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@ash <3 FINALLY posting the thread we talked about!! totally no pressure to match length, kier has been hibernating for three weeks in my head and now he has things to say <33
“You are not naming them,” Kier thundered — except, when Kier thundered, his voice had a tendency to go higher than usual, all stuck up at the top of his throat and wild with anger. And now, here, his anger was all the greater because he knew he was going to lose the argument — whatever could be said about his violence, his force, his cruelty, his disregard for she-cats whether they were pregnant to bursting or in any other disappointing state, whatever amount of chivalry he had meant he was going to let Pantherpaw win it. He just had to throw a violent tantrum before he did, had to throw his weight around and show how frightening Kier could be when he was mad.
And that was the thing, wasn’t it? That was precisely the thing. You could be lulled into such comfort — you could be a pretty girl, and you could get away with a thousand things, a thousand and ten, because he wasn’t going to react, he was going to be chivalrous, he was going to let it slide. You were safe. For a thousand and ten times you were safe. And then, one night, he grows that bit too annoyed, and you’ve outworn what appeal you had by being too much of a nuisance, and then there’s a new corpse in a ditch and a bundle of little kittens without a mother. You were never safe. He just hadn’t reached the end of his tether yet.
Whatever Pantherpaw wanted, Pantherpaw got: if she wanted to be in the nursery with the nursemaids, she’d be in the nursery, even if Kier wanted her in a separate den where his kits, bastards or not, wouldn’t be mingling with peasant blood; if she wanted to go for a walk, she went for a walk; if she wanted to tell Kier her bedding wasn’t plump enough in front of a meeting, he’d grit his teeth and give her a fawning, hateful grin and grind out that he’d send someone over — because, though he’d never say it, he felt a little guilty. There — he felt a little guilty. And so he was the married man who’d buy his one-time mistress a townhouse, because money, forgiveness — the guilt would go away; why hadn’t she forgiven him yet? So he’d killed her mother — he’d killed his own father, too, and no one had made such a feminine fuss over it. Except Kate. Oh, they were all headaches, good for a night and then nothing more — Pantherpaw was such a headache that he hadn’t even had his way with her again; he was doing all this, and for what? He wasn’t getting anything out of it. He hardly registered any alluring pregnancy glow on her, hardly felt any of the things that had had him all over Eris when she’d been pregnant — he was just stressed, and annoyed, and he had a headache. Or maybe she wasn’t the headache — maybe his guilt was.
He stalked back and forth in front of her, tail lashing and shoulder fur prickling dangerously; all the other nursemaids had been sent out of the nursery so he could have a domestic with this trumped-up concubine — and she wasn’t anything better, was she? She was practically a nursemaid herself; unmarried, with a bellyful of kits and no one who loved her. But at least the others were devoted. The fact Pantherpaw was due soon and they still hadn’t come to terms made him feel like he was suffocating with frustrated anger — because these were his kits; she was supposed to roll over and play ball. He’d never had to deal with a she-cat who wanted to be a part of her kits’ lives, hers and his. He didn’t know how to— how to— what was this, co-parenting? He’d never been faced with this obstinacy, with this argument he couldn’t best, and it set his fur-tips on fire because he couldn’t settle it the way he wanted to settle it. Last time he’d had kits, he’d had the mother killed — far easier. No headache. No yap-yap-yapping. But he couldn’t do that now — not right now. And there was nothing about either of them that got along; he’d used her and she’d used him, and they’d shared a moment of tenderness with tears on his side, and that was where their similarities ended. And yet he had to live with her. “Everyone knows they’re mine now,” he continued, still raging blindly, “because you were too STUPID,” he turned on her, advancing so quickly that it looked like he might hit her, “not to get pregnant — and aren’t you she-cats supposed to be good at that sort of thing?” He peered at her. “Did you do it deliberately? What, you thought if you got yourself knocked up, made yourself a nice little toy for the scary tyrant, I’d go easy on your sisters?” He didn’t acknowledge the fact that that was precisely what had happened — he’d gone easy on them. “Well, guess what, you little vixen,” he rounded on her again from where he’d turned away, “Cascadepaw looks to me like she’d make a far nicer night’s fun than you did.” He was just trying to wound her, flailing wildly, and feigning interest in the she-cat who amounted to his sister-in-law — he wasn’t thinking clearly amid all the blind anger, and it seemed a good jab.
His paw raised slightly, and for a second it shook slightly, like he wanted to grab her face and be rough with her — but he finally decided against it; he wouldn’t hurt a pregnant she-cat. So, he whirled away from her instead. “Those kits reflect on me, Pantherpaw, not on whatever peasant-stock family you come from — I name them.”
Pantherpaw scoffed. It was one of those scoffs that seemed to come from her often as of late. Her green eyes bore into the tom, narrowed to fine slits. The feline found herself lashing her tail in irritation, though there didn't seem to be an ounce of fear in her expression. No, Pantherpaw had seen a side of Kier that very few had gotten the opportunity to witness. As he stood before her attempting to lay down the law and run the show as he quite so often did with others, it was ineffective on her. No, Pantherpaw had managed to get so much out of Kier. Had pushed her limits and found that somehow, he held a soft spot for her. No matter that he would frankly never admit this, she saw it. Many cats saw it. They also saw how much she angered him to no end, yet, he still gave her everything she wanted.
Yet, she still made him angry. He still made her angry.
Every night she found herself thinking of her mother. Every night she remembered just how much resentment she had for the tom that stood before her. So each day, she found a new way to get under his skin. Though, even with each little complaint, it did not heal that wound that her heart felt. It only made her bitter and even more angry. At him. At him for taking her mother away, tormenting her sisters to no end. She'd lost any relationship she had with the two, and it hurt her so deeply that she felt alone. Alone at a time where she wanted nothing more than her mother and sisters. Especially when she was about to give birth in the next two weeks. It was terrifying. She had no one.
Even as she had to play nice, she avoided Eris. It was the smart thing to do. If there was anything Pantherpaw did know, was that Eris was not one that Kier would be nice about. So, she avoided the feline at all costs.
Then, his words struck her. Pantherpaw had been sitting so still and simply staring at Kier, yet those words... Her eyes were far off for a moment, her pupils shrinking. The thought of Kier tormenting Cascadepaw like this, in this way? It made her stomach lurch and she felt sick. She shifted her weight trying to steady herself, despite already having been seated. Her belly bulged on both sides, and she had one hind leg slightly tucked to the side. Even then, she also felt a pang in her heart that she almost couldn't explain. Jealousy? Pantherpaw pressed her lips together. Even if she hated him, she'd tied her soul with this tom now. She was stuck for the rest of her life, all because of one night where she'd gotten weak and desperate.
Now.. she was a prisoner.
Not like Kate, no, it was in a much different way. As much as she tried to push the whispers and words of others away... Kier owned her.
She called the shots with a lot of things, but when it came down to it? Kier could do as he wished.
Toms avoided her like the plague. She-cats were careful and didn't make friends with her for fear she would tell Kier anything they would say. It was... the most lonely she'd ever felt, and she was becoming quite bitter from all of this.
Her eyes shifted to his raised paw, then back to him. Her chin lifted slightly, daring him to touch her. As if it would change a thing. "Peasant or not, you chose to spend that night with me. I will name them. I am carrying them and creating their lives in my own stomach, something you toms cannot manage to do. I feel sick often, my paws hurt, and I will have to go through the pain to bring them into this world. I name them, and that is that!" She hissed through gritted teeth, pushing herself up to her paws and taking a step closer to him.
"The next time you raise your paw at me, do it. Coward." Perhaps she was pushing too far, but the comment about her sister had her fur on edge with a lot of confusing emotions.
When she talked back to him, Kier turned to watch her, his lips drawn back slightly and a quiet growl tearing unceasingly from his throat as he listened; it was very rare that his anger was anything but theatrical — even with Kate he laid on the melodrama as a transparent show of how unaffected he was, how little she mattered — but with Pantherpaw, there was no amusement. And maybe it was precisely because it was that bit too personal — with everything else, melodrama was degradation; he was above it, he was deigning to interact, to give his time and energy — it was dominance. You were nothing but something to be laughed at, and perhaps eventually he’d throw you a bone. But this… It was so utterly bleak, so utterly important, that he was serious. And that was almost a show of submission in itself — Kier had to tread that fine line, he had to appease Pantherpaw just enough that she’d be amenable to certain impositions once they were born, he had to give her due consideration and let her call him names. He couldn’t laugh, because just as much as Kier held the puppet strings, Pantherpaw held certain other advantages — the main one being that the kits were in her stomach. She had leverage over him, and as much as he had tried to keep that reality hidden in the hopes that she wouldn’t realise, she had picked up on it. And Kier hated being outwitted, hated being used, hated being seen through. Hated feeling anything less than the cleverest one in the room — especially at the hands of a she-cat.
