• Published 27th Oct 2013
  • 876 Views, 18 Comments

My Little Warriors-Into the Wild - Megasis101



A regular house cat named Applebloom will save ThunderClan and become the strongest warrior if them all....

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Chapter 1

It was very dark. Applebloom could sense something was near. The young cat’s eyes opened wide as she scanned the dense undergrowth. This place was unfamiliar, but the strange scents drew her onward, deeper into the shadows. Her stomach growled, reminding her of her hunger. She opened her jaws slightly to let the warm smells of the forest reach the scent glands on the roof of her mouth. Musty odors of leaf mold mingled with the tempting aroma of a small furry creature.

Suddenly a flash of gray raced past her. Applebloom stopped still, listening. It was hiding in the leaves less than two tail-lengths away. Applebloom knew it was a mouse—she could feel the rapid pulsing of a tiny heart deep within her ear fur. She swallowed, stifling her rumbling stomach. Soon her hunger would be satisfied.

Slowly she lowered her body into position, crouching for the attack. She was downwind of the mouse. She knew it was not aware of her. With one final check on her prey’s position, Applebloom pushed back hard on her haunches and sprang, kicking up leaves on the forest floor as she rose.

The mouse dived for cover, heading toward a hole in the ground. But Applebloom was already on top of it. She scooped it into the air, hooking the helpless creature with her thorn-sharp claws, flinging it up in a high arc onto the leaf-covered ground. The mouse landed dazed, but alive. It tried to run, but Applebloom snatched it up again. She tossed the mouse once more, this time a little farther away. The mouse managed to scramble a few paces before Applebloom caught up with it.

Suddenly a noise roared nearby. Applebloom looked around, and as she did so, the mouse was able to pull away from her claws. When Applebloom turned back she saw it dart into the darkness among the tangled roots of a tree.

Angry, Applebloom gave up the hunt. She spun around, her orange eyes glaring, intent on searching out the noise that had cost her her kill. The sound rattled on, becoming more familiar. Applebloom blinked open her eyes.

The forest had disappeared. She was inside a hot and airless kitchen, curled in her bed. Moonlight filtered through the window, casting shadows on the smooth, hard floor. The noise had been the rattle of hard, dried pellets of food as they were tipped into her dish. Applebloom had been dreaming.

Lifting her head, she rested her chin on the side of her bed.

Her pink bow rubbed uncomfortably around her neck. In her dream she had felt fresh air ruffling the soft fur where the bow usually pinched. Applebloom rolled onto her back, savoring the dream for a few more moments. She could still smell mouse. It was the third time since full moon that she’d had the dream, and every time the mouse had escaped her grasp.

She licked her lips. From her bed she could smell the bland odor of her food. Her owners always refilled her dish before they went to bed. The dusty smell chased away the warm scents of her dream. But the hunger rumbled on in her stomach, so Applebloom stretched the sleep out of her limbs and padded across the kitchen floor to her dinner. The food felt dry and tasteless on her tongue. Applebloom reluctantly swallowed one more mouthful. Then she turned away from the food dish and pushed her way out through the cat flap, hoping that the smell of the garden would bring back the feelings from her dream.

Outside, the moon was bright. It was raining lightly. Applebloom stalked down the tidy garden, following the starlit gravel path, feeling the stones cold and sharp beneath her paws. She made her dirt beneath a large bush with glossy green leaves and heavy purple flowers. Their sickly sweet scent cloyed the damp air around her, and she curled her lip to drive the smell out of her nostrils.

Afterward, Applebloom settled down on top of one of the posts in the fence that marked the limits of her garden. It was a favorite spot of hers, as she could see right into the neighboring gardens as well as into the dense green forest on the other side of the garden fence.

The rain had stopped. Behind her, the close-cropped lawn was bathed in moonlight, but beyond her fence the woods were full of shadows. Applebloom stretched her head forward to take a sniff of the damp air. Her skin was warm and dry under her thick coat, but she could feel the weight of the raindrops that sparkled on her yellow fur.

She heard her owners giving her one last call from the back door. If she went to them now, they would greet her with gentle words and caresses and welcome her onto their bed, where she would curl, purring, warm in the crook of a bent knee.

But this time Applebloom ignored her owners’ voices and turned her gaze back to the forest. The crisp smell of the woods had grown fresher after the rain.

