⸻
She wasn’t just their trainer. She was the trainer. The hard-ass Mandalorian bounty hunter who whipped the clone cadets into shape, showed them how to survive, and maybe, quietly, showed them something like love.
They weren’t supposed to fall for her.
She wasn’t supposed to leave.
But they did. And she did.
Now she’s back—in chains. On trial. And neither of them has forgiven her. But neither of them has stopped feeling, either.
⸻
Wolffe was gone.
Off to a frontline somewhere, chasing a ghost on someone else’s leash. He hadn’t said goodbye. Just stood in her cell, said her name like it tasted like blood, and left.
She told herself it didn’t sting.
Told herself that right up until the door hissed open again.
This time, it was him.
Fox.
She felt him before she saw him—every hair on the back of her neck standing at attention. She didn’t lift her head until she heard the soft clink of his boots on the duracrete.
“You always did have the heaviest damn footsteps.”
No answer.
Just the soft hum of the ray shield between them and the weight of six years of unfinished conversations.
She sat back against the wall of her cell, tilting her head to study him through the barrier. “You used to take your helmet off when you saw me.”
Fox didn’t move.
“You smiled, too,” she added. “Even blushed once.”
Still nothing.
She leaned forward. “Why don’t you take it off now, Fox? Scared I’ll see what I did to you?”
That one hit.
His shoulders shifted. Just enough.
“I loved you both,” she said, voice softer. “You and Wolffe. It wasn’t just training. You know that.”
“You walked away.”
“I had to.”
“No,” Fox said, voice hard behind the visor. “You chose to. We needed you. And you ran.”
He stepped closer to the shield.
“You trained us to survive, to lead, to kill. You were everything. You looked at us like we were people before anyone else ever did. And then you were gone. No note. No goodbye. Just gone.”
She stood now. Toe to toe with him on opposite sides of the shield.
“Don’t pretend like it was easy for me.”
“I’m not pretending anything,” Fox bit out. “But every time I close my eyes, I see the cadet barracks. I see you, pulling us out of bed, making us fight through mud and stun blasts and live fire. And every time I put this helmet on, I remember the woman who made me who I am.”
“And you hate her now?”
“No,” he said, almost too quiet.
“I wish I did.”
The silence between them wasn’t empty—it was heavy, loud, aching.
Then the lights flickered. Once. Twice.
Fox’s helmet snapped up.
“You planning something?” he demanded.
She blinked, surprised. “Not me.”
An explosion rocked the building.
Fox swore and turned toward the hall—too late.
The backup power cut in, and the shield between them dropped.
She moved first.
Elbow. Throat. Disarm.
Fox recovered instantly. Mandalorian training burned into his bones—her training.
They fought dirty. Brutal. No flourish. No wasted motion. Just rage and history and sweat.
He slammed her into the wall, forearm to her neck. “Don’t—”
She headbutted him. “Too late.”
He threw her to the ground. She rolled, kicked out, caught his knee. He staggered. She was up in an instant, swinging.
He caught her wrist. “You left us.”
She broke the hold, breathless. “And you never stopped loving me.”
That cracked him.
She tackled him.
They hit the floor hard.
His helmet came loose, skittering across the ground.
And for a heartbeat—
There he was.
Fox.
Red-faced. Bloodied lip. Eyes blazing with pain and love and fury.
He flipped her. Pinned her down.
“This is what you wanted?” he growled. “To be hunted? To fight me?”
“No,” she whispered. “But I’m not dying in a cell.”
Her elbow caught his jaw. He reeled. She moved fast, straddling him, fist raised—
And paused.
Just for a second.
He looked up at her like she was the sun and the storm.
So she closed her fist.
And knocked him out cold.
⸻
She ran.
Again.
Bleeding. Gasping. Free.
But not the same.
Not anymore.
Because this time, she left something behind.
And it wasn’t just her past.
It was him.
⸻
(Flashback - Kamino)
It was raining.
Then again, it was always raining on Kamino.
She stood in the simulation room, arms crossed, helmet tucked under one arm, a long line of adolescent clones in front of her. Twelve cadets. Identical on the outside. Nervous. Curious. Eager.
She hated this part. The part where they still looked like kids.
She paced down the line like a wolf sizing up prey. They were still, silent, disciplined.
Good.
But she could already see it—the cracks, the personality slipping through despite their efforts to appear identical. That one on the end with the defiant chin tilt. The one in the middle hiding a limp. The one watching her like he already didn’t trust her.
She knew it the second they marched in—twelve cadets, lean and lethal for their age. Sharper than the usual shinies. These weren’t grunts-in-the-making. These were the Commanders. The ones Kamino’s high brass whispered about like they were investments more than soldiers.
She smirked. “You all have CT numbers. Serial designations. Statistics.”
No one spoke.
She dropped her helmet onto a nearby crate and leaned forward. “That’s not enough for me.”
Eyes tracked her, alert.
“You want to earn my respect? You survive this program, you get through my gauntlet? You don’t just get to be soldiers. You get to be people. And people need names.”
A flicker of something passed between them—confusion, curiosity, maybe even hope.
“But I don’t hand them out like sweets. Names have weight. You’ll earn yours. One by one.”
She paused.
“And I won’t name you like some shiny ARC trainer handing out joke callsigns for laughs. Your name will be the first thing someone hears before they die. Make it count.”
“You survive my program, you’ll earn a name,” she said. “A real one. Something from the old worlds. Something that means something. Not because you need a nickname to feel special—because names have teeth. They bite. They leave a scar.”
The silence was sharp. But the room listened.
The first week nearly broke them.
She saw it in their bruised knuckles, in the fire behind their eyes. None of them quit.
So she came in holding a data slate. Her list.
“CT-2224,” she said, nodding to the clone who was always coordinating, always calm under fire. “I’m calling you Cody.”
A pause.
“Named after an old soldier from history. Scout, tactician, survivor. He fought under another man’s flag but always kept his own code. You? You’ll know when to follow and when to break the chain.”
CT-2224 tilted his chin, something like pride in his eyes.
“CT-1004,” she called next. “Gree.”
He quirked a brow.
“Named after an Astronomer. A mind ahead of his time. You like to challenge the rules. You think differently. That’ll get you killed—or it’ll save your whole damn battalion. Your call.”
He smirked.
“CT-6052,” she said, turning to the one with the fastest draw in the sim tests. “Bly.”
“Bly?” he echoed.
“Named after a naval officer. Brutal. Unrelenting. Survived mutinies and shipwrecks. Your squad will challenge you someday. You’ll either lead them through the storm—or end up alone.”
He went quiet.
“CT-1138.” She stepped toward the quietest of the bunch. “Bacara.”
That got his attention.
“Name’s from an old warrior sect,” she said. “Real bastard in the heat of battle. No fear, no hesitation. You’ve got that in you—but you’ll need something to tether you. Rage alone won’t get you far.”
