Woollytail?â
Woollytail sniffed. âIt takes time to shore up the roofs.â
Heatherstar flicked her tail. âIâm sure youâll find a way.â She turned back to the prey heap and sniffed Cloudrunnerâs rabbit.
Does Heatherstar ever patrol underground? Tallkit watched the WindClan leader curiously. Sheâd trained as a moor runner, but surely as leader, she needed to understand what it was like to be a tunneler too.
âHurry up, Tallkit!â Barkkit called.
Tallkit jerked his attention away and scurried after his denmates. Barkkit and Shrewkit were already at the Hunting Stones. The smooth, low rocks huddled like rabbits in the grass near the eldersâ den. Sprigs of heather poked between them and moss clumped at their base. Shrewkit leaped onto the highest stone and crowed down at Barkkit. âI am leader of the Hunting Stones!â
Barkkit scrambled onto the boulder beside him. âIâm deputy!â
Tallkit reached the rocks and waded through the thick moss at the bottom. Reaching up with his forepaws, he kicked out with his hind legs and tried to jump up beside Barkkit. His claws slithered on the frosty stone and he slid back into the chilly moss.
âHey, Wormkit!â Shrewkit called down. âWhy donât you tunnel underneath? Youâre not supposed to be a moor runner like us!â
Tallkitâs pelt pricked with confusion. âIâm not Wormkit. Iâm Tall kit!â
âYouâre going to spend your life wriggling underground like a worm, arenât you?â Shrewkit taunted. âThatâs where you should be nowâ under the rocks, not on them.â
Tallkit frowned. He knew that his mother and father were tunnelers, but did that really mean he couldnât play on the Hunting Stones?
Barkkit reached down with his forepaw. âIgnore him and try again, Tallkit!â he mewed.
Tallkit leaped for his denmateâs paw and felt it curl beneath his own. He churned his hind legs while Barkkit heaved. Scrabbling against the stone, he flung himself onto the rock. âThanks!â He sat up beside Barkkit, his pads stinging on the frozen rock.
He gazed across the camp. Sun shone from a crisp, blue sky, thawing the grassy hummocks, which bulged like clumped fur across the frosty clearing. The tunnelersâ bracken patch glowed orange while the long grass enclosing the moor runnersâ nests drooped lower as the frost slowly loosened its grip.
A white face appeared at the entrance of the eldersâ den. âYou youngâuns are up early.â Whiteberry slid out and sat gingerly on the cold grass a tail-length from the Hunting Stones.
Lilywhisker limped after him and stood tasting the air. She was the youngest in the eldersâ den, far younger than Whiteberry, Flamepelt, and Flailfoot. Sheâd retired to the den after a tunnel collapse had smashed her hind leg and left it useless. âDo you want to come onto the moor?â she asked Whiteberry.
The white elder looked at her. âSo long as you donât try to get me down any rabbit holes.â
âNot after last time,â Lilywhisker purred. âIâve never seen a cat chased out of a tunnel by a rabbit.â
Whiteberry shifted his paws. âI thought it was a fox.â
âYour sense of smell must be worn out.â Flicking her tail teasingly, Lilywhisker hopped toward the camp entrance. Her lifeless hind leg left a trail through the shallow snow.
Whiteberry heaved himself to his paws and followed. âYours will wear out too after a few more moons sharing a den with Flailfoot. Heâs got fox-breath.â
âItâs not that bad,â Lilywhisker called over her shoulder.
âDo you want to swap nests?â Whiteberry caught up to her. âLast night he snored right in my muzzle. I dreamed Iâd fallen into a badger den.â
As they disappeared into the heather tunnel, a pale ginger tom nosed his way