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Could I, pretty please, request Tsu'tey eating put-put, like no one has any business to, on human! reader? đđđĽşâ¤ď¸
It's coming babes! Sorry it's takin' so long! I couldn't help myself, the fic got away from me. So now there's a bit of a fluffy build up to the absolute filthy degeneracy we all crave â¤ď¸(â ââ˘âĎââ˘â â)â¤ď¸
Hopefully will have it done by tomorrow night~! áŚăâĄâš )ăâĄ
3.5k words
Content warning: Mention of drowning, mention of getting shot with arrows
Pouty kitty!! A little bit of a smaller chapter today, but that's because another one drops tomorrow again. We're moving forward in this story and it's going to be a very rough ride for a little bit before ruffled feathers gets smoothed out again lol
(If you want to be tagged with the updated chapters, please leave your @ myusername in the comments!)
Previous chapter | Masterpost | Chapter 19 - Coming soon
Standing on the receiving end, watching as you leave with their son, is unlike any pain Miles has ever felt before in his relatively short and long life. Screw getting shot by Mrs. Sullyâs arrows dipped in neurotoxins, screw Sully and the chokehold he had on him as he slowly but surely drowned him. Compared to this anxious fear that was crawling up inside of him, that had been like a walk in the friggin sunny park. For a moment, how he had ended up in this exact situation strikes him with blinding clarity. He had never meant for any of this to happen, never meant for Sullyâs son to get caught in the middle of their war, yet, a child had almost died and it had partly been his fault.Â
The bile that followed the realization didnât sit well with him. A part of him growls angrily inside of his mind, demanding that he âpussy up and put a pad on itâ. Yet, that part of him lay crushed to dust in the jungle somewhere far, far away from here. He was not that man, thatâs what he had claimed the entire time, but when push came to shove, when Sully had been within his grasp, Colonel Miles S. Quaritch was exactly who he had become. By some kind of miracle, he had managed to stop the tulkun hunt just in time before Scoresby sent the explosive-tipped harpoon into the animal. The shadow of your soul-crushed expression brokenly staring up at him with horror had entered his mind, making his entire body clench up, as if panic-stricken. He remembered mumbling something as he pushed the harpoon upwards to the skies, as far away from the animal as he could get it, before demanding that they stop the hunt altogether. From there, Sully would get the message and still be able to save the animal.Â
Sighing deeply, he realized that he had screwed up royally. He should have never taken Spider from your arms, should have never burned the villages, or ordered Lyle to shoot that chiefâs animal. He should have listened to you, should have taken your lessons to heart instead of just playing happy house while closing his ears to Ardmoreâs nagging. The woman, although outranking him, had no tactical sense whatsoever. Miles was not stupid. Upon waking, he had gathered all the intel he could on the General, pulled some strings, and called in even older favors. What he had found was unsettling, even to what remained of Quaritchâs personality inside of him. Ardmore was ruthless but sloppy, her work was efficient when successful, but disastrous when failed.Â
It wasnât as much the failed missions that worried him though. Ardmore had given him a promise inside of her office, one he no longer had any doubt that she would hesitate to fulfill once she got a hold of you. How he was supposed to keep you safe was beyond him. With the way his body ached, he wouldnât be able to defend either one of you anytime soon. The chances of the village protecting them were slim at best. They were primitive people after all. Once Ardmore set her mind on something, he feared it would rival that of Quaritch himself. The chance of the two of them coming with him was even slimmer. He had no claim to Spider, even though you had accepted him as Spiderâs father. The memory of your voice brokenly ringing through the hut pulls him out of his mind for long enough to assess the situation before him.Â
âYou do not deserve them,âÂ
The claim cut deeply, although knowing you, it was probably not meant to. The despair and heartache you had displayed took him by complete surprise. With every emotion pouring off of you, you let yourself be vulnerable without appearing weak. In fact, he had never seen a more powerful display of strength in his life. You had spoken the truth, even though it had obviously hurt you on a personal level.Â
The little mama was right, of course, though even admitting as much to himself didnât come easily. Spider had gone with her willingly, and why wouldnât he? She had been there for him his entire life compared to him. Sure, he had been dead for most of his kidâs life, but what did he do once he actually found his son back in that jungle? Kidnapping. Coercion. Manipulation. And hey, what do you know; kidnapping again.Â
Shaking his head, Miles clenched his jaw so tightly the force behind it threatened to break the bone. The pain brought a newfound clarity with it, clarity that he had needed so many times in the past few months. Sucking his bottom lip between his teeth, he squares his shoulders. Even though he never intended to hurt the children, using them as pawns in a game of war, just to get to the Sullys, had been beneath him. Looking up from his own pity party, he notices how Mrs. Sully doesnât fare much better than he does. He recognizes the shame and frustration, her anger at him lingering just behind her eyes, as if smoldering embers waiting to ignite. But for the moment, he couldnât care less what Mrs. Sully felt. Not when there were more important things to focus on.
