grip. âLook at Tallkit!â he teased. âHeâs blinking like heâs just opened his eyes!â
Tallkit bristled. âIâm nearly half a moon old and Sandgorse says I opened my eyes quicker than any kit in the nursery.â He glared at his denmates. âIâm just not used to snow.â The ground sparkled, and the heather that formed the camp boundaryâso dark against the sky yesterdayânow glittered brightly with frost. What would the moor look like when the heavy snows came and the world turned completely white? Palebird had warned Tallkit that leaf-bare hit WindClan hardest of all the Clans, because the moor touched the sky. But this also made them more special, and safer.
âWeâre closer to Silverpelt than any Clan,â sheâd told him as she snuggled him in their mossy nest. âWhich means that StarClan watches us more closely.â
Tallkit heard worry in her mew. âIs that why we tunnel under the moor?â he asked. âTo hide from the dead warriors in other Clans?â
âDonât be silly.â Palebird had licked his ear. âWe tunnel because weâre stronger and cleverer than all the other Clans together.â Her washing became brisker, silencing him.
âIâm going to the Hunting Stones!â Shrewkit charged across the grass.
Barkkit raced after him. âWhat about sliding in the hollow?â
âThereâs not enough snow for real sliding.â Shrewkit veered away from Tallrock.
âYouâre just scared.â Barkkit swerved after his brother, sending a shower of frozen flakes up from his paws.
âAm not!â Shrewkit called back.
Tallkit followed, not caring where they chose to play. It felt great to be outside, the grass cold on his pads as he raced across it.
âWatch out!â
Tallkit skidded to a halt as Cloudrunner yowled at him. The pale gray tom was crossing his path with Aspenfall. The warriors were heading to the prey heap, carrying fresh-kill. Wind-ruffled from the moor, theyâd brought food for the Clan. Tallkit gazed at them, impressed by their long legs and wiry tails. They were moor runners, which meant they served WindClan by hunting and patroling the borders, and Tallkit could smell heather on their pelts.
In the brittle patch of bracken where the tunnelers made their nests, Woollytail looked up from washing his mud-streaked belly. Like all the cats who served the Clan by carving out new tunnels and shoring up old ones far beneath the moor, his pelt was permanently stained with sand and dust. He nodded at the rabbit swinging from Cloudrunnerâs jaws. âDid you catch that on the high-moor?â
âYes.â At the prey heap, Cloudrunner kicked away a stale mouse left from the previous dayâs hunt and dropped his catch. âYouâre right, as usual, Woollytail.â
Tallkit blinked at Woollytail. âHow did you know?â
âI can smell the sand in its fur.â Woollytail flicked his tail and returned to washing.
Hickorynose, his tunnelmate, shifted on the bracken beside him. âYou only find sand tunnels on the high-moor.â The brown tom lifted a forepaw and rubbed dirt from his ear. âNot like the gorge tunnel. Thatâs all soil and grit. But itâll open the way to fresh prey beside the river.â
Cloudrunner snorted. âIf you ever find a way to stop the cave-ins.â
Aspenfall laid a vole beside the rabbit. âThe grit makes it unstable. Itâs not safe to tunnel there.â
Woollytail narrowed his eyes. âIt is if you know what youâre doing.â
Tallkit glanced from tunneler to moor runner as an awkward silence fell between them.
Heatherstar cut through it. She padded from her den and followed the rim of the Meeting Hollow. Passing the grass nests of the moor runners, she brushed by Cloudrunner and stopped beside the bracken patch. âWill the new tunnels be ready before newleaf,