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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A small giggle slipped from her lips as she bounced on one of her siblings, then rolled over onto her back. Then she bounced back onto her paws, just to suddenly feel a paw on her back. A small squeak slipped from her lips as Blisskit spun around, her mother gazing at her quizzically. Sablemaid narrowed her eyes,"Blisskit, what is that on your leg?" There was a small white spot there, but it oddly... looked like fur? The queen was clearly confused, because Blisskit was a solid black kitten, so why was there white?
Blisskit looked down at her right leg, and there it was, a spot. Her head tipped to the side. "I dunno momma. Maybe dirt?" Though, it was obviously white, and nothing like the color of dirt. She shrugged and then ran her tongue along it, only for it to... stay. Her eyes grew wide. "Wha-?"
However, Sablemaid then moved forward and began to groom that spot, only for it to still... stay. Bewildered, she jumped up and grabbed her kitten by the scruff. She may have been over reacting just a tad, however, she was concerned. Why would there suddenly be a white spot on her kit? It didn't make much sense. With that, she waved her tail to her other kittens, a signal to stay there and be good, and made her way to the medicine cat den.
And they would’ve made it without issue, too, if Kier hadn’t intercepted them. He’d been making his way up from the lower tunnels — he’d been spending a lot of time there lately — when he spotted them, immediately making a beeline and falling in cheerily beside Sablemaid like an annoyingly constant pest. “Hello!” he greeted his kit, so far ignoring her mother. He waved at his daughter, swinging from Sablemaid’s jaws, with an excited smile and a purr, eyes wide. “Where’s your mother taking you, mm?” He asked it like he and his daughter were conspiring against the hapless mother, like she was being such an over-protective worrier and they were condescendingly playing along to appease her delicate heart, so far above it as father and kit. He finally straightened and dragged his eyes up to the black she-cat at his side; the lazy grin was still on his face, dismissive and fondly teasing, like she was such a fussing woman, and yet mildly accusing; he simultaneously didn’t ever want to be bothered by her outside of the hours he chose to be a doting, loving father, and was affronted by the fact — his chest squeezed with that familiar sick jealousy — that she was operating on her own, making choices for his child without consulting him.
“Mm?” he hummed again, still smiling, padding alongside close enough beside her that their pelts brushed; it was both casually intimate, a thing of shared parenthood, and threatening. Everything about Kier was — he was so friendly, so endlessly friendly, and then suddenly he snapped. “What could possibly necessitate a trip to the medicine den?” Like he hadn’t ordered nightly check-ups on his kits; that was being sensible, this was being hysterical — quite simply because he wasn’t the one doing it. He again glanced down and shared a mocking little grin with his daughter, letting out a little breath of laughter through his mouth. His eyes flicked back up to Sablemaid; his voice grew a little dryer, a little more judgemental. “She looks perfectly fine to me, Sablemaid. The medicine cat has better things to do than placate your feminine anxiety, especially now that we’ve lost Lilacpaw — just because you bore my kits doesn’t make you a queen. If you were worried, you ought to have sent someone for me. I would have made the prudent decision. Really, you’re going far beyond your jurisdiction — getting very uppity, aren’t you? You’re just a,” his voice bubbled with sudden laughter and his eyes flicked down her body, grin crooked and venomous and so dismissive, “just a farm girl.” He really did sound annoyed now. Then, smiling softening again, he looked back down at his daughter. “Isn’t she, my dear?”
For a moment, he was almost going to ask which one is this again? But of course he remembered — Blisskit, little Blisskit.
Irritation was clear on her features. There couldn't have been another time for Kier to be prancing around them? As he spoke only to Blisskit, her annoyance increased. Her green eyes cut towards him as she stopped walking, tail lashing behind her dark form. As his fur brushed along hers, she felt an odd prickle spread along her body, exhilarating and confusing. Finally she put Blisskit down on the ground in front of her feet, eyes narrowed to fine slits as she gazed at her kit's father, his words seeming to demean her reasonings for heading where she was.
Sablemaid could feel anger bubbling up in her, could almost feel a sudden outburst, then the image of her mother flashed in her eyes. The image of Duskhaunting and how meek she seemed now, of Rosecascade and Ratsneer. Suddenly, her eyes seemed to change and she forced her fur to lie flat, feeling smaller than she did a few moments prior. Sablemaid met his gaze, head dipped down just slightly so that she seemed much smaller than him. His words cut through her like a thorn, reminding her that she was nothing to him, and never had been. She felt played with, a push and pull with how he felt about her. Sometimes, Sablemaid felt that Kier had something towards her, some type of love, feeling, anything. Other times... she felt lower than any cat here, only kept around because she was his property. The small moments the pair shared together felt like a wound in her heart, one that festered and caused many mixed emotions.
