READ READ READ đ„°đ„°đ„°đ„°đ„°đ„°
â±; All characters featured in this story belong to VivziePop. This story is a deviation from the canon material.
part i
part ii
part iii
part iv
and more soon!
She's Different
Izuku Midoriya x Reader x Katsuki Bakugou
Summary: You were different. Why couldn't he see that?
Warning: Alcohol mentions, PTSD mentions, a little angsty
Part 1:
Silence.
That's all he's known since you left.
How long had it been? 6 months.
6 months of silence.
5 months since Uraraka ended the affair.
4 months since he saw you were doing better.
3 months since he slipped from Number 1.
2 months since he'd taken up drinking.
1 month since he actually was a 'Hero'.
You had left him in a rut. The warmth and love he once felt from you that your aura had coated the house in now was cold and depressing.
He picked up the bottle of alcohol that sat next to him, the News Channel reporting of Dynamight and Shoto rescuing seniors from a villan attack on their care facility.
The anchor had asked the two how they felt and Dynamight couldn't help but wink into the camera, addressing someone personally.
That someone, Izuku knew as you.
"See you tonight, Princess,"
Izuku threw the bottle against the TV, smashing it and cracking the TV screen causing it to flicker out and go black.
Why did he have to suffer like this? Why did he give it all up? Why did he ever let Uraraka seduce him? Why had you walked out?
He grabbed his hair and grunted. His face red from alcohol as he felt his pulse race. A pressure built behind his eyes as water began to wet his lashes.
He missed you.
He missed your voice. Your laughter. The sweet smell of your perfume that sent shivers down his spine and clouded his head in the best way.
How you both used to curl into eachother late into the night or early in the morning and whisper sweet nothings to eachother. Nuzzling close and talking about the future you dreamed of together.
Or even the nights when he'd come home to you having an episode. A flashback, a trigger, anything that would set you off from your ex boyfriend. A man who used you and cheated on you daily.
He could pull you into a tight embrace and just hold you, let you cry and sob as he promised to be there. As he promised to love you.
Izuku had rescued you from him, just to turn out like him.
You had caught his attention. The way you smiled while lost in thought. The way your nose twitched when you laughed. How you would stop and admire flowers no matter where you two were. You never cared for his title of Hero. You'd fallen in love with Izuku Midoriya not Deku.
You'd bring him lunch when he ran over his own break. You'd make his favorite dinner after a particularly rough day of Hero work.
You would care for your friends and family like a Mother, always fretting over them. Supportive of Izuku no matter what, his number one through and through. Yet he couldn't be your number one, only The World's number one.
And he betrayed you.
He had let Uraraka drag him home to her house, had let her slip her hand on him anywhere she wanted. He let her do anything she wanted. He never said no, it was new, invigorating, heart racing...it was different.
He knew it was wrong, yet he continued. He left you for her countless times, half the time he figured you'd get over it. He did everything. He paid the bills and let you live like a Princess. The thrill of running behind your back swallowed him whole. He let the press and paparazzi find them. He didn't care. He thought what they had was special, that you were old news.
He was wrong.
Izuku let out a scream as it began to rain outside.
You had been different.
And he lost you.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Well here's that part 2 yall đ I didn't think I would but here's Izuku basically drowning in his own misery. It's short but I hope yall enjoy it.
@maroonmagic @multi-fandom-fanfic @darkempresslola @tremendouswolfsaladranch
This is đđ» Put the fear of Katsuki into me and I'll bust âșđ€€
tags: mdni, dark content, noncon elements but no smut, villain bakugou, fear kink, no pronouns used for reader, he calls reader dollface and sweetheart
word count: 1k
notes: this is part of my new year event! haven't written bkg in so long i missed heem<3
masterlist
the whimper you let out when the sparks from his palms land just too close for comfort has the hair on his arms standing up in excitement. youâre cute as a button and shaking like a leaf, and he thinks to himself that maybe, just maybe, heâll have to keep this one.
âplease donât hurt me! iâ i have money!â youâre so panicked, voice high pitched and squeaky when you reach for your purse with hands trembling so hard that theyâre almost a blur.
he scoffs and bats the purse out of your hands, letting it fall uselessly by your feet with a thud that seems to echo throughout the narrow alleyway. âiâm not here for your fuckinâ cash, sweetheart.â
you press further back into the wall as if you could seep into it, as if you could coat the bricks like paint and become something he canât get his bloodstained hands on. theyâre smoking where he's got them crossed over his chest so he can watch you shy away from them.
heâs hard as a rock, straining against the fabric of his pants at the way your tits bounce every time a gasping sob claws its way from the deepest part of you. your voice is raw and youâve given up on screaming for help.
he isnât sure what he prefers: the fear in your glassy eyes or the way youâve sagged in resignation, realising that no one was coming to save you from the deadly villain.
his laugh is more of a bark; it's gruff and intimidating to match his overbearing presence. you jump like a skittish animal at the sound of it and it only has him laughing harder.
he shuts up as suddenly as he started, mirth leaving his eyes until they were left cold and unblinking, staring intently at you. âwhaddya think iâm gonna do to you?â
you shake your head, doe-eyed when the heavy tears clinging to your lashline streak down your overheated cheeks.
âno, really,â he keeps going when you donât answer, âtell me what ya think is about to go down.â
âi donât know!â you whimper, and then you make your fatal mistake â you step to the right and try to dart past him.
he has to hand it to you, you almost pull it off, the element of surprise definitely helping you. if he was any slower, you mightâve just made it â but this was bakugou fucking katsuki, not some idiotic extra. heâs quick to snap an arm out and circle your bicep in his hot hand, yanking you back and slamming you into the wall once more.
he shakes his head and tsks at you while you try to catch your breath from the ache that the sudden impact left in your back, the pain winding you temporarily.
his arms are crossed again, thick biceps flexed as if to serve as a silent reminder of the clear power imbalance that exists between you even if his quirk wasnât part of the equation.
âthat wasnât very clever, sweetheart.â
he takes a step forward and you squeak pitifully, shaking your head back and forth frantically and raising your hands to plant them on his sturdy chest to try to hold him back â he moves as if he doesnât feel a thing and your hands look minuscule where they push futilely against the broad expanse of his chest.
he slams his hands aggressively onto the wall on either side of you, sparks shooting from his palms and raining down, making you flinch when they shower your body.
he rolls his hips against your stomach and for the first time you feel the effect that your complete and utter terrorâs had on him â heâs hard and intimidating against your stomach. he drops his head, nose skimming the crown of your head to take a deep inhale of your hair, groaning when the scent of your shampoo fills his senses.
âcall for a hero again.â his voice is harsh and demanding and you screw your eyes shut as if that could shield you from him. when the only sounds you make are gut-wrenching sobs he brings a rough hand up to cup your jaw, shaking your head a few times until you were looking at him, fearing his next move. âi said call for a fuckinâ hero!â
your lip wobbles but you nod the best you can in his grip. you can barely see him anymore, tears completely blurring your vision from them appearing faster than they can fall. âsoâsomeone help!â your voice breaks halfway through to match how you feel on the inside. âpleâeâease!â
youâre hiccupping now, ugly and violent noises that have your entire body jerking in his hold, and he just grins leeringly, closing his eyes and basking in it.
when his eyes open back up you start at the vermilion stare.
ââm gonna let you in on a little secret, dollface,â he whispers, tilting his face to the side. âthe people out there? they can all hear whatâs goinâ on in here, and they know that iâm the one doing it. so no one, not even a precious hero,â he spits the word out like it's acidic, facial features scrunching up in disdain, âis coming to save you. because they know that fuckinâ with me will only get more civilians hurt.â
his words feel like bullets once the weight of them sinks in because you realise that he's speaking the truth. dynamight was well known as the worst of the worst, he could take out god knows how many people in the area with just one devastating explosion, and the heroes definitely realised that you just werenât worth the risk.
âhowâs it feel, being sacrificed for the greater good?â he's still whispering, voice dripping in faux-pity and he squeezes your cheeks until you're pouting for him. he swipes a thumb along your bottom lip and you shudder in disgust at the lingering touch, a mockery of an intimate gesture. âdonât worry about it, sweetheart, iâve gotcha. weâre gonna have a lot of fun together, you 'nd me, right? keep me interested and i just might keep you around.â
you donât want to think about what will happen if you can't keep his attention.
reblogs are appreciated! let me know what you think<3
join my taglist here!
@kirishimasgirl @aethrmist @tipsyangels @ebiharachan @ladysierra117 @ghostbeam @daddykawa @lovemegood @andyyxeve @curls-and-crosses @plumybcky @tdntu0 @weebaboobs @amaejiki @ifeelsofilthy @sauza @neighdeeer @crystal-lilac @daddykatsu @drakendme @lovemegood @nappingwithyuuji @tirzamisu @xdisappointingsaladx @j1nnyj1n @nawmie @mxgenderbender @zukoslosthishonor @protaganistoftheworld @ushijimasthiccthighs @sammi-nikolai
Goodnight lovelies~đ„”đđ
Summary:Â Class 1A has a Sex-Ed class that teaches them about a new species of humans that have sexual quirks and can be summoned. The Bakusquad decides it would be funny to test it out on an unsuspecting Bakugou. However, after you show up and rock his world, Bakugou is the one who will have the last laugh.
Word Count: 3,903
Warnings: Smut
Authorâs Note: Happy Birthday, Bakugou Katsuki~ I love you so fucking much. I wish I could give you a special present today, but instead, Iâm going to have to fantasize about it. Happy Birthday baby~
PART 2
Keep reading
Hii đ» Soft as Clouds has me all happy and giggly đđđ» if itâs not any trouble and you still have space, may I be added to the taglist please?? đđ
Of course! This taglist is going be long but there's always room for more đđ
We that bitch đ€đ„°đ„°
nĂŹnrra [nÉȘ.Ënáč.a] adv. proudly, with pride
Anonymous Request: Maybe you can write something about Ao'nung? Where his s/o is a Sully daughter (so a forest na'vi) and things between them are serious, but maybe his parents want him to mate with a metkayina woman instead?
Ao'nung must find a way to convince his parents to allow him to be with you, despite you not being one of the Metkayina.
TW: blood
Ao'nung wanted to scream out of frustration, but instead, he simply nodded and walked away from the conversation.
His parents just didn't understand. They wanted to pair him with a Metkayina woman, someone who had grown up with him and better understood their ways, and until recently Ao'nung had, of course, been fine with that.
That was, until he met you.
Now, he couldn't imagine spending his life with any Metkayina woman. Not when he had you.
--
You waited anxiously for Ao'nung's return, pacing in your mauri pod, your sister's eyes carefully watching you.
"Y/N, sit down," Kiri finally said. "You need to relax."
"How can I!" you replied, practically hissing at her, and instantly felt bad for your reaction. It wasn't Kiri's fault that you were so stressed out - you were just so worried about how Ao'nung's conversation would go with his parents.
As the eldest son of the chief, Ao'nung's future had been planned since the day he was born - and you knew you were disrupting that by being in love with him, but you just couldn't help it.
Even though Ao'nung had annoyed you at first, and you'd thought him arrogant, the more time you spent around him, the more you realized he was just trying to live up to the pressure put on him.
You were just about to sit next to Kiri, when Neteyam ran by your mauri, sprinting and hollering about something - it was so fast, you couldn't understand.
"Probably Lo'ak," Kiri said, rolling her eyes, but the both of you jumped up to follow your twin brother. He was running towards the beach, and Lo'ak was just behind him.
"Or not," Kiri amended as you followed.
There was a small gathering on the beach, and you followed your brothers as they wove their way through the crowd.
"Y/N!" Neteyam yelled, turning frantically to look for you. "It's Ao'nung. Quick."
He grabbed your arm, and you rushed forward with him.
Lying on the beach was Ao'nung, and there was a large gash across his chest, and blood was pouring out of it profusely. Roxto sat next to him, also scratched up but not as gravely injured.
Quickly, you knelt next to Ao'nung and pulled off the top you were wearing, pressing it onto the wound.
"What happened," you asked quickly as you worked. While Ao'nung replied, you asked Kiri for a few specific things, and she took off to get them, probably from your mother.
"Fishing accident," Ao'nung said, and you looked to Roxto for a further explanation.
"He was mad. We got careless. The spear slipped."
You bent down, listening to his heartbeat. "It's missed anything vital. We just need to stop the bleeding. Roxto, apply pressure here." You removed your hands as Roxto's hovered, and you pressed his down over the bloody clothing.
Kiri returned swiftly with what you needed, and you got to work, applying agents that you knew would slow bleeding and promote clotting, plus ward off infection. You lay clean cloths over the wound, as the bleeding slowed. Ao'nung was silent, his teeth gritted, through the entire process. Many watched, and you knew he wanted to look strong for them.
Finally, you allowed yourself to look into Ao'nung's eyes, and you gave him a reassuring smile.
"You will live to see another day, Yawne," you said, and he reached out to grab your wrist and hold it tight. You were still applying pressure t the wound, but he was certainly out of the woods. The amount of blood had been alarming, but his greatest risk would be infection, not death from blood loss.
"Thank you, Yawntu," he said, his jaw finally relaxing, almost managing a smile.
"Everyone, shoo!" you said, turning to gesture with your arms wildly at them. "Give him some space."
As you turned back to him, his mother arrived.
"Where is my son!?" she yelled, as the crowd began to dissipate. She knelt down opposite you, and you backed up a little bit - or tried to, until Ao'nung reached out, grabbing your hand and stopping you from moving further away.
"I'm okay, Mom. Y/N has healed me."
She moved the bandages out of the way, closely examining the wound. "It needs closed."
You nodded, and held out the needle and thread you had been just about to use, once you got some privacy. "I wanted to move from the beach, ensure the wound was clean first."
She peered at the wound, her son, and then you.
"This is fine work, Y/N," she had to admit, though she seemed to do it reluctantly. "Come with me."
She stood and turned. You jumped up, pulling Ao'nung with you, and you followed her back to her home. She instructed Ao'nung to sit down, and told you to proceed with cleaning and closing the wound.
"This will hurt," you told Ao'nung as you ensured your needle was sharp enough. You reached out, putting a hand on his cheek. "Tell if you need a break. It's going to be many stitches."
He nodded, gritting his teeth, and you began.
Not so much as a sigh came from Ao'nung's mouth as you put 23 stitches in his chest, slowly, to ensure the wound was lined up and would leave as small a scar as possible on his broad, beautiful chest.
When you were done, you cleaned and dressed the wound, and you had almost forgotten Ronal was watching over your shoulder.
"Beautiful work," Ronal said, examining closely once you were done, and you slumped back against the soft wall of the mauri, exhausted from worry and stress.
"Leave now, girl, I must speak to my son," Ronal said, without so much as look towards you, and you didn't have to be asked twice.
--
You washed yourself clean, and hovered in the water awhile, joined by Neteyam.
"You were in there a long time," he said. "What happened?"
You described the scene to him, and he flinched when you got to the part about Ronal's dismissal.
"Well, if she doesn't let you two be together now, she's a fool," Neteyam said with a comforting smile. Something above your head caught his eye, and you turned to see Ao'nung approaching.
You sprung up, rushing to him, and heard the splash of Neteyam swimming away.
"Don't get the wound wet for a few days!" you exclaimed, pushing him by his shoulders away from the shoreline.
He smiled at laughed. "I know, I know, mom told me."
You sighed. "Are you okay?"
"Are you? I've never seen my mother scrutinize someone so hard, for so long."
You let out a long exhale. "I feel like I could sleep for three days straight."
"And you should. But first, I should tell you, we have my parents' approval."
That certainly woke you right up. "We... what?"
"My mother said she'd never seen such a promising tsahik before, and we would be a fool to let another clan have you when our people could use your skills here."
Your mouth hung open. "So, she finds me useful?" You had to chuckle.
"Useful enough to be my mate."
You fell forward into his arms, careful to avoid the bandages on his chest, and he wrapped his arms around you, holding you tightly to him.
"We can have everything we want," he whispered, and your heart felt as if it may burst from joy, after the insanely stressful day you'd just had.
You felt like you could cry, or maybe pass out, or both.
"I love you, Ao'nung," you whispered, looking up at him with tears in your eyes.
He kissed just below each eye, removing your tears, then your nose, and finally, a gentle kiss on the mouth.
"I'm so proud to call you mine, Y/N. I will love you forever."
Proud was just how you felt, as well. Proud of yourself, proud of your future mate, and proud to become one of the Metkayina.
Sir come hit this-I mean me đđ
Thinking about hitman Bakugou whoâs known in the seedy underbelly for being the best in his field. The man you call when you need someone to disappear, and his rates have the price tag to match. He never asks questions, only name and photograph. In exchange he gives his own photograph backâ one heâs taken at the scene to prove that heâs been successful. The bloody, broken body of his latest target left cold and alone as he collects his payment. Bakugou can charge whatever he wants and people will pay because he has a hundred percent success rateâ that is until he finds you.
He knows nothing about you apart from what heâs seen watching youâ the coffee shops you like to frequent each morning, the commute you take to work, even what you buy grocery shopping (you buy way too many instant ramen packets to be healthy.) but somehow the more he watches you the more he becomes intrigued by you.
Itâs almost pathetic really, how easily he allows himself to fall into you. Starting to think about more aspects of you, things that shouldnât matter when heâs on the job. He starts to wonder why someone would want you deadâ questions heâs never asked before on any other hit. But you have him questioning himself. Even as he watches through your window as you ready yourself for bed, peeling your shirt up and over your head as you unclasp your bra. Letting your breasts spill out as you pick up your sleep shirt, clearly oblivious to his eyes watching as you tug down your jeans, giving him the perfect glimpse of your pink panties.
Bakugou has to take deep, long breaths through his nose to stop himself from palming the tent in his pants as he watches you make your way towards your bed, slipping beneath the sheets as you settle down for the night. His gloved hands lifting up the window that heâd unlocked earlier that day to climb insideâ sleuthy feet padding across your carpeted floors as he stands over your bed. Giving him the perfect view of you sound asleep, your lips parted slightly as he watches the steady rise and fall of your chest. The gun in his hand wobbling slightly as he aims it towards your foreheadâ hesitating as he cursesâ heâs never hesitated before.
Bakugou Katsuki is the best hitman, with a hundred percent success rateâ until he met you.
SOMEONE CALL THE FIRE DEPARTMENT because someone just got burned.
