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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Dawnpoppy hadn't been feeling like herself for some time, and most cats knew it. She was eating less, she was a little clumsier, more forgetful. Sometimes she asked where her deceased mate or son was. But she was still content to be around her children, and she spent her nights lounging by the elder's den, chatting with anyone who would stop by.
One night, it was Aspenstar, her favorite (though she tried-and failed- to not make it that obvious) child, who stopped. "Good evening, Aspen," she greeted cheerfully, before a coughing fit bent her over double. After she caught her breath, she straightened again. "Any big plans for today?"
Concern washed over the she-cat's expression as she padded closer to her mother. "Do we need to call Jackdawpaw?" she meowed, before instantly realizing that her words betrayed the fact that no matter how hard she tried, she didn't really trust Pinesimmer in situations of emergency. "... I mean, Pinesimmer?" she quickly corrected with a sheepish glance. "You know we can get them if we need to, right?"
Her words to her mother were uncharacteristically gentle. They didn't carry the leader's typical razor sharp underside. The concern she had for her mother was genuine, and that sort of genuine concern was rare for the leader. Of course, there were a lot of cats she would pretend to be concerned about- her adoptive children, most of NightClan - but, there were few cats that she cared enough for to be genuinely concerned. It seemed her mother was one of those few cats.
Her tail lingered on Dawnpoppy's shoulder before she straightened. She was nearly positive her mother wouldn't want her to fret, but she couldn't help it. "Actually, I was wondering if you'd like to take a walk with me? I need you." This was another strange remark; Aspenstar had made it a point as of late that she didn't need anyone. Again, her mother was the exception to the rule. There was nothing the leader needed more than her mother's ear. Her heart ached to confess, to see the look of shame in her mother's eye, to then hear her advice on how to move forward.
Aspen paused, before adding a clumsy, "If you're feeling okay enough for it, that is."
"I'm fine, I'm fine, Asp." Her mother waved her off, giving her daughter's shoulder a gentle lick. "It's just a slight cold. I'd love to walk with you, dear." Dawnpoppy got to her feet, more slowly than she had in years past, and nodded for Aspenstar to lead the way. They walked out of camp, and the elder couldn't help but wonder what her daughter needed. She'd been doing a great job as leader, hadn't she? Everyone respected her, and she herself couldn't have been more proud.
She didn't always understand the complexity of her daughter's life, as her own had been so comparatively simple aside from a few years of infertility. Still, she wanted to help, so when they were out of camp she turned to Aspenstar, smiling softly. "Tell me what you need, dear."
She had brought them to the edge of the river. She didn't know why, but her paws had always been drawn to this spot. Of course, there was a certain irony in bringing her mother to the place that had consumed one of her lives, extinguished the life of her brother, Oakleaf. But, Aspenstar knew that at this time, the river side would be quiet, the burbling of the water obscuring the words they would say to each other.
As soon as they reached the waters edge, the leader seemed to crumble. Gone for a moment was the Aspenstar that she was becoming, the monster, the queen. In her mother's presence, she found herself reverting slightly to the scared child that was nestled in her chest. "I... I didn't mean for this to happen," she meowed, her gaze fixed off into the distance. She couldn't meet her mother's gaze, not yet. "I destroyed someone's life. I... I didn't mean for it to happen. I didn't mean to become this cat..." Her voice wavered slightly. No, Aspenstar would not cry. She cleared her voice, before shifting uncomfortably. Where should she begin? If she pulled too hard at the threads of her life, she was afraid she would unravel. Where did that leave her? What could she say to ever articulate the way she felt in her chest? Where was the start of the story, the mess she had found herself in?
"I'm in love with Phantomfox," she admitted after a long moment. "I've been in love with him since the day he helped me find Oakleaf's children." Might as well start this off with a bombshell, right?
Dawnpoppy blinked, sat, took a long and slow breath, and blinked again as she digested this news. Her mind wasn't what is used to be, but she knew who Phantomfox was- knew of his pretty Summerclan mate and their sickly son. Knew what Aspenstar meant when she confessed to loving the captain of her guard.
