Disclaimers: Bad Blood Yautja OC, violence, gore, stalking, reader gets physically bullied around, reader has no specified gender or racial identity, potential slow burn series??? NOT PROOF READ
In Short: You are a wildlife ranger and have noticed there has been some disturbing animal poachings lately. Determined to find the sick bastard, you end up in the path of a Bad Blood that thinks you're pretty hot
-> Part II
So... I finally watched Killer of Killers... yeah I love these huge aliens. Even the skinny bastards are big as shit.
This is a little intro to an OC I've been making ever since I watched Killers of Killers, slightly based on the Bad Blood predators from The Predators movie a while back.
Idk I get bored of the "noble savage" trope and because the yautja are so intelligent and cool, I feel like we should get more assholes fr.
Let me know if you like what I'm putting down and if I should maybe do a part two or a proper intro to my OC <3
PLEASE DO NOT INTERACT IF YOU ARE UNDER THE AGE OF 18 THNX
~◇~
For five years as a wilderness ranger, you’d learned that a quiet forest was a terrified one.
You adjust the strap of your bolt-action rifle. You’d been out here for forty-eight hours tracking what you thought was a particularly sadistic poaching ring.
It started with the deer, then the elk. Last week, it was a three-hundred-pound black bear found twenty feet up in a hemlock, its pelt shredded and its entire spinal column removed with surgical, cauterized precision. No local hunter had that kind of gear.
You push through a dense thicket of mountain laurel and freeze.
The smell hits you first, iron and bile, thick enough to coat the back of your throat.
It isn't an animal this time.
In the center of the clearing lies a mound of raw, red meat. You recognize the boots first, the heavy, steel-toed tread of the local poaching scum you’d been trying to catch for months.
They hadn't just been killed; they had been processed. Their skins were piled neatly to the side like discarded rugs, and their headless torsos were stacked in a grotesque, mocking monument.
"Jesus," you whisper, the word dying in the oppressive air. There are no footprints. No tire tracks. No signs of a struggle. Just a silent, impossible massacre.
You reach for the radio on your shoulder, your fingers trembling as you click the mic.
"Station Four. I have a 10-54 at the North Ridge gorge. Multiple human casualties. Extremely high level of violence. Do you copy? Over."
Only static greets you. A dry, empty hiss.
Your heart sinks. You’d forgotten. The main relay tower at the base was scheduled for a hardware swap today. A total tech blackout for the next six hours.
You are miles from the nearest trailhead, and the only people who knew where you were are currently rotting in a pile at your feet.
A sharp click-clack echoes from the canopy above. It’s a rhythmic, mechanical sound, like giant insects grinding their mandibles.
You spin, bringing your rifle up, but the trees are a blur of autumn gold and deep shadows. Then, you see it: a ripple in the air. A distortion, like heat rising off a summer road, moving with impossible fluidity between the branches.
It isn't a man. And it definitely isn't a bear.
You don’t wait to see it clearly. You turn and bolt.
The four-mile hike in had taken you hours; you try to make the return in minutes. Your lungs burn, and the forest seems to shrink around you. Every time you glance over your shoulder, the shimmer is there, always at the periphery, leaping from trunk to trunk.
If it wasn't for the panic, you would have noticed it hasn't attacked you.
It's almost as if it's herding you. Steering you away from the open ridges and deeper into the jagged, rocky throat of the valley.
You finally break through the final treeline, your breath coming in jagged sobs.
Your white ranger truck sits in the middle of the gravel turnout, a beacon of safety in the dying light. You scramble to the driver’s side, fumbling your keys, and shove them into the ignition.
Click.
You try again.
Click.
"No, no, no... please," you whimper, slamming your hand against the dash. You throw yourself out of the vehicle and yank the hood release.
The engine bay is a hollowed-out cavern. The heavy iron block has been ripped clean from the chassis. The remaining wires have been meticulously braided together into an intricate, mocking knot.
A cold realization douses your adrenaline. A bear destroys. A mountain lion kills. But this... this was deliberate. It required thumbs. It required a sense of irony. It required a mind that understood exactly how to trap a human being.
Whatever had been hunting, you wasn't a "thing." It was a who.
A heavy, metallic thud makes the truck groan.
It stands over seven feet tall, clad in dark, oil-rubbed bronze plating. You find yourself cataloguing it through the lens of your training, trying to find a box to put it in.
