Thunder Rising by Erin Hunter




  Acknowledgment

  Special thanks to Cherith Baldry

  Contents

  Acknowledgment

  Allegiances

  Maps

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Thunder Rising: Bonus Scene!

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  About the Author

  Books by Erin Hunter

  Back Ads

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Allegiances

  CLEAR SKY’S CAMP

  LEADER CLEAR SKY—light gray tom with blue eyes

  FALLING FEATHER—young white she-cat

  MOON SHADOW—black tom

  LEAF—gray-and-white tom

  PETAL—small yellow tabby she-cat with green eyes

  QUICK WATER—gray-and-white she-cat

  FROST—pure white tom with blue eyes

  FIRCONE—tortoiseshell tom

  NETTLE—gray tom

  TALL SHADOW’S CAMP

  LEADER TALL SHADOW—black, thick-furred she-cat with green eyes

  GRAY WING—sleek, dark gray tom with golden eyes

  JAGGED PEAK—small gray tabby tom with blue eyes

  DAPPLED PELT—delicate tortoiseshell she-cat with golden eyes

  RAINSWEPT FLOWER—brown tabby she-cat with blue eyes

  SHATTERED ICE—gray-and-white tom with green eyes

  CLOUD SPOTS—long-furred black tom with white ears, white chest, and two white paws

  JACKDAW’S CRY—young black tom with blue eyes

  HAWK SWOOP—orange tabby she-cat

  KITS LIGHTNING TAIL—black tom

  ACORN FUR—chestnut brown she-cat

  THUNDER—orange tom with amber eyes and big white paws

  ROGUE CATS

  WIND—wiry brown she-cat with yellow eyes

  GORSE—thin, gray tabby tom

  THORN—she-cat with a short, thick gray coat and bright blue eyes

  DEW—mangy tom with splotchy fur

  RIVER RIPPLE—silver, long-furred tom

  MISTY—gray-and-white she-cat

  KITTYPETS

  BUMBLE—plump tortoiseshell she-cat with yellow eyes

  TURTLE TAIL—tortoiseshell she-cat with green eyes

  Maps

  PROLOGUE

  All was dark over the moor, except for the glitter of far-off stars and the pale light of the moon. Thunder shifted on his haunches and closed his eyes to narrow slits as he gazed up at the silver circle where it hung close to the horizon. The night breeze rippling through his fur was cool and refreshing. The young cat began a luxurious stretch, then froze as another sensation joined the gentle ruffling. Something warm was rasping repetitively across his head.

  Thunder turned his head and saw his mother, Storm, licking his ears as she used to do when he was a tiny kit. Back then she would soothe him to sleep against her soft belly fur. Thunder drew in his breath in wonder. My mother! It had been so long since he’d last felt the touch of her fur.

  Storm paused. Thunder’s gaze met hers and he felt like he was sinking into the green depths of her eyes. Reaching out with one paw, his mother drew him closer to her, and he felt the comforting beat of her heart.

  Thunder’s mind whirled with the strangeness of this meeting, yet at the same time he realized how familiar it felt. In the waking world he had never been able to remember his mother, but now he recognized every marking on her fur. Even the faint scent of her breath was known to him, reviving memories of the dark, echoing Twoleg den where he had been born.

  Seeing Storm again reminded Thunder of the she-cat who had taken care of him when Gray Wing brought him to the moor. Hawk Swoop is kind to me. Her tenderness had never failed. Yet the feeling of love and comfort was much more powerful coming from his own mother.

  A purr rose in his throat. “Tell me the story again,” he begged, even though he wasn’t sure which story he meant, or where the urge to hear it was coming from.

  Storm settled herself more comfortably around him, one paw protectively over his shoulders. Briefly she hesitated, gazing past Thunder as if she could see into some immeasurable distance.

  “I first met your father in the forest,” she murmured, the words awakening a familiar echo in Thunder’s mind. “In the sheltered hollow where he lived. He was stretched out in front of a clump of brambles. Our eyes met, and then we . . . we just knew. I could sense the love in him.”