But if there was one thing he wouldn’t let her do, it was make a cuckold of him. And that was where her loneliness, her isolation came from. Not for any personal affection, but for one, simple reason: if any other tom were to have kits with her, they would be the half-siblings of royalty. And he couldn’t have that, because that immediately gave that father and those kits an avenue for social advancement. For destabilisation. For his own deposing. Kier was always locked in a silent, psychologically obsessed battle with every other tom, without them realising it; to him, they were just looking to unseat him, and he had to constantly reassert himself — it was that paradox of irrationally paranoid, narcissistic insecurity. Every tom in the Clan knew that going near her was as good as a death sentence — now, and always. That, and he didn’t much like someone else touching his things. With Eris, it was different; he could love her without possessing her, however all-consuming, however soul-owning that love was for him. He didn’t want Pantherpaw, he didn’t like her — but he had claimed her, and there was still that little prickle of sick jealousy. Really, it was an uninspiring prospect, having to keep her about, untouched and unmarried, until she grew into an old spinster. But such were the burdens of ruling. Maybe his humanity would take a dent in the future and he could make it simpler for himself, just kill her. Oh, it was such a freeing prospect…
You chose to spend that night with me. “Yes, because you manipulated me into it,” he snapped back, voice a wild, messy hiss, “— seduced me like some succubus.” Really, it was a bit of a sore point for him — for whatever reason, it had hurt him. And being hurt made him mercurial. To him, the only manipulations she-cats were capable of were the intimate sort — and he hated that he was blind to them, that he could be played like he so often played others; it was a distasteful, dishonourable thing when they did it, not the fun of his own deceptions. As she went on, the growl in his throat resumed, gurgling like a hunting dog’s, like metal on metal. Too angry to stay still, he paced back and forth in front of her, his tail-tip flicking erratic, his pupils dilated to the same size. I am carrying them and creating their lives in my own stomach, something you toms cannot manage to do. “YES!” he exclaimed, snapping his head up from where it had been thrust forward, sounding wild and unhinged, almost hysterical, almost laughing, eyes wide and faux-joyful. “And what a mercy that we can’t! It makes me sick. Everything about you, everything you are — it makes my stomach heave. It’s charity that you had me for your first time — no one else would have touched you, and now no one else ever will. At least you have that memory.” He almost spat the word.
As she drew nearer, the hysteria iced back over. Kier drew back, chin tucking back, warning growl resuming. They were the same height, small and frangible. His eyes held hers, narrow and unblinking with mutual hate. He was angry, he was furiously angry — but he hadn’t lost it yet. He was still containing himself; he was still restrained calm; nothing had tipped him over the edge.
And then:
The next time you raise your paw at me, do it. Coward.
For a moment, for a horrifying moment, Kier’s eyes went wild. The fur along his spine bristled; his gaze stared into hers; his teeth looked impossibly sharp. And then, as quickly as it had come, he settled again. Settled too much. His fur instantly lay flat, so quick and so unnatural that it was jarring. His entire demeanour changed. Completely serene, Kier let out a high, prolonged little giggle high in his throat, slowly turning away from Pantherpaw with something like a sigh — like it had been a good match between equals. “Ohhh, my dear…” he told her serenely, that laugh still in his voice, his back almost completely to her. And then, suddenly, he snapped around and caught her cheek, slamming her head to the ground. And for the first time alone with her in private, the theatricality made its appearance. “Yes, you know, you’re completely right,” he told her cheerily, like they were doing nothing more than taking a stroll together; he repositioned his paw, forcefully rolling her slightly so his claws could grip her round her throat instead, “there’s no discipline if one doesn’t follow through. We’ll have to learn that about our kits, won’t we? Of course you’re an insolent little harlot — of course you are, my dear. Your mother was so tender with you. Well, guess what, my girl,” his voice was suddenly vicious; he pushed down against her throat, claws prickling, “your mother isn’t here. Your mother is dead.I’m here — and if even your stupid sister,” he pressed down harder, half his weight on that one forepaw, “can learn the merits of keeping me happy, then there’s no excuse for you.” His voice changed again, now like he was making a passionate announcement. “Step one, my dear — punishment. I always find public humiliation does wonders; there’s something about having your wrongdoing paraded for all your…” He suddenly laughed, raising his head and holding up one paw as his shoulders shook. “Well, I was going to say friends, but that’s not quite the right word, is it? But for all your Clanmates,” he cooed the word so mockingly, leaning down towards her until their noses almost touched, his eyes dancing, “to see. And what better than a name? Let’s think.” He rocked back slightly, eyes drifting to the ceiling, like he was getting more comfortable; his paw still stayed against her throat, barely allowing any air in. Still, he hadn’t gone anywhere near her stomach. He had gone back on his aversion to harming pregnant she-cats — to him, this was more just frightening her; a warning; he could have done far worse — but he still hadn’t been beastly. He still didn’t want them wounded. He still cared about them. He’d already lost one litter, and it had almost broken him; he couldn’t lose another, even if this one’s mother was a nuisance. Even if he had to put her in her place. They had weeks left before the kits were due — he still had time to drill a bit of proper deportment into her. She was carrying bastard royalty; she had to look the part.
At first, when she’d first called him ‘coward’, the names racing behind his eyes had been spitting: toy, thing, hussy, nothing, concubine, drudge — the nastiest, pettiest things he could think of. It was one of the most harmless forms of cruelty, that need to live with whatever name you were given, but it was one of the most demeaning, the most all-consuming, the most difficult: it was identity itself, imposed on you by someone else just to be cruel. He loved the power of names, the power of holding them. Now, even though the feelings propelling him were still hot, red rage beneath the skin, the theatrical persona had overtaken him, and that always channelled pure anger into things more productive. More creative. If he acted on pure fury alone, he’d have lost his crown long ago. He wouldn’t have even had it. It was the theatricality that the cruelty came from, and it was the theatricality that gave him his edge. “Pantherpaw’s very bland, isn’t it?” he asked, like he was genuinely seeking some sort of opinion, some sort of confirmation; he looked back down at her, peering down unblinkingly with his paw still cutting off her air. “Your fur is black — my, we give your parents too little credit for their creativity,” he laughed. “No, my dear, I think you need something more fitting. Something that reflects you.” He smiled down at her, leaning closer, brushing his other paw down her cheek. His voice was so gentle, so loving. “A meaningless… cheap… disposable… little womb.” He smiled wider, close to her face, and tilted his head. “Mm?” The question was just a tender little hum in his throat.
Her nose wrinkled. Pantherpaw found herself once more scoffing at his words, her tail lashing behind her form in utter disbelief. "If I remember correctly, it was you who cried to me, Kier." She found her words pushing through her gritted teeth in a soft hiss. Though they were alone in the nursery, she could almost feel the eyes that seemed to want to see what exactly was going on in there. They could hear a certain amount, but oh how their eyes wanted to see. As the tom paced back and fourth in front of her Pantherpaw found herself staring at him with cold and unflinching eyes. She could see the anger bubbling inside him, hear it in his voice as he spoke. Then, as he spoke of his hatred of her she found herself frowning. Ears flicking back slightly. Perhaps she had never loved him, no. Yet... something in those words of his stung her heart. Was it because she was carrying his kits?
As he came to a standstill in front of her, staring, watching. Her words had changed him, she seen the flash in his eyes. As her ears flicked back upwards and she opened her mouth to say something else, nothing came out. Ohhh, my dear... Just like that, he'd crossed the line he'd yet to cross with her. Until now.
She hadn't time to react, even as she saw the half second flash of his claws. Before she knew it she was on the ground, a gasp leaving her lips as her head slammed onto the nursery floor. Pantherpaw could see a flash of lights and black as her head made impact, unable to contain the whimper of pain. Just as she was sucking in a breath and attempting to regain herself she felt his claws digging into her throat and his weight pushing down. She felt panic. Fear flashed through her green eyes as she scrambled at him with her front paws, gasping sharply and quickly as she tried to breathe. "Stop!" She begged, her claws gripping at his paw, his leg, his chest, anything they could manage. As he pressed harder and stood there rambling on, she was growing weaker yet more desperate to live.
For the first time since her mother was imprisoned, Pantherpaw's eyes were glazed over with fear. His words were soft in her ears, but they burned her like fire. Just as she had once had the assumption, she was right. The friends she'd previously had were no longer there. Cats avoided her, because of him. Perhaps this was his sick and cruel way to isolate her and make her truly alone. The only cat she had was him, and that was hardly much of anything. He'd not been the same cat as he was the night they'd shared together. No, he hated her now. He was right, it was nothing but a memory.
She tried to shake her head. Tears began to swell in her eyes as he continued to speak, as she continued to gasp for air. As they began rolling down her cheeks one side burned like fire from the open wound. Pantherpaw gave a choked whimper, looking smaller than she ever had and truly scared for the first time. Momentarily forgetting her hatred, feeling the kittens in her belly squirming wildly.
If I remember correctly, it was you who cried to me, Kier. The memory flashed through his head, hazy but not as hazy as he tried to pretend it was. His own sobs echoed in his ears. My mother — why didn’t she love me? Why didn’t my mother love me? Why was I never enough for her? For my father? Why did my brother— why did my SISTER hate me? Why me? Why was it never ME? I was just a kit. I was just a child. And it hurts — it HURTS. It had been such an easy step from that aching vulnerability, from his muzzle pressed into her black fur and the smell of her filling him in his grief, to what had happened next. And that was precisely why he was so touchy about the subject — because he felt betrayed. He felt betrayed, and he couldn’t quite reconcile that feeling — couldn’t quite come to terms with it. It felt too petty, too wounded, too personal. Every other time he’d been betrayed, by his mother or his sister, or most recently by Snowblister, it had been anger — aching, childish confusion, yes, because two of the three were meant to love him and the third he still privately (heartbreakingly) considered the closest thing to a best friend he had, but the anger had always done a fine enough job of masking all that up. But with Pantherpaw, he just felt truly… hurt. So hurt that he couldn’t understand that was what he was feeling — it felt like being sick, like itching. Kier was remarkably self-aware, but when it came to the emotions that were so childlike, that were so innocent, they felt foreign enough to fill him with fear; it almost certainly went back to his childhood, to all the feelings that had locked themselves up safe and sound as he grew and changed, and that sometimes opened the door and resurfaced and flooded him with the uncomprehending, wide-eyed grief of a five moon old kit. He had trusted Pantherpaw. Eris hated tears, they made her skin crawl, and so he had cried to Pantherpaw instead — and she had used it to catch his skin and hook it. She had taken a confession and wound it into blackmail. Their night hadn’t been special, but he’d at least thought they had shared something — and instead, the peasant girl had come out on top. And it hurt.
