Hi, can I request a Neteyam x verangs daughter? Maybe the sullys don’t trust her yet and she tries to prove herself by being a spy against her mother? Also yk how when Jake avatar gets turned off and Neytiri is protecting him in the first movie and she’s above him and hissing? Maybe a moment like that where she gets hurt and he’s protecting her and maybe that’s when his parents realize that they love each other. Thank you!!
After meeting you in secret near the reef—alone, injured, and carrying the name you were born under—Neteyam keeps coming back until “just checking” turns into real love. When he finally brings you to his family, the Sullys don’t trust you because you’re Varang’s daughter, no matter how hard you try to prove you’re on their side. Neteyam x Fem!Reader
Word count: ~3,050 words
Chapter Contains: ◆ high tension ✧ light fluff and ❖ intimate moments
Neteyam still remembered the first time he saw you like it was carved into the inside of his skull.
Not because it was pretty.
Because it was wrong.
A patch of coastline beyond the reef—far enough from the village that the Metkayina rarely went there unless they were hunting—had been scorched. Not fully burned the way the ashlands were, but enough that the sand was darker, the air tasted sharp, and the plants near the edge had curled like they were trying to hide.
Neteyam had gone out there alone at first light, bow in hand, because he’d spotted smoke the day before and his father had been busy with Tonowari. He wasn’t supposed to go without telling anyone. He knew that. He still went.
Because the firstborn didn’t get the luxury of waiting.
He followed the signs—footprints that didn’t belong to any Metkayina, a strip of fiber tied too high on a dead branch, a smudge of ash rubbed against a rock like someone had marked it on purpose.
Then he heard it.
A cough. Quiet, forced, like someone was trying not to make noise and failing.
Neteyam froze, arrow already halfway drawn.
He eased through the brush, careful, eyes scanning the sand. The ocean was steady behind him, rolling and breathing. The forest was still. Too still.
And there you were.
Kneeling near a chunk of driftwood, head down, hair damp and messy like you’d been in the water. Your hands were shaking as you tried to scrub something dark off your fingers.
Ash.
Your clothes were different—dark woven strips, practical, worn. Not Metkayina weaving. Not Omatikaya either.
Neteyam’s chest tightened. His mind raced through possibilities: scout, trap, bait.
He raised his bow fully, aimed at the space between your shoulders.
“Don’t move,” he said.
Your whole body went rigid.
Slowly, you lifted your hands away from the driftwood. Palms open. Fingers spread. Like you’d done it before.
You turned your head just enough that he could see your profile, the line of your cheek, the soot along your jaw. Your eyes flicked to the arrow, then to his face. No panic. No begging.
Just a tired, controlled kind of fear.
“You’re Metkayina,” you said quietly.
Neteyam didn’t lower his bow. “Who are you?”
You hesitated. Something in your throat bobbed like you were swallowing something sharp. “If I tell you, you’ll shoot me.”
Neteyam’s jaw clenched. “If you don’t tell me, I’ll shoot you anyway.”
That got the smallest change out of you—your mouth twitched like you almost laughed, then stopped because it hurt.
“Honest,” you murmured.
Neteyam took one cautious step forward. “Name.”
You stared at him for a long second, like you were deciding if his honesty was safer than your silence.
Then, barely above a whisper, you said it. “(Y/N).”
The name didn’t mean anything to him yet. Not then.
“What clan?” he asked.
You looked away toward the scorched sand, like you didn’t want to speak the answer out loud. “Mangkwan.”
Neteyam’s blood went cold.
He’d heard the name in fragments—warnings, rumors carried by Metkayina scouts, stories told in low voices when they thought the kids weren’t listening. The Ash People. Fire. Raids. A leader who didn’t fear Eywa, who used fear like a weapon.
Varang.
Neteyam’s fingers tightened around his bow.
You saw it. Of course you did. Your shoulders stiffened, but you didn’t run. You just… sat there, like you’d decided running would be worse.
“My mother is Varang,” you said before he could ask.
Neteyam’s head rang with the words.
He should’ve shot you. That’s what his training screamed. That’s what his father would say later in a calmer voice: You don’t let the enemy close.
But you weren’t standing like an enemy. You weren’t even standing at all.
You looked like someone who’d been sprinting for days and finally ran out of places to go.
Neteyam kept his bow raised, but his voice lowered. “Why are you here?”
You swallowed. “Because if I go back, I become her weapon.” Your eyes lifted to him, steady and haunted. “And if I stay near her, people burn.”
Neteyam’s lungs felt too tight. “You expect me to believe that?”
“I don’t expect anything,” you said. “But I can’t go back.”
A wave broke behind him. The sound filled the silence and then faded.
Neteyam stared at you. Your hands were still up. You hadn’t moved toward a weapon. You were shaking a little—either from cold or from holding yourself together.
He did the one thing he’d never planned to do.
