whitecough.â
âDo you want help gathering herbs?â Jaykit offered. He had never been out of the camp, and he was desperate to explore the forest. He wanted to smell the boundary markers;up till now he had tasted only the weak scents of ShadowClan and WindClan carried from the borders on the pelts of ThunderClan patrols. He wanted to feel the breeze fresh off the lake, untainted by the scents of the forest. He wanted to learn where the markers were along each boundary so that he could defend every pawstep of his Clanâs territory.
âYou could gather far more herbs with us to carry them back to camp!â Lionkit put in.
âYou know youâre not meant to leave the camp until youâre apprentices,â Leafpool reminded them.
âBut youâll need help if there are sick catsâ¦,â Jaykit insisted.
Leafpool silenced him by flicking the tip of her tail over his mouth. âIâm sorry, Jaykit,â she meowed. âIt wonât be long until Firestar gives you your apprentice names. But until then, youâll have to wait like any other kits.â
Jaykit understood her meaning. Their father was the Clan deputy, and their mother was Firestarâs daughter; Leafpool was reminding them yet again that it did not entitle them to special treatment. His tail twitched crossly. Sometimes it felt like the rest of the Clan went out of their way to make sure he and his littermates never got special treatment. It wasnât fair!
âIâm sorry,â Leafpool meowed. âBut thatâs just the way it is.â She picked up the foul-smelling moss and padded back to the medicine den.
âNice try,â Lionkit whispered in Jaykitâs ear. âBut it looks like weâre stuck in the camp for a while longer.â
âLeafpool always thinks she can win us over just because she brings wool for our nests from the moorland,â Jaykit hissed. âOr pieces of honeycomb to lick. Why canât she just give us what we really wantâa chance to explore outside the camp?â
Hollykit swished her tail over the frozen ground. Jaykit knew she wanted to explore beyond the camp walls as much as he and Lionkit did. âBut sheâs right,â she mewed grudgingly. âWe must stick to the warrior code.â
They ate, sharing the mouse and a vole between them. As Jaykit washed his face afterward, drawing his paws over his ears to give them a thorough cleaning, he noticed Brook emerging from the warriorsâ den to join Cloudtail and Brightheart in the sun. She carried a different scent from the other warriors, the scent of mountains and tumbling water. It seemed to make her the strangest of all the cats who were not Clanborn. Was it just her scent, Jaykit wondered, or was it something more he sensed in the mountain she-catâsome wariness that had never left her? He could not quite put his whisker on it, but he was sure that Brook felt out of place here in the forest.
A rustle in the thorn barrier that protected the entrance to the camp signaled Berrypawâs return. Daisyâs third kit charged over to the fresh-kill pile and threw down his catchâa plump wood pigeon.
âWhereâs Brambleclaw?â Berrypaw called out to the kits. Brambleclaw was Berrypawâs mentor, and Jaykit could not help but feel a small pang of jealousy that Berrypaw spent somuch time training with Brambleclaw when his own paws ached to hunt in the forest with his father.
âHeâs with Squirrelflight,â Jaykit replied. âTheyâre checking for loose stones.â He pricked his ears, listening for the sound of his motherâs and fatherâs voices. He could not hear them, but the breeze blowing down from the cliff behind the medicine den carried their scent.
âUp there,â he told Berrypaw, lifting his nose toward them.
âYouâre sharp today, Jaykit!â Berrypaw meowed. âI wanted to show him my pigeon and