Suddenly the fur on her spine prickled. Was something moving out there? Was something watching her? Applebloom stared ahead, but it was impossible to see or smell anything in the dark, tree-scented air. She lifted her chin boldly, stood up, and stretched, one paw gripping each corner of the fencepost as she straightened her legs and arched her back. She closed her eyes and breathed in the smell of the woods once more. It seemed to promise her something, tempting her onward into the whispering shadows. Tensing her muscles, she crouched for a moment. Then she leaped lightly down into the rough grass on the other side of the garden fence. As she landed, the bell on her bow rang out through the still night air.

“Where are you off to, Applebloom?” meowed a familiar voice behind her.

Applebloom looked up. A young tan cat was balancing ungracefully on the fence.

“Hello, Twist,” Applebloom replied.

“You’re not going to go into the woods, are you?”

Twist's eyes were huge.

“Just for a look,” Applebloom promised, shifting uncomfortably.

“You wouldn’t get me in there. It’s dangerous!” Twist wrinkled her black nose with distaste. “Henry said he went into the woods once.” The cat lifted her head and gestured with her nose over the rows of fences toward the garden where Henry lived.

“That fat old tabby never went into the woods!” Applebloom scoffed. “He’s hardly been beyond his own garden since his trip to the vet. All he wants to do is eat and sleep.”

“No, really. He caught a robin there!” Twist insisted.

“Well, if he did, then it was before the vet. Now he complains about birds because they disturb his dozing.”

“Well, anyway,” Twist went on, ignoring the scorn in Applebloom’s mew, “Henry told me there are all sorts of dangerous animals out there. Huge wildcats who eat live rabbits for breakfast and sharpen their claws on old bones!”

“I’m only going for a look around,” Applebloom meowed. “I won’t stay long.”

“Well, don’t say I didn’t warn you!” purred Twist. The cat turned and plunged off the fence back down into her own garden.

Applebloom sat down in the coarse grass beyond the garden fence. She gave her shoulder a nervous lick and wondered how much of Twist’s gossip was true.

Suddenly the movement of a tiny creature caught her eye.

She watched it scuttle under some brambles.

Instinct made her drop into a low crouch. With one slow paw after another she drew her body forward through the undergrowth. Ears pricked, nostrils flared, eyes unblinking, she moved toward the animal. She could see it clearly now, sitting up among the barbed branches, nibbling on a large seed held between its paws. It was a mouse.

Applebloom rocked her haunches from side to side, preparing to leap. She held her breath in case her bell rang again. Excitement coursed through her, making her heart pound. This was even better than her dreams! Then a sudden noise of cracking twigs and crunching leaves made her jump. Her bell jangled treacherously, and the mouse darted away into the thickest tangle of the bramble bush.

Applebloom stood very still and looked around. She could see the white tip of a red bushy tail trailing through a clump of tall ferns up ahead. She smelled a strong, strange scent, definitely a meat-eater, but neither cat nor dog. Distracted, Applebloom forgot about the mouse and watched the red tail curiously. She wanted a better look.

All of Applebloom’s senses strained ahead as she prowled forward. Then she detected another noise. It came from behind, but sounded muted and distant. She swiveled her ears backward to hear it better. Pawsteps? She wondered, but she kept her eyes fixed on the strange red fur up ahead, and continued to creep onward. It was only when the faint rustling behind her became a loud and fast-approaching leaf-crackle that Applebloom realized she was in danger.

The creature hit her like an explosion and Applebloom was thrown sideways into a clump of nettles. Twisting and yowling, she tried to throw off the attacker that had fastened itself to her back. It was gripping her with incredibly sharp claws. Applebloom could feel spiked teeth pricking at her neck. She writhed and squirmed from whisker to tail, but she couldn’t free herself. For a second she felt helpless; then she froze. Thinking fast, she flipped over onto her back. She knew instinctively how dangerous it was to expose her soft belly, but it was her only chance.

She was lucky—the ploy seemed to work. She heard a “hhuuffff” beneath her as the breath was knocked out of her attacker. Thrashing fiercely, Applebloom managed to wriggle free. Without looking back she sprinted toward her home. The attacker had a horn on the tip of its forehead and lit her horn which made her disappear with a quick flash and the cat ended up on top of her again. Applebloom struggled free again and started to run faster toward her home.


Behind her, a rush of pawsteps told Applebloom her attacker was giving chase. Even though the pain from her scratches stung beneath her fur, Applebloom decided she would rather turn and fight than let herself be jumped on again.

She skidded to a stop, spun around, and faced her pursuer.