He lowered his bow an inch.
Not fully. Not trust.
But enough that you noticed.
You exhaled like you didn’t realize you’d been holding your breath.
Neteyam’s voice came out rougher than he meant it to. “If you’re lying…”
You nodded once. “Then kill me.”
That answer should’ve made him more suspicious.
Instead it made something in his chest twist.
Because nobody said that unless they meant it.
Neteyam stepped closer, still cautious. “Stand up.”
You did.
He saw then that your side was scraped raw, like you’d crawled over stone. Your knees were bruised. Your wrists had faint red marks—old, not fresh. Like someone had grabbed you hard enough to leave a memory.
Neteyam’s throat tightened.
You noticed his eyes on the marks and you pulled your hands down fast, like you’d been caught.
“Where are the others?” he demanded, forcing his voice back into control.
“There are no others,” you said. “Not with me.”
Neteyam didn’t believe that, not fully, but he believed something else:
You were alone right now.
And right now, you were standing in front of him like a choice he hadn’t asked for.
He could take you back to the village.
He could leave you here and pretend he never saw you.
He could kill you and make the problem go away.
Neteyam looked at you again—at the ash on your skin, the exhaustion in your eyes.
Then he made the choice that haunted him for days and saved him later.
“Come with me,” he said. “But if you try anything—”
“I won’t,” you interrupted, quick and certain. “I swear it.”
Neteyam’s jaw clenched. “Swearing doesn’t mean anything to me.”
You held his gaze. “Then watch what I do.”
That was the beginning.
And after that, it wasn’t just one meeting.
It was the second, when you waited in the same place because you didn’t know where else to go, and Neteyam brought you water and a strip of dried fish without telling you it was from his own portion.
The third, when you asked him to teach you Metkayina hand signals because you didn’t want to get speared by a patrol.
The fourth, when he bandaged your scraped side with shaking hands and refused to look at your face the whole time like he was afraid you’d see how much it bothered him.
Over and over, he told himself it was strategy.
He told himself he was learning. He told himself he was gathering information.
But the truth was simpler and more dangerous.
He kept coming back because you were there.
And somewhere between the first cautious conversation and the late-night talks whispered over the tide, he realized he didn’t just trust you.
He cared.
And Neteyam Sully didn’t let himself care easily.
The first time you kissed him, it wasn’t soft or dramatic.
It was frustrated.
You’d been arguing—quietly, because you still weren’t supposed to be near the village. He’d told you it was too risky. You’d told him you were tired of hiding like you were a shameful secret.
“I’m not asking you to choose me over your family,” you snapped. “I’m asking you to stop acting like you’re the only one who gets to decide what’s safe.”
Neteyam’s eyes flashed. “I am the one who has to clean up the mess if you get caught!”
“And I’m the one who dies if I go back!” you shot back.
His chest rose and fell hard. For a second, he looked like he might say something cruel just to end the argument.
Instead he stepped closer.
“You don’t understand,” he said, voice tight. “If my mother finds out who you are—”
“I know,” you whispered.
Neteyam’s gaze dropped to your mouth, then flicked away like he hated himself for it.
You’d been holding your ground, but suddenly you were tired. Tired of fear, tired of running, tired of being treated like danger even when you weren’t.
So you closed the distance and pressed your mouth to his.
Neteyam froze for half a heartbeat.
Then his hand came up, cupping the back of your head carefully, like you were something breakable. His kiss wasn’t rushed. It wasn’t practiced. It was real—warm and shaky and full of everything he wasn’t saying out loud.
When you pulled back, both of you were breathing hard.
Neteyam stared at you like you’d changed the air around him.
“This is bad,” he whispered.
You almost laughed. “Yeah.”
Neteyam’s forehead touched yours, gentle. “I’m not supposed to want this.”
You swallowed. “Do you?”
Neteyam didn’t hesitate. “Yes.”
After that, it was impossible to pretend it was only strategy.
And that’s why he’d been sneaking off.
Not to hide secrets.
To hold you like you were real.
Now, standing at the edge of the village in the late afternoon, Neteyam felt that same tightness in his chest—but sharper.
Because he was done hiding.
Lo’ak had been watching him for days with that annoying little smirk like he’d figured something out. Kiri had asked him twice, calmly, where he kept disappearing to, and Neteyam had lied badly both times.
Tuk had straight up asked if he had a “secret fish friend,” and Neteyam had almost choked.
Even Jake had started narrowing his eyes when Neteyam came back later than he should, hair damp like he’d been swimming somewhere he didn’t want to explain.
Neytiri hadn’t said anything.
That was worse.
So Neteyam made a decision.
He found you at your usual meeting place—half hidden between mangrove roots where the water came in shallow and quiet—and he said it without easing into it.
“I’m telling them.”
