#patchback
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heehee. yay
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#clangen#clan generator#art#fallenart#blood tw#wolfbite#feathersight#skyfrost#levi#kestrelfeather#ospreyswipe#myrtleclaw#juniperfoot#littleleaf#darkstone#honeysong#flamefall#mistlefrost#inkynose#patchback#sleepydawn#bearspring#marshjump#HERES THOSE REACTIONS YOU FUCKERS WOULDNT LEAVE ME ALONE FOR. ARE YOU HAPPY
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oakburn and mossleaf mean the world to me and if anything happens to them I’m destroying this website and everyone in it
ft. Patchback from @fallenclan! It seemed fitting for a fc cat to do smth like this, especially with what’s been… going on..
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Folkvaran History
HISTORY
Primal Age
Folkvar’s territory was first inhabited by Silverskin dworfs, Woodland gnolls, and Ibias fauns. Scattered populations of Patchback centaurs, Mountain hogmen, and Oprezka goblins were quick to migrate over within the first few centuries, drawn to more abundant resources on Noalen’s eastern coast.
The dworfs largely kept to themselves up in the Shrieking Mountains, having little contact with the other peoples who squabbled below. There were many conflicts in these early times as different tribes fought over real estate. Nomadic gnoll clans seemed to dominate for quite some time, successfully raiding and pillaging the stationary tribes around them. This is referred to as the “Golden Age of Gnolls”, when this now-extinct species was at its most powerful.
1st Age
By the start of the 1st Age, gnolls became the most populous species in the region. They were largely war-like and lived nomadic or semi-nomadic lifestyles. The fauns developed offensive spells specifically to defend themselves against the gnolls, but it simply wasn’t enough, as the gnolls liked to use filth to their advantage, and fauns were particularly susceptible to the plagues they spread. As time went on, many fauns were forced to assimilate into local goblin and centaur tribes for protection, or else be driven to extinction.
Gnolls were known to raid faunish and goblin tribes frequently, but did not fair as well against centaurs or hogmen. These heavyweight gaians could defend themselves more easily, but even they struggled at times due to the gnolls’ sheer numbers and dirty tactics.
Some say that Folkvar Kingdom has been at war long before the conflict with Evangeline, for these earliest ancestors were spilling each other’s blood since the day Gaia breathed life into them. Its violent history is how it earned the title “The Warrior Kingdom”.
2nd Age
Around the start of the 2nd Age is when the Silverskin dworfs began venturing down from their mountains in large numbers, seeking more favorable climates to settle. They found temperate forests that were rich with the timber and farmland they sought, but these forests were also crawling with hostile gnoll and hogmen clans.
Gnolls still dominated the woodland regions at this time, and their numbers were only climbing. The beast-like heads of the gnolls and hogmen made it very difficult for them to communicate with other species, so it was rare for them to form alliances outside their own kind. Needless to say, the dworfs did not receive a warm welcome. The nomadic beast-headed raiders prevented them from colonizing Noalen’s eastern forests for a long time.
Back in their motherland, however, the dworfs were quickly advancing. They developed clever ways of surviving their cold, mountainous region by tunneling right through the rock and living mostly underground. They used their engineering prowess to develop complex ventilation systems and other devices, making them the most technologically-advanced culture on Gaia at the time.
The dworfs would attempt to colonize the forests again towards the end of the age, this time with more advanced weapons and equipment to deal with hostiles. Even with their fancy new crossbows, gunpowder muskets, and metal armors, they were outnumbered and overpowered by the stone age natives. All the dworf’s advancement came at a heavy cost, and they were starting to run out of resources like food and timber in their homeland. The pressure was on to conquer these forests or die trying.
In the meantime, they started trading with the Balbastrans (proto-Evangelites) to the southwest.
3rd Age
In the 3rd Age, Balbastrans increased contact with the Silverskin dworfs. Balbastran humans assimilated particularly well into dworfen culture, bringing with them the concept of beast-taming. In return, they adopted some of the dworf’s new steam-based technologies such as trains. These great advancements led to the founding of Evangeline Kingdom.
Initially, Evangeline's territories stretched from Noalen’s western coast to the eastern edge of the Blue Valley. Colonizing the eastern forests proved difficult, as they were still populated by hostile gnolls and hogmen, as well as established stationary tribes of fauns, centaurs, and others.
Evangeline succeeded, however, using a combination of violence and diplomacy. The kingdom was able to assimilate many of the established tribes, and together with their combined resources and technology, they were able to finally start pushing back against the beast-headed raiders. Gnolls quickly began losing control of the region, but the hogmen would remain a threat to Evangeline until the end of the 4th Age.
4th Age
The kingdom experienced a huge cultural revolution around the year 4200, when its leadership decided to combine Evangeline law with Lindist doctrine. Things had been heading this direction for centuries before this, however, as Evangelites were getting fed-up with hostile tribes of hogmen and other species terrorizing their remote towns.
The Full Moon Genocides also took place around this time, a period when the kingdom was ravaged by the novel lycanthropy disease. The High King took advantage of the peoples’ fear, anger, and desperation, and used it to install a heavy-handed theocracy.
Fae and gaians were declared lesser beings by Lindist leaders, and Evangelite law decreed that they should only exist in the kingdom as slaves. This caused many fae and gaians to flee the kingdom, but those who could not escape were enslaved, beginning an oppressive new era for Evangeline.
The kingdom also began a genocidal campaign against hogmen around this time, but it did not successfully drive them to extinction until the very end of the 4th Age–about 800 years later. In less than a century, Evangeline’s whole culture shifted into something unrecognizable. The kingdom had become a haven for male commoners and a nightmare for everyone else.
But this oppression was a boon for the upper classes, who were reaping big profits from Evangeline’s growing trade industry. Thanks to slave labor, food production became very cheap and could be sold to foreign markets. Zareen Empire was their biggest customer, and this is still true today.
The religious revolution caused much civil unrest among the lower classes, however. Things came to a head around the year 4500 when a civil war broke out between those who supported the revolution and those who opposed it. Most of the opposers lived in Evangeline’s neglected northern and eastern territories, and as a result, the kingdom split in two. The revolution-opposing territories banded together to make their voices heard, and they became known as Folkvar Kingdom. In Volkaspek, this name roughly translates to “Kingdom for the People”.
The Folkvarans demanded freedom of religion, equal rights for all peoples, and abolishment of slavery, and would not pay taxes to Evangeline until their demands were met. Evangeline refused and the two sides went to war. This war is still raging today–2,000 years later–with neither side gaining or losing much ground since it began.
Folkvar quickly formed an alliance with Etios Nation, which automatically put them at war with Matuzu Kingdom. While Folkvar usually fights Evangeline by land, most of its battles with Matuzu occur at sea.
5th Age
Folkvar Kingdom spent most of the 5th Age establishing supply lines and trade routes with foreign powers, all while defending itself from constant assaults by Evangeline and Matuzu. It experienced a large population boom after the Gold River War displaced many Morites in the south, a lot of whom fled to Folkvar Kingdom to become citizens. This proved helpful in the wars.
High King Gultopp came into power near the end of the 5th Age, and he still holds the throne today. Folkvar Kingdom has always welcomed immigrants with open arms, as it has struggled with population stability since its beginnings, but King Gultopp took this policy even further. He passed a law that grants anyone instant citizenship, so long as they or someone in their immediate family serves at least five years in the Folkvaran military. The military saw a sizeable boost in recruitment since then, though Gultopp has been criticized for pampering soldiers while ignoring the needs of civilians.
6th Age
King Gultopp continues to hold the throne, focusing his campaign on military recruitment and promoting immigration to feed his barracks. At the start of the 6th Age, he secretly began working with an Evangelite spy named Azura to destabilize Evangeline Kingdom. He did this by hiring mercenaries to steal Evangelite slaves and escort them back to his kingdom, where they were forced to join his military in exchange for freedom. Princess Azura provides him with valuable intel to pull this off successfully. The scheme is called “Operation Chaincutter”, and it has steadily been gaining traction over the years.
In the year 6007, Kelvingyard was damaged by an earthquake, leading to the escape of thousands of Evangelite slaves. Most of them ended up fleeing to Folkvar and joining its military. This event was a painful blow to Evangeline’s economy, and Folkvar took full advantage of their weakness by launching strategic attacks.
King Gultopp realizes he is growing old and will likely not see the fall of Evangeline Kingdom in his lifetime. However, he is considering passing his crown to his daughter Blomi, who has promised him that she will finish what he started. He entrusts her to keep working with Azura to take over Evangeline Kingdom, and in return, Azura promises to help end the Etios-Matuzu war peacefully.
Gultopp may be known as a warmonger, but he truly hopes his grandchildren will see his kingdom at peace for the first time in its history.
SEE ALSO
Folkvar Kingdom Main Page
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Questions/Comments?
Lore Masterpost
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Misc niiverse stuff again
Idk if anyone even looks at these posts but I’m just gonna put this stuff here so I don’t lose it
When I get bored I just draw the same 3 guys again
Random lore etc:
I’ve been thinking about some of my ocs ancestry. Not totally sure about everyone, and some (like the dworfs) are pretty obvious or their species doesn’t really have races. And of course most of them are actually very mixed like most people on Gaia, this is just their major ancestry. Here’s what I got now:
-Goria was part Faefaras part Marienna, and I guess Ela hence the green eyes. Zepio was Damijani obviously, and Curlinita’s descendants are basically a collect-them-all of elf races.
-Perkoill and Sirius had Namarie and Tanyel
-Strata and Helena have mostly Faefaras and Aiya
-Ohto and Ignatius are mostly Namarie and Tanyel
-Ster is Marienna and Ela. Vindia (I’m thinking she’s Ster’s niece because all my elves might as well be related at this point) has that plus Namarie so she’s a lot paler
-Cresti and Valerie are mostly Ela and Namarie, with some Faefaras
-Maleena is mostly Moorenock
-Sineriina, Akamia and Sprucie have Grisa and Lagaal at least
-Saku is Dalor and Ibias
-Valma is Shaghoof and maybe some Arrowfall and Lijen is Patchback and Dappleback
-Zicki is Oprezka and Bulaka
-Croc is Sovereign’s kid like I said so part Teetaktee, and his mom was Kakee
-Jonas has Pronga and Esukia
-Stefan has Goldengaze and Twister
-Juccadamias & Langs have Dalor and Pronga
-Sapers has Brunak and Grograshni
-Kadt has at least Quagene, Hemogalla, Lilagene
-Pruvite has Thunderhoof, Shaghoof, Redridge
-Topina is Skadgrik
Well. Knowers know:
Random facts
Juccadamias is a couple years older than Langs, but they're on the same class at school because he got held back. At first they try to hide this and that they're brothers from all the other kids because it's embarrassing, but they're so bad at it that everyone figures it out in a week or so anyway. And Jucca is always trying to copy his little brother's homework that he should've been doing last year
My classic design of Kukka had pink hair but now she has red hair since she’s a dworf. But since she was an actress, her performance once spawned a maenad that looks more like her classic design. Old drawing
Pakila was born dangerously prematurely, while Blera was born later than expected. Also Garnet couldn’t be around for either of their births, was too busy
Krati’s dad was a runt and would be a ziqit if he was in Lamai, but he’s in Zareen so he’s just a regular husband.
My first pre-lg version of Zicki was originally a boy, but at some point I changed her to a girl because I basically just decided that she’d look better with a skirt and fishnets. So I think she’s trans in-universe too. Was T4T with Jonas sometimes but they were very open or just friends with benefits
Yue’s shirt and Curlinita’s eyepatch liked aggressively flirting with each other every time they interacted. They’re not actually alive, just cursed, magic being magic just decided to be funny

Also Yue’s shirt is sleeveless and has a hole on the back for the wings. And she’s had the same looking shirt for centuries, but at some point at least got a new one that looks just like the other one. It’s a sylph skull
Kadt was adopted by a dworf mom, who later married a human guy. Said dworf has a brother who has one eye and likes playing ukulele ominously in the corner
Jucca and Langs mostly live with their grandparents who look like faun versions of Barbapapa and Barbamama.