Then Blisskit spoke, her tiny little voice seemingly filled with sudden anxiety. "I have a spot." She told Kier, her green eyes wide as she held out a paw to Kier, showing this new white spot she spoke of. "Why? I am a black cat, I'm not supposed to have a spot." Her little voice shook.
Sablemaid didn't let her gaze leave Kier, her lips pressing together.
The change in Sablemaid wasn’t lost on him; he was deeply gratified when the fight went out of her, when her stubborn anger, her insolence, faded away and she bowed her head. He gave her a smile, all oppressive praise; what a good girl. When she slowed to a stop, he slowed with her, pleased by the idea that he had gotten through to her and this silly little foray to the medicine den was over; they’d stop here and turn back around to the nursery, and there they would stay.
And then Blisskit held out her paw for him. I have a spot. Kier’s eyes flicked down to hold his daughter’s, listening very respectfully as she spoke with an unreadable, hooded sort of gaze. When she stretched out her paw for him to look at, he slipped his own underneath it, holding it up as his gaze wandered down to it; his paw was small, all black and sinewy and slender, but hers was impossibly smaller, like a fragile doll’s. Oh, is that all? he wanted to laugh, so dismissive and unconcerned and coarse, but he bit back the words; he didn’t want to be crass in front of his daughter, didn’t want to be seen to be waving aside her fears even if he was — even if he felt a faint frustration that this was clearly just the result of her mother’s incessant worrying; a kit with anxiety over a little spot, his kit with anxiety; it defied thinking. He held her paw gently, still not saying anything as he listened attentively, pretending to take her concerns seriously with sombre quietness. He turned her paw this way and that, looking at the spot from different angles, and finally sank into a crouch to look at it more closely.
Finally, he looked up at her with a smile, now more at her level in his crouch, and let her paw slip away. “My dear, you come from a line of runts and,” he wanted to say psychopaths, “all sorts of peaky characters — your grandfather, my father, was sickly as they come, and black and white on top of it; whose to say a spot might not come out here and there? And,” he laughed, again conspiratorially, like he and his daughter were in on a joke at Sablemaid’s expense; he brushed his paw pads back and forth under her dangling paw comfortingly, idly, as he spoke, “heaven knows what your mother’s lineage is; likely in-bred, you know.” His voice tightened with amusement. He didn’t look away from Blisskit as he spoke so tenderly to her, so comfortingly, his voice warm and amused like it was her mother that was over-reacting. “A white spot is the least of your worries. But come, come,” he pushed himself up, back up to Sablemaid’s height once more, “by all means, let’s go put your mother’s anxieties to rest — it causes wrinkles, you know, and she really can’t afford to lose much more of her looks.” He laughed, glancing quickly at her out of the corner of his eye to make sure she was listening. Now that he knew it was such a silly thing, he was more than happy to let her go to the medicine den — if only so Sablemaid could be embarrassed. Waving his paw dismissively at Sablemaid in a rather vague motion that might have meant stand aside or put her down, he immediately deemed her too slow to pick it up and instead manhandled her aside, bumping his cheek against hers to take Blisskit from her with no room for complaint. As soon as she was in his jaws, he set her down, still not acknowledging Sablemaid. Once Blisskit was on her own legs, he flicked his muzzle towards the medicine den and padded forward, letting her fall in and toddle along beside him. They left her mother in the dust behind them without a look back or a scrap of acknowledgement from Kier, leaving her to walk behind the royal carriage like a servant as he padded ahead alongside his daughter. It was beyond explanation why Kier was being so rude to her that night, but if one had to wager a guess a fine one would be that he was irritated with her parenting and sought to assert his dominance as the sire. She could nurse the kits, but he made the decisions.
