Warrior Cat Clans 2 (WCC2 aka Classic) is a roleplay site inspired by the Warrior series by Erin Hunter. Whether you are a fan of the books or new to the Warrior cats world, WCC2 offers a diverse environment with over a decade’s worth of lore for you - and your characters - to explore. Join us today and become a part of our ongoing story!
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11.06.2022 The site has been transformed into an archive. Thank you for all the memories here!
Here on Classic we understand that sometimes life can get difficult and we struggle. We may need to receive advice, vent, know that we are not alone in our difficult times, or even just have someone listen to what's going on in our lives. In light of these times, we have created the support threads below that are open to all of our members at any time.
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Post by achromatic on Jun 3, 2021 19:48:06 GMT -5
@ian omg sorry it's so long LOL For a cat who always thought things through, this plan hadn't been thought through at all.
He'd blame the unexpected factor, added to the lack of options, and his damn bleeding heart for this. Primal instinct wasn't really the same anymore, at least not after his mother had died. He had never gotten along with Daireanne, and he had been a trainee when his mother was killed by his own sister and his older brother took the place of his father. He had seen it coming, the madness in the baby-blues, the rage their sister was capable of, the collapse of their family...what he hadn't seen coming was the utter decimation that came along with it.
The other Nemesis after didn't even need to wipe out any trace of their predecessor; the madness had done them all in on their own.
In his last days, he had listened to Alistair speak–no, they had all listened to him speak–mumbling on and on about a curse, about his father and his mother, about his sister and his mate, about how they would never be able to settle anywhere permanent, that they were doomed to forever tear each other apart as a family, forever ripping each other apart.
Frankly, they had all done this to themselves; who would've thought it was a good idea to push the scapegoat so hard that she finally lashed out? To train her in her mother's footsteps, to put the ability of the killing blow in her paws, and then push her to pull the trigger? Certainly Bermondsey hadn't agreed, nor understood, but he supposed in hindsight, it had all been planned. His older brother lacked a heart and a soul after all; it was no surprise he had gained the mind of their father and the slyness of their mother. Still, when Safiya finally returned, with kits who's eyes had yet to open at her side, he had no idea what to do. He wasn't able to feed these kits, nor care for them, but she had begged, and he had relented. The first couple of moons were fine; he found a surrogate who didn't ask a lot of questions, and then...things got complicated.
Here he was, staying at an empty barn with kits who were far too young to travel, uncertain what the next step was. Of course, he could feed and care for them now, but what did the future hold for any of them? He couldn't return to the league with these two, and he'd never fit in with one of those soft-hearted clans.
A sound rustled him out of his thoughts, his sharp eyes immediately turning to the entrance, a scowl already on his face. Strangers were always a risk at places like this, but hell be damned if he let anyone hurt these kits.
When she was a child, she wanted to grow up to be just like her parents. In love with the world, in love with each other. She was so naive to think that happiness existed, that the world was not twisted and cruel. But, in her naivety, she was happy, perfectly at peace. It had been so long since she had felt at peace; she had become a wandering spirit, barely alive but not quite dead. A husk, one might say, of the child that once beamed at everyone who came across her. This was not unexpected. After all, she bore the same cross that any other cat born in that hell hole did: intergenerational trauma that left wounds so deep that no herb could fix. It had driven her from her homeland; there, the ghosts had become too noisy. If she was ever to resist the sounds of the darkness that lingered just below the surface of her mind, she had become distinctly aware that she needed to leave the League. It had been many moons since she made that decision, the decision to both escape and chase the madness; after all, she was going to find a way to defeat it one day. In those moons, she had become even more jaded than death and destruction had left her.