Zirgalei’s parents never married or even really dated, they’re just roommates who sometimes have sex for fun, accidentally had a kid and just went with it. She calls them both by their names but they’re chill
Sapers is a bit of a rich asshole, but not as much as Pruvite’s parents
Krati likes hitting people with an inflatable hammer
Zirgalei is a sk8r girl and likes hitting people with a baseball bat
Langs doesn’t like hitting people but he has a guitar and might hit you with it if he really has to.
Jucca has a shitty clay ocarina he made himself and likes playing it shittily. Also his shirt is supposed to be the “irritating” symbol on chemicals because it’s true, he is irritating
Ruukku is married to a pink rose limniad named Elvira, who is a fencer and also very fancypants. And they collect little porcelain cat sculptures
Kukka and Snow had a bunch of cats and rabbits but they had to get rid of the cats because Vanella turned out to be allergic to them, so now they just have rabbits.
Josefrollop is married to an evil pyriad Olivia who was in jail for a few centuries for committing mass arson but she's currently doing fire acts at Plinko's circus trying to be a nice guy.
Cluster had some cool moon and star tattoos. And one of his and Wysteria's kids was this architect named Malachite with shitty fashion sense who married Melenya the flame gnome. They look sorta like this:
Memes of course


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Patchback The voodoo fakemon The humps on its back seem to be closed. It slithers and sees by sensing things with a physic power.
Eyeback The voodoo fakemon This pokemon uses the needles on its tail to hurt the foe its fighting. It does so by hurting its self with the needles.
Mainly in habits the wet lands
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Joules Kids Patchback (Big Kids) SKU: 9059574
youtube
See the rest of the story at http://storiesarchives.localeyeschina.com/joules-kids-patchback-big-kids-sku-9059574/
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Joules Kids Patchback (Big Kids) SKU: 9059574
youtube
See the rest of the story at http://journalvideos.equine-superstores.com/joules-kids-patchback-big-kids-sku-9059574/
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To my original favorite Ats @franbalasadas (as if naman may iba pa?🤣) you know how difficult it is living under your shadow? You were always the cute one, you were always the mestiza one, you were always the adorable one. Hahahaha! May issue pala eh ano?!Hahahaha! I'm proud of you kaya, in my mind "Ate ko yan no!" (Kahit ako yun parating api, char!) Wishing you were always physically present in every gargantatious or liliputian (I think I'm inventing words🙊🤡) thing happening in my life, even though I think it will be World War Z if we'd be together each and every single day forever, at least may forever tayo😁 It's your birthday month!!!🎂(mag hahappy birthday lang, dami pang sinasabi...hahaha! and i'm sure you're like 😳🙄🤔🤷🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️) Peace! Wuv you, Ats! 😘 Patchback: Kabirthday month mo na nga si Wows and same kasi kayong mestiza! #NaDayaAtNaApiNanamanAko🤷🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️ #AdoptedLangAtaAko🙃🤣
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and with that, moon 269 is FINALLY FUCKING FINISHED... at a whopping 76 pages. i'm never doing a comic this long ever again btw
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#clangen#clan generator#art#fallenart#wolfstar#kestrelfeather#cloudtuft#flamefall#broccoli#pepperswipe#pondshine#patchback#levi#sleepydawn
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SUNNYCOTTON!!!!! a win for the lesbians <3
i'm trying to implement more traditions and culture for Fallenclan, so behold!! giving someone a cool bug as an old-fashioned way of asking to be mates :D
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#the bug is supposed to be a cottonwood leaf beetle. btw <3#blood tw#child abuse tw#clangen#clan generator#art#fallenart#safari#snowpaw#patchback#cottonleaf#sunnytuft#imagining sagespeckle going like 'listen. sooner or later sunnytuft is going to give you a bug ok. it means shes in gay love with you.'#'trust me on this'
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i cant believe that out of ALL accessories. after losing her mom, her dad, her sister, and her best friend all in 1 moon, sunnytuft started wearing FORGET-ME-NOTS. thats fucking Rough.
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#clangen#clan generator#art#fallenart#snowkit#frecklefox#feathersight#ospreyswipe#levi#patchback#pebblefreeze#sunnytuft#blood tw
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pinefrost :( i will miss you boy
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#clangen#clan generator#art#fallenart#jumblepaw#antbite#pinefrost#pepperkit#patchback#jumbletooth#pepperswipe
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Do you think you could add Sleepydawn’s Journey to tumblr to make it easier?
sure :)
Sleepydawn's Journey
“This is it.” Tangletail turned to look at him, her green eyes glossy but unsympathetic. “End of the line, Sleepydawn.”
A thousand rebuttals bunched on the end of Sleepydawn’s tongue. For you, maybe. Or This won’t be the last time you see me. Possibly even something as simple as, You’ll regret this.
Sleepydawn said nothing. Tail dragging on the ground, he turned away from his clanmates and stepped across the border.
He felt their eyes watching him as he went, as the ground turned from soft grass to hard dirt to even harder black stone. He itched to turn back, shoot them a glare or just soak in a final look at his clan. It’s in his nature to be impulsive. But where had impulsivity gotten him?
He rounded the corner of a twoleg nest, and then he was gone.
It was then, and only then, that he stopped, sitting hard on his rump in the narrow gap between structures. It smelled there--like rotting vegetation and some unique twoleg stench, but he had bigger problems than whatever odors he’d have to wash off his fur later.
What would he do now?
He wasn’t a Fallenclan cat anymore. Not even a warrior. Maybe he could be, if he traveled around the territories--to Cricketclan, Gooseclan, Shallowclan, even. They weren’t even far, all things considered, and most of them would probably accept a new warrior, but the idea of belonging to a different clan, a clan besides his own, soured his stomach. He wasn’t meant to live in a swamp, or a dense forest, to live in nests made of reeds and moss.
He wasn’t meant to be a loner, either, and yet…
He could wait for Levi. Levi, who was Ravenstar’s right hand, his deputy, should by all accounts be Sleepydawn’s leader now, even if he wasn’t Fallenclan’s. He could wait for Levi to join him, and Patchback, and whoever else as an outsider (If Wolfbite doesn’t kill them, first), and then… what? Start a new clan? How was that different from joining one that already exists?
Fallenclan was Sleepydawn’s home. That was who he was. Did Levi really mean anything to him outside of that?
Perhaps it was a question for a better day. Now, Sleepydawn was tired, and he was going to need to eat soon, even if he wasn’t hungry. Wolfbite had offered him a piece of prey from the fresh-kill pile before he left, and he’d refused, blinded by anger and despair and grief. He didn’t know what he’d be able to find in twolegplace, but there was no harm in looking. Hunting might help clear his mind, anyway.
Sleepydawn stepped further into twolegplace, and began his first day as a loner.
. . .
Twolegplace was. Different.
He’d been there before. As an apprentice, in any of his spare time he didn’t spend training, he liked to wander. Not far, of course, usually not more than a tree length in, knowing that twolegplace was dangerous and not for clan cats to explore, anyway, but enough to get a decent look at what the place had to offer.
Or so he had thought, anyway.
The place seemed devoid, at first, of anything but twolegs and monsters. They stalked around their flat, grassy patches of land outside, peered at him through the holes in their nests. Very few spared him more than a glance--just a couple of kits that crouched their long legs and made noises like a broken hiss-- pspspspsps.
He ran off quickly after that.
And the monsters, of course. They were everywhere. Mostly asleep, thank the stars, either resting on those patches of smooth black or silver stone, or tucked inside perfectly sized nooks in the twoleg nests. The ones that were awake slowly prowled up and down the rocky pathways, growling and rumbling all the while. Sleepydawn gave them a good berth, knowing that they wouldn’t stray from their marked walkways, on edge despite his knowledge. If nothing else, their constant noise made it difficult to listen for other dangers.
After a long while of aimless wandering, though, he found that perhaps twolegplace wasn’t as devoid of life as he thought.
There were birds everywhere. Just as abundant as they were in the mountains, maybe more. They seemed drawn to these odd little twoleg structures that seemed to be filled with seeds and nuts--perhaps something to lure them out of hiding so that the twolegs could catch a meal? It was smart, but if that was the case why didn’t he see any twolegs hunting them? Rather, most twolegs seemed to give the things a decent berth, as if perhaps they didn’t want to frighten the birds away. The birds didn’t seem too startled, anyhow, like they were used to the twolegs wandering nearby. Probably they were.
There wasn’t a lot of ground prey, besides a few lizards and squirrels, but those all scattered before Sleepydawn could get close, not yet trying to catch something now that he knew it wouldn’t be too hard to find a meal when he was ready.
There were other animals too, not just twolegs and prey. Cats--a not-insignificant amount of them, lounging on sunny rocks, or inside twoleg nests, but more importantly…
Dogs.
Inside twoleg nests. Bound to twolegs by long tethers. Barely trapped in big, wooden enclosures. The fur on the back of Sleepydawn’s neck raised, the old injury on his leg aching.
He didn’t like dogs. Hadn’t for a long while now.
He did what he could to avoid them, and began to look in earnest for a meal.
. . .
Sleepydawn knew the story of his grandfather, okay?
Otterslip. Born an outsider, adopted by the clan leader and the deputy, raised a warrior. Adopted kits of his own. Lost one. Lost his mind. Killed the medicine cat. Got exiled.
Sleepydawn was not his grandfather. But he’s not his father, either.
His father, Sleepycloud. His namesake. Born to Bluefern, Evie, and Newtscar, grew up to be one of the greatest warriors the clan had ever seen, scarred in valiant battle in the war against Shallowclan, drowned trying to save Foxdust. Spent every living (and dying) moment being a hero.
Sleepydawn wasn’t like him. Maybe it wasn’t a good thing, like he’d always told himself it was.
He wanted to be different. He wanted to be different in a good way. Stronger, more heroic, more valorous. Maybe he could make deputy, where Sleepycloud never could.
Looking at himself, trying to sleep uneasily in twoleg territory, belly full of outsider prey, exiled from his clan, perhaps Sleepydawn was more like his grandfather than he realized.
. . .
Sleepydawn rose with the sun the next morning, leg aching from an uncomfortable rest underneath a bush, and began to walk.
He didn’t have a destination, really--he just knew that with each breath he took so close to Fallenclan territory, yet forbidden from entering it, he felt sick. Like he ate something rotten, and he couldn't get his mind away from the heavy, nauseating feeling in his stomach. He needed distance, now, more than anything.
Maybe not more than food. Despite his nausea, he was starving.
If he were still with Fallenclan, he’d go to the freshkill pile and pick out something from last night. It’d be a bit stale, and cold, but filling, and it would give him the energy to go catch something fresher, or to go mark the border and pick out something fresher when he got home. Now, there was no freshkill pile, no border, no patrol. It was just Sleepydawn and his grumbling belly.
He found and caught a squirrel without much trouble. It was difficult, when he was already hungry and still groggy from sleep without Hazelthorn or Frecklefox or Ashblink to groom his pelt and make fun of him when he’s tired and incoherent--think about something else.
It was difficult, when he was already hungry and still groggy from sleep, but he managed, and the fresh taste of prey-blood on his tongue was worth it, sweet and nourishing. He swiped his tongue over his lips, but didn’t get the chance to eat any before a voice piped up.
“Wow, that was great!”
