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With leadership came newfound responsibilities to attend and decisions to be made. Such were things the freshly crowned Sunstar was learning, and though her paws still tingled with exuberance for her lifelong dreams coming to fruition, those were the parts of leadership she was fast beginning to hate.
Her first order of business, before she'd even been properly thrust into the role, had been to exile Doefreckle for his personal betrayal. She could still feel the shock in Shadedsun's gaze and the sorrow, the absolute pain and frantic desire to bargain and beg and plea, in Doe's, but she'd dismissed the meeting without waiting for the outcries to begin and retreated to her father's- no, her den. The beech tree had always been a safe place of comfort for her, where she could snuggle into her father's fur and taunt the nursery brats from within it, but now, absent of her family members as Rateye insisted she make it a home for the family she would one day build, it just felt... empty.
The only other place she found solace from her struggles was Watermouth, but even that was becoming a rare occurrence, with the turbulent sea now frigid to the touch. During their lengthy warm seasons, she could have swam to it with ease, but now low tides were crucial for her access. Instead, Sunstar often found herself simply on the rock outcroppings that overlooked the sea, gazing out over it and fluffing her pelt against the wild winds, searching the open blue for an answer no one else would give her. She almost didn't see the movement to her left and wouldn't have had Sunfreckle not stumbled into the sand, but the startled cry drew her eyes from the horizon to the she-cat- who, she realized with unmasked ire, was another problem entirely that needed attention.
Sunfreckle had resigned herself to staying quiet again. She had been proud when Summerclan gained their freedom again, even though the act of which left her exhausted and aching for days to come, and she was excited about the ceremonies, the new start, but the exile of Doefreckle had set off the familiar guilt inside of her again. She had moved to the back of the crowd, worried about what might happen to her because she still felt like she caused the whole thing. Sunfreckle had been the one to not report Aspenstar on their territory, to tell her about their beautiful fields and flowers, that Ratstar was weak and Devotedcrow was out. The ceremony had ended, she was never brought up, and she tried to go on about her day. But it still nagged at her, because little things always sent her mind into a spiral.
Despite her worries, she had slowly settled back into her routine. The first morning walk she took felt like the most freeing thing in the world, and she would have spent have her time running it out of pure excitement if her body didn't protest the very thought. She was out a little later now, making her way down to the sea shore for the first time since they moved back to camp. When she first stepped foot onto the sand, she thought of her adventure with Rhiannon, the identity she made up that she was somehow jealous of, the fact it felt more like her than Sunfreckle had ever been. The second thing she thought of was the heaviness of the water, Weevilspike nudging her up and away. She passed the half-bridges now, only stopping every now and again to admire an old seashell. She admired the view of Watermouth, and then immeditately came to a sharp stop, stumbled over her own paws that sent her to the ground with a strangled yelp.
She tried to play it off cool, curse about a rock that wasn't really there as she picked herself up, taking in the sight of their new leader before her. Sunstar always seemed like a powerful force regardless of leadership. Her confidence was loud, and despite their similar namesake, they were nothing alike at all. Sunstar was a summer afternoon, the sun at its highest peak, burning and strong; Sunfreckle felt more like a cloudless winter day — the sky was big and blue but the sun was weak, did nothing against the chill of the snow or wind. Really, she had admired Sunstar, she still did, but now, facing her, she felt nothing but fear.
"Sunstar!" She chirped, words clipped and nervous, trying to keep her tone respectful, loud and polite. But her mouth twitched into a nervous grimace, her ears twitching to flatten, and it all dripped into her words. "I didn't mean to interrupt, forgive me."
Sunstar didn't have the mark of someone particularly observant- at least, not to those less observant than herself- but she was a proper mean girl, the kind that could detect fear even when it was so infinitesimal it might not have existed at all as if it was a glaring weakness. Sunfreckle's did not evade her radar, and it filled her with a dangerous desire that would cry out for it later. She was thriving on this newfound position she found herself in, in which her clanmates didn't see the brat behind the mask any longer. At best, they respected her; at worst, they feared her.
With her trust reduced to such a frail, fragile thing, she would grow dependent on that fear to feel in control of herself and her clan.
