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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Since the last trial, Kier had been in a foul mood. He had just been coming back to himself after Eris' miscarriage, had just been beginning to see clearly again, and now that was all destroyed. He was worse than he had been at the lowest point of his vengeful grief — where that was tinged with mania, this was blackened by burning anger, by paranoia, by sleepless days where he'd wake his mate just to have a quick, hissing rant to her. Rage sizzled in him like half-lit kerosene, so close to the skin that his fur prickled with the static of it. And what was worse, he couldn't clear it — Kier, who had learned so young to contain and hide his feelings, who had learned to wrap around himself different lies and personalities as easy as he adopted accents and languages; Kier, who had gotten himself a crown with his silver tongue, couldn't get his emotions under control. And that manic frustration, that confusion, only made the anger worse, because now it sat in his chest like a ball of fear, something he couldn't get out, couldn't cope with — and it was all because of Snowblister. His growing panic at not being able to control his own feelings needed an outlet, and so it found it in blaming her, blaming her to ruin.
He became increasingly erratic, driven by a heart that was beating a little too quick, an anxious heart that wouldn't settle, and NightClan suffered for it. Blood ran as thick as it had in the early days of his reign, when they had to purge the remnants of dissenters — because Kier had to do something, had to try everything he could to make the knot in his chest loosen, had to reassert himself, and that came out in desperate, snapping violence. But it didn't help. The fear didn't leave. The fear never left.
He hadn't been sleeping. Now, Kier crouched beside the salty water in the main cavern; he'd been intending to wash his paws, but now his head had begun to droop closer and closer to the damp stone ground, jerking down in tiny, soft little bobs. His eyes had slipped closed without realising it. And then, suddenly, there was a great splash and he was surrounded by wet cold. Snapping his eyes open, he choked for a second, dipping in bewilderment below the dark surface, disoriented, before spitting out the silty water and pushing himself back to the bank. He clawed his way up onto the water-spattered stone and slipped out with a slinking, hunched posture, resisting the urge to shake his fur out; water dripped from his pelt, plastered to his ribs and glossy as silk and showing just how tiny he really was, and pattered onto the stone. His posture, the way he stood at the edge with such silent, seething defensiveness, showed that he was embarrassed and that anyone who commented would find their jugular stripped on the podium. Snowblister wouldn't fall into the pool; Snowblister was so powerful. The only things he had to rule with were his mind, his tongue, the violence he could convince others to do until it surrounded him with such blood that no one remembered the little tom standing in the midst of all the gore had achieved it with words alone, until there was such legend that the violence was inseparable from the king, until they all thought him impenetrable. But he wasn't. He was as vulnerable as he'd ever been. And standing there, small and dripping with cold water, he felt it.
If there was ever a time to make herself small, to disappear into the darkness that flickered throughout the NightClan territory, it was perhaps now. She had escaped the crushing claw of death once, and it was in her best interest to avoid anything that drew any sort of attention to herself. It was better that way, to do as much as she could to return to the shifting shadow that she had once been. Up until a few days ago, most of the clan hadn't even known her name. That had clearly changed that night, when every eye in the camp had been rested upon her, shooting daggers into a cat percieved as a traitor. Was she a traitor? She didn't think she was; being a traitor in the midst of outright warfare was stupid, and she liked to think she wasn't stupid. But, perhaps she was. After all, she had found herself at precisely the wrong place at precisely the wrong time. She should have stayed out just a little longer collecting the moss that was in her jaws, and she would have been able to avoid watching the leader crash into the water. But, of course, she hadn't, and now it seemed that she had to do something. Her jaw clenched slightly as she debated it within herself. If she approached Kier, there was a promised danger. Interacting with the leader was something she avoided as much as possible precisely because of that danger. It wasn't that she feared him, necessarily. She just knew that if she made one wrong move... But, if she did approach him, if she could make herself useful to him, perhaps that would be for the better. She didn't need his full stamp of approval, but she needed to make it clear that she really didn't hold anything against the tom. Or, at least, if she did, that that part of her was buried deep. Her blue eyes narrowed slightly, before she let out a near-silent sigh.
