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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It was late, well after moonhigh. What had started as an errand for his mother had quickly been forgotten when he’d realised that, as no one was keeping tabs on him anymore, he could go and hang around Eris instead. And so that was what he’d spent the day doing, helping her around her lab and sharing lunch with her because she always forgot to eat when she was engrossed in her experiments and switching on the lights he’d installed when it started to grow dark. All the mice they’d worked on had died, but that was half the fun — even Eris hadn’t seemed as frustrated by the failure as she usually did — and they’d shared a little lingering look over the bodies as they laid them out for the maggots and the worms.
Then, on the way home, he’d suddenly remembered his original reason for going out and had to keep up the pretence of being a good assistant — Rhiannon had probably been growling about his tardiness all day, if she’d remembered him at all. So, he’d had to go and hurriedly carry out his original task, which just made him later and later — how hard was it to find these accursed bloody berries? He spent far, far too long creeping around in the pitch-black undergrowth, getting tangled in spiderwebs and losing his footing in mole-holes and hissing curses every time his ears snagged on thorns and he had to swat and writhe around to free himself, until eventually it happened so often that he ended up screeching with anger while he did it, on his back and fighting with plants in the dark. When finally he had what his mother had wanted (and, in all likelihood, wouldn’t want tomorrow morning, when she’d take one look at them and sniff and say ‘what would I want those for?’ and leave him twitching behind her), it was the still, cold silence of the early hours. He was covered in shallow scratches, had a new, blood-crusted nick out of one of his ears, and was in an over-tired, seething mood.
He hardly thought about his family nowadays. Rhiannon, of course, was a looming figure, but his father, sister and brother had all slipped to the fringes. Where before they’d been such all-consuming presences, directing every facet of his life from what he could eat to where he could go to what he could say, now he was free of them. And while at first he’d had a confused period of mourning for the change, now he couldn’t be happier about it. He’d always believed he was close to them — now he realised it was only physical closeness from forced proximity. He had never known any other cats, and now, though he was still plotting Mal’s death, it was more a comforting, subconscious force of habit than something he was actively invested in; if it happened — if the opportunity arose — then wonderful, but if it didn’t, then oh well. His brother, once such a tyrant in his life, had faded to a peripheral being who played no real part in his day-to-day activities. Where his thoughts had been consumed by him two moons ago, now Kier went most of the day without thinking of him at all. And when he did, it was usually only because he was getting home late for dinner, or just to slip into bed if he missed it, and he had a vague, faint dread — now more a sort of tired irritation, like the monster of his nightmares had become a tangible beast, and the beast was obnoxious — of Mal’s backhanded drawls.
It seemed, however, that he’d underestimated just how much this once-tyrant might be bothered by the loss of his submissive chewtoy, and by said chewtoy’s disrespect for their family. Because, as he trotted up the staircase, eager to set down the twig he was carrying and give himself a quick, much-needed grooming and get into bed, a shadow suddenly fell over him from the second floor landing. Kier raised his head from where he’d had his eyes idly on the steps, his top two fangs protruding over the twig and his gaze strangely innocent. And, of course, it was his brother. His heart sank; he’d been hoping to get into the safety of their room without a beating. He told himself it was just because he’d outgrown the childish fear of Mal and any beating would just be an annoying chore, but really, he wasn’t that free of him. He still felt the fear; he still felt the dread of being alone with his brother; he still wanted to cry out for their father, even though he knew he’d never saved him then and he wouldn’t save him now.
But he wouldn’t let Mal see how much he affected him — let him see how he was the only cat in the world who could make him genuinely afraid. So, instead, swallowing his fear and replacing it with defiant, cheerful nonchalance, he set the berry-laded twig down at his own paws and told him, “no need for an escort, I’m coming straight up. Thank you, though, for your concern, brother.” And, with that, he picked the twig up again and tried to swerve around Mal to get to the trainee quarters, hoping he couldn’t see how fast his heart was beating in his little chest and how his pupils still darted like a hunted bird’s no matter how calm and unbothered he tried to keep his narrow silver gaze. His head twitched slightly; it hadn’t done that in weeks. His family, it seemed, really did make him regress to the small, hounded second son he’d always been. Just when he’d finally started to claw together his own confidence and freedom and life.