In fact, she had become a murderer. It was a fact that would have astonished anyone who had known the once gentle soul who looked as if she could never hurt a soul. Rightfully so; at one point, little Charlotte was a star in the never ending night of Primal Instinct. Her time on her journeys, though, had dimmed her shine. Instead of do no harm, her mantra became do no harm without purpose. The lines between morality, of good and evil, of sound and unsound, had blurred; now, the value she placed on life was different. In most cases, it was expendable, so long as it had a purpose. The stacks of bodies, the unnoticeable ghosts that lingered in her haunted gaze, was composed of cats whose lives did serve a purpose; they allowed her to learn more, had each given her another piece to the puzzle, led her to a new part of life.
However, this lifestyle was a lonely one. There was a small part of her that missed the warmth of her family, the feeling that somoene had her back. It had been a long time since she had trusted anyone. She was not supposed to be asocial, though. Charlotte was meant to be a part of something bigger. Because of that, no matter how close she got to the truth, there was something missing. The hole would not completely be filled.
She let out a sigh, before pausing. She didn't know how long she had been walking, but she was beginning to grow tired. It was getting to be late in the evening, after all. Who knew when she even started? Charlotte inhaled deeply, and suddenly her eyes widened. There was something familiar about the scent that was rich in the air. It.... it wasn't... could it be?
"Hello?" the mostly blind cat called, squinting her eyes to try to make out a blurry outline if one was to approach.
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Post by achromatic on Jun 3, 2021 20:16:30 GMT -5
Wariness was a feature not uncommon on Bermondsey's tired expression, his bright green eyes dulled by the utter exhaustion that was living as the last remaining legacy of his family's line. He had given the kits a quick glance, noting with relief that they were fast asleep, as he leaped atop a crate, choosing to address this situation by observing first. Choosing the higher ground was a calculated move after all, the tall cat creeping along the edges of the barn to get a closer look at the stranger.
Then suddenly, a breeze carried the scent of the other cat towards him. As long as it had been, there was something that never changed, despite the years of living on their own. It was recognizeable. It was...family? That couldn't be. He had known for years that most of his older siblings were either dead or gone, the rest of his litter hadn't stayed long either, but...
She spoke, and his eyes met her and for a moment, he felt his breath catch in his throat. Safiya? It had been moons since she had left, and he had thought her dead, for god's sake. He certainly had a couple of words for his sister, for leaving him, for leaving her kits behind–
Except it wasn't Safiya. As he neared the other cat, he realized she was plenty smaller, her fur shorter than the plumes of fur that framed Safiya's face, and her eyes–he hesitated for a moment, trying to recall the other cat's name. Her sister's first litter, no? He could remember them as kits, how torn they had been when...
"Charlotte?" he finally spoke, his voice soft, shock lacing every syllable. How...? "I thought...I thought you were..."
Dead. Didn't they all? Every other member of their family was either lost, insane, or dead. Why wouldn't he think the same? He shifted his weight uncomfortably, from one foot to the other. "What...what are you doing here? And...what happened to you?"
Her head turned in his direction, her amber eyes still squinted. It was much easier to recognize the voice than his face, given the circumstances, but that didn't mean that she didn't try. She swiveled her gaze in his direction, deciding it was probably just easier to walk closer than anything else. Taking a few hesitant steps forward, she stopped with a blink.
"I... wasn't aware you had made it, either," she meowed in response. Her voice was more gravely than it had been in her childhood. This had several reasons, one of which simply being lack of use. There wasn't much of a reason for Charlotte to talk these days, at least outside of her office. When seeing clients, she spoke as much as was necessary to get the job done. Outside of her experiments, though, she lived a solitary life, the same solitary life that she'd lived since the day she left Primal Instinct. So much had changed. "It's... good to see you did," she meowed with an awkward nod. Few cats of their blood made it this long, something that she was acutely aware of.
She took a moment to respond to his other words, taking in a deep breath. "In regards to your first question, I could ask you the same thing," she meowed with a shrug of her red-gold shoulders. "The life of a nomad leads you to places you don't expect to be led to." It was true; she had experienced most of the world. The black market trades of the city, the empty expanses of wide open space... She had traveled it all, it seemed, following the wind to whatever destination the universe thought could assist her with her goals.