He smiled down at Blisskit as he walked, slowing his pace with seemingly infinite patience to let her keep up with him. “I’m sure it’s no more than a fine little imperfection, a blemish. You’re so young, my dear — when I was little, you could hardly see me for my ears, and I…” He paused. “Somewhat grew into them.” He threw his daughter a rakish, self-mocking grin, head tilted. “Things happen.” Stopping briefly outside the den, he ruffled her between the ears roughly, affectionately, and then padded ahead, leaving her behind. “Hellooo,” he called, padding in like he owned the den — which he did. His voice echoed slightly, but was mostly deadened by the thick moss on the walls. “Anyone home?” He was almost relieved when no answer came; really, this was all one big joke to him, and he certainly didn’t want to speak to the medicine cat — still deliberately nameless to him after Eris’ miscarriage — for a farce. That said, maybe putting her on the spot about his daughter’s little spot and bathing in her presumed incompetence, her lack of knowledge on the subject, would be gratifying. Truth be told, he’d thought of going to the medicine den once or twice the last week; Eris had been staying in bed later and later or all night, and he could tell she was sick — eaten something bad or caught some regrettable little bug. He brought her food she’d only nibble at, groomed her stomach in case of some sorry nausea, came in earlier than usual to try and soothe her in case she was lonely, but nothing seemed to work; she was so quiet lately, just staring into space like she was angry, and he got the feeling she was giving him excuses. He wanted to ask the medicine cat if there was something wrong, or if she could look in on her, but he didn’t care to speak to her. And, reluctantly, he finally decided against it. He didn’t pry, gave his mate comfort and silence and nothing more — he never did pry since her miscarriage. It must have just been a bad week. She would come to him when she was ready.
Smiling, Kier turned back to his daughter from where he stood in the middle of the lush green medicine den; the moss was soft and spongey under his paws. But he was blind to the beauty, blind to the whole thing; this was where Eris had lost their kits, and it held nothing for him. “Well,” he told Blisskit with such warm finality, like it was the end of their adventure and she’d have to go home now. There was nothing for them here. When they got back, he’d hold Sablemaid back and tear into her — a doctor for a spot? Are you a little idiot? Do you want to rear fragile, whimpering dullards like your sister, afraid of their own shadow? You’ve seen how anxious (and here he’d wave his paw, trying to recall her name) Flutterkit is; do you want to encourage that? Mm? What are you teaching them to be? One simple task and you can't even do that. Honestly, Sablemaid, you call yourself a mother; all you’re good for is a quick lay. “I’m afraid she’s not here. Off gathering her parsley.” He moved to usher Blisskit back out; time for bed, and to let daddy Kier go. “Shall we off, my dear?”
Blisskit looked at her father with wide green eyes, watching him as he turned her paw over. He observed the spot, which seemed to put a little comfort into the kitten, then he spoke of her family lines. It seemed to intrigue her for the moment, though she caught on. The way he spoke of Sablemaid's seemed... negative, less than good. Her brows furrowed slightly, but Blisskit let this go and said nothing of it. Perhaps she may ask Sablemaid later what her father had meant by the words he spoke, seemingly less than nice, even.
Sablemaid kept her gaze on the ground for some time, then as he spoke, she felt her teeth grind together. How many insults was she expected to take? Would this be the rest of her life, from here on out? Wouldn't she be better off... away from this place... This place that she once considered home. It felt more like prison, now. Her sisters, she was sure felt anything close to the same she did. Yet, now she had daughters, and a son, to be here for. How could she ever leave? It crossed her mind, for a fleeting moment... that she could leave. Run away, it was possible. As quick as the idea had come, she pushed it away. Rosecascade, Duskhaunting, her kits... She couldn't leave them, no matter how miserable she felt daily. Her ears flicked back, and she focused on her paws again, her heart longing to be anywhere but here. Then Kier took Blisskit away roughly, without giving her time to react. She wanted to hiss, but held it back, instead trailing behind him.
Blisskit dropped down onto her paws upon reaching the medicine den, her mother hanging at the entrance and deciding not to enter, as if she were avoiding being too close to Kier. Blisskit shifted her eyes between the two, a spark of curiosity suddenly lighting in her. She'd began to notice how they acted towards one another, it was not love. No, not in the least. Blisskit always felt a tight tension in the air between her parents, always wondering exactly why they acted like that. It was a mystery to the young kit, but a mystery for later.
As she entered the den she was flooded with many scents. Some were strong and hit her at once, and others were a bit subtle and it took a moment for her to make them out. Her father was going on and on about something, but she seemed to be unaware of it. Blisskit moved forward, poking her nose into a pile and breathing in the scent. Curiously she moved to the next pile, looking at the dried leaves and batting it to the side. "So many smells..." she muttered softly, head tipping to the side.
When Sablemaid ground her teeth together, Kier cast her a sidewards glance, all little smile and triumph and oh, don’t look so glum.