He didn't even like them all that much, but now that his family was pulled in different directions, he had to admit he felt a little off. He had made acquaintances but none filled the Kier shaped hole in his heart. He hadn't realized how much of a punching bag his little brother was to him. And in turn, hadn't realized how much his ever-racing mind needed him to let off steam. Mal had a talent for keeping whatever emotion he was currently feeling bound up in chains. That emotion, the majority of the time, was anger. Relief had flooded the tom when he noticed that his siblings had broken off from him. He didn't have to babysit any more. At first, he couldn't have cared less to know what they were up to. In his mind, they were static. They didn't change or grow. Kier clings to their mother, catering to her every whim and creepily complimenting her as he does so. Kate is plotting world domination, and stepping on every cat's toes to achieve it.
A small part of him was even proud, that they had the initiative to do their own things. Another part mourned for their irritating presence. He was the oldest, strongest, and loudest of his peers and now he was just another Hunter in the League. Their weakness empowered him and now they weren't the only ones to be compared to. He dearly missed the role of 'leader', no matter how minuscule his following. As much as it pained him to admit, those two made Mal who he was. They were missing pieces to his jagged and messed up puzzle. He wanted to be Kate's older brother again, the one who could protect her if she needed it. He wanted to be Kier's mentor, thickening his skin with every insult and every blow. To Mal, he truly held these roles for his siblings. The silver tom finally resigned to the fact that he...missed them. There would never be another soul that knew that, however.
Mal had grown considerably since arriving at Primal Instinct. Instead of wallowing in misery at the loss of his family, he found solace in sparring. He loved to fight, and that part of him locked away from the world awoke every time he unsheathed his claws. His muscles were now toned and he struck fear in most of the other trainees. He was growing into quite the handsome young tom. Funnily enough, he was strong enough and now capable of surviving on his own but he needed the League to get there. In that time of training, he couldn't help but grow sort of fond of the partners he learned with. Mal had never known friends, only Harley and his siblings. The concept was strange to him and he wasn't sure he entirely liked it. The thought of having to be dependable for someone else repulsed him. He shouldn't have to worry about anyone other than himself. If everyone followed that logic, then there would be no need for reliable "friends".
A familiar scent hit his nose as he stretched his limbs. He stopped midway through and lifted his head to confirm the arrival of his dear brother. A sadistic grin spread across Mal's face. He padded over to meet Kier, stopping before he got to him. He enjoyed the imagery; Kier below him, his shadow consuming his entire form. The meek look of his little brother as the inevitable dread overcame him. His words, a front. The little creep was petrified. Mal cocked his head to the side, the faintest hint of a chuckle rumbled deep within his chest as Kier tried to move around him. He really didn't think this would be it, did he? Mal hopped around to face the now behind him Kier and fell in step next to him, his broad shoulder bumping up against his brothers. In another second, he was in front of Kier again, his brows furrowing as he stood in front of him, "Well, of course you wouldn't need one. You've been doing it just fine all this time, yes?" Mal's voice fell right back into its passive aggressive tone that he used almost exclusively for his little brother. "Tell me brother, how have you been?" He crooned, lowering his ears slightly to convey the perfect sympathetic and concerned expression, "And you would be able to tell me how our dear mother is doing. I haven't the slightest idea, and you, well, do have an... attachment to her." He added with a small smile, lifting a paw and placing it gently on Kier's shoulder to really sell his performance. Mal knew it was all show. And Kier certainly knew.
