Warriors: Dawn of the Clans #1: The Sun Trail

Free Warriors: Dawn of the Clans #1: The Sun Trail by Erin Hunter, Wayne McLoughlin

Book: Warriors: Dawn of the Clans #1: The Sun Trail by Erin Hunter, Wayne McLoughlin Read Free Book Online
Authors: Erin Hunter, Wayne McLoughlin
weight of two cats, and Gray Wing felt himself lifted from the ground. The pain in his neck was shooting through all his body and a red mist covered his eyes. He struggled to stay conscious. Then he felt the eagle let go with one talon to grab at Jagged Peak.
    Hah! he thought. Mistake, greedy-belly!
    He managed to twist around and batter at the eagle’s underbelly with his hind legs. With a screech the bird released him and he plunged downward to hit the rocks with a bone-jarring crash.
    Looking up, Gray Wing saw Jagged Peak hanging on to the eagle’s wing with his claws. “Jagged Peak! Let go!” he yowled.
    Jagged Peak glanced at the ground, then unhooked his claws and fell back onto the stones. The eagle swooped toward them again with another furious screech; with a heartbeat to spare, Gray Wing shoved Jagged Peak into the space between two rocks. They cowered there in the tiny gap while the eagle shrieked overhead.
    Jagged Peak was trembling from pain and fear, looking like nothing more than a kit. Gray Wing curled his body around him and soothed him with long, slow licks.
    “It’s okay,” he murmured. “You’re safe now. I’ve found you.”

At last the screeching died away and Gray Wing dared to stick his head out of the crack. The sky was clear; the eagle was nowhere to be seen. “Okay, we can leave,” he mewed to Jagged Peak.
    Jagged Peak looked up at him with worried eyes. “What if the eagle’s waiting for us?”
    “It’s not. It’s gone.”
    Gray Wing squeezed into the open and after a moment’s hesitation Jagged Peak followed. He stood quietly, still shaking a little, while his brother checked him over, nosing carefully down one side and then the other.
    “You have a few scratches,” Gray Wing announced at last, with a quiver of relief that it was no worse. “But you’ll be fine.” Anger surged up to replace his anxiety. “What were you thinking, leaving the cave like that, you little fuzz-brain?”
    Recovering rapidly from his fear, Jagged Peak faced him defiantly. “I wanted to go with the others! Quiet Rain had no right to stop me!”
    “She’s your mother,” Gray Wing meowed. “She knows what’s best for you.”
    His eyes narrowing, Jagged Peak retreated a pace. “You haven’t come to take me back, have you?” he asked. “Because I’m not going. I’ll fight you if I have to!”
    Gray Wing had to suppress an amused mrrow at the sight of his little brother, tail lashing and claws out. “Calm down,” he sighed. “I won’t make you go home. We’re going to find the others.”
    Jagged Peak’s eyes widened in surprise. “But you wanted to stay!” he objected.
    “You need me more than they do.”
    Jagged Peak’s shoulder fur fluffed up with renewed indignation. “I’m fine on my own!” he declared.
    “You nearly got carried off by an eagle,” Gray Wing pointed out.
    Jagged Peak waved his tail dismissively. “Well, I found the way down into the valley without falling.”
    Gray Wing realized that there was no point in arguing. “We still have a long way to go before we’re clear of the mountains,” he continued. “Things could get even more dangerous.”
    “We’ll be okay,” Jagged Peak asserted. “We have each other now! And did you see how I fought off that eagle? You’d have been chickfeed if it wasn’t for me!”
    The little cat set off again, bounding over the boulders. Gray Wing followed more slowly; the pain from his neck and torn paw pad stabbing him like sharp thorns. The sun had vanished behind the mountains, and dusk was gathering around them.
    “We need to look for somewhere to shelter!” he called to Jagged Peak.
    His brother halted and turned to look back at him. “I want to keep going,” he mewed obstinately. “The others will be so far ahead by now!”
    “It’s too dangerous to travel in the dark,” Gray Wing insisted. “There are still places to fall, even though we’re in the bottom of the valley. Tomorrow we’ll follow the ledge

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