Kier met her hiss with one of his own, open-mouthed and with his ears pinned back, louder, guttural, more dominant; a warning one, one that spoke of what would happen if she spread that story about, the two of them staring each other down like snakes who couldn’t quite take the final plunge. She couldn’t risk the kits, he wouldn’t risk the kits — and so the damned safety net around her grew. But if she thought Kier hated her, she was wrong. When he hated how someone had made him feel, it was almost like the one who had inflicted it was immune — the self-hatred was amplified, and all that surrounded the other was betrayed grief. As furiously angry as Snowblister made him, it was the same for her. Kier’s affection, when thrown back in his face, became not hate, though he would kill them with such mock joy to win the battle and save face and conquer the traitor who thought they could best him, but child-like sorrow. And after the death, the guilt would follow; he would boast and laugh and play to the crowd so extravagantly, but in the night, his eyes were hollow and staring. It had been just the same with Harley. And every betrayal pushed him further and further into that stunted kit, pushed him into cowering hiding while he paraded to cover it up. The only one he could trust was Eris; the pain Pantherpaw had given him the one time he was stupid enough to lower his guard and believe someone else could ever care proved that.
As she scrabbled at his paw, his leg, his chest, Kier kept his grip on her, staring down at her with wide, hungry eyes and a look of pure, silent, manic delight. Captivation. He drank in the sight of her, relished it. At her choked whimper, he leaned down, tilting his head so his ear was closer to her. “What was that?” he asked round a glistening grin, letting out a little titter. He pulled back again, resumed his delirious, fox-hungry staring. Her scrabbling reopened the faint scratches Duskpaw had dug into his foreleg when she was in her mother’s grave and inflicted new ones, and still he didn’t move, just stared down at her like he was longing to see how long she could last before she ran out of air and he had to let her go. Any second now. Here it was, his eyes widened further—
And then faint movement out of the corner of his eye caught his attention. His gaze flicked down to her stomach, and for the first time he saw them kicking at the soft flesh. Her fear, her pain, her squirming, the unspeakable feeling when he saw the first of her tears — suddenly, they weren’t vindicating things; they were hot-chested guilt. It was like he came back to himself, or like the concern he truly felt for Pantherpaw grabbed the high of sadism and yanked it down, dispelled it like thick mist. Kier scrambled off her, eyes wide and startled — “are you alright?” he blurted, wild-eyed and bewildered, that horrible, familiar panic he’d felt the night Eris had miscarried their kits filling him again like a dam had broken. It was just— it was just a threat. It had just been a threat. He hadn’t meant to— to— He was just—it was theatrics— “I’m sorry,” he blurted out again, like it would change anything, paws kneading in terror at the stone floor and eyes huge, hunted, helpless — this couldn’t happen again. It couldn’t happen, that his family’s violence would take everything pure from his life. “I’m sorry— I didn’t— Pantherpaw, I wasn’t—“ He paced back and forth in frantic fear, paws working over each other whenever he stopped. Suddenly, he closed the gap that had opened up between them and, half-crouching close and messy behind her, desperately lapped at her neck fur with his tongue, ran a frantic paw over her swollen stomach, like calming her down, soothing her, comforting these kits that were theirs, would make— He wanted to cry; a lump formed in his throat, one borne of the pure disbelief, the impossibility, of this panic. This had already happened once— it couldn’t— “You’re alright,” he told her, but it wasn’t any sort of comfort — it sounded like he was begging, like he was trying to force a lid back on something far beyond that point. It wasn’t Pantherpaw in front of him anymore, it wasn’t Pantherpaw he was staring down at with such blind, too-young fear; her black fur was brown and striped, her lip had a scar over it. “You’re alright, you’re alright — I shouldn’t have done that, I’m sorry.” Already the worst case scenario was freezing him up — with Eris, there had been no question, absolutely no question: his kits or his mate, and he had chosen his mate. But he didn’t want to choose this — he didn’t want to choose between kits and a girl, even if she had betrayed him. For a moment, he had frozen in place, staring in fear at the opposite wall with his chin on the top of his Pantherpaw’s head; now he startled back to life and looked back down at her frantically. His paw was still resting on her stomach; the kits hadn’t stopped kicking.
And then he felt what he had been dreading, so faint, so faint that it flooded fresh, trembling terror through him; there was no disgust like there might usually have been — it was too late for those games. “You horrible girl,“ he pleaded, the words sounding fear more like desperation than insults, eyes finding hers in half-choked earnestness, “tell me that wasn’t a contraction.”
"P-please.." The word came out hoarse and begging as he egged her on to say something more. The air deprivation had began black spots in her vision and her scrambling paws got weaker. Then, the weight was gone from her throat. A gasp sucked in as she rolled slightly to the right, her breath coming in fast as the colors and light began to ebb back into her vision. "Kier..." She had muttered so soft that it seemed to have hardly came from her lips. Her glazed eyes stared forward, unmoving even as he fretted around her. His touch didn't even get a reaction from her, instead she just stared forward, sides heaving quickly.
Panic. It set in. "Kier!" She said again, this time more desperate and fearful. Pantherpaw rolled herself to her paws in a panic, though they were trembling terribly. Another wave of pain, so close to the last. Her stomach contracted again, her claws scratching along the stone floor as she stumbled forward. "It's too soon, it's too soon... Oh no..." Her breathing was quick, making her light headed. "No, no, no.." Her words frantic and her emerald green eyes moving rapidly around the den.
Their argument entirely forgotten as fast as it had started. No, she had something far more pressing now. Never mind he was likely the cause of the sudden onset of labor.
"They aren't ready, they aren't ready!" She cried, her head shaking back and fourth as she stumbled forward. "Kier! Do something!"
As Pantherpaw rolled to her paws, Kier scrambled to his own, panicking backwards. Kier… Kier! “Yes!” he blurted out, just blindly staring at her stomach, eyes wide and wild, “that does happen to be my name!” Do something! “What can I possibly do?” he exclaimed, backing away again — there was no anger in his voice, just sheer, overwhelmed terror. He looked like his body wanted to flee but his mind, his fragmented, incomprehensible, soft-hearted loyalty, wouldn’t let him. “I don’t know the first thing about— about BIRTH!”
And then something changed.
For a moment Kier was silent, and in that moment of silence he looked like he was thinking. Like he was coming to some existence-altering conclusion. He frowned down at the stone floor. And when he looked up again, his voice was indignant, like he’d been lied to, like he’d been deceived, like he’d been fooled into some outdated way of thinking. “But— no, you know, I trusted the medicine cat with Eris — I’m not making that mistake again. She can deliver all the Inferior kits she wants; she’s not delivering mine. I’ll do it myself.” His newfound resolution brought him to Pantherpaw’s side, his gaze flitting over her body as he spoke like he was assessing variables, like the panic was giving way to maths, to numbers, to percentages. “If she can make it up as she goes and have some semblance of success rate, I can do it better — a hundred times better. They’re half a moon early — so what? They have a strong mother; they’ll live. They’ll be fine.” The die was cast; his determination solidified — for better or for worse, he wasn’t going back on it now. Overflowing with that purpose, that dedication, Kier pressed his muzzle to Pantherpaw’s forehead in a platonic kiss less reassuring than it was wilfully determined. His terror dissipated, replaced by the utter forced, bluffing confidence that had won him a crown — he didn’t know what he was doing; he’d feel his way through this like he did everything else, taking advantage of opportunities and making things up on the spot. Adaptability, that was what earned kingdoms. And that was what would allow him redemption now — he couldn’t save his and Eris’ kits; he could save these. He would adapt to the circumstances, make it up as he went, and guide them through this. His whole demeanour seemed to change, voice calming to that sort of stern, inarguable gentleness a matron carried. He was bluffing, but if Kier had anything, it was these three things: an utter hubristic belief in his own abilities, optimism strong enough to conquer terror, and an unparalleled talent for lying.
He stroked a paw along Pantherpaw’s back, soothing and rhythmic, trying to ease her back into her nest. “Before anything else, my dear, you need to lie down. Relax. A kit feeds on his mother’s stress, and there’s no reason in the world for you to be so. This is all perfectly natural — she-cats around the world do it every day, don’t they? And you’ll be no different. In an hour from now, you’ll have a litter of perfectly healthy kits, hungry from their exertions. A bit smaller than average, but they were always going to be with us for parents, weren’t they?” He laughed, flashing her a grin that looked halfway between contained anxiety and genuine softness. Anything he felt for Pantherpaw now was utterly platonic, and perhaps that was why he was taking such a hands-on role — he didn’t love her, didn’t care for her at all beyond some irreconcilable sense of responsibility, but he would help her through this, like odd, inconceivable friends. Any other she-cat that bore his kits, he would throw to the wolves and only come into check afterwards if they had survived the birth; but with her, somehow, in some way, he had already aligned himself with the concept of these kits — of her — as family. Maybe he just felt he owed her this for what he’d done to her mother. He’d always told himself he would kill her. Now, he knew he had been lying to himself, trying to reconcile his betrayal with the reality of his fond weakness.
