Bluestar's Prophecy

Bluestar's Prophecy by Erin Hunter

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Authors: Erin Hunter
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turning the treetops pink. Pride and excitement welled unexpectedly in her belly. This was her territory, and her Clan was in trouble. She knew with a certainty as hard as rock that she would risk anything to help her Clanmates. She half slid, half fell down the steep tumble of rocks, scrabbled down the face of the giant boulder, and raced along the path to the rocky slope at the bottom. She was determined not to be left behind.
    The other warriors had disappeared into the camp by the time she reached the bottom, and she pelted through the gorsetunnel, praying she hadn’t missed anything.
    In the clearing, Sparrowpelt was already sharing his story with Pinestar. The rest of the Clan cats, pelts bristling, were gathering around them. Stonepelt and Stormtail padded, gray as shadows, from beside the nettle patch. Branches trembled around the fallen tree as Weedwhisker pushed his way out from the elders’ den with Larksong and Mumblefoot. Robinwing paced in front of the nursery, her ears pricked up straight.
    Dappletail—a warrior for only one moon, but already acting like she was deputy—pushed past Patchpaw, who was padding blearily from the apprentices’ den.
    “Get out of the way! This is important!” she snapped. “Come on , White-eye!”
    Whitepaw had been given her warrior name at the same time as Dapplepaw. Bluekit thought it was cruel of Pinestar to name her after the blind, cloudy eye that marred her pretty face, but White-eye had never seemed bothered by it, and she followed her denmate now with her usual unruffled air, shrugging apologetically as she passed Patchpaw.
    “Bluekit!” Moonflower called from the fern tunnel. She emerged from the shadows, her eyes round with worry. “I’ve been looking for you! Have you been outside?” Her mew was sharp. “You know you’re not supposed to leave the camp!”
    Bluekit wanted to explain that Sunfall had taken her, but Goosefeather and Featherwhisker weaved past the silver-gray queen, blocking her view as they hurried from the medicine clearing.
    Tail twitching, Swiftbreeze swept in front of Bluekit. “Are you coming?”
    Bluekit nodded and followed. She’d talk to Moonflower later.
    Pinestar’s eyes narrowed as he spoke with the warriors from the patrol. “You say there was blood inside our border?”
    Sparrowpelt nodded. “Squirrel blood. And it was fresh.”
    Bluekit sat down beside Swiftbreeze. “Will there be a battle?” she whispered.
    Swiftbreeze twitched the tip of her tail. “I hope not.”
    Snowkit skidded to a halt beside them, her fur fluffed with excitement. “Imagine if there was!”
    Adderfang was pacing in front of the ThunderClan leader. “WindClan cats must have killed it this morning and carried it back through Fourtrees to their own territory,” he growled.
    “Are you sure it was killed by WindClan?” Swiftbreeze called.
    “WindClan scent was everywhere!” Thrushpelt reported. The young warrior looked terrified, his fur sticking on end. “We were choking on it.”
    Windflight tipped his head to one side. “There was no scent on the bushes,” he meowed slowly. “It may have just drifted down from the moorland.”
    “ Drifted ?” Sparrowpelt scoffed.
    “Too much of a coincidence!” Adderfang snapped. “Squirrel blood and Clan-scent together? They crossed our border and killed ThunderClan prey!”
    “Could anything else have killed the squirrel?” Pinestarqueried. “Was there any sign of a fox?”
    “Nothing fresh ,” Adderfang meowed.
    Pinestar blinked. “But there was fox scent?”
    Sparrowpelt flexed his claws. “There’s fox scent everywhere if you sniff for it!”
    Mumblefoot padded stiffly forward. “WindClan has done this before,” he reminded them.
    Stonepelt nodded. “Leaf-fall always makes them nervous. The rabbits start to go to ground when the forest is still prey-rich. This won’t be the first time hunger has driven WindClan past Fourtrees and over our border.”
    “And it won’t be the last,”

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