“CT-8826,” she barked. “Neyo.”
He didn’t flinch.
“Named after a colonial general in a lost war. Known for precision and cruelty in equal measure. You fight with cold logic. That’s useful. But one day it’s going to cost you something you didn’t know you valued.”
His stare didn’t break.
She nodded to herself.
Then she stopped in front of CT-1010.
This one was different. Always stepping in front of the others. Always first into the fire.
“You,” she said. “You’re Fox.”
He tilted his head. Curious. Suspicious.
“Not the animal,” she said. “The man. He tried to blow up a corrupt regime. People remember him as a traitor. But he died for what he believed in. He wanted to burn the world down so something better could rise.”
Fox looked at her like he wasn’t sure whether to be proud or afraid.
Good.
And finally—
CT-3636.
She exhaled. Quiet.
“You’re Wolffe. Spelled with two f’s.”
He arched a brow.
“You ever heard of General Wolffe? He died leading a battle he won. Knew it would kill him. Did it anyway. That’s who you are. You’d die for the ones you lead. But you’re not just a soldier. You’re a ghost in the making. You see things the others don’t.”
Something flickered across Wolffe’s expression. Not quite gratitude. Not yet. But something personal. Something deep.
She stepped back and looked at them all.
“You’re not just commanders now. You’re names with weight. Remember where they come from. Because someday—someone’s going to ask.”
She didn’t say why she chose those names.
But Fox knew.
And Wolffe… Wolffe felt it like a blade between his ribs.
⸻
That night, neither of them slept.
Fox sat on his bunk, staring at the nameplate freshly etched on his chest armor.
Wolffe couldn’t stop replaying the sound of her voice, the precision of her words.
It wasn’t just what she called them.
It was how she saw them.
Not clones.
Not numbers.
Men.
And in that moment—before war, before death, before heartbreak—both of them realized something:
They would have followed her anywhere.
⸻
“Target last seen heading westbound on foot. She’s injured,” Thorn’s voice snapped through the comms, sharp and clear as a vibroblade. “Bleeding. She won’t get far.”
Commander Fox didn’t respond right away.
He didn’t need to.
He was already moving—boots pounding against ferrocrete, crimson armor flashing in the underglow of gutter lights. His DC-17s were hot. Loaded. He’d cleared the last alley by himself. Found the blood trail smeared across a rusted wall. Confirmed it wasn’t fresh. Confirmed she was smart enough to double back.
Fox’s jaw tensed behind the helmet. That voice. That memory. He hated that it still echoed.
He hated what she’d made him feel back then—what she still made him feel now.
“She was ours,” Thorn said suddenly, voice low on a private channel. “She trained us. Named us. And now she’s—”
“A liability,” Fox snapped.
A pause.
Then Thorn said, “So are you.”
She’d been moving for thirty-six hours straight.
Blood caked her gloves. Her ribs were cracked. One eye nearly swollen shut. And still—still—she’d smiled when she saw the Guard flooding the streets for her.
“Miss me, boys?” she whispered, ducking into an old speeder lot, sliding through a maintenance tunnel like she’d been born in the underworld.
Fox was five minutes behind her. Thorn was closer.
She was running out of time.
So she did what she swore she wouldn’t.
She pressed a long-dead frequency into her wrist comm and whispered:
“You still owe me.”
⸻
Fox was waiting for her at the extraction point.
He stood in front of the old freight elevator. Helmet on. Blaster raised. Shoulders squared. He hadn’t spoken in five minutes. Hadn’t moved in ten.
When she limped into view, he didn’t aim. Not yet.
“You’re bleeding,” he said, voice flat.
“You’re still wearing your helmet,” she rasped.
He didn’t answer.
“Why?” she asked. “Why don’t you ever take it off anymore?”
That hit something.
He didn’t move, but the silence that followed was heavier than armor.
“You think if you bury the man I trained, the one I named, then maybe you don’t have to feel what you felt?” she asked, stepping closer. “Or maybe—maybe you think the helmet will stop you from loving the woman you’re supposed to kill.”
Fox raised his blaster.
“I’m not that man anymore.”
“And I’m not the woman who left you behind,” she said.
Then she charged him.
They hit the ground hard.
She drove her elbow into his side, but he blocked it—twisted—slammed her onto the deck. She kicked his knee, flipped him over, caught a glimpse of his face beneath the shifting helmet seal—eyes wild. Angry. Broken.
Their fight wasn’t clean. It wasn’t choreographed.
It was personal.
Every strike was a memory. Every chokehold a betrayal.
She got the upper hand—until Fox caught her wrist, yanked her forward, and headbutted her hard enough to split her lip.
“Stay down,” he growled.
But she was already back on her feet, staggering.
“You first.”
She lunged. He met her.
For one second, he nearly won.
And then—
The roar of repulsors screamed overhead.
A ship—low and mean—swooped in like a vulture. Slave I.
Fox’s head snapped up.
From the cockpit, Boba Fett gave a two-fingered salute.
From the ramp, Bossk snarled: “Hurry up, darlin’. We’re on a timer.”
She spun, landed one final kick to Fox’s side, and leapt.
He caught her foot—just for a second.
Their eyes locked.
She whispered, “You’ll have to be faster than that, Commander.”
Fox’s grip slipped.
She vanished into the belly of the ship.
The ship shot skyward, cutting between the towers of Coruscant, gone in a blink.
Fox lay back on the duracrete, chest heaving, blood in his mouth.
Thorn’s voice crackled in his comm:
“You get her?”
Fox didn’t answer.
He just stared at the sky, helmet still on, and muttered:
“Next time.”
⸻
The hum of hyperspace thrummed through her ribs like a heartbeat she hadn’t trusted in years.
She sat on the edge of the med-bench, wiping blood from her mouth, cheek split open from Fox’s headbutt. Boba threw her a rag without looking.
“You look like shab.”
She gave a low, painful laugh. “Better than dead. Thanks for the pickup.”
Boba didn’t answer right away. He just leaned back in the co-pilot’s chair, helmet off, arms crossed over his chest like a teenager who wasn’t quite ready to say what he meant.
“You could’ve called sooner, you know,” he finally muttered. “Would’ve come faster.”
“I know,” she said, quiet.
Bosk snorted from the cockpit. “Sentimental karkin’ clones. Always needin’ someone to save their shebs.”
She ignored him.
Boba didn’t. “Stow it, lizard.”
After a beat, he glanced back at her. “You’re not going back, are you?”
She didn’t answer.
“You should stay,” Boba said. “The crew’s solid. And you’re… you were like an older sister. On Kamino. When it was just me and those cold halls. You didn’t treat me like a copy.”
That one hit her like a vibroblade to the gut.