She made her way over to the leader, careful to keep her eyes from meeting his. As she approached, she bowed her head deeply, the same sign that she had given him the night that Snowblister had saved her sister's life. She made no comment that she had seen him fall into the water, although she might have had he been anyone else. Instead, she dropped the clump of moss from her jaw. It hit the ground without a sound. Even as she approached, though, she was careful not to get too close. If he thought that she was intruding, if he thought she was stepping out of place (was she? She wasn't entirely sure herself), staying out of arms length would give her one last second to prepare to field an attack.
"Sir," she meowed softly, her voice barely carried through the cavern. "I apologize for approaching without permission, sir, but perhaps this could be useful for you," she continued, before pushing the moss his way. It was the closest thing to a towel that cats had, probably. A soft spiral of fear gnawed at her stomach, but Cascadepaw was careful not to let it show. Instead, she offered a small, unobtrusive smile, before taking a step back, creating as much distance between the two as possible as she awaited his response.
Kier had just started towards his den, beginning to shiver through his thin fur and with his head thrust forward, when the voice made him stop. He turned just in time to see her deep bow, saying nothing as he watched her from cold, slightly defensive eyes; she spoke and still he was silent. Not even his tail-tip stirred; he watched her, and he was still. Inside, past the ice, a thousand different emotions flooded and spiralled — that warm, purring glow at being called sir, something so unique to her, something that always stroked at some very particular place within him that even lord didn’t touch; distrust, because such a clever thing didn’t call him sir without reason, and he wasn’t arrogant enough to think she was truly won over by him, wasn’t arrogant enough to think this was more deference than it was survival; hissing self-consciousness that of course it had been her to see him, of course it had been Cascadepaw — Cascadepaw, whom he so desperately needed to win over; gratitude to the universe that it was her, because now he didn’t need to come to her first, now she had come to him, now this was surely some heavenly sign that he would triumph over Snowblister in the end — surely this was reassurance from the universe that he would not only survive, but flourish.
And so, finally, the silence broke and Kier smiled. The air around him seemed to unfreeze, like it had relaxed. “Ohh,” he replied dismissively, waving away her nerves with a leering, welcoming little grin; really, being able to dismiss such apologies, such fitting apologies, gave him a rush of power that was thinner than the high of brutality but just as delicious, “pretty things are always welcome to approach.” The idea of her knowing she needed permission to do anything… To walk, to talk, to breathe… It sent a tingle up his legs. Just as a droplet, hot from his body heat, ran down one of them. Ah, he’d forgotten he was still sopping wet. “Thank you,” he added, a touch more embarrassedly. He held her eyes for a moment longer as he reached out for the moss, and then broke the contact as he drew it back. “Ah — look away, would you?” he asked. Asked, deferentially, gentlemanly, in the way you might not notice it was a command. “This is all very,” he let out a laugh, “unsophisticated.” And then, after a moment, he hesitantly, reluctantly, after half-lowering himself and then pausing to sure she wasn’t looking, lay down and rolled onto his back, sinking into indignity for a few red-faced, demeaning moments as he rolled back and forth like a dog. The very second he was at least halfway damp instead of drenched, he rolled over and pushed himself back up, quickly brushing bits of moss from his fur and sending the wad flying across the stone floor towards the medicine den — someone would take care of it — with his paw. He grinned easily, charmingly, at Cascadepaw, tilting his head. “You can look again.”
He watched her for a moment, still grinning; it twitched slightly at the edge as he thought, taking her in. “And you can look me in the eye, you know,” he added, and his voice was an odd mix of gently reassuring and pitilessly amused, like that avoidance of eye contact in a she-cat — in any low-ranking, disgraced cat, but especially in one of them — wasn’t exactly what he wanted, what he’d drilled into their heads with terror and violence and threats. His voice quietened, warm as nectar. Close. Intimate. Just for them. Just for the two of them. “Duskpaw — we shan’t speak her name. But she needn’t look at me. Let her keep her eyes on the beetles and the worms. You, though. You can.”
As he spoke, a chill ran down her spine. Pretty things are always welcome to approach, the tip of her tail twitched. She wasn't precisely sure how to take the statement. There was a part of her that enjoyed the flattery; as a wallflower, Cascadepaw went mostly overlooked. Was it so wrong that there was a part of her that was delighted? The other part of her, though, was much less satisfied with how his words made her feel, slightly like prey. Perhaps she was his prey, waiting to be ambushed. It was a delicate balance between safety and danger, and no matter how dismissive he seemed to be of her nerves, her instinct prevented her from being totally at ease. The thoughts wavered through her mind, making her head spin slightly. One day, she hoped that she would learn to read the tom. It was her specialty, after all, collecting as much information as possible. With enough interactions with the leader, she'd memorize his mannerisms, learn when his body language changed. This would be her best strategy, she figured, but also her riskiest. The longer she was around him, the more she played with death. Any moment he could snap, and it could be over.