  Thunder’s pelt prickled with confusion as if ants were crawling through it. “Why are things so different now?” he asked. “Clear Sky turned me out—my own father! Where did all that love go?”

  He felt Storm shift uneasily. “It’s still there,” she replied. “It’s just . . . Clear Sky doesn’t know what to do with it. You’ll help him find a way.” She bent her head and drew her tongue along the side of his body with strong, comforting licks. “I know you will.”

  Thunder relaxed, but before he could close his eyes, he spotted a sudden movement in the distance. The dark shape of a cat, his head and tail raised, paced across the shining circle of the moon. Though he was far away, Thunder instinctively knew that the cat was his father.

  Storm must have seen him too, for Thunder felt her heartbeat quicken. His own heart ached to realize that his mother still loved Clear Sky.

  He half rose, intending to go after his father, but the paw that Storm had laid across his shoulders tightened, drawing him closer to her side. “Leave him be,” she mewed softly.

  “But you said—” Thunder protested.

  “The time isn’t right,” his mother told him. “You will know when it is.”

  She began to lick his ears again, and gradually Thunder settled down. “But he’s my father . . .” he murmured sadly.

  “I know,” Storm reassured him. Briefly playful, she patted him on the nose, her claws sheathed. “You have so much of him in you,” she purred.

  The ache in Thunder’s heart grew more painful still, as if sharp claws were gripping it. “Then why won’t Clear Sky acknowledge me?” he demanded. “Why can’t I go to him?” His voice rose to a wail. “Everything feels so wrong!”

  Storm’s eyes were full of sorrow as she fixed her gaze on the full moon. The night breeze grew stronger, ruffling her fur, and she curled her body more tightly around Thunder, protecting him from the chill.

  Thunder couldn’t see her face anymore. He could only hear her as she began to speak again. “You will make things right,” she murmured, her voice trickling through him like warm honey in his veins. “When the time comes, I know you will. . . .”

  CHAPTER 1

  The new growth of moorland grass rippled under a warm breeze that ruffled Gray Wing’s fur, telling him that the cold season was coming to an end. Green shoots were springing from the ground in all directions, and bright yellow flowers had appeared on the gorse bushes that dotted the landscape. The distant sound of birdsong promised abundant prey in the moons to come.

  A few tail-lengths away, Thunder was letting out excited squeals as he wrestled happi
ly with Hawk Swoop’s kits, Lightning Tail and Acorn Fur. Gray Wing blinked affectionately as he watched them rolling around on the soft grass, batting at each other with flailing paws, their claws sheathed. He had asked Hawk Swoop for permission to take them out for a hunting lesson.

  “Okay,” the tabby she-cat had agreed. “But mind you don’t let them go too far from the camp.” Now Gray Wing was content to let the kits play for a few moments, enjoying their carefree antics.

  Farther across the moor, he could see Cloud Spots and Dappled Pelt returning from the direction of the river, bunches of fresh herbs clamped in their jaws. Rainswept Flower emerged from a clump of gorse carrying the limp body of a rabbit. She dragged the prey into the hollow where Jackdaw’s Cry and Shattered Ice were digging out more earth to open up a new sleeping tunnel. Hawk Swoop and Tall Shadow sat close together, grooming themselves while they talked.

  This feels like home now, Gray Wing thought, remembering their long journey from the mountains and their struggles to establish themselves on the moor. It had been hard to accept Stoneteller’s vision of a better home to be found if they followed the sun trail. The journey had been full of danger, and yet they had made it through. Life’s good here.

  “Lightning Tail, you be a hare.” Thunder’s voice brought Gray Wing’s attention back to the kits. “I’ll show you how to catch one.”

  “Okay.” Lightning Tail began hopping from side to side, imitating the irregular movement of a hare.

  Thunder glanced at Acorn Fur and meowed, “Watch this!” Flattening himself to the ground he crept toward Lightning Tail, who kept glancing over his shoulder to see whether the older kit was catching up to him.

