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 9, 2021 7:58:28 GMT -5
@ian aw censored here we go again Primal Instinct didn't feel the same in the city as it did in the forest. The darkness of the tree cover had always kept the ruins shrouded in mystery; in his kithood, he had spent moons climbing onto things, trying to mirror the way his father seemed to practically fly through the air with ease. The city, however, was open. There was less secrecy, less space to stay hidden. The overgrown weeds on the roadside and the boarded up windows on buildings of this warehouse district made his skin crawl.
It made sense why they moved, he thought dryly; surely, the city put newcomers at a disadvantage if one didn't know the layout of the damn place. He had already crashed into two of the league's cats while on his way, with one of them seemingly a high-ranking character, though his impression of her was...let's just say he wouldn't make up his mind just yet.
Still, there were a ways to go before he found where their camp was, but as he neared, he found the familiar scent of a cat he had spoken to not long ago. So she was back? His lips twitched into a smirk; and here he thought she was going to travel forever.
Moving towards the direction, it didn't take too long to find the golden-furred cat he was searching for. "So, I didn't think I'd see you so soon after we had met," he spoke.
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POSTEDJun 9, 2021 18:20:12 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
The golden and flame she-cat's ears pricked at her uncle's voice. It felt like it had been several moons since she had last seen him, but time was not something that felt steady and evenly moving. It ebbed and flowed in ways she couldn't quite understand, where some days felt like years but some moons felt like days. It was an odd existence, but perhaps everyone in their middle life felt the same way, that time was fluid and intangible.
"We must have both been called back by the League's siren song," she agreed with squinted eyes as she tried to make out Bermondsey's shape. Her tail tip twitched back and forth slightly, a soft smile resting on her face. She had told herself that she wasn't ever going to go back to Primal Instinct. The city was not her home; she craved the darkness of the forest, the ruins, not pavement so hot she wondered if she would singe her paw pads. Yet, she hadn't been able to resist the strange song of the group that had once been her home, even if they no longer lived in her home. "I can't say that I'm upset about that, though. It's nice to have a familiar face." All of the cats from their era, it seemed, were dead or long gone. She couldn't say this was unexpected, though; the group of felines she'd grown up with had always been more willing to shed blood than anything else. She could only imagine that at least some of them died at the paws of their League mates. She used to find the cruelty appauling, but as she aged, she had come to the acceptance that sometimes, violence and brutality was just part of life.
"You're alone this time?" she then asked, noticing that the two young ones were no longer in tow. Concern flashed through her eyes for a moment; where were her siblings? She hated the idea that he had brought them with him; Charlotte knew better than most that the League was no place to raise kittens, especially those who were born with her mother's light. The League consumed that light easily, relinquishing its victims only when they were as jaded and cold as each cat that came before them. Yet, at the same time, she hated the idea that they were no longer under the watchful eye of Bermondsey. Although she had not known the kittens for very long, she had been grateful for her uncle's care of them. Would they receive the same care from cats they weren't related to? Charlotte didn't know.
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Post by achromatic on Jun 12, 2021 3:20:48 GMT -5
There was a fondness in his eyes only reserved for family that had grown in Bermondsey’s gaze. Once, he too had been more than competitive with his own siblings. Primal Instinct was like that; not even family was safe from each other’s bloodthirsty claws. He knew that better than anyone. Yet, the years of solitude had changed the tom. His pelt brushed against Charlotte’s in a familiar manner, a manner rarely seen if others were around.
“It has been too long since I’ve returned,” he murmured, “but I suppose the league has its ways of entrapping us. I thought I’d escape it’s claws but the time I spent away, I found myself thinking of this place. The city is nothing like the forest but I suppose I’ve learned to adapt to everything else; this will be no different.”
His warmer expression shifted to something unreadable at the mention of the kits. Bermondsey always did have the same poker face he inherited from both of his parents, a cold unfeeling expression that seemed to be wrought with apathy, yet there was something in his eyes that showed he wasn’t as removed as he thought. “Evenie got sick,” he replied quietly, “she wouldn’t have survived the journey if a clan cat didn’t feel sympathy for her. We travelled north after that and Aleksy...I wouldn’t have been able to raise the kits properly if I travelled like a rogue all my life, and Aleksy might’ve done fine here—at least better than Evenie—but...”