Her mind whirled for a solid minute before she spoke. "Does he love you too?" She asked quietly, her tone encouraging and entirely non-judgmental. She needed all the information before she could decide what to advise her daughter to do- clearly Aspenstar wanted advice, since she often didn't bother her mother with her own problems.
She held her mother's gaze for a moment, before looking away. "I tried to convince myself he didn't," she admitted, her tail low to the ground. "I did everything I could to pretend I didn't know. I even ordered him away. I could love him without him loving me back." At least, that had been what she tried to convince herself. There was a part of her that had succeeded; the longing had been growing ever so slightly more tolerable. "And then I stumbled on the fight between he and Rosethorn. I heard him say it. I'm in love with Aspenstar. "
Aspenstar paused slightly, for the first time expressing that there was a part of her that did feel some remourse about the situation. "He's the first cat in my life who has ever seen me for who I am, not who I should be. He sees the fractures, the broken pieces, the ugliness, and he accepts it," she meowed softly, her eyes still trained on the ground. "I fell in love with him because he was the first cat who ever accepted all of me. I didn't want to, god, I didn't want to." But, perhaps that was a lie. Maybe not a lie, but certainly not the full truth. If she didn't want to, she would have put a stop to it when she first felt butterflies. She hadn't, though. Instead, butterflies became desire , and soon, it was too late for the feline.
"But I still did. I still fell in love with him, and apparently the feeling was mutual. I ruined her life, Mom."
This was a messy subject indeed, and Dawnpoppy couldn't help the grimace that crossed her whitened features. She coughed a few times, her thinning frame wracked by the jolts, before she spoke. "First of all, dear, you didn't do anything wrong. You didn't force him to love you. You didn't make him forsake any vows he'd made. That's on him, not you."
"Secondly... we can't fight what our heart wants. If you made an effort to stay away from him, and you didn't try to come between them... perhaps they just naturally grew apart. Maybe he realized he'd rushed into a hasty relationship with her. Maybe he realized there were better options out there. Whatever happened, you didn't cause it by yourself, son don't blame yourself for this."
It didn't mean the elder particularly liked Phantomfox as an option for her daughter, with his surly and aggressive tendencies. Nor did she particularly like how their relationship evolved from emotional infidelity. But she prized her daughter's happiness above all else. "Whatever happened between them, that's in the past. If they're over, if he has no ties to her... you two are free to do what you want, without guilt. Don't let the past ruin the present."
"But," she added after a moment, wrinkling her whiskers. "I'd be wary. You're a special girl, Asp, but if he can fall out of love so quickly with one cat he can do it with another, and he might leave you just as quickly. Don't let any unworthy tom stand between you and your goals."
Aspen felt a little comfort at her mother's words. She supposed they were true; after all, she could only control herself, right? But, shouldn't she have prevented it? Hadn't her coy smiles and borderline flirtatious banter drawn him to her? Shouldn't she have avoided him? If she would have just stayed away that first day, if she would have accepted the position and demoted him... Aspenstar frowned at the thought; her life would have been a lot less colorful without him. Her ears twitched- why did she even care? What good was guilt? Her mother was right, it was his fault, not yours. A conflict warred in her eyes.
She blinked at her mother's words. We can't fight what our heart wants. This was true. The more she had struggled against wanting him, the more she wished to be curled next to his ugly mug. He brought her a peace that no one else could bring her. Peace, that was a funny way to put how she felt. It would be hard for anyone to see the duo's relationship as ... peaceful. After all, she was fire and he was gasoline. He fed the parts of her that ached for blood, for chaos. She had taken a nose dive into the dark parts of herself, and he stood by her side, his very presence, even just the scandal of it all, egging her on, encouraged her to release the monster within. By his side, she felt at peace with that part of her for the first time in her life. Had she been a fool to fight it all along? Had her inner turmoil, her desperate clinging to humanity, all been a waste of her time and effort? It had only delayed the inevitable, hadn't it?