“I’ll be back — thirty breaths in the time I’m gone. Mm? Slow ones — deep.” He demonstrated, raising his upturned paw slowly till it touched his inflated chest as he drew in a breath. “No need for any more than thirty.” Touching his nose again to Pantherpaw’s forehead, he ducked out of the nursery. As soon as he was out, he stopped and stood there for a moment, like he was going over a list in his head, mouth moving slightly as he breathed the words; no time for fear, for bewilderment — he always worked best when he had a task. Seeming to reconcile himself with the list, he gave his head a tiny nod and hurried over to the medicine den. Paying no mind to being neat, he pawed poppy seeds, borage leaves, and windflower roots out of the nooks, scattering other herbs over the den floor; bundling them into his jaws, he was out as quickly as he had arrived. He stopped on the way back to the nursery only to drop the leaf wraps at his paws and give an order to the nearest cat that no one was to come in — that it was strictly off limits; the pregnant queens would have to find somewhere else to bed down, he didn’t have a care in the world for them and their hardships. To the same cat, he tacked on another message, one to be relayed to Eris — he’d be occupied for an hour or two, nothing to worry about, he loved her, he’d tell her everything later. And then he was back in the nursery; back beside Pantherpaw. “There we go — twenty-nine, mm?” He settled behind her head, giving her a comforting smile; the herbs were laid out at his side. Easing his paw around to her chest, he encouraged her to lie down against him, the back of her neck supported upright. “Good girl,” he praised quietly from behind her; turning his head gently to the side, he stuck a few poppy seeds to his paw pad and, turning his head again and brushing her neck fur out of his eyes with his other forepaw, offered them in front of her. “Good girl,” he murmured again with a smile she couldn’t see, brushing his paw comfortingly down the side of her neck.
Kier groomed the back of her head rhythmically, reaching around to massage her stomach with his paw. “If I learned one thing on my travels,” he went on with that same calm, gentle confidence, “it’s that nature will make itself known — your kits will tell you when you need to push, not some healer counting contractions. Listen to your body, my dear; it will guide you through this. You’ll be alright. And I’ll be here the whole time.” If he thought about how the ache in his heart was for Eris, if he thought about how this could have been her instead of Pantherpaw, how this could have been their happy future with the League never casting their shadow over their lives, he would break down then and there — so he forced it out, buried it. He’d sob and wail later, all those wounds re-awoken and picked clean from where they barely lay beneath the surface to begin with. This should have been Eris; it wasn’t. He would have given these kits up to any god if it meant they could be his and Eris’, or at least he told himself he would; but they weren’t. And they never would be. His kits were dead; these weren’t. For now, Pantherpaw was here; she had to be at the centre. He’d help her through this. He’d failed Eris — they would never have this happy future. He’d redeem himself now. It all came back to that old grief. Every single thing in the world did.
Kier seemed almost.. confident now. It made her fur spike in confusion. "H-have you ever helped a she-cat birth?" Her ears flicked back, shaking her head at his attempts to comfort her. Kier seemed to take control of the situation so well, it in fact.. was almost comforting. However, Pantherpaw knew deep down that this was too soon. Something could go wrong, she was unable to get rid of her panic. Her instincts were screaming at her so loud, however she could not seem to make them out.
"K-kier! Get Cascadepaw, please!" She begged him, shaking her head back and fourth. If there was one thing she knew, that was that her sister was calm and collected, as well as knowledgeable in so many things. As he coaxed her to lay down she furrowed her brows and was about to speak again before another contraction rippled through her stomach. She sucked in a sharp breath, eyes squeezing shut as she attempted to breath through the pain. Kier's laps along her head gave her a small whimper.
Here the pair was, this time in opposite positions than before. Where she had comforted him and listened to his cries, now here he was so close to her and listening to her own. How the roles had reversed. "What if they aren't okay? Kier, what are we going to do?" She turned, buried her face into his chest furs as if hiding this reality from herself. Fear radiated from her pelt, but she tried to take comfort in him. In the cat who had changed her life, taken her mother, her sisters, even from her. It was... terrifying to be so alone.
H-have you ever helped a she-cat birth? For a moment, the question plunged him back into that terrible night — the trail of blood on the dusty ground behind Eris, the sick, growing stench of it; her utter silence as the night dragged on, while he wept and stumbled over his own helpless, pacing steps in the background; your mate or your kits, I can only save one; I’m sorry, Kier, but you have to choose. Pantherpaw shifting against him snapped him back to the present like she’d shocked him, the memory melting around him like blood. “No,” he replied, forgetting for a moment that he was supposed to be reassuring her. There was only numbed, emotionless grief in his voice, like it had happened but it didn’t matter anymore, it couldn’t matter. The litter of little bodies he’d buried by himself, sobbing alone in the misty, empty, freezing night, that he’d left to the cold, unfeeling earth when they should have been against their mother’s warm stomach, when Eris should have been purring over their living kits instead of too locked away in her own uncomprehending, staring loss to leave her nest — the senseless unfairness of it… They couldn’t matter. He’d never repressed his grief — he’d drowned in it; he still did; what other reason for this war was there? But now, just for a few hours, he had to. Suddenly, the only place he wanted to be was by Eris’ side, to cry and to be held — he felt nothing for this girl. But this was his redemption; this was his she-cat. He’d get her through this, if only because he couldn’t do it before. “No, not successfully. But you’re as different as it’s possible to be — you’re healthy and strong,” he gave her the tiniest determined shake from where he lay behind her, his forepaw wrapped around her with such gentle force, “and our kits are going to be fine. They’re going to be better than fine — they’re going to be fierce, clever survivors. Better still than that — they’re going to be beautiful. Name a thing more natural than birth,” he rasped his tongue quickly over the back of her head, “there’s nothing. Excuse my crassness, my dear, but you were made for this — whatever else I say, that much really is the truest thing in the world: your beautiful body was made for this.” He gave her a lick more brisk than before, like he was cutting off the sentimentality and returning to business. “You’ll be fine.”
Get Cascadepaw, please! For one, brief moment of instinctive irritation, he wanted to argue, to turn her down and cut off her protests and turn her back to the job at hand — he could do it, and she’d have to put up with it. With all the other queens in NightClan, they got what they were given — special requests were uniformly turned down; have the kits and have them taken, that was all they had to do. That was their only role. He didn’t like being given orders, even if the order ended with ‘please.’ Even out there, he was less chivalrous than the other toms — if he were feeling in the right mood, he might bow and adhere to a she-cat’s demure wishes, might go fetch her something and smile as she took it, playing the gentleman for a bit of fun, and because he liked the way they held his gaze and batted their lashes at him; but most of the time, he’d laugh at them if he were in a jovial mood and wave them on with a hiss if he weren’t. But with Pantherpaw, he stuck to the old doctrine: refuse a birthing she-cat nothing. With the others, he rolled his eyes and asked how long it could possibly take when one went into labour, glancing up at the moon through the cenote and giving his tongue an irritable click. With her, feeling her contractions against his own body, he didn’t doubt her very real pain for a moment. His flash of anger settled and melted away like prickling water, leaning back slightly to avoid being clipped in the jaw as she swung her head back and forth. He was about to agree—
What if they aren't okay? Kier, what are we going to do? As she buried her face in his chest, Kier growled without sound, stiff against her, lips drawn back slightly, his temper returning amid the whirlwind of fear; as handsy as he was, physical touch from someone else still made him queasy. He didn’t hold her. “If they aren’t okay, there is no ‘we’,” he snapped; panic — not feeling in control — made him furiously angry, and now his fur was prickling. He hated feeling afraid, he hated feeling powerless, and the grief of it, the raw terror that made his mouth dry and his chest clench with static, made him hateful. It was the only way to push others away, to ensure he was alone, and in any other circumstance he would have disappeared into his den and curled up in the empty silence until he stopped being scared, like he had after Eris’ miscarriage. But he couldn’t do that now, and the strangled feeling of obligation felt like a noose around his neck — he couldn’t hide, and the fear had nowhere else to go but the static ends of his fur. “I’m not a fortune teller — how should I know? How can I possibly know?” Without really meaning to, he drifted his paw up to hold her shoulders as she hid herself in his fur. “What’s the point of being all doom and gloom — they’ll be fine. It’s your job to believe that. I can’t have these kits for you, and thank god I can’t — this is up to you. To your capabilities and your will. I know you’re not a coward — you’ve withstood a trial, you’ve withstood your mother’s death, you’ve withstood me. You are one of the strongest she-cats in this Clan and you’re going to bring our kits into the world with that same stubborn strength.” As brusque and brutal as it was, delivered in a stern, borderline angry voice, it really was meant as comfort. Kier just didn’t coddle — if he hadn’t taken over NightClan, she’d have been trained as a soldier; now she had to be that soldier. That was all there was to it. “Now enough of this.” He passed his tongue over her fur again, gentler this time, holding her a little more loosely, a little more tenderly, against his chest. “You’re being silly. Aren’t you excited to meet your kits? Mm?” He looked down at her, face still hidden in his fur, stroking his paw up and down the back of her neck. “Just hold onto that, you terrible girl.” It had almost become a nickname, stubbornly fond.