She then blinked. "And, if you're trying to ask why I'm squinting at you, it's a long story." By this time, she had made it much closer to him, close enough that she could see more than just his frame. She gave him a sharp prod, as if to make sure he was real and her brain wasn't playing another elaborate trick on her. Relief flooded her gaze when she realized he was real; good, at least the madness was at bay. "Infected cut led to partial blindness in both eyes."
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Post by achromatic on Jun 4, 2021 8:17:48 GMT -5
He felt a certain feeling in his chest, an unfamiliar one. Relief? Joy? It didn't feel like either, just a...warmth. The same warmth that he had felt for the kits, for his sister, so foreign yet familiar. His expression softened, a near chuckle left his mouth as she prodded him, and he gave her a lick atop her head in return, a familiar gesture of family. There had never been much tying the scattered members of their little clan together–certainly not a familial bond with their parents–but with how few of them there were left? There wasn't much room for hostility or jealousy, as there had been with most of his siblings.
Not to mention, Charlotte was a child of his favourite sibling anyway. The others he couldn't care about–sadistic little freaks, he'd grumble under his breath–but Safiya had always been kind. A light in a world that wanted to suffocate any joy. He felt a sort of sympathy–a feeling rarely felt–for her though. Partial blindness must've been difficult to live with.
"I left not long after you did," he replied truthfully, remembering exactly why the she-cat had left in the first place. He neglected to mention that he had still stayed near the forest they once grew up in, even after the league had departed from it, "it's been so long since I've seen anyone familiar. It's good to see you again, Charlotte, though...I wish circumstances had been better for both of us. I hope your journey's been...productive for you so far."
He was about to ask her another question when the squeaks and mewls of the awakened kits made him turn. Right. They'd be awake and hungry now. "I'm sorry," he spoke, his voice clipped by the urgency, a soft chuckle leaving his mouth, "I suppose I'm not alone this time." He needed to hunt again, but he couldn't leave them alone; hopefully the barn would have a mouse or two hiding here. His tail touched Charlotte's shoulder, a gesture for her to follow if she hoped to stay here for the night.
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POSTEDJun 8, 2021 8:42:16 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
Her head hadn't been licked in a long time, perhaps since the day of her father's execution. It had been Avi's favorite thing to do, give each of them a lick on their head whenever they were being too cute for him to handle. It was strange to feel touch again that wasn't... well, wasn't based in her life's mission.
She nodded at his words. She wasn't really surprised that her uncle had left; it had seemed as if any cats that were still alive had enacted the second part of the curse well: that members of the bloodline shall never find rest and shall wander the earth forever without finding home. She wondered if that had been what happened to Fitzrovia. He was her only sibling that she didn't know for sure was dead, and she deeply hoped he was out there somewhere. The alternative made her heart too sad: that she had failed at her mission, and was unable to save anyone at all. She had already considered that she would never save herself, but to be unable to save others too? She could barely stand it.
"I never thought I'd see any of you again," she admitted, the first time she ever said her deepest fear aloud. "I'm glad I got the chance to, for what it's worth." After a moment, she blinked. "I've learned a lot," she admitted with a shrug. "I've picked up healing along the way. It started as a pet project in the ways the mind works, but it's gotten more expansive with time and experimentation," she added, almost as if there was a small part of her that hoped her uncle would be impressed. No one had been impressed with Charlotte in a long time, and it was sort of an empty feeling. "I hope you've found similar success."
Her ears perked at the sound of kits. "I wasn't aware you had a litter?" she asked, immediately identifying the soft noises. Interest flickered in her gaze. She had always thought her uncle to be the kind that would end the bloodline. Whether or not he believed in the curse, it felt odd to her that he had children. She then followed him, moving into the barn with a raised brow.