The words were unspoken. Safiya’s kits deserved better. They deserved a chance to live. They deserved a chance to try and outlive a curse older than they could ever know.
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POSTEDJun 22, 2021 10:07:33 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
She let out a soft sigh, leaning into his touch for just a moment. If she closed her eyes, sometimes she could pretend that Safi's spirit carried with the tom, and sometimes, the she-cat just needed her mother. Still, she sighed shortly after, resuming the discussion.
"I'm starting to think there is no escape." There was a glint of something in her voice. Resentment, maybe? She had come back to the League of her own volition, of course, but she couldn't help but be angry that the home that had called to her had changed so much, and that it had called to her at all. "It's even worse in the city than it was in the forest. Cats were brutal back then, but at least they were fed. At least there were herbs." Again, something darker flashed in her voice. It had been approximately two weeks since the she-cat had bore her newest cross and accepted the position of Shaman. It had been a funny thing- with Funk gone, there was no cat that even remotely knew how to heal. Her own DIY training had provided the best hope for the League. How pathetic that truly was; not only was the Shaman lineage gone, but they were so desperate as to ask her. She supposed, though, that a real Healer would resent a position in Primal Instinct; at least she was used to low stores.
Charlotte listened to the tom with a blink. A hint of regret filled her gaze. Should she have stayed with her uncle longer? She would have been able to help Evenie, right? Still, she couldn't help but feel like the two kittens would have a much better life anywhere but here. Her tail flicked back and forth as she tried to decide whether or not to tell her uncle her great secret. It was something that she had carried close to her chest for so long...
"I did the same thing," she meowed quietly, her gaze shifting away from him. "I tried to give Reynardine the best life. Unfortunately, that meant getting her as far away from here as possible." She thought about her child more often than she didn't. Perhaps it had been why she had been so good with her little siblings; there was a part of her whose maternal nature had been robbed the day she told her mate that he would have to raise the child, that it was a mistake for her to even get pregnant. "I hope, whereever the three of them are tonight, they feel a peace that we have never known."
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Post by achromatic on Jun 22, 2021 11:05:12 GMT -5
Escape. He almost laughed at that. It seemed like no matter how much they pretended they weren't of the crooked kind, they were still doomed from the start. "I think maybe I'm built like them," he replied, his tone almost cold at that statement. Bermondsey had always felt conflicted. He never wanted to be like Daireanne, to be the kind who used everyone like a pawn in his hand, as if everyone's goal was simply to protect the king. He had respected his father, and perhaps at one time, even loved the tom, but that had been long gone, washed away in his descent to madness.
There was a darkness in the tom's eyes. "Yet, when I come back here, I feel it rising in me," he admitted, "the anger...the disgust at cats weaker than I am. I had to grow up seeing the world as it is, and now the league has all types of soft-footed fools who contribute nothing to the group. Cats who barely know how to fight, cats who would never have survived my mother's rule, and they enjoy themselves, feast themselves fat on the food others have caught simply to meander the city as if nothing's wrong."
There was a disgust he held for many of the other cats in the forest, the ones who never knew suffering or hard work, the ones who did nothing but follow along brainlessly, and as hard as he tried, he could never get rid of that anger, that disdain, that feeling that he had to amass whatever he could to prevent exactly what happened to his father from happening to himself. He was clever enough to know that fear itself wasn't the answer that it promised to be, but not clever enough to figure the solution. He was strong enough to survive in the league, but not strong enough to rule it with an iron fist. He was fast enough to get himself into this mess of a place, but never fast enough to get away.
The bitterness faded slightly as he blinked at the she-cat. "Reynardine?" he echoed. She had a kit. For a moment, there was almost a look of pity in his eyes; he knew what this meant. Another brought into the curse of a bloodline they were born to deal with. "Does she know?" he murmured, "about our family? About any of this?"