And then, beginning to ease himself out from under her — she’d leaned back more as the next contraction hit — he added, “I am but your servant, Pantherpaw. I’ll go fetch your dear sister for you, shall I?” Giving her another brief lick between the ears, he slipped out of the den to find Cascadepaw, muttering, “like some cuckold courier pigeon.”
It didn’t take long to find her. “Cascadepaw,” he greeted coolly as he padded up, not letting himself rush within sight of her like some frazzled milksop, “your sister is asking for you — the kits are coming early, you know, and she’s rather in a panic.” He gave her a little grin, meant to be nonchalant; but no matter how unbothered he tried to seem, it was clear that he was deeply anxious. “I hope you’re ready to be an aunt.” He turned back to the nursery, beckoning for her to fall in beside him — and then suddenly turned back. “Oh — and fetch some of that,” he searched around for the word; usually he was so good with his herbs and plants, so he really must have been a bit thrown off by all this, a bit befuddled and distressed, “borage,” he finished at last, “that you brought in to the medicine cat the other day. Bit early, I know, but— well, maybe it will be a good luck charm. An omen. Milk before birth, birth before milk, chicken, egg.” He smiled, trying to crack a joke, but it didn’t reach his eyes. As he waited, he just stood there slightly hunched, like he was in pain, or like he was just so stiff that his back was liable to snap at the slightest touch. Then, as she rejoined him and he walked with her back towards the nursery, the stiffness didn’t abate; it was in every step, in the way he held his head. He was nervous. “A girl needs someone’s paw to hold,” he went on, still fighting to seem blasé and above all this, “and she’s squeezed mine to the bone.” He grinned again, a wisp of air escaping through his teeth, and waited for Cascadepaw to duck in ahead of him, holding his paw out with that instinctive, slightly mocking deference. It was so ingrained that he hardly thought anything of it. Slipping in after her, he didn’t go back to lie behind Pantherpaw; he took a seat just to the side of the entrance, shoulders hunched, looking uncomfortable and like he would rather have been anywhere else but was too stubborn to leave. He’d see this through, even if he had to cover his eyes. She wasn’t his mate, but it was still his job to be there when an important mistress birthed — for anyone else, the news could be relayed to him while he lay in bed with Eris, to be waved off dismissively; for an occasion like this, if only to avoid any outside speculation that the kits weren’t his, he’d be present. If it had anything to do with comfort, with secret, near-platonic affection, he wouldn’t say so. He rearranged his paws and cleared his throat awkwardly, not looking forward to the long night ahead.
@ian i’m bringin you in whether you want it or not (and goldcrest bring in duskgirl if you like!! <3 that’s an ORDER)
Cascadepaw had been tucked away, watching the camp, the way she normally was. What else was a good reporter to do than watch, to gather information, information that could one day come in handy. She spent most of her days like that, sitting at the edge, taking in the sights, at least when her attention wasn't pulled away, like it currently was.
Her head snapped in Kier's direction as he spoke to her. "The kits?" Her voice was slightly strained at the sound. I hope you're ready to be an aunt. Cascadepaw tensed at the words. She was no more ready to be an aunt than her sister was to become a parent, which was to say, not at all ready. She blinked twice, before giving herself a shake. If she let herself go down that rabbit hole, she wouldn't be able to pull herself out of it, at least not in time. Pantherpaw needed stability, and stability and groundedness was something that Cascadepaw needed to provide her, especially now. She let out a small sigh, before turning to him. "Ready or not, it's coming," she meowed after a moment, pulling herself to her feet.
When he continued, there was a part of her that wanted to tense again: he wasn't meant to know that she had been gathering supplies. No one was meant to. But, she supposed she had been stupid to think that word wouldn't get back to Kier. In a clan of eyes, eyes owned by ravenous cats that wanted nothing more than to demonstrate to their tyrant that they were loyal, that they were worthy, in a clan like this, there were no secrets. An omen. Her lips twitched slightly, although she controlled herself before she had the time to frown. Had her own neuroticies, her need to keep herself busy by preparing for the kittens, somehow caused this? Again, there wasn't time to think. There was only time to go.
She returned to his side with the borage. For the first time in her life, she didn't wait for Kier to tell her it was okay to go ahead of him; even if he hadn't offered her the deferent pass, she would have pushed passed him anyways. For once in her life, Cascadepaw didn't have time for pleasantries. She was on a mission. She made it to her sister's side, setting the herbs down next to her. The marbled feline found herself falling into a seated position. There was something not right about it all, the atmosphere of the den. Something had happened. Still, Cascadepaw knew better than to ask.
"Shhh, shhh," she meowed, giving her sister a soft lick on her face. "Everything will be alright," she soothed, her tone gentle. Cascadepaw could only hope that her words rang true.
She couldn't help but wince. Right where her sister had given her an encouraging lick, was the same spot that Kier had just drew blood to her face. No matter, there was no time to think about that, because another contraction rippled through her stomach and she found herself gasping in shock. "Cascadepaw." Pantherpaw found herself whimpering softly, fearfully even. Not only was she now full of fear for the fact that the kittens inside her were coming rather early, but also full of fear too.
The kittens were coming, and they were the only things that kept her and her sisters safe from the cruel claws of Kier. Of death.
Panic set in again, and her breathing became uneven. She was also bringing kits into this world that were of a monster... of Kier. Yet, here he was with her, showing her some type of comfort, of kindness.
She was confused, oh so confused and panicked.
"It's too soon..." She mewed again, her face constricting into a wince from the pain. "I'm scared..." She whispered this time, hoping that only her sister could hear, and understand that she was scared of more than just the birth. She was scared of so much, it was easily seen within her eyes.
"Yes, my dear, it's too soon," Kier hissed from his place by the entryway, shoulder fur prickling with frustrated impatience as he leaned forward slightly. "That's been well established. Will you get on with it?" The point between care for someone that wasn't his mate and irritation was incredibly thin, and he'd already shown his hand far too many times that night; he'd fussed over Pantherpaw, felt terribly anxious for her, apologised and soothed and fretted — now he rather just wanted his end of the bargain. My, but she was dragging this out. "Honestly, my girl, if every she-cat made such a commotion every time they gave birth, no one would ever know the joys of pregnancy — they'd all be too afraid. You're really doing your whole sex a tremendous disservice by being so melodramatic about this." He sniffed distastefully, leaning back again and watching her with disapproving, wary eyes. He felt uncertain and panicked and like he'd expressed too much humanity; he'd made himself look weak, and now he had to crack down on it. He hated not being in control of things. "You have your pretty sister, now hurry up."
If it occurred to him that by distancing himself and rushing her, he might be putting her and the kits in danger, he didn't let himself show it. He couldn't. There was a stubborn barrier between the Kier that wanted to lie beside her and gently encourage the kits out, and the Kier that was sitting with such stiff coldness at the edge of the nursery, watching with a seething sort of self-hatred — because he was putting them in jeopardy because he couldn't show he cared, and because he wouldn't stop. The barrier only grew stronger, higher, as his heart weakened and begged. He felt like crying, but the Kier that was in charge, that was always in charge, wouldn't let him.
The moment Kier had approached Cascadepaw, rambling about kits and borage and hands to hold, whispers spread like wildfire. Kits, they said, and there's no medicine-cat in sight. Duskpaw heard everything, of course, ears pricking towards the hushed words, waiting for them to sink in. Kier's kits, they all spoke of, hardly a mention of Pantherpaw's name at all — she was a nameless face, another mistress, a peasant girl he had hooked up with some bored, lonely night, someone to give him another line and be forgotten about later. Everybody knew of what happened to the mother of his first litter, even if it was obvious it wouldn't happen again. At least, not with Pantherpaw. Still, worry crept up on her like a ravanous beast, sinking claws into her gut and heart, making her breath skip and hop uncertainly. She hadn't been called. Of course she hadn't, she wouldn't know what to do (though, somehow, Cascadepaw did? She didn't dwell on it), but all she could imagine was hearing the news at a later date, when the hours dragged on far longer than they should have — she didn't make it, was all Duskpaw could think of, too many complications, to much blood loss, she wasn't ready, she wasn't strong enough. They whipped around her mind like a flurry of equally likely, terrifying scenarios, and before she could think of anything else she had barged her way towards the nursery, shouldering through the entrance and skidding to a halt in front of the scene from where she'd half run inside.
Her ears flicked backwards, folding down, and her legs shook with apprehension. "Pantherpaw," she breathed, voice caught in her throat. She had hardly spoken to her sister at all, a mix of awkward, fearful mistrust and guilt, paired with an unfair anger — how could Pantherpaw be having his kits, after everything. Duskpaw could never understand, and she wasn't sure she wanted to.
Bumbling further in, she crouched beside Cascadepaw and in front of Pantherpaw, face contorted in tearful fear. She didn't address Kier, she didn't look at him at all, eyes and mind focused only on Pantherpaw. "Hi. You — you'll be alright, it's alright. It will all be over soon, and then you'll have wonderful, healthy kits at your side," she could feel the painful heat radiating off her sister, and Duskpaw leaned back to give her space, realizing that perhaps crowding wasn't good at the moment. She swallowed her anxious tears, but everything about her still trembled. "Do you need anything? Something to drink, something to bite? I'll fetch you whatever you need, name it."