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Post by achromatic on Jun 8, 2021 9:10:44 GMT -5
The tom nodded, and for a moment, there was a faint smile on his lips. "I'm glad you found a purpose," he spoke, for he himself had not, not for a very long time, "it's a better fate than most of us, you know." The mind was never something to be understood; he had watched his father, with all of his arrogant confidence, know himself for most of his life, and then spend the last few years of his own completely lost in a labyrinth he had created of his own.
Bermondsey wasn't sure how Charlotte would take the news of the kits. He himself had been...confused when Safiya had shown up with two kits in tow. Frankly, part of him had assumed that his bleeding-heart sister would never find another such as her first lover, but she had arrived with no explanations and no conversation other than that they'd be better off with him than with her, and she was gone before he could even ask why. The sardonic part of him had wondered if they were accidents, supposed mistakes like her first letter. The slightly less pessimistic side had been almost concerned; Safiya hadn't abandoned her first litter despite everything until it was too dangerous for her to be there.
Would Charlotte be saddened by the news? Bitter, perhaps? Surely, their family had never been....functional; jealousy and rage and everything else ran rampant between them all, and he had been a silent observer, of how Daireanne bullied Safiya, how Luc burned with jealousy over Daireanne, how Bela found amusement in her sadistic tendencies...
Still, she deserved the truth. He pushed the mewling kits towards Charlotte, as Sunkit in particular immediately clamored over with her sharp squeaks and mewls, a spitting image of their grandmother. "They're not mine," his voice was quiet, still, "they're your siblings. Congratulations, I suppose. Your mother left them with me before disappearing again; you missed her by a moon or two."
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POSTEDJun 8, 2021 9:46:00 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
She could only barely make out the smile, but it made her feel warm. A soft smile passed across her own lips for a moment, before nodding. "Unfortunately, I am all too aware," she then responded, her smile immediately faltering. There had been so much loss and destruction in the family, and the flame-pelted she-cat knew that she was obscurely lucky that she'd made it this far at all. How she wished she could have saved everyone who came before her.
Her pondering was cut short by his news. It literally stopped her in her track, catapulting her through every emotion all at once. Relief was first. If nothing else, the fact that her mother had given her kits to Bermondsey suggested that if nothing else, she was still alive. She couldn't help but feel relief wash over her; the world was already dark, but it would have been even darker if it had permanently removed Safi's presence from it. Then shock. Not only was her mother alive, but she had a second litter? Charlotte would have never known had she not happened by her uncle this one time, a complete chance encounter. She had siblings and they'd been in the universe this whole time, and she never knew. Then, confusion. How had the she-cat come to give birth a second time? With who ? Why did she leave them? Charlotte had so many questions, questions she would only ever be able to ask her mother, so questions she would be resigned to never be answered. Then, sadness. She had missed her mother by such a short period of time... What if she would have made the turn down this road earlier? Would she have been able to see her mother one last time?
This was giving her whiplash, so it wasn't surprising when her first reaction was only a quiet "Oh." What more was there really to say? She was sure that Bermondsey was as in the dark about it all as -
Then the little kitten came closer to her. Even without 20/20, she was taken aback at how much she recognized her. For never looking at Sunkit in her entire life, she looked so familiar. "How is that even possible?" she muttered in astonishment to herself, glancing over at Bermondsey. Surely, he had to see the resemblance to his mother, too? After the immediate shock wore off, though, the she-cat offered a smile and a wave of her tail to the little ones. It wasn't their fault that she was experiencing every emotion in the book. "Hello, there!" she meowed to the one that clamored on her, trying to make her voice as neutral and kind as possible. "What's your name?"
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Post by achromatic on Jun 8, 2021 10:02:59 GMT -5
Bermondsey felt a feeling of trepidation rise within him at Charlotte's silence, worried that there might've been some resentment, some bitterness within her, but the quiet oh and astonishment made the tom relax. He should've known things would be fine; there had never been a single mean bone in Safiya–at least, not until their brother broke her–and he wasn't surprised to see that Charlotte was so much like her mother.