Why am I sobbing đđđ€đđ€
tags: AFAB reader (referred to as âmamaâ), established (kinda toxic) relationship, canon divergence: secret family au (post arrest), spoilers for touya backstory and chapters 349 onwards, hurt/comfort, original child character (âKaiyoâ; he is your shared biological child), parent todoroki touya, mentions of canon attempted suicide and canon child abuse, themes of generational trauma, family feels, todoroki family centric, villain rehabilitation, dealing with trauma and recovery, second chances
wc: 16k+
You shouldnât have come.Â
There are crowds of press, packed so tightly that getting any closer would be futile, all of them a cacophony of questions and accusations. Youâre standing atop a small brick wall encasing a flower bed of hyacinths outside of the hospital, a head above the sea of cameras, watching as a group of heroes â Endeavor and Shouto included â slowly lead Touya towards an armoured van.Â
Relief floods through your system for a few precious seconds, overwhelming the hopelessness in your stomach. He was alive.Â
One little rumour from a patient in your clinic, an unsure whisper of I heard theyâre moving that Dabi kid from the ICU to villain corrections had led you here. Itâd been two long, devastating weeks since the final battle. Two weeks with no word from him, two weeks of reading every article you could find about the âelusive first son of Endeavorâ and learning nothing.Â
The media blackout that came thereafter was the only thing that kept you hoping that he was okay. The Todoroki family, though disastrous and complicated, held some influence in Japan. And though Touya would vehemently try to reject it, they could not allow their surviving first son to be fed to the wolves.Â
And wolves they were; yelling obscenities and insults with spitting anger. Legal justice was one thing, but the court of public opinion was another thing in its entirety, a fragile and fickle thing that held the power to sway even government policy.Â
Kaiyo stirs in your arms at the noise and you soothe him, rubbing your hand along his back until he quietens, then you tuck away the stray red hair that has fallen loose from beneath his hat. Truthfully you never intended to bring him here, but given recent events it has been hard for him to separate from you, cheeks still slightly pink from his earlier tantrum.Â
Itâd been damn near impossible to prevent the four year old from learning about the broadcast a few months prior, paired with the sudden less than frequent visits from his father, he knew something was deeply wrong and he didnât understand it.Â
Touya is scanning the crowds lazily, expression impassive to everyone but you. You could see was exhausted, more gaunt than you last remember, but his disinterest only fed into everyoneâs fury.Â
âVillain!â theyâre bellowing at him, fingers pointed and words sharp, âdonât you care about the suffering youâve caused?âÂ
He cares, you think, more than anyone could ever understand.Â
You cannot look away as Shouto lingers by his brother, the other sidekicks giving them a wide berth. Endeavor is tucked away beside the van speaking with an armed officer, his shoulders hunched forwards in an uncharacteristic manner. He appeared to be ashamed.Â
Good, the thought bitter and weighing heavily in your chest.Â
Touya shuffles along obediently, wrists out and pressed together against his pelvis. Quirk suppressing cuffs, you assumed. They were bulky, and no doubt uncomfortable. You hold Kaiyo a little closer as you ache, distantly wondering if heâs cold without his quirk.Â
After today it was entirely possible youâd never see him again, that your son would grow up without his father.
Nobody knew of your connection to him, something both of you doubled down on after your pregnancy came to light. There would be no way for you to visit or contact him now without suspicion being cast upon your little family. Law enforcement will without a doubt assume you were aware of his intentions, and worst case they would believe you to have played a part in them yourself.Â
He couldnât allow that to happen. And yet, here you were.Â
You just needed one last look at him to know he was breathing, living flesh and blood, to know that the only thing you would have to mourn was your relationship. More than anything you needed him to be ok. And he does look different â better, in some ways. The new skin grafts hug his jawbone comfortably, and the rings that once kept him together are gone.Â
Being alive meant he still had a chance.Â
Touya tilts his chin up, squinting against the flare of the sun, and the corner of his mouth crooks into a smile. Itâs the irony, you think, as your own lips twitch. The heavens should have opened by now, rain should be soaking your clothes to your skin, influenced by the utter misery flooding throughout your body. Instead, the day is bright.
As if he can feel it, he turns, and his gaze immediately falls on your figure in the distance. Youâre close enough to see the abject fury flit across his features, eyes wide and unblinking as they stare back into your own.Â
The hand you have rested against Kaiyoâs back slides up over his hat to cradle his head, his small fingers curled tightly into the fabric of your shirt, drawing Touyaâs attention to the boy.Â
To his son.Â
The anger dissolves like sea foam, it washes away to give space for his grief. This was it, the final goodbye. You couldnât find it in yourself to hate him for his choices, because it was something he had told you heâd do from the start.Â
In hindsight, you can only curse your naivety.Â
Youâd met Touya a few months after your eighteenth birthday while shadowing one of the senior nurses in the clinic. The place was small, run down and barely funded, but it was valuable work and they were kind enough to give you the extra experience.
Heâd been brought in unconscious by a concerned passerby. The skin of his arms has been rough, raised and pale pink, inflamed where theyâd been burnt. Barely nineteen at the time, it was nothing compared to what he would do to himself years later.Â
âWatch him until he wakes up,â theyâd told you, and you did so dutifully until his eyes flew open in alarm.Â
Back then his identity as Dabi was makeshift, fresh and unrefined. With the glue still wet between the cracks it was unsurprising that he would slip. Touya. That was how he introduced himself to you on that first day, under the hazy influence of painkillers.
The memory stuck with you throughout your relationship. Youâd see it now and then â youâd see Touya plainly behind the veil. Sometimes you said his name as if it was a dare, and heâd hated it so much that he loved you. With you there was no need to exert effort in maintaining his bravado, he could just be. And that was dangerous, or so heâd insisted.
He would disappear for weeks at a time. He always had a myriad of excuses, from expressing concern for your safety to spitting that you were nothing but a good fuck. You could no longer count on one hand the amount of times youâd heard the âIâm a villain, you shouldnât be with meâ speech.Â
Touya would leave, and yet youâd still come home to a receipt on the counter, or to your clean sheets unmade. It was laughable, and you loved him.Â
The pregnancy was⊠unexpected. Difficult. If his emotions were a switch on the wall, your growing baby was a finger flicking it up and down incessantly. Mornings full of nausea and nights full of reassurance. You offered him an out, a door that would always be left open, and he refused it.Â
Stay and be a bad father. Leave and be a bad father. Those were the only options he thought existed for him. And maybe you shouldâve believed him when he told you Kaiyoâs birth wouldnât change a thing about the path heâd set for himself.Â
But you couldnât accept it. Not as heâd held your boy in his arms, not as the apprehension and fear in his eyes softened into love. Not as heâd laughed and told you, âguess I needed to give one good thing to the world before I dieâ.Â
Sometimes the adoration would become overcast with anguish. There were days he couldnât even look at Kaiyo because of how much he loved him, reminded only of how little he had been loved by his own family â but he never let Kaiyo see it.Â
âJust because heâs too young to understand now doesnât mean he wonât laterâ.
The only small mercy is that your son remains asleep, blissfully unaware of what he is losing, and unperturbed by the noise around him. His light, shallow breaths against the skin of your neck are a warm comfort.Â
Touya canât say anything for fear it will draw attention to you both, and you think that alone is punishment enough.Â
Shouto stands beside him in silence, surveying the surroundings and eventually following Touyaâs line of sight to you. Instinctively you step backwards into the soft soil of the flowerbed, your thoughts offering an apology to the hyacinth flattened beneath your shoe.Â
With the realisation that his youngest brother has noticed you, Touya turns and lunges in Shoutoâs direction with his teeth bared. It could almost be comical if not for the unpleasant murmurings of the crowd. In the short moment that Shouto is distracted, you jump down from the brick wall and slip away.Â
You donât look back.Â
A small part of you had hoped your role in the story had ended, that you now might just move forward as best you can. Instead, you were shadowed by an overwhelming sense of dread everywhere you went. There was little to do besides work and walk, yet you couldnât help but feel watched. The cashier at your local market, your neighbour, Kaiyoâs teacher, the food vendor on the corner; with just one look you canât help but to think that they must know, that any day now this false peace will collapse onto you like a tonne of bricks.Â
The anxiety keeps you up at night, counting the glowing stars stuck to the bedroom ceiling to pass the hours, tension threading itself into your muscle fibres. Kaiyo was warm where he laid curled at your side, but the loneliness â in all its violent emptiness â made the night colder. Despite it all, you missed Touya, your eyes still searching for him across the futon.Â
Remnants of him are still scattered throughout the apartment. Should anyone come looking, there would be plenty of him to find. Heâd hated having his picture taken, yet always gave in to you quickly, and you never needed to ask him for anything twice. There were photographs of his lips pressed to your hair, of his smile tucked against your neck, of his arms holding the baby; hand cradled around the crown of his head, his purpled scars a stark contrast to Kaiyoâs soft skin.Â
He had treated fatherhood like he was a dying man, a clear red flag that you can only now see with hindsight. He had spoiled the two of you with his time and effort, no matter how uncomfortable it made him, because he knew any day might be his last. Touya was born with inherited wounds that were left to fester. To him, his failure was terminal, and no amount of love would undo that.Â
The wood panels are cool beneath the soles of your feet as you pad your way through to the bedroom, bending at your knees to pick up stray toys and socks left throughout the hallway. Thereâs still an ache in your cheeks, the strain of smiling too long through all the tears and questions from your son that morning before school. You wish you had answers.Â
Your shared room looks much emptier with the large futon hung over the balcony to dry. You find a small star in the centre of the room that has fallen from the ceiling. Held between your fingers in the daylight it is dull, a pale yellow, much different to the green glow it emits at night. Touya had bought them for Kaiyo after a series of bad dreams, lifting the boy onto his shoulders and letting him stick them wherever he pleased.Â
Another piece of him. As you are slipping the star into your pant pocket, you hear a knock on the front door. You werenât expecting anyone â rent had been paid, Kaiyo was with his sitter and your neighbours were at work. It sounds again, reverberating throughout the apartment, and the soft hair on your arm lifts in anticipation.Â
There is a sense of embarrassment somewhere within you as you creep towards the entryway, keeping your body low and your steps light. You can hear muted, muffled voices through the cheap wood, fingertips carefully lifting the peep hole cover to look through.Â
You hold your breath, stunned. There are two women just an arms length from you, both of them beautiful and horrifyingly familiar to you. Rei, Touyaâs mother, stands with her head held high despite the nervous fiddling of her hands. Fuyumi, his sister, is clasping the strap of her shoulder bag with a white knuckled grip.Â
âMother, are you sure this is the place?â she asks, her eyes darting anxiously over the surroundings, âmaybe Shouto made the wrong assumptionâ.
Rei is lovely, you think, even with the air of sadness Her smile is gentle, and her expression softly determined. âThe worst outcome to this is that he misunderstood the situation,â she replies, âbut if this person is important to Touya then theyâre important to meâ.Â
Fuyumi nods, shifting her weight between each foot. You inhale shakily through your nose, blinking back the dryness in your eye as you continue to watch through the lense.Â
âHe said⊠there was a childâ.Â
Your forehead bumps against the door as you startle, cursing under your breath, lungs tightening as the dread floods your system. The two women freeze alongside you, observing the door cautiously, glancing at one another in silent conversation.Â
âIf youâre there, we arenât here to hurt you,â Rei lifts her hand, and rests it against the door in a show of reassurance, âI believe you know my eldest son. We only want to talkâ.Â
The push and pull of guilt, relief and fear forces the weight of your body to sink forward, drawn to the sincerity in her voice. There is no amount of time or distance that would dilute the loyalty you felt towards Touya. Letting them in would be a betrayal.Â
âPlease,â Fuyumiâs voice is wet, thickening with tears, âheâs my older brother. Heâs refusing to talk about you orâ or anything! We just want toââ
Rei turns to soothe her, and youâre reminded of your own parenthood. If something ever happened to Kaiyo you might just scorch the earth in your attempts to find him. Itâs hard to swallow the swell in your throat as you watch his sister turn into the touch, seeking that comfort.Â
Touya had loved his mother, a difficult thing for him to stomach but true all the same. Heâd grieved the attention he never received from her, but you knew he didnât blame her, and it is that which leads your hand to the door handle.Â
Time feels like itâs in suspension. To see them standing so clearly before you without the film of dirt from the glass is still a shock to process. Behind you is a home filled to the brim with evidence of your own criminal involvement, the first photograph theyâll see hung in the hallway is of their grandson.
Kaiyo deserved his chance at having a family.Â
âPlease come in,â your fingers are trembling where they sit in your pocket, curled around the divots in the star. Please forgive me, you think.Â
You step backwards to allow them through, both accepting with a short bow and a quiet thank you. Itâs unnerving and tense, their stares lingering along the walls and shelves, the mother and daughter now hand in hand as they take a seat on your couch.Â
âWouldâŠâ a blunt point of the star sinks into the thickest part of your palm, the sensation acting as your tether, ââŠcan I get you anything to drink?âÂ
âSome tea would be wonderful,â Rei concedes, her voice full of earnest and so light itâs almost wistful. As you steep the leaves you canât help but get the feeling she knew you needed more time.
The ceramic cups are old, stained with time and well loved. You fill them with hot water, tendrils of steam billowing warmth across your face, and place them atop the coffee table before kneeling onto the floor.Â
Beneath your mug is a clumsily drawn cat, the marker permanently stained into the wood. There are others, too, little marks left by mistake. Faint lines of kanji where the ink had seeped through the paper, hearts and stick figures and stars. Rei reaches her hand out to trace a finger along them, lips pressed thinly in a sad smile.Â
âI apologise for our unexpected intrusion,â she tells you, âIâm Himura Rei and this is my daughter, Todoroki Fuyumi".
âBelieve it or not Iâve been waiting for someone to find us,â your hands wrap tightly around the hot cup, incognisant of the sting to your skin, âit was beginning to eat away at me a little bitâ.
âThen Shouto was right,â Fuyumi mirrors you, keeping her voice soothing and calm as she speaks even as her eyes are tearful. You recall Touya telling you she was a teacher, and you can see why.Â
âYou did know him,â she says, âit looks like he spent⊠a lot of time hereâ.
You hear yourself laugh breathlessly at her tiptoeing of the subject, âhe practically lived here until he decided to join the league. After that he stayed away for our safety, I supposeâ.Â
She nods, seeming to accept your answer, glancing then to her mother in a silent plea for assistance. âCould you tell us what he was like?â thereâs a mellow, apologetic tone in Reiâs words, but to whom she was apologising you didnât know.
âCould you tell us all the things we missed?â
So you sip your drink to smooth the dryness in your throat and itâs scalding against the roof of your tongue, and you tell them everything you know.Â
After your first meeting youâd thought about him every day for a week, haunted by the intensity in his eyes and the marks on his skin. You had talked and talked and he had done nothing but listen. While you thought you'd never see him again it wasnât long at all until he came back to your dingy clinic, this time of his own accord, in need of painkillers and suturing.Â
Heâd gone straight to you, rudely bypassing the doctors with any qualification in the ward, and shoved some money into the palm of your hand. He was still young, his attempts at carrying himself like a man seemed more like puppetry to you, but still you entertained it and attended to his wounds.Â
âSince Iâm still not fully trained youâll need to sign this,â you remember holding out the clipboard to him, your supervisor lingering by the curtains, the impatient tap of her foot echoing in your ears.Â
âTouyaââÂ
Back then his aversion to hearing that name was much greater. Every time itâd passed through your lips was as if you had pressed your thumb on a fresh bruise, and heâd lash out in kind.Â
âDonât call me that here!âÂ
âWhy? Are you running from something?âÂ
Heâd laughed at you with eyes that glittered like he was about to cry, but the tears never came, they never could. âRunning implies that someone is looking for me,â his skin pulled uncomfortably taut as he smiled, âthereâs no one to run fromâ.
âHe dyed his hair black soon after that,â the mug held between your trembling hands grows cold, your tea mostly untouched and leaving a faint brown ring around the ceramic, âsometimes he would visit me all soaked with rain, and the colour would run down the back of his neckâ.Â
You pause every so often to offer them a chance to ask questions, but the two women remain quiet, listening raptly to your story. Their genuine trust and willingness to believe you bore a sense of unease, or perhaps guilt that youâd had him to yourself while theyâd mourned.Â
âThen things eventually progressed to⊠more,â even with the air of melancholy, you couldnât help but take refuge in the normalcy of being timid around your partner's family, sheepish as you recount your relationship.Â
âDid you love him?â Rei asks, and though not unkind, her question makes you feel unspeakably lonely.Â
Loving Touya had felt nothing like a free fall, there was no moment in which you woke up and realised your feelings. Itâd been no great feat to love him, no grand prize or climax at the end of a long battle; you saw all the worst parts of him and it didnât change a thing. Even with all his flaws your feelings only deepened until they hollowed you out.Â
Despite it all, you had walked into it knowingly, each step forward towards him a purposeful choice.Â
You have only your own hunger to thank. Your eighteen year old self had been fiercely persistent, and however much he denied it, you knew he was drawn to your sympathy. Even though he was never entirely honest you pursued him with the small truths he did offer, motivated by the selfish wish to see him happy.Â
âYes,â in sickness and violence, in struggle and fear; youâd loved him through holidays and birthdays, through time spent apart and nights spent alone, âI love himâ.Â
âAnd the little boy, is he your son?â
Kaiyo. An unexpected yet happy accident. Named after forgiveness and the spitting image of his father, a red haired cherub, you both already knew the answer. âYou can say it, Ms. Himura,â your smile strained as you run your thumb along the handle of your mug, âheâs our son. Mine and hisâ.Â
Fuyumi exhales shakily, slumping forward like the fight left her body along with it. You can see the moment your confession truly registers, misty eyed and sparing a glance between one another. Turning on your knees, you reach into the shelves of the TV cabinet, grasping the framed photo of your son as an infant.Â
Rei takes it from you delicately as you offer it to her with an outstretched hand and traces her fingers across the glass pane, circling the swell of Kaiyoâs pink cheek. Itâs a personal favourite of yours â his arms are held above his head in triumph, the lower half slightly blurred from the excited kick of his feet. Heâs grinning widely, so much so his eyes are squinted.Â
Touya had been the one to take that photo, making ridiculous noises from behind the camera, the ghost of their intermingling laughter still ringing in your ears.Â
âHis name is Kaiyo and heâll be turning four soon,â you watch warmly as Fuyumi leans over her mothers shoulder to get a better look, hand clutching at the fabric of her knit sweater, âthe pregnancy was unexpected. We didnât⊠I told Touya I would raise him myself, but he insisted on taking responsibilityâ.Â
As you recall, the very notion that he wouldnât stick around had offended him. He loved his son. Heâd even cried over the baby scans, dry blood still smeared across black and white where they sit in your bedroom drawer. But you could see how the fear had eaten away at him throughout those nine months, restlessly doting on you and bringing home stolen things for the baby every few days but never being able to touch your growing bump.Â
âThen, why did he join the league?â Fuyumi asks, but you were intuitive enough to see the real question between the lines. Why wasnât any of this enough? Why did he leave this behind, too?Â
Youâd guessed from the beginning that his relationship with his family was, at best, a strained one. In reality it was worse than you couldâve imagined. The small pieces to his past that he let slip every now and then would always fill you with distress, at a loss for words.Â
The reveal of who his father had been all you needed to understand the secrecy, of both his identity and of your relationship.Â
âStain,â you cross your arms over the surface of the coffee table, knees folded beneath it, and resist the urge to hide your face, âhe continued to use his quirk so his condition was worsening, and his anger towards Endeavor had been festering for yearsâ.
You ignore their plaintive wince at the mention of the pro, blunt nails curling into your inner wrists as you continue. âTouya felt his death didnât matter. It didnât change a thing,â and he had to watch his world move on without acknowledging it, âeverything Endeavor did made him susceptible to Stainâs causeâ.