“Oh good,” Kier commented dryly as the last sister entered, turning his head to follow her with his eyes. “The whole brood’s here.” Standing, he padded over and suddenly appeared close beside Duskpaw, head turned to smile at her; if this were a hospital room, he’d be making such a scene and making it all so much about him and his feelings that the doctor wouldn’t have quite known what to do with the expectant mother who ought to have been the focus. “Ah, Duskpaw — dug any good graves lately?” His unblinking smile didn’t leave the side of her face. It really was quite funny, that she could just walk in here without being invited, that an Inferior could just barge into a room the leader was in and have no consequences, because she had some strange in — the whole little family’s dynamics were a mystery to the rest of the Clan.
It gave him a sick sort of pleasure, a sort of power, that Pantherpaw should know he had relationships with each of her sisters that she wasn’t privy to — didn’t matter if they were surface-deep, didn’t matter if they were built on lies and terror and push-and-pull; he’d amplify the unknown just to make the mother of his kits feel she was missing out, to make her feel he might like one of the other two more, to make her wonder if one of them might be next. Whatever his feelings for Pantherpaw, whatever his fears, he was still annoyed with her, he would always be annoyed with her, they would never have an easy relationship — and what better way for someone so built on jealousy to punish someone who had annoyed him than to play with it a bit in someone else. It gave him a thrill of nasty appeasement, so sweet it tasted foul. The fact Kier was trying at all to get under her skin showed the hold she had over him.
When Duskpaw hesitated before Pantherpaw, Kier looked between them smilingly, taking a seat beside Cascadepaw like they were equals; he didn’t seem at all bothered by her. “Well — go on!” He knew he wasn’t the centre of attention in this situation and so he had to insert himself as equally important, had to make a role for himself — he was the father for heaven’s sake! “She won’t bite. Can’t do much of anything right now, really.” At Duskpaw’s fussing, Kier let out an irritated breath and rolled his eyes. “She doesn’t need anything — what she needs is to get these kits out. It won’t do them any good to be all,” he made a face, waving a nauseated paw at the general area of Pantherpaw’s stomach, “clogged up, you know. They want to come out — they’re my kits, they know what they want.” He sounded vaguely proud at that, almost preening. But as Duskpaw went on, hot, jealous irritation built in his chest again and curled his expression. “She’s had poppy seeds, she has borage if her milk doesn’t flow — she doesn’t need anything else.” Without warning, having padded around Pantherpaw’s other side, he suddenly snapped his teeth at Duskpaw’s face, lying down pointedly against Pantherpaw. It was a very clear contest for power and control over the mother-to-be, and Kier was finally asserting his dominance; he didn’t much fancy losing to this waif of a girl, family to Pantherpaw or not. There had to be a clear divide, a clear hierarchy — Kier was at the top, Cascadepaw followed, Duskpaw was at the bottom. They were lucky he hadn’t cordoned their sister off somewhere else entirely. “She’s fine, Duskpaw — stop being such a woman about this.” Didn’t matter if she was fine; her wellbeing came second to his battle of wills with Duskpaw. Whatever his feelings, right now she was just a tug-of-war between an Inferior and the leader. “Cascadepaw and I are midwives enough. If you’re going to stay, be a good girl for me and keep your poisonous little mouth shut.” He turned his head back to Pantherpaw and drew his tongue over her cheek, suddenly attentive. “Mm? Now hurry up,” he told her gently, nuzzling her cheek like he cared. “Your sister’s getting hysterical.” With Eris, not that he ever let himself think about kits now, she could have taken as long as she needed; with Pantherpaw, it was all about efficiency.
Pantherpaw shifted a slight bit, feeling Kier's impatience and irritancy at the situation. Stress made her grind her teeth, the pain of each contraction rippled through her stomach and body. Her green eyes shifted from Kier then, to Cascadepaw. Her sister seemed to be trying her best to comfort her worry, and the sudden closeness she had with her once more seemed almost a relief. How she missed her sister, the way she shushed her and told her everything would be alright. Her brows furrowed, and it was then at that moment she had a quick thought of Duskpaw, but said nothing of it. When was the last time that the pair had spoken? Did Duskpaw even talk to Cascadepaw? Everything in their life had been so complicated, so... miserable since their mother had been taken to that forsaken prison.
Then came Kier's voice, rushing her along all over again. Though, Pantherpaw had never had kits before... she was sure that it was a process that was unexpected and unpredictable. Her sharp green eyes focused on him as her sister doted around her licking her cheek. Something was in her eyes, a certain look. One might almost see it as a dark and hate-filled one. Yet, it only lasted for half a second.
Duskpaw rushed in, and relief flooded her. At least, she would have her sisters here. They weren't Primrosetuft, but they were truly all she had. She felt a deep pain in her, this time it was not from the contractions. It was the pain of seeing her two sisters here for her once again. She'd been avoided, mainly. Left alone, but she never knew why. Confined to the nursery she had no idea what was going on in the every day lives of her siblings. Day in and day out, she laid in this nest. Restless, fearful, and always angry. Always dealing with Kier. Always arguing with him, always finding a new hate for the tom. He was the reason they were here, he was the reason she was in labor now! Perhaps if he hadn't... her eyes seemed far off for a moment, Kier butting in as Duskpaw asked her questions. It seemed to trigger a replay of the scene that had happened earlier in her head. She seemed distant, eyes staring ahead as she remembered the sound of his claws smacking her face.
Her body jolted. Brought back to reality by the touch of Kier, her ears pinned back. So many confusing emotions rushed through her as she tried to make herself some how small, but failed. His tongue drug across the scratches along her cheek, as if to make a point. They stung, and she found herself squeezing her eyes shut against him. Go away. Please just go away. She thought. Pantherpaw knew he wouldn't though. Whatever sick game he was playing at, he was good at it.
Her breath had quickened, adrenaline surging through her as she tried to focus. It was almost impossible, the tension in the room was so strong she could hardly breathe. Another contraction rippled through her stomach, and suddenly, she felt this strong need to push. So.. she did, and as she did, she attempted to tune them all out.
Within seconds, the first sac slipped out and the first kit came into the world.
In that moment, her own disobedience didn't matter, just as Kier's crass sarcasm didn't matter, either — she was not here for him, she wasn't here to look at him or speak to him or even think of him; she was here for her sister, to help as she did one of the most difficult jobs Duskpaw could imagine. The idea of birth had always made her squeamish, uncomfortable, constricted in her skin. To have bare kits felt more like baring parasites, but she knew it wasn't like that for everyone, and so she never mentioned it. Duskpaw, stubbornly, kept her eyes on Pantherpaw, even as Kier moved beside her. Ah, Duskpaw — dug any good graves lately? Her brows furrowed, her breath hitched, yet she refused to respond.
"It'll be alright," she repeated as she moved back, away from where she had nestled in front of Pantherpaw. "Poppy seeds?" Were the first words she spoke in Kier's general direction, eyes still trained on her sister, "no, that's not good — they'll make her drowsy." Her tone was exasperated, far to wiseacre to be speaking to a leader, and yet it hadn't yet clicked that, perhaps, she should still be respectful towards him. In the moment, just as she was in every moment, she was foolish. It would be her downfall, she knew, being so recklessly emotional, so consumed by them, that she couldn't even attempt to hide them even when it mattered most. When Kier snapped in her face, a jealous beast, something more primal than put-together, she jerked her head back, a look of indignation crossing her features. Duskpaw wasn't even entirely aware of the game of tug-of-war, of the apparent rivalry between them — she didn't even know of the power she seemed to hold over Kier, no matter her low rank; she drove him insane with jealousy, and she had yet to understand the ramifications of it at all. All she could understand was that they had simply had a night together, as Kier did with many she-cats of Nightclan, and it was nothing more than that. The hatred of her was something, she believed, to be inherited from her mother, and Duskpaw was still too good-heartedly stubborn to break away like her sisters had.
She took a shaky breath. "I'm. . . here for my sister," as all she chose to say, and she hoped it got the point across — she wasn't here to chat with him, she didn't care if he didn't want to hear her, she would go on, she would help, still, in the ways she knew how. "And she needs time and concentration, rushing her won't do a thing." This time, she made sure to keep her tone lighter, more respectful, despite the underlying vexation.
Despite herself, despite the air of bravery, she still squeezed her eyes shut the moment her sister's contractions turned into something more — now, she sat slightly dazed, unsure of what to do, and she could only imagine that Kier would get a laugh out of that.
we can do a family thread now after this one if you guys like <33 set a few weeks later when the babs are a bit older <3 i can make it unless someone else wants to <3 they’re finally here!!!!!!! tl;dr: kier renames panther. as a treat <3
At first, Duskpaw’s refusal to react to him had driven him mad. Now, he knew how to read her. The little furrow to her brow, the hitch in her breathing — as he stared at the side of her face, he grinned, so pleased with himself and with her, and let out a little titter. It was almost better when they wouldn’t give him the big shows, when they made him work for it, when they teased and taunted and enticed him with titillating little hints that were morsels rather than feasts. He loved the effect he had on Duskpaw; fear looked good on her.