Your stomach dropped. “Neteyam—”
“I’m telling them,” he repeated, voice firm, like if he said it twice it would keep his hands from shaking. “I can’t keep doing this. I can’t keep lying.”
You stared at him. “They’ll kill me.”
Neteyam’s jaw clenched. “No.”
You barked out a humorless laugh. “Your mother literally threatened to rip someone’s throat out the last time Lo’ak did something stupid.”
Neteyam’s eyes flashed. “Lo’ak is always doing something stupid.”
“That’s not comforting,” you muttered.
Neteyam stepped closer, hands reaching for yours. “Listen to me. I know who your mother is. I’ve known. And I still trust you.”
Your throat tightened. “You’re not the one who has to convince your father.”
Neteyam’s gaze softened, just slightly. “I know.”
You looked away toward the water, watching the ripples like they could answer you. “What if they don’t believe you?”
“Then I’ll make them,” Neteyam said.
You snapped your eyes back to him. “How?”
Neteyam didn’t answer right away. His thumb rubbed over your knuckles, grounding himself.
“Because you’re not going to face them alone,” he said finally. “You’re with me.”
The words hit you hard—warm and terrifying.
You swallowed. “Okay.”
Neteyam exhaled like he’d been waiting for you to say it.
He leaned in, pressed his forehead to yours for a moment—quiet, steady—and then he took your hand and started walking.
Toward his family.
Toward the place you weren’t sure would let you breathe.
When the Sullys saw you step into the open with Neteyam, it was like the whole air shifted.
Kiri noticed first. Her eyes widened a fraction, then narrowed like she was trying to read a story off your skin.
Lo’ak’s mouth dropped open. “Bro,” he blurted. “No way.”
Tuk stared at you, half behind Kiri. Her eyes were huge.
Jake stood up from where he’d been talking with Tonowari, expression going hard in an instant.
And Neytiri—
Neytiri’s hand went to her knife like it moved on its own.
Neteyam felt you tense beside him. He squeezed your fingers once, quiet reassurance.
“My dad,” he said, voice controlled but tight, “my mom… this is—”
You swallowed, forcing your voice steady. “I’m (Y/N).”
You didn’t add your clan. Not yet.
Jake’s eyes flicked over you like he was searching for a weapon, a trap, a lie. “And why is my son bringing you here?”
Neteyam stepped slightly in front of you without thinking. Not blocking you from them—blocking them from you.
“Because I’ve been meeting her,” he said.
Lo’ak made a sound like he’d been waiting for this. “I knew—”
“Lo’ak,” Jake snapped.
Lo’ak shut up immediately.
Neteyam’s chest rose. He forced himself to keep his voice even. “I found her weeks ago. Near the reef. Alone.”
Neytiri’s eyes didn’t leave your face. “Alone,” she repeated, like the word tasted bad.
You swallowed hard. “Yes.”
Jake’s voice was low and dangerous. “You’re not Metkayina. Not Omatikaya. Who are you?”
Neteyam’s grip tightened around your hand. He glanced at you—are you ready?
You nodded once, tiny.
“My mother is Varang,” you said.
Silence slammed down.
It was like the ocean stopped breathing.
Tuk gasped. Kiri’s eyes widened again, softer this time—shock and something like sadness.
Jake’s expression turned to stone.
Neytiri’s lips peeled back in a quiet, sharp snarl. “No.”
Neteyam felt your hand tremble. He stepped closer to you, shoulder brushing yours.
“She’s not here to hurt us,” Neteyam said fast. “She ran from Varang. She’s been helping me. She’s been—”
“She is Ash People,” Neytiri cut in, voice shaking with fury. “She is Varang’s blood.”
“I know!” Neteyam snapped back, surprising even himself. “I know who she is.”
Jake’s eyes narrowed. “And you kept this from me.”
Neteyam’s jaw clenched. “Because I knew you’d react like this.”
“That’s not an excuse,” Jake said sharply.
Neytiri stepped forward, movements smooth and lethal. “Tell me,” she hissed, eyes locked on you. “Why are you here?”
Your throat tightened. You forced the words out anyway. “Because I don’t want to be her weapon.”
Neytiri’s eyes flicked to Neteyam. “And you expect us to believe that because you say it?”
You swallowed. “No. I expect you not to believe me.”
Jake’s mouth tightened. “Smart answer. Doesn’t mean it’s true.”
Neteyam’s heart pounded. He could feel the moment slipping, turning into something ugly.
“She’s given us information,” he said quickly. “Markers. Scout patterns. She—”
Lo’ak broke in, unable to help himself. “So you’ve been sneaking off to meet the enemy?”
Neteyam whirled on him. “Shut up.”
Lo’ak blinked, offended. “I’m just—”
“You’re just making it worse,” Neteyam snapped. “Like always.”
Jake’s voice cut through. “Neteyam.”
Neteyam looked at his father, breathing hard.
