Roots of Earth ~ A Ninjago Fa...

By LordTigress

1.9K 74 2

What would it take for you to face the darkest parts of yourself? Set just before the events of Hands of Time... More

Introduction
Episode 65/a: A Forgotten Enemy
Prologue
Chapter 1: Fangirls, Fast-food, and Felines
Chapter 2: Midnight Meeting and Memories Unbidden
Chapter 3: Little Secrets
Chapter 4: Lost Friend and Forgotten Family
Chapter 5: A New Side
Chapter 6: Jay's Investigation
Chapter 7: Ambush and Abduction
Episode 66/a: A Game of Cat and Mouse
Chapter 8: The Dark Sleep
Chapter 9: The Second Ambush
Chapter 10: Fleeing the Felines and Spilling the Beans
Chapter 11: Meeting Jake
Chapter 12: Whisker's Revelation
Chapter 13: Who Says Cats Can't Swim?
Chapter 14: Travelers Reunited
Chapter 15: The Water Ninja's Nightmare
Chapter 16: Figuring It Out
Episode 67/a: Cat Out of the Bag
Chapter 17: The Sleeping Strangers
Chapter 18: Catching the Mole
Chapter 19: A Little Lie and a Little Leaf
Chapter 20: Entering Eagle Talon
Chapter 21: Little Leaf's Unnerving Form
Chapter 22: A Reluctant Alliance
Chapter 23: What They Said and What She Heard
Chapter 24: Shapeshifting
Chapter 25: A Storm of Emotion
Chapter 26: Rescue Mission
Chapter 27: All Paws on Deck
Chapter 28: That Sinking Feeling
Chapter 29: The Never-Ending Nightmares
Episode 68/a: Echoes of the Past
Chapter 30: Matilda's Memory
Chapter 31: Story of the Red Battle
Chapter 32: A Point of View
Chapter 33: The Ambush
Chapter 34: Familiar Faces
Chapter 35: Little Leaf's Mission
Chapter 36: Crossing the Gorge
Chapter 37: Jay's Terror
Chapter 38: OWCH.14
Chapter 39: In Ronin's Shop
Episode 69/a: A Cat's Nine Lives
Chapter 40: The Star Pool's Message
Chapter 41: Breaking the Ice
Chapter 42: Getting In
Chapter 43: Mission: Uncomfortable
Chapter 44: Thing 1 and Thing 2
Chapter 45: The Fur Flies
Chapter 46: Black's Blood's Unearthly Scheme
Chapter 47: A Terrible Trip Down Memory Lane
Chapter 48: The Rescue Teams
Chapter 49: The Sight
Chapter 50: The Lying, the Witch, and the Werecat
Chapter 51: Beneath Earth and Stone
Chapter 52: A Narrow Escape
Chapter 53: Dangerous Games
Episode 70/a: The Awakening
Chapter 54: The Next Morning
Chapter 55: The Burdens Grow Heavier
Chapter 56: The Awakening
Chapter 57: Nya's Promise Fulfilled
Chapter 58: Worlds Away
Chapter 59: Back in the Moon Tribe
Chapter 60: The Ninjas' First Lesson
Chapter 61: Skylor in the Cold and Misako in the Dream
Chapter 62: Return of the Sight
Episode 71/a: A Tale of Two Kitties
Chapter 63: The Name of a Father
Chapter 64: Ronin's Memory, Eagle Talon's Worry, and Liana's Night
Chapter 65: Meeting the World of Pawreles and Skylor on the Loose
Chapter 66: Ronin Meets Dr. Shadow
Chapter 67: The Mind-Bending Session
Chapter 68: Mëekies, Igloos, and Nightmares
Chapter 69: Return to Birchwood and Liana and Nya's Talk
Chapter 70: The Duel
Chapter 71: Looking For Zane
Chapter 72: Searching for Kohuru
Chapter 73: "Only Us"
Chapter 74: The Vixen
Chapter 75: Escape Across the Tundra
Chapter 76: At the House of Lou Brookstone
Chapter 77: Raining Cats and Dogs
Chapter 78: The Unexpected Allies
Chapter 79: The Offspring of Brookstone
Episode 72/a: Dreamcatcher
Chapter 80: The First Encounter
Chapter 81: Red Blood, Blue Fire
Chapter 82: Fugitives From Justice
Chapter 83: Retribution
Chapter 84: The Pawreleser's Guide to Avoiding Unicorns
Chapter 85: Lou's Story
Chapter 86: The Fire Mage
Chapter 87: Oxstone Village
Chapter 88: Flight of the Fire Mage
Chapter 89: A New Prophecy
Chapter 90: Fire, Earth, and Lightning
Chapter 92: True Brothers
Chapter 93: A Happy Ending
Episode 73/a: Dark Lightning
Chapter 94: Fall of the Master of Lightning
Chapter 95: Garagan of Jëmlen
Chapter 96: The Dark Sleep Strikes Back
Chapter 97: Ninjago City
Chapter 98: Getting into Jëmlen
Chapter 99: Lightning Streak's Stand
Chapter 100: Sunset
Episode 74/a: Son of Earth, Daughter of Darkness
Chapter 101: Lightning Strikes
Chapter 102: The Great Battle
Chapter 103: The Great Battle, Part 2
Chapter 104: Fallen
Chapter 105: The Great Battle, Part 3
Chapter 106: Nine Lives
Episode 75/a: Son of Earth, Daughter of Darkness - Part 2
Chapter 107: "Death, be not Proud"
Chapter 108: The Heir of the Moonstone
Chapter 109: Earthquake
Chapter 110: Return of the Son of Fire
Chapter 111: "Sister Only; a Broken, Scattered Heart"
Chapter 112: Roots of Earth
Chapter 113: Reunion
Chapter 114: A Fallen Warrior
Chapter 115: Always Gold
Epilogue