“I couldn’t stand seeing your face,” she admitted. “All I saw was Jango.”
He looked away. “Yeah. Well… I am him.”
She stood, stepped over to him, and rested a bruised hand on his shoulder.
“You’re better. You got his spine, his stubbornness. But you’ve got your own code, too. Jango… Jango would’ve left me behind if it suited him. You didn’t.”
He looked at her, lip twitching. “Yeah, well. You trained half the commanders in the GAR. You think I was about to let Fox be the one to kill you?”
She smirked. “Sentimental.”
He rolled his eyes. “Shut up.”
She moved toward the ramp. “Thank you, Boba. But I can’t stay.”
“You don’t have to run forever.”
“No,” she said, voice thick. “Just long enough to finish what I started.”
And with that, she slipped through the rear hatch, into the wind, into whatever system they dropped her in next.
⸻
Wolffe stood silent, arms folded, helmet tucked under one arm. Thorn sat across from him, jaw tight, armor scraped and bloodied.
Plo Koon entered without fanfare, his robes trailing dust from the Outer Rim.
“You two look like you’ve seen a ghost,” the Kel Dor said mildly.
“She might as well be,” Thorn muttered.
“We had her,” Wolffe said. “Fox did. And she slipped through his fingers.”
Plo regarded them both for a long moment.
“I assume there is tension because Fox and Thorn were in charge of the op?”
Wolffe’s jaw tightened.
Thorn spoke first. “She’s dangerous. She’s working with bounty hunters now. It’s only a matter of time before she turns that knife toward the Republic.”
“Perhaps,” Plo murmured, folding his hands. “Or perhaps she is a wounded soldier, betrayed by the very people she once called vode.”
Wolffe’s shoulders stiffened.
“She made her choice,” he said flatly.
“And yet,” Plo said, gently, “I sense hesitation in you, Commander. Pain.”
Wolffe didn’t respond.
“She is off-world now,” the Jedi continued, glancing at a tactical holo. “Potentially aligned with Separatist sympathizers. The Senate will push for her recapture. But I believe it would be wiser… more effective… for the 104th to take point on tracking her.”
Thorn straightened. “The Guard’s been assigned—”
“And you failed,” Plo said, not unkindly. “Let Wolffe try. Perhaps what’s needed now is not more firepower… but familiarity.”
Wolffe met Plo’s gaze. “You’re using this as a chance to fix me.”
“I’m giving you a chance,” Plo corrected. “To understand. To remember who she really is. Not what she became.”
Silence.
Then Wolffe slowly nodded.
“Then I’ll bring her in.”
Plo’s gaze softened beneath his mask.
“Or maybe,” he said, turning to leave, “you’ll let her bring you back.”
⸻
The atmosphere stank like rust and rot. Arix-7 was a graveyard of ships and skeletons—metal, bone, old wreckage from a thousand forgotten battles. The 104th picked through it like wolves in a burial field.
Wolffe moved ahead of the squad, visor low, silent.
Boost sidled up beside him. “You know, this place kinda reminds me of her. Sharp, full of ghosts, and ready to kill you if you step wrong.”
Sinker snorted. “Yeah, but she smelled better.”
“Cut the chatter,” Wolffe growled, tone clipped.
Boost shrugged. “Just saying. Weird to be tracking the person who taught you how to hold a blaster.”
“Worse to be planning how to shoot her,” Sinker added, quieter.
Wolffe didn’t respond.
He just kept moving.
They found her in the remains of a Republic frigate, buried deep in the moon’s crust, converted into a hideout. Cracked floors, scattered gear, a heat signature blinking faint and wounded—but moving.
She knew they were coming.
She was waiting.
⸻
They found her in the wreck of an old Separatist cruiser, rusted deep into the jagged crust of the moon. Sinker and Boost had gone in first—quick, confident, all muscle and old banter. That didn’t save them from being outmaneuvered and knocked out cold.
Wolffe found their unconscious bodies first. And then, her.
She stepped into the light like a shadow peeling off the wall—hood pulled low, face scraped and bloodied but eyes still burning.
“You always send the pups in first?” she asked. “Or were they just stupid enough to come on their own?”
Wolffe charged her without a word.
Hand-to-hand. Just like she trained him.
But she didn’t hold back this time—and neither did he.
She was still faster. Still sharper. Still cruel with her movements, a blade honed by years outside the Republic’s rule.
But Wolffe had strength and control, and he’d stopped pulling punches years ago.
They traded blows. She bloodied his mouth. He cracked her ribs. He pinned her. She slipped free.
Then came him.
The air shifted—sharp with ozone and tension—and suddenly Plo Coon was between them. Calm. Powerful. Alien eyes behind his antiox mask, watching her without familiarity, without sentiment.
“Step down,” Plo said.
She bristled. “Another Jedi. Wonderful. Let me guess—here to ‘redeem’ me?”
“I don’t know you,” Plo answered. “But I know what you’ve done. And I know you were once theirs.”
“I was never yours.”
“Good,” Plo said, igniting his saber. “Then this will be easier.”
They fought.
The air crackled.
She struck first—fast and brutal, close-range, aiming to disable before he could bring the Force to bear. But Plo Coon had fought Sith, droids, beasts. He wasn’t unprepared for feral grace and dirty tricks.
He parried. Dodged. Let her come to him.
“You’re angry,” he said through gritted teeth. “But not lost.”
She lunged. “You don’t know me.”
“No. But I sense your pain. You’re not just running. You’re bleeding.”
“Pain is what’s kept me alive!”
He knocked her off balance, sent her tumbling. She scrambled, but he held her in place with a subtle lift of the hand, the Force pinning her in a crouch.
“Enough,” he said, not unkindly.
She panted, teeth grit, shoulders trembling.
“I don’t know why you left them. I don’t care. I only ask you stop now, before someone dies who doesn’t need to.”
Her gaze flicked past him, to Wolffe—who stood in silence, jaw tight, one eye focused and guarded.
“You Jedi think you know everything,” she hissed. “But you don’t know what it’s like to train them. To love them. And to choose between them.”
That made Plo pause.
“I chose nothing,” she said. “And it still broke them.”
The silence that followed was colder than the void outside.
Plo stared at her for a long moment.
Then, slowly—he stepped back.
Released the Force.
“You’ll run again,” he said, saber still lit. “But I won’t be the one to kill someone trying to hold herself together.”
She blinked.
“You’re… letting me go?”
“I’m giving you a moment,” he said. “What you do with it is yours to answer for.”
Wolffe took a step forward.
Plo stopped him with a look.
“She’s off world. Unarmed. And—” his voice lowered, “—no longer a priority.”
Wolffe’s fists clenched.
She didn’t wait.
She bolted into the wreckage, shadows swallowing her whole. Gone again.
This time, no one followed.