He was bristling immediately, whipping around with a hiss. The grassy enclosure had reeked of kittypet already, layers and layers of scent, like a territory, so he hadn’t noticed the cat approaching. She was sitting primly next to the entryway of the twoleg nest, ears twitching. A lithe brown tabby, with a green collar.
“I’ve never been able to catch a squirrel before,” She chirped, unaffected by his hiss. “I mean, I’ve gotten lizards and baby birds and things, but never anything like that.”
Sleepydawn bared his teeth. “I’m not sharing.”
The kittypet looked a bit disappointed, but not necessarily surprised. “That’s alright, I just ate. I’m Katie, what’s your name?”
“None of your business.”
“That’s a weird name. Nice to meet you, Noneofyourbusiness!”
For a second, he was appalled at her stupidity, but then he saw the mischievous gleam in her eye, and it turned to anger. He wanted to swipe at her face, or spit, or just scare her off, but he saw the skinny, leggy look to her, and the size of her eyes and ears. She wasn't much older than a kitten, maybe seven moons old, and Sleepydawn wasn't so cruel that he’d attack one that young, or that untrained. He gritted his teeth through the anger and picked up the squirrel, making to leave.
“Wait!” Katie cried. “I’m sorry, I’m just kidding around. Are you new to the neighborhood? I haven’t seen you around before.”
Sleepydawn stared for a second, then reluctantly dropped his prey. “I’m not a kittypet.”
A frown. “What?”
“I don’t live with twolegs.” He snarled. “I don’t stay in a nest or let them pet me with their awful naked paws.”
“Oh, you’re a stray.” Katie blinked. “Or- are you feral? You don’t like housefolk at all, huh?”
He huffed an angry breath. “Obviously.”
“Katie!”
There was another kittypet. No collar, but he could smell the stench of twolegs clinging to every fur on her pelt. She was mostly black, with a white muzzle, paws, and underbelly. Crouched on the wooden wall, she looked down on the both of them with fear.
“Katie, get away from him!”
“It’s okay, Socks, he’s nice!” Katie chirped. “Or, well, he’s actually pretty crabby, but still. He’s just feral.”
“He’s not just feral,” Socks hisseed. “He’s a mountain cat, Katie.”
Now Katie began to bush up, her eyes going wide. She looked at Sleepydawn and slowly took a few steps back.
Good, he thought vindictively. They should be scared.
Sleepydawn bared his teeth a little at the both of them, hoping that the squirrel-blood from earlier was still clinging to his gums. He wasn’t sure if it was or not, but they both shrank away anyway, bristling and tense.
“I’ll be leaving now,” Sleepydawn spat, tilting his head up a bit to glare. “Unless you want to talk more.”
“No,” Katie mewed softly. “I’m sorry for bothering you.”
Sleepydawn huffed, picked the squirrel up in his mouth, and hopped over the wooden wall.
He ate his breakfast behind another twoleg nest a bit further away, but it didn’t taste as good as it did before. He told himself it was just because it’s cooled, now, and wasn’t quite as fresh, but there was a small, quiet part of him that whispered food always tastes better with company.
He bitterly told the voice to shut up, and took another bite.
. . .
The sun sets, and rose again. Sleepydawn had to assume he was on the other side of the twolegplace, now. It was a long, long ways away from home, but. Not far enough. It was there that he had his second encounter with kittypets.
He was in one of those grassy enclosures behind a twoleg nest. He’d crossed so many by now, wanting to avoid the stone pathways outside where the monsters roamed. He stayed on top of the wooden walls, mostly, but this enclosure had a bit of water in it, and his mouth was dry.
Halfway through drinking, he heard pawsteps behind him.
Choking on water, Sleepydawn was off like a startled rabbit, tearing at the ground under his paws. There was heavy breathing behind him, growling, and then a few barks. It wasn’t a huge dog. It was smaller than the one that Sleepydawn nearly lost his leg to.
But he couldn’t think.
Riddled with fear like a bug-chewed leaf, Sleepydawn ran for the first familiar thing he saw--a tree--and scrambled up it, hearing teeth snap at his heels, just narrowly missing his tail as he shot up the trunk. He got halfway before he could convince himself it's far enough, trembling and breathing heavily.
Below, in the enclosure, a twoleg burst out of the nest, growling and barking back at the dog in its own clumsy language. It grabbed the beast by its collar and dragged it backwards. Just as the two disappeared inside, another form slipped out.
Sleepydawn barely noticed. All he registered was that the dog is gone, he was safe, the dog was gone-
He was having trouble breathing.
“All right up there?” Called a voice, croaky with age.
Sleepydawn crushed his eyes shut, gripping the branch under his claws with a vicious force. The dog is gone, the dog is gone, the dog is gone.
A sigh, faint. “I’m too old for this.”
Sleepydawn didn’t register the cat crawling up the tree, not even when they settled next to him. Long fur, gray, maybe, a stench of twolegs. Sleepydawn was trembling too hard to notice.
“Calm down.” A tongue rasped reluctantly over his head, face, ears. It was a familiar gesture, and he relaxed into it a little--flashing back to when he was a tiny kit and Ivybounce would do the same to him, laughing and calling him Sleepykit, my little sleepy kit, when he would yawn and complain.
“You’re alright.” The grooming paused when the cat spoke, then continued. “Deep breaths, son.”
Sleepydawn snapped back to reality abruptly. He was a warrior, crouched in a tree shaking with fear from a dog while a kittypet calmed him down. As if he couldn’t be any more of a failure. With a snarl, he snapped his teeth at the kittypet until they draw back.
“Ungrateful little shit, aren’t you?” The cat huffed, not looking particularly alarmed, just ticked off. “Saved you from panicking out of your skin and that’s what you give me?”
“I wasn’t panicking,” Sleepydawn lied, fur bristling along his spine even more than it already was. “I’m a warrior.”
“Mountain cat, huh?” The kittypet scoffed. “Met one of you once when I was young. Not so scary. That how you got your scar? Battle?”
Sleepydawn glances down at his scarred leg. The fur is parted oddly all down that limb, awkwardly trying to grow around the thick pink tissue. Ravenstar had called it a mark of a true warrior. Sleepydawn called it painful.
“A dog.” He answered without thinking.
“That explains it.” The kittypet shook their head. “Listen, it’s late, you’re clearly exhausted. Stay here and I’ll bring you something to eat.”
“I don’t want your kittypet food.”
“How about a bird, then?” The kittypet chuckled a little when they saw the hungry look on Sleepydawn’s face. “That’s what I thought. I’ll be back.”
He told himself he’d climb down and run the moment that the kittypet disappeared, but he found his body strangely shaky and weak. He spent a few minutes trying to gather the strength, and then the kittypet was returning, sitting on the grass below with an oriole in their jaws.
“Dinner,” They called. “Hop down into the yard, the dog is locked inside now.”
Sleepydawn swallowed. His voice was uncharacteristically weak when he meowed, “Are you sure?”
“I’m sure. And anyway, Buttercup is no wild dog. She likes to chase, but wouldn’t know what to do if she caught anything. You ever catch her chasing you again, just give her a scratch on the nose and she’ll head home.”
Sleepydawn reluctantly chose to trust the kittypet for now (not that he had much of a choice), and climbed down from the tree, only a bit shaky when he landed. The kittypet dropped the oriole in front of him and didn't speak until Sleepydawn started to eat.
“My name is Dust Bunny,” they said. It was a bit of an odd name, but it was clanlike, and it made a part of Sleepydawn relax. “You can call me Dusty if you want. This is my housefolk’s yard and you’re welcome to stay in it for the night, if you want to.”
He didn’t want to. But he does think that he wouldn’t be able to go much farther without a rest.
“I’ll sleep in the tree,” he grumbled out between bites.
“The manners on you,” Dusty snorted. “Did your mother raise you to talk to your elders like that?”
Sleepydawn bristled a little. Not because he was mad, no--because Dusty was right. Ivybounce would be disappointed in him. For more than one reason.
His heart ached at the thought of her.
“...Sorry.” He meowed after a minute of pause. “Thank you for the food. And the shelter.”
“That’s more like it,” Dusty sat and wrapped their tail around their paws. “The tree is fine and all, but there’s a bit more shelter inside the shed, and Buttercup can’t get in there, which I can guess you’re worried about.”
Sleepydawn swallowed down a heated retort at the same time he swallowed down the last bit of oriole. “Thanks.”
As he washed his face, cleaning the orange and black feathers off his muzzle, he considered Dust Bunny. They were old. Elder age, certainly, with white hairs around their muzzle and an audible creak from their joints. It was beyond Sleepydawn how they managed to climb up and down a tree and still catch him a bird with energy to spare, but perhaps living with twolegs would do that to you. He knew they tended to grow fat on plentiful food. Perhaps in their younger days they had even more energy. Enough to wander across twolegplace, to poke at the mountain cat borders, meet a Fallenclan cat or two. Still, this den was a long way from Sleepydawn’s home. It was unlikely they would have met a Fallenclan cat unless they, too, were wandering.
“You said you met a mountain cat before,” Sleepydawn meowed. “Will you tell me about him?”
Dusty’s ear twitched. “What makes you think they were a him?”
They must have caught the disappointed look on his face, because they chuckled a little. “You knew him, huh? Well, I don’t envy you if you did. He was a nasty son of a bitch. Long brown fur, stripes over his eyes, scar on his cheek, sound familiar?”
“Otterslip,” Sleepydawn breathed.
“That’s the one.” Dusty tilted their head. “He said he was exiled, but that he’d be returning home soon. That his clan would ‘come to their senses’. Seemed very determined. You wouldn’t happen to know how that story ended, would you son?”
Sleepydawn avoided the old cat’s gaze. “Yewberry and Ivybounce--his kits--found his body a long time back. Infected wound, but they weren’t sure what from.”
“Figured as much.” Dusty nodded. “Not the dying part, that is, just that his clan wouldn’t accept him home. Once you get exiled from a group like that, I reckon there’s not much of a chance of returning.”
Sleepydawn flinched. It must have been visible, because Dusty’s eyes narrowed.
“...Well, I’ve told you a story,” They meowed eventually. “How about you tell me one? How’d you get that scar?”
Sleepydawn blinked. It wasn’t the story he’d been expecting to be asked about, but- he wasn’t any more excited to tell it, really. He flicked his ears backwards a bit and thought, for a long moment. Dust Bunny waited with a patient expression.
“My leader,” Sleepydawn said finally. “He ordered me to chase a dog off our territory. Normally it’d be a mission for a whole patrol, but he wanted me to prove myself.”
“Hm.” Dusty blinked. “And did you?”
“I nearly died,” Sleepydawn admitted, his throat getting a bit tight like it often did when he spoke of that day. “But yeah. I managed to injure it bad enough that it fled, and made it back to my camp. After that, Ravenstar accepted me as one of his most trusted warriors.”
Dust Bunny looked at him for a long moment. “Accepted you as a trusted warrior, huh? But only after you’d proven yourself like that?”
Sleepydawn nodded. An excuse perched on his tongue, It’s typical clan behavior, you wouldn’t understand. But he didn’t want to lie to this kittypet. Not after the meal and shelter that had been offered.
“Sounds like some leader.” Dusty’s voice was dry with sarcasm. “Tell you what, I’m gonna hit the hay. You have a good rest and I’ll see you off in the morning, alright?”
“Alright,” Sleepydawn agreed hollowly as the kittypet padded across the yard, into the twoleg den, and disappeared.
. . .
When Sleepydawn awoke, he became quickly aware of the ache in his leg.
The small, abandoned twoleg nest (a shed, Dustbunny had called it) was sturdy, safe from dogs, and solid enough to keep the draft mostly out, but it did nothing for his old injury. He’d chosen a high ledge to rest on, and tried to sleep on only that before giving up halfway through the night and curling up in a weird, crinkly sort of twoleg material that smelled like a thunderpath. It had a bit more cushion to it, at least, but he still found his sleep restless and woke with a deep, sharp ache running all the way from his paw to his shoulder.