The way you had just walked out on them, on him, threatened to make him spiral into a panic he didn't even want to acknowledge. Being ashamed didnât fit into his life, didnât clash well with his personality, in all honesty. Yet, when you had told them - told him - that they were unworthy of calling themselves parents, that they didn't deserve their children, he had only felt shame at the way he already knew it to be true. You were going to leave him for real if something didn't change soon, were going to turn your back on him and walk out of his miserable life like everyone else had. If he was being honest with himself, which apparently was the theme of todayâs schedule, he didnât understand why you hadnât already left. It wasnât as if he hadnât expected it to happen. Everyone left him, that was just the story of his life. And maybe you would be better off if you did. But then again, if you hadnât found a partner in all the years since adopting Spider, what was to say you would now?Â
Closing his eyes and sighing deeply, he already knows what he has to do. Although it pains him to the very core of his soul, Miles steps up to Mrs. Sully, noting how her eyes darken with wariness as she scowls up at him, the grip on her knife tightening instinctively as he comes to a stop before her. The tension in the small hut is thick enough to slice with a knife, Sully and the big chief ready to pounce if he even breathed wrong.Â
âShe is right,â He starts slowly, his Naâvi not as good as he wished it to be, but by the shocked silence in the hut, he mustâve said it correctly enough. âI should not use the children on you,â
The sentence is chopped and slow, and heâs certain that he worded it all wrong when the hut remains silent, the Sullysâ expressions that of bewildered owls gawking at him with open ears. Growling his frustration at his own laziness, Miles slowly raises his hand to pinch the bridge of his nose, praying for patience.Â
âI shouldnât have used the children against you,â He repeats, in English this time, âI apologize.â
âI understood what you said, demon, I am not slow like you,â Neytiri hisses back way too fast before continuing in English, âI will not forgive. But we do agree, for once. Y/n was right and I apologize for putting Spider in danger,â
Itâs not perfect, itâs not perfect in the slightest, but itâs a start he thinks as he looks at his former Corporal. Sullyâs shocked expression is not lost on him, and somehow, it makes him feel angrier than he already was. Turning around, Miles steps over to his cot, before sitting down. His body is tired and his head is pounding uncomfortably. With narrowed eyes, he watches as Mrs. Sully leaves the hut, but as she does, the big chief walks up to him.Â
âIt takes a strong man to admit when he is at fault,â He says before turning back to Sully. The two whisper something in Naâvi before the big chief leaves them both.
Miles doesnât know how much time passes in silence, the sound of the sea below the hut soothing in a way he hadnât expected it to be. Still, his anger and frustration over Sully only rise inside of him. The time he had wasted, the lives that had been lost, the cost it had demanded of him - all without a second thought. Although they were his decisions, he couldnât help but fall victim to Quaritchâs old ways of thinking.Â
âYou were my brother,â He starts, his low and voice raspy - filled with anger and old betrayal that didn't belong in this new life of his, âAnd you betrayed that,âÂ
âIt wasnât personal, Quaritch,â Jake replies, and in truth, he sounds so honest. It only works to infuriate him even more though.Â
âI gave you a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, Corporal. I went out of my way to give you what you needed to succeed. When Parker wanted to pull the plug, I fought for you. I showed you loyalty and you took that and spat it right back in my face - you turned your back on me,â Miles growls, ears pinned tightly to his skull as his tail thrashes loudly behind him, easily giving his emotions away which Sully clearly read.Â
âWhat we were doing was wrong, can you still not see that?â Jake shoots back, his own anger showing, though his body language remained calm, non-confrontational. Anger though, anger Miles could work very well with.Â
âYou betrayed me, Jake,â He fuels on, the rasp in his growl lethal even to his own ears.Â
âYou betrayed yourself, Colonel,â Jake spits his title with disgust and for a split second, it hits home. Miles is unable to respond, unable to help his ears from twitching or his tail from freezing up behind him. Â
âWhat we came here to do was wrong. Still, the Naâvi opened their homes, their hearts -â Jake points in the direction you and Spider had just left moments ago and the message hits dead center, â - and welcomed us, made us a part of them, out of the goodness of their hearts. You know, the Naâvi has no word for shit like lies or sins. Itâs not in their nature. But you know what? It is in ours, Quaritch,âÂ
What Jake says has Miles stopping in his response, mouth opened in a sneer to spit back, but nothing comes. Instead, his thoughts fly around inside his skull, evading him each time he reaches for any of them. Heâs left gaping like a fish until he audibly snaps his mouth shut.