  Thunder waggled his haunches and shot forward in an enormous leap. When he landed on top of Lightning Tail the black kit let out a squeal and rolled over on his back, wrapping his paws around Thunder’s neck, so that the two toms collapsed to the ground in a bundle of wriggling fur.

  Clear Sky and I were just like that once, Gray Wing thought with a prickle of sadness. How did we ever come to quarrel so badly?

  “You’re dead!” Thunder yowled. “I killed you!”

  “I want to do it for real!” Acorn Fur announced, bouncing up to them. “I’m going to be the best hunter ever.”

  “That’s good,” Gray Wing mewed, padding up to the kits. “But you’ve got a lot to learn before then.”

  “I can creep like Thunder.” Lightning Tail pressed himself down and squirmed along with his paws scrabbling in the grass. “See?”

  “Great,” Gray Wing responded, ignoring the kitten’s tail, which was waving around in the air. “But there’s more to that than catching prey. Out here on the moor, prey can see you from a long way off, so what do you have to do?”

  “Leap on them . . . like this!” Acorn Fur screeched, jumping on top of her brother and knocking him off his paws.

  Thunder dived in to join them. They would never catch anything if they couldn’t pay attention, but Gray Wing held back from reprimanding them. It felt good to watch the happy, healthy kits.

  They’re so big and strong . . . twice the size of poor Fluttering Bird.

  A twinge of grief passed through him as he remembered his sister, who had died in the mountains because there hadn’t been enough food for her during the cold season. He felt a rush of protective love for Thunder and the others; he was determined that they would grow into strong, healthy cats.

  The cold season wasn’t so hard. There was always enough prey. Gray Wing still found it difficult to accept that the snow here wasn’t as thick as the snowfall in the mountains, and it didn’t stay around for so long. The frosts burned off much earlier in the mornings. There had been few days when they couldn’t hunt or find water to drink, especially in the forest, where the trees provided shelter from the worst of the cold weather. He suppressed a sigh. There were still times when he missed his home and his mother, Quiet Rain, but the easier life on the moor meant the kits had survived, and would soon see the warm season return.

  Thunder and Lightning Tail kept wrestling, yowling loud enough to scare off all the prey on the moor. Acorn Fur broke away from them with a sudden shriek. “Watch me!”

  She raced into the hollow and vanished down the tunnel opening where Gray Wing had seen Jackdaw’s Cry and Shattered Ice working earlier. He headed after her, his heart beginning to pound. There was a whole network of tunnels underneath the moor, mostly burrows dug by rabbits. The cats had begun to enlarge them to make dens, but some places weren’t yet safe. And being in the burrows never felt natural to Gray Wing. It was so dark and confining, he found it hard to breathe. Besides, if she goes too deep into the tunnels we might not be able to get her out.

  To Gray Wing’s relief, Acorn Fur reappeared almost at once, thrust into the open again by another cat close behind her. As the cat emerged, Gray Wing saw it was her father, Jackdaw’s Cry. Shattered Ice stuck his head out behind the other two, an annoyed look on his face.

  “Stay away from here,” Jackdaw’s Cry scolded Acorn Fur. “This tunnel isn’t safe yet. Shattered Ice and I are still digging it out.” He gave his daughter a sharp tap on the nose, his claws sheathed. “Aren’t you supposed to be having a hunting lesson with Gray Wing?”

  “She is,” Gray Wing called down to him. “Thanks, Jackdaw’s Cry.”

  The black tom gave Gray Wing a nod of acknowledgment before vanishing into the tunnel again with Shattered Ice.

  Acorn Fur turned away, her tail drooping, and trudged back up the slope to the top of the hollow.

  “Wow!” Lightning Tail exclaimed as she joined the others. “That was awesome! Now we know how to get our noses whacked.”

  Acorn Fur glared at him, but didn’t reply.

  “I think you should show us again,” her brother teased her. “I’m not sure I could get it right.”