It was another kitten, with a thick coat of shaggy white fur, strong legs, a short horn, and a broad face. In a heartbeat, Applebloom smelled that it was a she-cat, and sensed the power in the sturdy shoulders underneath the soft coat. Then the kitten crashed into Applebloom at full pelt. Taken by surprise by Applebloom’s turnabout, it fell back into a dazed heap.

The impact knocked the breath out of Applebloom, and she staggered. She quickly found her footing and arched her back, puffing out her yellow fur, ready to spring onto the other kitten. But her attacker simply sat up and began to lick a forepaw, all signs of aggression gone.

Applebloom felt strangely disappointed. Every part of her was tense, ready for battle.

“Hi there, kittypet!” meowed the white cat cheerily. “You put up quite a fight for a tame kitty!”

Applebloom remained on tiptoe for a second, wondering whether to attack anyway. Then she remembered the strength she had felt in this kitten’s paws when she had pinned her to the ground. She dropped onto her pads, loosened her muscles, and let her spine unbend. “And I’ll fight you again if I have to,” she growled.

“I’m Sweetie Belle, by the way,” the white kitten went on, ignoring Applebloom's threat. “I’m training to be a ThunderClan warrior.”

Applebloom remained silent. She didn’t understand what this Sweetiewhatsit was meowing about, but she sensed the threat had passed. She hid her confusion by leaning down to lick her ruffled chest.

“What’s a kittypet like you doing out in the woods? Don’t you know it’s dangerous?” asked Sweetie Belle.

“If you’re the most dangerous thing the woods has to offer, then I think I can handle it,” Applebloom bluffed.

Sweetie Belle looked up at her for a moment, narrowing her big green eyes. “Oh, I’m far from the most dangerous. If I were even half a warrior, I’d have given an intruder like you some real wounds to think about.”

Applebloom felt a thrill of fear at these ominous words. What did this cat mean by “intruder”?

“Anyway,” meowed Sweetie Belle, using her sharp teeth to tug a clump of grass from between her claws, “I didn’t think it was worth hurting you. You’re obviously not from one of the other Clans.”

“Other Clans?” Applebloom echoed, confused.

Sweetie Belle let out an impatient hiss. “You must have heard of the four warrior Clans that hunt around here! I belong to ThunderClan. The other Clans are always trying to steal prey from our territory, especially ShadowClan. They’re so fierce they would have ripped you to shreds, no questions asked.”

Sweetie Belle paused to spit angrily and continued: “They come to take prey that is rightfully ours. It’s the job of the ThunderClan warriors to keep them out of our territory. When I’ve finished my training, I’ll be so dangerous, I’ll have the other Clans shaking in their flea-bitten skins. They won’t dare come near us then!”

Applebloom narrowed her eyes. This must be one of the wildcats Twist had warned her about! Living rough in the woods, hunting and fighting each other for every last scrap of food. Yet Applebloom didn’t feel scared. In fact, it was hard not to admire this confident kitten. “So you’re not a warrior yet?” She asked.

“Why? Did you think I was?” Sweetie Belle purred proudly; then she shook her wide, furry head. “I won’t be a real warrior for ages. I have to go through the training first. Kits have to be six moons old before they even begin training. Tonight is my first night out as an apprentice.”

“Why don’t you find yourself an owner with a nice cozy house instead? Your life would be much easier,” Applebloom meowed. “There are plenty of housefolk who’d take in a kitten like you. All you have to do is sit where they can see you and look hungry for a couple of days—”

“And they’d feed me pellets that look like rabbit droppings and soft slop!” Sweetie Belle interrupted. “No way! I can’t think of anything worse than being a kittypet! They’re nothing but Twoleg toys! Eating stuff that doesn’t look like food, making dirt in a box of gravel, sticking their noses outside only when the Twolegs allow them? That’s no life! Out here it’s wild, and it’s free. We come and go as we please.” She finished her speech with a proud spit, then meowed mischievously, “Until you’ve tasted a fresh-killed mouse, you haven’t lived. Have you ever tasted mouse?”

“No,” Applebloom admitted, a little defensively. “Not yet.”

“I guess you’ll never understand.” Sweetie Belle sighed. “You weren’t born wild. It makes a big difference. You need to be born with warrior blood in your veins, or the feel of the wind in your whiskers. Kitties born into Twoleg nests could never feel the same way.”

Applebloom remembered the way she had felt in her dream.

“That’s not true!” she mewed indignantly.