Chapter 91: The Stealth Mission

6 0 0
By LordTigress

Stealth and secrecy were the most important elements the ninja had to keep in mind the next morning. While Kenzo and his family went about their daily business, so as to not draw any unwanted attention from the Moon Tribe patrol cats, the group of teenagers spent the majority of their day quietly in the house, namely the stuffy attic. Once Shiro had gone to work in the mines and Suki and her children had gone to work in the fields, Lloyd assigned himself to scout out the quarry, after attaining a map from Shiro.

"We need to know just how many warrior cats are out there, what the mines and warehouses look like and where they're located, and how the warrior cats work," Lloyd had announced that morning, once everyone had awaken and eaten. "Before we make a plan of getting in there and attacking, we need to know what exactly we're getting into."

Jay wasn't very pleased with the prospect of having to lie around the house all day being still and quiet. "Why can't we just wing it?" he protested. "Just drop in, kick butt, save the slaves, ta-da! Mission accomplished!"

"The last time we winged it—" Lloyd stuttered, "winged it— wing it— the last time we winged?"

"'Wung' it?" Jay offered.

Cole groaned impatiently. "Gah—'the last time we did that'."

"The last time we did that," Lloyd said, "it was when we were trying to recuse Little Leaf from Dog Bone. We all remember how that ended."

Everyone grimaced. Cole briefly touched his fingers to his face. Little Leaf blushed and stared at the floor.

For the sake of secrecy, Lloyd decreed he would be the only one going to scout out the area. This was immediately met with protests, and it was soon decided that Zane would join him—he was the most insistent about coming with Lloyd to see the quarry. Although everyone was thinking the same thing, nobody said a word about his uncharacteristic persistence in being involved in this mission as much as possible—not in front of him, anyway.

It was still damp and cool outside when Zane and Lloyd slipped out of the cottage. Donning their face-masks and nodding to each other, Lloyd led the way—having Shiro's map—to the quarry. Treading quickly and quietly, they kept to the line of trees that circled one area of the town. It was mostly open plains from then on, but thankfully, very few patrol cats were out, and the farmers laboring in their fields paid the ninja no mind—or, perhaps, Suki had spread the word and everyone was helping the ninja keep a low profile.

Lloyd and Zane made their way out of the village and headed north, over a range of rocky hills. The dark, dismal little town of Oxstone soon disappeared. The sky overhead matched its empty grayness. The dry dust and rocks of the surrounding hills completed the forbidding look. The air was chilly, and Zane caught Lloyd shivering and rubbing his arms whenever they slowed their light run.

