“Yes, I do!” Micah stopped and stared at her. “I’ve never met a cat who goes off chasing moths or disappears into strange tunnels in the middle of the night or tells me that she’s going to learn how to heal and read omens.” He paused, his gaze sparkling so intensely that her heart seemed to miss a beat.
“You’re wonderful!”
Moth Flight shifted her paws nervously. Would he think she was so wonderful when she told him about
Micah stiffened. “Part of what?”
“You’re meant to be a medicine cat too.”
“On the farm?” He tipped his head, puzzled.
“No!” Moth Flight paced across the stone and looked over the trees to the distant moor, curving like a cat’s spine against the glittering sky. “You’re to be SkyClan’s medicine cat.”
“That’s your Clan, right?” Micah stopped beside her.
“No.” Moth Flight steadied her breath. “I’m from WindClan.
SkyClan is Clear Sky’s group. They live in the forest, not on the moor.” She felt Micah shift uneasily beside her.
“So I’ll live
Her heart lifted. He hadn’t said no. She turned sharply and faced him. “Do you mean you’ll do it? Become a medicine cat for the Clans?”
Micah returned her gaze, but she could read nothing in his eyes. “The leader of SkyClan,” he began. “He’s a tom, right?
Fierce. He likes bossing other cats around.”
Moth Flight’s mouth grew dry as he went on.
“Is he suspicious of other cats? And proud? Gray with blue eyes?”
Moth Flight backed away, startled. He was describing Clear Sky exactly. “How do you know?”
“I’ve dreamed of him,” he murmured. “I dream I’m bringing him catmint to help a sick kit.”
“Catmint?” Moth Flight pricked her ears.
“It’s an herb that grows behind the barn. It looks a bit like nettles but the leaves are smaller and they don’t sting. You’ll know if you ever see some. It smells great. And it helps coughs.” Micah whisked his tail impatiently. “I keep having the same dream. The kit’s always sick and the gray tom’s ordering me to hurry with the catmint.” He blinked at her. “But I can see now—it
I’ve been seeing my destiny!” His fur rippled with surprise. He lifted his gaze toward the moor.
Moth Flight shifted her paws nervously. He’d just discovered that the life he’d planned was not the life that had been planned for him. “Do you mind?”
“Why should I mind?” Micah shrugged. “It’s pointless to mind your own destiny. You just have to face it.”
Moth Flight wondered how he could be so calm. Fear hollowed her belly as she tried to imagine the moons that lay head of her. “Aren’t you scared?”
“No,” he meowed softly. “One path is as good as another.
It’s not knowing which one to take that’s scary. Now that I know where I’m meant to be going, there’s nothing to fear.” He looked at her. “For
“Do you promise?” Her mew quavered.
“I promise.” His green gaze was steady. Starlight sparkled in its depths.
Moth Flight reached out her muzzle and touched his. Her heart slowed as his nose brushed her cheek. She felt soothed by his stillness, aware of the moonlight washing their pelts.
Chapter 14
Moth Flight felt a muzzle nudging her shoulder. She lifted her head, blinking at the bright sunshine.
Memories flooded her. The night before!
Heart leaping, she scrambled to her paws. “We have to get back and tell Wind Runner!” They’d talked until dawn had crept over the moortop, and then slept. Now the sun was sinking behind them. “Come on!”
“There’s no hurry. We can eat first.” Micah jumped off the rock and sniffed for prey underneath.
“There isn’t time. It’s full moon tonight. We have to get back and tell her before the Gathering. Then she can let the others know.” Moth Flight leaped from the rock and headed across the stony ground, toward the fields. If she could convince
Wind Runner that the Clans needed to have medicine cats, then Wind Runner could explain everything to the other leaders.
She heard Micah’s paw steps hurry after her. “What’s the
“The Clans meet every full moon to share tongues,” Moth
Flight explained quickly, her eyes fixed on the meadow ahead.
“They swap information about dangers, like Twolegs or dogs, and how the prey’s running. It helps keep the peace.”
“Do the Clans
“They did once,” Moth Flight told him. “Now we meet and share so that we’ll never fight again.”
She quickened her pace. The moor looked a long way off.
They’d be lucky to get there before dusk.
“We’ll travel faster on full bellies,” Micah scanned the land around them as stones gave way to grass beneath their paws.