Stainâs temporary reign of terror over Japan was the first time heâd ever heard anyone criticise hero society so blatantly. You remember the vengeful kindling in his eyes as he recited the vigilanteâs words, your son sound asleep in his arms and none the wiser.Â
It was that night, and every night that followed, that the stress had started to gnaw at your chest until you felt your lungs collapse under the weight. Panic gripped you each time he returned home with a new injury, the smell of smoke suffocating and clinging to the futon covers no matter how much you washed them. He carried a feral sense of excitement and restlessness that left you helpless â something had breathed new life into him, and it had not been you.Â
Fighting had been pointless, your pleas like water to a ducks back. He loved you, he loved his son, and somehow he had rationalised that burning himself and the world would give rise to a better place. Â
âHe already died once,â your smile is tight but not as tight as your throat, âand it did nothing. So this time heâd do it where it couldnât be hidden, where everyone would have to look right at his self immolation and know their part in causing itâ.Â
It's then that Rei carefully places the photograph on the table as she lowers herself onto her knees, the frame remaining upright with the support of its stand. With her hands resting one atop the other, she leans forward into a full bow in front of you.Â
Youâre stunned with arms suspended in the air as you hesitate to reach for her, a swell of tears lining your eyes at her softly spoken apology. Your son watches over the exchange, his presence poignant even through an image.Â
âMs. Himura, please lift your head,â you shift towards her, close enough to thread your fingers over her own, feeling the peaks of her knuckles against your palm.Â
âI failed him as his mother,â she says, overturning her hand to hold yours and squeezing, âit was those failures that led to your own suffering. Iâm sorryâ.Â
In your peripheral you see Fuyumi as she moves to mirror her mother, sitting close beside you, fingers ghosting a chill along your forearm where she comes to entangle with the two of you.Â
âPlease donât take responsibility for my pain. Besides, it wasnât always terrible,â you stare at the knot of limbs, comforted by the gentle warmth of their touch, âI donât think⊠Iâve ever met anyone who loves as much as your son doesâ.Â
Reiâs eyes fall shut, a faint pinch between her brows, sorrowful as she replies: âI knowâ. Â
Her expression is so full of regret itâs almost contagious, drawing you in and reminding you of your own mistakes. Thereâd been so many opportunities that you couldâve fought him, couldâve said something, but didnât for fear of pushing him further away.Â
âHow did you find me?âÂ
Your voice cuts through the plaintive silence and you shrink under their gaze as their eyes lift. Fuyumi speaks in place of her mother, her thumb rubbing back and forth over your wrist.Â
âShouto saw you as Touya was being transferred, and in all honesty he didnât think anything of it until Touya attacked him to keep the attention on himself,â she explains with an amused lilt, âhe appeared to be very protective of youâ.
Idiot, you think fondly.Â
âI assure you he only told my mother,â Fuyumi squeezes your forearm once again as if to comfort you, âhe was concerned and wasnât sure if he just misunderstood. But we wanted to look for you to make sureâ.Â
âThen, the authorities arenât aware?âÂ
âNo,â Rei murmurs.Â
Youâre surprised by just how much you were being upheld by stress, shoulders sagging forward in relief, sinking your teeth into the soft inside of your cheek to withhold a whimper.Â
âThank you,â you say hoarsely, and you repeat it again and again until the two women have swaddled you in their arms, surrounded by the gentle scent of lavender and detergent.Â
âYouâre family to Touya, therefore youâre family to us,â Fuyumi reassures you, âyou donât have to do this alone anymore if you donât want toâ.Â
Family. The prospect almost seemed too good to be true, an enticing offer laid out only to trap you at the end. You couldnât risk Kaiyoâs safety or wellbeing, but their sincerity is so palpable itâs stifling.Â
âHow is he?â you ask instead, âis he safe?âÂ
âThis knowledge isnât available to the public, but he has been moved into a private villain corrections centre,â Rei looks at Kaiyoâs picture as she speaks, and you wonder if she sees Touya looking back.
âHe will be undergoing rehabilitation with the hopes of one day joining us for a period of probation,â she continues, turning to you with a soft smile, ârest assured we have no intention of removing his autonomy. Touya consciously chose to carry out his actions and he should take responsibility for itâŠâ
Her voice breaks, â⊠but we had our own part to play in his creation, and believe he deserves a second chanceâ.Â
Itâd sound like a perfect dream if you did not know Touya as intimately as you do. Youâre unable to repress the grimace that crosses your expression.Â
âHe wonât be happy about that,â your eyes fall closed momentarily as you exhale, âhe wonât see it your way. You already took his autonomy by removing his choice to die, thatâs what heâll thinkâ.Â
âYou really do understand him, donât you?â Fuyumi laughs mournfully, âheâs refusing to cooperate. He was relatively fine in police custody but since the transfer heâs become more hostileâ.
The room grows a little smaller with every word. âDo you think itâs because I was there?âÂ
âShouto asked twice who you were and Touya attacked him both times. Itâs a big part of why he came to me about it, and why we knew we had to find you,â Rei says.Â
It would make sense. Touya always smothered his anxiety with anger, a response that allowed him some control or imitation of power, and power meant safety. You knew he found common ground with his youngest brother, that being the reason he ultimately lost to him, but that didnât mean he trusted Shouto. The thought of him restlessly wondering if you and Kaiyo were in danger causes your chest to tighten.Â
âMaybe if youâre able to tell him weâre okay, heâll start responding to treatment?âÂ
âMaybe,â Rei nods and then the apartment is veiled in heavy silence. It wasnât unlike sitting at his wake. You wished he could bear witness to how much love you all felt for him.Â
Suddenly, a muted beeping sounds from the thin, mint coloured watch clasped around Reiâs wrist. She sighs and pressed her lips into a thin, displeased line. âIâm sorry but we canât stay longer. They still get a little nervous if Iâm out too long,â she says.Â
Right. She too had spent time locked away in a hospital. It must be difficult, you think, to have a mistake follow you wherever you went. A perfect recovery did not mean other people would forgive, or forget.Â
Maybe one day, Touya would see that he and his mother are more similar than he realises.Â
âThatâs fine, Ms. Himura,â you bow forward towards her, and then again while addressing Fuyumi, âIâm grateful to you both for finding usâ.Â
âAnd weâre grateful you gave us a chance,â Fuyumi lifts her arms in an aborted motion as if to hug you, but decides against it, âweâd like to leave you with our contact information. If thereâs anything you need or⊠if youâd like Kaiyo to visit, please donât hesitate to callâ.Â
Their touch lingers long after they leave. The evening moves on, sun dipping below the seam of the horizon as it always does as if nothing had changed, an unintended reminder of how minuscule your problems really were. Kaiyo is returned home by his sitter, excitedly babbling about his day, rushing throughout the apartment with bare feet padding over the spot where his grandmother had been seated only hours before.Â
Youâre reminded of how intuitive he is when he curls himself around your thigh, asking you if youâre okay, if you were feeling sick or sad. Thereâs a guilt there that can only come with parenthood, your depression smothered like a wet blanket as you pull forward a smiling mask to wear, hoping it will placate his worry.Â
âIâm okay baby,â you tell him with fingers combing through unkempt red hair, his eyes wide and bright and distinctly your own, âIâm just a little tiredâ. Â
There is an anger that accompanies the insurmountable love you feel when you look at your son. It is difficult to accept his abandonment, to know you will have to be the one imparting that pain into him. So gentle, excitable and considerate of those around him, qualities taught to him by his supposedly villainous parents.
Despite his mistakes and doubts, Touya tried to be a good father, heâd wanted to be one. You suspected a lot of it came from a place of wishfulness, parenting his child in a way heâd wanted for himself, as painful as it mightâve been to realise just how little heâd mattered to his own. And you can see it now â Touyaâs inherited wounds are steadily present on Kaiyo, a passing of the torch, and all you can do is try to stop the bleeding.
If you truly thought about it, you could say your whole relationship had carried a disquieting dark shadow beneath its skin, something of a spreading blood wheel. You overlooked it anytime he was callous and unruly, youâd cry and ache but it pleased you to know he still cared enough about himself to be angry.Â
Soon after joining the league heâd gradually plateaued, urges satisfied, and you shouldâve noticed.Â
âMama, look,â Kaiyo appears and lifts a thin sheet towards you, paper wrinkling under his chubby fingers, âI drawed dad!â
âDrew,â you warmly correct, cradling his cheeks as you duck to press a kiss to his forehead. The drawing is that of three stick figures, each one distinct with features. Touyaâs figure has his black spiked hair, and across the lower half of its face is a purple shadow. His scars, you assume.Â
It was all perfectly normal to Kaiyo; the sutures and rings, the burns, the ever present smell of smoke. From the moment he could open his eyes, they would follow his father with love and excitement. The admiration would sometimes unsettle Touya, too familiar, too much like looking into a reflection.Â
âItâs brilliant, baby,â you tell him, gentle as you take it from his grasp, âshall we put it on the pinboard along with the others?â
He huffs, incensed by your request, âbut I want to show my friends!â
Therein lies the dilemma. You wonder how often this problem will crop up in the years to come, how quickly you might run out of acceptable excuses as he becomes old enough to understand. Dabi was too easily recognised, even in your son's amateur rendition of him.Â
âI really love this one though Kai, it has all of us,â you twist your lips into a cartoonish pout, pulling the sweet sound of a laugh from him, âplease can I keep it?â
His childish glare withers as he fights a smile, the restrained happiness plain on his face and entirely contagious. âOk mama, I guess,â he relents, innocent and forgiving, head tilted and cheeks pink under your praise. In moments like this, you can truly understand a parent's wish to freeze time.Â
You recall Touyaâs claim of putting good into the world before his death. You too could hardly believe that youâd raised such an unequivocally good little boy. But as you watch your son appraise his art with an excited wiggle, youâre reminded that children are not a tool for redemption.Â
âI love you,â I promise Iâll be better for you, âand dad loves you too. How about we draw him another picture? Iâll do one aswell".Â
âOkay!â he takes your hand and begins to pull you along the hallway towards his room, your back bent uncomfortably to lessen his reach. Halfway to his destination, Kaiyo pauses, pulling anxiously at the hem of his metallica shirt.Â
âWhen⊠When is dad coming back from work?âÂ
Thatâs right. Work in Okinawa, youâd told him. A terribly flimsy excuse given in a moment of panic. At the time you just wanted him to have a reason to hold onto, to reassure himself with, but it was slowly coming back to bite you.Â
âHe still has a lot to do baby,â an understatement if youâd ever heard one, âitâll be a little while. But we can be patient, canât we?â
His lips purse into a pout, eyes shimmering with unshed tears as he bravely nods, and the thought of Reiâs phone number waiting in your contacts lingers in the forefront of your mind.Â
Truthfully it haunts you throughout the rest of your week, stomach lined thickly with guilt. You eat, you work, you walk Kaiyo to school with eyes on every corner. You sleep in Touyaâs most recently worn hoodie and pretend itâs his skin, his hands, too attached to his scent to wash it.Â
Kaiyo continues to draw, to write and create. He brings graded homework back from school to keep in one of your old folders along with his other keepsakes; just in case Touya comes back, just so he can show him.Â
You were looking over some of the old home made cards the night you finally called Rei, reliving another time and wondering if it ever really had been better, or if itâd just been a figment of your imagination.Â
It can be difficult to know when a memory has been altered by nostalgia.Â
âWhatâs this?â Touya had said as Kaiyo handed him a Fatherâs Day card, the inside lined with confetti and star sequins that toppled into his lap when opened.Â
âIâ I made it for you,â Kaiyo had explained nervously with eyes wide, hands flexing at his sides, âsee⊠thatâs you andâ and me!âÂ
âThose potato shaped things are us?â Kaiyo had visibly deflated even with Touyaâs playful tone, âthis is pretty fuckinâ cool if you ask meâ.Â
âFreakinâ,â youâd gently chided, lacking any heat for it to sound truly scolding at the time, too pleased by Kaiyoâs excited dancing. You recall the relaxed smirk on Touyaâs lips and how heâd pressed a kiss to your shoulder, a rare moment of him being truly at ease and present.Â
âAnd the heart, why sâit blue and not red?âÂ
âBecause of your fire, dad!â Kaiyo grinned as he lifted his arms, mimicking the pose of a hero, âI hope I have blue flames, just like youâ.Â
Fragile. You'd watched on as Touyaâs expression became strained, closing the card and setting it on the table, âI guess we better keep it somewhere safe since you worked so hard on itâ.Â
Into the folder it went.Â
You decide to make the leap the following morning, allowing Kaiyo to sleep a little longer while you sift through your shared wardrobe for a suitable outfit. Work had happily allowed you a day off â even though they were chronically short staffed, you didnât often call in sick so they were glad to give it to you.Â
Usually Kaiyo would be dropped off with his sitter, an older woman known in the neighbourhood for fostering children. Sheâd been around for a long time, had seen and worked with many a criminal, and she understood young people more than you could comprehend. You trusted her with your son, trusted that even if he unknowingly slipped up she wouldnât say a thing.Â
But today that wasnât necessary. You feel the fabric of the small knitted sweater between your fingers, frowning at the aggravating itch. He wouldnât wear this, too scratchy, but it was also the closest to nice clothing he had.Â
It isnât like youâre living in poverty, but one mistake and it could very well be a truth for you. Clothes were fine as long as they fit â Kaiyo loved the little band tees his father would bring him more than anything, he didnât care much for formal wear.Â
The unbidden image of Touyaâs displeased scowl flashing through your thoughts is enough for you to put the sweater back. Forcing Kaiyo to conform for the sake of his wealthier relatives, indicating that your own reality was something lesser, is something you wouldnât do. Something Touya would hate you for.Â
A small lump curled up beneath the futon covers begins to move. Kaiyo stirs, almost as if he can feel your turmoil, sleep lined eyes searching for you.Â
âMa?âÂ
âMorninâ, handsome,â a smile pulls naturally at your lips and warmth unfurls in your chest when he reaches for you. Half of his hair is pressed flat to the side of his head where heâd laid.Â
He blinks slowly from your lap, his fathers nose wrinkling as he surveys the clothes youâd been mulling over. Itâs an unspoken question.Â
âI have a surprise for you so I wanted to find something nice for you to wear,â you tell him, hand rubbing along the length of his back. He perks up noticeably, foot kicking out against the sweater youâd just been holding.Â
âDonât like that one,â he says. You laugh, eyes closing for a moment to silently send thanks to Touya, even if he had just been a fleeting piece of your imagination.Â
âThought so,â you murmur, leaning forward to move it aside, âpick something for yourself, then. Make sure itâs something youâll feel good in, because weâre going to meet some new people todayâ.Â
âWho?â he asks, mouth wet and shaped into an âoâ as he fists his hands into another one of his dark coloured t-shirts.Â
âYou know how a lot of your friends have more than just a mother and father?â
He mumbles a dejected âyesâ.Â
âWell, I know youâve been missing dad so I thought we might be able to connect with him in a different way,â you explain, helping him lift his pyjama shirt over his head and refraining from pinching his belly.Â
âWhat would you say if I told you⊠I was going to take you to see your grandma right now?âÂ
âGrandma?!â he squeaks from behind the clean shirt you loop over his head, frowning then as you help him push his arms through the sleeves, releasing a small noise of complaint.Â
âThatâs right, your dad's mother,â â your smile dims slightly while he insists on dressing himself, reminded of how quickly the time has passed, how much he was growing â âI guess he didnât talk about his family a lot did he?â
Kaiyo shakes his head excitedly, bouncing on his toes as he struggles to tug his pants over his clean underwear. He relents and allows you to do up the fiddly top button of his trousers.Â
âThatâs not allâŠâÂ
âMore?!â
âYou have an auntie and two uncles,â you tell him, and his hands fly to cover his mouth as he begins to dance with excitement. His joy is contagious, you feel it fill you and spill over as you pull him back into your lap, holding him tightly.Â
Rei and the siblings, that had been the deal. No Endeavor. Touya may forgive the former, but never the latter. You wouldnât do that to him.
It isnât strenuous getting him out the door, but it is taxing to get him to the station, hair once again tucked under a knitted beanie despite the day's warmth. He jumps over the cracks in the pavement, follows the pattern with his feet, stops to greet every stray he sees.Â
And you let him. Because his happiness is your own, and you dread to imagine him without it. Maybe it was selfish for you to cover his ears to the cruelty around him. He knew of fear, pain and crime, he knew that people sometimes did bad things to others. But it had never been personal to him, not yet.Â
Perhaps the biggest question as a parent was just that â at what point do you expose your children to what may hurt them?Â
You had told Rei the cover story ahead of time, embarrassed by your own lies, but sheâd been understanding. Gentle. Somehow it only left you more ashamed.Â
You wanted to preserve the innocent lense in which he viewed the world, wanted to encase the image he held of his father in amber. Because when youâre a child, the power of those traumas stay with you, chemically alter you; they become the epicentre of your nightmares, they shape your convictions and morals, they fuel your will. Touya knew that more than anyone.Â
You observe Kaiyo while he watches the surroundings change, clutching the backrest of his seat as he looks out the train window, propped up on his knees and ignorant of the glare from the elderly woman beside him. Folded on her lap is the morning newspaper, a grainy black and white photo of flames and the words âWhere is Endeavorâs Villainous Son?â printed across the front.Â
You adjust the hat, his eyes fixed on the moving landscape. Heâd never been this far out of the Kanagawa prefecture, Touyaâs unease with regards to your safety always taking precedence over the freedom to explore, so you let him press his nose to the glass and laugh as his voice begins to vibrate with the train.Â
âDo you remember the names I told you?â
âYumi!â
âFuyumi,â you emphasise, tucking the tag by his neck back into the confines of his shirt, âwho else?â
He holds out his fist, fingers unfurling one by one as he counts, seeking your praises as he goes. âFuyumi⊠Shouto⊠NatsuâŠo⊠Natsuo!â
The two hour journey passes in what feels like a minute. With one blink the train arrives in Shizuoka, slow as it pulls up to the second platform, the anticipation knotting thickly like yarn in your gut. Kaiyo, as perceptive as he can be, is bubbling with too much enthusiasm to notice your inner turmoil.Â
You hold him on your hip, arms pressing him close into your chest as the sliding doors part, and step into the throngs of people waiting to board the train. As if youâd been in a soundproof bubble the noise of the city amplifies, a cacophony of voices and cries and whistles echoing uncomfortably in your ears. There are suits everywhere, hats tipped over eyes, too many unknowns in such a crowded space.Â
The relief of stepping out onto the clear street almost buckles you. Kaiyo is squirming in complaint, wanting to be put back on the pavement but you hike him up a little higher. You couldnât let him down, couldnât let him out of reach, couldnât let anyone take him.Â
âSorry baby, you can walk soon. I just need to find the car firstââ
Youâre interrupted then by a low, nasal voice, startling you to pivot on your feet. Behind you stands a large figure, bowler hat held politely to his chest as he bows forward. Kaiyo shrinks into the crook of your neck at the sight of a stranger, sensing your unease. The man repeats your name, the well groomed moustache sitting on his top lip moving as he speaks, curled into spirals at either end. Heâs formally dressed, wearing a three piece suit and a large black topcoat.Â
âThat is you, correct?â
Grappling at your thoughts, you recall the riddle that you had given to Rei after her suggestion of having you picked up. She hadnât wanted you to make your own way there, adamant that the family staff would drive the two of you to her home, and you gave in only at the promise of a safeword.