He allowed the fond smile to appear on his face, an expression that would be impossible to see if it was not for the connection they already had. Seeing Charlotte's smile and pleasant surprise made something lurch in his stone-cold heart, the heart that he didn't think even existed for the longest time. Evenie really did look like her mother, other than the bright green eyes that had opened not too long ago. The she-cats in their family really did inherit Severine's famed beauty, though he was glad they had yet to show signs of the cruelty underneath.
Evenie looked up curiously at the new cat. "Mm Evenyee!" she squeaked, already mispronouncing her name, "who are you? Are you my mama? Have you come to play with us?" Her bright, innocent eyes turned to Bermondsey, and he let out a chuckle. "No, she's not," he spoke softly, a tone reserved only for the kits, "that's your sister. Her name's Charlotte." He looked up to Charlotte once more. "That's Evenie, this one under my foot is Aleksy."
Aleksy also seemed excited to meet the new cat, but he was a little more shy, climbing onto Bermondsey's paws. "Why is she so big if she's our sister?" he asked curiously, "why are we smaller than her?"
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POSTEDJun 8, 2021 20:49:42 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
Even on the days where her own jadedness exhausted herself, at her core, Charlotte really was like her mother. Despite the fact that most of her morals resided somewhere in the "grey" category, she was not vindictive or unnecessarily cruel. She wouldn't hurt a cat that she felt she could avoid hurting, something that was strange considering her particular history. Knowing that the apple really didn't fall far fro the tree, it was no surprise that she reacted to the kittens in the way that she did. After all, they were innocent, thrown into a world that they were far too young to understand. If anything, there was a part of her that pitied the small things; at least she and her littermates got to bask in Safiya's particular warmth until they were old enough to care for themselves. These children, it seemed, could not be so lucky.
When the kitten spoke to her, she ducked her head slightly so she could properly look her in the eye. "That's a beautiful name, Evenie," she purred gently, her smile still on her face. "It's nice to meet you, Evenie." She then turned to Aleksy, offering another wave of her tail. "And you, Aleksy," she meowed. The girl was darling, but Charlotte found the boy's curiosity endearing. She had once been like that, too.
She sat down, wrapping her tail around herself gently. "I was born a long time ago," she explained, "in a place far away from here. I have had more time than you to get big and strong, but one day, you'll be just as big as me!" she promised, letting out a faint chuckle. "Maybe even bigger!"
She then looked back to Evenie. "I'd love to play with you, if you would have me?"
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Post by achromatic on Jun 9, 2021 5:53:04 GMT -5
Aleksy's eyes brightened. "Really?" he stepped out from under Bermondsey with wide eyes, "do you really think I'll be big? Even bigger than papa?" He had already started referring to Bermondsey as his father, the only father figure he had ever known. Evenie just giggled, making a comment about how she was going to be big too.
Bermondsey chuckled. "Sure you will," he reassured the kit, "probably even bigger than me, if we're honest. You have bigger paws than I did at that age." The tom had been born tall, not large. After all, his own father was a smaller cat than most, and he had no idea who their father was.
Evenie was already excited to play, her tail lifted up high as she wiggled, trying to tackle Charlotte's paw. "Will you teach me how to hunt? Or tell us a story? You're our sister right? What's our mama like?" She had a million things she wanted to do and it seemed as if there was never enough time for them all.
Aleksy trotted over, sitting down in rapt attention. "Yeah Charlotte! Did you have any cool adventures out there? Papa said there used to be big groups of wild cats out there! Have you seen them before? He said they could take down a whole fox if they wanted to!"
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POSTEDJun 9, 2021 18:41:03 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
She smiled at the fact her brother regarded her uncle as his father. It was a sweet gesture, and it meant that the two trusted the tom, which suggested to her that they were well taken care of, or at least as well taken care of as she could assume from a tom who had kittens just... absolutely dumped on him. "Papa's a little small," she agreed with Bermondsey, "so I bet you outgrow him in a few moons!" she finished with a grin.