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POSTEDJun 23, 2021 10:01:12 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
She listened to him speak with a nod of her head. "I don't understand how they got this way," she meowed, although perhaps she did. They had gotten this way because they had grown lazy and complacent. Gone were the days of Primal Instinct being the phantom at the edge of the forest, waiting for its next opportunity to strike. They had gotten too comfortable. Yet, was that something they could be faulted for? The darkness that had once covered the clan had been all-consuming, an inescapable fire under all of their tails that suggested that if they did not fight, if they did not struggle to bear the weight of the League, they would die. Death had been nearly constant those days. "Perhaps they grew tired of always being one step away from disaster." It had been her only hypothesis. "Yet, if that were true, why would they be here? Sadists turned masochists; once willing to kill each other, now willing to be killed by an enviornment that is wholly non-viable for survival." Things truly had changed.
"At least it isn't a daily bloodbath," she then meowed with a shrug. "It makes my life a whole lot easier when I don't constantly have to heal cats with approximately nothing." She clicked her tongue in irritation, although it wasn't directed at him. It was directed at the situation that the two of them found themselves in, in a home that was not a home, living in a culture that was so foreign to that in which they had grown up. They were alien to their own homeland. It was almost ironic; she had resented the place that she had once called home, only to resent it even more when she had to return.
"My biggest mistake," Charlotte meowed, "was allowing another cat to be brought into this world." There was genuine regret in her voice. "The day that she opened her eyes was the day I left her. I couldn't let her remember me. It was the only way I could think to atone for my sin, to leave her before she could ever know me."
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Post by achromatic on Jun 23, 2021 11:51:10 GMT -5
He didn't understand either, and he found that his distaste for the league's new softness was almost as strong as his distaste for his brother's reign and its unnecessary sadism. The lack of bloodshed had made this league soft, just as much as the blood flood had drowned it too quickly in the past. They were too comfortable, too complacent with the world they lived in. The city was both too easy and too difficult to live in if he was honest. Things had to change.
"I suppose you're right," he nodded, "though frankly, with the amount of stupidity in those fights these days, I'm not all that sure you'll feel the same in a moon or two." He had seen cats fight over scraps of meat, over spots to sleep, over literally everything. It won't be long before we have the same problem as we did before." If he was honest with himself, he'd prefer being back in the old forest, where the paths were familiar and the darkness covered his tracks, even if that meant rewitnessing the place where his family was torn apart once more, reliving that very sight of watching his sister kill his mother, again and again.
He had grown used to it, grown used to the thought of it all, of seeing the blood pool in the nest he had been born. When he was younger, the dreams had been terrifying. Now, they were but another feature of his nights every once in a while. It had been a while since he had last dreamt of it.
Bermondsey's expression turned to one of understanding, but it was an unsympathetic one. "You made a good decision," he affirmed quietly, "but you're right; a kit with our blood will only suffer the same fate as us." He knew that was the same reason he had left the two in the clans rather than here; perhaps there, they'd be able to survive the fate that had struck down the rest of their family.
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POSTEDJul 1, 2021 20:51:28 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
She sighed slightly. "Perhaps you're right," she meowed, her shoulders rolling. "Maybe it'll feel more like home when they're murdering each other because they looked at their sister's aunt's favorite piece of prey the wrong way." She let out a humorless chuckle. There was a twisted part of her that missed that kind of chaos, the thrill of always being one step from death.
Then, she shook her head. "I can only hope that leaving her delayed the inevitable," she meowed, her voice solemn. "I did everything I could. Now, it's the stars choice." She didn't believe in the stars, or anything really. There was nothing scientific about believing in life after the end. However, it was amusing to her to muse like that.
"Care to take a walk?" she then asked. "I've got some herbs to collect, and it might be a good way for you to become more familiar with the territory. God knows it took me a moon to know where I was going."
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Post by achromatic on Jul 2, 2021 17:34:37 GMT -5
He let a small smirk slip onto his face at Charlotte's words. "Or when someone mistakens someone else's tail as a mouse when they're dumpster diving," he snorted. There was a part of him too, that found this sort of violence irresistible. It was in his blood, really. They were always drawn to the chaos. It was funny really, how the rest of them had so easily fallen to it, all but his dear sister, and still, an exception to the rule didn't seem to break the cycle of what had happened.
"I hope she knows better to come down here," he agreed, as he followed behind Charlotte. There weren't many cats who he listened to, who he'd agree to do as he was told, but Charlotte was one of the few cats he liked. Not tolerate, actually liked. The word family didn't mean a single thing to Bermondsey, and yet, it did.