"It's okay, Sunfreckle. I was just about to leave here anyway." Was that a lie? Sunstar graciously moved to a stand regardless of if it was, crossing over the white sands until she and her nametwin were standing a fox-length apart. "I'm shocked anyone has come out here so soon. I thought we'd all be sick of the sea ever since..." She didn't need to finish for the other to know what she referred to. The memory was still fresh, the salt in the air still thick in her lungs and her tongue tasted of burning water.
Sunstar was still … off-putting, to put it lightly. Sunfreckle's paws shifted nervously, she never met the new leader's eyes, there was a higher pitch to her voice. She owed her the respect, but Summerclan's crowned princess had always been intimidating. Perhaps it was the fact she held herself in such low regard that anyone she perceived as better, superior, was someone to be weary of.
I was just about to leave here anyway. Sunfreckle stepped back, gave her space as if she would walk ahead; it was almost an invitation.
I thought we'd all be sick of the sea ever since...
She nodded in solemn agreement, "I think I've still got the taste seawater in my mouth," it was an attempt at humour, though she blinked curiously at Sunstar because they were both here, by the sea, talking about how they hadn't expected to see anyone by the sea. The fear of drowning was still very strong, well after the event, because the exhaustion still dragged on, she still got nervous with her back turned because what if a Nightclan cat was still following her and she couldn't defend herself — she'd gotten lucky, really, that that Canarynight had given up when she hit the water.
"And, um, I don't know if it even matters coming from me," she gave an awkward bark-like laugh, "but what you did was great — with the meetings, and the plans, and showing Nightclan what's what, y'know? I've never felt so much adrenaline!" Alright, maybe she was sucking up a little — not that Sunfreckle would admit it, of course — to get on her good side. With the exile, she was still on edge, and now facing the one cat who pretty much decided her fate, she wanted to stay in her good graces.
Sunfreckle's comment received a tight smile in response, Sunstar's eyes drawn to the rolling sea. For the first time since the invasion, she really looked at it- not across it, not at the horizon- and was rewarded by an immediate, visceral flashback of being beneath it, tumbling, spiraling, choking...
She ripped her gaze back to the warrior, forcing out a hollow chuckle. "Yeah. Same. If I ever eat fish again, it'll be too soon. Maybe I should create a law forbidding anyone from catching seafood for the next few moons." It was her own shaky attempt at a joke but was followed by instant regret and Sunstar was hurriedly backpedaling in the same breath. "Not that I would. Do that, I mean. That would b-be unjust, corrupt. I wouldn't.. wouldn't do that." Her ears flicked back against her head, panic tightening in her chest and she was sure her vision was blurring, all the insults Doefreckle wounded her with resurfacing as she jumped straight to all the horrible things Sunfreckle must be concluding about the young, exile-happy leader.
It didn't stop there. As much as she wanted to trust Sunfreckle's compliments, wanted to feel great and in charge and worthy of where she stood now, doubt lingered in the back of her mind. She'd believed someone before, only to be betrayed and torn apart in the worst ways possible. Why should she believe this she-cat? This same cat that caused everything- the invasion, the murder, the affair, the exile. Wasn't it all because of this one cat? "Why'd you do it?" Sunstar startled herself with how forward it was and how demanding it sounded, but there it was, what was truly on her mind and what Sunfreckle certainly must have feared would come out. Aspenstar wanted power. Pinesimmer wanted control. Doefreckle wanted love. What did Sunfreckle want? And was it a good enough to appease Sunstar's wrath?
She laughed at her joke, but it fell a little flat. It wasn't difficult to tell that Sunstar was nervous, panicked at the thought of being seen as a tyrant. Exile aside, she didn't see her as particularly unfair — Sunfreckle's own fear was set in fairness, anything given to her would have been earned. She wasn't sure if she should offer comfort or keep her space, so she settled on a middle ground, moving only slightly closer in case and looking with wide, concerned eyes.
The question caught her off guard. Why'd you do it? She could have played the oblivious act — do what? — but she knew it was fruitless. Sunfreckle knew exactly what she was talking about, knew it would come out at some point, and instead of answering right away, she averted her eyes. She'd felt terrible since the occupation, felt every ounce of grief and guilt but it didn't compare to hearing the words from someone's mouth, especially Sunstar's. The truth was, she wasn't sure. It had been a regular night, she wouldn't have thought anything of it again if Aspenstar hadn't invaded. It had been pleasant conversation, light flirting.