(click for better quality)
me?? drawing angsty clone wars art?? in this economy?? more likely than you’d think.
(sorta-redraw of this thing from a year ago)
Ryio Chuchi x Commander Fox x Reader x Sergeant Hound
The doors hissed closed behind you, muting Coruscant’s constant thrum. Your heels clicked against the marble tiling—white-veined, blood-dark stone imported from home, etched with quiet pride.
The apartment was dim, tasteful, and cold—just the way you preferred it. You dropped your cloak onto the back of a chaise and walked straight for your desk.
The datapads were already stacked like bricks of guilt.
You sank into the high-backed chair, activated the holoscreen, and scrolled through messages from governors, planetary councils, and military liaisons. The usual blend of corruption, ego, and veiled threats disguised as diplomacy.
Too much to do. Never enough time.
“Perhaps you should consider a protocol droid,” murmured Maera, your senior handmaiden, gliding in with a cup of steaming blackleaf tea. “One of the newer models. They can help prioritize correspondence and handle… the more tedious tasks.”
You looked at her over the rim of your cup. “So you mean let a metal snitch sit in my office all day?”
“They’re quite helpful,” she said, folding her hands. “Especially with translations, cross-senate scheduling, cultural briefings—”
“I know what they do.”
Maera gave you a patient look—the kind she’d perfected over years of serving someone who never stopped. “You don’t have to do everything yourself.”
“Of course I do,” you said, already scanning through another briefing. “Because no one else does it right.”
The chime of your apartment door interrupted further commentary.
You didn’t look up. “Let them in.”
Maera bowed, then vanished toward the front foyer.
You heard the faint murmur of pleasantries, the soft wheeze of servos, and then—
“Oh, this place again,” came the indignant voice of a droid. “Why does it always smell faintly of molten durasteel and latent judgment?”
“C-3PO,” came Padmé’s warning voice, graceful and composed even when exasperated.
You turned slightly in your chair to face your guests. Senator Amidala, as ever, was luminous in Naboo silk, gold accents at her collar and sleeves. Anakin followed just behind her, less formal, hands in his belt, looking like he’d rather be anywhere else.
C-3PO trailed in with careful offense, wringing his hands as if expecting you to insult him on sight.
You stood slowly, arching a brow. “I’d say it’s a surprise, but I’ve been too tired to lie today.”
Padmé gave you a sharp smile—more real than most. “We came to discuss the fallout from the Senate hearing. Your… performance with Senator Kessen.”
Anakin was already smirking. “You mean the part where she lit his reputation on fire and danced in the ashes?”
“I didn’t dance,” you said mildly. “I just pointed out the arson had been self-inflicted.”
Padmé pressed her lips together. “It was a bold move. Some say reckless.”
“And others say effective.”
“Others,” Padmé said carefully, “are wondering if you’re trying to provoke more conflict than resolution.”
You rolled your eyes and gestured to the chair opposite your desk. “Sit down, Senator. You’ll get a cramp standing on that moral high ground all night.”
She exhaled, and—credit to her—actually sat.
You watched her for a moment, then lazily turned your gaze to C-3PO, who was busy inspecting a vase and making soft noises of horror at the lack of polish.
“So,” you said abruptly. “Do you enjoy having a protocol droid?”
Padmé blinked. “Pardon?”
You leaned forward, expression sly and disarming. “C-3PO. Is he worth the constant commentary and fragility? Or do you keep him around to make you feel more composed by comparison?”
C-3PO squawked. “I beg your pardon, Senator, I am an exceptionally rare and invaluable translation and etiquette droid—”
Padmé raised a hand, silencing him gently. “I find him useful. Occasionally irritating, but… helpful.”
“Hmm.” You leaned back. “I suppose it’s easier when you don’t mind being listened to.”
Anakin stifled a laugh. Padmé gave him a warning glance.
You shifted slightly in your chair, eyeing her again.
“You didn’t come here just for diplomacy. What’s the real reason?”
“I did want to talk about Kessen,” Padmé said evenly. “But… yes. There’s more. I’m concerned about the alliances you’re forming. With Skywalker. With… certain Guard officers.”
“Fox,” you supplied, smiling faintly.
Her expression flickered. “You’re not subtle.”
“I’ve never needed to be,” you said. “Subtlety is for people whose power isn’t visible.”
Padmé’s voice softened. “Be careful. People are watching you more closely than ever. You’ve made enemies, and you’re not on neutral ground anymore.”
You stood slowly, brushing nonexistent dust off your skirt. “I’ve never had neutral ground.”
Behind her, Anakin leaned on the back of the couch with a half-smirk. “Told you she’d say something like that.”
Padmé sighed.
The light in your home office softened as the sun began to vanish behind the metallic skyline. Coruscant’s artificial twilight crept in, and shadows elongated against the marble floor, the sharp silhouette of the Senate still looming in the distance through your tall windows.
Padmé stood now, hands folded neatly in front of her, expression calm, composed—but not cold.
“For what it’s worth,” she said quietly, “we’ve never seen eye-to-eye in the Senate. Our values differ, and our approaches even more so.”
You arched a brow. “A gracious understatement.”
She continued without rising to the bait. “But I still want you to be safe.”
That made you blink, just for a moment. A flicker of something softened your features, though it disappeared just as quickly.
Padmé took a breath, glancing sidelong at Anakin before she added, “And while I don’t agree with the friendship you and Skywalker seem to have built, I understand why you formed it.”
You tilted your head. “You disapprove?”
“I worry,” she corrected. “He has a habit of getting drawn into… chaos. You carry more of it than most.”
You gave a slow, dark smile. “I thought he liked that.”
“He does,” Anakin chimed in from the corner, hands clasped behind his back.
Padmé gave him a sharp glance. He shrugged like a delinquent Padawan.
“But regardless,” Padmé said firmly, refocusing on you, “he’ll protect you, if you need it. That’s what he does. Whether I agree or not.”
You regarded her in silence for a long moment. Then you said, with just enough edge to be honest but not cruel, “It’s strange, Amidala. I don’t think we’ve ever spoken this long without one of us trying to crush the other in a committee vote.”
Padmé gave a small, tired laugh. “Well. There’s a first time for everything.”
You nodded once. “Your concern is noted. And… accepted.”
Padmé inclined her head, graceful as ever. Then, with one final look, she turned and made for the door.
C-3PO clanked after her. “Oh thank the Maker. Honestly, Senator, I don’t think I was designed for this level of tension!”
Anakin lingered a little longer, offering a subtle grin as he passed you.
“Don’t do anything reckless while I’m gone.”
You smirked. “You make it sound like a challenge.”
The apartment fell into stillness once more, the doors hissing shut behind Senator Amidala and her entourage. Outside, Coruscant’s traffic lanes shimmered like veins of light against the dusk. Inside, you remained at your desk, arms crossed loosely, head tilted back to stare at the ceiling as the silence swelled around you.