And then she was speaking again. Poppy seeds? No, that’s not good — they’ll make her drowsy. At her hussy-ish second-guessing of him, Kier’s lips drew back in an affronted, hissing snarl. “WHO has medical experience here?” he snapped back. “Me or you? Shut up, Duskpaw.” The order was sharp and hateful and humiliating. He was only ever so immature with her. As the sister went on, Kier stayed lying beside Pantherpaw, possessive not because he wanted her but because he just didn’t want Duskpaw to have her. “Yes, well, all I’m saying is I rather think a fair amount of attention-seeking comes into it,” Kier muttered sneeringly, conceding to Duskpaw’s gentle scolding; it was a weakness he didn’t know he had, like a dragon that could be stroked behind the neck to make it settle down — if a she-cat explained something with tender, authoritative deference, his fur lay flat and he backed down, like a Catholic-raised boy who wouldn’t argue with a nun. “All that screaming — it can’t hurt that badly. If no one were here to fuss over them, I doubt they’d make so much as a peep.” As he spoke, he turned his head back to Pantherpaw, idly grooming about her ears with soft strokes that contrasted so strangely with the cruelty of his words. But he was always a hypocrite; he might have thought Pantherpaw wasn’t in any pain at all, that she was just putting on a show, but he was still going to cave to chauvinism and play the begrudging gentleman.
Pantherpaw curling in on herself beside him snapped his attention completely from Duskpaw. He perked up, following her to lean over her, ears pricked up in interest. Instinctively, he moved his paw to her stomach, brushing over it back and forth with his eyes wide and watchful; surprisingly, he wasn’t disgusted in the least, wasn’t nauseated — he looked exhilarated, fascinated, enthralled. He’d thought he’d wrinkle his nose and wander over to take a seat behind Cascadepaw to avoid throwing up, back turned to the scene until it was over, listening blindly and trying to block out the feminine sounds; instead, he was mesmerised. He’d always liked medicine, the marvel of bodies — and he’d done this. Some part of him had melded with Pantherpaw and he’d done this. It was thrilling. “Excellent!” he exclaimed, laughing in excitement as her contractions began in earnest, still holding Pantherpaw to him. “Very good girl! Well done, my dear.” And then, with a heady rush of triumph that felt like nothing he’d ever felt before, the first kit was born. “See, Duskpaw?” he laughed on the same breath, shooting her a look over her sister’s head, cocky as could be. “Fine as anything. Cascadepaw, be a dear and take care of that first kit. It rather takes the allure out of fatherhood when they’re so terribly messy; I’ll see it when it’s clean.” He turned back to Pantherpaw, praising and encouraging, ignoring the firstborn kit until it was more presentable. As the waves of pain continued rolling through Pantherpaw, Kier, still so undone by the addictive, drunken triumph of the scene, drew her impossibly closer. He felt dizzy, hazy. “You know,” he whispered in her ear, just a breath. “It’ll be a shame. You looked so becoming pregnant. Maybe we can have some more fun another time, mm?” Head still bowed with Pantherpaw’s, Kier’s eyes crept to the side to lock with Duskpaw’s, a slow little grin spreading across his face. Then, with the breath of a laugh, he let her go and dragged his gaze from Duskpaw’s, not wanting to interfere with the wonders of birth.
As the labour continued, at the back of his mind, with a desperately stricken longing that ached and curled in his gut, he thought of Eris. He never let himself think of kits with her now, never let himself imagine or hope, however idly, whether in a stolen second during a meeting or in the early hours of the morning as he held her to him; he was more than happy, unfathomably happy, with the life he had with her — he was as dizzyingly in love as he had ever been, and the miscarriage had only added a further deepness to it, a selfless, unshakeable devotion that was the most grown-up thing about their heady love affair. He had accepted almost as soon as she’d miscarried that they’d never have kits; he was alright with that, never wanted her to feel badly, like she hadn’t given him what he wanted — he was happy to grow old with her, just with her. He wanted her to know that. And yet now, just for that moment, as he watched Pantherpaw bring their kits into the world, her cries faded to muffled, heavy near-silence and he allowed himself a second of selfish grief. Just a second. Not because their relationship needed kits — the first time had been an accident, as it had been with Pantherpaw; they were both still so young — but because if anyone were having kits with him, he wished they were kits he truly loved. Wished they were hers. Then the sound rushed back in and he put away the heartbreak, the selfish yearning, to where it usually sat on its vulnerable shelf. He would never let Eris see it. He would never let her despise herself for what she couldn’t give him. All he needed — all he wanted — was her. Just her. Only ever her. But he worried that she wouldn’t believe him.
As more of the kits were born, he finally asked whether the next one was a boy or a girl. And over and over, the answer came back ‘girl.’ A silent raise of his brows, a twitch of his whiskers, and a disbelievingly irritated little exhale through his nose were the only signs that he wasn’t pleased as he turned away again, back to focusing on Pantherpaw. He repositioned himself where he still lay against her, holding her a little more loosely. It wasn’t precisely anger — it was just a “well…” By the fourth girl, he stopped asking. “My,” Kier commented cheerily as the kits kept coming, crass as ever and mildly, pleasantly surprised, “it’s a wonder such a small thing as you could have fit all this in. Small mercy, I suppose, that you did birth early — we might have had a nasty surprise.” She might have been torn open, he meant. There was also an underlying, unspoken meaning to it: with Eris, he had chosen her over the kits when he could only save one. He wouldn’t have made the same choice with Pantherpaw. It was lucky she survived naturally, because Kier wouldn’t have done her any favours had it been up to him. That knowledge hung between them like taffy, utterly meaningless to Kier in his joy; it hadn’t happened, so what did it matter? He would have killed her — he didn’t.
And then the last kit was born — and at long last, it was a tom. “Well,” Kier laughed, standing immediately and letting Pantherpaw drop unceremoniously from where he had been letting her lean against him as he wandered over to inspect the kits. “You certainly are good at having girls. Must be your mother’s genes.” It might have been a half-insult — it might have been meant as one. But the way he was looking down at them was pure, smitten-eyed love. Softness. “Near half a dozen daughters.” Unexpectedly, Kier’s voice had broken slightly; it came out tender and disbelieving and emotional. His eyes didn’t leave them. He hadn’t yet allowed them to be given back to their mother; as they mewled and crawled about blindly, Kier collapsed heavily into a crouch, all his world faded into the six kits on the ground in front of him. It was all about him and them, not Pantherpaw. A little shyly, he put his paw out so they could clamber and squirm over it, looking down at them with that adoring, besotted, hazy smile. “They’re perfect. Hello, beautiful things.” Really, Kier had a secret: he loved his daughters. He loved them more than his sons. He loved having daughters. He would be the perfect father to a girl. They were the first kits he’d really cared for since he’d buried his litter by himself in the misty empty freezing night, sobbing alone. Kier laughed, tearful and embarrassed about the tears, so overwhelmed from stress that this moment of pure emotion, of success, of relief, nearly ruined him. “So many girls,” he repeated, laughing and brushing away tears sheepishly with the paw that wasn’t occupied with the kits. It didn’t sound like a bad thing at all. They weren’t the kits he wanted, not his and Eris’, but they were still his. Insignificant, meaningless accidents on the side, no royal standing, no expectations, no responsibilities as his heirs —and from that disregard flowed an easy, calm, soothing, warm love. The unknowableness of Kier. it was clear already that he’d be a doting father; his first litter were entirely forgotten in that moment, the old nothing compared to the new. One kit, a little black, dappled she-kit, crawled over to him and squirmed half up his forepaw; Kier helped her up the rest of the way with his other one, so unexpectedly gentle. “Hello, sweet girl,” he greeted gently with another soft little laugh. Finally, he picked her up softly by her scruff and padded carefully back to Pantherpaw, dropping her against her stomach to suckle. He didn’t order Duskpaw or Cascadepaw to bring the others, just expected them to follow; there was a sacred, tender unbreakableness of the moment, like he couldn’t physically be cruel. He settled against Pantherpaw’s back.
As he looked down at the kits from where he was curled up along Pantherpaw’s back with a completely subconscious closeness that had everything to do with pride at the kits and with her and nothing to do with any affection, a wide-eyed, awed, almost uncomprehending wonder on his face, his mind returned to the argument he’d been having with her just before the birth. It felt suddenly silly, insignificant. But one thing still rang true, purer than before — she needed a new name. She would have gained one eventually — soon, really. She was well due. It was unbecoming for a royal mistress to have so plain a name; she needed a little badge of honour, a little title to set her apart as something untouchable and dignified. And what better thing could she have done to earn it than bring him these six kits? A thousand words wisped behind his eyes, some too old, some too crass: regent, dowager, matron, regal; dainty, mistress, concubine. Before, he had mocked her parents for giving her a name that so obviously referenced her pelt; now, it felt like a tender homage. She’d given it to their kits; they both had. The right thing to honour, but prettier, more ladylike, more noble. “Sable,” he breathed, brushing his muzzle against her ear, eyes half-closed. “Sablemaid. There, that’s a prettier name. A name befitting the mother of kits with Royal blood. Mm?” He brushed his muzzle over her ear again, eyes opening as his gaze drifted back down to the kits at her stomach. For the first time, there was possessiveness in it as he looked down at them. Reaching a paw across Sablemaid’s stomach like she wasn’t there at all, he ran it so gently over his kits, a touch like air, careful not to displace them. “My girls,” he whispered. For the first time, the son hardly mattered.
"Kier," Cascadepaw's voice was quiet, barely more than a calming breath when he snapped at Duskpaw. "We must stay even, for them," she meowed, glancing down at her sister. "You can deal with my sister later." She passed Duskpaw a glance, a warning. If she was going to be in the nursery, she was going to mind her place. The den was tense enough; Pantherpaw didn't need any additional stress. Then, she continued to watch and assist. As soon as her sister gave birth to the first, Cascadepaw let out a soft breath. She hadn't realized that she had been holding it, waiting on the edge of her seat for something to happen. She couldn't help but let the corner of her lips flicker into a smile, even if it was only small and almost sad. She gazed at that kitten for a long moment, before turning her gaze to the new parents. "Congratulations," she meowed, dipping her head deeply in the direction of the bat-eared tom.