"I didn't mean too," a children's excuse, it wouldn't fly, so she continued, "really. She seemed so genuine, she'd wandered onto the territory one night and I was supposed to bring her back." She gave a nervous, crackly laugh, "and — and I had just gotten back from my break, I didn't know who she was. And then she said I was pretty and —" she took a breath for a moment, maybe she shouldn't admit she was so easily charmed " — and I ... got distracted, and said some stuff I shouldn't." Gave Aspenstar their weaknesses, same thing. Sunfreckle shrunk back, didn't offer an awkward smile or laugh to diffuse the tension, let it sit in the air.
And then she started again, slower this time, more careful, "I was stupid, really, really stupid. And I'm sorry." It was almost tearful, confusingly so because why did she want to cry? She'd caused this mess. She knew a simple sorry wouldn't fix it, but she said it anyway, and despite how empty it probably felt to hear, the words were authentic.
Sunstar listened to her speak, reactionless, though irritation crawled like fractured lightning across her face. It was surprising she got through the first line without exploding- really, she wanted to drawl with growling bitterness, if you hadn't meant to be doing it, then how'd we end up here?- but it was stifled by what followed, relenting just long enough to let Sunfreckle finish. By the time she did, Sunstar wasn't sure herself if she was more upset at the explanation or her own inability to gauge the truth in it, and it left her frozen there while the winds whipped at her fur and gusted sand around them.
Finally, she relaxed, just a slight lowering of her shoulders that ached horribly when she let them rest. Her joints felt so tight and heavy with all the troubles she was burdening recently that letting her body relax was almost becoming painful, a phantom throb awakening in them when they fell slack. "You didn't know," she repeated, the same words said to Rosethorn to pardon her for bearing Pinesimmer's kits. "You're right, you didn't know. How could you know?" She could have reprimanded her for the act anyway, because she was still a SummerClan cat who'd given away SummerClan secrets to a stranger, but the repentance in Sunfreckle's mew was enough to assure her that she felt justifiably awful about it already with Sunstar heaping anything more on top of that. She was still unsure of how trusting she wanted to be, but when there was no shift to insults and vitriol, she decided it was worth the chance. "Thank you for being honest with me, Sunfreckle, I appreciate it. I'm not mad at you- anymore," she laughed again, and this time the sound of it was fuller but still hesitant.
They stood there for a bit, both not quite certain of how to proceed, when Sunstar spoke again, "Come on, take a walk with me. If you don't, I'll banish you," she teased and suddenly turned back towards the beach, trotting towards the withering greenery that encroached on the coastline. It seemed as though they were returning to that alcove where SummerClan had sheltered in to evade NightClan retaliation efforts, but Sunstar cut a berth around that until the land began to rise and they were cresting a small hill that opened out to the overlook the sea, a looming two-leg structure standing sentry in the center. "This place has always been locked up so we could never get into it, but look over here." She directed Sunfreckle to where the rotted wooden boards crossing the entrance had fallen away, likely during a summer storm, and now revealed a way inside.
In the silence that followed, Sunfreckle suddenly found herself feeling hot and shaky, but the initial, gnawing shame had loosened slightly at the apology, like an impossible weight had been lifted. For a moment, it was just them, tensely staring off at the other until finally Sunstar relaxed, causing the whole atmosphere to shift, and with that, Sunfreckle settled as well. How could you know? Her tail twitched apprehensively, and every possible thing her new leader could say came to mind, the good, the bad, the terrifying, all at once.
Then she let out a slow, quiet breath, nodded but didn't laugh along with her, though she offered a hesitant smile, "you — you don't have to trust me right now, but I'll try to make it up to you, I promise." Her words were a little lighter, eager to still fix her mistakes. When Sunstar turned back towards the beach, she fell into step just beside her, giggled (nervously, still) at her joke, even if the fear of such a thing had been so painfully real a few seconds before. As the lighthouse came into view, she stared up at it with wide eyes. It was incredibly tall, imposing, but didn't hold the same atmosphere that the Witch's house did when she had first seen it. She gave an excited look, immediately rushing up and ahead, climbing right up to the structure. Sunfreckle had always been a fan of Summerclan's secrets, the old twoleg buildings left mostly abandoned, the mystery, the excitement, and it was all located within a day's walk. The wind had left the door slightly ajar, enough to fit her head in and push it open more, allowing them full access to the darkness that lay inside. She didn't need an invitation, nor a rundown of whatever plan Sunstar had in store for it, because she was already waving so she could be the first to step onto it's old, cold floors.