She then turned her attention back to Evenie, letting out a soft chuckle when the kitten tackled her paw. If she had been any bigger, perhaps Charlotte would have been knocked over because she wasn't expecting it, but instead, all she could do was smile. "If you keep your tail down when you pounce," she started, "sometimes it helps with your balance a bit. That's one of the first things Mom taught me."
She then paused from giving the kittens her attention, turning for a moment to Bermondsey. "You look hungry. If you want to hunt or take a moment to yourself, I've got these two," she offered with a blink. She could only imagine the last time that Bermondsey truly got a moment alone, especially with how excitable they were.
Charlotte then looked back to the little ones, her tail sweeping across the earth. "Yes, I'm your sister." That was as good a place as any to start. "You have another brother out there somewhere, I think, but it's been a long time since I've seen him." She thought of Fitzrovia often, but it had been a very long time since the two had crossed paths. She hoped he was still out there, at least.
"There still are big groups of cats out there," she meowed with a nod. "Your papa was probably talking about our home. We came from a place called Primal Instinct, and the cats there were big and ferocious!" That was one way to put it, but she figured the reality of Primal Instinct was not something you should tell children. "I lived there until I was about eight moons old, long enough that I even was able to start to train! Do you want to hear a story about them, or about what happened after I left and was on my own?" She had lived two lives, it seemed: one chained to Primal Instinct, and one chained to a desire to save.
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Post by achromatic on Jun 12, 2021 3:30:28 GMT -5
Bermondsey looked grateful for the reprieve, nodding once before leaping over the crates that hid their position, disappearing to hunt for their dinner. Evenie and Aleksy didn’t seem to notice at all, too excited about hanging out with their sister. Evenie nodded brightly at her older sister’s advice, practically slapping her tail down onto the ground as she pounced once again...on her brother’s tail as he gave a squeak of surprise, scrambling to his paws as he tried to kick her off of him. The two bickered for a moment, giggling and wrestling until Aleksy stilled, his ears twitching at the sound of Charlotte’s story of the forest.
“Wow!” he gasped, eyes wide, “what’s our mama like? Is our brother a big strong fighter like our papa?” Aleksy was young, but the time alone made him aware of exactly how small their family seemed. The thought that there were others out there, uncles and cousins and everything else, made him hopeful that perhaps they’d all meet someday.
Evenie, however, seemed more interested in the stories of the forest. “What was Primal Instinct like?” she asked, intrigued, “what kind of training did you do? Papa said there were warriors in the forest; were you like that? Did you fight off any badgers?”
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POSTEDJun 22, 2021 10:20:29 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
"She was the kindest cat I have ever known," she meowed quietly. It had been a long time since she had actually thought about her mother; while at the beginning, Safi's presence had felt nearly constant in her life, like she could hear her mother guiding her, but that had stopped a long time ago. Now, Safi was only a passing thought, another victim to the curse that haunted their lives. "Primal Instinct was a group of very mean cats, but she was different. Where they wanted to fight, she wanted to love. She was one of thebest damned things to come out of that group." It was then that her eyes widened. Maybe she shouldn't swear around the kids? Oops. She then let her thoughts drift to her brother. Fitzrovia had to be out there somewhere, didn't he? She didn't feel the gnawing ache in her chest like she did with Louisa; that meant that he had to be alive, right? Perhaps it was a dumb hope; perhaps it was even cruel to wish upon her brother the same fate that she herself had earned. "I think he would have been," she decided after a moment, "as strong and big as your papa. We separated from each other a long time ago, and I'm not sure how he ended up." There was a slight pain in her voice; oh, how she wished she had answers.