âWeâve done despicable things in our lives, Colonel, but this? This is a chance to make amends, to be born anew. Donât waste it. Donât repeat historyâŚâ And with that, Jake turns his back and leaves.Â
Miles sits in silence until night has long since fallen, mind racing as the conversation with Sully runs through his mind. In more than one way, he knew that his former Corporal was right. This was a chance to start anew, to live a life away from war. But did he even know how to do that? He was born into war, lived and breathed war for the entirety of his human life, only to be reborn into war, of a different kind, once more.Â
He had done things in his previous life that he knew he could never walk away from. And when his time eventually came, when he was military no more, he had roamed mindlessly before the Head of Chief position for the RDA was offered to him on Pandora. The private sector was sketchy at best, but it was home, a place where people like him could continue to live with the rules and mindset they had been used to from a lifetime of service. The time in between, though, that had been the worst. With no purpose in life, Quaritch had nothing - had no one. Heck, he didnât even know himself apart from the Marine he had always been. That wasnât to say heâd never let his mind wander, wondering what a life without the ever-pressing threat of active war and death would be like. To come home to a womanâs warm embrace, hell, maybe even a couple of kids too. Every time his mind went there, however, he would violently throw the thought from his mind. That life was not for him, had never been in the cards he was dealt. Â
Now, though, now things were different. He already had the kid, had his eyes set on a woman⌠He had somehow been given this unattainable dream, but could he really keep it? Could he be the husband and father he had secretly dreamt of being all his life? And what then of Ardmoreâs threats? If she found them already married, she would not hesitate to use Y/n against him, or him against her. But to what gain? There was nothing you could give Ardmore that any other native woman could not provide⌠unless it was to get full control of him. The thought has him freezing as a chill runs down his spine. The bond went both ways. If Ardmore got Y/n, he would be helpless to deny Ardmore anything she demanded of him, if only just to keep you safe.Â
Miles doesn't have time to analyze his new discoveries, either one of them, when Spider walks into the hut, returning first, with a basket of food in his arms. He watches as the kid puts the basket down on the other side of the small hut, rummaging inside of it until he pulls out a ripe spartan fruit in his small hands. Miles watches as Spider cuts into it, dicing the juicy fruit into small cubes that probably were human-sized. It makes his own stomach growl loudly.Â
âHow are you doing?â Spider looks up from the bowl heâs putting the diced fruit into, his face curious behind his exopack.Â
âHonestly, kid? I donât know. These are new waters for me,â Miles couldnât help but reply honestly. This was his son before him, the kid who saved him from a watery grave, even though he had just betrayed him and his mother.Â
âYeah, no shit,â Spider chuckles, a grin spreading across his lips before removing his mask to eat the first cube of spartan fruit, humming loudly as the taste no doubt explodes across his tongue. âHeard you apologized to Neytiri,âÂ
âWords spread fast I see,â Miles sighs, as his stomach growls angrily again while watching his son eat, âIt was the right thing to do,âÂ
Spider looks at him with an expression Miles canât place before he nods his head and leans back. Rummaging in the basket, he lifts another spartan fruit from it. Indicating that he was to throw the fruit, he waits for Miles to be ready to catch it before sending it over.Â
âHow angry is your mother?â He asks, digging into the fruit before daring to look into his sonâs eyes, a small âthanksâ mumbled as he chews loudly.