Kier’s eyes darted slowly over his brother’s face with an odd, distrusting expression on his face — one that wanted to believe this was just gentle concern, and one that knew it wasn’t; one that so wanted to be able to trust his own flesh and blood, his big brother, and one that knew he couldn’t; one that was almost leaning into the lie, and one that knew where it would lead. At heart, he truly was still just a child who hoped that one day, maybe one day, his brother would respect him. He stayed silent as Mal continued; the closer he got, and the softer his voice became, the more he understood the threat in it. The more his heart began to sink as he realised what he’d done wrong, what Mal was displeased about, what he’d been foolhardy to believe wouldn’t come back to haunt him. He wanted to slip past him and flee, but he knew that in every version of this story, Mal caught him. As it was, Kier stayed still, chin not quite tucked in and mismatched pupils not leaving his brother’s — and was it stubbornness, defiance, or was it a rabbit freezing in the hunter’s torch and hoping he moved on?
At his brother’s insinuating taunt about their mother, Kier lowered his eyes, shame wrestling with embarrassment. When Mal placed his paw on his shoulder — his brother knew his feelings about physical touch, knew he could disrespect Kier’s boundaries and he couldn’t do anything to stop it, knew that it was just as effective as a blow precisely because it threatened one, because it echoed of the past — Kier flinched, eyes still on the ground. He wanted to shake it off but he didn’t. Then, finally, steeling himself and swallowing away the quivering fear, he forced himself to look up and fixed his brother with a sneering, narrow-eyed smile.
“It must be tough,” he replied, and his voice was close to spitting, hateful contempt, dropping all pretence of this conciliating sibling game they played. He knew the punishment for insolence but he couldn’t go back to the role he’d always filled — he’d grown, psychologically, and he physically couldn’t cram himself back into that pitiful little box. Finally, even if it ended in a beating, he could stand up to his brother for the first time in his life and tremble a little less than he would have two moons ago. “To go from having your little kingdom to no one caring a single fig about you. Who do you frighten now? The kits in the nursery — the little trainees? Poor Mal, poor big brother — Mother likes me,” uses me, “Harley babies Kate; who do you have? Who notices if you don’t come home at night? Or are you always home on time? Do you never leave.” It sounded more like a blunt, mocking statement, and Kier leaned back slightly, straightening as he resigned himself and dove headfirst into this rebellion; he was already committed and the ending would be bad, so who cared if it ended up awful. How that would sting, his little brother pitying him, looking down on him. “That’s why you’ll never be anyone’s favourite, Mal — because you don’t have enough personality to do anything more than be Father’s dependable, eldest son. What a prize.”
Now it was utter denigration, utter derision. His voice only shook slightly; the quiver detracted a little from the arrogant ferocity he was aiming for, but spoke so utterly of how long this anger had been bubbling away in side him — that he would say it even when he was so afraid. It was almost admirable, almost brave. Kier’s eyes didn’t leave his brother’s, though every few moments he’d slightly flinch and wince and half-blink, like he knew a blow was coming and kept preparing for it a moment too soon and was continually thrown off when it didn’t arrive. Finally, in an act of pure rebellion, he moved his paw up and pushed Mal’s off his shoulder; it was gentle, but the gentleness spoke louder than if it had been a brutal shattering of their chain. His chin quivered slightly, as did his paw, but his eyes were pure contempt — pure ‘no more.’