"He has a tie," she meowed with a passive flick of her ear. "Their son. He wants him back." If Foxpaw didn't exist, yes, they would have their happy ending. They could galavant off into the sunset, both high off of the psychopathic tendencies of the other. But he did, and he was a complication. "She took him with her to SummerClan." Her voice was devoid of emotion. "I'm sure this has all destroyed him, too. He's a soft boy, kind," for a moment, there was a soft fondness in the way she spoke of him. Foxpaw had been a particular fascination for the leader since the day she saw Phantomfox snap her brother's legs. She had fallen in love with him that day, if she hadn't been in love with him before. The way that Phantomfox was so willing to kill to protect what he loved was alluring to her. It was the same fierce protectiveness that she had for her clan, no matter if that protectiveness was legible to the others. "Should I be guilty about that? About knowing deep down that some how, some way, he will end up with custody of the boy?" The question was soft. Rosethorn had no chance against him.
Aspenstar froze at her mother's final words. Her entire body jerked at the very idea, as if someone had placed a burning iron on her skin. It was as if the very idea brought her physical pain; was her mother right? Was she just a fix? No, that couldn't be right. She saw the way he looked at her, saw the way that he was as drunk on the idea of the her as she was on the idea of him. ... right? For a brief moment, doubt flashed through her gaze, before she took a moment to compose herself.
What she was going to say next might make her mother think differently about her, might start to expose the serpent that lived just below Aspenstar's skin. But, the leader saw no purpose in lying. "I love him in a way that I can't explain, like the stars themselves have ordained our intertwined fates." What a cruel thought, that the stars would ordain such a pair. Did they really have no empathy for the living? "But, I can say this with as much certainty as I say that I love him: my love will run out the moment he stops being useful to me. If anything, he should be the one who is worried about me." She let out a noise. At least, after hearing this, maybe Dawnpoppy would stop trying to soothe her?
Dawnpoppy did frown deeper at the mention of Foxpaw. "You should find a way to keep the boy out of it, if you can. I can speak to a mother's love, and a child's bond with their parents... even if Phantomfox insists on getting his son back, his mother has just as equal a claim on him. It's not ideal, but... perhaps time in both clans will have to do. It would be better for the boy, too- if you want to keep him soft and kind." If someone had taken any of Dawnpoppy's children away from her... she would've been devastated.
Her last words made Dawnpoppy frown again. A coughing fit overtook her for what seemed an eternity then, leaving a bit of blood staining the edge of her lip. "Oh, Aspendust, you don't mean that," she said, flicking her tail behind her. Quite suddenly she smiled, looking a little dazed but quite happy. "You're a sweet girl. A kind girl. We should get back to see your father and Oakleaf. We need to celebrate your promotion to warrior, don't we?"
She nodded at her words. That would be a suitable enough compromise for her, but she was unsure if Phantomfox would have the same convictions. She didn't get a chance to respond though before Dawnpoppy continued.
Her blood ran cold as her mother spoke her name. She hadn't been Aspendust in moons, and the actual sound of her former warrior name made her flinch as if a hot iron had been placed on her spine. That wasn't all, though. Oakleaf.... he had been dead for seasons now.... There was a pained look in her eye as she realized what that might mean: her mother was in her twilight moons, was she losing her memory? "Okay, mom, let's go see them," she meowed, before she followed to camp.
- It had been some time since Aspenstar had confessed her affair with Phantomfox to her mother. Things had been... expectedly busy for her. After all, it's no surprise that after establishing a colony, you'd have more work on your plate. With Pinesimmer off in SummerClan, she'd found getting things done easier, and it was this newfound productivity that had kept her away from the elder's den. That would change tonight, though. Jackdawpaw had just given Aspenstar the news that the situation was getting worse. Her brow had furrowed at his words, especially as he warned her that if it continued, it was very possible her mother would lose her memory completely. The idea that her mother would forget who she was was daunting, horrifying, made her stomach churn. She couldn't have that, so she was going to take time out to see her today.
Padding over to the nursery, the NightClan leader poked her head in. "Ma, you in there?"
Dawnpoppy was indeed getting more forgetful. She'd been content with her aging body for some time, knowing this was how life went. It was easy to lounge around all day and complain good-naturedly about your knees hurting. Now her mind was starting to bleed around the edges, fading into a fuzzy kind of cheerfulness. There was no need to feel sad about a failing memory when you couldn't even remember what you were forgetting. The elder was less sharp than she'd been before- and she always called her daughter Aspendust these days.