And then he was ready to leave the den — and his daughter wasn’t listening to him. She was wandering about, pushing her nose into piles of herbs that the medicine cat had been too negligent to sort straight into storage, not bothering with him. Somewhere along the way she’d clearly learned her father didn’t mind not being the centre of attention — that would have to change. Someone else might have been fondly amused at being ignored, at her unintentional show of insolence; Kier was irritated. So many smells… “Yes, that would be the plants,” he sniped back in a hiss, all teeth, leaning forward slightly over the tips of his forepaws. He always seemed much older than he really was — until he was suddenly just a teenager muttering insults at a child he was too young to have. He snapped his head around to hiss at Sablemaid. “You’re raising a halfwit.” He didn’t acknowledge the fact that she wouldn’t be so overwhelmed by foreign sensations if anyone around her was allowed out of camp, to collect the scents of pine and tansy and wild violet on their fur and educate her through sheer subconscious experience; nothing was ever his fault.
And then a thought occurred to him. Kier’s ears pricked. He cast a brief glance at Sablemaid — it was meaningless, just a look to assure himself and her that if she argued, it wouldn’t mean a thing — and then took a step forward. “My dear…” he interrupted Blisskit again, trying to draw her attention back to him with none of the irritation he’d shown her a second ago; now, he was deferential and wary, like she was suddenly a nervous little deer he didn’t want to frighten away before he could entrap her. “You find all this… interesting?” As he came into her field of view, there was a smile on his face, filled with so much hope. He was a lawyer leading the witness with no hint of scruples or guilt — he was hopeful, he was excited; a daughter wouldn’t want to disappoint her father, would she? He didn’t ask do you like the smells? because that was too vague — he supplied precisely how he wanted her to feel for her: she found it interesting.
Reaching her, Kier slowly settled down into a crouch at her side, tucking his paws underneath him and giving her his full attention — full affection — with his head turned to the side to watch everything she did. The smile was unmoving. For a few seconds he was silent, just watching her like a parent would watch their child play. And then he spoke, like he was so pleased with her, like they were bonding. And what daughter didn’t want to grow closer to her dad? “You know, I’ve always been tremendously interested in medicine, too. Your grandfather, you know, he was sickly, so I learned to help him when we were on the road. It was much harder there — no nice patches of herbs regrowing every season. And another of your ancestors was a Shaman. It’s in your blood.” He smiled, tilting his head; he was close enough to feel her warmth through his fur, his daughter looking like a softer version of himself beside him. After a pause, he added, “medicine is a wonderful endeavour. So helpful. So fun. Always something new to do. And with our medicine cat apprentice gone…” He trailed off, eyes lingering on hers pointedly.
Oh, what a thought that was — what an opportunity that could be. His daughter, a medicine cat. Someone who would do what he wanted more than her mentor would — someone who wouldn’t want to let him down. Someone to— oh, interpret for him, feed stories for him, lie for him, get under the skin of other Clans and sabotage for him… Lie without knowing she was lying. And she would never turn against him, because she was his kit and they loved each other. That was what he needed — he would never want a kit for a deputy, because then they’d lose the fear of the other Clans and gain their contempt for such nonsensical nepotism; they would think he was blind to his kits faults, and he’d be a laughingstock. And especially not a son — then he’d be paranoid about being usurped and grow to hate him, stoop to plotting against his own kit to put him in an early grave.
His gaze made her skin crawl as he looked her way. A slight emotion flashed in her eyes as they locked, but only briefly. Her green eyes tore away and to the ground, there was no sound coming from Sablemaid.
His hiss broke Blisskit's thoughts, and it made her jolt. No longer was she focused on the smells that lingered in the den, rather her eyes were laid widely on her father. The tone he held, she could remember hearing it with Sablemaid when they were off doing whatever it is they did outside the den sometimes. Blisskit had never understood the "talks" the two had. Sablemaid always came back frazzled, and silent. Blisskit remembered her mother looking almost.. sad. She wondered what it was her father could do to Sablemaid that would make her look so... defeated. The little kitten had carefully watched the interactions with her mother and father, though never understood them. She felt like things happened when her and her siblings couldn't see, maybe.
The relationship between her mother and father always left questions, but she dare not ever ask them. She had tried once.