He had him captured, his piercing blue eyes boring into the black tom. This felt like home, familiar. All that was missing was Kate's disgruntled look and Harley waiting for the right moment to intervene. Oh how he enjoyed this too much. This time, it was his law abiding self that was stuffed into the corner. That part of him now almost felt bad. Just a small moment, a fleeting twinge of guilt for what he was doing to his only brother. It quickly dissipated, like usual, and dark Mal came in full force, squashing the pathetic good angel on his shoulder with a metaphorically loud squelch. Kier gave him something he so desperately craved; power. He could feel it welling up inside him at the very presence of his brother. Radiating from his core with such assurance and confidence that it rattled Mal sometimes. He knew with utmost certainty that even if no one else bowed to him, Kier would. He always would. The sniveling, bony, little tom that couldn't muster enough strength to stand up for himself. He was oh so predictable. His eyes never left his brother's. They never twitched, never darted, just intensified with every passing second. He could hold him here forever, locked in this trance that only he could end. That only he could allow Kier to come out of for a breath of air. That only he could--
Oh? What's this? The change in demeanor. The hardened glare. The knowing smile. No way. Was the little creep growing a spine? He could read him so easily. It was a talent of Mal's. He noticed things in other cats that they didn't even know they were doing themselves. It was how he was so persuasive, so charming. Body language is everything. As he spoke, Mal raised a brow, as if mocking him. As if he were allowing him to speak and humoring his idiotic notion of talking back to him. He would have silenced him if it weren't for the utter surprise at his words. That power that boiled inside him churned into rage. To think that this little pathetic creature had the audacity to throw those ridiculous claims at him. To think he could say such things without repercussions. To think that deep down, Mal knew he was absolutely and unironically spouting the truth. At this very moment, he couldn't decide if he was more angry with Kier or the fact that he was right. What happened to his baby brother? Who taught him to stand up? Who would Mal have to pummel for allowing Kier to gain confidence? He was almost hurt, he almost recoiled at his brother's insults. Was he truly right? Was his identity completely dependent on bullying Kier? Would no one ever be proud of him? The questions swam around in his mind as he stared ahead, speechless. He suddenly felt faint, everything spun around him in every direction, the very foundation of who he was crumbling before him. It was an out of body experience and he couldn't stand it. His roller coaster of emotions that had just occurred left him reeling. His paw being knocked off Kier's shoulder locked everything back in its place. Like that little act of defiance brought Mal's soul barreling back into his hollow body.
No. He would not win here. He would not best him with simple words. Mal was stronger than that. His eyes narrowed and his brow furrowed in new resolve. He would show his brother that this was a grave mistake. One that he would not soon forget. He leaned forward, his nose inches from Kier, "And that, brother, is where you fail. You live for being the favorite. Your mind is not your own. You only exist in the opinions of others. And the need for that opinion of you leaves you a puppet. You could not stand on your own." He smirked, snapping Kier's precious twig under his large paw, the wood splintering with the weight and looking as sad as you could imagine a broken twig could look. "Don't forget that it was I who held your strings long before Mother ever did" He added with a sneer. He knew these words would cut deep and he honestly didn't know how his brother would respond. He may lunge at him for all he knew. He hoped this would crush him, because he needed him to be broken, so that he could rise to his former self. Kier was Mal's drug. He needed a fix from time to time and two moons was far too long of a stretch. The high he was riding right now would last him awhile. He felt on top of the world. Adrenaline coursed through his veins, egging him on. Poor, poor Kier. What did he do to deserve such wrath? Nothing, really. Mal thanked whatever higher being there was that he wasn't born the small pitiful one. The irony in his insult, however, was that Mal could not stand without Kier. Maybe he liked this newfound confidence his brother held. It gave him more reason to put him in his place. It was brave, and incredibly stupid. He stood tall over Kier, his tail lashing from side to side and his ears pinned in anticipation for a fight. He leaned ever so slightly forward, as if beckoning a reply.
The look on Mal’s face — so subtle but there: doubt, bewilderment, rage — was everything Kier could ever have wanted, could ever have dreamed of; it was like a drug sending tremors up his spine. He felt just as dizzy, just as light-headed as his brother did, but where for Mal it was an identity crisis, for Kier it was a pure high straight to his veins, one that made him almost laugh out loud, his brother crumbling in front of him. This was what victory felt like; and to have a victory over Mal — the air in Kier’s lungs felt like heroin. For the first time in their lives, their roles were reversed — and he was addicted.