Moons ago, when he first healed from the injury, Bristleheart took him on a walk and explained that he would always feel that pain, as long as the leg remained, and that he had to exercise it in particular ways in order to keep the pain to a minimum and to keep himself from damaging it any further. He’d then proceeded to run Sleepydawn through a series of stretches, each of which made his leg hurt more than the last.
He wasn’t ashamed to admit that he hadn’t kept up on the exercises. First it was stubbornness, then lack of time and energy, that pulled him away. He tried to do them a few times a moon, but why would he keep up with them if they only made him hurt worse?
Now, he pulled himself upright and moved into the first position. A sharp twinge fired up into his spine, and he bonelessly collapsed. This had been easier when he was younger.
“‘Morning,” A drawling voice meowed. Dusty poked their head through the cracked entrance of the shed and looked around for a moment before peering up. “There y’are. Sleep well?”
“Fantastic.” Sleepydawn replied in a flat voice, shaking out his bad leg before hopping down to the ground, leaning heavily to his right. “Twoleg dens really are a wonder.”
“Yeah, well, more comfortable when you’ve got a pillow or two to keep ‘ya warm.” Dusty licked their lips. They smelled like meat, almost, but dry and strongly hinted with twoleg stench. “Should I catch you another bird?”
Fire suddenly rose in Sleepydawn’s stomach. He was tired of being in pain, of being uncertain, of missing his home, of being coddled. “No. I’ll be moving on.”
Dusty had the nerve to look surprised. “So soon? Where are you traveling to in such a hurry?”
Away, Sleepydawn thought. Anywhere but here. Anywhere that I can’t be looked at by another cat like I’m something alien and unnatural. Anywhere but home.
“None of your business.” He meowed instead.
. . .
He left Dusty’s yard as the sun began to stream over the trees, and didn’t stop walking until it was at his back again.
Unsurprisingly, his leg still ached. Now the others did too, down to each pink paw-pad. His back and neck throbbed with dull pain from being upright all day. His tail was sore where it had been dragging on the ground.
Having passed through twolegplace and ended up in some sparse oaken woods, he tried to haul himself into a tree, failed, and squeezed himself into an abandoned rabbit’s burrow instead. The earth, not wet but still leeching the heat from his pelt with every breath, pressed softly against each side and crumbled a little around his ears. He’d be filthy in the morning, and even more hungry than he already was.
Being underground was comforting though, in a way. It was nothing like Fallenclan’s camp, which was rocky and sandy and really only earthy in a few places, but the way that the starlight seeped through the entrance a few tail-lengths in front of his muzzle was familiar. Wrapped in dirt, he closed his eyes and imagined it was fur, instead--he was a kitten again, Ivybounce was cleaning the space between his eyes, Hazelthorn and Frecklefox were curled against him.
His leg ached some more. He fell asleep.
. . .
Sleepydawn had gotten used to crossing thunderpaths.
The first time he’d done it, he was terrified. It seemed like the end of the world when a monster came snarling around the corner from so far away. Fallenclan didn’t have any thunderpaths inside their territory--there was one, on the border, but it was quiet and usually barren. One could sit at the edge of it for a whole day and see less monsters than there were toes on their paw.
Now, more recently (he refused to think about how long it had been. It couldn’t have been more than a few moons, surely), it was routine. Look left, look right, scamper across when it was safe and pay no mind to the big metal beasts.
Today, Sleepydawn looked left, looked right, and scampered across. He looked for the sharp gleam of metal in sunlight, in those massive black paws, those shiny silver teeth, enormous and impossible to ignore.
He wasn’t looking for whatever had hit him. Small, boney, like a collection of metal sticks, with two big but slender paws, and a single twoleg perched on its back.
If it was a true monster that hit him, he’d be dead. Whatever this one was (a baby monster, maybe?), the impact itself hurt, but it wasn’t what left the damage. What damaged him was the slender paw that rolled over his bad leg when he’d thrown himself backwards, and the sharp metal that came crashing down on him once the baby monster had lost its balance on his body. Sharp bruises and gashes formed on his skin, and he shrieked at the same moment the twoleg did, both of them pressed into the hard black stone.
A full grown monster, ash-gray and snarling, rumbled to a halt next to the collapsed baby. The sight of that alone was enough to force Sleepydawn to his feet, adrenaline flooding his pain receptors, and hobbling off into the woods.
He knew the feeling. His leg was broken again.
The twolegs began to chatter behind him, their meows high with alarm. Sleepydawn pushed forward into the woods, away from them, blinded by pain and terror and dread.
Something dark descended over his head, like a great black heap of snow falling from a tree branch, except it was faintly warm and reeked of twoleg stench.
Sleepydawn screamed, lashed out with both his front paws, and blacked out as the pain overwhelmed him.
. . .
“What are you doing?”
Hazelkit turned to look at him at his question. In her mouth, a clump of oddly-smelling grass, which she spat out to answer him, struggling to get the last few blades off her wet tongue.
“Bristleheart gave us this lemongrass,” She explained, inky-black tail waving slightly. “He said if we rub it around camp, it scares away snakes!”
Sleepykit wrinkled his nose. “So, chores?”
“We’re protecting the camp,” Frecklekit interjected, chest puffed out. “It’s an important job.”
Sleepykit pondered this for a moment, debating pros and cons. “Can I join?”
His sister, in all her graciousness, heaved an over-dramatic sigh. “I guess.”
At this, Sleepykit perked up, and swooped down to grab a mouthful of the grass. It had a harsh, acidic smell to it, but he bravely wrinkled his nose and plodded his way towards the camp entrance, head tilted back to keep the long ends from dragging on the ground.
Broccoli was sitting guard at the mouth of the cave, sharp amber eyes peering over the horizon. At Sleepykit’s approach, he turned, a warm smile on his face.
“What’ve you got there?”
Using his paw to quickly scrape the plant off his tongue, Sleepykit responded, “Lemongrass! Bristleheart says it scares away snakes, so me and Hazelkit and Frecklekit are rubbing it everywhere! It’s really stinky, though.”
“Very clever,” Broccoli praised. “Sounds like something your father would have done.”
Sleepykit frowned.
Cats told him that his father, Sleepycloud, had been one of the bravest warriors ever. He was born in Fallenclan and spent his whole life protecting it--and he died trying to save another cat, Fox-something. Sleepykit never got to meet him, but he was named after him, and cats said he looked just like him.
But Sleepykit was the one rubbing lemongrass around camp to scare away snakes. Not Sleepycloud.
He opened his mouth to tell Broccoli this, but the other cat had already turned away, finished with the conversation. Sleepykit’s jaw closed with a quick click, and his tail lashed. Whatever. Mama said it didn’t matter what other cats thought about him, anyway.
. . .
“I hear you got hit by a bike,” was the first thing Sleepydawn heard when he woke up, shrouded in a haze of pain, his head cloudy with some fog he couldn’t identify. “What was that like?”
He was… underground. Or in a den. Everything was silver and white and far away.
“Hey, are you listening, tripod?”
The world faded out.
. . .
“You look very handsome,” Ivybounce gave his face a last few embarrassing licks before nudging him forward. “Go, go, she’s about to call you.”
“Sleepypaw, step forth.”
Craning his neck to stand as tall as he could, Sleepypaw padded across the sandy earth towards highledge. Frecklefox, newly named, grinned at him from alongside Hazelthorn, both of them gleaming with pride.
He took his seat just below the ledge, looking up at Cherrystar. She smiled down at him, eyes crinkled, before speaking.
“Sleepypaw, you have worked hard to learn the ways of the warrior, and have earned your name. From this day forth, you shall be known as Sleepydawn. Fallenclan honors your vigilance and welcomes you as a full warrior.”
Hazelthorn! Frecklefox! Sleepydawn! The clan’s chant rose around them, spiraling into the air. Sleepydawn stepped back to join his siblings and felt a smile grow on his face.
It’s a different name, he told himself silently, eyes closed to bask in the praise. My own. No one else’s.
He opened his eyes again to catch his mother’s gaze. She was grinning, wide and sunny, but tears were rolling down her cheeks.
No one else’s.
. . .
He woke again. Possibly. A little more aware this time, he noticed something sharp stuck into his right front leg, like a thorn. He wiggled, found it didn’t hurt too bad, and left it alone.
A wet sound, like someone throwing up. A faint smell of blood. Something overwhelmingly sharp and unnatural. And twoleg, twoleg, twoleg. So many smells…
“Hey, wanna hear a joke?” Someone mrrowed. “I’d tell you one about fish, but I don’t think it would land!”
Sounded like something Frecklefox would say. Sleepydawn tried to reply to his sibling, but found that he was asleep before he could.
. . .
I’m not him. Sleepydawn wobbled on his paws, dangerously close to the edge of a steep hill before getting his bearings again and moving away, still, slowly towards camp. His body felt oddly light, yet so, so heavy. Every movement was a marathon.
I’m not him. Blood ran lazy rivers down his shoulder, tracing delicate lines around his paw and leaving a messy red trail behind him. He half-thought his ear might have been torn, too, just a bit, but it was hard to tell.
I’m not him. Sleepydawn had survived his big hero moment. Sleepycloud hadn’t.
I’m not him. Sleepydawn was not his father.
. . .
Wakefulness came back to him slowly. First, he was aware of the sensations in his body--a low, dull pain, something foggy and fuzzy, like he was filled with cobwebs, and some kind of bedding underneath him. Then sound, smell, and the dry dry dry taste in his mouth. The sharp thing in his leg was gone. He cracked open his eyes and found that they were sticky and clumped with goop, like he’d been asleep for days and days without knowing. He drew a few raspy breaths. His throat was sore.
Oddly, his leg didn’t hurt.
He wobbled upright, eventually, and looked around. Flat, silver walls on every side except for one, which was caged away with some kind of mesh. Behind it was an alien landscape--every angle sharp and perfect, smooth wood and metal and materials he didn’t know the name of. Two twolegs milled around beyond.
He lurched away, but there was nowhere to go. He was stuck--at their whims, no matter what they may be. Saving him, maybe, for a meal. His shoulders hit the wall behind him with a shockingly loud bang. Why couldn’t he catch his balance?
“Hey, are you awake already?” Meowed a voice. It sounded a little familiar. Young, feminine. A second later, a little golden and white paw poked into view at the bottom of the mesh wall, flapping around like it was trying to catch a bird. Or someone’s attention.
With the terror running a line down his middle, words failed him. He managed only a low, strangled growl. His throat was sore, like he’d swallowed twigs.
One of the twolegs turned its odd, naked head over to him, and made a quiet noise. It didn’t approach, didn’t make a move towards him, but just its pale eyes facing him sent a horrible involuntary shudder down Sleepydawn’s entire sternum.
After a few moments, it finally looked away, but that awful, crawling sensation didn’t leave him. Trapped. Trapped to their whims, like every horror story he’d heard as a kit--he remembered the tale of Jaggedstripe, who wandered into a silver mesh box like this one and hadn’t been seen for moons, returned different and more hollow with tales of the creatures that stuck her with silver thorns and wrapped woven grass cords around her throat.
He had to get out, as soon as possible. The longer he stayed, the less likely he was to leave, but when he tried to step forward--
Something was on his leg. Clinging, wrapped around, like an awful, shiny green limpet. It was unnaturally colored, like newleaf grass but a hundred times more vibrant. It didn’t hurt, but it was heavy--he couldn’t feel the leg underneath, not even that buzzing hum that would tell him it was asleep. Just nothingness. If it werent for the very tip of his paw poking out, he would have thought it had been taken off altogether.