The journey from the village to the quarry took about fifteen minutes at a jog, although it took less than that time before Zane started to detect the smell of smoke. Not crisp, wood-fire-smoke—this one was a more dank, oily stink to it. Then he could see on the horizon a thick, dark plume rising steadily into the sky. A few minutes later, he started to hear the sounds: the clang of metal. The grinding of wheels and machinery. The harsh voices of men.

The two ninja crept with every shadow. Boulders sticking up here and there on the hillside provided ample cover as they neared the source of the noise. Stepping lightly—making sure not to send any loose pebbles rolling—they peered over the rise of a steep hill. Zane caught his breath.

A large quarry sprawled out before them. To the northwest of where Lloyd and Zane were hiding, they could see a large tunnel that had been blasted into a naked gray mountainside. Scores of men in ragged, dust-stained overalls trudged to and fro this entrance of what appeared to be the clearstone mines. Many carted wheelbarrows in and out of the gaping hole; it was hard to see the cargo of these wheelbarrows from the southern side, but from what Zane could tell, they were many clumps of gray rock. If there were precious minerals among them, he couldn't see. Some clumps were so large, they had to be carried out in a mule or ox-drawn cart. Others of these large carts delivered massive crates.

Several large warehouses took up the west end of the massive quarry. Each one two to three stories high, they looked to be made of a funny jumble of wood and metal clashed together hastily. Large, dirty windows interrupted the pattern here and there. The biggest of these warehouses sat the closest to the quarry, and it was there the people went in and out, hauling minerals, carts, and tools. A couple of smaller shacks sitting close to it appeared to be storage sheds for equipment and for the animals. The other two warehouses, however, sat several hundred feet apart from the largest, and it was there Zane first noticed the patrols of lion-sized cats prowling around.

"Moon Tribe warriors," he hissed to Lloyd.

Lloyd's head shifted ever-so-slightly to the left, but he otherwise did not move.

Zane scanned the scene. "At least a dozen of them, although I am sure there are more."

Lloyd peered at the smaller warehouses. A pair of nekomata were pacing idly by the large front doors. "It looks like they're guarding something in those other warehouses. I wonder what it could be."

"Indeed..." Zane's eyes narrowed as he scanned the buildings. He wondered what—or who—was being guarded within those doors.

"Zane?"

"Hm?" Zane shook his head and turned back to Lloyd.

"Come on," his friend was hissing, backing away. "Time to report back. I think I've got an idea."

Zane hesitated, then followed. He told himself he would be back soon.

* * *

It was amazing how quickly a room could stink of B.O. with five people hanging around in it since last night. Liana wrinkled her nose against the smell. She and the rest of the ninja had only slept here in the attic and been sitting around for a few hours this morning, but already it was feeling cramped and stuffy in here.

For the time being, Liana stationed herself at one end of the room, where she had located a window. She'd carefully cracked it so that a small breeze could come in, and it was there she sat in the corner. To pass the time, she alternated between restyling her ponytail, practicing some exercises with her nunchucks, and playing with her necklace. She could hear Jay, Nya, and Little Leaf together at the other end of the room now, chattering on about that movie they'd watched—"Starfarers", as she recalled.

Somebody was walking toward her. Already identifying the set of heavy footsteps, Liana felt her heart give a nervous jump. "Hey, Cole."

"Hey." He sat down beside her. She felt oddly happy that he'd chosen to sit with her. Hastily, she tucked the smooth crystal pendant of her necklace back into her shirt; she preferred to keep it safe from breaking in any combat.

"So, ah..." She attempted to make some conversation. "When will Lloyd and Zane be back?"

"Soon, hopefully," he responded.

"Right." She nodded knowingly, feeling awkward. She and Cole hadn't really spoken to one another since last night, when she'd held his hand. It'd felt perfect then, but looking back, she realized it was kind of weird and stupid of her. Sure, she'd just woken up from that strange Dark Sleep nightmare and had been scared, but still...

"How're you doing?" Cole's voice jolted her out of her thoughts, and she felt herself blush.

"What?"

"How are you doing? After last night," he repeated. "The nightmare...?"