"You know, I've always wondered what's inside, but I do hope nobody lives here already."
You don't have to trust me right now, but I'll try to make it up to you, I promise. Sunstar had looked at her, long and solemn, again withdrawn to herself and all the things that now plagued her that once wouldn't have. She was an honest cat by nature, had never danced around a topic because she suffered no consequence of telling it like it is, and so never grappled with the worries that others would lie; they were often more than happy to try and take her down a peg, fruitless as it always was. Now, her whole perception was tainted, her inclination to believe suspended within a different, simpler, brighter time. Her silence would be notable, the distrust underlined in it.
As Sunfreckle clambered ahead, all that previous anxiety melted away by exhilaration, Sunstar followed more slowly, delicately treading a well-worn path that led directly to the doorway. "I haven't seen anyone," she replied, "and I've come out almost every day since my coronation. Hopefully it stays that way. SummerClan already has one deranged loner living out in the middle of nowhere and I'd rather keep it that way for now." She stepped inside after the calico did, grateful at least that the gloom would disguise the way her pelt crawled uncomfortably and that Sunfreckle was larger than she was, more intimidating than the fuzzball leader prowling behind her.
The space inside was littered by two-leg furniture left behind, all rotted wood and cobwebs strewn about, and only few strands of weak light filtered in from windows higher above. They illuminated the thriving moss that crept up the walls along the areas where the light would pass throughout the day. Snaking out of the darkness, dark rusted iron stairs spiraled far above their heads, branching out onto two separate platforms, and at the top of them, Sunstar could just make out a sliver of the dreary skyline. She glanced from it to Sunfreckle warily. "Ladies first."
"Well then!" Cheerfully taking the lead, Sunfreckle took the first few, tentative steps inside. She glossed over the loner comment — she could understand the predicament, had been in a similar situation herself where she was on Summerclan, but not a part of them, and she supposed it was the charm of the place that prevented them from truly leaving. She assumed Sunstar would have been a bit young by the time she'd left, she mused with an idle look towards the she-cat.
Inside of the lighthouse was damp, uncomfortably so, but Sunfreckle didn't hesitate to walk further. Her small adventure with Rhiannon had given her a newfound joy in exploring old, abandoned places, and she now knew where to look for any secrets it may hold. Small crevices, the walls, the floors, behind, under, around the furniture, and this was much bigger than a measly twoleg shack, so there was bound to be something interesting. After a moment of examining a particularly dusty cobweb, she looked up towards the spiraling stairs, clambering onto the first one and hopping up the rest, ignoring the creaks they made.
Nearing the top, there was a platform in between, giving way to a small, simple room with a few bits of old furniture. The stairs narrowed from here, and the light was coming from above. She took a few minutes to catch her breath, "what idiot twoleg decided they needed this many stairs — I still haven't recovered from running halfway across Summerclan," giving her mixed pelt a little shake to rid herself of the access debris that seemed to be falling from the ceiling, she continued, having to step higher as the stairs grew taller nearer the open air at the top. The entire thing would have been enclosed in glass, had one of the windows not been shattered. The light was out of service. But she was taken by the view, clear and tall, stretching further than she had ever been able to see. The ocean stretched miles longer now, and everything looked so miniscule.
"This is so cool!" Her voice raised in excitement, and she turned to grin at Sunstar, "what are you planning to do with this?"
Sunstar couldn't grasp the concept of not being lavished in luxuries. A roof over your head, steady flow of prey to be had, even if you yourself didn't contribute that day- the draw of it for others simply mystified her, but she watched as Sunfreckle explored the crevices and crannies, craning forward to see if she unveiled something intriguing. There were all sorts of knickknacks to be found, most rusted over or washed out gildings, and other half-ravaged things she dared not to touch. Treasures to some, she was sure, but she had no use for these faded trinkets.