And then Mal got himself back under control and stepped closer, and Kier was broken back into little brother. The laughter inside his head fell silent; the look of triumph wilted back into wary fear; his chin tucked in as he took a small step back. When Mal snapped his twig in half, squishing the hard-won berries and staining his fur dark purple, Kier hunched his shoulders slightly; he wanted to growl, but he held his silence, not daring it. All that effort, wasted — and now his mother would think he was incompetent. Don’t forget that it was I who held your strings long before Mother ever did. He hated, more than anything, that his history with Mal didn’t just exist in his own mind, that Mal had all those memories too. He hated that so long as his brother lived, he would never be free — that every achievement would be soiled with oh, well, if only you’d known Kier when he was a kit. He hated the idea that he, so obsessed with forging his own path and his own ideas, still wasn’t free of his own subconscious need to latch onto a fixation; that, when he’d thought he was acting on his own, that it had been what he’d wanted, had just taken his reins from Mal and handed them to his mother; that when he’d thought he was finally making his own decisions, he’d still entwined his fate with his mother’s. Maybe there was nothing sinister in it — maybe it was still what he wanted; maybe his life and his mother’s were just progressing in parallel lines. But the way Mal said it, with such knowing contempt, made Kier feel like he understood something that he didn’t, and that uncertain fear — that humiliation, that insecurity, that knowledge that for as long as Mal was alive he’d always just be little Kier, that possessive terror that told him that if he died, Mal would usurp him as Mother’s favourite — filled him with such wild, desperate hate.
In that moment, in that one, intoxicating moment, he wanted to end this relationship that had been festering between them since the day he was born right there; he was brave, he could do it, he was small, he could shoot up right now and latch his teeth in the fleshy part under Mal’s chin and hang off him like a disease until all his blood was dripping down the Mansion stairs. It was almost like it was what Mal wanted, too — for this tight, unceasing tension to finally be given its outlet, for it to end one way or another.
For a few moments, Kier was trapped by indecision. He offered Mal a thin, twitching smile, one so dismissive and contemptuous and unbothered — and the idea that it was supposed to be unbothered was so laughable when Kier’s eyes were as black as that, when the fur on his shoulders kept twitching back and forth, beginning to stand up and then forced back down by some internal battle, when he kept tottering back and forth on paws uncertain of what they wanted to do. He imagined himself saying something clever and final in a sly, dreary voice, brows quirked and eyes so warmly knowing; imagined himself slipping close past Mal with some last, lingering comment that would keep him wide awake; imagined how satisfying it would be, how powerful, how fitting of who he so desperately wanted to be: suave, cold, uncaring. Grown-up.
But Kier was a child. He was nine moons old. He was hurt. And so what he did wasn’t what he wanted to do. What he did was what he’d never done before, and what the bullied kit of his past needed him to do, was begging him to do, for them, for all the times he couldn’t before.
What Kier did was let out a slightly manic, tearful bark of laughter, twitch his lips back into a fanged hiss, and scratched his claws across Mal’s cheek. It was so quick — there and done before he’d even had time to properly think about it. And the second he realised what he’d done, the second he saw the bloody marks opening up on his brother’s face and felt the hot wetness on his own claws, his eyes widened in slow terror — and he turned and fled down the stairs. His descent was speedy and ungraceful; he’d learned to be quick in his youth, learned that where Mal could catch him in the open, he sometimes couldn’t reach him when he burrowed in behind some object. His eyes darted about desperately for some such hiding place as he raced out onto the outside landing of the Mansion that led onto the steps that descended to the barren grounds, bathed in bright silver moonlight and the shadow of the house. But he couldn’t see anything within running distance; instead, for just a moment too long, he stood there gasping in breaths that were quickly becoming panicked.
He saw the power within Kier. He saw the moment of triumph and how every fiber of his little brother's being relished in that moment. He got just a small taste of what Mal so desperately craved and why he treated Kier this way. The two were not as different as one would think. This small glimpse into their roles being switched showed him that if Kier was able, if he could ride that high a little longer, he could be dangerous. He could be the bully, easily. It was Mal's job to make sure that never happened so when he got the reaction he wanted once he bowed up to Kier, relief washed over him. Watching him lose that spark of hope was all he needed. His little brother was changing, though, and that thought scared Mal more than any brute of a tom he could face in the future. He was standing up, he was holding his ground, and he was talking back. Gone were the days of snide comments that he could throw at him and almost guarantee silence as a response. Gone were the days of cuffing him over the head with a paw with a promise of no retaliation. They were both getting older, and childish ways were quickly dissipating. The tension had been there for as long as he could remember and Kier was close to snapping.