Jake’s expression softened a fraction—not approval, but the beginning of an attempt to understand. “You care about her.”
Neteyam didn’t deny it. “Yes.”
The word hung in the air like a challenge.
Neytiri’s gaze sharpened. “You are firstborn,” she said, voice low and furious. “You do not tie your heart to danger.”
Neteyam’s throat tightened. “Then maybe you should’ve taught me how to untie it.”
Neytiri’s eyes flashed like he’d slapped her.
Neteyam instantly regretted the words, but he didn’t take them back.
You stood there, silent, heart hammering, feeling like you were watching a fight you caused just by existing.
Jake exhaled slowly. “Okay,” he said, calm but firm. “We’re not doing this with yelling. Not in front of everyone.”
He looked at you. “If you’re here, you’re under watch. You don’t go anywhere alone. You don’t touch a weapon unless I say. You sleep where we can see you.”
Your stomach dropped, but you nodded. “Okay.”
Neytiri’s stare was still sharp enough to cut. “And if she lies—”
Neteyam’s head snapped toward his mother. “She won’t.”
Neytiri’s voice was quiet and deadly. “You do not know that.”
Neteyam’s hands clenched at his sides. “I do.”
Jake stepped between them slightly, a calming wall. “We’ll find out,” he said. “That’s how this works.”
Your chest felt tight, but Neteyam’s shoulder brushed yours again—still there, still not leaving you.
Lo’ak muttered under his breath, “This is insane.”
Neteyam shot him a look that shut him up again.
Jake nodded toward the huts. “Come. We’ll talk. And you,” he said to you, “you’ll answer questions.”
You swallowed. “Yes.”
As you followed them, you felt eyes on you from everywhere—Metkayina, Sullys, even kids peeking around posts.
You kept your chin lifted.
You’d done harder things than walk into a hostile village.
But you’d never done anything that felt so personal.
The questions started immediately.
Where had you been hiding? How did you get to the reef? Were you alone? Had Varang sent you? Did you know the Mangkwan were near? What did “marking the wind” mean?
You answered all of it.
Not perfectly. Not smoothly. But honestly.
Neteyam sat close the whole time, like he was physically anchoring you. Every time someone’s voice got too sharp, his body would tense, his jaw tighten, his eyes flash.
Neytiri watched you like you were a snake in her home.
Jake tried to be measured—hard, suspicious, but not cruel.
Kiri asked questions that were softer, stranger. “Do you… hear Eywa?” she asked at one point, head tilted like she was listening to something behind your words.
You hesitated. “Not the way you do.”
Kiri nodded slowly, like she’d expected that.
Lo’ak was the worst.
He kept circling the same idea, poking. “So you’re telling us you’re Varang’s kid and you just… decided to be good?”
You met his eyes. “I decided I’m tired of watching people burn.”
Lo’ak’s mouth tightened. “Convenient.”
Neteyam slammed his hand down on the mat. “Enough.”
Everyone went still.
Neteyam’s breathing was sharp, controlled like he was fighting himself. “She’s answering. She’s been honest. You don’t get to keep calling her a liar because you want to feel tough.”
Lo’ak opened his mouth, then shut it when Jake shot him a look.
Jake leaned forward slightly, gaze steady. “Neteyam. I get it. You care. But caring doesn’t mean she’s safe.”
Neteyam’s eyes flashed. “And not caring doesn’t mean she’s dangerous.”
Neytiri’s voice was low. “You don’t see it. She is Varang’s blood. That blood calls blood.”
Your throat tightened. You forced the words out before you could stop yourself. “Blood doesn’t decide everything.”
Neytiri’s gaze snapped to you, sharp enough to make your skin prickle.
Neteyam shifted closer, shoulder almost in front of you. “She’s right.”
Neytiri’s nostrils flared. “You defend her like she is already family.”
Neteyam’s voice dropped. “Because she is to me.”
A heavy silence.
Jake exhaled slowly, rubbing his jaw. “Okay,” he said, calmer, but the tension was still there. “We’re not settling this tonight. She stays. Under watch. We’ll see what she does.”
Neytiri didn’t argue, but her eyes said she wanted to.
The meeting ended with rules instead of trust.
And when everyone finally left, you sat there on the mat, exhausted, staring at your hands like they weren’t yours.
Neteyam stayed.
“You did good,” he said quietly.
You let out a shaky laugh. “Your mother looked like she wanted to rip my throat out.”
Neteyam’s expression tightened. “Yeah.”
You looked at him. “Are you mad?”
Neteyam’s jaw worked. “I’m mad they won’t listen.”
You swallowed. “They’re not wrong to be scared.”
Neteyam’s eyes softened, just slightly. “And you’re not wrong to want a different life.”
He leaned in, forehead touching yours briefly—quick, like he didn’t want anyone to see.
“I’m here,” he whispered. “Okay?”