She shook the thoughts from her head, before looking to Evenie. The kitten wouldn't know how loaded a question that would turn out to be. "The League was made of the worst of the worst," she meowed, deciding that the best way to ensure that the kittens never traveled home was to ensure they knew the reality of the situation. "They fought everything they saw, and there was no peace to be known in that forest." Maybe Bermondsey had told the kittens differently, and maybe she should have asked, but these kits deserved better than that place. "I remember it being dark, so dark. There were places in that forest that the trees were so thick that light didn't touch the ground. But, not everyone was bad. It is only in the darkness that stars shine, and there were some that shined so brightly." Louisa, Safi, Avi... All victims of the League's darkness, all deserving so, so much better.
"We trained like the warriors, yes, but I left the group before I got too far into my training," she admitted. "Unfortunately," she meowed with a slight chuckle, "that means no badgers."
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Post by achromatic on Jun 22, 2021 10:41:52 GMT -5
The two kits only stared, wide-eyed, at Charlotte as she spoke. Despite being too young to truly understand something as poignant as tragedy or grief, it was clear that the cat in front of them was...emotional about this. Without a second word, Evenie moved closer, nuzzling the other she-cat the way their papa did to them when they were upset or hungry. Still, she had so many questions.
"Why did mama leave Primal Instinct?" she cuddled into Charlotte's flank, "Is that why we're leaving too? Because the cats are meanies?" Their sister's words about the league made a feeling of fear crawl up into Evenie's chest. She hadn't heard much about Primal Instinct other than to keep an eye out for what was out there, and the thought of those scary cats hunting them down made her green eyes widen.
"Will we ever see mama again?" Aleksy seemed more tentative, crawling behind Charlotte's paw and twining his tail against her leg, "will the Primal Instinct cats come after us?" They seemed to have all but forgotten their interest in fighting badgers.
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POSTEDJun 23, 2021 10:22:02 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
Charlotte smiled slightly when the kitten nuzzled against her, and she licked Evenie's head in response. She was gentle, proof that cats like her still had a chance. Charlotte's chance had been wasted, the light that once burned in her eyes long gone, corrupted by the dark ambivalence to life and death that could only be truly found when you stared mortality in the face. Maybe there was hope for Evenie and Aleksy; if they stayed far away from that place, maybe they would have a chance at the life that Charlotte may have had if she had been born anywhere else.
"She left Primal Instinct because it was no longer a home to her," she meowed in response. This wasn't a lie. Safiya had to leave for her own safety. "Bad things happened, things that never should have happened." Her body tensed for a moment at the memories of her father's death, of the look that had entered her mother's eyes the day she knew that the old Safi was gone, replaced by an angry, hurt creature whose primal instincts did, in fact, take over. She let out a sigh, but the tension did not fully leave her shoulders.
"Your papa is keeping you away from that place because it is a place where no cat deserves to be," she meowed, quite unsure of how to have this conversation with a child. "They do not know that you exist, but even if they did, as long as you stay far, far away from them, they will never hurt you. I promise you that. Your papa will never let anything bad happen to you." She touched both of their heads with their nose. "I won't let anything happen to you."
She then tipped her head. "As for if you'll ever see mama again, I can't answer that. If the stars align, you will. The stars aligned for us to meet, right?"
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Post by achromatic on Jun 23, 2021 18:57:23 GMT -5
The two kits didn't really understand any of the words Charlotte spoke; they were far too young to understand anything as deep and as harsh as reality truly was, and at the sound of their adopted father's footsteps, they immediately brightened, clamouring over each other to see him leap down from the crates that hid them from view.
The lithe tom was holding two plump mice in his jaws; the barn was often filled with them, and they were slow and fat, easy enough to catch. Dropping it by Charlotte, he gave the kits a smile. "Did Charlotte tell you a story?" he mused, as he glanced briefly at the golden she-cat.
"She told us about the forest cats!" Aleksy announced, immediately bounding over to the tom, "she said they were really mean and that you were taking us somewhere safe from the evil cats!"
"She told us about mama!" Evenie chirped afterwards, already pushing her paws into the tom's pelt excitedly, trying to climb into his grasp, "she said we might meet her again if the stars...if the stars...I don't know, something about stars!"