Footsteps padded softly across the marble, and Maera re-entered the study. She moved with careful grace, but she was watching you closely—too closely for comfort.
“You held your temper,” she said mildly.
You smirked, eyes still on the ceiling. “I’m evolving.”
“I almost miss the yelling.”
You finally looked down. “Don’t get sentimental.”
Maera glanced at the datapads still stacked on the desk, then turned her attention back to you. “What’s on the agenda for tomorrow?”
You exhaled through your nose and stood, smoothing the front of your robes with a practiced flick of your fingers.
“We’re going shopping.”
Maera blinked. “Shopping?”
You gave her a devilish smile—cool, amused, but exhausted around the edges. “For a protocol droid.”
She blinked again, just once more slowly. “I thought you hated protocol droids.”
“I do,” you agreed. “But I hate having to draft a thousand reply letters to planetary governors even more.”
She blinked again. “Is this because Senator Amidala made hers look useful?”
“It’s because I’ve learned that war criminals don’t schedule their own executions and Kessen’s supporters won’t shut up in my inbox.” You paused, then added with a shrug, “And fine, maybe I’m tired of forgetting which language the Kray’tok trade delegation prefers.”
Maera offered a rare grin, genuine but subtle. “I’ll call the droid district and start vetting models.”
“Do that,” you said. “Make sure whatever we get can take sass, curse in Huttese, and redact documents on command.”
“And maybe something that doesn’t faint when you pull a blaster on someone mid-sentence?”
“Exactly.”
She left with a knowing nod, and you stood alone for a beat longer, your eyes drifting to the window, to the glowing silhouette of the Senate dome.
You murmured under your breath:
“Let’s see if protocol can keep up.”
⸻
Mid-morning sunlight filtered through the transparisteel roof of Coruscant’s droid district. Neon signs buzzed, offering quick repairs and overpriced firmware updates. The air stank of ionized metal and fast food.
You stood between two handmaidens: Maera, your ever-calm shadow, and young Ila, who looked like she’d been plucked from a finishing school and hadn’t yet realized she was in a war-torn galaxy. Ila was already staring wide-eyed at a droid with one arm replaced by a kitchen whisk.
“Are they all this… rusty?” she asked, wrinkling her nose.
“Only the cheap ones,” you replied dryly.
The first shop was a disappointment. The protocol droid bowed so low it knocked its head on the counter. The second tried to upsell you a ‘companion droid’ that made Ila blush violently. By the fourth shop, you were regretting everything.
“Maybe we just commission one from Kuat,” Maera muttered.
“Why? So it can bankrupt us while correcting my grammar?”
Then, in the fifth cramped storefront, you found it.
VX-7. The protocol droid stood motionless—sleek plating dulled by years, but optics sharp and intelligent. It didn’t grovel, didn’t babble. When you asked if it could handle over three dozen planetary dialects, it replied in all of them. When you asked if it could manage your schedule, redact sensitive communications, and tell a governor to kark off in six ways without causing a diplomatic incident, it smiled faintly and said:
“Of course, Senator. I specialize in tactfully worded hostility.”
You turned to Maera. “I’m keeping this one.”
Then something small rammed into your shin.
You looked down to see a battered astromech droid—paint chipped, dome scratched, one leg replaced with an old cargo hauler’s stabilizer. It beeped at you. Aggressively.
“What’s this?” you asked, raising a brow.
The shopkeeper looked apologetic. “R9-VD. Mean little bastard. Picks fights with power converters. Nearly blew a hole in my storage unit last week.”
Ila gasped. “Oh stars—he’s twitching!”
The droid growled.
You grinned. “I’ll take him.”
The shopkeeper blinked. “You will?”
“Buy one, bleed one free. Sounds like a bargain.”
“I was hoping you’d say that,” he muttered, already dragging the crate of restraining bolts out from behind the counter. “Take him before he sets fire to my register again.”
Maera stared at you. “You’re collecting feral droids now?”
“I collect useful things.”
You exited into the street, the new protocol droid gliding beside you, R9 clanking along behind like a stubby little demon. Ila was still muttering prayers under her breath. You were halfway through admiring your new acquisitions when a familiar bark echoed from across the thoroughfare.
“Senator!”
You turned to find Sergeant Hound, helmet off, walking toward you in full armor—Grizzer trotting loyally at his side.
“Well, well,” you said. “Look who I find when I’m burdened with two droids and a fainting noble.”
Hound laughed, scratching behind Grizzer’s ear. “Running errands?”
“Recruiting staff,” you said, nodding toward the droids. “The tall one speaks over a thousand languages. The short one hates everything.”
Grizzer growled affectionately at the astromech, who let out an aggressive beep in return.
“Careful,” Hound chuckled. “Grizzer likes him.”
You watched the way he stood—relaxed but alert, protective but never patronizing. When he met your eyes, there was no awkwardness, no nervous fumbling.
No obliviousness.
“Walking your route?” you asked.
“North patrol. You’re in my sector.”
“How fortunate for me,” you said, letting your tone shift slightly—warm, measured, curious. Not performative.
Just real.
Hound smiled, a little wider than usual. “Need an escort home again, Senator?”
“Only if Grizzer promises not to chew on R9’s restraining bolt.”
The droid made a noise like it was loading a weapon. Grizzer barked once, delighted.
Hound looked between you, the droids, your handmaidens—then back to you.
“I think I could be persuaded.”
You smiled. And for the first time in a while, it reached your eyes.
⸻
The doors to your apartment hissed open with a smooth sigh of hydraulics. The droids rolled and clicked in after you, their sensors flicking to scan the space—uninvited, instinctual, and irritating.
“Ila,” you called before your cloak hit the back of the nearest chair. “Make sure the astromech doesn’t electrocute anything.”
“Yes, Senator!” she said quickly, scrambling after the droid as it began sniffing around the comm terminal like it wanted to chew through the wires.
“Maera,” you continued, already tugging off your gloves. “I want them both repainted, polished, and calibrated by tomorrow morning.”
Maera raised a brow. “The astromech too?”
“I want it looking like it belongs to a senator, not some spice-smuggler from Nal Hutta.”
“The protocol droid seems compliant,” Maera said dryly. “The other one just tried to bite the upholstery.”
You turned and narrowed your eyes at R9-VD, who stared back—optics glowing, dome twitching.
“I don’t care if it wants to die in rusted anonymity. It’s going to shine. And we’ll scrub the attitude off if we have to sandblast it.”
Maera only nodded, too used to this by now. She snapped her fingers toward the cleaning droids and pulled out a datapad to begin scheduling repairs and a polish crew.
You poured yourself a glass of something dark and expensive and leaned against the balcony frame. The city buzzed beyond the transparisteel, a sleepless, greedy animal that had become your second home.