You inhale to steady yourself. âWhat is it that, given one, youâll have either two or none?â
His eyes soften considerably but it does nothing to soothe the tension, only when he gives you the answer do you let yourself relax. âA choice,â he says, âmy apologies. I should have been more considerate of your circumstancesâ.Â
Circumstances. What a kind understatement.Â
âMy name is Ono Hiroki, Iâm under the service of Ms. Himura and will be your driver,â he continues with a well meaning tilt to his head as he leans towards Kaiyo in greeting, âand what is the young master's name?â
You feel your son shift beneath your chin, presumably to look up at Hiroki, but he remains stubbornly quiet. âThis is Kaiyo,â the grip he has on your shirt lessens at the sound of your voice, âwe appreciate you coming out here to meet us but⊠please donât refer to him with that titleâ.Â
Touya would turn his nose up if he heard. You can almost imagine the shiver that may have run down his back just now, wherever he may be, and the thought forces you to hide a smile into Kaiyoâs knitted hat.Â
âOf course,â Hiroki assents, and he begins to lead you towards the car. You cringe at how obviously it stands out amongst the more common models, clearly something owned by someone with great wealth and status. Even with having chosen your best outfit, the clothes on your back suddenly felt like straw, cheap and unfit for the occasion.Â
The drive is smooth, though your sense of time becomes warped â had someone asked you how long it took to arrive, you wouldnât have an answer for them. Kaiyo, just as he had done on the train, pressed his nose and fingers to the window; leaving behind murky smudges against the glass.Â
As the car pulls to the curb youâre left feeling alienated by the neighbourhood. Worse, Hiroki steps out and speeds around to your door, opening it for you with a reflexive bow.Â
It feels⊠uncomfortable.Â
The property itself is walled off from the street and the building is large, though youâre sure thatâs only in comparison to your own homes. Youâre drawn in by the greenery that surrounds it, though the trees were likely put there for the sake of privacy the garden was clearly a labour of love.Â
It appears to be a single story house, the roofs tiled dark brown with broad waves and an exterior hallway that frames around each room. You could picture Rei tending to her garden while her children sat on the veranda in the summer months.Â
It was beautiful.Â
Hiroki slowly leads you up the path, the gravel between each step crunching beneath your shoes. The pace can be attributed to Kaiyoâs adamance in standing on each individual stone, which the man kindly indulges.Â
The entrance is made up of a large sliding door with plaster slitted windows. Hiroki pushes it across and moves aside to allow you into the house. You murmur in wonderment at the width of the genkan, the wall above the shoe cupboard lined with traditional calligraphy.Â
âYesâ itâs fine! Iâll bring them throughâŠâ
A sweet, familiar voice echoes throughout the entryway. Kaiyo tucks himself against the back of your knees as Fuyumi rounds the corner, socked feet slipping slightly on the wooden flooring in her excitement.Â
Her lips part to greet you, the words caught in her throat as her gaze is drawn to the movement behind your legs. Typically Kaiyo could be quite rambunctious around others, loud and eager to befriend others. Here you can feel his anxiety, how small he must feel in this large, unfamiliar place.Â
Fuyumi, too, is at a loss for words. A little pale, teary eyed as she blinks, visibly composing herself in front of you both. âItâs good to see you again, Fuyumi,â you say as the silence stretches on, taking pity on her.Â
Her demeanour lightens, and she appears grateful. Somehow her awkward loss of words and your son's hesitance lent you courage even if you, too, did not have your footing.Â
âHow about we take off our shoes and make proper introductions?â the question ends with a soft hum, a gentle verbal push, reaching back to pluck the hat from Kaiyoâs head.Â
His hair is mussed, cowlicks pointed in all directions after being pressed beneath the yarn. You run your hand through it, wetting the pads of your fingers to flatten some of the more unruly curls down until theyâre neat. The red is brighter in the sunlit genkan, and Fuyumi does well to conceal her sharp inhale.Â
Kaiyo steps forward, nervously wringing out the material of his t-shirt, and Fuyumi lowers herself to his height as if approaching a cornered animal. Tender with her motions, she reaches out to still his anxious tic, ducking her head to smile where he can see it. A teacher, you remember.Â
âItâs so wonderful to meet you Kaiyo. Iâm your aunt Fuyumi,â she says. He turns over his wrist and takes three of her fingers into his fist, head nodding forward in what you know to be a bow.Â
âNice to meet you, aunt Fuyumi,â he replies.Â
âDonât worry about formalities, sweetheart,â she uses her free hand to straighten out the hem of the shirt, her eyes flickering over the logo with some recognition, âyou can call me âYumi. You are my nephew, after allâ.Â
Kaiyo straightens his back, overjoyed by the privilege, and looks up to share the feeling with you. If you could read his thoughts youâd guess it was something along the lines of told you her name was âYumi, mama.Â
âNatsuo isnât here yet as he stayed overnight at his girlfriend's dorm,â Fuyumi continues as she rises to her feet, still keeping a firm hold of Kaiyoâs hand, âbut mother and Shouto are in the tatami room. She likes having all the doors open on a day like this while we sit together, would you like to meet them?â
âYes!â. In his excitement he pushes up onto the tip of his toes, shedding his timid attitude and grinning so wide his cheeks begin to pinken. Itâs infectious, Fuyumi brightening considerably at his sudden comfort in her presence, and she begins to guide you both through the house.Â
Soft spoken murmurings become louder as you approach the open sliding door into what you presume is the tatami room. Kaiyo pauses a few steps before, hidden behind the panel, waiting until youâre close enough for him to wrap an arm around your thigh.Â
âYouâre ok, baby,â you whisper warmly, âletâs go in togetherâ.Â
You enter the room with an awkward gait, slowed by the weight of your son against your leg, the matts firm beneath your feet. Immediately you are embraced by the scent of earth and autumn bellflower. Rei is seated on a pale green cushion across from Shouto, cross legged and holding a steaming cup of tea with both hands, on the table between them is a vase blooming purples and blues. You garner their attention, self-consciousness twisting uncomfortably in your chest as they appraise you and Kaiyo, a part of you always ready to jump to his defences.Â
But the two, despite the cool air and unreadable expressions, only seem to thaw as their eyes fall to your son.Â
The light knock of Shoutoâs mug levelling atop the table surface brings you above water. âGreet your grandmother properly, sweetheart,â you step further into the space and lower to your knees, Kaiyo mirroring your actions with caution, facing Rei with his hands resting politely on his knees.Â
You bow forward, thank you for having us Ms. Himura, and watch with fond exasperation as Kaiyo leans until his forehead is touching the tatami in your peripheral. âItâs nice to meet you, grandmother. Itâsâ itâs nice to meet you, uncle Shouto,â he recites, âmy name is Kaiyo!â
You smile at the force behind the words, as if heâd practised them in his mind repeatedly before arriving. Rei appears to come to the same conclusion, returning the words and beckoning him to sit beside her, and Fuyumi ushers you to take a seat by Shouto.
In closing the distance Rei appears mystified, eyeline wet as she blinks back the tears, hands lifting to cradle your son's face in her palms. Kaiyo tenses for a moment on contact, shoulders relaxing as her thumbs graze over the swell of his cheeks. You wonder who she was truly seeing as she looked at Kaiyo, a little boy almost identical to her own. âMy hands are a little cold, arenât they?â her voice is soft, weak. Thereâs an intonation of grief, of regret, and an apology in her eyes.Â
And your son, ever loving and perceptive, covers them with his own as if to tell her it doesnât bother him in the slightest. Then he shifts closer on his knees until heâs tucked against her chest, her chilled touch running along the length of his back as she holds him. At your side you feel Shouto exhale a short, hot breath of emotion.Â
âTea?â
You look to see Fuyumi has set out more cups, now with a pale cream teapot in her grip, unphased by the temperature as tendrils of steam wisp and dance from the spout. Along the curve of her jaw is a single tear, and she tilts to wipe it on her shoulder with a weak sniffle. You feel it too, pulling the sleeves of your shirt over your wrists to conceal the trembling, lifting your chin to keep the emotions behind your eyelids.
âThatâd be great,â you nod, accepting the cup that Shouto slides towards you, âthank youâ.Â
Youâre tempted to thank Fuyumi again as you bring the ceramic to your lips, a slight sting to the skin of your palms and your lower lip, breathing in the potent scent of green tea. This family must enjoy it a little stronger, steeping the leaves for longer, the bitterness heavy on your tongue. There is at least some respite in the distraction it provides â you could not talk if your mouth was busy.Â
Kaiyo ignores the silences, leaving his grandmother's lap to squeeze himself next to Shouto. You try not to laugh, the youngest at a loss for what to do as your son looks up at him in wonderment and admiration, though it is hard to restrain yourself at the barrage of questions Kaiyo targets him with.Â
âAre you really going to be a pro hero, uncle Shouto?â
âI am,â he replies solemnly, âIâll be a hero that my family can rely on. Do you want to be a hero?â
âHell no!âÂ
âKaiyoââ
âIâm going to go to space,â he barrels on without a care, too wrapped up in his own passion to recognise the informality, but with Reiâs quiet laugh you realise there was no need to worry. As Kaiyo stumbles over his words about asteroids and comets, about how the sunset on mars is blue and isnât that so cool, Shouto seems to relax even further.Â
âHe doesnât think heâs good at talking to children,â Fuyumi whispers at your side, âbelieve me, Kaiyo is doing him a favourâ.Â
Even as the time passes Shoutoâs tea remains steaming in his left hand while yours begins to cool, and Rei observes their back and forth with an autumn bellflower petal between her fingers, gently as she handles it like it were something precious. Thereâs no tension, any growing pains soothed as Kaiyo soaks up the attention, the beating heart of the room.Â
âIâm gonna go to space anâ clean up all the junk,â he announces. A goal that youâd heard many a time, manifested in his fathers arms one evening as theyâd sat together watching a pre-quirk era documentary about space travel.Â
âPro heroes came along and suddenly we forgot everything that used to be important to us,â Touya muttered, âgoing to space isââ
ââa hero's job in its own right,â Shouto says.Â
You do well not to drop your drink as Kaiyo launches himself into Shoutoâs lap, one of his arms outstretched to not spill his own while the other steadies the boy to his chest. Gleeful, childish laughter wells throughout the room, paired with the balmy sun and the whistle of a Japanese tit flitting through the gardens.Â
âDad told me that too,â you feel as the mother, the sister and the brother all hold their breath at the mention of Touya, the one topic they werenât sure if they could even touch upon, âdo you really think so, uncle Shouto?âÂ
âI doâŠâ he shifts, hugging Kaiyo only after glancing at you for permission, â...and you donât need to prefix my name with âuncleâ every time. You can be casualâ.Â
âPrefix?âÂ
âA word that comes before another,â you interject gently, âhe means you can just call him Shouto, babyâ.Â
In that instance your back straightens at the sound of another voice ringing throughout the house, low and distant. âIâm home,â they shout with familiarity, âsorry Iâm late!â.
Fuyumi jumps to her feet, leaving to meet the new arrival, and Kaiyo watches her go with a chubby fist curled into Shoutoâs sweater. He pats his hand awkwardly to Kaiyoâs thigh in reassurance, âdonât worry, itâs just Natsuo. Heâs my other older brotherâ.Â
Kaiyo lessens his grip, tentative as he watches the open doorway, and you canât help but to reflexively reach out to pinch his cheek. âItâll be fine,â you murmur.Â
Your first impression of Natsuo is that heâs much bigger than his siblings. He mustâve inherited his build from his father and his demeanour in spite of him, because even with the chill that he brings, his grin is refreshing. The type of person that sets you at ease and wordlessly invites you in, that actively wants you to feel welcomed.Â
âWow, youâre really here. Youâre reallyâŠâ Natsuo's throat bobs as he swallows his next words, silenced by Fuyumiâs encouraging touch. Rather, he hastily greets his mother with a kiss to the cheek, and then he settles down at the table facing Kaiyo.Â
A litany of emotions flicker through his face, like he wasnât sure how he was supposed to feel. Even so, his smile doesnât waver as he introduces himself to you, nervously rubbing his neck as he bows.Â
âAnd you must be Kaiyo. Iâm Natsuo, I guess that makes me your uncle,â he inhales deeply, chest expanding and falling, âyou⊠you really do look like your dadâ.Â
He sounds mournful. Kaiyo senses the change in atmosphere, though he doesnât understand it, and the anxiety settles into his restless fingers as they pick a thread loose from Shoutoâs sweater.Â
Fuyumi lightly swats at him: âNatsuo, youâre freaking them out!âÂ
He gives a wounded complaint, dramatic only in a way you can find with siblings as he clutches at his bicep, and Kaiyo laughs. Like it was called upon, the sun moves from behind a cloud and brightens the room.Â
âSorry, buddy. I didnât mean to be awkward, I was just surprised,â he says.Â
Kaiyo slides down from Shoutoâs lap, the youngest briefly forlorn at the loss before schooling his expression once more. âItâs ok, mama said I look like dad too. Thatâs why Iâm so handsome,â he grins triumphantly.Â
Your chest knots tightly at the spotlight it shines on your relationship with Touya, thoughts running amok with assumptions of what they must think of you, whether they approve of how you have raised Kaiyo. But despite your inner conflict the family donât flinch, in fact â they smile with him.Â
âTouya was indeed a beautiful little boy,â Rei briefly looks at the purple petal still held between her fingers, âI have a lot of pictures here. Would you like to see?âÂ
Kaiyo scrambles, almost knocking the table as he stands, âyes please, grandmother!â
Thereâs an air of nostalgia as she leans down to take his smaller hand into her own, in the way he looks up with love, height falling just short of her hip. The last time she had seen her children this size had been before she was sent away. You canât even begin to comprehend such a loss.
âJust 'grandma' is fine,â she assures, and Kaiyo bounces with each step as they leave to find the photographs.Â
You realise, then, that you are left alone with the siblings. Fuyumi pours more tea, the sound of running water loud in your ears, Natsuoâs words barely audible to you.Â
âI wanted to thank you,â he says, cup in hand with his thumb anxiously tapping the rim, âfor being there for Touya when we couldnât be. For bringing Kaiyo here even when you have every right to distrust usâ.Â
The words pick away at the composure youâd maintained throughout the morning, their gratitude, while completely genuine, feels undeserved. In the grand scheme of things your relationship to Touya had not changed much at all, perhaps heâd staved off his mission for a while to play house with you, but the outcome was the same.Â
âIt isnât you that I distrust,â the âEndeavorâ goes unspoken, âI wanted Kaiyo to keep his connection to his father. And you donât need to thank me, I didnâtâŠâ
Didnât help him. Didnât save him. Didnât stop him. You only loved him. You laid with him in darkness and thought if you held him tight enough that something might crack, that the light might get in.Â
âWhat I did wasnât enough,â you tell them, the words broken with your wet exhale, âit was your actions, your dedication to understanding him. Itâs⊠itâs you I should thank, Shoutoâ.
âStill,â Fuyumi is tender as she speaks, her hand resting between your shoulder blades, âknowing that all that time he wasnât alone, knowing that he had you, it means a great deal to us allâ.Â
Even if he hadnât been alone for those few years, there was still a rotten past from before he met you that he wouldnât touch. Touya, stone faced and eyes narrowed, watching you from beneath the sheets of his hospital bed as if he were a wounded animal. Your slow, telegraphed actions, promising respite. Thatâs why despite wanting to stay away from you, he couldnât â because you saw who he was, and you still loved him. The burning flesh, the distended skin, the smoke and the blood. You saw the bodies on the news, you saw the flames across the city, and you still loved him.Â
Maybe that was the only thing you got right; because there isnât much else worse than someone loving the potential of who you could be, or loving someone youâre not. In the end, you think, we all want to be seen first and loved second.Â
âI do think heâs worried about you,â Shouto interjects plainly, â heâs not directly asking about your wellbeing because he doesnât want to reveal your identity, but the staff say heâs restlessâ.Â
âYou can be quite perceptive, Shouto,â Fuyumi says.Â
âA friend of mine has told me that before,â thereâs a flicker of a smile pulling at his lips and it warms his expression. If you needed to attach a word to it youâd pick fond.Â
âThough he also said I make all the wrong assumptions about what Iâm seeing,â he exhales through his nose in what you think might be a laugh, âthatâs why I went to my mother first. This seemed⊠too important to be wrong aboutâ.
âIâm truly grateful for your discretion,â you wipe a tear along the heel of your hand, ignoring the sting in your sinuses, âand for your acceptance of usâ.
âYouâre our family now,â Natsuoâs grin widens, âand I canât say I wasnât curious âbout the kind of person my brother fell in love withâ.
You knew what Touya would say to that. You're too good for me, I donât want to hurt you. You shouldâve seen through it then, with every premature apology. People only say those things when they know theyâre going to hurt you.Â
Over your thoughts you hear the siblings begin to talk again with affection, your eyes drawn to the empty end of the table. You should be here, you think, I wish you were here.Â
Kaiyo returns excitedly with a large picture frame held to his chest, the paint worn and flaking, encasing an old school photograph of Touya. His uniform is buttoned to the top, face youthful and pale, not a scar to be seen. You recall his discomfort with high collared clothing, always irritable against his sutures.Â
Following behind is Rei with an album of family pictures. Some of them have been awkwardly cut, some burnt along the edges, some faces notably scribbled over with a pen almost out of ink.
âMama look, he really does look like me. And dadâs hair was white! Did he colour it like that, too?â
âNo sweetheart,â you murmur with gaze fixed to the page as it turns in Reiâs lap, the siblings all gathered around to look, âremember, he told you he had red hair like yours, but it changed like magicâ.Â
âSo cool,â he mumbles in awe under his breath, âdad is so coolâ.Â
Rei stiffens minutely. Maybe that, too, was uncomfortably familiar.Â
The conversation continues into the late afternoon, moving only to sit beneath the clear skies and stretch your legs, Rei guiding you along her well loved flowerbeds. They tell Kaiyo stories of his father, diluted but true for the most part, their smiles tightening with the memories. It feels odd, wrong, mourning a man that is very much alive. You give them a piece of him and in exchange, they offer one back as the hours pass. You come to know another Touya â their Touya â and when you line him up aside your own you find that they arenât all that different. Â
As Kaiyoâs confidence grows with his newfound family he begins to wander. Natsuo lifts him into the air and he laughs joyfully, a sound you wish you could solidify and keep by your breast, and they take off to hide in the house with Fuyumi close behind.Â
âAre you sure itâs ok for him to play indoors? Iâd hate to leave any messââ
Rei smiles. The light reflects against the crown of her head forming something of a white halo and Shouto is at her side, eyes softening at his mothers happiness.Â
âI assure you itâs alright,â she says, âtruthfully I think Iâve missed the messâ.Â
You think of toys left astray, crayon smudging cheap wallpaper, juice rings staining the coffee table. Marks of your little boy left all around the apartment. Touya cursing as he steps on a building block, hopping on one leg theatrically to make Kaiyo laugh. Touya spilling the warm bottle of milk as he falls asleep and Kaiyo on his chest, exhausted from a day without rest.Â
âI know what you mean,â you reply.Â
Shouto only blinks. You couldnât imagine that he was allowed to make much of a mess at all, and that thought alone makes you ache. His brow furrows then, and anticipation settles in your gut.Â
âThere was something we wanted to ask of you now Kaiyo is distracted,â he seeks Reiâs support as he talks, and she nods gently before turning to face you.Â
âAs weâve told you⊠Touya is not being cooperative to treatment. In all honesty, we are getting anxious that he will be removed from the programme,â she says with regret, âyou are free to refuse. But as you suggested when we first met, I thought he might benefit from knowing youâre safeâ.
It feels as if the ground beneath your feet has steepened, a weightlessness flooding through your chest, and you reach for the closest pillar on the veranda to steady yourself.Â
âYouâll let me visit him?âÂ
âStrings can be pulled to get you a visitor's pass,â Shouto confirms sagely, âtypically it is for professionals or family. Which you now areâ.
You hadnât even let yourself entertain the idea of being able to see him again. The possibility of hearing his voice, of holding him again, felt too good to be true.Â
âAnd Kaiyo? Where will he stay?â you ask, âI canât take him with me, I donât want him to see his father like thatââÂ
Approaching you from the house is the soft, pitter patter of socked feet. You feel a weight fall on your back, Kaiyo interrupting to wrap his limbs around your waist and neck, giggling into your nape. Natsuo lands unceremoniously on the tatami matts, leaning himself against the inside of the sliding door panels with pink blossoming on his cheeks, âdamn, kid. Youâve got too much energyâ.
âYour house is so big, grandma,â the words carrying a little embarrassment as Kaiyo says âours is a lot smallerâ.
