws.” He glanced at Leopardpaw and Patchpaw. “All of you.”
Before they could answer he padded away, stopping beside Speckletail. The pale tabby sat hunched outside the nursery with Poppydawn while their kits tumbled around them. The Clan’s youngest members seemed to be the only cats unmoved by the looming battle. If anything, they were noisier than ever.
“If I were fighting tomorrow,” Thistlekit declared, “I’d get a WindClan warrior like this.” He hooked up the shrew he’d been eating. “And shred it.” He tossed the half-eaten fresh-kill to the ground and pounced on it, claws unsheathed.
“Don’t play with your food,” Poppydawn scolded. “It’s disrespectful. That shrew died so that we may live.”
Thistlekit sat up, looking annoyed. “You just don’t want me to become a warrior! You want to make me stay a kit forever!”
Pinestar cuffed him playfully around the ear. “I doubt she’d be able to,” he purred.
Thistlekit looked up at the ThunderClan leader. “Can I come to the battle?”
Pinestar shook his head. “I need you to stay here and help defend the nursery.”
Thistlekit puffed out his chest. “No WindClan cat’ll make it past me.”
“I believe you.” Pinestar sounded calm.
As Bluepaw watched him reassure his Clanmates, she realized that all trace of the doubt she’d seen in him earlier was gone. He stood with his broad head high and his powerful shoulders stiff, as though already primed for battle.
She wondered how many lives he had left. Perhaps that’s what gave him confidence. Why did only leaders get to have nine lives? Wouldn’t it be more useful if StarClan granted every cat nine lives?
Moonflower padded from the fern tunnel, her yellow eyes glowing in the half-light. “You two should get to sleep early tonight.” She reached Bluepaw and Snowpaw and touched each in turn lightly with her muzzle. Bluepaw could smell fear on her pelt, but her mew was unchanged. “I haven’t seen your nests yet. Are they comfortable?”
“I wouldn’t mind a bit more moss,” Snowpaw mewed. “The bracken keeps poking through.”
“I’ll get some from mine.” Moonflower padded quickly away toward the warriors’ den.
“Are you going to eat that?” Leopardpaw was eyeing Bluepaw’s mouse.
Bluepaw shook her head and tossed it over to the black apprentice.
“You might as well have mine, too,” Snowpaw added, flinging her shrew after.