Dilligently, Cascadepaw performed her task. For each kitten, she gently cleaned them, before nudging them in the direction of Kier. It felt almost wrong to keep them from her sister, but there was no use in arguing with the tom, not now. The kittens were born, and Pantherpaw needed to rest. It would be easier for her to rest of Kier was appeased. After the final kitten was passed to the tom, the young she-cat turned again to her sister, offering her a smile. "You did it," she murmured. "All healthy, all perfect." She let her gaze drift again to Kier and the kittens, waiting for the moment that he was ready to share them again. When the leader moved, so did she, never more than a half step behind him in the process.
Once they sat back next to their mother, Cascadepaw let her gaze drift to Duskpaw. Now that the kittens were born, the midwifery complete, she wasn't sure if the two of them should stay, or if they should make themselves scarce. She was gazing at her sister when she heard Kier re-name Pantherpaw. Sablemaid? Cascadepaw tensed slightly, her gaze breaking from Duskpaw to look back to the new parents. She said nothing, though. Instead, she found herself temporarily lost, her gaze becoming distant for a prolonged moment before she looked away. What a cruel thing to do, divorce her sister of her identity. Was she doomed to the same fate? Her jaw tensed, before she let out an awkward cough.
"Shall Duskpaw and I fetch another mossball for water? Is there anything that you need?"
It had been a long process, or at least Pantherpaw had felt that way. Her body ached, she was exhausted. Her green eyes however, dull, remained on the kits that Kier coddled and cooed at as they wriggled around. Instinct was to rush over, take them from him, pull them to her belly. Her claws dug into her nest, ears back as she quietly awaited what her entire being so longed for. Finally, he put one against her belly and a small bit of relief entered her body. Then the others were brought to her and she let out a breath that she had no idea she had been holding. Pantherpaw bent and nuzzled them, one by one. Carefully licking their ears lightly. There was so many... yet.. she felt so tired and had little energy. All she wanted to do was close her eyes and drift...
Then she felt Kier against her once more. She blinked, and her eyes turned to look at him, twisting so that she could. His nose brushed her ear, and it triggered the instant memory of the time they had together that had led them where they were now. A shiver spent through her body, her face growing hot as she felt the familiar companionship they had once shared. His cries echoing in her ears, long gone now was the soft Kier he had shown her that night. Yes, she had in a way, seduced the tom to ensure that her life and her sister's lives would stay in tact. Yet, she'd be lying if she had ever said she never had feelings for him, or that her feelings were entirely gone.
Sable. He spoke into her ear, his breath warm and toxic. Why did her body melt so? Then he continued, and the feeling that had been creeping into her mind, body, was gone in an instant. Sablemaid. Confusion set in, quickly and instantly replaced with shock. Her name, her name was gone. Something her mother had named her the moment she had laid eyes on her. She was named for her pelt, for her eyes, for her muzzle shape.
When her gaze finally moved to Cascadepaw, to Duskpaw, it was not a look of happiness or anything near. It was a look of fear. Kier had not only now stripped away her entire identity, he had isolated her from her remaining family, he had taken the support of her clan away, he had taken everything away from her. Now, he owned her. The name was not a mark of warrior hood, it was a mark of ownership.
Then Cascadepaw spoke, but she wanted to wail. Wanted to beg her sister to stay. There was a turmoil of emotions coming through her, confusing and swelling.
No. She wanted to be alone, more than she wanted any type of companionship.
"Can... can I be alone with them?" She asked, her voice croaking as she did. Fearful that Kier would deny her this. "I'm... tired." She continued carefully, her eyes looking down to the squirming kittens at her belly.
Kier. "Mm." His eyes were still locked with Duskpaw's. We must stay even, for them. You can deal with my sister later. Just as Duskpaw had unwittingly soothed Kier before, Cascadepaw soothed him now; he was always incredibly malleable to a she-cat's reason, and it made him vulnerable to a remarkable degree of manipulation — thinking them cunning and full of deception when they weren't, he just as readily regarded them as vessels of sense. They could stand apart from politics and contest; they had the gentler touch; they were wise, if not clever, and he would always bow, deferentially and chivalrously, to that matronly scolding. His eyes lingered as she talked, so venomous and snake-like, and then finally dragged away from Duskpaw's. He gave Cascadepaw a quick, small smile. "Quite right, my dear. There's all the time in the world. This is all in bad taste." A laugh bubbled out of him as he looked back at Duskpaw, making his chest shudder where he was holding Pantherpaw. "You—you really do have such a way of getting to me, you know." It was a brief, harmless moment of camaraderie, like an actor who played an enemy dropping character to speak jovially to the other actor — except Duskpaw wasn't one. Really, all it did was sound unspeakably ominous.
During the labour, Kier was hardly aware of Cascadepaw hovering behind him like an indentured shadow; he took it for granted, disregarded her, gave no thought to the subconscious knowledge that a flick of his tail would send her off on a task. At first, it was because it was such an expected place for a she-cat that he paid no mind to it at all, no more mind that someone would pay to a table he knew would be there to set a glass down on in the dark; then, because he was too enraptured by the kits to pay attention to anything else in all the world. All healthy, all perfect. "Perfect, yes," he murmured with a high, quiet sort of dreaminess, his head tilted down at the kits and his eyes all fogged. There was a faint purr in his voice.
And then he had renamed her. The look of fear was utterly lost on Kier; he just smiled around at the two other she-cats, blind with immense pride and self-satisfaction and exhaustion, like he'd done anything at all beside take the credit for all Sablemaid's hard work and suffering. To him, he felt it was an utterly equal thing — it was just as hard, you know, to stand by and listen to someone wail. A hard night's work. At Cascadepaw's cough — the awkwardness was again lost on him — he looked up at her with a patient, indulgent smile, still lying along Sablemaid's back. Shall Duskpaw and I fetch another mossball for water? Is there anything that you need? "Oh, no, no." His voice was unceasingly friendly, so cheerily dismissive, like they were all equals, all tremendous friends. "No need. We’re perfectly content. No, my dear, you two must be tired. Go, go — or stay! Whatever you both like. The more the merrier."
Can... can I be alone with them? Kier turned his head back to Sablemaid, and when he spoke his voice was a rush of warm, self-effacing deference, of apology. "Of course, of course — quite right, my dear; here I am inviting them to stay without even an inkling of regard for what you've been through." He hurried to stand, extracting himself from where Sablemaid had leaned her weight back against him. "Let me leave you; my mate will be expecting me anyway, you know, probably not eager to hear about the night's events, but—" He laughed, now standing between Duskpaw and Cascadepaw. Then, suddenly, he re-closed the distance between himself and Sablemaid and touched his nose between her ears, again overcome by pleasure at the labour's outcome; it had been an immensely successful night, and he liked nothing better than success. "Six kits," he enthused again as he drew his head back, the brief affection such an afterthought that didn't mean nearly as much as Sablemaid might have hoped it did. His eyes locked with hers, so thoughtlessly, warmly intimate — and yet it was far more like friends than lovers. "What a remarkable feat. Yes, but we must make sure they don't get lonely — even in a litter, it's an awful possibility. And with all the other kits away with their nursemaids, the nursery mustn't be a dreary place. Playmates, perhaps — yes, companions." Standing at her back, he leaned over Sablemaid to nuzzle the kits. His voice dropped to a quiet, purring murmur. "Companions for the princesses and the prince." Hand-selected, of course, for their worthiness; noble, but peasant enough to be obedient, submissive friends. Hired friends who daren’t make them unhappy, trembling at every possible offence, but who Kier would fondly, naïvely believe were true friends indeed to his daughters. That odd, kingly gullibility. Drawing back, his gaze wandered to their mother. He smiled down at Sablemaid, pausing a moment just to look at her; he was pleased, proud, immensely gratified. There was a strange paternity to it. Fond, because she'd succeeded. It would have been another story if she'd failed.
Finally, with a last look — and then a final touch, because he couldn't resist — to all the kits' little heads (but not to Sablemaid's; his gaze slipped past her like he'd forgotten she was there at all), he turned back to the other two sisters, ushering them out like he were the gentleman between two ladies. "Come, girls. Out we must go. We're not wanted." He laughed, and then glanced back at Sablemaid. "Well done again, my dear," he praised her warmly. The smile lingered for a moment — and then he turned away and padded out of the nursery, still chattering animatedly to Duskpaw and Cascadepaw, his captive audience. Despite his eagerness to get back to Eris, he'd likely keep them trapped for an hour or two more — didn't matter if they never got a word in; he wanted to babble about his joy, his personal triumph, his utter success, his plans for the kits’ happiness as he made them up on the spot and got excited about how own ideas, and the only thing worse than a violent Kier was a chatty Kier, because then he never shut up no matter how many polite interjections you tried to make to excuse yourself. There would never be a word of Sablemaid's; she was a forgotten mistress who'd brought them into the world, tucked away in a bedroom, but it was his victory, and they were his kits.
fin? <3 (ACTUALLY i think it would be so cute to do a little two-days’ flash forward to the stuff we mentioned in the family thread, of them being exhausted parents in the nursery. let’s timeskip and do that for a reply or two puh-wease, and then fin <3)