As if on cue, Mal noticed the slow and twitching smile that Kier had let creep across his features. The depth of his black eyes held a hatred Mal had never seen in him before. The grey tom narrowed his own eyes, his pupils turning into slits rather than black holes. The snap was inevitable, palpable even. If anyone were to get close to the brothers at this time, the frenzy of anticipation for a fight would ensue. Their lives were building for this moment. What are you going to do? It's your move, Little Kier. Just as Mal was lowering himself slightly, braced for impact, a shrill sound came from in front of him. For just a split second, he was confused as to what just happened. Kier, he just... laughed? His heart lurched with such a disturbed feeling as he realized what was happening. A thin trail of blood rolled down Mal's left cheek as the wound began to sting. The rage and confusion he felt was indescribable. He was seething and he could feel his body radiating heat as the anger flowed through his veins. This was the last thing on Mal's mind that his little brother would do. He knew they would scuffle but for Kier to throw the first punch, to work up enough courage to even move, and then for that courage to evaporate as quickly as it came. He was gone, the black tom streaking down the steps was just a blur.
Just as a drop of blood dripped from his cheek onto the floor, spreading into a small circle, Mal launched himself forward. He soared down the steps, taking several at a time as he leaped after his brother. Finally hitting the dirt, Mal bounded into the brush. His muscles were wound tight, adrenaline coursing through him. "Big mistake, Kier." Mal growled, almost shouting into the shadows. Oh what he would do when he caught the little weasel. He wouldn't kill him, no, but he would make him regret laying a paw on him. He couldn't handle the thought of killing him... who would he torment then? He skidded to a halt, slowly scanning the darkness and sniffing the air around him. He started creeping along, circling around where he thought he could hear him panting. A low chuckle rumbled within his chest, the sound and the circumstance lending him a particularly evil appearance. "Harley and Kate aren't here to save you now. Oh, and where is mother dearest? In this, your darkest hour?" He teased, lowering his body as he stalked his prey. The moonlight was just enough to bathe the open grounds in a beautiful silver, perfectly matching Mal's pelt. The tall grass helped him stay hidden as he tried to locate his brother. The shadows, however, were perfect for Kier. The slinky tom could move about without much to worry about. This battlefield couldn't have suited them more. Two opposites in color, circling each other until one could snuff out the other. He had never truly hunted his brother before, and he had to admit, it was his new favorite game. He wasn't like this with any other cat. What about his brother was so irritating to him that he had to treat him this way? He didn't know, he never would, but he wasn't going to stop now.
At first, Kier crouched cowering in the shadows of the undergrowth, watching his brother through the leaves with his panted, fearful breaths trying so hard to be silent and his wide eyes flooded by moonlight. They looked such a dull, empty grey, not like his mother’s own glowing silver or the beauty of his brother’s pelt. Crouching there, he was a pitiful thing, fur too short and dull, bones too prominent, body too small — and he was so heartbreakingly aware of it. Kier was never afraid; he’d court leaders and bite his own tail-tip off to impress.
But his brother terrified him.
“What is it about me, Mal? What precisely do you hate so much?” Kier was aiming for a disinterested, even mocking tone; what he got instead was something almost plaintive, because, much as he was horrified by it and quickly tried to crack down on it, he truly was just a child born of the moors who didn’t understand why his brother had seen the mewling little kit beside him and decided he was something so disgusting, so awful, so beneath him. When he continued, despite how much the honesty terrified him and left a great half of him gaping in shock at this deviating from the script of his life, he was almost tearful, his voice wet and full. “All I’ve ever done is try to be good for this family.” A lie. “I never hated you or Kate, not back then.” Another lie. All he did was lie. He was made of them. He wanted to be honest, wanted to cut himself open, was crying for it; he couldn’t. “So why me? Why me, Mal? Why is she your sister and I’m something to be spat on?”
