Moth Flight was on his heels. “Are you okay?” She sniffed her mother’s broken leg. The swaths of comfrey were hanging from it loosely. Wind Runner flinched as she touched it with her nose.
Moth Flight looked into her mother’s eyes, seeing agony spark in their amber depths. Then she looked back at the Thunderpath. Monsters streaked back and forth, picking up speed as the rain began to ease. The gaps closed between them.
There was no way back now. They had to keep going.
“Can you do this?” She searched Wind Runner’s gaze, praying she’d say yes.
Wind Runner nodded and struggled to her paws. Dust
Muzzle and Spotted Fur flanked her.
Moth Flight blinked through the rain, scanning the meadows ahead. Perhaps she’d find some poppy seeds along the way.
Anything to ease her mother’s suffering.
They crossed the sodden fields slowly. Mud clung to their paws as they skirted meadows and squeezed beneath hedgerows. Every few steps, Moth Flight glanced up at Highstones, hoping each time that they’d loom larger. But it seemed that, with each paw step, the great, dark cliffs were moving farther away.
She lifted her head, blinking at Spotted Fur and Dust Muzzle as they helped Wind Runner squeeze beneath a hedge. She could hardly see them in the darkness. Dusk was passing and night rolling in.
Had they come all this way for nothing? She stopped, frozen with fear.
“Moth Flight?” Dust Muzzle’s call jerked her from her thoughts. She stared at him as he turned from the hedge and headed toward her. “Are you all right?”
“What if I was wrong?” she whispered.
“You’re never wrong,” Dust Muzzle told her.
Moth Flight hardly heard him. “Gorse Fur said that if she’s going to die, she should be with her Clan. And we’ve taken her away from them.”
“She’s with
Moth Flight looked past him. She could just make out the shapes of Spotted Fur and Wind Runner beyond the hedge. The WindClan leader was lying on the ground. Moth Flight darted forward, panic spiraling in her chest. She wriggled under the hedge and sniffed Wind Runner’s muzzle. Was she still breathing?
“I’m just resting,” Wind Runner grunted.
Moth Flight’s paws trembled beneath her as relief swept her pelt.
“Did you think I’d give up when we were so close?” She lifted her chin from the muddy earth and looked toward Highstones.
Moth Flight blinked in surprise. They were nearly there! As she gazed up at the sheer cliff face, green wings fluttered above her. She looked up and saw the moth bobbing toward the dark opening in the stone.
Hope flared in Moth Flight’s belly.
“Come on!” She nosed Wind Runner gently to her paws. “We have to get there before the moon does.”
“Are we racing the
“I always told Gorse Fur you were a strange one…”
Affection opened like a flower in Moth Flight’s chest.
Then Wind Runner coughed, her paws buckling beneath her.
Moth Flight smelled the scent of fresh blood. She pressed her shoulder against her mother’s as Dust Muzzle slid around the other side. Wind Runner’s fur felt warm and wet and Moth
Flight guessed that her neck wound was bleeding heavily now.
Chapter 34
They had managed to haul Wind Runner over the stone lip of the cave. Wind Runner leaned against Dust Muzzle, her eyes clouded. She murmured under her breath. “Where’s Gorse Fur?
Tell him I’m coming.”
Moth Flight glanced at her mother anxiously. Wind Runner was clearly lost in a feverish world of pain.
Dust Muzzle peered into the darkness at the back of the cave. “Where’s the Moonstone?”
“It’s down a tunnel,” Moth Flight told him.
“Can you get her there alone?”
“I must.” She was their medicine cat. She alone must guide her mother to StarClan.
Spotted Fur shifted his paws uneasily. “We could help her there and then leave.”