The thoughts swirled for a moment, before he met her gaze. Had it not been locked on the ground? Dammit, Cascadepaw, she chided herself, although she did not look away. She held his gaze as long as he held hers. There was a hint of something in her eyes - was that curiosity? For a moment, while they looked at each other, she did find herself deeply curious. Why was he holding her gaze? What did he know that she didn't? She let out a breath when he looked away- had she been holding it in the moment that they had looked at each other? She hadn't meant to be. At his command to look away, the feline made a point to turn her head. There was a part of her that wanted to comfort him, to like and say that it wasn't unsophisticated, but she didn't need to defend his honor. Instead, she simply nodded, waiting for him to speak next.
When he said that she could look, she swiveled her head back in his direction. You can look me in the eye, you know, there was a part of her that wanted to smile. And why would I do that? She could imagine the quiet disobedience of never looking at him again, and especially as he spoke about her sister, it was tempting. But, that damned curiosity, the part of her that wanted to fall into his words, let herself believe them, wanted to see how this played out. She was just as certain that he had ulterior motives as he was sure that her words were not simply deferent. She wanted to know those motives, wanted to know what went through the leader's mind. Her gaze moved back to meet his.
Her lips twitched into a faint smile as she gazed at him. It was the first time that she had smiled since her trial, and it came... almost naturally. His honey sweet words, the intimacy in the moment that they shared, it would be silly to expect her not to smile, wouldn't it? If she ignored the fact that her life probably depended on her ability to react, she could almost see why her sister had done what she did. She was sure that Pantherpaw got the same flattery, but there was a part of her that knew the relationship between Kier and his sister was drastically different than the relationship that she would form with the tom. Of course, he hadn't said out loud that he needed her, didn't admit to the fact he wanted to, needed to win her over. But, she could sense that something was different, even if she didn't know what.
"Thank you," she meowed, her tone soft, a hint of shyness in her tone. "I am honored that you think highly enough of me to grant me that privilege." Her tail tip twitched back and forth, and she bowed her head slightly again. "May I join you?" Her eyes widened at her own forwardness; it wasn't very becoming of a lady. "Of course, I don't wish to intrude, sir..." she quickly added, but her voice trailed off. She did want to intrude, wanted to fall into a seated position, wanted to know why. Why was he doing this? If he told the apprentice no, laughed at her request, she would never get another chance like this. This was her chance, perhaps the only one she would ever get.
At her thanks, Kier smiled and dipped his head, his eyes hanging on hers for a moment longer before he made a show of chivalrously deferring to her, his head and eyes downcast for a second before he rose again. Really, it was uncommon — it was passing strange. If anyone were to watch, were to watch this scene of the leader going to such pains to make a lowly she-cat feel welcome, a she-cat who was neither Superior nor Executioner nor even Reporter, who was a traitor’s daughter… It would have been unthinkably befuddling. There was no reason.
It was more or less understood that if Kier took a fancy to a Superior tom’s mate, they’d turn a blind eye for a night. Let themselves be cuckolded and not hold it against their leader. Afterwards, the next dusk, the next night, Kier would laugh and give them a conspiratorial little grin, lean in like it were a terrific inside joke at the she-cat’s expense, and say their name with such teasing warmth, say oh, you know how it is; when they give me that look, I can’t help myself — nothing degrading about sharing. And they’d have to put on a tight smile and nod — because even if they didn’t love their mate, as many a tom in NightClan now didn’t (if Kier said you know, I think you and her would make a fine pair, there was little room for argument; you proposed the next day, because it was beneficial to him socially, or politically, or practically, and so you followed suit), she was still theirs. Theirs, until she was Kier’s. And yours again when he was done, when he’d had his little power trip that came of taking a wife off a husband’s arm and knowing he had no choice but to be just as loyal as before while Kier fed her dripping cherries on his lap at the head of the table.