Your chest ached. “Okay.”
Days passed.
And it didn’t get easier.
You did everything right.
You stayed where they told you. You helped the Metkayina repair nets and carry water. You shared what you knew—about the braided markers, the signal smoke, the way Mangkwan scouts moved in pairs, the way Varang tested edges before striking.
You trained where Jake could see. You let Neteyam guide you through Metkayina signals and safer routes.
You didn’t touch a weapon unless someone handed it to you.
You didn’t argue when Neytiri watched you like a shadow.
And still—
Still you felt the distrust like heat on your skin.
Whispers when you walked past.
Kids pulled away.
Adults stared too long.
And every time Neteyam caught it, his shoulders would go tight like he was holding back a fight.
One evening, after you’d helped patch a section of woven walkway, Lo’ak muttered something under his breath as you passed.
“Hope she doesn’t set it on fire.”
You stopped.
Not because you wanted to fight him.
Because you were tired.
You turned your head slowly. “Say it again.”
Lo’ak blinked, surprised you’d heard. He recovered fast, smirk returning. “Nothing.”
Neteyam appeared beside you like he’d been summoned by anger.
“What did you say?” Neteyam demanded.
Lo’ak lifted his hands. “Bro, relax—”
Neteyam stepped closer, voice low and dangerous. “You don’t get to joke about burning people.”
Jake’s voice cut in from behind them. “Neteyam. Enough.”
Neteyam froze.
Jake’s gaze was hard. “We’re not fighting each other.”
Neteyam’s chest rose. He looked like he wanted to argue.
Then he looked at you.
And he swallowed it down.
“Come on,” he muttered to you instead, gripping your wrist gently. “Let’s go.”
He pulled you away from the walkway, away from the stares.
When you were far enough that the ocean covered voices, you yanked your wrist free. “I don’t need you to fight my battles.”
Neteyam’s eyes flashed. “Yeah, you do, because they won’t stop.”
You shook your head, frustrated tears burning behind your eyes. “Neteyam, I can handle them. I handled worse.”
Neteyam’s jaw clenched. “You shouldn’t have to.”
You stared at him.
Because that was the difference, wasn’t it?
In the ashlands, suffering was normal. Here, he looked at suffering like it was something to prevent.
You exhaled shakily. “They’re going to keep seeing me as her.”
Neteyam’s voice softened. “Then we keep showing them you’re not.”
You swallowed. “How long?”
Neteyam stepped closer, hands hovering like he wanted to hold you and wasn’t sure you’d let him. “As long as it takes.”
Your chest tightened. “And if it never changes?”
Neteyam’s eyes held yours, steady. “Then I choose you anyway.”
The words hit you like a wave.
Your throat tightened. “Neteyam…”
He leaned in, pressing his forehead to yours again—longer this time, a quiet promise.
“I’m not letting you go back,” he whispered. “Not to her.”
Your voice came out small. “I don’t want to go back.”
“Then don’t,” he said. “Stay.”
So you did.
On the seventh night after you arrived, the air changed.
You felt it first—the way birds went quiet near the treeline, the way the wind carried something bitter that didn’t belong by the ocean.
Ash.
You sat up in your assigned sleeping space, heart hammering.
Outside, village guards moved faster. Torches were lifted. Whispered words turned sharp.
Neteyam appeared at your entrance a moment later, eyes dark and focused.
“You smell it too,” he said.
You nodded. “She’s close.”
Neteyam’s jaw clenched. “Tell me what she’ll do.”
You swallowed. Your mind raced through Varang’s habits. Her cruelty wasn’t random. It had purpose.
“She’ll test,” you whispered. “She’ll send scouts first. Or she’ll try to draw someone out. She likes making people choose.”
Neteyam’s gaze sharpened. “Choose what?”
You didn’t want to say it.
But you did anyway. “Choose who to save.”
Neteyam went still.
You could hear the village outside, tense and waiting.
Neteyam’s voice dropped. “Stay here. Don’t move.”
You grabbed his wrist. “Neteyam—”
He looked down at your hand, then back to your face. His expression softened for half a heartbeat.
“I’m coming back,” he promised.
Then he slipped out into the night.
You sat there, shaking, knowing Varang didn’t care about promises.
The attack didn’t start with a roar.
It started with a scream.
A Metkayina guard near the treeline—one sharp cry cut off too fast.
Then movement.
Shadows pouring out like smoke.
Mangkwan warriors hit the village edge hard and fast, not trying to conquer—trying to disrupt.
Torches flared. People shouted. Spears rose. Arrows hissed through the dark.
You grabbed your knife and ran.
You shouldn’t have. You knew the rules.
But you also knew Varang.
And Varang wouldn’t waste an attack like this unless she wanted something.
You hit the open walkway and froze.