"Oh! Oh, oh, yeah, yeah..." She fiddled with her nunchucks again. "Um, yeah, I'm OK. It wasn't as bad this time." But Eagle Talon was in it, and he killed you, she wanted to add. Yet she held her tongue. Some horrors she should keep only to herself.

Cole sounded skeptical. "You sounded really scared..."

"I'm fine now. I slept better after that." Impulsively, she felt for his hand and laid her own upon it. "Thank you."

She felt him stiffen at the touch, but he didn't pull away. "Oh— OK." He fell quiet—had her ears been deceiving her, or had his last sentence sounded shy?

A brief silence settled between them before Cole ventured, "So, how's that sight bow been working for you?"

From then on, Liana and Cole made idle conversation with one another that gradually felt more comfortable. Before she knew it, Liana found herself completely at ease as she talked with him on varying subjects; weapons, the uniforms, what training exercises they wanted to do once they this mission was over—and then, "normal people" subjects: how they grew up, what school was like for them, and even some funny stories from that period of their lives. Cole sounded relaxed, too, as he got used to talking. It helped that he made a few jokes that had her laughing out loud—earning demands from Nya, Jay, and Little Leaf as to know what was so funny.

Secretly, Liana was afraid one or all of them would come over to join in the conversation. Yet, oddly, the others seemed to decide to leave her and Cole alone. Liana wondered if Nya hadn't given some sort of sign to Jay and Leaf to not interfere. Thus she and Cole spent the few hours that passed like this: chatting amiably, occasionally laughing, and both secretly realizing how better their friendship might have been if they'd taken the chance to forgive and forget earlier.

However, most long conversations have a habit of transitioning—one way or another—to a deeper or darker subject, and as it turned out, this one was no different. Finally Liana was able to summon the courage to ask Cole, "How are you doing with— with the Eagle Talon and Black Blood... thing?"

He fell quiet. Liana's mouth ran dry. Did I push too far? Immediately her stomach began to squirm with guilt. Too soon. It'd been too soon for her to remind him of that. Perhaps she could—

"I'm OK, I guess," he muttered in a low voice. "Getting over it."

Now that she'd already brought his mind to it, she might as well commit. Swallowing, she asked, "What will you do if you see them again?"

His voice sounded cold. "I'll show them that they can't push around a ninja."

"Even though they're your—?" She stopped herself, but not in time.

He hesitated. "It doesn't matter how they're related to me, Liana. They're trying to hurt Ninjago; they're the enemy. My real family is the team."

The sentence itself ended technically optimistically, but Liana was still disturbed by the icy note in his tone. "Cole... you don't have to—"

She was interrupted by the sound of a door opening and footsteps trotting in. Both Cole and Liana jumped to their feet, as did the others. She reached for her nunchucks, but Lloyd's voice broke the tension: "It's us, relax! We're back."

"How'd it go?" Jay demanded. "What'd you see?"

"We saw enough to form a plan on the way back," Zane responded grimly. "I will send a report to Master Wu, then we will tell you. We are going to ambush the mines tonight, and we are going to save everyone in the village."

* * *

Each day at noon the workers were allowed to take an hour-long break to return home for lunch, but they were expected to be back promptly within that hour. After today's lunch break, Shiro returned to the quarry leading a mule hauling a cart. The nekomata sentries stopped him at the entranceway.

"What's that you're hauling?" a burly tom demanded. He glared at the few large crates that were stacked atop one another in the cart.

The mule snorted and sidestepped uneasily when the cats drew near. Shiro patted the animal reassuringly on the neck and shrugged to the guards. "Stuff for the new hose. We came across a clump of the shiny ore, but it's all stuck together in a pretty big gravel deposit. We're thinking we can use the hose to spray off the outer crusts and soften—"

"Fox dung, all right!" the tom snorted, rolling his eyes. "I asked what was in the boxes, not a lecture on what it's used for. Get on already."

Shiro nodded meekly and tugged on the mule's lead. The mule was only too happy to oblige, as its nervous gaze never left the enormous cats glaring at it. Not until they left the Moon Tribe warriors a few hundred yards behind them did the mule—and Shiro—relax.