His voice was a whispered rasp when he finally breathed, “What is…”
“I knew you were awake!” The young voice meowed again. “I’m Fishstick. It’s been so-o-o boring in here, there hasn’t been any other cats in ages. Just me, a couple dogs, and a raccoon the other day.”
His heart skipped a beat at the mention of dogs, but his brain caught on the name. “Fishstick… are you a warrior?” She sounded far too young, but…
“No.” Fishstick’s voice was suddenly glum. “I wish. That’s just the name my mama gave me ‘fore she ran off. What’s yours?” The blooming hope in Sleepydawn’s chest withered. Of course not. Even if she had been a warrior, she certainly wouldn’t have been a Fallenclan one. Gooseclan, maybe--she had the sort of rounded accent that he’d come to associate with that clan, though he was coming to realize it might be from the proximity to Twolegplace that gave them that inflection.
“Doesn’t matter,” he responded, suddenly exhausted. Despite the Twolegs, and the mention of dogs being near, he slumped down. His eyelids stubbornly drooped, but he blinked a few sharp times to keep them open. “I need to… get out of here.”
“Don’t we all,” Fishstick snorted. “Did they take your leg? I heard ‘em talking like they might.”
He shook his head before realizing the young molly couldn’t see it. “Still there.”
“Bummer. I could’ve called you Tripod, since you don’t wanna give me your real name. I could just call you what the Upwalkers are calling you.”
Sleepydawn scowled. Why was he entertaining this young fool? Still, curiosity tugged at him… “What are the Upwalkers calling me?”
“Mr. Mayor Whiskers,” Fishstick said, with a smugness to her voice that suggested this was perhaps something to make fun of. Sleepydawn wasn’t sure what Mr. or Mayor meant, but Whiskers seemed a fine name, at least. Hazelthorn had once wanted that to be her full warrior name--Hazelwhisker. She’d gotten Thorn, though, and liked it even better.
“It makes me sound tough, but mysterious”, she’d meowed, a twinkle in her slitted eyes. “Your name is awfully cutesy, though. A nice, sleepy morning, no dawn patrol, just cuddled up with your little brothers and sisters…”
He’d swatted her, after that. Always hated his name, branded his father’s son until the day he died. When he’d fallen into step with Ravenstar, practically his second deputy, he’d thought about asking if it could be changed. Somehow, it felt like a defeat to do such a thing--like admitting he couldn’t be bigger than his father’s name. He didn’t know what he’d have changed it to, anyway, but Whiskers was alright. Better than Fishstick, anyway.
He thought about telling her this, but stayed silent. He was more mature than to make fun of the name of a cat who must have barely been apprentice-aged.
“Anyway, Mr. Mayor,” Fishstick meowed again, incessant, “I heard you got hit by a bike. How’d that happen? They’re slow as slugs.”
A ‘bike’. Was that what kittypets called those small monsters? Sleepydawn’s tail twitched in annoyance at the teasing, but he kept his mouth shut, watching the twolegs beyond. One was sitting on some odd contraption, its paws on another, even weirder machine that seemed to be giving off a white light. The other had a stick in paw, and was scratching it on the surface of a very thin plank of wood held in its opposite paw, periodically glancing up at the array of the objects--bottles?--in front of it.
“What am I in for, you ask?” Fishstick continued. “Well, I’ll tell you. There I am, headed down an alley for some dumpster diving. I’d smelled chicken in there, see, and it was fresh. Hadn’t been rotted or nothing, not even gotten soggy in garbage water, so I’m off to find it. There it is, middle of the alleyway, sat on a nice paper plate. I was so hungry I didn’t even notice the cage over it until it was too late. Soon as I got a bite, wham! The cage fell, and I was stuck. ‘Course, if I’d noticed it beforehand I’d’ve slipped out and given those Upwalkers what-for, but as it was I was too hungry to do much. Next thing I know I’m in here. They said something about getting my weight up so they can spay me, no thank you! I’ve got a plan to get out of here before anything like that happens.”
Sleepydawn perked up. “A plan?”
“Oh, that caught your interest huh? Yeah, a plan! See, I’m gonna act all sweet to the Upwalkers, like I’m a real tame kitty, then, when they let me out on good behavior, I make a break for it. Course, I’ll have to get through the door, but I’ll break that branch when I get to it.”
“It’s cross that branch,” Sleepydawn muttered. “Breaking the branch is something else entirely.”
“Whatever,” Fishstick groaned. She sounded like Minnowpaw, whining about being sent on dawn patrol.
Regardless, the plan… could work? Sleepydawn didn’t know enough about the habits of Twolegs to say for certain, but it sounded possible, at least. Could he do the same? Act sweet to get his way? He could recall, faintly, doing it as a kit--looking up at Ivybounce with the biggest hazel eyes he could muster to plead for a bit of extra playtime before bed. It worked sometimes, but now--he had a feeling it wouldn’t be as effective. Not with the scars twisting up his leg, his crooked fangs, the always-tired look in his eyes. It was un-warriorlike to act like that towards a Twoleg, anyway.
He’d find some other way. For now, Sleepydawn rested his chin on his paws and pictured a mountain climbing up into the clouds.
. . .
The Twolegs stopped in front of Sleepydawn’s cage twice a day to refill his food and water. Sleepydawn, who had already been hungry and thirsty before he’d been hit by a bike, didn’t last long before eating and drinking--the food was dry, with some kind of wet paste, like chewed meat, piled on top of it, occasionally littered with an odd, bitter taste. The water was bland, somehow, which Sleepydawn found odd since he had thought water was already bland, yet somehow this Twoleg water managed to be even blander.
And he still had no plan.
Not even the beginnings of one, though it was difficult to concentrate with Fishstick’s incessant yapping. Only four moons old and already convinced she knew everything, had seen everything, and had everything to say about it.
She acted like any other excitable kit, or apprentice. She also didn’t treat Sleepydawn like he was something strange or other--until she found out where he’d come from.
“-I found a big fish in a trash can once, but I guess that doesn’t count as catching it, really,” she meowed. “But once in this Upwalker’s backyard I found these huge birds, bigger than me, and they had all these little babies running around, and I got one of those before the mama chased me off. What about you?”
“Hm?” Sleepydawn grunted, having been practicing his skills in tuning her out entirely.
“What’s the weirdest prey you’ve ever caught?” “A kitten. Just about your age, killed it bloody and ate it, now shut up.”
“Oh come on,” Fishstick whined, just as complainy but not quite as gullible as a clan-raised kit. “If you tell me the weirdest prey you’ve ever caught, I’ll shut up.”
“Forever?”
“For the rest of the day, but you also have to tell me how you caught it.”
Sleepydawn marinated on this for a moment. Fair enough price. His ears were about to start bleeding.
“Well,” he began, pretending to not notice the excited squeal that Fishstick released. “One early newleaf morning, I was out on a hunting patrol when I stumbled across a fawn. Usually the mother deer will fight you away from their young, but this one was left behind while she went to find food. It tried to run as soon as I pounced, but Boulderstep jumped on top of it, too, and the weight of us both was enough to bring it down. Took the whole patrol to carry it back to camp.”
For a moment, Sleepydawn was lost in the memory. He remembered it clearly--it was one of the first hunting patrols he’d gone on after his leg healed. Ravenstar ordered him to lead it--even though Boulderstep was his senior, and the better hunter. Perhaps cowed by Ravenstar’s insistence, nobody had challenged his leadership the whole way. They stalked out of camp into the early morning fog, brisk on the tips of their noses, and found the fawn in a cluster of spruce trees on the edge of the plains. Nothing had ever tasted as good as the prey-blood sweet on his tongue as he helped drag it home. Ravenstar had been sitting on the camp-ledge when they arrived--not calling a meeting, simply observing his clan--and his eyes had shone with pride. After the clan’s excitement over the huge prey subsided, he was pulled aside next to the medicine den to hear Ravenstar’s muted words.
“I knew I made the right choice.”
“Hold on,” Fishstick blurted, completely bypassing the impressive catch and nitpicking on the details. “Who’s Boulderstep?”
“My-” A lump suddenly formed in Sleepydawn’s throat. He swallowed it, and it scraped the whole way down. “A clan cat I once knew. Not really a friend.”
“You knew clan cats?”
Sleepydawn groaned internally. “Used to. Weren’t you supposed to shut up for the rest of the day?”
“What kind of clan cats?” Fishstick pressed. “Do they live in the plains? The forest? Where are they? How long ago?”
“Oh be quiet!” Sleepydawn snapped. “Why do you care, anyway? You think they’d let a soft kitty like you join up with them?”
“I’m no soft kitty!” She argued loudly.
“Sure are acting like it, every time those Twolegs come in here. You really think your plan will work? You think they’ll just let you out? Wake up and smell the daisies, kitty, you’re not getting out of here. We’re both going to sit here in these little cages eating slop and withering away until our hearts give out or the Twolegs get tired of us and kill us. Welcome to the real world.”
Silence, finally--blissed silence. It echoed in the metal cages and out in the harsh room beyond. Sleepydawn sunk into it like a fresh bed of moss, letting his eyes slip shut.
Then-
Sniff.
Fuck.
Sleepydawn shook his head, quietly. He really never had been good with kits, he always backed out of kitsitting, and helping his clanmates train their new apprentices. Still, making a kit cry was a new low--one he wasn’t proud of.
“Fish-”
“I’ve been a loner- ever since I was a kit,” Fishstick meowed, her voice cracking with tears. “Never lived with Upwalkers, just around ‘em, and I- one time I heard stories about these cats. These cats that lived in big groups and always fed each other and protected each other, and- I’d always been by my lonesome. Always have been. And I thought that sounded like- something real special. I’m going to be a warrior, even if I have to fight my way through a hundred Upwalkers. You don’t know nothing about me, and I ain’t no soft kitty.”
“Alright.” Sleepydawn acquiesced quietly. He’d seen things that would make her stomach curdle. Done things that would give her nightmares. “You’re not soft.”
“And I’m gonna be a warrior. Say it.”
“You’ll be a warrior.” Sleepydawn hoped she never knew the battle. The heartbreak. He wondered if all the love he’d lost was worth it.
“That’s right.”
Fishstick was mostly silent for the rest of the day. Sleepydawn found it difficult to enjoy.
. . .
A day later, Fishstick woke him by slapping her paws against the bottom of his cage.
“Psst! Mayor!” A pause. “Mr. Mayor!”
“What?” Sleepydawn grumbled, knowing she’d only stop if he responded.
“Do you think I really could fight an Upwalker? To get out, I mean?”
“Dunno.” He huffed. “Maybe. There’s usually two of ‘em, though.”
“Oh yeah.” He could hear the frown in her voice. “D’you think I could escape ‘em, then? Just slip out from their paws during the next checkup?”
“You’re forgetting this whole place is closed off. Where would you go?”
“Right.”
Sleepdawn waited, then let his eyes drift closed again.
“Well, what if-”
. . .
“Tell me a story.”
“Hah,” Sleepydawn responded dryly.
“Ugh.” Fishstick’s little cream-colored paw appeared at the bottom of his cage. “Come on, Mayor, I’m bored out of my fur! Just one!”
Her words devolved quickly into a wordless, petulant whine. Reminded sharply of Frecklefox, flattening his ears to his head, Sleepydawn snapped, “Fine!”
Instantly, the paws disappeared, and he heard a shuffle, as if she was getting comfortable. Typical. He wracked his brain for a story, and found only one--a story that had been haunting him for many moons.
“Once upon a time… there was a cat.”
“Strong start.”
“Can you shut up and listen?” He huffed.
“Once upon a time, there was a cat. His name was Sleepydawn.
“Sleepydawn was a Warrior. A clan cat. When he was born, his father was already dead. His mother had discovered that she was expecting in the same moon that he died.”
“How did he die?” Fishstick chirped.