When he’d started speaking, when he’d been truly plaintive and willing to just stay there like prey that had given in and let his brother find him, he’d been sitting in one spot, in a bank of dark ferns; but he’d been throwing his voice, so that it sounded like he was on the direct opposite side of the clearing. Now, as the lies took back over to twist around him like a defence mechanism, like his brain had seen what his heart was doing and had wreathed them over the truth, like it had spat why are you being so stupid? while he’d stared back forlornly, he was picking his way around the edge of the clearing, continuing to throw his voice this way and that so that he was here, there, everywhere; in the trees, the bushes, the air itself. The moon striped the earthen ground with stark black shadows.
“Why don’t you love me?”
And for that final question, all the lies stripping away one last time to expose the raw, wailing truth, Kier stopped in plain sight between two banks of ferns, his voice his own, reedy and fragile and smothered so anti-climactically by the trees around them, his expression defeated and torn apart and stricken with the inability to understand this age-old question, his head tilted slightly with exhausted misery, his body so small. He looked at his brother, brows drawn together and up in such an innocent demonstration of grief, and he wanted to understand. What was it about him that was so fundamentally unloveable? What had his brother seen in him that horrified him so fully, that filled him with contempt and scorn and pity and hate?
The constant battle between 'good' and 'evil' in Mal's mind was raging a full-on war right now. Hearing Kier's questions, these heavy and building questions, was causing Mal some discomfort to say the least. He didn't know the answer. He didn't know why he chose his little brother as the punching bag to all his malicious tendencies. He did nothing wrong to deserve this treatment. He was this small, pitiful, gangly looking kit that needed love and attention to thrive but instead received punishment and hatred from his older brother. Why? Why was he like this? Why did he enjoy tormenting another living being, much less his own brother? These are questions that had surfaced in his mind throughout his short life, but he never entertained them for too long. He always pushed them aside, convincing himself he was just an older brother. That's what siblings did, right? Give their younger brothers hell? This was normal... right? Kier was almost pleading, his voice breaking in all the right places to convey the most sad and desperate picture for Mal. It was a struggle to decipher whether he was telling the truth. Mal guessed he was not, and his brother was an incredible actor. He knew this from his doting demeanor towards Harley, but then shrinking back into whatever creep he was as soon as their father turned his back. It was disturbing yet impressive the way he could flip his script at any given time.
Mal's ears swiveled around, twitching at every change in direction Kier's voice seemed to take. He halted his slow creep, his muscles taut and his body as still as it could possibly be. In the next moment, he saw the slinky black figure, bathed in moonlight, without a single shadow hiding his location. Mal relaxed, rolling back his shoulders as he glared at him. Why didn't he love him? He did love him. He loved him dearly. He couldn't imagine his life without Kier, couldn't he see that? He was no one without him. Just as light cannot exist without dark, big cannot exist without small, Mal cannot exist without Kier. He admitted that to himself, in this moment. He wouldn't dare say it out loud for his brother to hear, though. He loved him for all the wrong reasons. A lever to be used at Mal's will, whether Kier consented or not. He was an easy way to feel powerful and strong and feared. He slowly moved to the other, eyes narrowing as he approached. His tail lashed as he sat in front of him, just staring. He didn't quite know what to say. His heart actually broke for his brother, but he was too selfish to fix their relationship, not that Kier would ever have it that way anyhow. Finally, he sighed, heavily and dramatically exhaling his breath. "Kier..." His voice was almost soft, defeated even. He shook his head slowly and in the next moment, launched himself at the black cat. His paws slammed into his shoulders, barreling him over so that Mal had him pinned underneath him. He hissed, barring his fangs as he targeted Kier's throat but he suddenly stopped, running a tongue over his lips as his mouth closed. He stared at his brother, his blue eyes boring into his greys.
He kept a paw on his chest as he spoke, "Kier, you're my brother." The words came out in a whisper, as if he didn't want to say them. It was a struggle to choke them out of the recesses of his mind. His words were few, but they meant so much more. In that one sentence, it was an apology, a reassurance, and a promise. At the end of the day, Mal and Kier were brothers. They were family and Mal would always choose his life over his death. And that meant something. Whether or not Kier would catch on to that, he didn't know. He snorted loudly and backed off of his brother, letting him up freely for the first time in their lives. He licked his paw, going over his wounded cheek, "If you ever raise a paw to me again, you'll find yourself without it." He threatened, just for good measure and to wrap up this sappy moment.