âSometimes houses are too big,â Natsuo reassures as he slumps forward to rest his chin against his fist, âyou can get lost and feel lonely in a big house. I bet at your place, you can always find your mama, huh?âÂ
He nods, bouncing on the balls of his feet and rocking your body forward with the motions, âdoes that mean dad was lonely in the big house?âÂ
Reiâs hands wring tightly in her lap, the question pulling a forlorn atmosphere over the three, and youâre quick to try and rectify it. âEven if he was, he wonât be anymore because he has you,â you say as you twist your body to pull him into your arms, squirming as your touch curls against his ticklish stomach, âisnât that right?âÂ
âYes,â he stammers between deep inhales, giggles tumbling from his lips and ringing across the garden. Rei reaches to thread her fingers through his hair, the red stark against her skin.
âYou are both free to sleep in my guestroom tonight,â she offers warmly in response to your earlier concern, âwe will watch him while youâre busy tomorrowâ.Â
âWe can have a sleepover!â Natsuo shouts, the excitement forcing him to sit straight and eyes gleaming. Kaiyo gasps, mirroring his uncles enthusiasm as he clings to your shoulders. Shouto, however, remains plain faced as his gaze flickers between the two.Â
âIs it really that fun?â he asks. You hide your abrupt laugh into Kaiyoâs hair as Natsuoâs expression settles into disbelief.Â
âWhat? Youâve never had a sleepover in the dorms?â
âWe have a curfew,â Shouto shrugs, and Natsuo guffaws.
âWhat the f⊠heck is wrong with your schoolââ
As they bicker you observe contentment settle around Rei. A gentle breeze passes through the shrubbery and you hear the leaves rustling, light breaking through the canopy above and dancing along the grass. Fuyumi calls everyone back into the house as the scent of curry is coaxed out into the open, and you all make your way to the dining area.Â
The night comes sooner than you expect. Kaiyo whines at the full feeling in his stomach, cheeks orange and smattered in sauce. Apparently Rei brought over all the childrens things during her move â everything, from toys to certificates to baby clothes, and youâre offered the hand me downs with a wistful smile.Â
Aside from the red sleeves the shirt is white, a flame embroidered into the centre and the word fire written below it. Then youâre given an old blanket, slightly thread bare and clearly well loved. It is a light purple, faded after years of being washed, and dotted with stars. Itâd belonged to Touya, sheâd said, he always loved stars. Kaiyo clutches it tightly to his chest where he lay across from you on the guest futon.Â
âDid you have fun today?â
The covers shift, a tell tale sign that heâs kicking his feet. âYes mama,â he mumbles, nose wrinkling as he fights to keep his eyes open, âI feel really happyâ.Â
âI love you baby,â you hum fondly, leaning over to needlessly readjust the covers once more, if only for an excuse to kiss his forehead again, âare you sure youâll be alright while Iâm gone tomorrow?âÂ
Kaiyo nods, cheek turned against his pillow, jaw already slackening as he succumbs to sleep. It isnât home, thereâs no glowing iridescence on your bedroom ceiling tonight, but the space across from you feels empty as it always does.Â
âWatching you two sleep soundly together was the happiest Iâd ever been,â heâd said. You have no doubt in your mind that he had been telling you the truth.Â
When you're pulled into consciousness it happens gently, the house so quiet that itâs unsettling. You were used to rousing with voices in the streets, car engines spluttering as they passed, thuds from the apartment above your own. Here itâs peaceful, a reality that you never thought youâd come close to, and for a moment you can hardly believe youâre awake.Â
The staff offer to make the two of you breakfast but you politely refuse, a possessive twist in your stomach. Accepting help never came easily to you, a deeply buried seed of insecurity in your heart that first leapt to defensiveness. You could feed your son just fine on your own.Â
Rei joins you soon after tending to her potted plants, Kaiyo pushing up onto the tip of his toes to kiss her cheek as she holds her dirtied hands away from his clean clothes, passing by you to wash the soil from between her fingers. âGrandma, will you have breakfast with us?â
âOf course,â she smiles.Â
The rest of the family slowly trickles into the dining room with slow, sleep leaden movements. A full table, a full heart, a full stomach. Breakfast tastes all the better in their company, even Kaiyo seems to have soaked up the serene atmosphere as he quietly recounts a strange memory he had to Fuyumi.Â
Still, the dread begins to settle, your knee bouncing restlessly and concealed by the table cloth. Hiroki enters the house with a deep bow and a lanyard around his wrist, your ID badge clipped securely to the end. âItâs best we leave now to avoid any run-ins with the press,â he tells you apologetically, âthe likelihood is low. But Iâd like to completely mitigate the chance, if possibleâ.Â
Kaiyo lingers in the genkan, shifting on either foot, fiddling with the strings on his sleep shorts. âIâll be back later, baby,â you hook your pinky around his and squeeze, âI promiseâ.
He presses a wet kiss to your cheek and you do not wipe it away, the morning air cooler on the skin where the imprint is left. An off duty officer waits by the curb to follow behind Hirokiâs vehicle â another safety precaution, they say â and he opens the side door on your behalf.Â
âWhat will happen once we get there?â you ask, stare fixed on the streets as they speed past, flocks of people continuing with their days as normal. The thin, plastic card in your hands feels like lead.Â
âUpon arrival the officer will escort you to the reception as I am not permitted to enter the building,â he explains while subtly adjusting the rear view mirror to watch you, âyou will sign yourself in and then youâll just have to wait. Iâm afraid Master Touya isnât aware that you are his visitor, so itâs entirely possible heâll refuse to see youâŠâ
Eventually the words become muffled, a disjointed hum in your ears, and your fingers tighten around the lanyard. You play out every hypothetical in your head, try to script questions in preparation, explanations and excuses. But you come up empty.Â
Anything that you think of would be rendered useless as soon as you laid eyes on him.Â
Pulling in, you survey the land. The facility is double fenced, double gated, and for all intents and purposes it looks to be a prison. There are patients spread out across the grounds, some lounging in the shade while others gathered under staff supervision.Â
Surprisingly you are hesitant to part ways with Hiroki, the man bidding you goodbye with a bow and with promise to pick you up as soon as youâre done. The click of your shoes echoes throughout the building as you walk, the accompanying officer striding ahead of you and silent, beckoning you hastily through the security scanners.
A man stands incredibly tall behind the desktop screen situated atop the main desk, large auburn jackrabbit ears protruding from the crown of his head, paired with two large antlers. As you approach his nose wrinkles.Â
âPass?â he asks, interrupting any chance of you greeting him. You swallow the agitation in your chest and show him the ID card, to which he scans with a handheld device and waits until it beeps. Satisfied, he hands you a clipboard detailing a list of names and tells you to find yours.Â
âWrite your signature in the arrival slot, and when you leave write it in the departure slot. Wait to be called upon in the seating areaâ.Â
You exhale shakily as you sink into your chair, taking in the room, unable to describe it as anything other than impersonal. You had spent a good deal of adulthood working in a clinical setting, and yet this place only seems to make you uneasy. No colourful posters, no informative leaflets, no magazines for people to read. No stickers by the doors, no colour in the staff uniform, guards posted at every entrance.Â
Eventually a red light above the doors to the wards flashes red, a loud buzz cutting through the silence and startling you so harshly your chair scrapes against the tile. A doctor calls your name from the doorway, all eight of her beady eyes observing closely as you get to your feet.Â
âThe patient is being given forty milligrams of quirk suppressant every four hours while he acclimates to his skin grafts. So rest assured he will not burn you,â â you quickly smother your anger at her insinuation â âsince you have a high ranking family pass, contact has been allowed, but if anything goes awry there are guards posted at the doorâ.Â
Youâre barely given time to process her explanation or the new information as she abruptly comes to a halt, almost stumbling into her back. All eight of her eyes blink at you expectantly as the door clicks open, inclining you to enter.Â
âThank you,â you mutter as you pass, flinching when the door once again clicks shut. You steel yourself with a deep inhale, lungs ballooning to expend the anxiety spiking throughout your chest, and lift your head.Â
The air remains there, held in your mouth so as not to make a sound. Touya stands across the threshold with his back to you, facing the wide barred up windows and observing the other patients. Heâs in a loose fitting tâshirt and pants, all white and blending into the rest of the room. Where the collar dips below his nape you can see pink, inflamed skin, and for a moment you are reminded of your first meeting.Â
âFinally decided to come look your failure in the eye, did you?â his voice is harsh, like talking through gritted teeth and lilted with sarcasm. Youâre frozen in place, muscles tensed as if you were bracing for impact, throat swelling just from hearing him speak again.Â
âHate to say it but thereâs no cameras here,â he laughs, a hollow and dry sound as he begins to turn, âso you can drop the fuckinâ actââ
The anger dissipates as soon as he meets your gaze, his seething grin slipping until his jaw slacks in surprise. Even as your eyes sting you cannot blink for fear that heâll disappear, a wishful figment of your imagination. Heâs really here, a few feet from you, flesh and blood and breath.Â
Closer now, you can clearly see there are lines of scarring where his previous body had been sutured together. No longer held by staples and rings, the patchwork skin fitting the curve of his cheeks without pulling taut and tearing. He doesnât wince in discomfort as his expression contorts into disbelief, as his brows pinch and he starts toward you.Â
âWhat the fuck do you think youâre doing here?âÂ
Even with the obvious ire behind his words you arenât frightened by him. Your legs carry you to meet him halfway, reflexively reaching out for him in all the ways you had longed to over the past few months, only for him to catch you by your wrists. His grip tightens in warning, answer me he snaps, but his demand goes ignored. Youâre focused entirely on how cold he feels, sharp around your forearms, just like his tongue.Â
âYouâre freezing,â you whisper.
He huffs in exasperation, a sound you never knew you could miss. âI know,â he says, dropping your arms as his hold loosens and you silently mourn the loss, âitâs like this all the fuckinâ time nowâ.Â
âBecause you donât have your quirk?âÂ
He nods curtly, lips twisting in disdain, the confusion in his eyes sinking through realisation and settling on betrayal. âYouâve been getting cosy with my family, haven't you? Itâs the only way you wouldâve been able to get in here,â he sneers.
You rub away the chill from your inner wrist, following him further into the room as he walks away from you, pleading with him to listen before he makes any assumptions. âTouya, it isnât what youâre thinkingââ
âDonât call me that!â
Your own anger steers you then, frustrated by his refusal to hear you. âTouya. Touya. Touya. Touya,â you repeat childishly until he spins on his heel to glare at you. Iâm going to keep your name in my mouth until my last breath, you think. Arguing, scowling, youâll take anything in this moment as long as he keeps looking at you.Â
âYour mother and sister tracked me down, I didnât go looking for themââ your own fault, you shouldnât have been there ââthey wanted to help me. They wanted to look out for your son!â
He hums like he doesn't believe it, and the forced amusement in his smirk irritates you, crawling hot through your chest. âI bet youâve been enjoying all that bastard's money, right? Heâs got plenty to throw at you and keep you quietâ.
You almost forget to breathe with how his accusation takes you by the throat, the regret crossing his features being the only thing keeping you in the room. Itâs hard to handle his vitriol when it is directed at you, hard to see him like this, so wounded and cornered. In his mind you have gone behind his back, you have sought help from the people who hurt him the most, and you are only here on their orders.Â
Itâs a cycle he cannot break from. Heâs gone again, tethered still to the world, but they are all moving on without him. Heâs gone again, tucked away where no one needs to look at him, and they are all better for it.Â
âI have not met Endeavor and I have made it clear that Kaiyo will not meet him either,â you tell him firmly, âI have not, and will not, accept financial help from that man. You⊠Iâd never do that to youâ.Â
He wilts then, partially limbless as he sinks back against the hospital bed frame tucked beneath the barred window, covers still spotless and unused. As you glance up at the star-less ceiling, you wonder if he manages to get any sleep at all.Â
âWhy are you here?â he asks again, no fight left in his words. Without the bravado to keep him up he looks exhausted, torpid. You join him cautiously, settling yourself on the edge of the mattress.Â
âTo reassure you that weâre okay. That we arenât in any danger,â you murmur, splaying your hand out in the space between your bodies, âweâre worried about you, Touya. Why arenât you talking to them?â
He rests his hand beside yours, stretching out his pinky to hook over your own; the one youâd linked with Kaiyo only two hours before. âWhat good would that do?â he says, âIâm defective and this is just a waste of taxpayers money. Why let me live in the first place?â
The worst part of it all is the grating monotony in his tone, the total disregard for his own life and wellbeing. âDonât say things like that,â you rasp, âit isnât true. You have a real chance to do better nowâ.
âFuck you,â he snorts without malice, giving a light shake of his head as he continues, âI was always going to end up here. You knew the path I was going to take from the startâ.Â
âAnd so did you, Touya!âÂ
The words come hoarse as they catch in your throat, heavy where they press against your nerves. Around you the room becomes smaller, stifling, and yet he is still miles from your reach. Youâd do anything if only it meant wiping that look of indifference from his face.Â
âYou knew, and you could have made the effort to change. Donât act as if this was predestined for you, it was your own choices that led you hereââÂ
âThis wouldnât be happening if you just hadnât come looking for me!â
âOf course I looked for you,â you pleaded with him, âwhat would you have had me tell Kaiyo?â
âThat I was dead,â he replies plainly, âhe wouldâve been better offâ.
âYouâŠâ fatigue floods your system and you feel yourself sink back against the bed frame ââŠyou truly believe thatâ.Â
You don't sob, don't let yourself whimper, you simply let the salty burn overtake your vision and clog your throat, thick and cloying. âDonât cry,â he murmurs, âyou know Iâm bad with cryingâ.Â
âYouâre crying too,â and he laughs humourlessly, eyes still dry. Amongst the quiet you can hear people outside talking, the window panel slightly ajar to let in a continuous breeze, carrying in the scent of spring. You shiver, and when his icy touch begins to move away you upturn your hand, interlocking your fingers together to keep him there.Â
You can feel him watching you as you appraise his belongings. No character, no personality, everything looks brand new and unused. Compared to your stingy one bedroom apartment tucked away in the sparse Yokohama neighbourhoods, this place was completely lifeless. He must hate it here, waking up in yet another unfamiliar place against his will, treated as if he were something to fix.
Though after everything heâs been through, it must be a relief to do something bad and be punished for it, rather than to be punished for all the things you couldnât do.Â
âHow is he?â he asks, ending the drawn out silence.Â
âHe knows something isnât right,â you say, feeling the chill along your wet cheeks, âhe wants to see youâ.
He makes a sound of acknowledgement as he strokes his thumb along the back of your hand. You tighten your grip, still habitually cautious of the sutures that are no longer embedded into his skin. âWhat a kid wants isnât always whatâs good for themâ.
âThatâs priceless coming from you,â you huff, and he knocks his shoulder against yours in response. Bittersweet, you recall how you sat beside him on a hospital bed just like this five years ago, IV hooked into his veins to ward off infection. Hair white, skin mottled, growing accustomed to your freely given affections.Â
You breathe, the exhale long, and lean your weight into his side. Your hands, still interwoven, rest together in your lap. âWe just wanted to be closer to you,â you tell him, your apology unspoken, âKaiyo misses you. I miss you. Even if Iâm angry with you, donât ever believe that we arenât thinking of youâ.Â
The word sorry does not come naturally to Touya, it never has. Remorse was best shown through action, overbearing attention and unnecessary gift giving that only ever left you wondering who heâd stolen from. When he rests his cheek atop your head, nuzzling softly into your hair, you know heâs trying to apologise as well.Â
So you recount everything that happened over the past two weeks. Of nightmares and paranoia, of old photographs and starless ceilings, of autumn bellflowers and cultural dissonance. You rush each story, unsure of how much time you would be allowed in this place, nor how often you would be able to visit. And he listens, slowly sagging against you the more you speak, your bodies two beams upheld by the other.Â
âOh, and the driver called him âyoung masterâ at first,â a small grin pulls at your lips at his amused snort, the only sign that he was still awake, âI know. I told him right away not⊠not to call him that. I knew youâd hate thatâ.
His muscles tense then as an intrusive knock reverberates throughout the room, a white knuckled grip on your hand at the interruption. The doctor from before steps into the threshold and is followed closely by one of the guards, eight eyes blinking simultaneously as she takes in the scene, her expression unreadable.Â
âYour allotted time for visitation is up,â she says, her voice softer than before and perhaps even tinted with regret, âIâll give you a few moments to say goodbye and notify your driverâ.Â
A part of you wishes that the wordless goodbye you gave back at the hospital by the hyacinth beds had been your last, because this time around it is impossibly harder. If his expression is anything to go by you think, if he could, Touya would freeze your hands together in an eternal block of ice.Â
âTouya,â he begrudgingly meets your gaze, âwhat happened to you was undoubtedly a tragedy. Still youâ you hurt people, and you need to accept that. Iâm not going to tell you to forgive anyone, you donât have to, butâŠâ
You lean forward, pressing your forehead to his ââŠeven if others canât, I want you to forgive yourselfâ.
âFor who I was or for who I wasnât?â he mutters, so close you can see the stray white stripes in his eyelashes. The doctor clears her throat quietly where she lingers by the door, and so you get to your feet. His throat bobs as he swallows, expression suddenly pleading as you let him go, and you take his face between your hands.Â
His cheeks are rough, the sore skin raised under the pads of your thumb. âFor all of it,â you say.Â
Youâd always thought that love didnât need to be so complicated. Sometimes it was as simple as I see you, and I understand you. Sometimes it was dirtying your hands to make their life a little easier. Sometimes it simply took the form of an illusion, and all you needed was for someone to point out the tangled lines, the true image irreversibly seen.Â
âWe love you. If that means anything to you, then take advantage of this second chance and let yourself be betterâ.Â
Afraid of testing their patience, you step away from the bed, heading towards the door where your guide awaits. While only four strides, it feels like a lifetime, and you find yourself dragging your feet to stall for time. The thought of leaving him here made your stomach sink, an invisible magnetism tied to your spine and begging you to turn around.Â
You startle as the guard suddenly steps forward, recounting Touyaâs patient number with warning, but the doctor holds her hand out to settle him. Youâre tugged back against a firm chest, familiar if not for the deathly temperature, arms circling firmly around your waist.Â
Their presence falls away as he kisses you, and the sensation is new. No awkward angle, no need to be aware of his sutures, no copper tang left on your tongue as you pull back. Once, twice, and thrice â Touya kisses you without regard for time he was wasting, for the people who were waiting to take you home, and you give him every extra second you have.Â
âTell Kaiyo Iâll be out by the time he starts his training at JAXA,â he murmurs. You laugh wetly, finally forced to take your leave.Â
âBetter make that ten years sooner, you hear me?âÂ
The door begins to shut behind you and heâs crying again, eyes dry as he calls out to you.
âNo promises!â
First of all. Oh my god. The second hand embarrassment I had when this man couldn't fuck well but when Neteyam came into view. Sir. Give me a knife I will end it all since it wasn't you yourself đ« đ
part 1 | part 2
đ pairing: neteyam x human fem reader đtags: nsfw, aged up neteyam (obviously), jealousy, alien cultural misunderstandings, oral sex (f receiving) vaginal sex, size kink, voyeurism, brief na'vi oc x reader, mentions of reader sleeping with other na'vi men
masterlist
reblogs are always enormously appreciated!
notes: okay i had to split this into two parts because it surpassed the tumblr word limit đ hereâs part 1, and Iâll post part 2 in a day or two!
adult neteyam art created by the incredibly talented @cinetrix, whose work motivated me to write for adult neteyam in the first place!!
The tsahĂŹkâs hut is cool and dark, offering a much needed reprieve from the hot balmy air of the day outside. Itâs been a quiet day for you, though you canât complain about that; itâs a pleasant change of pace from the usual hectic rush of people that usually pass through.