Sleepydawn bit back a retort. Then slumped, a little. He didn’t have the energy to be mad, or to lie. “He drowned trying to save his clanmate. Failed.”
Fishstick gave a sad little whine. Sleepydawn pushed on.
“When Sleepydawn was born, he looked so much like his father that his mother decided to name him in his honor. That’s where he got the Sleepy part of his name. Though they matched in name and appearance, Sleepydawn wasn’t anything like his father--his father was a hero, an amazing cat who dedicated his life to protecting his clan. Sleepydawn tripped over his paws on hunting patrols, and bit his own tongue more times than he ever bit an enemy warrior. In the shadow of his father, he grew up angry and resentful. Not many cats liked him.
“The clan that Sleepydawn lived in was under the reign of their leader, Ravenstar. Ravenstar was a harsh and sometimes unfair cat, but Sleepydawn looked up to him. One day, when a dog found its way into their territory, Ravenstar decided to have Sleepydawn chase the dog out by himself, rather than send a patrol after it.”
“Why?” Fishstick interrupted.
Sleepydawn opened his mouth to reply, and found his tongue curled. A gaping absence of explanation found a home in his throat. Why?
“I don’t know,” he finally meowed. “Maybe Ravenstar wanted Sleepydawn to prove himself. Maybe he wanted Sleepydawn to learn a lesson. Whatever the reason, Sleepydawn refused. It was a suicide mission for the most skilled of cats, of that which Sleepydawn was not. But all it took for him to change his mind was for Ravenstar to suggest that this was the way to prove he wasn’t his father. And before he knew it, Sleepydawn had left camp.
“He found the dog on the plains, hopelessly chasing rabbits. Sleepydawn fought with everything he had, but the dog was quick, and vicious. It bit nearly clean through his leg, shaking him like a terrier with a rat. He thought he would die that day, alone on the plains, facing a dog by himself, leaving his family behind to grieve. Instead, he got lucky. The dog stumbled its foot into a rabbit warren, and it left an opening just big enough for Sleepydawn to tear its throat out.
“The dog fled. Sleepydawn would never find out if it died or not, because he couldn’t follow it. He’d chased it off the territory, and very nearly died in the process. He struggled his way back to camp, trailing blood all the way, and when he returned, Ravenstar praised him. It was the most that Sleepydawn had ever gotten--a cat telling him that he was better than his father. He knew then that he would follow Ravenstar to the ends of the earth.
“And that’s where Ravenstar led him. After that day, he grew only crueller and crueller, starting wars and even killing his own cats in the middle of camp, and Sleepydawn was at his heel every step of the way. He did terrible things in Ravenstar’s name.
“Eventually, Sleepydawn’s clanmates revolted against Ravenstar. He was killed, and Sleepydawn, along with Ravenstar’s other followers, were banished from the clan forever. The End.”
Silence, for a few moments. Sleepydawn wondered then if his story had lulled Fishstick to sleep, when:
“That’s it?”
“What do you mean that’s it?” He huffed in response. “I said the end, didn’t I?”
“Yeah but.” Fishstick shuffled above him. “Stories are supposed to have a happy ending. The villain gets punished at the end, and everyone lives happily ever after. There’s supposed to be a moral to the story.”
“The villain did get punished,” Sleepydawn snorted. “Ravenstar died, Sleepydawn got exiled.”
“But he should have realized the error of his ways!” Fishstick cried. “He should have joined with the cats that killed Ravenstar, and become the hero!”
Sleepydawn let those words hover in the air for a few moments, then laid down, curling his tail over his nose.
“Yeah, he should have.”
. . .
Their opportunity to escape arrived one cold morning, as Sleepydawn woke with his face pressed against the artificial moss bedding.
Less than a moon had passed, from what he could tell through the clear-covered opening that he could see from the mouth of his cage, but it felt, in many ways, like an eternity. Fishstick woke him most days with her mindless chatter, and kept him from dozing the day away with much of the same. This morning was different in that he woke to her screams.
“Don’t touch me!” He heard her howl as he woke with a start, the sound of clattering metal and mumbling twolegs alongside. “I’ll take your pelt off! Don’t!”
He jolted upright as quickly as he could with his cast, flooded with instinctive adrenaline. Just below him, a twoleg was crouched with its hands near Fishstick’s cage, repeatedly reaching forward and flinching back and making soft cooing noises.
“Fishstick!” He called out.
“Help!” She wailed, sounding every bit the young cat she was. “They’re trying to take me and- I don’t know what they’re gonna do!”
She sounded near tears. Sleepydawn didn’t think, just knew that he had to get the twoleg’s attention away from her as quick as he could, and he couldn’t fight them.
He slammed his cast into the wall of his cage, flinching at the loud bang and the shooting pain, then collapsed on his side, splaying all his limbs out and summoning the saddest, most agonized sounds he could.
The twoleg immediately lurched to look up at him with wide eyes, hesitating only a moment before closing Fishstick’s cage and reaching up to open Sleepydawn’s.
Its paws moved over him, gently stroking his pelt and prodding him. He resisted every instinct that screamed at him to attack, thrash, escape; knowing that he needed to remain the center of attention even through the uncomfortable sensation of touch.
After a moment, the twoleg scrambled away, leaving his cage open.
As soon as its back was turned, Sleepydawn jumped up as quietly as he could, and hopped down to the smooth, cold ground. He landed awkwardly, but sent a silent thanks up to Starclan when it was, at least, silent.
“Mayor?” Fishstick cautioned.
Behind him, she was still locked in her cage, pelt ruffled. She had pale ginger striped fur and creamy white paws and muzzle, her pupils narrow slits. Huddled at the back of the metal box, she looked smaller than she probably was, even puffed up in fear.
Sleepydawn glanced behind him to make sure that the twoleg was still occupied before hobbling over to the mesh of the cage. “How does this open?”
“Bite there,” Fishstick hurried closer, gesturing with her nose as he followed her instructions. The metal cut into his mouth as he pressed down, made his teeth ache, but after a moment of increasing pain it began to swing open.
Fishstick pushed her way out instantly, jostling him in her hurry, and immediately rushed to his side, stretching up to her tiptoes to wrap her neck around his.
“Thank you, thank you, thank you!” She trilled, grin stretching her muzzle even as he pushed her away.
“Enough.” He huffed, and started quickly hobbling to the doorway, cracked open just a smidge, a miracle upon miracles. “Let’s hurry out of here and then we can go our separate ways.”
“What?” Fishstick hurried along with him. “Wait- you have to show me where those warriors are, so I can join them!”
“I have no such obligations,” Sleepydawn huffed. “Now, be quiet.”
“No!” Fishstick jumped in front of him. “No, if you don’t- you have to swear that you’ll show me where the warriors are. Or else.”
Annoyance flared deep in his chest. He bared his teeth, stretching to his not-unimpressive height to loom over her. “Move.”
“No.” Fishstick hardened her expression and drew to her full height, her head only reaching his shoulder. “If you don’t give me your word, right now, I’ll scream. Then we’ll both get caught.”
Manipulative little shit!
“You-” Sleepydawn gritted his teeth, tried to remind himself that the most important thing right now was getting out, and then they could argue about this. “Fine, yes, word given, let’s go.”
Fishstick’s face lit up like a forest fire, and just like that she was racing him for the exit, unbeknownst to the twolegs behind them.
Freedom, at the tips of his whiskers again.
. . .
Sleepydawn had done many things in his life that he wasn’t proud of, but nearing the top of the list was losing an argument to an apprentice. Twice.
So he was taking her to Fallenclan’s territory. Fine. He wouldn’t even have to cross the border--or even get close to it. Just as soon as it was in eyesight, he could tell Fishstick to look for the mossier side of the mountain and make a beeline for the second-biggest cave. As long as she didn’t describe him too in-depth to the cats that she found there, she’d be fine. And if she did, he had to hope that his siblings would convince Wolfstar to let her stay anyway, regardless of what awful cat led her there.
“We’ll have to figure out how to get that cast off you,” Fishstick chirped, trotting along at a pace that made him ache up to his shoulder. “You’re slow.”
“I’m old,” which wasn’t really true, but a lifetime of hardships and work made him feel older than he should. “You’re too fast.”
“Anyway, I used to know a kittypet who lived around here, he had a cast once.” Fishstick waved her tail for him to follow. He briefly considered making a break for it. “He’ll know how to get it off.”
Sleepydawn wasn’t keen to take advice from a kittypet, but after only a bit of bullying from his young companion, it turned out that the cat’s advice was good. Sleepydawn soaked his cast leg in water for only a few minutes before it started to slough away in stringy green chunks. The white wrapping underneath, which felt a bit like thick cobwebs, followed without much trouble.
His leg underneath was skinny and hurt to put pressure on, but not so much that he couldn’t walk on it. It had always been a little crooked since his accident, so when he found it straighter than before, that surprised him more than anything else. He hadn’t known that was possible.
“Yeah, there’s something to be said for Upwalker medicine,” Ace, the kittypet, meowed conversationally. “Can’t have kits anymore, but it’s a small price to pay for a lifetime of good health.”
…Sure.
Ace invited them to sleep in a comfortable nook underneath his Twoleg’s shed, which Fishstick accepted before Sleepydawn could even think about refusing. He also offered them some dry kittypet food, which Sleepydawn stood his ground on.
“Absolutely not,” He snapped. “I’ve been eating that shit for way too long. Come on, Fish.”
Fishstick hurried after him, jumping along like a tadpole that had just grown legs. “Are you gonna teach me how to hunt?”
“I’m not your mentor,” Sleepydawn snorted. “I’ll catch something for the both of us. You’re gonna follow along quietly and keep an eye out for twolegs.”
Fishstick gave a deep, exaggerated sigh, but didn’t argue, apparently realizing she’d filled her quota of being annoying for the day.
Hunting with his leg still injured was difficult, to say the least, but working around it was something he was used to. It didn’t take long for him to find a sparrow, feeding on fallen seeds two yards over from Ace’s; carefully, he stalked it, keeping most of his weight on his three good legs, always aware of Fishstick a few fox-lengths back, watching silently for once in her life. He pounced, and made sure to land on his right forepaw, using his left to gently grab the bird and hold it in place for a quick, crunchy bite to the back of the neck.
“This one is yours,” Sleepydawn rolled his eyes at the sheer excitement in Fishstick’s expression, nudging the prey towards her. “I’ll catch another.”
He meant to leave her behind immediately for his own meal, but found himself hesitating, just for a moment, to watch Fishsticks’s face as she bit into fresh prey. If her stories were true, she’d had it before, but you wouldn’t know that from the blissful look that washed over her as she ripped away a mouthful of feathers and went for a bite, chewing slowly with her eyes closed.
Against his will, Sleepydawn cracked a smile. Whatever. Apprentices were fine sometimes.
. . .
“Is Fallenclan big?”
“Hmm.” Sleepydawn hummed, eyes closed, chin rested on his paws. He usually fell asleep fairly quickly, but even still, Fishstick seemed to know exactly when to pipe up to draw him out of his nearly-achieved slumber. “How so?”
“Like, a lot of cats.” she hesitated. “And the territory, too. Clan cats have a territory, right?”
“Mm-hmm.” Sleepydawn resigned himself to a few more questions before he’d try to convince her to go to sleep. “They’ve got a mountain and some plains. And there’s lots of cats.”
“More than I’ve got toes on my paws?”
“More than twice that,” He cracked one eye open to see her faint outline in the dim light that peeked into the space under Ace’s shed. “Go to sleep. It’s a long journey.”
“How long?”
“Sleep.”
Fishstick fell quiet, blissfully. Sleepydawn began to drift gently away, until-
“What do you think you’re doing.”