The village was chaos—Metkayina forming defensive lines, Sullys moving with practiced urgency. Jake barked orders. Neytiri moved like a storm, arrows flying.
And there—near the waterline, moving like she owned the tide—
Varang.
Even in the dark, she was unmistakable. Her presence made the air feel warmer.
Your stomach dropped.
She wasn’t here for the village.
She was here for you.
Varang’s head turned slightly, and her eyes found you like she’d been waiting.
A slow smile spread across her mouth.
“My daughter,” she called, voice carrying over the fight like a blade.
You stood still, heart hammering.
Neteyam spotted you a second later.
His eyes went wide with anger. He sprinted toward you, weaving through bodies.
“What are you doing?” he snapped, grabbing your arm.
You swallowed. “She’s here for me.”
Neteyam’s jaw clenched. “Then you stay with me.”
Before you could answer, Varang moved.
She didn’t rush straight at you. She cut through the chaos, using her warriors as moving cover, stepping over fallen nets and broken posts like she’d practiced this exact route.
A Mangkwan warrior lunged at Neteyam, forcing him to block.
That half-second was all Varang needed.
Her hand shot out and grabbed your braid hard, yanking your head back.
Pain flashed white.
You gasped, stumbling.
Varang’s voice pressed into your ear, low and satisfied. “You thought you could hide in the sea.”
Your throat tightened. “Let—go.”
Varang laughed quietly. “Still defiant.”
She shoved you forward.
You hit the sand near the waterline, hard enough to knock the air out of you. Your knife slipped from your grip.
You scrambled, disoriented, trying to get up—
Varang’s blade flashed.
Not aimed to kill.
Aiming to mark.
To remind you who she believed you belonged to.
Your heartbeat slammed against your ribs.
Then Neteyam hit her.
He slammed into Varang from the side with a force that drove her back a step. His shoulder checked her hard, and he swung his bow like a staff, knocking her blade off-line.
Varang’s eyes flicked to him, amused and furious at once.
Neteyam planted himself between you and her.
Low stance. Shoulders tense. Tail lashing.
A feral sound rumbled in his throat—half growl, half warning.
It was so sudden, so raw, that for a second even the warriors around them hesitated.
Neteyam’s eyes were wild.
He looked exactly like a predator protecting its mate.
And you—half on the ground, breath heaving, heart hammering—couldn’t tear your eyes away from him.
Varang’s smile sharpened. “Ah.”
Neteyam bared his teeth.
Then he did it.
He lowered his head slightly, arms spread wider, making himself a shield.
And he hissed.
Not a polite warning.
A full, violent, protective hiss that cut through the noise like a blade.
For a heartbeat, it was like the whole world narrowed to that sound.
Like you’d been thrown back to an older story—Neytiri above Jake, refusing to let anyone touch him.
Only now it was Neteyam above you, refusing to let Varang reach you.
Varang stared at him like he’d just confirmed her favorite suspicion.
“You love her,” Varang murmured, almost pleased.
Neteyam’s voice came out rough. “Back away.”
Varang stepped closer anyway, blade angled low. “She is mine.”
Neteyam’s shoulders tightened. “Not anymore.”
Varang’s eyes flicked down toward you, then back up. “Then choose,” she whispered. “Protect her… or protect your family.”
Neteyam didn’t even glance away.
“I’m protecting both,” he snarled.
Varang’s smile turned cruel. “We’ll see.”
She struck.
Fast. Brutal. Aimed not at Neteyam’s throat, but past him—toward the space she knew he couldn’t fully cover without moving.
You realized her plan too late.
Varang wasn’t trying to beat Neteyam.
She was trying to hurt you so he’d break.
Her blade flashed low—
Pain exploded across your side, hot and sharp like fire.
You gasped, hand clapping over the wound as blood warmed your fingers.
Neteyam’s head snapped toward the sound, eyes going huge.
And in that instant—because he was human under all that control—his focus flickered.
Varang drove her elbow into his ribs hard enough to stagger him.
Neteyam stumbled a step, breath knocked out.
Varang leaned in, voice a hiss meant only for him. “That is what love buys you.”
Neteyam’s body shook with fury.
He stepped back into place, forcing himself between you and her again, even though he was hurt. Even though you were bleeding. Even though the world around them was still fighting.
He lowered his head again, shoulders wide, and hissed a second time—angrier, louder.
It was not a boy’s sound.
It was a warrior’s.
It was a promise: You will not touch her.
That’s when Jake and Neytiri saw it clearly.
Jake was moving through the fight with controlled brutality, but his eyes caught on the scene—his son hunched over you, feral, refusing to move even when it would be smarter.
Jake’s expression shifted—shock first, then something heavier.
Neytiri appeared a moment later, bow raised, eyes blazing.
“NETEYAM!” she screamed.
Neteyam didn’t look back. He couldn’t.
Neytiri’s gaze snapped to you, blood on your hand, then to Varang’s blade.
