part 1 part 2 part 3 Author's Note
pairing: Wukula x female Na'vi Reader
The laughter followed them for a while, low and amused, satisfied in the way predators are when something weak stumbles in front of them. But as they moved deeper into the village, it thinned. Warriors stepped aside when they saw him coming. Some glanced at the figure over his shoulder, curiosity bright in their eyes. Others only looked at the markings carved into her back and whispered among themselves.
Even here, among Mangkwan, the symbols meant something.
The path twisted between rough structures made of dark wood, bone, and stretched hides. Smoke drifted through the air in slow threads. Somewhere metal struck flesh, and she could hear something scream briefly before going silent.
Wukula kept walking until the village opened into a wider clearing.
The ground here had been cleared down to hard earth, packed flat by many feet. Tall spears had been driven into the ground in a wide circle, their tips blackened by old fire. Bones hung from cords, clicking softly whenever the wind moved. She could feel her muscles going numb, her hands lightly touching the scarred skin of her captor. Her pride was dimmed but the sheer number of ash colored Na’vi that gathered around them, following, ready for her to run.
At the far side stood a larger structure than the others. It stood higher, heavier, marked by layers of old soot and thick beams darkened by years of smoke. The entrance was open, a heavy hide pushed aside. Two warriors stood outside it. They saw Wukula approach and straightened slightly. Neither spoke. He stopped a few paces away and shifted her weight once on his shoulder like she was nothing more than an inconvenient sack. She clenched her teeth when the movement jolted her aching ribs.
“Tell her,” he said simply.
One of the guards disappeared inside.
For a moment there was only the crackle of distant fire and the quiet creak of bone ornaments swaying above them.
Then a voice drifted from within.
“Bring him in.”
Wukula shifted her off his shoulder and set her on her feet with a roughness that made it clear he wasn’t a gentle man by nature. Her legs wobbled for half a second before she forced them straight. She wouldn’t break now, not in their village.
He tugged the rope once, sharp.
Her ears flattened back despite herself. Anger, humiliation and exhaustion swam in her eyes, and this time she didn’t hide it. She simply refused to act on it.
Wukula looked at her, annoyed.
Then, quiet enough to be private: “Head up.”
Varang did not look at them right away. Beside her stood a warrior. Scarred and tall, blind in one eye. They discussed about timing, losses, supplies. Her voice was calm, unhurried.
As the warrior finished speaking, Varang nodded once.
He obeyed immediately, retreating without question.
Only then did Varang turn, gaze heavy and she felt it like a hand closing around her throat. But she didn’t look away from the Tsa’hik. Varang’s eyes traveled slowly, face, throat, shoulders, stance, the rope. They drifted lower, looking at her injuries with interest, like she was reading a map.
Then her gaze returned to the captive’s eyes.
“So,” Varang said. “This is what you dragged out of the forest.”
“She is strong.” Wukula lowered his head slightly. “She killed four of my men.”
Varang only hummed. Her attention returning to the captive.
Her shoulders straightened despite the pull on her wrists. Her chin lifted. If she was going to be looked at, she would not be looked down on. Varang watched the entire movement without interrupting. Silence stretched. The fires cracked softly. At last Varang’s gaze drifted slowly over her, from her face, to the rope around her wrists, to the wrappings across her back where the scars beneath had begun to show through again.
Her head tilted slightly. “Turn.”
The word wasn’t loud. But it carried weight. She didn’t move as her jaw tightened. Varang’s eyes lifted back to her face.
Beside her, Wukula exhaled slowly through his nose.
“She said turn,” he muttered.
She didn’t look at him. Varang’s gaze cooled slightly. Wukula stepped forward, grabbed the rope, and yanked hard. The sudden force twisted her body sideways and forced her to turn. Pain shot through her shoulders as the rope pulled tight. She hissed under her breath.
“Careful,” Wukula said flatly. “Or I’ll make you bow too.”
Her eyes flashed toward him. Then she forced herself still. Varang’s gaze settled on the scars across her back. The room went quiet again.
“You,” Varang said, stepping closer. “What is your name?”
She could hear a soft growl coming from her left. It almost made her laugh knowing that his reputation is also on the line and she was the one ruining it.
Varang’s smile sharpened.
“Ah,” she said softly. “So she is mute.”
She circled once, slow, deliberate. Her presence pressed in. Like a blade drawn halfway and held there, making everyone in the room remember how easily she could strike.
The air changed. Even Wukula’s posture tightened subtly, as if he too, recognized the shift.
Varang’s hand lightly caught the girl’s kuru. Her hold gentle but affirming. As her instinct kicked in, she turned around suddenly, fully looking at the Tsahik. Wukula moved a little, already knowing what will follow. He saw it too many times after successful raids.
Varang laughed quietly at the tension alone.
“Easy,” she murmured. “If I wanted you screaming, little warrior, you would already be screaming.”
The nickname landed like a hook.
It wasn’t affectionate, it felt more like a claim.
“You will answer me.” She said, holding her kuru firmly now. She looked at her captive, how her breathing quickened, her eyes darting towards Wukula and then the exit behind her. But as if struck, she lowered her gaze, her ears pinned, and voice quiet.
“I have no name. Not anymore.”
Then Varang made a soft sound.
“Oh,” she said. “This is better.”
Their eyes met again, Varang traced one carved symbol lightly with the pad of her finger, not enough pressure to hurt, just enough to remind that her body was being read like a map.
“These are exile marks,” Varang said, voice thoughtful, amused.
