CONTENT WARNING: Talk of death. —— Space, click, or arrow keys. —— Next: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/1080940133/ Previous: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/1074577386/ First: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/843320692/ Refs: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/1077668748/ —— We all knew it was coming. —— Cast: - Stormlift [she/her] (tuxedo cat with many scars and orange eyes) - Daystar [he/him] (grey cat with a torn ear and yellow eyes) - Mistkit [he/him] (very light grey kit with almost white stripes)
No ads. I have a deal for you: You accept that this is a shorter chapter without complaint, and in exchange, I rebuild my buffer, so future chapters will be longer (30+ panels). And maybe even a bonus chapter here or there. Deal? Stormlift was a kittypet who got stuck in an electric fence outside of Windclan territory. Windclan didn’t have the resources to heal her, so Shadowclan took her in. In her healing process, then deputy Daybreak was greatly impressed by her resilience and strength, and ended up falling in love with her. The feeling was mutual, and soon after Daybreak became Daystar, they had a litter of Featherkit, Graykit, and Cloudkit. Daystar was a rather strict father and she was more relaxed, but both loved their kits dearly. Featherkit was closer to Daystar, whereas Cloudkit was closer to Stormlift, and Graykit was always rather independent. Daystar and Stormlift died within a few moons of each other. Daystar from sickness, and Stormlift from a fight with a coyote. They each gave Featherstar one of her nine lives. I actually like Stormlift’s design a lot. I might have to make her more plot relevant just to have an excuse to draw her more. I should also clarify, this chapter isn’t short because I ran out of time or anything. It’s sort because this is genuinely all this scene is, and I think it’s important to end the chapter on this. It genuinely took me a very long time to figure out how to best introduce this death without ruining anyone’s emotional state, and I think ending this chapter here and giving it a week before diving in deep on the topic of death is the best way to go about it.