When his brother first came into view, he tensed, like seeing a monster from a fairytale in the dark. When he began to approach, it took everything in Kier not to run, to stand there and wait for him to draw near. When he finally sat in front of him, Kier was trembling openly, his little paws shaking against the earth and his jaw clenched tight, so defiantly, to stop his teeth from chattering. He raised his chin slightly. But then, when Mal just breathed out his name with such quiet, defenceless exhaustion, it turned his world upside down. He didn't know what to do. He faltered. His paws moved restlessly, with small little movements, against the ground, like he didn't know whether to flee or stay. His body relaxed, but that somehow just made him look more afraid - because Kier was never uncertain. His brother showing him gentleness had thrown him like nothing else in the world ever had.
And then - and Kier hated that he should have predicted this; why did he always want to believe his brother might change; why did it keep breaking his heart - Mal launched himself at him, claws outstretched, and pinned him against the ground. "Mal - Mal, please," he babbled in a frantic, quiet little rush, looking up at his brother with wide eyes that darted between his. The same things he always babbled when he got him underneath him on the ground, apologising and pleading for the only times in his life if it might just appease his brother - please don't; please, Mal, don't, please. But this time was different. He'd never hurt Mal before; he might kill him this time. And as much as Kier spouted that rhetoric about finding meaningless, unpredictable deaths so fun and exciting, when it actually came down to it, he didn't want to die - he wanted to live; he was terrified; it was too soon, there was so much left that he still wanted to do, to try, to see. When Mal showed his teeth, Kier squeezed his eyes shut and turned his head away; anyone else he would have stared into the jaws of, would have laughed and cheered and chattered until the teeth sank into his neck, but for some reason, for some broken reason, he didn't want to look his brother in the eye when he killed him.
And then, instead, Mal's weight was stepping off him. Kier stayed there for a long moment longer, half-curled up against the ground, eyes squeezed shut, paws raised defensively, so small and skinny and afraid. Finally, he dared to open his eyes, his working pupil dilating to match his broken one. Kier, you're my brother. Still not moving from the ground, Kier just stared up at his brother in disbelief, in innocent, confused distrust. This was a trap. Surely it was a trap - there was no other explanation, no other reason for Mal to be talking like this.
Finally, still slightly hunched defensively, like he was ready to curl up again and protect his head if his brother changed his mind again, he pushed himself into a sitting position, watching him distrustfully from under his lashes. He didn't want to let himself hope. If you ever raise a paw to me again, you'll find yourself without it. Still not having said anything, Kier broke his silence to let out a little, huffing breath of laughter. At least that was more normal. "So, what?" he asked at last, voice more uncertain than usual, despite the mocking tone he still forced into it because he had to cling to some sense of normality in this dizzying, inexplicable turn of events, had to seem like he didn't care as much as he did, like his heart wasn't growing with hope, "do we cuddle and go dance through a flower meadow? What does this mean? You know I have allergies." Despite everything, his eyes had grown gentler and a small, crooked smile had appeared on his face. It was the first time he'd ever started to let his guard down around his brother. The most tragic thing was this really was all Kier had ever wanted, all he'd ever dreamed of - but it had come too late, when he was already twisted beyond repair. In another lifetime, when Mal loved and sheltered Kier as a kit, they could have been something beautiful. Kier could have been kind, sweet, clever - a reedy little kid with a head full of ideas and harmless inventions. But he wasn't. In this lifetime, there was nothing between them but bitterness and hate and fear.
He was still going to kill him. Some day. Loving him wouldn't change that - it was the end of their story; it always would be. But that didn't mean he couldn't get to know him a little now. Maybe this, whatever this was, could be a bittersweet meeting of brothers they'd look back on tearfully as Mal bled out some day in the dirt.