* * *

They hit a hard bump. The crate shuddered, and Little Leaf barely stifled a startled mew.

"Shh," Zane patted her briefly on the head. "We are almost there."

Zane and Little Leaf were scrunched up together in one of the large crates Shiro was hauling into the quarry. Earlier the ninja had agreed that they should be the ones to infiltrate the quarry first because Little Leaf would know how the patrols and habits of the Moon Tribe warriors worked and because Zane often had the best tactical plans when found in a tight spot—and also because he insisted on being the one to go.

At the moment, Zane was locked up in the darkness of the crate, being hauled across the quarry. Little Leaf was in her bakeneko form and sat in his lap. She had been eager earlier to join him, but now he wondered if she was having second thoughts. Her white and calico fur was bristling all over, and she dug her claws into Zane's thighs whenever they hit a bump. To her credit, she stayed quiet, and they were able to get past the guards undetected.

Finally, the cart stopped rolling. Little Leaf looked up at Zane questioningly, but he only shook his head and made a small "shush" motion. A few minutes passed, in which he guessed Shiro was unhitching the mule and putting it elsewhere.

Outside the crate they could hear the clamor of noise: the clash of metal against stone, wheels, boulders, and pulleys creaking, and men grunting and occasionally barking orders to one another. Every once in a while a mule would bray or a nekomata would growl. Heat pressed in on Zane within the stuffy crate. He was sure if he had been in his original nindroid body, he would have been sweating figurative buckets.

Both he and Little Leaf jumped when Shiro's voice suddenly came by Zane's head. "Stay put 'till I come get you." They could hear him shuffling uneasily outside the crate. "It'll be dark soon. Just sit tight."

They heard his footsteps retreat, and they were left alone.

* * *

"I need to pee," Little Leaf complained.

Zane suppressed a sigh. By his calculation, it was the eighth time she had proclaimed that fact since Shiro had left, which was two hours and fifteen minutes ago. He was a naturally patient person, but being cramped up in the box for a couple of hours with a hairy cat who refused to sit still nor stop complaining wasn't making it easy. By this time, the daylight had just about completely faded.

"Please remain quiet, Little Leaf," he hissed. "It should not be long now."

"But I really need to go!" She fidgeted again; this time weaving herself back and forth between Zane's legs. It wasn't the first time she had done it, and now a plentiful serving of white, ginger, and black hairs coated his pants.

He set his mouth in a straight line and proceeded to ignore her. He stiffened, however, when the silence of the evening—now that most of the workers had gone—was broken by the sound of footsteps upon gravel. They were nearing the crate.

Zane leaned over and jabbed at Leaf's shoulder with his hand. She whirled around at him incredulously, but fell quiet when he motioned for her to be quiet and gestured his thumb behind him, signaling that he could hear something outside. The calico crouched down. In the darkness, Zane could just barely see the outline of her feline shape sitting between his legs.

The footsteps stopped right by Zane's head. He held his breath and fingered the pair of shurikens that were attached to his belt. If that was an enemy, they were in for a big surprise. He silently willed Little Leaf to stay still and silent.

Something rustled above their heads. A noisy creak broke the silence. Little Leaf voiced a startled hiss and crawled beneath Zane's arm when the lid was removed. Dim lamplight poured in, and Zane blinked several times, adjusting to the light.

"Shh." Shiro gestured to them. "Come on."

Zane felt the metal joints of his legs ache in protest when he stood up; they'd been half-folded for so long they were now stiff and sore. He shook off the feeling and clambered out of the crate, hefting Little Leaf in his arms. Once on the ground, he put her down.

"Put these on." Shiro thrusted some gray, dusty clothes into Zane's grasp. "It's not much of a disguise, but at least if you're seen, you could be mistaken for one of us miners."

Quickly, Zane slipped a long-sleeved shirt and gray overalls over his gi and slapped a dark cap over his head.

"I'll tell the others that you got through safely." The older man slapped Zane's shoulder and looked him in the eye. "Good luck."

"Thank you," Zane said. Shiro nodded and turned away, quickly disappearing into the dark shadows of the evening. Zane knew he was on his way back to his house, where his family and the rest of the ninja team waited.