"I still find this city too damn confusing," he chuckled, "it's unnatural for us to live here instead of in the forest, if you ask me. The concrete isn't meant for our paws at all, and there's never enough of anything to go around. Where have you been going to get your herbs anyway? I don't see anything around here that remotely resembles the Garden of Tatlia."
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POSTEDJul 8, 2021 9:52:39 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
She shook her head. It was hard to tell if she loved or hated those moons of her life; perhaps it was a mix of both. On one hand, the light that Safi had had clung to her, too, and she had been far too soft to ever survive in the League. On the other hand, Primal Instinct's depravity ran through her. As much as meaningless bloodshed disgusted her, it had also enchanted young Charlotte. It still did. After all, why would she have selected her career path had she been afraid of a little blood.
She nodded once to the tom in agreement, but said nothing. It would be her daughter's biggest mistake if she ever made it to these parts. She could only hope it never happened.
"Now, try navigating it with the eyesight of a mole," Charlotte grumbled. It was her own personal hell most days to figure out how to get from point a to point b, not that she'd really tell anyone that. As he continued, she motioned him to follow with a sweep of her tail. "Well, you see, that's an excellent point. There is no place to get herbs, at least not propperly and in enough quantity that they're helpful. That, my dear uncle, is why I don't like hunting for herbs alone." There was a hint of mischeif in her voice, but they walked along quietly for a moment until they reached a large apartment complex. "See up there, third floor?" She pointed to a balcony that was accessible by the fire escape. "The two-leg keeps a garden on the wooden cage. We've gotta get to it and raid it."
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Post by achromatic on Jul 8, 2021 18:44:39 GMT -5
He chuckled at her words, before sighing. He both loved and hated this place. Loved it the same way anyone would feel nostalgic over a childhood home, even with all the trauma running like a live wire through it all. Hated it because of what it did to his family. Loved it because despite how far he had gotten away from this place, there was nowhere that fit a cat like him better than here. Hated it because of exactly the same thing; he was stuck in cycles here. There was no escape from the way his life was, not like this.
He gazed towards where Charlotte was gesturing. Ah, so that was how the league was surviving, huh? Surely, the owners of the garden would notice? Then again, twolegs were often oblivious to the world around them. "What are you looking for today?" he asked, glancing to the fire escape, the stairs and the metal grating, as if analysing the situation before they jumped right in.
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POSTEDJul 13, 2021 9:49:13 GMT -5 TO primal instinct
"To answer the question you didn't ask first, yes, there is a high chance that we will be caught by two-legs if we are not careful," she meowed with a casual shrug. It wasn't the worst thing in the world. "There are two things that would happen if that's the case. One, they'll spray us with something to chase us off. If that is the case, do not attempt to immediately get it off you; we'll have to double check what it was." She blinked, remembering the day she got dosed with a spray bottle of vinegar. She'd made the mistake of not swimming off the residue, and she couldn't get the taste out of her mouth for what felt like hours.
She jumped to the first step of the escape, before quietly moving up it higher and higher. "Today, we are looking for borage. I have none, and it's too early into kitting season not to have any at all. Our queens aren't being properly fed, which means that without the herb, there's a chance that any kittens born would starve due to lack of milk production." If every thing the healer had learned was from trial and error, there had to be a story as to why she was so insistent. Her eyes flashed as they got to the first landing and she looked back, for the first time chekcing to see if he had actually followed her.
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Post by achromatic on Jul 13, 2021 19:46:12 GMT -5
He chuckled at that; it seemed like she had experience in this sort of venture with others, if she had already predicted every thought that had crossed his mind. Strange advice too, he wasn't exactly sure what to think of it. "They're spraying poison on us now?" he snorted in amusement, though he knew this was no laughing matter.
Borage huh? He knew a little bit about herbs, and he could assume that this was to help with kitting somehow. Even if he didn't care to have any kits of his own, he understood the importance of having lineages, or growing their numbers lest anything happened. While he was an advocate for getting rid of cats who contributed nothing to the league, kits provided potential.
Following after, it didn't take too long for Bermondsey to catch up, and when she turned to check on him, he chuckled, passing her with a brush of his tail against her flank. "Better catch up," he smirked, as he continued forward, slipping between the rails to the garden, the greenery practically overflowing off the balcony. "What does it look like?"