  “Really? Then this is how you get your nose whacked, flea-brain!” Acorn Fur hissed, swiping her paw across her brother’s nose.

  Lightning Tail leaped back. “Hey, that hurt!”

  “That’s enough,” Gray Wing meowed, getting between the littermates before a fight could develop. “We’re supposed to be hunting, remember?”

  To his relief the kits began to settle down, scuffling about until they found comfortable spots to sit. They looked up at him with wide eyes.

  Gray Wing glanced around for something to help the young kits learn. He noticed movement underneath a gorse bush; a rabbit moved a little way into the open, nibbling at the grass.

  “Look over there,” he told the kits, pointing with his tail, “but don’t move. See the rabbit? I’m going to catch it.”

  The kits nodded, with sparkling eyes and impatiently twitching tail-tips.

  “First,” Gray Wing went on, “I’m going to let it come away from the bush a bit. It’s likely that the entrance to its burrow is hidden there somewhere. And when I’m chasing it, I’m going to keep a careful eye on it so I can guess which way it’s going to run.”

  While he had been speaking, the rabbit had moved even farther into the open. Gray Wing watched carefully, waiting for just the right moment. Then, in a spurt of energy, he took off after it, reveling in the sensation of his muscles stretching and the breeze streaming through his pelt.

  He was within a few tail-lengths of it before the rabbit realized he was there. It fled with a squeal of alarm, its white tail bobbing up and down. Gray Wing kept his gaze fixed on it, racing across to intercept the creature as it tried to double back toward the safety of the bush.

  The rabbit’s paws skidded as it veered away again. But within a few strides Gray Wing had caught it, slamming his paws on its shoulders to thrust it to the ground, where he killed it with a bite to the throat. Satisfaction flooded through him.

  Picking up the still warm body of his prey, Gray Wing trotted back to the kits, who were watching admiringly.

  “Great catch, Gray Wing!” Thunder exclaimed.

  “I want to do that,” Acorn Fur meowed.

&n
bsp; “You will, soon,” Gray Wing promised, pushing the rabbit underneath the branches of a nearby gorse bush. I’ll come back to retrieve it when we’ve finished. “In fact, you may have a try now. Who can find some prey?”

  The kits sprang to their paws, gazing around and sniffing vigorously at the air. “All I can smell is that rabbit,” Lightning Tail complained.

  “Then let’s move,” Gray Wing meowed, leading them a few tail-lengths away from the hollow. “Thunder, can you see anything?”

  Gray Wing had already spotted a mouse nibbling on some seeds in a clump of longer grass. As it slipped between the grass stems, the tops began to wave about, and Thunder spotted the movement.

  “There!” he whispered, angling his ears toward the mouse.

  “Okay, go for it,” Gray Wing told him.

  Immediately Thunder pressed himself to the ground and began to creep forward.

  Gray Wing shook his head, still keeping his voice low so as not to alarm the mouse. “No. I already told you, that way of hunting might work in the forest, where there are plenty of places to hide, and sounds in the trees that would cover your approach. But it’s no good out here, because your prey can see you from a distance. You’ve got to rely on speed.”

  “Oh . . . okay.” Thunder rose to his paws again, the tip of his tail twitching in frustration, then hurled himself across the moor toward the grassy tussock where the mouse was hiding.

  “Faster!” Acorn Fur shrieked.

  “Stupid furball!” Lightning Tail slapped his tail across his sister’s mouth. “Now look what you’ve done!”

  The mouse froze, as if it had heard Acorn Fur and realized there was danger near. Then it shot out of the long grass, scurrying toward an outcrop of rock a few tail-lengths away. Thunder tried to put on an extra burst of speed, but somehow he managed to get tangled up in his own paws and lost his balance, landing on the ground with a thump. The mouse dived into a gap between two rocks and vanished.

  Thunder scrambled upright, gave his pelt a shake, and plodded back to the others with his head down. “Sorry,” he mumbled.

 
No Previous Page Next Page
Should you have any enquiry, please contact us via [email protected]