Itâs one of the rare days that Moâat has left you to tend to the duties of the healing hut alone; it had taken years to reach this level of trust with her, and you find yourself almost deliriously proud to be able to help out. Naâvi medicinal practices are very different to human ones, but your training in first-aid has given you enough knowledge and experience to hold your own when it comes to helping out with the smaller day-to-day ailments that tend to pass through the healing hut.
Besides, youâre always happy to give Moâat a break. She had claimed that she needed time to commune with Eywa, though secretly you suspect that she just likes to take some time to herself in her old age. But thatâs fine â youâve always found helping out in the healing hut soothing, and your heart swells at the fact that Moâat trusts you enough to leave you in charge, even if itâs only for a few hours.
It also helps when your patient is a big, hunky alien warrior with more muscles than brains, who sits in front of you as you smear a herbal paste over the scratches he had gotten in training earlier that day.
Txeyto is not an easy patient; he flinches when you prod his wounds, whines when you clean them, and complains as you smear the paste on his scrapes. Itâs a little irritating, but the sight of his big broad shoulders and chiselled abdomen is enough to soothe the worst of your aggravation.
âAre you nearly finished?â Txeyto complains, flinching away from your fingers once more.
You bite your tongue and force a smile. Patience has never been your strong suit, and Txeyto is certainly testing the short reserves you have left. But heâs very handsome, and very skilled at archery, and you feel that his physical attractiveness outweighs the minor personality flaws.
âYes, just another few moments.â You murmur, keeping your voice low and soothing as though speaking to a child.
Txeyto settles a little when you use the baby voice on him, and you struggle to keep your face blank at the ridiculousness of it all. Men are such children, even the big strong Naâvi warriors that should be above such behaviour. Heâs lucky heâs handsome.
âHow did you get these injuries, hm?â You ask, using a light touch to dab some of Moâatâs specially formulated healing paste onto his scrapes. You keep your fingers as gentle as possible, but Txetyo still winces dramatically.
He perks up at your question, his tails swaying low over the floor where youâre both sat cross-legged. âI have been training very hard. I am one of the best archers in the village now.â
âNo doubt.â You murmur distractedly as you work.
âBut it is important for a tsamsiyu to be competent in many forms of combat, so I must practice my hand-to-hand combat also,â Txetyo continues, apparently forgetting to wince now that heâs talking. âNeteyam has been helping me train.â
Ah. You canât help the face you make at that, and youâre thankful that Txeytoâs back is facing you so that he canât see your expression. You also canât help the way you cast a quick glance towards the entrance to the hut, as though worried that simply speaking the name aloud will summon Toruk Maktoâs eldest son.
âIs that right?â You say, keeping your tone carefully neutral. âSo, heâs the one that got you all scraped up like this?â
Txetyoâs shoulders flex under your hands, and you realise without looking at his face that youâve stung his pride.
âI scraped him up also.â He grumbles, shifting to try and peer over his shoulder. âThey are wounds to be proud of, as I got them in combat.â
You donât think that a couple of minor scratches from wrestling around in the mud with one of the villageâs biggest dickheads count as combat wounds, but you donât argue. You just hum non-committedly, paying more attention to his bruises than is entirely necessary.
âYou should be careful,â You say instead, running your fingers carefully over one of the bruises discolouring the pretty blue skin of his defined bicep. âItâs a shame to see these lovely muscles all bruised up.â
Thereâs a long momentâs pause. It seems as though the cogs in Txetyoâs head are working slowly, because he seems to be struggling to understand your flirty tone of voice. But when it finally seems to click, he turns his head to peer at you with wide, curious eyes.
âAh,â He says, his shoulders squaring as he seems to preen. âYou like them?â
God, he really is a little dumb. But thatâs okay. You donât necessarily need a man with brains.
âMhmm,â You hum, allowing your hand to rest on the bulge of his bicep. âI like strong men.â
Thatâs true, if a little bit of an oversimplification. Youâve lived as a human on Pandora your whole life, but it was only in recent years since youâve reached adulthood that youâve started really paying attention to the people around you. And good lord, you had some impressive specimens to look at.
You find yourself drawn to their athletic and toned bodies, their radiant blue skin, their cat-like grace and agility. Maybe itâs because you had grown up on Pandora with no humans your age other than Spider, but you find yourself especially drawn to your size. The sheer size of their hands alone are enough to fluster you, especially when your brain is flooded with images of those big hands in other contexts.
And luckily for you, thereâs no shortage of Naâvi that are interested in experimenting with humans, too.
Txetyo visibly perks up, his ears twitching forward as he finally seems to notice the way your much smaller hands are lingering on his body as you patch him up.
âI am very strong.â He says, tail thumping against the ground.
You fight the urge to sigh. Heâll never make a great conversationalist, but thatâs alright. Heâs big and strong and handsome, and you just want to relieve some tension.
âI know.â You murmur, your lips quirking a little as you shuffle around so that youâre kneeling in front of him, your knees pressed close to his thighs. âBut I could still kiss your scratches better, if youâd like.â
Kissing wounds better is definitely a human colloquialism that Txetyo doesnât understand, judging by the furrow of his brow, but he doesnât seem to care. He reaches out and wraps a big hand around your waist, and you feel a pulse of arousal low in your belly in response.
âYou like my muscles so much that treating my wounds has aroused you?â He asks, the smugness in his voice impossible to miss.
His pompousness is a little irritating, but you can ignore that because his hands are big and warm and itâs exciting to feel his palm start to push its way under your cotton tank top. The few Naâvi men youâve been with before had been absolutely fascinated with the soft squishiness of your human breasts, so your breath hitches in anticipation as his hand reaches up to grope at your tits over your bra.
Okay, you can probably admit that youâre a little pent up. Itâs probably a terrible idea to allow Txetyo to feel you up like this in the middle of the healing hut, but youâre horny.
If youâre telling the truth, youâve been hoping for a chance like this all week â but thereâs one thing, one irritation, that has been preventing you by interrupting every damn chance youâve gotten alone with any man.
In fact, youâve been interrupted so often and so many times that youâre almost expecting it, even as Txetyoâs big hands squeeze at your tits. Heâs a little rough with it, but heâs so much bigger than you that you suppose thatâs unavoidable â besides, his strength only adds to the thrill.
Then, just like clockwork, as though thereâs some kind of sensor that goes off whenever youâre about to get some, thereâs a rustling sound by the entrance of the hut before the little woven drape covering the doorway is pulled back.
And then, who else would be standing there, but Neteyam. One of the few people on the whole planet that can actually ruin your whole day just by showing his stupid face.
His eyes find you, but his expression doesnât change as he glances over your flustered expression and the hand that Txetyo still has shoved up your top. He tilts his head, and it feels as though heâs examining every damn detail all at once; the ointment smeared all over Txetyoâs bruises from training, the way youâve shuffled so close to Txetyo that youâre practically straddling his thigh, your unsteady breathing behind your mask.
âAh. Am I interrupting?â He asks with a hint of wry humour to his voice, as though he hasnât interrupted every attempt at getting laid youâve made this month.
It has to be on purpose. That, or he has some sort of nearly supernatural sense for when youâre horny, because he always seems to show up every goddamned time. Somehow itâs gotten worse in the last few weeks, too. Youâve barely been able to get a moment alone with whoever youâve been chatting up before Neteyam has appeared, snapping at them to get back to training or duties or whatever lousy excuse heâs been able to come up with in the moment.
âWhat do you want?â You snap, impatient and too strung tight to waste your energy on pretending at politeness.
A very delayed reaction finally hits Txetyo, and he scrambles to remove his hand from the inside of your top. His hand alone is so large that the outline of it is painfully obvious even through your shirt, and you close your eyes with a sigh as he clumsily pushes himself away from you in a rather ungainly attempt at pretending nothing was going on.
âNeteyam!â He blurts, his ears flattening against his skull. Heâs clearly mortified at being caught in such a position by Toruk Maktoâs son, and he overcompensates by attempting to scoot away as though he hadnât even been touching you.
You try not to roll your eyes â youâre used to this, after all. Youâve been with several Naâvi men, but they all seem to have the same sort of embarrassment about actually being open with the fact that theyâve hooked up with you. You canât be all that annoyed about it, you suppose. You understand where itâs coming from. Youâve been around the Omaticaya your whole life, and while the taboo of having Sky People around has faded somewhat, that doesnât mean that anyone is actually willing to admit that theyâve been with you.
Youâre used to it. Itâs fine. Youâre just a little mortified that Neteyam is currently witnessing the scramble for Txetyo to get away from you.
Heâs watching the other man with his head still tilted to the side, his big golden eyes dark in the cool shade of the hut. A muscle in his jaw is flexing, like heâs trying not to laugh.
âI will- I will see you later?â Txetyo whispers to you as he stands. He probably intended for his voice to be low enough that it stayed between just you and him, but the hut is quiet enough that thereâs no doubt Neteyam can hear him just fine.
âMhm. Yeah.â You murmur back, watching Txetyoâs big broad back as he steps away from you, all hasty and flustered.
Txetyo gets as far as Neteyam, whoâs still standing with his arms crossed in the doorway. Neteyam doesnât so much as shift, his eyes dragging with lazy satisfaction over the myriad of scrapes and bruises that he had left on Txetyo during their sparring earlier.
Txetyo shifts on his feet, visibly nervous in the face of his future chiefâs judgement. âAh⊠Will we train again tomorrow, Neteyam?â
Neteyam hums non-committedly, before finally stepping away from the doorway. He brushes past Txetyo, and you wonder if heâs always so dismissive of his fellow warriors or if heâs just being an even bigger dickhead today for some reason.
âWe will see.â Neteyam says shortly, though heâs not even looking Txetyoâs way.
Taking that as the dismissal it so clearly is, Txetyo nods awkwardly before disappearing out of the hut, leaving you and Neteyam alone.
For a long moment, you do your best to avoid looking up. Youâre beyond irritated right now, made so much worse by the fact that your panties are kind of wet and youâre so fucking desperate for attention right now. The little wooden bowls knock together clumsily as you try to arrange them without looking up, but it becomes difficult when Neteyam lowers himself down to sit opposite you.
âThe tsahĂŹkâs hut is a bold place for such activities.â He says, and you donât have to look up to know that thereâs a stupid smug look on his face. âWhat would my grandmother think?â
As he sits down, he places a woven bag by your knee. You donât need to look at it to know what it is; heâs always bringing stuff to the healing hut for his grandmother. Herbs or medicinal plants, fibres for weaving bandages, even animal bones that he had whittled down for needles for suturing.
Even you can grudgingly admit itâs thoughtful; but he only ever seems to bring it when youâre around. Itâs like he just wants to rub it in your face that he excels at everything he does â itâs extremely annoying.
You finally look up, your face already scrunched in a scowl. âWhat do you want?â
He raises his hairless brows at you, an expression he no doubt learned from his father. âI would like my cuts from training treated. What else would I be here for?â
And now you know that heâs just messing with you, because while Txetyo was covered in bruises and abrasions from his tough training session earlier, Neteyam doesnât have a single visible scratch.
âWhat exactly am I supposed to treat?â You ask, voice tight.
Neteyam shifts, proffering you his shoulder, and you see a single scrape along his otherwise flawless striped blue skin. You purse your lips, staring at it in mild disbelief.
âYou canât be serious.â You say, deadpan.
But itâs clear that Neteyam is serious, because heâs already stretching out on the comfy woven rugs of his grandmotherâs hut as if he belongs there. Itâs obvious that he has no intention of moving â he must have come here just to torture you.
You blow out a frustrated breath, the inside of your respirator mask fogging up briefly before rapidly clearing. Neteyam is infuriating. He gets under your skin in a way that no one else does, as though he knows every goddamn little button to press just to aggravate you.
Maybe itâs just a by-product of having been raised as next in line to lead the Omaticaya, or of being Toruk Maktoâs oldest son, but youâve always found Neteyam closed off and distant.
Truthfully, you canât say for certain if heâs always been this way. When you were young teenagers, you hadnât had much contact with him; he was always busy with his own training, and then the whole Sully family had left for Awaâatlu. When they had returned, several years later, Neteyam had been more reserved, and yet somehow even cockier and more confident than ever.
âI donât understand you. Thereâs no need for you to get this scrape seen to, and you know it. You just like wasting my time.â
He just watches you as you complain, his eyes hooded and dark in a way that honestly leaves you a little heated. He doesnât deny it, which only irritates you further. You knew he was just trying to annoy you!
âItâs your job to treat wounds when youâre here, isnât it?â He asks, and you can see the way his tail is lazily undulating behind him, skimming across the woven carpet. Heâs enjoying arguing with you.
You huff out a put-upon sigh, before grabbing two of the jars. The ointment is naturally antiseptic but it goes on with quite a sting; you try not to feel satisfied about that as you coat your fingers in it before dabbing it onto the scrape on Neteyamâs shoulder. Youâre not as gentle as youâd usually be either, your patience is too thin for you to be considerate with him right now.
But this is not Txetyo. This is Neteyam, and he doesnât so much as flinch as you rub the paste over his still sluggishly bleeding scratch, even though you know it must sting. You try not to feel irked by his stoicism.
As you work, Neteyamâs head rolls back. In a move thatâs almost imperceptible, his nostrils flare and he scents the air. You assume itâs the fairly astringent scent of the herbal paste youâve just pulled out thatâs bothering him, and you raise an eyebrow at him.
âProblem?â
His lips quirk, though he manages to keep his expression neutral. âNo. I am simply enjoying being under your tender care.â
You narrow your eyes at him. Heâs mocking you now.
The fact that he had walked in on Txetyoâs hand up your top as he groped at your tits feels like a heavy unspoken weight in between you as you dab at his minor wound. You keep waiting for him to bring it up, to laugh at you for it, but he remains stubbornly quiet as you work, his golden eyes watching you in quiet contemplation.
In fact, heâs never brought up any of the times heâs interrupted you right before you got with someone. Heâs caught you in varying levels of undress, with Naâvi men over you, under you, holding you, touching you, kissing you, but somehow just before anything good actually happened. Every time the men had scrambled away from you as though you were something diseased, mortified at being caught with a tawtute by Neteyam, a man that (for some reason you canât comprehend) they seem to have an awful lot of respect for.
In the beginning, you were inclined to come up with excuses for him; he was Jake Sullyâs oldest son, and was inevitably going to keep track of his peers and where they disappeared off to when they had duties that they should be attending to. But now, you think heâs doing it to spite you specifically. It might be a bit of a self-centred thing to believe, but youâre almost certain of it.
You shift on your knees beside him, raising yourself up a little to ensure that youâve covered all parts of his scrape. You donât want him returning tomorrow to complain that you didnât do a good job.
You have to bite back another sigh as you do so, your thighs rubbing together in a way that sends a sharp jolt up your spine. Youâre horny and needy and so, so resentful of the fact that youâre now treating the same man thatâs the direct cause of your state right now.
Neteyamâs attitude wasnât the only thing that changed in his time away, however. You have to keep your eyes fixed carefully on his bruising shoulder, because if you didnât you know that your gaze would wander, and thatâs a dangerous game to be playing in the presence of someone as perceptive as Neteyam.
But itâs difficult not to look. Time and ocean air has been kind to him; heâs grown as tall as his father, and whatever sort of training or work he had been doing with the Metkayina has resulted in broader shoulders and a more sturdy build than is typical of the Omaticaya. Itâs galling to admit, and makes you feel as though youâve eaten something sour and unpleasant, but Neteyam is hot as hell.
He might be aggravating and smug and too cocky, but no one in their right mind could deny that heâs attractive. Not even you. Especially you, if youâre being honest with yourself, considering your penchant for enormous blue alien men that could snap you in two with a pinkie if they felt so inclined.
God, you really have to think about something else. Youâre so wet that your panties are starting to get uncomfortable, so you focus determinedly on the resentment thatâs still simmering over the fact that Neteyam had interrupted what was promising to be a very productive encounter with Txetyo.
Neteyam shuffles a little where heâs sitting in front of you, and your eyes track the way his muscles bunch and shift under his vibrant blue skin. Damn, but seeing Naâvi musculature up close never gets old, even if itâs Neteyam.
Youâre almost finished with dabbing paste on the tiny scrape (and you hate to admit that it had taken you longer than it should have due to your distraction), when Neteyam half-turns his head towards you.
âMy back is sore, also.â He murmurs, though his eyes remain downcast.
You pause, staring at him. âOkay. And?â
Thereâs a moment where the two of you just look expectantly at each other. When nothing comes of that, Neteyam speaks again.
âYou are playing healer today, are you not?â He asks, and his left ear twitches oddly. âOr is your attention all reserved for Txetyo, hm?â
Your cheeks heat in humiliation and your jaw clenches. You knew he wouldnât be able to help himself from making some sort of stupid comment.
âLay down.â You snap, prickly and embarrassed.
âYes maâam.â Neteyam purrs, probably all satisfied that heâs gotten under your skin. He reclines, all of those lithe muscles flexing and bunching as he rolls over onto his stomach.
You grab another pot of ointment, and then take a moment to steady yourself.
You know that heâs winding you up on purpose, just like always, but you can never figure out why. He doesnât treat you like any of the other men in the village do â they might enjoy fucking you, but theyâre rarely caught dead in public with you, worried about what it might mean for their own reputations.
Neteyam is bolder, more confident; though the burden of responsibility that he carries is unmistakable, he never seems to get caught up with the petty whispering and musings of the village people. Itâs just unfortunate that he seems so set on bothering you.
Your mouth goes dry as your eyes drop mindlessly over the expanse of his long, pretty back. His skin is stretched tight over lithe muscle, little luminescent white freckles glinting like little stars. He looks so smooth, though the flawlessness of his body is marred by thick pale scars that litter his skin, courtesy of the near legendary battle with the RDA that you hear happened off the coast of Awaâatlu.
You glance down, flustered. Fuck. It would be so much easier to hate him if he wasnât physically perfect.
âProblem?â Neteyamâs voice is a little lower in register than it was before, perhaps because heâs lying on his stomach with his head pillowed under his crossed arms.
You twitch. Shit. You had gotten distracted, and had lost yourself staring at him.
âNo. Shut up.â You blurt reflexively, dipping your fingers into the oily ointment used for easing sore muscles.
Neteyam huffs quietly, a sound that could be a grunt or a laugh, but doesnât bother responding. It makes you feel as though youâve lost a game you didnât know you were playing.
Antsy and on edge, you lean forward and survey his strong back properly. When he's laying out in front of you like this you can see the way his back is knotted with tension and his shoulders are hiked up around his ears. It doesn't look too bad, but it can't be comfortable either.
You take one more moment to admire the musculature of his shoulders, before gathering yourself and dipping your fingers into the ointment. It's balmy against your fingers and smells a little bit like blueberries, and begins to tingle when your hand is entirely coated.
"Where does it hurt most?" You ask, your voice quiet.
In the silence, you can hear Neteyamâs throat click when he swallows.
"My neck and shoulders." When he speaks, his voice is a little deeper than expected.
The very first touch to Neteyamâs back pulls a quiet sigh out of him; it sounds like relief.
Considering his size, it takes surprisingly little to have him melting under your hands. Your fingers spread under his scapula, finding a knot in the muscle and pressing in hard. It takes a bit of finagling, but after some firm pressure you feel the muscle begin to soften beneath your touch.
Gaining confidence, you return your kneading fingers to his neck. He really is terribly tense, and shivering spasms flit up and down the muscles of his back in regular intervals as you drag the warm palms of your hands over him. As your fingers work into his tense muscles, he lets out quiet little grunts that are muffled by the cradle of his arms.