Your brain instinctively reaches for human parallels. The frame is towering, but the proportions; the massive breadth of the shoulders, the narrowing of the waist, the corded, heavy musculature of the thighs. It’s a humanoid frame but scaled to a god-like, terrifying degree.
Your mind, desperate to make sense of the predator, involuntarily assigns a gender to the sheer, aggressive mass of the form.
He. This isn't an "it" anymore. He is standing right in front of you.
You jerk your rifle up, the barrel shaking as you aim for the dark, faceless metal mask. But before you can pull the trigger, a clawed hand reaches out and grips the steel barrel of your gun.
He then gives a sharp, brutal shove against the weapon, the force of it slamming the butt of the rifle into your shoulder and pinning you against the side of the truck.
The air is driven from your lungs in a sharp wheeze. Your vision swims, your fingers going numb as you gasp for breath.
Seeing your grip loosen, he casually jerks the rifle from your hands and tosses it into the dark pines like it’s a piece of refuse.
Now, he invades your space. He steps closer, his massive frame blocking out the last of the sunset. He’s so close you can smell the ozone and musk rolling off him.
Your hands fly up instinctively, palms flat against his chest plates to push him back, but it’s like trying to move a mountain.
Your fingers slide over the etched metal and the warm, pebbled skin of his midsection. He’s solid. Unbothered even. And he's standing so close you can hear the strange, heavy rhythm of his breathing.
A small, choked sound escapes your throat. You’ve spent your career being the one in control of the wilderness, the one with the badge and the gun.
Now, stripped of your tools and trapped in the shadow of something that doesn't belong in your world, that control shatters. You feel small. Not just in height, but in the entire biological food chain.
He reaches up, disengaging the clamps on his head, and pulls the mask away.
Beneath the metal, his face is a terrifying landscape of leathery skin and four giant, hooked mandibles. His amber eyes aren't the mindless eyes of a shark; they are bright, intelligent, and currently fixed on you with a heavy, predatory focus.
"Please," you whisper, the word trembling. It’s a useless plea, but your brain is misfiring, caught between the urge to scream and the paralyzing realization that he hasn't killed you yet.
He doesn't snarl. Instead, he leans down, his head tilting with a cruel, feline curiosity.
You try to flinch away, but there is nowhere to go. You’re forced to endure the sensation of his mandibles clicking softly as they fan out, framing your face.
The tip of one serrated hook brushes against your cheek. It doesn't break the skin, but the intent is clear, he’s touching you because he can.
A deep, tectonic purr starts in his chest. It’s a low-frequency rumble that vibrates through your own ribcage, making your knees go weak.
You feel a sudden, dizzying rush of heat that has nothing to do with fear; it’s the sheer, primal intensity of being the sole focus of something this powerful.
You’re braced for the end.
For the blade or the bite.
But it doesn’t come.
Achingly slowly, he steps back, granting you a dizzying pocket of space. You slump against the truck, your legs shaking so violently you have to grip the door handle just to stay upright.
He stands there in the twilight, a towering silhouette of bronze and mottled skin. He watches you scramble for your dignity, his amber eyes tracking the way you frantically look toward the dark woods, then back to your hollowed-out truck.
He’s made his point. Whatever that point may be.
With a slow, deliberate movement, he reaches down and retrieves his mask from the dirt. He shakes the forest floor's debris from the metal, the red lights of the visor flickering back to life.
He doesn't put it on immediately. He looks at you one last time, a look of dark, expectant promise.
He raises the helmet. From the vocal emitters in the neck, a sound emerges.
"Go on then."
The blood freezes in your veins because to your utter shock, it isn't a mechanical recreation. It’s your voice. It’s the exact weary, impatient tone you’d used two days ago when shooing a stubborn elk off the trail.
And just like that, with the languidly of a lion in his terrioty, he simply turns and leaps, his massive frame vanishing into the canopy with the silence of a ghost.
You stand alone in the gravel, the silence of the Ridge returning, heavier than before.
You’re "free" to walk away, to hike the miles back to civilization in the dark, but you know it’s an illusion.
It didn't need to be said, but you know whatever the fuck you just encountered isn't letting you go. He’s just giving you time to realize that no matter where you go, you’ll eventually have to come back to his woods.