“I’m cold,” Fishstick responded, shuffling over and burrowing into her side, jamming her icy-cold nose directly against one of the scars on his leg. “Goodnight.”
Sleepydawn opened his mouth, fully intent on telling her to get the hell back to her side of the space, but…
She was quiet, at least. He might not get that if he started her back up again.
Whatever. He’d tell her off in the morning.
. . .
It wasn’t like Sleepydawn had a small family.
His family was pretty large, actually. He had five siblings in total, though one died before he was born, another when he was an apprentice, and a third when he was a young warrior. His parents were both long dead by the time he was exiled, but both of them had siblings too--giving him a total of four aunts and five uncles, though he’d met only a pawful of them. There was a myriad of cousins, and a niece and nephew as well, the children of his oldest sister.
It had been so easy, at the time, to ignore them all. Looking back it hurt like a thorn in his chest.
He’d been such a lonely kit, and such a bitter apprentice, and throughout his warriorhood so angry that he didn’t blame the cats that didn’t reach out--they were probably afraid he’d claw their pelt off. He spent the young and formative moons of his life so twisted up inside himself that he refused to take the time to make friends, bond with his mentor, or get into mischief with his fellow apprentices. He grew up stunted because of it, and then in his adulthood only latched onto Ravenstar, who fueled his anger rather than trying to soothe it, and fed into his attempts to break free of his father’s memory.
He’d been such a miserable apprentice, despite growing up surrounded by family and could-have-been-friends.
Fishstick didn’t seem to have the same troubles as him.
Her energy was limitless. Her enthusiasm had no apparent bounds. He walked slowly in a straight line, conserving his energy, and she criss-crossed, jumped up onto fences and halfway up tree trunks, over creeks and then back again just for the thrill. Every night she crashed like she’d never had the opportunity to sleep before--shoving her way into his side and passing out before he could complain.
One morning, the sun rose, and with it came a gentle flurry of snow--a rare sight to see off the mountain that was once Sleepydawn’s home. When he woke, and felt the damp, bitter chill that he knew so well, he resigned himself to an extra-cold and miserable walk, today, or until the snow melted--frozen paws and whiskers and soaked fur. Fishstick, on the other paw, lit up as if she’d never seen something so wonderful before, barreling out of their shelter and into the thin layer of white snow with an air of glee around her more vibrant than anything Sleepydawn had seen in the last four moons.
She spent that day with even more energy than normal, if that was a possible thing to achieve. The grin never slipped from her face, she raced in circles around him as they traveled, and she even bullied him into a short snowball fight. That whole day, he watched her with quiet eyes, and a thought lingered in the back of his mind.
Is this what I could have been?
. . .
The snow didn’t melt, per se, but no more fell after the first day--it left a thin coating on the tops of leaves and grass, like gently-laid spiderwebs, melting into their fur as they stepped on it. It disappeared from any twolegplace almost instantly--either melted on the bare stone that the twolegs built their homes around, or shoveled away by the twolegs themselves with great stone scoops to make room for monsters to roam. Perhaps monsters were vulnerable to snow and ice? Something to consider.
Regardless, it left the land bitterly cold as Sleepydawn and Fishstick traveled along. His bad leg always ached a little extra when it was especially cold or wet outside, but even without that added bit of discomfort, they were left stumbling and clumsy after a while, forced to make frequent stops to huddle in some meager shelter and get the feeling back into their paws before continuing. Still, Fishstick’s spirits stayed bright--she suggested scenic detours that Sleepydawn would immediately refuse, and begged on their breaks for him to teach her a battle move or how to catch birds out of the air, despite his reminders that their breaks were meant for resting, and her grin hardly faltered. He finally caved and showed her a basic hunting crouch before they went to sleep one night. He told himself she’d need a leg up, as a former loner in Fallenclan. He ignored all evidence that she’d probably fit in better than he ever did.
Aside from all that, several days of their journey were spent cold, stiff, and vaguely miserable. Distracted.
It made sense that neither of them noticed the dog until it was too late.
It happened quickly--quicker than Sleepydawn could keep up with. One minute, serene, annoyed calm, the next, a dull growl, a single, grating bark, and a brown dog the size of a bicycle was bearing down on them, snapping its teeth as the two of them leapt into the air and tried to flee.
Panic overtook Sleepydawn’s mind like a fungus. He suddenly couldn’t think, couldn’t feel--it was just ice in every bone of his body, a tight, frozen grip, screaming without words or logic. He was blind, deaf, moving without telling his body to move.
And then Fishstick screamed.
Everything snapped back into place, like a bone being reset. Still, panic, but now he could see pearly white fangs closing down around his young companion, and his legs listened as he told them to carry him closer. He remembered his training like he remembered how to breathe--he flew at the dog’s face and howled and raked his claws over the eyes and nose, sinking his teeth clean through one of the ears. The dog howled in response, flinging its head hard enough to send Sleepydawn several feet away, a chunk of meat and fur clenched in his jaw, still. It howled all the way home as it fled back to its twolegs.
Like Buttercup, he thought nonsensically, blood ringing in his ears, a metallic taste clinging to all the corners of his mouth.
Fishstick wasn’t hurt. They called it a night early and found a twoleg’s shed to sleep in, curled up on a high shelf. Sleepydawn wrapped his tail around her and groomed her fur until she fell asleep.
. . .
His journey before he had been hit by a bike seemed to take moons and moons, but it seemed like they’d only just left the twoleg’s clutches before Fallenclan’s mountain started to loom in the distance.
Fishstick’s questions came in greater frequency and urgency the closer they got. She asked who the leader was, and what kind of prey the cats of Fallenclan ate, and how long they’d lived on the mountain. He answered most of her questions, usually truthfully. An ache was forming in him, deeper than the one in his leg. Once they reached the territory, he’d have to leave her behind. He’d be alone again.
Thoughts appeared in his mind, unabbiden--what if after he left her at the border, she found another dog? Or a group of rogues? Or a patrol in a particularly foul mood? What if she wandered straight past Fallenclan, across the river, and met a Shallowclan patrol, instead? There were too many variables. He’d have to take her directly to camp--or as close as he could get before they met a patrol, anyway. He wouldn’t linger. Just long enough to make sure she could stay there, and wasn’t turned away. Would Wolfstar do that? Sleepydawn wouldn’t know.
The first step across the border was like sinking into cool water after a day in the greenleaf sun--the tense muscles of his spine relaxed, a soft breath escaped his lungs. This was home.
Not his. Not his home.
Behind him, the world. In front of him, his world. And to the left, nestled into a bed of rocks and lichen, a sacred place, that he’d only walked past before, never into. The sun was setting, anyway. He directed Fishstick towards the cave with a nod of his head, and the two of them ducked under a curtain of moss into soft darkness.
“We’ll shelter here for the night. In the morning, we’ll make the last leg.”
“Ha! Leg.” Fishstick swerved to bump her whole body into his weak side. He dodged without much difficulty.
“Show some respect, why don’t you?” He growled. “This is a sacred place. The only place we can speak to Starclan.”
Fishstick quieted, a little, as Sleepydawn led them both down into the entrance of the Glowcave. The light from outside faded out slowly, then began to pick up again as glowing mushrooms appeared on the walls, pocketed by thick curtains of lichen. The air was slightly humid, but the ground wasn’t muddy, just slightly damp enough to stick to his paws in little crumbles.
“Woah.” Fishstick craned her neck to look at the mushrooms overhead. She seemed uncharacteristically meek. “Is it… okay for us to sleep in here?”
“It’s fine,” Sleepydawn snorted. “Starclan isn’t going to kick us out for needing a place to rest.”
Hopefully, he added to himself.
Though he kept the appearance of the confident older cat Fishstick expected him to be, inside, he was wide-eyed as a kit. He’d never seen the Glowcave himself, very few cats had--and it was stunning. At the end of the cave, so brightly lit by mushrooms it might as well have been twilight, they found a little pool of water, fed by a natural spring. Fishstick immediately went for a drink.
Something tickled his mind about that--wasn’t that how you visited Starclan’s territory, by drinking? Whatever. Maybe a visit to her ancestors would humble her.
Sleepydawn curled into a neat ball a few tail-lengths from the water, under a few particularly large mushrooms. After a few moments, Fishstick appeared to burrow into his side and dig her elbows in his ribs. He sighed in resignation.
Comforted in the thought that Starclan would protect her while he slept, Sleepydawn faded away.
When he woke up, it was to the sweet smell of crushed grass under his paws, and a warm breeze. There was no little golden tabby to be seen.
“Hm, Fish?” He meowed, cracking his eyes open, suddenly jolting up. “Fishstick? Hey, Fish!”
“It’s alright, she’s safe.”
Sleepydawn turned. There was a cat there that he didn’t recognize--black and white, with a jagged scar between his eyes. He smelled faintly familiar.
“What do you mean she’s safe?” Sleepydawn snarled. “Where is she? What have you done?”
“She’s with you,” The cat meowed, calm, but with a slight tremble in his voice. “Sleeping in the Glowcave.”
Sleepydawn paused.
He was in a field, he realized. Long grass surrounded him in a huge circle, but the stuff he stepped on was only up to his dewclaws, soft and tickling his fur where it swayed gently in the breeze. The sky above was a dark blue of twilight, dotted with puffy pink and purple clouds. The sun was setting on the horizon, bright as a marigold. The temperature was just on the edge of too warm, exactly as Sleepydawn liked it. He could smell honey and rabbits on the air.
“This is… Starclan.”
“It is,” agreed the cat, whom Sleepydawn was realizing was probably long dead.
“I’m… allowed here?”
Something in his voice, the smallness of it, the surprise, seemed to make the cat in front of him break. His mouth wobbled a bit, his ears twitching as if in a valiant attempt to stay facing forward. He blinked rapidly a few times.
“Oh, Sleepydawn,” he whispered. “Of course you’re allowed. If you want to be.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Sleepydawn snapped.
“It means you regret what you did,” the Starclan cat meowed. “And that if given the chance, you wouldn’t repeat your mistakes. You’ve done awful things, but in your heart is a good Fallenclan warrior.”
“I’m not a Fallenclan warrior anymore,” Sleepydawn lashed his tail, shaking his head to rid himself of the avalanche of emotions this cat was dumping on him. “And I won’t be again. As soon as I show Fishstick where the camp is, I’m leaving. I won’t even give them the chance to chase me away.”
“Do you think they would?”
“Sure,” he scoffed. “Flamefall would bite my tail off if given half the chance. I’m sure Wolfbite- Wolfstar isn’t keen on having Ravenstar’s followers in her camp.”
“I don’t see you following him, now,” the cat sat down, curling his tail over his paws. “Or his memory, for that matter. Not everyone can say the same, you know.”
A pause. “You never killed in his name.”
“I would have,” he snapped. “If Ravenstar had told me to kill a clanmate, I would have.”
“Which one?”
“What?”
“Which one?” The cat blinked. “If he’d told you to kill Hazelthorn, would you? What about Ashblink? Or Feathersight, or Marshjump, or Gizmo. Would you have killed them if he told you to?”
The words he wanted to use made a nest and died in Sleepydawn’s throat. “Who are you?” He meowed instead.
The scarred cat looked at him, long and sad. “I’m sorry.” “For what?”
“For making you live in my shadow. For dying before you were born. For leaving your mother to raise you without me.”
It was Sleepycloud.
This was the cat that Sleepydawn had spent his entire life underneath. That he’d nearly died for. That he’d destroyed his leg in the name of. This cat had caused his mother immeasurable grief, and his littermates, and himself. This cat had ruined his life.
“...Dad?”
“My baby,” Sleepycloud fell forward, no longer holding back his tears, and tucked his head over Sleepydawn’s shoulders. “Oh, little bug, my baby. I’m so sorry, I’m so sorry.”