"Ready?" He looked down at Little Leaf.

Her forked tails twitched back and forth nervously. "I think so."

Slowly, silently, Zane and Little Leaf made their away across the quarry; they used objects to hide behind in case anybody from the warehouse was watching them. From the open area where the paths led into the mines, they crept from shadow to shadow, stepping carefully. Little Leaf was little more than a white-and-dark-patched shape drifting with Zane. Frequently she'd stop and sniff the air, then gesture with her tails that the way was clear. The minutes passed by slowly, but they were drawing closer and closer to the warehouses—and that was their destination.

Many workers had stayed behind to pull the night shift. The musty windows of the warehouses were illuminated with a forbidding red glow, as if something within were on fire. However, there were no sounds of alarm, merely the grumble and groan of machines and the occasional harsh voice that those outside could only attribute to an irascible Moon Tribe member. People were still working within, Zane detected.

At one point, Little Leaf abruptly darted away. Zane stiffened and whipped his gaze around his surroundings, but he couldn't see what she'd run from. When he turned back to the cat, she was a hundred feet away in a small open shed, crawling around in a pile of ashes.

"Little Leaf!" he hissed. "What are you doing?"

Now coated in a thin layer of dark gray soot, she padded back to him. "I'm hoping this will hide my scent. The warriors might get suspicious if they smell another cat nearby."

"Do I need to hide my scent?" he asked.

She shook her head. "You just smell like metal. You fit right in."

They drew closer to the warehouses. They stopped beneath the shadow of another shed, this one with a water trough. About two hundred feet of open dirt sat between them and the large doors to the largest warehouse. The sides of the massive building were cast in ink-black shadows, and the rocky hills in the background added to the darkness. Quietly, Zane adjusted his vision settings.

There. If he'd been a human, he wouldn't have seen them. Two large, muscular nekomata stood by the doors, where the night shadows were at their thickest point. One was ginger, the other was sand-colored. They sat up, awake and alert.

Slowly Zane drew back behind the shed. "All right, I believe I have a plan. Little Leaf, you will have to sneak as quietly as possible past those bushes to come around on the werecats on their right. You will walk up and pretend to be a fellow guard, coming to relieve them of their shift. While you distract them, I will make my way to their left side and ambush them. If I am swift enough, we can both—"

Little Leaf interrupted his strategizing by picking up a rock and throwing it. It clattered several hundred feet away against metal, and glass could be heard shattering.

The nekomata guards at the doors leapt to their paws and raced away toward the sound. Their retreating growls quickly faded away as they disappeared.

Leaf looked up at Zane and grinned.

"Or, we could do that," he acceded.

They wasted no time in running to the doors. Without looking back, Zane shoved one of them open and entered. Little Leaf was close on his heels, and he quietly shut the door behind him. Then he turned around.

The warehouse looked even more enormous from the inside—not to mention, more menacing. The dark ceiling rose high above their heads like a yawning mouth of a giant. Fire hissed and glowed from differing areas of the single-room building. Black, spindly catwalks made up the upper levels, often crisscrossing several hundred feet above the ground. Dark, looming shapes of machines, boilers, grinders, forges, and who knows what else crowded the ground floor.

The fires gleamed off of these metal figures, shimmering like something from a fiery nightmare. Steam and smoke alike hissed and belched from some machines and drifted up to the ceiling. Zane could just barely make out several large skylights standing out from the slanted ceiling.

Dozens of sweating, soot-stained workers bustled about in their grimy overalls as they tended to the contraptions. Some were purifying clearstone from dusty rocks with picks while others polished the extracted stones and collected them in large baskets. At the far end of the room, somethings that resembled iron bowls the size of cars held glowing pools of melted clearstone; beneath these melting pots large fires blazed loudly, constantly keeping the liquid minerals boiling. Some people were in the middle of tipping one of these pots over to drip the liquids into cases that had shapes resembling sword blades. Many more were doing work Zane didn't have time analyze.

The clash of metal, roar of fire, groan of engines and hiss of steam nearly overwhelmed him. His gaze drifted up to the ceiling-hung catwalks that arched above the workers' heads; there he could catch sight of feline figures pacing idly through the screen of smoke. Sometimes a cat would peer down at what the workers were doing, as if ensuring they weren't up to anything they weren't supposed to. Then it would flick its tails and move on. Every once in a while, the glow of their eyes flashed against the darkness.