By the time the pair of them reached the top, Sunstar was practically jumping from step to step and panted miserably, her body racked by exhaustive aches. The openness here comforted her enough that she could sink down and rest, watch a flock of birds fly past, before rising to her paws once again and crossing to the busted out window. The wind whistled against it, and, leaning over it, Sunstar was greeted by a treacherous drop that simultaneously sank her stomach and filled her with a rush of adrenaline. If she stepped out into the air, would she just lose one life or all of them, reduced to stardust crashing in the surf?
She pulled back before she could be tempted further by the impulse, flicking an ear to the question. "It's incredible up here," she agreed, not deigning to answer right away, "I bet if we were here on a nicer day, we could see the coral under the water." She followed Sunfreckle's eyes across the vastness of the sea. "Do you think there's something out there? Something grander than SummerClan?" The thought of it puzzled her. While many cats were stricken by the same wanderlust, venturing out to the other clans and enamored by the cultural shifts, Sunstar had always been satisfied right where she was. She knew every inch of the land because it had always belonged to her just as she belonged to it, immune to the temptation to want something else, yet now, certifiably in charge of this wild kingdom of hers and gazing past the sea she'd almost died in, she couldn't help but to wonder what more there was. A side effect of being used to having it all was never knowing where it stopped.
Instead of sitting down, or showing any signs that she was tired at all except for a slowing, laboured breath, she pressed up against one of the intact windows, digging her forehead into the cool glass and staring out to sea. The waves were rough when standing right next to them, but being up so high made them look almost calming. It was a good thing Sunfreckle wasn't scared of heights. When Sunstar spoke, she didn't crane her head to look, only continued to stare in wonderment.
Do you think there's something out there? She purred, "of course. I swear once I saw a piece of land … or a rock — but, generally, you could walk anywhere in any direction and there's always going to be something there." She shrugged, sighed wistfully, finally tore her gaze away and towards the flame-point she-cat.
"I've always wanted to see it," and she gave a nervous laugh, because she had always felt a little stupid for talking about her want to see more; her parents had always told her she had enough right here. It was never the other clans she was drawn too, it had always been the world beyond. To satisfy the feelings, keep them at bay, she had taken to learning every little thing about Summerclan's territory, every little secret, places like the barn, the streams, the beach and the old buildings, every place herbs could grow, every birds nest. Anything. She couldn't recommend it enough, because it made her a little less scared of the world around her, more welcoming to mystery instead of shying away from it, but there had always been an apprehensiveness to anything outside of Summerclan.
"Where would you go?" And would you stay? was the unspoken rhetoric that followed. "What would you most like to see?"
Doefreckle spoke of highlands and Devotedcrow reminisced over desert heat, though those places felt faraway- everything did. Sunstar held stock in the tangible senses, the feel of temperate sand beneath her feet and floral-scented meadows cloying against her nose. Places that sounded so unforgiving didn't endear her, though she could detect the wistful notes in Sunfreckle's mew, pondering over that and the recent reminder of the other's previous absence. There was an indecipherable shine behind her eyes, the gears churning thoughts over and over, but she wasn't ready to broach them yet, even as they poised themselves on her tongue.
"I'd only want to stand on top of the clouds. When we were apprentices, Bubbie and I would go off to the farms when the sheep would be out and jump into their fleece. I always wanted to know if clouds would be softer or not, what it'd be like to be above them," she murmured, her own voice softening with insurmountable fondness for the carefree days of their youth, when the worst of her worries were whether clouds felt like sheep's wool.
She pondered the question for a moment, because there was a million places she wanted to see. She sat down, turned again to look out the window, more relaxed now, eyes hooded and content, tail resting idly around her paws.
"I've always wondered where the birds go when they migrate — I used to wake up at the crack of dawn just to hear them, and my sister hated it because I always woke her up with me," she laughed, though regretted mentioning it at all when she felt a small prickle of grief, something deep down and usually ignored. She winced, moved on quickly, "but really, imagining that anything was possible, I'd like to live in the coral reef. They're so colourful," she leaned forward slightly, staring down at the dark waves that she had been in only days before, but if she could admire the beauty of it, she could forget the feeling of it dragging at her fur.