“I’m sorry,” Sleepydawn, a fully grown adult, wept into his father’s chest. “I’m sorry, it’s all my fault. I should have died instead.”
“Never,” Sleepydawn’s father clamped his head down, pushing him further into his chest. “Never, I’m so glad you’re alive, that you got to live and hunt and fight. And I’m so sorry for the path you’ve had to walk.”
It’s not your fault, Sleepydawn almost said. Wanted to say. He wasn’t sure if it was true. Sleepycloud didn’t let him say it.
“You are my son,” Sleepydawn’s father drew back just enough to press their foreheads together. They had the same eyes. The exact same eyes. Sleepydawn was looking into a reflection of his own form. For the first time, he saw in himself what everyone else had seen. “You are your mother’s son. You are your siblings’ brother. You’re a guardian to this young cat that you’ve brought to live the life of her dreams. You’re a fantastic warrior. Even in exile.”
Sleepycloud’s eyes were teary, and glimmered with stars. “I have no right to ask anything of you. But…”
Sleepydawn grit his teeth, throat feeling thick. He wanted to know. “Tell me. Ask.”
His father’s eyes fell shut. “Let yourself love. Let yourself be loved. Let yourself enjoy life and know that you’ve spent yours serving and toiling and you deserve so much. Please.”
The new, starry world faded away.
Fishstick didn’t have any dreams, when she woke--Sleepydawn asked her just to be sure, but it seemed she hadn’t been visited. Presumably, she didn’t have anybody waiting for her, there. Not in that afterlife.
If he thought she’d been excitable before then, it was nothing compared to her attitude that morning. She frolicked and leapt about like a fawn in newleaf, thrilled more than anything to be a warrior at last. It was a wonder she didn’t alert any patrols to their approach as Sleepydawn carefully led her towards camp.
He wasn’t sure if it would be his last time in Fallenclan territory, but he treated it as if it was. They passed through the plains, close enough that he could point out the Honey Spruce to her, instructing her to keep her distance. Then, they followed the creek upriver, towards the Starpool. He made Fishstick pause, then, so the two of them could watch the fish swimming under the surface for a few minutes. The reflection of the sun on the water dazzled them both. He showed her the best place to cross the creek, over a neat set of close-together stones, and laughed at her when she misjudged a jump and got her hind legs wet.
They had to travel a bit around, for the best path up to the camp. In the far distance, Sleepydawn pointed out the Sky Pine, the tallest tree in the territory, standing stoically near the Gooseclan border. He remembered trying to climb it, as an apprentice. Fishstick probably would, too. One day soon.
Everywhere, the smell of Fallenclan. Like cold mountain water and moss and wet earth and birds. The closer they drew to the camp, the stronger that scent became. Sleepydawn’s lungs ached with it, and not for the first time, he debated turning back.
It was too late, anyway.
Before the mouth of the cave had even come fully into view, a voice called out. “Stop where you are!” A long-furred yellow molly stalked towards them, expression harsh and guarded for a moment before falling slack in surprise. “It’s…”
“It’s me.” Sleepydawn agreed. “I know I’m- not welcome here. I’m just delivering someone.”
He tilted his head to look behind him, seeing Fishstick. Her eyes were wide, fur prickling on the back of her neck as Moorthistle approached them.
“We’re here to speak with Wolfstar,” Sleepydawn dipped his head in submission. “And then I will leave.”
“...Alright.” Moorthistle agreed after a moment of careful consideration, green eyes flicking over them both. “Ashblink, I’ll be back in a moment.”
A solid lump formed harsh in his throat as Sleepydawn followed Moorthistle, past his mate. Former mate. Their relationship had been strained before he’d been exiled, and when Ashblink hadn’t come to say goodbye before Sleepydawn left, well… he understood what that meant.
I didn’t treat you well, he realized silently as Ashblink’s cold blue eyes followed him. I’m sorry.
Fishstick had none of the struggles that he was carrying--once she’d gotten over her initial awe, she was trotting after him like a puppy, tail held high and eyes bright, peering at the walls of the cave and the cats that were beginning to gather around them like she’d never seen such things before. Maybe she hadn’t.
She’ll make a good warrior, Sleepydawn thought suddenly, surprising himself.
She really would. Despite her annoying demeanor, which was something that, really, all apprentices had to some degree, she was intelligent, and curious, and eager to learn. Perhaps one day she’d win a battle single-pawed against a group of rogues, saving her entire patrol, or she’d bring home a ptarmigan in the middle of leaf-bare when the rest of the clan was freezing and starving. She’d probably be a better warrior than Sleepydawn ever was.
But she wouldn’t be here without me, he realized.
This was how he repaid them. Mistlefrost, Wolfstar, any other cats he’d hurt. He brought to them this promising young cat with her whole future ahead of her. Even if he couldn’t serve Fallenclan himself anymore, he could do this.
He loved his clan. With every breath.
Wolfstar padded up to the two of them, her chin tilted up and her blue eyes icy. The star-shaped white mark on her forehead was still startling to see, such a blatant show of Starclan’s favor. She was their leader. Their true one.
“So, you’re back, after everything.”
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Would you like to explain more what is behind those reactions in the latest comic? I mean those panels with Littleleaf ect. What are they feeling and why?
(Love the expressions btw)
sure :)
-Kestrelfeather (61 moons, he/him) He's happy for Wolfbite! That's his best friend and he was probably let in on a lot of the information that Wolf got regarding Ravenstar's murderings, so he's not only happy that Wolfbite succeeded her mission, but also that Ravenstar is toast lol
-Ospreyswipe (113 moons, he/him) Very similar reasons as Kestrel, he's Feathersight's mate and he knew most of what was going on, so he's happy that Ravenstar isn't leader anymore and he's also happy that Feathersight finally completed the mission he'd been on for years
-Myrtleclaw (112 moons, any pronouns) & Juniperfoot (113 moons, she/they) Myrtle and Juniper were Sandsnap's mates. Not only are they filled with a mix of grief and joy at seeing Sandsnap's murder avenged, they're also feeling a lot of emotion seeing their daughter, Wolfbite, be the Big Hero. They probably weren't let in on what was happening, but they're relieved she's okay nevertheless.
-Littleleaf (83 moons, he/him) His brother, whom he dearly loved, who was only ever loving and kind to him, just died. How do you think he's feeling?
-Darkstone (38 moons, he/they) Overjoyed. Darkstone has always had a bit of a mean/slightly bloodthirsty streak, so while most of the cats watching this have an undercurrent of "oh shit that guy just died horribly", he's just kind of laughing about it. If he could hold pompoms he'd be doing a little dance about it
-Honeysong (53 moons, she/her) She's in pain and exhausted but she's also very happy that Ravenstar isn't leader anymore. She's also a pacifist and somewhat disturbed by Ravenstar's gory death, so she's hiding her face in Darkstone's fur as well as using him as physical support.
-Feathersight (112 moons, he/she/they) Relief. He's known something was wrong since Ravenstar became a warrior and he's carried the burden of Poppyfeather, Cherrystar, & Sandsnap's murders with him for so long, knowing that he's been one of the main forces bringing Ravenstar down has made him more stress-free than he's been since he was a young cat. He will be breaking down in tears later that night.
-Flamefall (72 moons, he/him) Shock. Awe. Grief. Ravenstar was his friend for longer than he was his enemy, so there's a definite feeling of sadness within him at seeing that cat die, but he was afraid of Ravenstar for a long, long time, and seeing that cat be taken down is. Really something. He's felt irredeemable for many moons, and knowing that this wouldn't have happened without him is bringing a new light into his life.
-Mistlefrost (107 moons, he/him) & Inkynose (40 moons, she/her) Mistlefrost and Inkynose were two cats who were punished for speaking up about Ravenstar's actions. They both have a little bit of a vengeful streak, so they're reveling in seeing a cat who made them suffer suffer. They're also both extremely loyal to Fallenclan, so they're overjoyed to see the world realign itself.
-Patchback (105 moons, she/her) Patchback was one of Ravenstar's most loyal followers. She was kicked out of her old clan for being too cruel, so when she joined Fallenclan she kept it all on the down-low. Then comes Ravenstar, a cat with the same ideals as her who praises her for her strength. Her ability to put her clanmates in their place. Now that cat is gone. She's grieving and furious.
-Levi (109 moons, he/him) Levi is a cat that follows power wherever it goes, and he just watched his chance at leadership get thrown out of the window. He was loyal to Ravenstar, sure, because that was his best option of getting to where he wanted to be. He saw Ravenstar die, adjusted, made an attempt, and realized very quickly that without Ravenstar to back him up, he wasn't much of anything.
-Sleepydawn (74 moons, he/they) Sleepydawn was resistant to Ravenstar's loyalty at first, but a little manipulation brought him right around. Before he knew it, he was doing whatever Ravenstar told him, desperate for the validation and ignoring his family as they tried to pull him away. Ravenstar was his pillar of support--Sleepydawn did what he said because he was the clan leader. It was the right thing to do because he was the clan leader. Now, he wasn't the clan leader anymore. What does that mean for Sleepydawn?
-Bearspring (56 moons, she/her) After her mother, Cherrystar, died, Bearspring was left with a gaping wound. She was bitter at the loss, and angry, and Ravenstar, who had always been a good friend to her mother, took her under his wing and taught her ways to get that anger out. She was loyal to him, unfailingly, and then her mother's ghost appeared and said that she was murdered. And then Ravenstar died in front of her. There's a lot going on inside her head right now, but the largest emotion is probably guilt. She thinks she's been betraying her mother all this time.
-Marshjump (56 moons, he/she) Marshjump is Bearspring's brother. He never fell under Ravenstar's paws, always too soft-hearted and relying on his father more than anyone, but he saw how his sister did. He didn't know the extent of Ravenstar's cruelty until now, when he saw his mother's ghost. Now, not only does he see that, but he sees his sister, trembling in guilt and rage and grief, and knows he has a chance now to bring her back to him. He's grieving, but he also feels shock and joy and terror.
also bearspring. lmao
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Did Levi Patchback and Sleepydawn get a choice in swearing loyalty or exile? Cause I feel really bad for Sleepy if they didn’t
they didn't really have a choice in being exiled, the reason that they were exiled was because they all hurt their clanmates, either on Ravenstar's orders or because Ravenstar allowed it. Sleepydawn helped Ravenstar attack Mistlefrost, Patchback helped him attack Inkynose and was abusing her apprentice, and Levi just kind of. Tried to restart Ravenstar's leadership with himself in his place
#fallenasks#gardenergulfie#theres more of ravenstars followers that were given a second chance too!#like paledawn and cliffberry and bearspring etc
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could we see the sprites + names/traits for every outsider cat (excluding the lost cats)? off the top of my head i know there's crouch, evilface, nari, and mr oreo. if that wouldn't be super spoiler-y, of course!
-🐉
sure thing!
Of course we've got the exiles. Levi (left) is bloodthirsty, valuable insight, and good kitsitter, and Patchback (right) is fierce, a skilled mediator, and a great teacher.
Evilface, who quickly became a fan fav. She's strict, a dream shaper (very cool) and a good kitsitter.
Mr. Oreo (left) is nervous with steady paws, and her son Nari (right) is troublesome with steady paws.
Crouch, another that we've seen, is childish, with steady paws and a natural intuition.
Two loners that have been around for ages. Kite (left) is a compassionate molly with helpful insight, and Hop (right) is a righteous molly who is fast as the wind and a great climber.
Finally, the only one that I believe hasn't been shown yet, a kittypet named Metal. He's grumpy, a great storyteller, and a good hunter.
#fallenasks#fallensprites#fallenlore#dragon anon#i'll probably end up showing the outsiders in the upcoming allegiances post? but i'll have to draw metal for that#maybe i can use one of my bases lmao
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