The girl stared forward, jaw rigid.
“Your clan wanted you remembered,” Varang continued.
“They wanted me dead.” She said evenly.
A real laugh, brief but genuine, like she’d just been given a gift.
“And yet here you are,” Varang said. “Still standing.”
Varang moved around to face her again, eyes bright with interest now, like the scars had flipped something inside her from curiosity to delight.
“What did you do to earn this?”
“I killed a member of my clan,” she said.
Wukula’s gaze sharpened slightly.
Varang’s eyebrows lifted.
“Ah,” she said. “And you survived long enough for them to punish you.”
Her eyes narrowed, hungry for the story.
She could have lied. Lies were sometimes useful.
But Varang didn’t look like someone fooled by words. She looked like someone who enjoyed pulling truth out by the roots. She met her gaze. The light of the fire illuminated her eyes, quiet fury danced in those black irises. As if the thought of what happened brought a new wave of rage, swallowing the fear she felt moments ago.
Varang’s smile widened, slow and delighted, like a predator enjoying the moment prey reveals it’s teeth.
“Little warrior,” she said again, voice warmer now, amused in a way that felt dangerous. Her hand moving towards her cheek. “You are not broken.”
Varang’s gaze slid to the rope binding her wrists.
She reached out and tapped the rope lightly with one finger.
“You could snap this,” Varang said. “I can see it in your arms. In your shoulders.”
She leaned in just slightly, studying her expression like she was trying to decide what kind of creature she’d been handed.
“So tell me,” Varang murmured. “Why haven’t you?”
The girl’s eyes flicked once, briefly, to Wukula, then back to Varang.
“Because I’m not stupid,” she said.
Varang’s laughter returned, soft and pleased.
“Good,” she said. “Stupid warriors die quickly. You saw the ones you killed.”
Wukula exhaled through his nose, annoyed. Varang glanced at him, amused by his impatience.
“And you,” Varang said looking at him, “brought her all this way.”
Wukula’s jaw clenched. “She was… interesting.”
“Interesting,” she echoed. “That is not a word you waste.”
She stepped closer again, invading her space, but she didn’t back away. Varang hummed thoughtfully, then turned away as if bored, only to pivot back immediately, eyes sharp with a new wave of interest.
“Do you believe Eywa abandoned you?” Varang asked lightly, like she was asking about weather.
The room seemed to tighten around the question.
Even Wukula watched now. She lowered her gaze, tail now moving in a slow, calm motion. Varang watched the girl, every move and every breath. She knew her captive was thinking of her next words, that might even be her last.
“No.”
Varang’s ears perked. Wukula gripped his knives, knowing that soon enough he would hear a clear order. Part of him felt disappointed.
“ She was never there for me. “ She continued, her gaze far away, like she was living through a memory.
“I watched as my sister lay beneath him, and She did nothing to stop it.” She said through teeth, her fists clenching. Varang looked at her, a sort of admiration sparked in her eyes.
“So I had to finish what She refused to.”
She turned towards the Tsahik, her eyes cold, lips tight. Varang stared at her for a long beat. Then she laughed, soft, delighted, genuinely entertained.
“Yes,” Varang said. “yes, I like you.” Varang turned back to Wukula, eyes still bright.
“You chose well.”
Wukula inclined his head.
“She will either harden… or break.”
Varang’s gaze returned to her, warm with amusement.
“And if you break?” Varang asked lightly.
“Then you kill me.” Her voice didn’t shake.
Varang hummed as if pleased by the simplicity.
“Yes,” she agreed. “I would.”
She stepped even closer to her captive, until she could smell smoke on her, could feel heat from the fire pit at their side, could see every small scar on Varang’s face.
“You will stay,” Varang said. “Not because you asked. Because I am curious.”
Her jaw tightened and Tsahik noticed immediately.
“Oh, don’t look offended,” she said, amused. “You didn’t come here for choice.”
She reached out and, with two fingers, lifted the her chin gently, almost tender.
“Little warrior,” Varang murmured, “you have one job.”
“Survive,” Varang said simply. “Long enough to become useful.”
She released her chin and turned away as if the matter was already decided. Then she paused and looked back over her shoulder, smile returning.
“Since this is a start of your new life, you will need a name.” She turned to look at the girl fully.
“Vi’reya” she murmured as she bent down and held her captives chin, forcing her to look at her new Tsahik.
“And since you arrived under his watch,” Varang added, gesturing lazily toward Wukula, “you will learn under his hand.”
Wukula stiffened slightly. Varang’s smile widened at his reaction.
“You will teach her our ways,” she continued. “our rules.”
Her eyes drifted back to the captive again.
“And you,” she said softly, “will try very hard not to bore me.”
Vi’reya held her stare, ears still down, fury simmering in her eyes like a banked fire.
Varang looked delighted by it.
“Yes,” she murmured. “You’ll do nicely.”
“Take her,” Varang said. “Make her useful.”
Wukula stepped forward and tugged the rope sharply.
She stumbled a half-step, caught herself immediately, and glared at him so hard it felt like it should leave marks.
Her ears flattened completely, tail rigid with restrained aggression.
Wukula’s mouth tightened.
As they left, Varang’s voice followed them, amused but with a hint of treat.
“Little warrior,” she called. “Try not to die too quickly. I’ve only just started enjoying you.”
She didn’t look back. And when Wukula pulled her along, she let her glare answer for her words.
Wukula grumbled under his breath, half to himself: “This is going to be irritating.”
She bared her teeth, silent.
Yes. It will be.
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