âWhy were you so hard on Txetyo during training?â You ask as your fingers dig into the tense tissue of his back. Your voice is unintentionally loud in the quiet of the hut. âHe looked as though he had been attacked by a thanator when he was here earlier.â
Neteyam just grunts. âTxetyo is an overconfident skxawng. He is not nearly as skilled as he thinks he is.â
You click your tongue, dissatisfied with that answer. âI could say the same about you.â
Just like all your attempts to insult him, your words seem to bounce right off him. Stupid thick-skinned bastard. His pretty mouth tilts up in a smile.
âI have the skills to back it up, paskalin.â
Your lips purse at the name, your cheeks hot. God, heâs such an asshole.
When you exert pressure as you run your fingers down his spine, Neteyam grunts softly into his arms. The sound is startling in the quiet, interrupting the steady rhythm of your quiet breathing.
"Does that hurt?" You ask. Your voice comes out a little shakier than youâd like.
"No." Neteyamâs voice comes out in a low, gravelly rumble. The sound of it almost startles you into snatching your hands away, but you manage to refrain yourself. "Keep going."
You just swallow thickly, and try to keep yourself on task. âHe just wants to be better. He was excited to train with youââ
âLower.â Neteyam groans, shifting under your hands.
You clench your teeth. Really, you should probably just walk away from him. Thereâs no real need for you to be doing any of this. Heâs not even injured, and who knows whether heâs telling the truth about his back being tense.
But youâre stupid, and youâve never been good at walking away, from either fighting or fucking. This strange encounter feels as though it lies somewhere in the middle of those two things. Your palms drag down to his lower back, and he flinches briefly before melting under your touch.
His body is so big that itâs difficult to get a good angle to knead properly at his tense muscles, and before you can think too hard about it you swing your leg over his hips. You settle back, perching your weight cautiously at the base of his spine.ï»ż
It's a braver move than you would usually make, but you try not to second-guess yourself â like this, you have so much more leverage to rub at the rigid sinews of his back. You drag your knuckles down the length of his spine and he groans into the cradle of his arms.
You try to ignore the excited flutter in your belly. Itâs just Neteyam. Youâre not actually getting turned on from this; the only reason youâre so affected is because you had been horny with Txetyo. You shift where youâre sitting on his back, but you have to force yourself still almost immediately, because the friction nearly makes your lungs seize.
âComfortable?â Neteyam murmurs, and you can hear amusement in his voice.
âShut up.â You say reflexively, before scowling. âI canât believe you interrupted me and Txetyo just for this. You have, like, one bruiseââ
âItâs a very sore bruise.â He murmurs lazily, sounding unbothered. âDo you think squeezing your tits might help? That seemed to help Txetyo feel better.â
You pause, jaw dropping in indignation. âIâ shut up!â
Neteyam makes a noise that sounds like a snicker, and you dig your fingers down the planes of his back vengefully. His waist narrows into an elegant taper, and when you reach the part of his back where his ass begins to swell, you exert firm pressure against the base of his tail.
If you had done it to a human, you know it would have hurt. But instead the tightness of the muscle unfurls under your fingers, and Neteyam gives a long, low groan. The sound is delightfully gravelly, and you take a breath as you feel molten heat ooze down into your belly and settle between your legs. Itâs not a reaction you had been expecting.
You sit back onto his lower back, avoiding his tail. From here, you have a truly captivating view of how slick his back looks from the ointment, and how his skin glows in the dim light of the hut. His body really is perfect, and your eyes track over the taut shiny scars that litter his skin.
âMmm. May I get up? Or do you want to sit on me a little while longer?â Neteyamâs low voice breaks you out of your stupor, and youâre horrified to find that youâve just been sitting there with your wet panties pressed against his back beneath your thin shorts.
You scramble off him quickly, flustered and clumsy. It had been a bold move to straddle him in the first place, and now you feel very stupid about it.
âYou should apologise to Txetyo.â You blurt, just to say something into the silence.
âWhy are we still talking about Txetyo?â Neteyam has always been a relatively tolerant and even-keeled man, but you can hear irritation beginning to bubble up in his voice.
âBecauseââ You start to say, but then Neteyam rolls over so that heâs laying on his back.ï»ż
Now that he's lying on his back, stretched out all long and lithe, your eyes rove over his face and then down his throat, his chest, his stomach, his hips. Your eyes catch on the protrusion between his legs and stick there, your mouth dropping open in surprise when you see that his loincloth is tented.
âBecause- he⊠you were tooââ You try valiantly to finish your sentence, but your thoughts have scattered to the wind.
Heâs hard. Why the fuck is he hard? Is that just from you rubbing his back? Oh my god, what are you supposed to say? It feels like his hard-on is staring at you.
Neteyam pushes himself up into a sitting position, his hands planted on the woven rug behind him as he pushes himself up so that heâs sitting looming over you. Once heâs upright, Neteyam flexes his shoulders and groans slightly as he goes. It doesn't sound like a pained groan, thankfully.
The movement brings him closer to you than you had been expecting, and you end up freezing. Like this, you can see the way his expression has smoothed into one of relief. His shoulders are looser too, no longer held bunched up around his neck.
Neteyam doesn't seem to notice your close proximity, nor the way you have tensed at the lack of space between them. Youâre not touching, but youâre so close that you swear you can physically feel the air between you.
âIf Txetyo is so upset about being beaten by me in training, then he should focus on getting better instead of slinking away with his tail between his legs and trying to screw you in a corner of my grandmotherâs hut.â
You gape at him like an absolute idiot, floored by the acerbity in his tone. Youâve always thought Neteyam was a bit of a dickhead, but that was mostly because of his nearly insufferable need to always be the best. Always the best warrior, the best son, the best brother, the best future Oloâeyktan. The best role model to his peers.
âSo thatâs what this is about.â You say, your voice coming out distinctly accusatory. âYou donât like that your friends are fucking a human, is that it?â
Neteyam doesnât even bother answering. He just rolls his now loosened shoulders and watches you carefully. He doesn't tell you to back off, or wrinkle his nose at you, or act as though he's repulsed by you. He just stares at you across the miniscule space between you, and that only angers you further.
âIs that why you keep interrupting whenever Iâm with any of the other tsamsiyu?â You demand, fists clenching. âWhat, you donât like that your friends find a tawtute attractive? Is that why you keep cockblocking me?â
Neteyam huffs a quiet snort, as though he thinks youâre being stupid.
âI hear what some of the Naâvi in the village say, about how itâs shameful to be with a tawtute.â You hiss. âI just didnât think youâd be one of them.â
And if youâre honest with yourself, it sort of hurts. Neteyam has always gotten on your nerves with his confusing mix of overconfidence and jagged insecurities, and he had really infuriated you when he had started to interrupt all of those illicit little meetups you had planned with some of the boys in the village, but you hadnât actually thought that he had any disdain for you like some of the other Naâvi.
And then you do something so stupid that it shocks even you.
Your eyes drop back down to the tent in his tewng, eyeing it thoughtfully, before reaching out and running your fingers over the hardened outline of his cock through the fabric with purpose.
Neteyam hisses, and his hips actually lift off the floor in an attempt to follow your touch.
âGod, youâre a hypocrite, arenât you?â You breathe, fighting to keep your voice casual. âHow can you judge your friends for fucking around with me when youâre this hard after just a backrub?â
âTheyâre not my friends.â Neteyam grunts, his jaw clenching as his head tilts back. His hips rock into your hand.
Your touch goes firmer, and then your hand slips under his loincloth. Youâve had plenty of sexual encounters with Naâvi men, but this is different.
This is Neteyam. This encounter feels like proving a point. A very sexually charged point.
His cock is silky smooth and hot to the touch, and you feel a little drunk as your fingers close around it. And damn, it feels big. All Naâvi cocks are big compared to your hands, but this⊠feels different. You were aroused anyway, youâve been feeling pent up all damn week, but now that your hand is on his dick your nerves are fizzing up.
Itâs a surprise when Neteyamâs big hand settles on your waist to tug you closer, and you feel your stomach swoop when he pulls you forward. You donât release his cock even as he pulls you to settle over one of his thighs, your legs slotted in between his, and you can feel him harden even further beneath you.
You wonder absently if it's really you that's causing his very obvious arousal or if it's just a natural consequence of the massage; either way, when his hips flex up towards you, they press right in between your legs.
You shiver almost violently, the sensation of him pressing hot and hard against your core frying your nerves and wiping your thoughts clean. The part of your brain that had been screaming about what a bad idea this whole thing is has become muffled now, and your own hips jerk against his.
âYouâre such an asshole,â You say, though your voice comes out reedy and breathless. âYou of all people donât have a right to talk shit about those guys just cause theyâre into humans, especially when your cock is this hard, and especially considering where your dad came fromââ
He lets out a soft, quiet noise as you move against him, and uses his grip on the back of your top to pull you tighter against him yet again. âDonât talk about my father when you have my cock in your hand.â
It takes what feels like a monumental effort to wrench your hand away from him, and he lets out a wordless grunt of dissatisfaction as his hips twitch in an effort to follow your hand. Itâs delightfully pathetic, and you feel your ego swell at the sheer sense of power that washes over you; itâs a rare feeling, especially when youâre faced with a big blue alien almost twice your size.
âYou should apologise to Txetyo.â You sound like an out of breath idiot. âItâs not like you can judge him for being with a tawtute when youâre that hard from me just touching you.â
Neteyam just stares at you, his jaw clenching and his honey eyes dark as he takes several breaths through his nose. Youâve never seen him like this before; youâve never seen any of the men youâve been with like this before. It looks as though heâs holding onto a thin veneer of control, and you wonder if heâs angry with you, if youâve perhaps pushed him too far.
âThat was never the issue.â He says and fuck, his voice has gone so gravelly. âAnd donât pretend that youâre not wet beneath those clothes of yours. I can smell it.â
Your thighs squeeze together as you swallow hard, struggling to maintain your aura of indifference and no doubt failing.
âThatâs because of Txetyo.â You say, and it tastes like a lie on your tongue. âYou interrupted us.â
Neteyam laughs quietly and humourlessly. His expression suggests that he doesnât find anything about this conversation funny, and his hand is still splayed across your back. Youâre so damn conscious of how big his palm is as it spreads across your spine. Why the hell hasnât he let go of you yet?
âAh, I see.â Neteyam murmurs. âYou would have fucked him in my grandmotherâs hut?â
Your mouth is so damn dry, and you swallow compulsively. âItâs not any of your business who I fuck.â
Neteyamâs smile is grim. âTxetyo would fuck his own shadow if he were nimble enough to catch it. You have terrible taste in men.â
You rear back. Youâre surprised by how much that hurts. Living as a human on Pandora is lonely, and itâs not like you have people lining up outside the human outpost looking to spend time with you. If you want any sort of companionship or intimacy, you have to accept any attention that you can get. And sure, most of that attention comes from men that only want to get their dicks wet, or the experience of being with a tawtute, but itâs better than nothing at all.
âWell, we canât all be the Oloâeyktanâs son.â You say, your voice stiff and cold. âWe donât all have countless suitors throwing themselves at our feet. Some of us have to accept attention from whoeverâs interested.â
Neteyamâs expression shifts, an odd look appearing in his eyes, and your stomach swoops. You donât think you could bear to see pity in his eyes, so you pull away from him, shaking his hands off.
âYour scratch is fine.â You say, your voice thin and a little thready. âYouâre all treated.
âHeyââ
As you stumble to your feet, Neteyam reaches out as if to stop you. You dodge his hands, unable to look him in the eye.
Panic is starting to set in now; what had you been thinking, touching him like that just after he had chided you for flirting with Txetyo in the tsahĂŹkâs hut? God, you feel like such an idiot. He must think youâre so pathetic.
Like a coward, you turn on your heel and flee out of the hut. You need air, you need to be out of the cool darkness of the hut, you need to be away from the overwhelming weight of Neteyamâs presence. Through the blood rushing in your ears you can distantly hear Neteyam call to you, but youâre too desperate to escape from the whole humiliating interaction to stop and listen.
You stagger out of the hut, squinting at the evening light; it seems blinding after spending all day in the dim musty air of Moâatâs healing hut. You pat at your rumpled shirt and creased denim shorts, flustered and frenzied as you try to straighten yourself out.
âTawtute?â
You jerk, gasping, and whirl to find that Txetyo is sitting on a log a few feet away from the hut, apparently waiting for you to finish up with Neteyam. You feel like youâre burning up from a mixture of mortification and confused arousal and youâre certain that Neteyam is about to follow you out.
âIâ I have to go!â You blurt, already stepping back towards the forest.
Txetyo frowns, obviously bewildered, but he doesnât stand. âDonât you want toââ
You donât wait for him to finish. Youâre already fleeing, disappearing into the trees as you run the whole way home.
âââ  ïœĄïŸâ: .✠. :âïŸ
It might be a little cowardly, but you avoid the village for days after that.
You stick to the outpost, watching Norm and Max and the other scientists work. You try not to die of boredom, and you try not to overthink and overthink and overthink.
But you have too much time on your hands as you slink around the outpost, and you canât stop feeling guilty about abandoning your attempts to help Moâat out in her healing hut.
You also canât stop thinking about the shift of Neteyamâs muscles in the low dim light, or the silky hot feel of his cock in your hand, or the soft breathy grunts he had let out as his hips rocked. It feels like the experience has actually rewired your brain, as though youâll never recover from it.
Growing up on Pandora as a human has been lonely. The only other human your age is Spider, who had become the closest thing you have to a brother â and you love him even when you feel like throttling him, but sometimes you just yearn for more.
You want companionship, you want understanding, you want romance, you want sexual intimacy. You donât think itâs too much to ask for, and if you have to turn to big nine-feet-tall Naâvi warriors who just want to say theyâve had the experience of sleeping with a tawtute, then thatâs⊠fine. Even if itâs only temporary.
Part of you is honestly relieved when Spider finally manages to force you out of the outpost and back to the village. Itâs a relief to get back into the forest, to the village, to the life youâre used to. The outpost has nothing on the vibrancy of the village life, and you feel as though you can breathe for the first time in days upon stepping back into the village, even if itâs through your respirator mask.
Thereâs been a big hunt today, and the village is buzzing with excitement. You pass by several willowy Naâvi covered in celebratory paint, and follow the sound of the heavy thumping of drums.
The evening after a hunt is always a joyful affair, and you gradually start to relax throughout the night. You feast on collected fruit, hum along to some of the music, and sit comfortably with Spider all evening. At some point youâre joined by Loâak, which you donât mind either; Loâak has always been the kind of outcast that fits comfortably between the edges of you and Spider. Those edges have smoothed out as he got older, but heâs always been a cool guy to hang out with.
When heâs not joining Spider in ganging up on you, that is.
âSoâ so wait, wait, let me get this straight,â Loâak is waving his hands as though trying to settle down a group of rowdy children, even though itâs just the three of you present. âNeteyam walked in on you fucking again, but this time it was in grandmotherâs hutââ
Youâre sat around the large campfire in the middle of the village, tucked away from the main celebrations. Part of you is flourishing being in this environment again, but another part is withering at this damn conversation. You glance around nervously, hoping that no casual observers can hear you guys talking.
âTxetyo only had his hand up my top!â You hiss hastily. âWe werenât actuallyâ and we would have gone somewhere else when it came down to it!â
âTxetyo is a dickhead.â Spider complains, leaning heavily on your side. Heâs so frequently dwarfed by the Naâvi that itâs easy to forget that heâs over six-feet-tall and corded with muscle, and his bulk is heavy.
Irritatingly, Loâak leans into you the same way on the other side, though heâs more careful about leaning his full weight, and you end up crushed in between the two idiots.
âHe isnât.â You protest, pushing back against their weight. âHeâsââ
âNah, he is.â Loâak interrupts before you can defend him. âTotal skxawng. You know he keeps telling people heâs the best archer in the clan? And yet he didnât manage to catch anything in todayâs huntââ
You try not to wince at that. Itâs impossible to miss that while Txetyo may not have been successful in the hunt today, someone else is being lauded for their skill and success.
Neteyam has been given a place of honour by the fire next to his parents, and the careful swirls of paint all over his body canât hide the proud glow on his face. Under the smooth veneer of Neteyamâs smiles and cheer was the jagged edge of his inferiority complex, his need to always be better and to be liked. Funnily enough, his insecurity has always been your favourite part of him. It felt real in a way his cockiness didnât.
You canât stop yourself from glancing over. Night has already fallen and there are many couples dancing, the flickering firelight sending wild shadows across the gathering. But even in the unsteady light, you catch the intense golden stare of Neteyam watching you from across the circle.
You hastily turn your face away, pressing your lips together tight as you try to pretend like you hadnât been looking in the first place.
ââHeâs better than Artâalak, at least.â Spider says, continuing on the conversation that you had checked out of for a few moments. âThat guy was awful. I mean, what did you even see in him?â
You roll your eyes, sinking further back into the stupidly heavy weight of Spider and Loâak in a silly attempt to hide yourself from view. It almost definitely doesnât work, and you can still feel the weight of Neteyamâs stare on you, even as you fixedly ignore him.
âPretty sure we donât want the answer to that one, man.â Loâak says, snickering.
His eyes glance around, before flashing across the gathering as though he can also feel Neteyamâs attention. You frown as Loâak hastily removes his arm from around your shoulders, even leaning away from you a little.
âIâm allowed to want company.â You say loftily, though youâre certain that your voice is a little shaky.
It feels like your skin is heating up under Neteyamâs eyes, and you feel yourself getting shifty. Why wonât he just look away?
Loâak obviously notices his brotherâs attention, because he leans a little closer so he can speak quietly in your ear.
âMy brother can be unbearable,â Loâak murmurs, âBut heâs not a bad guy.â
âGross.â You wrinkle your nose playfully at Loâakâs rare display of sincerity about his brother and he hisses at you, swiping at your head.
Itâs all in jest, which is obvious given how gentle his hands are with you, and you laugh and lean away.
âI justâ I donât understand him.â You sigh once your laughter has tapered off. âI mean, I get that he doesnât approve of the whole interspecies thing, but itâs like he goes out of his way to catch me in embarrassing situations. If he finds it gross, why seek it out?â
Loâak purses his lips and avoids your eyes. âUhâŠâ
âAnytime he shows up, the guys Iâm with go running.â You continue, your brows knitting into a frown. âI mean, itâs getting ridiculous. Why canât he just mind his own business?â
Loâakâs eyes dart over your head, and you just know that he and Spider are sharing a look together.
âHe doesnâtâ I wouldnât say he disapproves of interspecies relationshipsââ Loâak says, but he fumbles a little in his attempt to get his words out and darts another panicked glance across the fire towards where Neteyam is sitting with their father.
You just scoff, crossing your arms defensively across your chest. You feel a little vulnerable talking about this; usually, youâre content to suffer through the embarrassment of having your sex partners pretending they donât know you in public alone, but since Neteyam had started walking in on you, now he knows that theyâre doing it too.
âHe scolds them like theyâre children whenever he walks in on us, talking about how theyâre neglecting their duties and all that,â You mutter, scowling. âBut itâs obviously because heâs annoyed that his friends are messing around with a Sky Person.â
Spider shifts at your side, making an odd sound beneath his breath. You turn to look at him, but heâs staring rather fixedly at a tree branch overhead. Loâak clears his throat, similarly looking off to the side to avoid your eyes.
You frown. It feels as though theyâre hiding something from you, and the thought is unsettling.
âWhat?â You demand, sitting forward and staring intently at them.
âNothing,â Loâak protests, but his voice is a little too high-pitched to be believable. âUh⊠Itâs just⊠well, I really donât think that Neteyam has a problem with interspecies relationships. Our dad came from the Sky, too!â
You think that Loâak probably intended for that to be reassuring, but instead you find your stomach sinking miserably.
