“Very good!” Dawnstripe’s mew surprised him. He’d completed a circuit of the training ground already, so focused that he hadn’t seen her. He pulled up, slowing to a trot before turning and padding to her side.
Hareflight dipped his head. “Nice work, Tallpaw.”
“You learn quickly,” Dawnstripe meowed.
Shrewpaw slewed to a halt a few tail-lengths away. “Not bad for a tunneler.”
Hareflight glanced up the hillside. “We should meet the others.”
Tallpaw followed his gaze. “Is Outlook Rock over there?” He squinted across the heather but could see nothing but blue sky arcing over the moor.
Dawnstripe headed up the slope. “I’ll show you.”
Outlook Rock stuck out from the moor-top like a snipe’s beak. Below it, the land dropped away, the valley so steep and long that Tallpaw couldn’t tell whether the white shapes in the meadow below were sheep or dandelions. He padded gingerly over the stone, feeling the wind tug at his pelt as he peered over the edge. The whole world rolled out before him, fading against the clouds on the distant horizon. Dizzy, Tallpaw shrank back. What if a gust of wind lifted him off? The granite beneath his paws was too smooth to grip.
“Look ahead, not down,” Dawnstripe warned from behind him.
Tallpaw fixed his gaze on the horizon. Highstones gleamed palely in the sunshine. Beyond them, mountains nudged at the sky. Movement flickered at the corner of his vision and he found himself twitching, his gaze flitting from a wind-ruffled tree to a distant monster flashing along a Thunderpath. A buzzard swooped in the distance, snatching his attention up to the sky.
“They’re coming!” Shrewpaw’s call made him turn.
Cloudrunner, Aspenfall, and Larksplash were leading their apprentices up the slope. Dawnstripe beckoned Tallpaw with a flick of her tail and he hurried to her side as Stagpaw, Ryepaw, and Doepaw leaped onto Outlook Rock. The three apprentices looked somber and focused as they lined up along the rock and sat down.
“What are they doing?” Tallpaw whispered to Dawnstripe.
“They’re being tested on their observation skills,” Dawnstripe hissed back. “Keep quiet so you don’t disturb them.”
Cloudrunner stood behind Stagpaw. “What do you see?” he asked his apprentice.
“Red monster; lapwing diving for insects; a Twoleg walking across the Thunderpath.” Stagpaw leaned forward and squinted. “Dog running along a hedgerow.”
“Which way?” Cloudrunner prompted.
“Toward the scent line.”
“How long before it reaches it?”
“Long enough for a runner to fetch a patrol from camp.”
“Good.” Cloudrunner looked over his shoulder at Aspenfall. “Doepaw’s turn.”
“Twoleg climbing a fence; rogue crossing the Thunderpath.”
Tallpaw watched her steadily scan the landscape. His attention had been caught by one movement after another, and his neck ached from jerking his head around. Doepaw seemed to be directing her gaze at each place in turn, picking objects out with fixed concentration before shifting her head.
Ryepaw was even better. “The Twolegplace loner is sunning himself on his green-patch. There’s a heron fishing the stream beside Long Wall.”
Dawnstripe leaned down to Tallpaw. “Ryepaw has the best eyesight in WindClan,” she whispered.
Tallpaw glanced up as a buzzard swooped high overhead. Ryepaw’s gaze remained trained on the land stretching below her. “How come they don’t get distracted?” he asked.
“Training,” Dawnstripe breathed.
Larksplash padded from the rock. “Nice work,” she told Ryepaw. “Let’s test your hunting skills.”
Tallpaw felt Dawnstripe press against him. “This is where you help out.”
Tallpaw gulped. “How?”
Cloudrunner paced around the older apprentices as they assembled on the grass, their eyes wide with anticipation. “We need to test your tracking skills.” His gaze flashed toward Tallpaw. “You’ll be the rabbit, Tallpaw. Stagpaw, Ryepaw, and Doepaw will hunt you.”
“They’ll catch Tallpaw easily,” Shrewpaw snorted. “I should be the rabbit.”
Hareflight narrowed his eyes. “You’re good at open-running, Shrewpaw. But in the heather, I think Tallpaw will have the advantage.”
Shrewpaw bristled. “Why?”
“He’s smaller,” Hareflight explained. “And more nimble.”
Tallpaw’s heart was speeding. His denmates were going to
Dawnstripe purred. “Don’t worry. They’re being tested on how they pursue you,” she whispered. “They need to work together to track you down. Aspenfall and Cloudrunner will be watching to see how they manage to stay out of sight while still giving one another tail signals.”
“So I just need to keep running.” Tallpaw’s pelt tingled. He knew how to run!
Cloudrunner flicked his tail. “Head for that boulder,” he told Tallpaw.
Tallpaw narrowed his eyes. Beyond a vast stretch of heather and gorse he could just make out a tall stone standing against the sky.