âOh, sheâs furious. Never seen her this mad before,â Spider grins and Miles coughs as he chokes on the fruit before sighing in defeat while putting the half-eaten fruit down in his overly exposed lap.Â
âIâve never seen her this sad before either,â Spider continues shortly after as if he was waiting to gauge Milesâ response before offering the information.Â
âWhyâs she sad?â Miles dares as he stuffs the last bits of the spartan fruit into his mouth.Â
âYou broke her heart and betrayed her trust,â Spider gives so freely, without judgment, and just like that Miles has a new goal in his life.Â
Conflicted about what his mind tells him and what he feels, he knows deep down that even Quaritch would have been weak for this Naâvi woman, for their son. She had shown him kindness where he had deserved none, had embraced his unit, taught them well, and made them smile, and what did he do in return? He had turned around and spat in her face, throwing away all of her hard work. Quaritch had always known he was an asshole, but Miles never for a second believed they could sink as low as this. You had taken his son in after Quaritchâs death, giving him warmth and motherly love, letting Spider grow into a confident and strong young adult. Quaritch and Miles owed you everything, even before you had met.Â
Now, though, that responsibility fell upon him. Quaritch was no more, no matter how much he tried to come to the surface in Milesâ mind, dictating what he should or should not do, what he should and should not feel. Although his voice in the back of Milesâ mind had been conveniently quiet when it came to you, Quaritch had had his full share of âbrilliantâ ideas to offer on other stuff. Fifteen years, one and a half decades. That was a lot of time for the world around him to change, a lot of time for Quaritchâs methods to be outdated. This was a new age, demanding a new point of view to defeat an enemy that would no doubt come for them with a personal vendetta much stronger than before.Â
Lost deep in his own thoughts, he doesnât notice how Spider goes to sleep, his small body curled up in his motherâs huge bed, rolled into their blankets like a burrito. Sighing deeply, he gets up to clean the knife and bowl that the kid had used, dipping it into the bowl of clean water. For a moment, he looks longingly at the knife in his hand, entertaining the thought of breaking free, but Miles shuts Quaritch up before that seed can grow. This isnât giving up, he decides, but rather seizing the second chance heâs gotten to do things right. Looking out over the sea, he sees two ikrans flying in the distance, riderless, and instinctively, he knows that itâs Cupcake and Hawnu. You must have just returned if he caught sight of Hawnu flying away.Â
Turning back to his cot, Miles bends down on his aching knees before burrowing down into the material below. The woven mat is nothing much, but the blanket heâs covered in is soft and warm, protecting him from the harsh winds out on these islands. Closing his eyes, he lets his mind wander to more pleasant things, like how Cupcake was safe, how you had brought her with you. If she was out flying with Hawnu, it meant that the wounds on her neck werenât serious as he had thought. Any other thought disappears as light footsteps approach the hut, however. The guards outside greet you gently as you pass them by before stepping inside the hut.
You look tired. Your eyes puffy and dark as they meet his from across the room. Turning your back to him, you fiddle with the flap that works as a door, fastening its buckles as you prepare for sleep. One by one, you close the flaps until the only light source is the pit on the floor, not that he actually needs it, his night vision working just fine for once. You donât say anything as you turn your back to him before getting into bed with Spider, the blankets rustling quietly before the hut grows quiet once more.Â
Sighing, he pushes the blankets away from his body and gets up to his knees, groaning like an old man as his body protests the activity. Seizing this second chance starts here, with the woman who had offered him the trust and patience he had only experienced in rare dreams. Walking over to their bed, Miles wraps his fists over his thumbs, an anxious gesture he never quite managed to hide. Getting down to his knees before your bed is easier than getting up. It isnât lost on him how your shoulders rise to protect your neck or how your ears pin tighter against your head while he gathers his⌠courage.
âFor what itâs worth, I am sorry, sweetheart,â Milesâ voice comes out raspier than he thought it would, but his words ring no less true.Â
He kneels there for a while longer, the silence stretching on, before getting up with a hiss, his body protesting louder this time. Walking over to his cot again, he lets his body crumble to the soft material. The olive branch had been extended, all he could do now was wait and hope that you would accept it.
Chapter 17 | Masterpost | Chapter 19 - Coming soon
@mechformers you and me trying to out-compliment each other lmao đâ¤ď¸đ¤
everyone say thankyou @mechformers for being the best genuinely. always motivating me fr