Sweetie Belle did not reply. She suddenly stiffened midlick, one paw still raised, and sniffed the air. “I smell cats from my Clan,” she hissed. “You should go. They won’t be pleased to find you hunting in our territory!”

Applebloom looked around, wondering how Sweetie Belle knew any cat was approaching. She couldn’t smell anything different on the leaf-scented breeze. But her fur stood on end at the note of urgency in Sweetie Belle's voice.

“Quick!” hissed Sweetie Belle again. “Run!”

Applebloom prepared to spring into the bushes, not knowing which way was safe to jump.

She was too late. A voice meowed behind her, firm and menacing. “What’s going on here?”

Applebloom turned to see a large blue she-cat strolling majestically out from the undergrowth. She was magnificent. White hairs streaked her muzzle, and an ugly scar parted the fur across her wings, but her smooth blue coat shone like silver in the moonlight.

“Luna!” Beside Applebloom, Sweetie Belle crouched down and narrowed her eyes. She crouched even lower when a second cat—a orange, golden tabby—followed the blue cat into the clearing.

“Ya'll shouldn’t be so near Twolegplace, Sweetie Belle!” growled the golden she-cat angrily, narrowing her green eyes.

“I know, Applejack, I’m sorry.” Sweetie Belle looked down at her paws.

Applebloom copied Sweetie Belle and crouched low to the forest floor, her ears twitching nervously. These cats had an air of strength she had never seen in any of her garden friends. Maybe what Twist had warned her about was true.

“Who is this?” asked the she-cat.

Applebloom flinched as she turned her gaze on her. Her piercing blue eyes made her feel even more vulnerable.

“She’s no threat,” mewed Sweetie Belle quickly. “She’s not another Clan warrior, just a Twoleg pet from beyond our territories.”

Just a Twoleg pet! The words inflamed Applebloom, but she held her tongue. The warning look in Luna's stare told her that she had observed the anger in her eyes, and she looked away.

“This is Luna; she’s leader of my Clan!” Sweetie Belle hissed to Applebloom under her breath. “And Applejack. She’s my mentor, which means she’s training me to be a warrior.”

“Thank ya for the introduction, Sweetie Belle,” meowed Applejack coolly.

Luna was still staring at Applebloom. “You fight well for a Twoleg pet,” she meowed.

Applebloom and Sweetie Belle exchanged confused glances. How could she know?

“We have been watching you both,” Luna went on, as if she had read their thoughts. “We wondered how you would deal with an intruder, Sweetie Belle. You attacked her bravely.”

Sweetie Belle looked pleased at Luna's praise.

“Sit up now, both of you!” Luna looked at Applebloom. “You too, kittypet.” She sat up immediately and held Luna's gaze evenly as she addressed her.

“You reacted well to the attack, kittypet. Sweetie Belle is stronger than you, but you used your wits to defend yourself. And you turned to face her when she chased you. I’ve not seen a kittypet do that before.”

Applebloom managed to nod her thanks, taken aback by such unexpected praise. Her next words surprised her even more.

“I have been wondering how you would perform out here, beyond the Twolegplace. We patrol this border frequently, so I have often seen you sitting on your boundary, staring out into the forest. And now, at last, you have dared to place your paws here.” Luna stared at Applebloom thoughtfully. “You do seem to have a natural hunting ability. Sharp eyes. You would have caught that mouse if you had not hesitated so long.”

“R-really?” Apple bloom stammered.

Applejack spoke now. Her deep meow was respectful but insistent. “Luna, this is a kittypet. She should not be hunting in ThunderClan territory. Send her home to her Twolegs!”

Applebloom prickled at Applejack's dismissive words. “Send me home?” she mewed impatiently. Luna's words had made her glow with pride. She had noticed her; she had been impressed by her. “But I’ve only come here to hunt for a mouse or two. I’m sure there’s enough to go around.”

Luna had turned her head to acknowledge Applejack's words. Now her gaze snapped back to Applebloom. Her blue eyes were blazing with anger. “There’s never enough to go around,” she spat. “If you didn’t live such a soft, overfed life, you would know that!”

Applebloom was confused by Luna's sudden rage, but one glance at the horrified look on Sweetie Belle's face was enough to tell her she had spoken too freely. Applejack stepped to his leader’s side. Both warriors loomed over her now. Applebloom looked into Luna's threatening stare and her pride dissolved. These were not cozy fireside cats she was dealing with—they were mean, hungry cats who were probably going to finish what Sweetie Belle had started.