The protocol droid finally stepped forward, voice even.
“Shall I begin familiarizing myself with your schedule, Senator?”
“Start with everything I’ve put off since the Kessen disaster.”
“That could take a while.”
“Good,” you said with a small smile. “That means I’ll finally be caught up.”
As the droids were ushered away for cleaning, you took a sip of your drink, eyes never leaving the skyline.
Everything was sharpening.
Even your toys.
⸻
Coruscant’s dusk cast long shadows over the Guard barracks. Inside the command room, Fox stood over a data console, reviewing the latest internal report—a thinly veiled attempt to stay busy, to stay removed. The hum of troop activity outside was constant, comforting. Controlled.
Hound leaned against the far wall, arms folded, helmet clipped to his belt. He’d been unusually quiet on patrol. Fox noticed.
“You’ve been around the senator a lot lately,” Fox said, voice neutral, still scanning the holoscreen. “She using you for access?”
Hound’s brow ticked upward, slow and unimpressed. “That a serious question?”
Fox finally looked up. “She doesn’t keep people close unless she can gain from it.”
“She doesn’t exactly keep you far.”
That made Fox pause.
Hound pushed off the wall and stepped forward, tone low. “You ever think she’s not using either of us?”
“She’s a politician,” Fox said bluntly. “That’s what they do.”
“And you’re a commander,” Hound shot back. “You’re supposed to see the battlefield. But somehow you can’t see that both those senators—Chuchi and her—don’t just want your vote in a hearing. They want you. And you—kriffing hell, Fox—you’re so deep in denial, it’s tragic.”
Fox opened his mouth, but nothing came. His jaw tensed. His fingers curled tighter over the edge of the console.
Before the tension could crack the air entirely—
“Commander Fox.”
The voice was delicate, practiced, kind. Senator Chuchi stepped into the command room, her pale blue presence a breath of cold air between the two men.
Hound stepped aside, silent.
Chuchi held out a small datapad. “These are the updated refugee settlement numbers. I thought it best to deliver them personally.”
Fox took it, fingers brushing hers for half a second too long. “Appreciated, Senator.”
Chuchi’s eyes lingered on him, soft but calculating. “I also hoped to ask you about additional patrol rotations near the lower levels. I’ve had…concerns.”
Her tone was careful, concern genuine—but her glance toward Hound didn’t go unnoticed.
Hound met it with polite detachment, but behind his eyes, something shifted. He excused himself quietly and stepped past them, boots heavy on the stone floor. Neither of them saw the way his jaw clenched or the storm in his expression as he exited.
Fox stood frozen a moment longer, datapad in hand, Chuchi watching him.
Something had changed.
The lines were no longer clean.
He used to know what battlefield he stood on.
Now… he wasn’t so sure.
⸻
It wasn’t like you were following Fox.
You just happened to be heading toward the main Guard corridor with a report in hand. The protocol droid clanked behind you, reciting lines of political updates from other mid-rim systems while your new astromech—newly repainted in deep senate gold and high-gloss black—scuttled along beside it, muttering occasional threats at passing security cameras.
Pure coincidence, really.
You slowed when you rounded the corner near the war room. There they were—Fox and Chuchi.
She stood closer than usual. Too close.
Her hand brushed his vambrace as she handed him something. Fox didn’t pull away. He didn’t lean in either. Just… stood there. Controlled. Focused. But not untouched.
You paused. Watched. Tilted your head.
For a second, you hated her grace. Her softness. The way she made proximity seem natural instead of tactical. And how Fox didn’t seem to flinch from it.
A glimmer of something crawled up your spine—irritation? Jealousy? No. You didn’t have the luxury of that.
Before you could form a thought sharp enough to fling like a dagger—
CLANK—whiiiiiiiiirRRRRRZK—BEEP BEEP BEEP.
R9-VD rounded the corner like a demon loosed from hell’s server room, chased by your newly programmed protocol droid, whose polished plating gleamed like a diplomatic dagger.
“Senator!” the protocol droid trilled. “Your schedule is running precisely six minutes behind! Shall we move?”
Fox turned instantly at the racket, his expression shifting from unreadable to just vaguely resigned.
Chuchi stepped back from him with that serene smile she always wore in public, just a whisper too composed.
“Ah,” you said smoothly as you strode into view, “Don’t let me interrupt.”
“Senator,” Fox greeted you, stiff but polite. Chuchi nodded.
You let your gaze flick between them, slowly. One brow raised, mouth curved like you already knew the answer to a question no one asked. “Looks like everyone’s getting awfully familiar lately.”
“Professional coordination,” Chuchi replied, not missing a beat.
“Mm,” you hummed, eyes on Fox. “Is that what they’re calling it now?”
Fox’s brow twitched. Chuchi’s smile remained.
You snapped your fingers, and both droids froze. “Let’s go. We’ve got senators to ignore and corruption to thin out.”
As you swept past, you didn’t miss the way Fox glanced at you—just for a heartbeat.
Not enough.
Never enough.
But still… something.
⸻
The rotunda thundered with voices—some raised in passion, others carefully modulated with practiced deceit. The topic today was dangerous, volatile: the proposal for the accelerated production of a new wave of clone battalions.
You stood with one arm draped lazily along the back of your bench, expression unreadable but gaze sharp as vibroglass. Across the chamber, Chuchi had just taken the floor.
“I speak not against the clones themselves,” Chuchi said clearly, firmly. “But against the idea that we can continue this endless production without consequence. We are bankrupting our future.”
Your fingers tapped against the railing, the only sign of interest until you leaned forward to activate your mic.
“For once,” you said, voice cutting smoothly through the chamber, “I find myself in agreement with my esteemed colleague from Pantora.”
A ripple of surprise swept through the seats like a silent explosion. A rare alliance—unthinkable.
You continued. “We’re manufacturing soldiers like credits grow on trees. They don’t. The Banking Clan is already circling like carrion. Every new battalion is another rope around the Republic’s neck.”
That set the chamber ablaze.
Senator Ask Aak from Malastare sputtered his disagreement. “Our survival depends on maintaining numerical superiority!”
“And what happens when we can’t feed those numbers, Senator?” you snapped. “Do we sell your planet’s moons next?”
As chaos unfolded, the usual suspects fell into line—corrupt senators offering their support for more clone production, their pockets no doubt already lined with promises from arms manufacturers and banking lobbyists.
After the session ended, you stood shoulder to shoulder with Chuchi outside the rotunda. She looked exhausted but satisfied.
“Strange day,” she said quietly. “Stranger allies.”
You sipped from a flask you definitely weren’t supposed to have in the Senate building. “Don’t get used to it.”
But before she could respond—
“Senators,” came the purring, bloated voice of Orn Free Taa, waddling over with the smugness of someone who believed he owned the floor he walked on. “Your sudden alliance is… fascinating. One might wonder what prompted it. A common bedfellow, perhaps?”