But Cascadepaw wasn’t anything special, not to any onlooker. She wasn’t even the mate of anyone special. She wasn’t the elegant, the poised, the sophisticated sort of she-cat he favoured for his one night stands and mistresses — women who could kick him in the face with heels and still look perfect for dinner; graceful, disdainful, old Hollywood glamour. She might grow up to be, but now she was just reticent, shy. And more than that, Kier wasn’t being overtly lewd, overtly flirtatious. Really, he was being as respectful, as well-mannered, as attentive as he had ever been — and all of that without trying to feel her up. Without even seeming like he wanted to. His smiling eyes stayed on her, but they were absorbed, interested in what she had to say, like she was more than she was, like she mattered, like he would pull out her chair for her and lavish attention on her, and for what? It was inexplicable.
Of course, she didn’t matter. She only mattered so far as what she could give him. She might have been the ugliest thing in the world, might have been a complete dolt, and he’d have given her all the same attentions if she could offer him all the things she could now — it was just a benevolent mercy that she was fine to look at on top of it all, that she was clever enough to know how to play stupid. He liked clever in Eris; he liked stupid in every other she-cat. Let them be pretty faces and empty heads.
I am honored that you think highly enough of me to grant me that privilege. For a moment, Kier feigned surprised incomprehension, like he couldn’t imagine why she would ever think herself unworthy. Then he seemed to realise, and in his surprise he did a sort of double take, like he was horrified she was still entertaining ideas like that when she’d been reprieved. “Oh — the business with your mother?” He waved a paw dismissively, soothingly, like she were a skittish mare who had to be gently calmed. “Oh, my dear, it’s forgotten. Your sister — of course I’m irritated about that, everybody knows I am, but you; you were found innocent! Fairly and truly. It’s no privilege, just what you’re owed.” He smiled warmly, like she were an equal. And that, when all the world knew Kier’s fanatical obsession with Class distinctions, was more inexplicable still. At her forward question, Kier’s smile didn’t falter; it stayed on his face as she babbled, his eyes never leaving her, just watching with a slow blink. Perfect — perfect, that she should be doing all this work for him. Perfect, that she should be so conscious of ladylike behaviour, so eager to please not only him, but this idea of what she should be that she’d crafted in her head from scraps of propaganda, of need, floating about NightClan’s air and plucked from it. Perfect, that all of this should flow like destiny, like the universe itself, had ordained it. He would come out of this on top after all, with his perfect lady bloodied by all the deflections she had shielded him with. What a pair they could be.
In lieu of an answer, Kier wandered over to the sheltering privacy beside his pillar in the centre of the camp and sat down, gesturing with his paw for her to sit. The smile never left his face. They were still in the open, but the stone at his back and the cool shadows over them both made it feel a little more fitting. By now his fur had dried to glossy black. “Do you know, it’s very refreshing to be asked that outright,” he replied at last when he was seated, his voice as cheery and open as it had ever been. “So many skirt around questions — I know what they mean and all the while it’s hell, having to wait for them to tie themselves into knots before they finally get somewhere close to what they want to ask. I suppose it’s because they’re afraid of being seen to commit themselves to anything, and all that doublespeak rhetoric has its place, I appreciate it, I admire it, I use it — but really, I’d say there’s far more danger in annoying someone by not just spitting the damn thing out.” He laughed. Someone was clearly him, but he would never say that; until he didn’t, and in spite of all the violence and the slaughter and the horror of kits reporting parents’ indiscretions and condemning them to death, he made a great show of how harmless he was — until he was parading his tyranny, he was warm and benign, no more dangerous than a sparrow. What could little Kier possibly do? Mention his ringmaster theatrics the day after they’d happened and he’d widen his eyes and feign obliviousness — at least with gentle ladies. They had no reason to know what the perfect gentleman did at trials, had no reason to hear his screaming, frenzied speeches that whipped the masses into hysteria like a drug — they knew, of course he knew they knew, but it was an unwritten bit of decorum that they would feign ignorance and let him be the harmless flatterer. His smile grew warmer still. “And really, you can let up on ‘sir’ while we’re alone.” Unable to stop himself, he leaned in and the lecherous little grin spread across his face as it so often did, his voice lowering. “Not that I don’t like it an incredible amount. If we were alone somewhere else, perhaps it would have its merits…” Then he remembered who he was speaking to and leaned back again. “So,” he continued warmly, like he hadn’t just made a meaningless pass at her, “is there any particular reason for the pleasure of your company, or am I simply lucky?”