"How are we supposed to get the rest of the ninja in here?" Little Leaf muttered. "Lloyd wanted us to find a way to let them in from the inside, but I don't really see a way..."

Zane peered through the dim light and scanned his surroundings. After a minute, he spotted something. "There. At the far end of the right wall." He gestured. "I believe I see a small door. It is set apart from the rest of the workers a bit, so perhaps we can let the ninja in from there."

"I can't see it," she complained.

"Follow me," he ordered. "If we can get past the guards, I am sure we can make it to that door without any trouble. Just try not to be seen."

If she tried to protest, he didn't hear it. He deftly slipped into the scattered throng of machines and workbenches where the people slaved. His disguise provided ample camouflage among the workers, and Little Leaf slipped easily among the shadows.

Together they passed by the smoking machines and hissing forges. Zane pulled his cap down to somewhat shield his metallic face. A few of the workers glanced at him when he walked past them, but no one seemed to take any real notice. Thankfully it was rather dark and hard to see in the warehouse.

As they neared the small side door that Zane could just barely make out several hundred yards away, he realized that within the right wall, what appeared to be a large hangar had been built hastily within the interior of the warehouse. He couldn't see what was inside, only that a large room was opening up to the side. Deciding it could be worth checking out, he neared it.

He drew closer—a little more cautious now, since he was leaving the safe bustle of the workers among the machinery. A quick glance upward told him that none of the feline guards seemed to be paying any attention to him from the ceiling-hung catwalks.

He picked up the pace until he stood before the entrance of the hangar. He scanned his surroundings again in case he was being watched, then looked into the room. He gasped.

Several dozen rows of bulky motorcycles were lined up together—although "motorcycles" didn't quite seem to fit the description. They looked more like weapons on wheels than bikes. The frames were large and bulky, fenders thick with green and brown-patterned armor. The wheels were enormous, obviously made for rough terrain. Zane felt his stomach sink when his gaze roved over the sleek rocket launchers equipped to the sides of each bike.

"What is it?" Little Leaf joined him. "I thought we were— oh." She stared at the motorcycles.

"Apparently your tribe has been evolving in its technology," Zane murmured.

She cast him a startled look. "I— I didn't know. I don't think any cats knew—or many, anyway..."

"It seems that Black Blood keeps many secrets from her tribe when convenient," he muttered.

Something rustled from the hangar. On instinct, Zane whipped around and crouched down behind a couple of fuel barrels. Hastily Leaf joined him. Carefully, they both peered at the hangar from their hiding place.

A tuxedo-pelted nekomata entered the hangar from an outer door. As he walked in, he transformed into a human state: a young man with dark eyes and a short mop of black hair. The werecat turned to a workbench and—to Zane's puzzlement—tied a leather work apron over his outfit and slid matching goggles over his head with remarkable familiarity.

As far as Zane knew, none of the Moon Tribe had ever taken to wearing human clothing, aside from Eagle Talon when he'd been disguised. He and Leaf watched as the man brought out a tool box and began rummaging through it. Whereas the Moon Tribe guards acted stiff and irritable nearby, this one acted comfortable in his environment—clearly, he'd been here for a while.

"Do you know who that is?" Zane whispered.

Leaf's eyes narrowed in concentration. "No... wait— no, yes! I think I do. Spark... Pelt. Spark Pelt. Yeah." She blinked. "Wow. I haven't seen him in a while. I almost didn't recognize his scent. He was one of the cats who'd been sent away seasons ago for some 'special duties' that no cat would tell us kits about."

"Hm." Zane's gaze roved away from the hangar and to the side door. It was so close... if only Spark Pelt would turn his back to the entrance for a few seconds.

"Hi, Spark Pelt!" a new voice called cheerfully. Zane ducked again when another werecat entered, this time from the entrance by which Zane and Leaf were hiding. This one was in the shape of a lean teenage girl whose dark brown hair reached only to her shoulders. A thick leather baldric was slung over her shoulders from which a sleek clearstone sword dangled at her back. A couple of dainty bracelets were wrapped around her wrists, from which hung some small gray objects that looked suspiciously like animal bones.