You opened your mouth—but your protocol droid stepped forward first, blocking your path like a prim, glossy wall.
“Senator Taa,” the droid began in clipped, neutral tones. “While my mistress would be more than happy to humor your curious obsession with projecting your insecurities onto others, she is currently preoccupied with not strangling you with her own Senate robes.”
Taa blinked, thrown off by the droid’s tone. “Excuse me?”
The protocol unit didn’t miss a beat. “Forgive me, Senator. That was the polite version. I am still calibrating my diplomatic protocols, but I’ve been programmed specifically to identify corruption, incompetence, and conversational redundancy. You seem to be triggering all three.”
A sharp wheeze escaped Taa’s throat. “Why, I never—!”
“I suspect you have,” the droid interjected coolly, “and quite often.”
You didn’t even try to hide your smirk. “Don’t worry, Senator. He’s new. Still ironing out his filters. But I must say—he has excellent instincts.”
Chuchi choked on a laugh she tried very hard to disguise as a cough. Taa huffed and stormed off in an indignant swirl of silks and jowls.
Your droid turned to you. “Mistress, was I too subtle?”
“Perfect,” you said, patting its durasteel head. “I’ll make sure you get an oil bath laced with Corellian spice.”
Beside you, Chuchi finally let her laugh out. “I never thought I’d say this, but I may actually like your droid.”
“High praise coming from you.”
You both stood there for a quiet moment, mutual respect buried beneath mutual exhaustion.
“Today was strange,” she murmured again. “But… maybe not entirely bad.”
You tilted your head. “Don’t tell me you’re warming up to me, Chuchi.”
She gave you a look—wry, but not cold. “I’m starting to wonder if the galaxy would survive it if I did.”
Before you could respond, your astromech barreled out of the shadows, shrieking some new string of mechanical curses at a cleaning droid it had apparently declared war against.
You sighed. “And there goes diplomacy.”
Chuchi smiled. “Maybe the Senate could use more of that.”
Maybe.
⸻
The Grand Atrium of the Senate tower glittered with chandeliers imported from Alderaan, light dancing off glass and gold like it had something to celebrate. The banquet was a delicate affair—sponsored by the Supreme Chancellor himself, under the guise of “Republic Unity” and “Cross-Branch Collaboration.”
You could smell the tension in the air the moment you stepped in.
Long tables overflowed with artful dishes and finer wines. Senators mingled with Jedi, Guard officers, and military brass. Laughter drifted across the space, hollow and too loud. You walked in dressed to kill, as always—not in literal armor, but close enough. Your eyes swept the crowd. Scanned. Not for enemies. Just… two men.
You found them both within seconds.
Fox stood near the far arch, stoic in formal Guard reds, talking with Mace Windu and Master Yoda. Chuchi was at his side, hands clasped politely, expression open, deferential. Her eyes weren’t on Windu.
They were on Fox.
Across the room, Hound leaned against a support pillar near the musicians, his posture deceptively casual. Grizzer lay at his feet like a shadow. Hound’s eyes found yours immediately. He didn’t look away.
For a few beats, neither did you.
“You’re staring again,” your handmaiden whispered as she passed, wine in one hand.
“I’m assessing military distribution,” you replied flatly, plucking the glass.
“Liar.”
You smiled over the rim.
The Jedi presence tonight was thick. Kenobi, cloaked in his usual piety. Skywalker, prowling the crowd like he’d rather be anywhere else. Even Plo Koon and Shaak Ti made appearances, the Council exuding quiet power.
You didn’t care about them. Not really.
You moved.
Chuchi’s voice reached your ears as you approached the table where she and Fox stood. “I just think the Guard needs greater Senate oversight—not control, but transparency. For their safety.”
Fox nodded. “A fair point, Senator.”
“I’m shocked,” you drawled, appearing at his other side. “You usually flinch when people imply oversight.”
Chuchi’s smile cooled half a degree. “Some of us don’t believe in oversight being synonymous with domination.”
You sipped your wine. “I don’t dominate anyone who doesn’t want to be.”
Fox choked on his drink. Windu raised a brow and promptly walked away.
Chuchi’s stare could have frosted glass. “You’re impossible.”
“Debatable,” you replied. Then, sweetly, “Careful, Senator. You’re starting to sound jealous.”
Before Fox could open his mouth—likely to misinterpret all of this—Hound appeared beside you.
“Senator,” he said, his voice a little low, a little warm. “I didn’t know you’d be here.”
You tilted toward him just slightly. “Trying to avoid me?”
“Not a chance.”
Fox’s eyes flicked toward you both. Sharp. Confused.
Chuchi noticed. Her gaze narrowed.
The conversation fractured as other senators arrived—Mon Mothma offered a cool nod, Padmé a quiet, guarded greeting. Bail approached with that politician’s smile and a quick, dry joke about the wine being better than the Senate votes.
But your attention split.
Fox’s shoulders were tense. He wasn’t making eye contact. Not with Chuchi. Not with you.
You leaned closer to Hound instead. “Tell me, Sergeant. Ever get tired of playing guard dog?”
“Not if the person I’m guarding’s worth the chase.”
That pulled a quiet snort from you. Fox heard it.
Chuchi, lips pressed in a fine line, excused herself and stepped aside—clearly trying to regain the upper hand.
The music swelled. Jedi floated between circles of influence. No one else seemed to notice that the air had gone charged, electric. A love square strung tight.
You stood between them, half a heartbeat from chaos.
And somewhere deep down, you enjoyed it.
The lights in the atrium dimmed just slightly as a new musical ensemble began to play—string instruments from Naboo, delicate and formal. On the surface, everything was polished elegance. Beneath, cracks were spreading.
Chuchi had excused herself from your circle not out of disinterest, but strategy. She’d caught sight of your handmaidens lingering near a refreshments table, their gowns modest and their eyes sweeping the room with practiced subtlety.
“Excuse me,” she said with a gentle smile as she approached. “You’re the senator’s attendants, yes?”
Your senior handmaiden, Maera offered only a nod. Ila, eager to please and twice as naive, curtsied.
“She’s fortunate to have you,” Chuchi continued, a kindness in her voice. “It can’t be easy, assisting someone so… involved in such controversial matters.”
“It isn’t,” said the younger girl quickly. “But she’s not what people say. She just—”
“She just doesn’t care who she angers, as long as it moves the line,” the elder interrupted. “It’s her strength. And her flaw.”
Chuchi tilted her head. “You’re fiercely loyal.”
“We don’t have the luxury of softness where we’re from, Senator Chuchi,” the elder said simply. “Not all planets grow up in peace.”
Before Chuchi could respond, a sudden flare of static caught attention nearby.
