The mouse darted away, but Moth Flight was quick. She landed a whisker away from the hay lump and thrust her paw into it, moving faster than she’d ever moved in her life. Triumph flared through her as her claws sank into warm flesh. Quick as a flash, she hooked the mouse out and killed it with a single bite.
Black-and-white fur pelted past her. Hay dust exploded around her as Cow thumped against one of the lumps, scrabbling under it for a moment before dragging out her own catch.
Her eyes shone at Moth Flight as she killed the mouse she’d caught, then nodded approvingly at Moth Flight’s. “There’s no better place to live than a barn,” she purred loudly.
Moth Flight met her gaze, grateful for this cat’s warmth. But she couldn’t agree. For a moment she imagined the wind on the high moor, sweeping through her fur as she chased rabbits with Dust Muzzle.
“Come on.” Cow was padding back to the sunny opening of the loft, her mew muffled by her mouse.
Moth Flight scooped up her own catch and followed.
Mouse was already eating. Micah appeared a moment later, scrambling over the stack of hay and landing lightly beside them, a mouse dangling from his jaws.
Moth Flight bit into her mouse, relishing the sweet flavor.
She remembered, with a grimace, last night’s toad. How could
RiverClan eat frogs every day? Perhaps they didn’t. Perhaps they saved them as a
Soft breath brushed her ear. “You said you dream as well.”
Micah’s mew broke into Moth Flight’s thoughts. He’d moved close, laying his mouse beside hers.
“Yes,” she murmured.
Cow was busy eating. Mouse had already finished and was starting a leisurely wash a tail-length away.
Micah took a bite of his mouse. “What do you dream about?” he asked, his mouth full. “Me?”
Moth Flight shook her head, trying not to purr. Micah clearly was not a modest cat. “I dream about a moth, and spirit-cats. They’re so vivid it’s like they’re real.”
“
“Dead cats who visit the living.” Moth Flight wondered suddenly if farm cats were visited by their ancestors too? By the puzzled look on Micah’s face, she guessed not. She pressed on.
“Do you dream the same? About moths and other cats?”
Perhaps he didn’t know that the cats in his dreams were dead.
She stared at him eagerly, hardly smelling the warm scent of prey wafting from her mouse. Hope sparked in her chest. Would
Micah know what the moth meant and who the gray she-cat was?
He shook his head, then swallowed. “I just dream about you.” A frown wrinkled his brow. “Just you. Playing with a young gray tabby tom—”
“Dust Muzzle?” Moth Flight interrupted.
“I don’t know his name. Sometimes you’re playing Catch the Tail, sometimes you’re out on a wide stretch of grass, hunting. Sometimes you’re with different cats—another gray tom, thinner and older than the Muzzle one.”
“Gorse Fur!” Moth Flight’s pelt stood up along her spine.
This cat had really seen her in his dreams!
Micah shrugged. “If you say so. And there’s a wiry brown she-cat. She always looks cross.”
“That’s Wind Runner, my mother,” Moth Flight told him.
Micah took another mouthful of mouse. “I was taken from my mother when I was a kit. But if mothers are that stern, I’m happy I had Cow instead.” He glanced fondly toward the plump she-cat. Her eyes were glazed with contentment as she chewed the last of her catch. Micah’s whiskers twitched suddenly. “Why are you always taking plants back to your den?”
“You saw that?” Moth Flight stared at him.
“The other cats tease you, but every hunting trip, you bring back a plant instead of prey. It drives your mother crazy.”
Moth Flight purred loudly. Micah made it sound funny. Then she paused. “Are you surprised to see me in real life?”
He narrowed his eyes, as though thinking. “My dreams have always seemed real, so it seems natural that I’d meet you one day.”
Moth Flight nodded eagerly. “I know just what you mean.
My dreams aren’t about you, but they seem so
Micah eyed her, dubiously. “Green moths and spirit-cats?”
Moth Flight gazed into his bright green eyes. “You dreamed of me when you’d never met me,” she told him. “So anything’s possible.”
Micah’s ear twitched. “I guess.” He held her gaze and warmth flooded her pelt.
She stared back, feeling suddenly as if she had always known him. Her fur tingled.
Chapter 9