Henry was.â
Smudge shrugged and stared down at his paws. âBut Henryâs all right,â he mumbled. âI mean, I know heâs a bit lazier now, but heâs not unhappy. We could still have fun.â
Rusty felt his heart fill with sadness at the thought of leaving his friend. âIâm sorry, Smudge. Iâll miss you, but I have to go.â
Smudge didnât reply, but stepped forward and gently touched Rustyâs nose with his own. âFair enough. I can see I canât stop you, but at least letâs spend one more morning together.â
Rusty found himself enjoying the morning even more than usual, visiting his old haunts with Smudge, sharing words with the cats he had grown up with. Every one of his senses felt supercharged, as if he were poised before a huge jump. As sunhigh approached, Rusty grew more and more impatient to see if Lionheart would really be waiting for him. The idle buzz of meows from his old friends seemed to fade into the background as all his senses strained toward the woods.
Rusty jumped down from his garden fence for the last time and crept into the woods. He had said his good-byes to Smudge. Now all his thoughts were focused on the forest and the cats who lived in it.
As he approached the spot where he had met with the Clan cats the night before, he sat down and tasted the air. Tall trees shielded the ground from the midday sunshine, making itcomfortably cool. Here and there a patch of sunlight shone through a gap in the leaves and lit up the forest floor. Rusty could smell the same cat-scent as last night, but he had no idea whether it was old or new. He lifted his head and sniffed uncertainly.
âYou have a lot to learn,â meowed a deep voice. âEven the tiniest Clan kit knows when another cat is nearby.â
Rusty saw a pair of green eyes glinting from beneath a bramble bush. Now he recognized the scent: it was Lionheart.
âCan you tell if I am alone?â asked the golden tabby, stepping into the light.
Hastily, Rusty sniffed again. The scents of Bluestar and Graypaw were still there, but not as strong as the previous night. Hesitantly, he mewed, âBluestar and Graypaw arenât with you this time.â
âThatâs right,â meowed Lionheart. âBut someone else is.â
Rusty stiffened as a second Clan cat strode into the clearing.
âThis is Whitestorm,â purred Lionheart. âOne of ThunderClanâs senior warriors.â
Rusty looked at the tom and felt his spine tingle with cold fear. Was this a trap? Long-bodied and muscular, Whitestorm stood in front of Rusty and gazed down at him. His white coat was thick and unmarked and his eyes were the yellow of sunbaked sand. Rusty flattened his ears warily, and tensed his muscles in preparation for a fight.
âRelax, before your fear-scent brings unwanted attention,â growled Lionheart. âWe are here only to take you to our camp.â
Rusty sat very still, hardly daring to breathe, as Whitestorm stretched his nose forward and gave him a curious sniff.
âHello, young one,â murmured the white cat. âIâve heard a lot about you.â
Rusty dipped his head in greeting.
âCome, we can speak more once we are in the camp,â ordered Lionheart, and, without pausing, he and Whitestorm leaped away into the undergrowth. Rusty jumped to his paws and followed as quickly as he could.
The two warriors made no allowances for Rusty as they sped through the forest, and before long he was struggling to keep up. Their pace barely slowed as they led him over fallen trees that they cleared in a single leap, but which Rusty had to scramble over paw by paw. They passed through sharply fragrant pine trees, where they had to jump across deep gullies churned up by a Twoleg tree-eater. From the safety of his garden fence, Rusty had often heard it roaring and snarling in the distance. One gully was too wide to jump, half-filled with