âOh.â You say, pursing your lips. âSo itâs me that he has a problem with.â
âNo!â Loâak protests, but then he pauses. His mouth opens and closes as he struggles to form a response under the weight of your narrowed eyes.
When no explanation comes, you end up just averting your gaze and looking towards the fire. Itâs stupid, but youâre not sure what you were even expecting. Neteyam has always been perfect in his personal life, his duties, his relationships within the clan, his looks. Itâs hardly a surprise that heâs developed a distaste for you â you know what Sky People represent to the Naâvi, after all.
Across the gathering, two Naâvi girls are shooting looks at Spider. You almost think theyâre looking at him in disgust, but when Spider catches their eye and smiles back they both look away giggling.
You click your tongue and roll your eyes. You wonder when exactly it was that the Naâvi your age stopped seeing you as human nuisances that haunt the village, and started instead seeing you as people with possible sexual appeal.
âThat is just unfair.â You intone dully. âYou get Naâvi girls flirting with you from across the campfire, and I get Naâvi boys fucking me in corners and then pretending they donât know me. And thatâs only if I donât get rudely interrupted by Loâakâs asshole brother.â
âMen.â Loâak says in a disparaging tone that sounds as though itâs meant to be sympathetic, but it falls short as heâs biting his tongue to keep from laughing. âMaybe you just have bad taste.â
Spider laughs too, though heâs still looking in the Naâvi girlsâ direction. Thereâs a pink flush in his cheeks, and his smile looks distinctly pleased.
âYeah,â You grumble, sinking down where youâre sitting. âIâm hearing that a lot.â
The conversation moves on then, Loâak nudging at Spider over your head and grinning as he recounts the highlights from the hunt earlier that day, but youâre distracted. You hardly even hear a word they say, too busy staring broodingly into the fire.
Luckily, neither Loâak nor Spider mind your silence. Theyâre perfectly content to fill the quiet themselves, chatting and babbling and joking over your head.
Youâre drifting, lost in your own thoughts until you hear Loâak and Spider go quiet. You glance over to them, only to realise why theyâve stopped talking â Neteyam is walking your way.
You stiffen, eyes narrowing behind your respirator mask as he comes to a stop before you all. He greets his brother and Spider briefly, distractedly, before his big amber eyes settle on you.
All you can do is wait, tensed. You have no idea what heâs going to do or say, but if he says something about that day in the healing hut you might actually scream.
But Neteyam doesnât immediately say anything. He crouches in front of you, his gaze as measured and even as ever, and proffers a wrapped utumauti leaf to you. For a moment, you just stare at it as though itâs something venomous.
âA portion of yerik meat,â Neteyam clarifies, not even blinking as he watches your face. âFrom the hunt earlier.â
Oh. Now you see. Heâs just showing off, like he always does. Heâs always doing things like this, just to show off his skills, his prowess, how strong he is. Itâs irritating; everyone already knows how great he is, and heâs already practically revered throughout the village. You donât know why he keeps trying to flaunt his greatness in front of you, other than the fact that he must love to annoy you.
Spider nudges you in the side, and you reach out to take the wrapped meat from Neteyamâs outstretched hand.
âThank you.â You say, a little tersely.
Neteyam just nods, his tail coiling. He watches your face for another moment, and all the unspoken tension between you from the other day seems to swell to unbearable heights. His ears twitch, and then he glances over his shoulder to where his parents are sitting by the fire. Theyâre watching, which makes you feel itchy and embarrassed.
âI should return.â He says simply, before standing and nodding at you, then Spider and Loâak, before straightening up and walking back to his place by Jake, his tail swaying low.
Thereâs a long moment of silence, where you can feel Loâak and Spider staring at you.
âDonât.â You say sharply when you see Loâakâs mouth open, and he closes it with a click.
This feels embarrassing, as though Neteyam is mocking you somehow. Itâs not the first time heâs given you food, always making sure to let you know he caught it himself. Itâs like he has a damn pathological need to show off his skills, to try and prove himself, to prove that heâs better than anyone else. Itâs aggravating, even more so now that Loâak has made it clear that itâs you that Neteyam has a problem with.
Eventually, Spider and Loâak return to their conversation and you pull back, sitting silently between them. You pull your mask off for a brief moment to nibble at the meat. Youâre a little irritated to admit that itâs delicious, and you sit back to lean into Spiderâs side as you chew at it sullenly.
Youâve just begun to wonder if this night is a total bust altogether when you catch movement out of the corner of your eye. You raise your head, surprised to see the sight of Txetyo stepping towards you.
At your side, Spider and Loâak share a look before sitting up straighter.
âTawtute,â Txetyo greets, nodding his head at you. He casts a single cautious look towards Loâak, before focusing on you properly.
He is keeping his voice purposely low so that no one else can hear, but you canât bring yourself to care. This is the most public setting that any man has ever actually approached you in, and you can feel your expression brightening already.
âHello.â You murmur, smiling sweetly at him. The last time you had seen him had been right after you had fled the tsahikâs hut, right after you had touched Neteyamâ and no, you are not thinking about that right now.
âI would like to speak with you.â Txetyo murmurs, his voice low as he darts one more quick look between Loâak and Spider before settling on you again.
You brighten. Youâre under no illusions about what Txetyo wants to âspeakâ about, and you can safely assume that there will be little to no talking involved at all.
Yes. A distraction. This is exactly what you need.
âSure.â You say, your lips curving up in a coy smile as you unfold yourself from where youâve been sitting between Spider and Loâak.
âUhââ Loâak starts to say, but youâre already beginning to step away with Txetyo, whoâs beginning to lead you away from the gathering.
Maybe itâs a little impulsive, but youâre feeling reckless tonight. You can still feel Neteyamâs eyes boring into your back as you follow Txetyo towards the treeline, but you determinedly refuse to look. The celebration should be enough of a distraction to keep him busy and away from you for a while so you can finally get laid.
âââ  ïœĄïŸâ: .✠. :âïŸ
You resist the urge to check the time on your battered old wristwatch as Txetyo slides down your body and repositions himself between your legs.
It feels like such a long time since youâve hooked up successfully with anyone, with no interruptions, which is probably why youâve been so affected by all-things-Neteyam recently. You were hoping that this encounter with Txetyo would restore you back to normal, to get rid of all the thoughts of Neteyamâs intense golden stare and pretty face and silken hot cock that are absolutely haunting you.
Yet, so far, the nightâs been less than stellar. Txetyo had led you away from the celebrations, and you had to try hard to pretend like you donât see him looking around compulsively to make sure that no one else has seen him leave with you. You had followed him into the trees, and had brightened up when he took your hand as soon as you were out of sight of the gathering.
Before you knew it, you were on your back on the forest floor with your panties around your ankles and your dress rucked up around your waist as Txetyo loomed over you on his hands and knees.
Txetyo is handsome, and heâs big and strong and heâs not opposed to hooking up with a Sky Person, but heâs not much for conversation and it seems like heâs only really got one thing on his mind. Apparently, your list of criteria might be a little lacking, because Txetyoâs also proving to be woefully bad at sex.
He spreads your legs and buries his face there. You blink at the canopy of glowing foliage overhead, grimacing. Honestly, youâd think that anything tongue-adjacent would feel good against a clit, but thatâs just not true. Txetyo seems to have an affinity for moving his tongue rapidly and aimlessly against you, resulting in nothing better than the occasional teasing â definitely by accident.
You shift a little, try to angle your hips so that Txetyoâs mouth is over your clit, but he doesnât seem to pick up on what youâre attempting to do at all. He just moves his mouth away, jabbing his tongue sort of aimlessly at your left labia.
âCould youâ a bit higherââ You say, trying to shift again.
Txetyoâs mouth is rather sloppy against your pussy, but youâre not actually sure what heâs doing down there. He seems to be missing every possible nerve ending that might feel good, which is actually a little bit impressive.
You sigh, and just resign yourself to getting bad head. You let your head thunk back against the mossy forest floor, your legs hanging off of Txetyoâs big shoulders as he hunches between your thighs.
Itâs almost imperceptible, but the quiet âcrackâ of a twig breaking underfoot has your head snapping around in a panic.
Though night has fallen, itâs never truly dark on Pandora. The moss beneath you glows faintly, illuminating the outline of your body as you lay there with Txetyo getting busy between your legs. The trees and foliage around you are similarly phosphorescent, your surroundings all lit up in luminous vibrance.
Pandoraâs bioluminescence is beautiful; it also means that you can see Neteyamâs figure all dimly lit up as he leans against the trunk of a tree about fifteen feet away.
Neteyamâs head is cocked to the side as he very obviously takes in the scene before him, his head turning to scan up and down your body. His little luminous freckles are lit up and glowing, and itâs impossible to miss the fact that his golden eyes are fixed on you, so intense that itâs almost breathtaking.
You almost scream. You mean to, but instead you moan, completely by accident, and Txetyo groans between your legs.
You donât know what to do. Youâre gaping at Neteyam, who seems all too content to just watch you, meanwhile Txetyo is totally oblivious. Heâs still doing nothing right, but something deep inside you pulses.
Moments later, much to your horror, Neteyam takes a small, tentative step forward. He stands only a few feet away, behind Txetyo and in plain view of you.
Go away! You mouth, staring at him in disbelief.
Neteyam scratches his head, feigning confusion, and then he takes another step forward.
He doesnât say anything. Why isnât he saying anything? Itâs not the first time heâs walked in on you in a situation like this, but usually by this point heâs started making snarky comments, which in turn makes the men youâre with scramble away from you like youâre diseased.
Your dress is pushed up clumsily around your stomach, exposing your pussy. Thereâs a man between your legs. Youâre in the process of getting fucked and Neteyam is watching, goddammit.
It definitely, absolutely is not hot. And yet⊠your hips twitch, and your breath hitches.
âThat feel good?â Txetyo asks, peering up to grin at you. Your attention is dragged back to him and you blink, dazed.
âYeah,â You lie. âSo good.â
âMm,â Txetyo hums in satisfaction, slipping two fingers into you. âGood.â
You grunt at the stretch of his thick fingers, breathing deep. His mouth returns, his fingers jabbing kind of aimlessly, but it hardly matters. Your attention is locked on Neteyam, and itâs somehow making Txetyoâs useless attempts feel somewhat invigorating.
âOh god,â You gasp. Youâre so confused. Part of you is still waiting for Neteyam to speak up, to make a sound or to clear his throat. Something. But he just watches on, his pretty eyes dark.
âMm, so pretty,â Txetyo murmurs from between your legs, still blissfully unaware of your onlooker. âCan I fuck you now, tawtute?â
Despite yourself, you find your eyes darting over to Neteyam. The stupid fucker is still looking, and when he sees that youâve looked at him his lips quirk. Your whole body flushes deep with heat, and you try to pretend like you arenât taking direction from him; usually, his appearance would have stopped this entire encounter dead in its tracks. But youâre continuing, and the fact is, you feel as though you need his permission or something.
âY-yes.â You say.
Neteyam purses his lips, and raises his non-existent brows. Fuck, what does that mean?
âHow would you like me toââ
âJust like this.â You blurt. It feels, for some reason, as though you canât risk Txetyo noticing Neteyam. This is the only way you can see Neteyam without Txetyo noticing him, anyway.
Txetyo shuffles up your body, his bulk dwarfing you. Thereâs a momentâs struggle as heâs lining himself up against your pussy, groaning low as he pushes into you. The stretch is intense, and a little painful, as always; you never quite get used to the bone-deep satisfaction of that achey biting stretch in your cunt.
The stretch is satisfying, like it always is, but itâs not necessarily special. Txetyo is not as evenly proportioned as he looks, and his cock is smaller than other Naâvi youâve been with. That is, mostly, a good thing; it means he can fuck you without lube, which you usually have to use to accommodate the shocking stretch of taking a Naâvi cock. It also means that you adjust to having him inside you a little quicker, your muscles easing gradually around the intrusion of his dick.
What is special (or at least unusual) is the fact that Neteyam is still watching. You stare back, maintaining a bewilderingly intense sort of eye contact. Txetyo groans as your cunt clenches down on him, and he lowers his face to bury it in your shoulder; like this, your view of Neteyam is completely unimpeded.
âAh! Youâre so tight,â Txetyo hisses. âThis is okay?â
âYes,â You gasp. âYou can move.â
And by God, does Txetyo move. He jerks in and out of you with a complete lack of coordination. You bounce and flop against the luminescent bed of moss beneath you, occasionally throwing a hand over your head to try and anchor yourself to a tree root behind you, just to stay put for a second or two.
Neteyam is undoubtedly amused. He has a hand pressed to his mouth, and the skin around his eyes is scrunched up with mirth. At one point, when Txetyo starts humping into you so desperately that you grunt, wincing, Neteyam doubles over himself completely, laughing silently.
âOh, oh,â Txetyo groans. âTawtute, I am going toâ you are so tight, so hot insideâ"
You smack one of Txetyoâs hands away from where heâd been rubbing determinedly at the side of your vulva. You rub at your clit instead in fast, harsh circles, staring at Neteyam desperately. You donât actually know what youâre looking for, or what you want him to do⊠but you want him to do something.
Neteyam reaches down to palm the bulge at the front of his tewng that you hadnât even noticed until now, and you moan. You rub yourself even faster, attempting to angle your hips in any way that could increase your pleasure from Txetyo. It seems impossible, but you manage to catch one or two good strokes.
âPlease, pleaseâ!â You gasp, eyes wide as you maintain eye contact with Neteyam over the wide bulk of Txetyoâs shoulders.
Neyeyam moans. Itâs low, barely noticeable under Txetyoâs own strangled sounds, but you hear it clearly. Your body seizes up and then youâre coming, gasping high and quick as you drink Neteyam in with your eyes, frozen under Neteyamâs gaze in turn.
âUnnng,â Txetyo grunts as he comes too, thrusting into you through the last shocks of his orgasm.
You barely even blink, your eyes fixed wide open as you tremble, your breaths shaky. Neteyam doesnât break eye contact either, watching you so damn closely that it feels bizarrely as though heâs watching a show youâre putting on, as though all of this is for him. The worst part is you feel as though youâd be lying if you said it wasnât.
Neteyam silently turns and slips away through the foliage, and Txetyo flops onto the mossy ground beside you moments later, breathing heavily.
âThat was good.â Txetyo sighs, his voice thick with satisfaction.
You donât reply, still staring at the place Neteyam had disappeared into the trees. Youâre partly unable to believe what just happened and partly turned on beyond belief, just knowing it did.
What the fuck?
Someone better call a cop. Cause this fic is robbing me of my feelings CAUSE ITS TOO DAMN CUTE. đ
This Is a Family
dad!neteyam x fem!metkayina!reader
â warnings: slight angst, neteyam doubting himself, aged up neteyam for the sake of him being a father (nothing sexual), one mention of being shot (pass tense).
â summary: neteyam has doubts about his parenting, and he fears that heâs going to raise his son the way his father raised him.
â i ??? love ??? him ??? so ??? much ??? he deserves the world.
â 1.0k words
Neteyam always masked his fear. Growing up, he figured the best way to keep his siblings together during the war with the Sky People was to pretend he was never scared. It worked especially well with Tuk, and in turn, she felt herself feel less worry.
And people never questioned whether he was actually scared or not. Partly because he got so good at acting, but mostly because he was the oldest child of the great Toruk Makto. Apparently that meant he had the inability to feel regular Naâvi emotions.
It became a part of him. He never showed his fear to anyone, even in fearful situations. He buried it so deep down that he never once thought that maybe, just maybe, it would end up coming back to bite him in the ass.
Like it was in this moment.
He was sat down in your shared Marui, head held low in the palms of his hands, elbows resting on his knees with his legs crossed. His breathing was rapid and his chest was rising and falling like he just ran twelve miles. He couldnât stop the racing thoughts in his head.
Pregnant. Youâre pregnant. Heâs going to be a father.
That in itself isnât a bad thing. Donât get him wrong, he was ecstatic when Ronal confirmed both of your suspicions. He kissed you so hard the moment the words left her lips, and he cuddled you tight that night (and every night after) with his palm resting on your tummy, where your son was growing everyday. God, he was so happy. So fucking happy. But there was still that overwhelming fear he felt when he thought about it some more.
Because no, he doesnât think his dad was a bad dad. No, he doesnât think ill of his dad. But he knows that his parenting method had affected the way he grew up in such a way he couldnât even explain. And Neteyam was always scared that the way his dad raised him was so engraved into his brain that he would subconsciously raise his son to be the same.
It scared him so much, but like usual, he never let it show. Unbeknownst to him, however, you were always able to see right through him. Since the moment you two met, you were able to tell he was not only nervous to be around an entirely new clan, but also scared.
And he always wondered how you always knew when to comfort him, but he just thought that was some weird coincidence. You never mentioned it to him. Because admittedly, you thought the look of confusion he showed when you comforted him was cute. You always thought Neteyam was cute. Since the moment you saw him.
You were walking by your Marui to get to your friendsâ when you heard sniffling inside. When you peaked your head in and saw that the sniffling was coming from Neteyam, your heart cracked. Youâd barely ever seen him cry before. Only a handful of times; once when he got shot during the war with the Sky People; and once when you found out you were with child. Each time, he had people there to comfort him, but this time, as he sat alone inside the Marui, he had no one.
You quickly rushed over to his side, putting your hand on his shoulder gently. Neteyam jumped at the feeling of your hand on him, not knowing anyone was even there in the first place.
âYawne, what is wrong?â Your voice was gentle, soft. It was one of the many things Neteyam lovrd about you. âWhat has happened?â
He sniffled again before answering, âNothing tiyawn, do not worry.â
You let out a scoff at that and moved to kneel in front of him, hands finding their way on his thighs, moving up and down to comfort him. You wanted him to look at you and repeat it, because you knew he couldnât lie to you like that. And when he didnât meet your eyes, it was basically confirmed right then that something was wrong.
You took his face in your hands and tilted his head up, finally looking each other in the eyes. Neteyam placed his palms on the back of your hands and sighed.
âWhat is wrong.â It was more of a demand for him to tell you rather than a question this time.
He debated whether he should say it or not, but he ultimately decided he should. âI am scared.â
âOf what, my love?â
Again, he sniffled and placed a hand over your now very prominent baby bump, âOf becoming a father.â When you didnât answer, he took it as a silent tell for him to elaborate. âI am scared that I will raise him the way my dad raised me. I do not want our son to feel the amount of pressure I felt growing up. I do not want him to feel like his siblings do not get the same amount of⊠attention, from his parents.â
To lighten the mood, you smirked, ââHis siblingsâ,â you repeated, seeing the smallest of smiles form on your husbandâs face, âyou want more, huh?â
âWell, yes. It is inevitable, I cannot just stop making love to you.â
A light cover of blush appeared on your cheeks, and Neteyamâs smile only grew wider. Though you kept as serious as you could in order to reassure him of his thoughts. âMayawne, you will be the greatest father known to man. You will raise your son, and his siblings, with the amount of love anyone would only wish theyâre parents had showed them. You will be an amazing father, no matter what your thoughts are telling you.â
He visibly relaxed at your words, shoulders dropping and chest loosening with a deep breath. âBesides, if you step out of line, I will be right there to slap you so hard you will forget you are even a father in the first place.â
Neteyam laughed, but nodded. Even if you were joking in the moment, he knew you would keep to your word. He leaned forward and kissed you lovingly. And though the kiss tasted of salty tears, you loved it. You loved any kiss your husband would give you.
âI see you.â He whispered against your lips, eyes closed and forehead against yours.
You smiled, âI see you.â