The young man looked up from the toolbox. "Hello, Wolf Paw," he responded with a smile. "Done with your patrol?"

"It's so boring," the girl groaned, although Zane thought he detected good humor in her tone. Her back was to him and Little Leaf. "I decided to quit early. Don't tell my mentor, though."

Spark Pelt chuckled. "Your secret's safe with me." He continued rummaging through the toolbox.

Wolf Paw cocked her head and joined him at the wooden table. "What'cha doin'?"

"Looking for the socket wrench. Loud Bird was being a mouse-brain and decided to try to ride one of these bikes off a ramp he made out of cardboard boxes," Spark Pelt muttered, still pushing things around in the box. "He ended up halfway through the kitchen wall with one wheel nearly wrenched out of the front fender. I just spent the whole afternoon trying to put that bike back together."

Wolf Paw laughed. "I saw that happen. That was so funny, Loud Bird stumbling out of that wreck with his fur all bristled up and dusty from tearing down the wall!" She cocked her head again. "I didn't really understand the rest of what you said, though."

"You'll get used to the human terms we use around here." He glanced up at her. "How long have you been here?"

"About a month."

"Thought so." Spark Pelt seemed to be stifling a grin. "You're as small as a kit."

"Am not! You're not even much taller than me!" Her amber eyes widened indignantly.

"I'm kidding!" He held out his gloved hands in a defensive state, smiling gently. "It's not often we get young cats here, though. Especially students."

"Black Blood herself chose me for this assignment." Wolf Paw straightened up proudly. "She told my mentor that my hunting and stamina would do really well here, what with keeping the humans in line."

"I've seen you with the sword. You're pretty handy with it," he remarked.

The two werecats continued talking idly. Zane found himself wishing he could stay so he could learn more about the werecat who seemed to know enough about the human world to repair a damaged motorcycle, but they didn't have time for that. They are distracted. If I am going to get to the door, now is the time. Slowly, he stood up, keeping his eyes on the young werecats. Their backs were to him.

Stepping lightly, Zane stepped into the light and started for the door that stood a mere ten feet away. Little Leaf followed.

"Hey!"

He whirled around to find Wolf Paw glaring at him. "What are you doing? Get back to work—!" She peered closer at him, then gasped. "Wha—? He's made of metal!"

A startled voice rumbled from the catwalks. Zane felt his heart sink—but he wasn't about to back down so easily.

"Ice!" He shot a blast into the hangar.

Wolf Paw's eyes bulged in astonishment, yet she reacted quickly and dodged out of the way. Spark Pelt, on the other hand, was struck in the shoulder and thrown off his feet. The force flung him against the motorcycle closest to him with a loud crash added by his yowl of shock. He struggled to pick himself up, but found ice completely encasing his shoulder to his elbow.

"Help!" The word itself was pleading, but the way it came out of Wolf Paw was in a furious snarl. She yanked her sword out of her sheath and got into a fighting stance, amber eyes narrowed at Zane. "We're being attacked!"

Shouts rang above them. Feline figures raced toward them, growling. Within seconds they were becoming surrounded by the Moon Tribe warriors. Zane and Little Leaf shared a look of dismay.

"Ohh, mouse dung," they chorused together. 

Continue Reading

You'll Also Like

1.8K 70 11
In the bustling world of Ninjago, amidst the clash of elemental powers and the constant threat of dark forces, there exists a pair that is just tryin...
67 5 4
Kai; master of fire. Jay; master of lightning. Cole; master of earth. Zane; master of ice. And Haruki; master of change. These five plus the legendar...
3.5K 155 16
To be read after: https://www.wattpad.com/story/311274712-a-simple-apron-one-night-stand-book-2 How long can one go neglecting its own household? Kai...
303K 7.5K 25
(MY FIRST WRITING PROJECT, WILL CONSIST OF CRINGY WRITING + PLOT, SOME CHAPTERS ARE EDITED TO WORK BETTER. BUT, PLEASE BARE WITH ME, AS I HAVE MANAGE...