She glanced back at Sunstar, "I think the clouds are a good choice, I like to imagine they feel like sheep. I bet the sun is real pretty from above." Their mood had settled into more of a comfortable one, presumably the walk up the stairs had taken the energy out of them, but maybe it was just the fact their original tension had been cut.
Maybe the relief that surged through her as Sunfreckle moved past the melancholic memory made her a worse leader, but Sunstar could live with that for now, willing to let the opportunity to question it lapse and instead offering a small laugh at it. "Living in the coral, huh? Do you think the fish have their own version of clans down there? Are we gods to them?" That thought prompted another laugh, Sunstar amused at the absurdity of intelligent thoughts hosted within the fish, the same creatures that practically threw themselves into a predator's paws.
There was something especially somber about the mention of her sister now, when neither of them wanted to bring it up, and so she was just as relieved as it was rushed away, squinted her eyes at the dark waves in hopes of catching glimpses of the colourful coral that lay beneath it. Are we gods to them? She laughed, almost silently.
"Gods? Why, I think we'd be rather cruel ones — I caught a chub the other day and had it for breakfast, and last time I checked I don't think gods eat their subjects." Perhaps she should have asked Sun God when she had the chance.
Sunfreckle watched as her breath fogged the window, and lifted her paw to make a faded mark. She tilted her head slightly, the strangeness of Sunstar's original question dawning on her at last, "why do you ask? Is the leader stress that bad? Oh, Starclan, I don't know how you do it — I think I'd break! I mean, maybe that's obvious," she kept her tone light, though there was a hint of concern, of understanding.
Sunfreckle's assertion roused more amusement from the young leader, her eyes twinkling. "Do we have irrefutable proof that Gods don't eat their subjects?" But her laughter was cut short. Is leader stress that bad? There was genuine emotion rooted in it, and it was a gentle, reaching offer of support. Sunstar just wasn't sure how much she could lean into it. Just hours before, she had forgiven the warrior for her betrayal- an act of treason, some might say, had she known exactly the breed of snake Aspenstar was- but that didn't erase it completely from existence. While disloyal and treasonous didn't strike her as some of Sunfreckle's characteristics, she was still getting a measure of the she-cat for herself. If she told her everything she felt on the inside, she would be exposing herself to treachery.
No, she needed time for the recent wounds to heal before she opened herself up to another strike.
A capricious glow sparkling behind the blue of her eyes, she breezily dismissed the concern. "Receiving lives, seeing what the other side is like for the first time, it just made me curious, is all." She paused, but not long enough to dwell on it. "For the record, Sunfreckle, I think you shouldn't be so hard on yourself. My Papi trusted you implicitly as one of his medicine cats. I don't think you would break as easily as you say you would. After all," she hedged, voice soft and gentle, "a weaker cat would have left the clan after Aspenstar exposed them."
Sunstar had a point — personally, Sunfreckle had only seen the Sun God once, and he didn't exactly seem like the type to not eat anyone.
Receiving lives, seeing what the other side is like for the first time, it just made me curious, is all. She nodded in understanding. When she was younger, when her parents tried to set her on the path of leader before she showed interest in medicine, she always wondered what having more than one life was like. Would it eliminate the dread that came with passing time, or would it amplify it? What did it feel like to receive them? Sunfreckle decided not to ask.
At the words, she could only offer a hesitant chuckle, a quiet thing, "I suppose so, yeah," her tail twitched and she glanced back at Sunstar, "you know, one time he said I was 'the best we've ever had!'" She gave her voice a gruff note, like she was imitating him, "but I don't know if that was just to impress the Springclan leader. . ." she laughed again.
A weaker cat would have left the clan after Aspenstar exposed them. She said nothing at first, thinking over the words. Perhaps it was true. Her time in occupied Summerclan had been draining, terrifying, and despite trying her best to help their revolution succeed, the guilt had dragged on her. Even then she didn't learn, for it didn't take long before she snuck out in broad daylight, running around with a stranger she had met that very moment. She wondered if, eventually, that would come back to haunt her too.
"I guess so," she said finally, "I guess that'll take … time, to get through my head," she smiled faintly.