"Why don't you tell daddy you love him? You do love him, right? Like you tell me and my sisters, and Sproutkit. I never hear you say it to daddy." Blisskit had mewed to her mother one time, not long after Kier had left from visiting. She remembered the change in Sablemaid, watched her mother tense. "Don't ever ask questions like that again, Blisskit. Somethings aren't your business. Keep your nose where it belongs." Some might think it a harsh lesson, but Sablemaid was only trying to protect her daughter. From getting too curious, from asking Kier questions she shouldn't, or even asking other cats. Sometimes, it was better to not know the answers, and to continue fitting in like those who... lived. As long as Blisskit was raised to do as she was told, who could have a blind loyalty to Kier, she was safe. So were her other children.
Blisskit didn't know those things, she just knew it was the first time her mother had ever looked scary before. That was enough.
His voice pierced her ears, and stabbed her right in the heart. Why would Kier, her father, say something like that? Her eyes drifted to Sablemaid, and the queen had ducked, eyes squeezed shut and ears pinned against her skull. As if she were about to be struck, and Blisskit held her breath.
Then, nothing happened. Instead, Kier turned around to her, and something was different. Blisskit furrowed her brows, watching Kier. He was acting... "Yes, there are s-so many smells." She stammered, anxiety melting through her body like a hot burst of wind in the greenleaf. Then he began speaking, and her eyes grew like the full moon. It all sounded so exciting, at least the way Kier was putting it. She didn't know just exactly what that would mean later.
Her mother knew, though. Sablemaid had jerked her head upwards, and her eyes grew wide. "No." She mewed, whispered, really. She had breathed the word on her breath, but Sablemaid felt her heart hammering in her chest. Fear, for what future Blisskit would have was an instant flash. "No, Kier." She said, this time a little stronger, but her voice still cracked. Her paws, shook.
It was rare Kier got this look — this petty, gloating look — but right now he had it; at Sablemaid’s pleading protestations, Kier snickered and looked over his shoulder at her with a sneering grin from where he was still crouched beside his daughter. Even Duskhaunting still got more of the performative Kier; only her sister ever got the true ugliness of him, the side of him that was too nasty to even be theatrical. “There’s no such thing as ‘no, Kier,’” he replied silkily, in the way that algae was silky. The words trembled around a faint titter.
Then, scraping his eyes away and slipping one paw out from under him, he turned back to Blisskit — and curled it over her shoulders, drawing her nearer. “So very many smells,” he agreed, cooing. With her tucked against him and held in place by his paw, her whole world was Kier and the herbs in front of her — just their smell, their sight, their promise. “Now, my darling,” he changed tactics midway through his sentence; it was jarring, the sudden change in tone, and it betrayed how truly excited about the prospect he was that he couldn’t decide on one delivery, “— do you know, I’ve been so unhappy lately. So dreadfully unhappy. Yes, things have been so hard — all these run-ins with the League, and we’re down a medicine cat…” After a pause, he turned his head to smile down at her. “Do you know how you could make me happy, Blisskit? It’s just a simple thing. It would make me,” his smile grew gentler; he brushed his paw gently down her temple, smoothing her fur like a loving father, “indescribably happy if you would think about filling that post. Proud, too. Oh, so proud — my daughter,” he lowered his voice to a purr, tilting his head towards her so their temples touched and giving her a conspiratorial little grin, “my favourite daughter — devoting herself to medicine. Helping her Clan. Helping me.”
He suddenly sat up, paw slipping away, and turned towards the den entrance, shoulders slumped. As he did so, he flashed Sablemaid a sick little grin; it vanished a heartbeat later into despair — ears back, expression so dismally soft, so young, so overwhelmed. “But it’s so much to ask of you. Far too much. No, my dear, I understand if you want to go home to the nursery and keep playing your kit games — the responsibility, the respect, the expertise… They’re really no place for a she-cat. You ought to devote yourself to games and frivolity instead, as you were intended for.” He glanced over his shoulder at his daughter, offering her a small, sad smile — all love, all exhaustion. “I’ll find someone else. The closeness a medicine cat has with their leader… It would be unfair to give it to someone I already love so dearly. Better someone else has the opportunity to make themselves a favourite.” He laughed, shoulders still hunched gently, like it really was the most innocent, blameless concept in the world — like it was such a silly idea. “Who knows — maybe I’ll end up liking them more than you.”
It was cruel, to play on a child’s natural jealousy. But it would be harmless in the long run, undone as soon as she said yes, and to Kier it was a perfectly innocent ploy; he loved her, and what was one little lie that would be forgotten within the hour? Business was business — things were done to get what he wanted, irrespective of true feelings. And if he was banking on one thing, it was that any child of his had inherited a little of his envy.