Her face twisted with fury.
She drew an arrow and aimed at Varang without hesitation.
Varang’s eyes slid to Neytiri, and for the first time, something like respect flickered there.
“You understand,” Varang murmured.
Neytiri’s voice shook with rage. “Leave.”
Varang smiled wider. “Not yet.”
Jake stepped in beside Neytiri, weapon raised, jaw clenched. His eyes flicked once to you, then to Neteyam’s posture—how his body curved protectively around you without him even thinking.
And Jake understood.
This wasn’t reckless.
This wasn’t a crush.
This was his son choosing someone with his whole body.
Varang took a slow step back. She didn’t look afraid. She looked satisfied—like she’d gotten what she came for.
“This is not finished,” she called, voice carrying over the fight. “Blood calls blood.”
Then she melted back into the shadows, pulling her warriors away with eerie discipline, disappearing into the treeline like smoke.
The attack faded as quickly as it came, leaving broken wood, scattered arrows, and the sound of heavy breathing.
Neteyam didn’t chase.
He dropped to his knees beside you immediately.
His hands hovered over your wound like he was afraid to touch and make it worse. “Hey—hey. Stay awake,” he said, voice raw. “Look at me.”
Your vision swam, pain pulsing. “I’m… here.”
Neteyam exhaled shakily like he’d been holding his breath for a year.
Neytiri reached you first, hands sure as she pressed cloth to your side. Her touch was firm, not gentle, but not cruel.
You flinched anyway.
Neytiri’s eyes snapped up. “Hold still.”
You forced yourself to breathe. “Yes.”
Jake crouched beside Neteyam, gaze moving between you and his son. “Neteyam,” he said, quieter than usual. “You hurt?”
Neteyam’s voice cracked. “She hurt her.”
Jake blinked at the rawness in his tone.
Neteyam’s throat worked. “Because of me.”
You tried to shake your head, but the movement pulled pain. “Because of her,” you whispered. “Not you.”
Neteyam looked at you like he didn’t believe he deserved your words.
Neytiri tightened the bandage with quick precision. Her eyes flicked to Neteyam—how close he was, how his body still angled between you and everything else.
Neytiri’s expression shifted—still wary, still sharp… but something in it softened, just slightly, like a door cracking open.
Jake’s gaze followed hers.
He exhaled slowly. “You warned us,” Jake said to you, voice quieter. “You stayed. You didn’t run.”
You swallowed. “I didn’t want—” Your voice shook. “I didn’t want anyone to get hurt because of me.”
Jake’s mouth tightened. “You’re not responsible for Varang.”
Neytiri’s eyes stayed on you. “But you are her blood.”
Your throat tightened. “I know.”
Neytiri held your gaze for a long moment.
Then she said something you didn’t expect.
“You bleed for this family now.”
Your breath caught.
Neteyam’s head snapped toward his mother, startled.
Neytiri didn’t look away from you. “That is not nothing.”
Jake nodded once, decisive. “She’s under our protection,” he said, voice firm. “She betrays us, she answers for it. But if she’s in… she’s in.”
Neteyam’s shoulders sagged like he’d been holding up the sky.
He looked at you, eyes shining with something he didn’t let fall.
“Stay,” he whispered.
You forced the word out through pain. “I will.”
Later, when the village had quieted into exhausted watch shifts and the healers had cleaned your wound, you lay on a woven mat with fresh bandages and a dull ache in your side.
Neteyam sat at the entrance, back against a post, bow across his lap.
He hadn’t left since they carried you in.
You shifted slightly and hissed. Pain flared, then settled.
Neteyam’s head snapped toward you. “Don’t move too much.”
You gave a weak, breathy laugh. “Bossy.”
Neteyam’s mouth twitched, but his eyes stayed serious. “Yeah.”
Silence stretched, filled by ocean breath.
You watched him for a while, the way his shoulders were still tense, like he was waiting for the next attack. The way his gaze kept sweeping the dark outside the hut.
Finally, you whispered, “Your mother hates me.”
Neteyam didn’t look away from the entrance. “She’s scared.”
You blinked. “Of me?”
“Of losing us,” he said quietly.
You swallowed. “And your father?”
Neteyam’s jaw tightened. “He’s… careful. He doesn’t like unknowns.”
You stared at the ceiling, throat tight. “I’m an unknown.”
Neteyam finally turned his head toward you. His eyes were tired, but steady.
“You’re not,” he said.
You blinked. “To them I am.”
Neteyam shook his head once, stubborn. “To me you’re not.”
Your chest tightened. “That doesn’t fix it.”
Neteyam’s voice softened. “It starts fixing it.”
You were quiet a moment, then you whispered, “When you hissed at her…”
Neteyam’s ears twitched like he was embarrassed. “Yeah.”
“You looked like your mother,” you said softly.