"Aspendust!" She said brightly, rising unsteadily to her feet. The corner of her moss nest was stained with brown blood from where she wiped her mouth after coughing. "Are we going for a walk? It's such a lovely evening, isn't it?"
Aspendust . Every time her mother called her by her warrior name, Aspen felt herself wincing. It was evidence that her mother was losing grip with what was happening. Perhaps it wasn't a bad thing, the leader supposed. Perhaps her mother would die still thinking she was a hero, simply because she wasn't cognizant enough to know that she was anything but. Maybe it was better that way. She blinked away the thoughts. No, this was not a time to consider her mother's mortality, or what it meant to her.
The one-eyed leader smiled at her mother, before nodding. "Yes, I was thinking that we could. Things have been... busy lately," an understatement of the year, "and I've been a little... absent. I'm sorry about that. I was thinking we could go to the triple falls? It's where you took me the first night I was promoted to apprentice, remember that?"
"Yes, I do remember," Dawnpoppy said with a wide smile, before delving into a fit of coughing. "Excuse me. That must've been eight or nine moons ago now! You're getting so old so fast, my love." She nodded for Aspendust to lead the way, following her out of the den and through camp. "Where's Oakleaf? Is he leading some patrol again today? I just spoke with him this morning about how his warriorship is going."
Is he leading some patrol today? The leader visably winced at the reference to her brother. It had been a very long time since she and Phantomfox had found Oakleaf drown in the river, but it didn't make the pain any less. It was the moment that started it all. How was she going to respond to this? When she had confessed her concerns to Larkspur, the furry deputy had told her that it would be best to challenge her mother's preception of reality as little as possible. Play along with it, you don't want to spend what little time you have left upsetting her. The words floated through the back of her mind.
She found herself nodding slowly. "Yes, he is! He told me that...." what leader would her mother remember? "Flamingstar," she decided, "asked him to take some of the apprentices out. I wish I got assignments like that," she meowed with a bit of wistfulness in her voice, fully committed to the adoption of Aspendust as a character. Larkspur was right, she needed to make this as easy on her mother as possible. If her mom remembered her as a young warrior, perhaps she just needed to be the cat she was back then.
The duo walked along for a few moments, Aspen leading the way slowly as not to wear her mother out. After a pause, she glanced back at her. "How are you doing?" she asked, a bit of seriousness in her voice, as to tell Dawnpoppy that she wanted to know the real answer to her concerns.
"Ahh, it's good to see that Flamingstar trusts him so much," Dawnpoppy said brightly. The question seemed to confuse her mother, who took a few more steps for doubling over, hacking a bit of blood onto the ground at her feet by the end of her coughing fit. "I'm fine, dear. Only I have this cold that came on yesterday or the day before. I hope you don't get it."
The clan knew by now it wasn't a cold- it was something eating away at her insides, turning up clots of blood and accelerating her mental decay. It had been moons since the coughing fits had started and they were only getting worse. "Why do you ask? What's wrong?"
"I have a feeling it's not contagious," she murmured, more to herself than her mother. Should she have brought Pinesimmer home to take care of her? Was Jackdawpaw's treatment not enough? The leader's jaw clenched; the idea of retrieving Pinesimmer made her want to gag on herself, but she also didn't want her mom to... kick the bucket. Her tail twitched at her own displeasure of the situation.
"I'm concerned about you, Ma. Have you been going to see Jackdawpaw regularly like I asked?" Her tail brushed against her mother's pelt, concern in her eye. "Every time we see each other, you look a little sicker. You... you need to take care of yourself, alright? We still need you."
"Oh, I'm not going anywhere. Especially not before you become a warrior, Aspenpaw," Dawnpoppy said warmly, resting her frail chin on her daughter's shoulder. "I know I had your litter later in life, but I'm still a warrior! Don't age me prematurely." Her voice, warbly and a little raspy, was certainly not the voice of a healthy warrior- nor was the shaking of her limbs. But she didn't seem to notice. "My, but you've gotten tall. What has your mentor been feeding you?"