"Papa?" Aleksy piped up, as Bermondsey's eyes met the young tom's, "what bad things happened? Why isn't it safe?"
Bermondsey's brow furrowed, as his eyes met Charlotte's for a moment, as if asking her whether she told the kits the truth. He sighed, shaking his head. "Your mama left after your grandparents left," he spoke, a softened version of the blunt truth, "she...needed to breathe a different kind of air. Our family's...complicated, but don't worry. One day, when you're older, you'll understand. Now eat."
He pushed a mouse towards Charlotte as well. "You'll need your strength too," he spoke softly, "for wherever your journeys may take you."
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POSTEDJul 3, 2021 22:01:32 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
She looked to her uncle with a slight apology at her uncle. She had tried to keep the conversation age appropriate, but it had been quite literally years since she had last really interacted with a child. And even then, she'd gotten rid of that child before she was old enough to really be interacted with . Before that, it had been since her moons in the League that she interacted with anyone younger than a full grown adult. That was a purposeful decision; the work that Charlotte did was not meant to be done to children, and Charlotte had very little use for anyone that did not further her work.
She flicked her ear in gratitude at the mouse he gave her, before taking a bite. She hadn't been eating regularly, mostly because their was always work to be done, work that was more important than hunting. Yet, then, why was she about to say what she was about to say? "You know," she meowed after swallowing, "my journeys don't have to take me anywhere for a little while if you needed help for a little bit." She sounded a little awkward, but there was something that was refreshing about being around her family again, something she didn't want necessarily to end that evening. Would she stay with Bermondsey and the children forever? That was unlikely. The world was filled with knowledge she'd yet to obtain. But, answers could wait a few days, right?
dm me if you want to listen to me ramble about the interstellar soundtrack
2,314 posts
Post by achromatic on Jul 4, 2021 18:11:06 GMT -5
The kits were busy, chatting about whatever was on their mind as they ate, and Bermondsey held a soft look in his eyes as he took a couple of bites as well, before looking towards Charlotte, his ears perking up as she began to speak. Staying, huh? He couldn't help the small smile that appeared on his face. As much as he loved the two, they were a pawful, even when they were being good. It was just a lot of work to keep an eye on two kits while still feeding and protecting them wherever they went. A little help could be nice, and well, there seemed to be years of catching up to do for the two of them.
"That would be great," he replied with a nod, "I'd really appreciate that.""
Evenie looked over to the adults. "Hey auntie Charlotte, are you staying with us?" she grinned, "you can come with papa and us and we could go on an adventure! Maybe we can explore and you can tell us even more stories!"
Aleksy smiled shyly. "I want to travel and see the world like you did," he replied with a small giggle.
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POSTEDJul 8, 2021 9:42:32 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
Even with minimal function, she could still see him well enough to see his smile, even if it was blurry. She couldn't help but return the expression with a smile of her own. She didn't expect the relief that she felt when her uncle accepted her offer; in fact, she had been mostly convinced that she had been asking mostly for his good. it seemed like she wasn't entirely correct, though. You see, she couldn't deny the feeling of comfort that came with being with her own, even if not permanently. Her travels had been long and isolating; now, she'd at least be able to stay with her family for a little while. It would be the first time since she left her family all those moons ago...
"As long as you'll have me," she meowed with a smile to Evenie, "I would love to stay with you." Her words were genuine, more genuine than they had been in a while. Perhaps this was to be expected, though. After all, she was willing to put aside her life's work to spend some more time with them. "Maybe while I'm here I could show you some flowers? That's what I do now that I'm big and grown. I tend to flowers and mix medicines," she meowed, both as a fun fact, and a way of telling her uncle: if there's something physically wrong with any of you, I can probably help. "There are some pretty ones that I'm sure you'd like."
She then looked at Aleksy, offering his cheek a touch with her nose. "I'll make sure you get a chance to when you're big enough," she promised, although she knew she had no real way of ensuring that. "You can do anything you set your mind to!"