Neteyam went still.
You rushed on, before he could think you meant it as an insult. “Not in a bad way. In the way she protects your father. Like—like you’d tear the world apart before you let it touch what you love.”
Neteyam’s throat worked. He looked away again, jaw tight. “I didn’t think. I just—”
“Protected,” you finished.
Neteyam’s fingers tightened around his bow. “I was scared.”
Your voice came quiet. “So was I.”
Neteyam’s gaze flicked back to you. “I’m sorry you got hurt.”
You swallowed. “I’m sorry you had to see her like that.”
Neteyam’s mouth tightened. “I wish I could erase her from your life.”
You stared at him, warmth and ache mixing in your chest. “You can’t.”
Neteyam’s voice dropped. “Then I’ll stand between you and her every time.”
Your eyes stung. “Neteyam…”
He shifted closer, still sitting guard but leaning so his shoulder was nearer to yours. His hand lifted slowly, hesitant, like he wasn’t sure he was allowed.
You leaned into it before he could change his mind.
His fingers brushed your cheek—gentle, careful.
“You’re safe right now,” he whispered.
Your breath shook. “I don’t know how to be safe.”
Neteyam’s thumb traced a small, grounding circle. “Then we learn.”
You looked up at him.
In the dim light, his face was open in a way warriors rarely allowed. Protective, yes. But also honest.
And you realized something that scared you almost as much as Varang did:
Neteyam wasn’t going to stop loving you just because it was difficult.
He was going to love you like it was a duty.
Like it was a promise.
You whispered his name.
Neteyam leaned in, pressing his forehead to yours—slow, steady, familiar.
And for a few quiet seconds, the war outside didn’t exist.
Only the ocean.
Only his breathing.
Only the warmth of being held without being owned.
In the early morning, Jake came by without announcing himself.
You were half awake, drifting, when you heard him outside the entrance. Neteyam straightened instantly.
Jake’s voice was low. “Neteyam.”
Neteyam stood, careful not to wake you fully. “Yeah?”
There was a pause.
Then Jake said, “You scared the hell out of your mother last night.”
Neteyam let out a breath, half laugh, half pain. “Yeah.”
Jake’s voice softened. “You also scared me.”
Neteyam went still.
Jake continued, quieter. “I saw you. The way you stood over her.”
Neteyam’s jaw tightened. “I wasn’t thinking.”
Jake exhaled slowly. “No. You were.”
Neteyam frowned. “What?”
Jake rubbed a hand over his face, tired. “You were thinking with your heart. That’s still thinking. It’s just… dangerous.”
Neteyam’s throat tightened. “So you want me to stop.”
Jake’s voice came firm. “I want you to be careful. I want you alive. I want your family alive.”
Neteyam’s eyes flashed. “She’s part of that.”
Jake was silent for a moment.
Then he said, “Maybe.”
Neteyam’s breath caught.
Jake glanced into the hut, toward you. His voice dropped even further. “If she’s lying, it gets people killed.”
Neteyam’s jaw clenched. “She’s not.”
Jake’s gaze sharpened. “You sure?”
Neteyam didn’t hesitate. “Yes.”
Jake studied him a long moment.
Then he nodded once. Not approval. Not full trust.
But something that mattered.
“Alright,” Jake said quietly. “Then we’ll give her a chance.”
Neteyam’s shoulders sagged in relief he didn’t want to show.
Jake’s voice softened. “And Neteyam?”
Neteyam looked up.
Jake’s eyes were tired but warm. “Next time you sneak off, you tell me.”
Neteyam blinked, startled.
Jake shook his head slightly. “Not because I want to control you. Because I want to protect you.”
Neteyam swallowed, throat tight. “Okay.”
Jake nodded once, then stepped away.
Neteyam stayed there a moment, breathing like he’d just survived something else.
Then he sat back down by the entrance—closer this time.
When you finally woke fully, you found him there, exactly where he promised he’d be.
And for the first time since you arrived, the village felt… a little less hostile.
Not because everyone trusted you.
But because Neteyam had made it impossible for them to pretend you didn’t matter.
Because Jake had seen it.
Because Neytiri had seen it.
Because last night, in the middle of chaos, love had been loud enough to cut through fear.
And Varang had seen it too.
Which meant the danger wasn’t over.
But you weren’t alone anymore.
Neteyam met your eyes, and his expression softened just enough to feel like sunlight breaking through cloud.
“You okay?” he asked quietly.
You exhaled, wincing a little, but smiling anyway. “I’m still here.”
Neteyam nodded, like that was the only answer he needed.
“Good,” he said. “Because I meant what I said.”
You blinked. “What you said when?”
Neteyam leaned closer, voice low, steady, stubborn.
“Stay.”
And you did.
I LOVE THIS REQUEST I HOPE YOU LIKED IT!!