Your protocol droid—newly repainted and proud in fresh navy and chrome—was engaged in a verbal deathmatch with none other than C-3PO.
“I assure you,” Threepio huffed, “I have been fluent in over six million forms of communication since before you were assembled, and—”
“Perhaps,” your droid cut in smoothly, “but proficiency does not equal relevance. One might be fluent in six million forms of conversation and still be incapable of saying anything useful.”
“Well, I never—!”
“Correct. And that, sir, is the problem.”
Nearby Jedi Council members were visibly trying not to react, though Plo Koon’s mask did a poor job of hiding the amused twitch at the edge of his mouth.
Amid the chaos, you had drifted from the center. Politics buzzed behind you. You found yourself near the balcony edge—narrow, cordoned off, affording a view of Coruscant’s skyline.
Fox found you there.
You knew it was him before he spoke—he moved like precision, shadow and control in equal measure.
“Senator.”
You didn’t turn, not right away. “Commander.”
He stepped beside you, stiff in his formal armor, helmet clipped to his belt.
“I noticed your… astromech’s absence tonight.”
You smirked faintly. “Yes, well. I’d like to avoid sparking an incident with the Jedi Council over a ‘misunderstanding.’ He has a habit of setting things on fire and claiming self-defense.”
Fox made a sound—something between a huff and a grunt. Amused. Maybe.
You turned your head slightly, catching his expression. “Disappointed? I thought you didn’t approve of my companions.”
“I don’t,” he admitted. “But I’m…used to them.”
That was, for Fox, practically a declaration of fondness.
“I’d say the same about you,” you said, voice quieter now. “I don’t approve of you either. But I’ve gotten used to you.”
His jaw flexed. He didn’t answer. Not directly. But his eyes lingered longer than they should have.
Then—
“Senator,” Chuchi’s voice cut across the air like a scalpel.
You turned to find her approaching, poised and polished. Behind her, your protocol droid and C-3PO were still trading passive-aggressive historical references. Hound watched the balcony from a distance, arms crossed, unreadable.
Fox straightened the moment Chuchi arrived. You stepped back just a little.
And the triangle turned into a square again.
Tight.
Tense.
And ready to collapse.
⸻
Beyond the golden arches of the Senate Hall, music swelled and faded like waves. Goblets clinked. Laughter rolled off the lips of polished politicians and robed generals. But not everyone was celebrating.
Behind an alcove veiled by rich burgundy drapes, four Jedi stood in quiet counsel.
Mace Windu, ever the sentinel of Order, stood at the head of the half-circle, his gaze fixed beyond the banquet like he could see the fractures forming beneath the marble.
“His behavior has changed,” Windu said. “Subtly. But not insignificantly.”
“He still reports for duty,” Plo Koon offered, voice gravel-smooth but thoughtful. “Still acts with discipline.”
“And yet,” Shaak Ti murmured, “I have observed Commander Fox linger longer than usual at Senate functions. His patrol patterns shift more often when certain senators are present. And he has taken… liberties with Senator Ryio’s assignments.”
“Nothing has breached protocol,” Anakin interjected. “Fox is loyal. He’s the best the Guard has.”
Shaak Ti gave him a long look. “And yet, there is more than one clone whose loyalty might now be divided.”
Anakin’s jaw twitched.
“This isn’t Kamino,” Windu said coolly. “We cannot afford emotional compromise in the Guard—not now, not when tensions are already splintering the Senate. These clones were not bred for palace intrigue.”
Plo Koon folded his arms. “And yet we bring them into the heart of it.”
“We trained them to follow orders,” Shaak Ti added gently. “Not hearts.”
Anakin looked between them, the shadows of his past bleeding into the tension. He didn’t need to ask who else they were talking about. It wasn’t just Fox. Hound had been seen near Senator [Y/N]’s apartment. Thorn, too, had lingered far longer than necessary when she’d been attacked.
“She’s dangerous,” Mace continued, tone edged in steel. “Not reckless—but calculating. Clever. Her alliances shift like smoke, and I do not trust her attention toward Fox or the others.”
“She’s done nothing wrong,” Anakin said.
“Yet,” Windu countered. “Keep watch, Skywalker. If she’s tangled them in personal threads, it must be cut. Quickly.”
⸻
You sipped from your glass of deep red wine, half-listening to a cluster of outer rim delegates arguing over fleet taxation. But your eyes wandered, again, to the crimson armor across the room.
Fox.
He was speaking with Mon Mothma and Bail Organa. Calm. Professional. Controlled, as always.
But his gaze flickered toward you now and then—unreadable, unreadably Fox. And just behind him, your polished protocol droid hovered patiently, Maera and Ila whispering about a dessert tray.
The Council was watching. You could feel it.
⸻
The air inside the Jedi Councilchamber was tense, still, and too quiet. Four members of the Coruscant Guard stood before the Jedi Council’s senior representatives: Fox, Thorn, Stone, and Hound, all sharp in posture, their expressions unreadable behind the stoic training of a million battlefield hours.
Opposite them, stood Masters Mace Windu, Shaak Ti, Plo Koon, and a late-arriving Anakin Skywalker, who kept to the shadows of the room.
“This is not an accusation,” Master Windu began, tone steely. “But a reminder. You are peacekeepers. Defenders of the Republic. Not participants in the political games of its Senate.”
Shaak Ti added gently, “We’ve noted a… shift. Certain guards developing close ties to senators. Attachments. Loyalties. Intimacies. We remind you that such relationships blur lines—lines that should never have been crossed.”
Plo Koon looked to them with quiet concern. “It is not about love, nor about loyalty. It is about danger. Risk. The Republic cannot afford to have its protectors compromised by personal bonds.”
Hound flinched. Barely. Fox didn’t move, but Thorn cast him a pointed glance.
“We won’t name names,” Windu said, “but this is your only warning. Choose duty.”
Dismissed, the clones saluted and filed out, silent as ghosts—yet burdened more heavily than ever.
⸻
It was nearly midnight when the knock came. You weren’t expecting anyone—Maera had already sent off the last reports, and Ila was curled up with a datapad on the couch.
Maera opened the door, only to blink as Anakin Skywalker strolled in, cloak trailing and R2-D2 chirping along behind him.
“Don’t tell me the Jedi are doing door-to-door interrogations now,” you said, not bothering to stand from your desk.
“Just figured you should hear it from someone who doesn’t speak in riddles and judgment,” Anakin replied. “They warned the Guard today.”
You looked up slowly.
“About me?”
“About all of it. You. Chuchi. Hound. Fox.”
You leaned back in your chair, lacing your fingers together. “So the Council knows?”
“They suspect,” he clarified. “But they’ve already made up their minds. No direct interference. But they’ll start pulling strings. Reassignments. Surveillance. Sudden policy shifts.”
You exhaled slowly. “Let me guess. The clones are the ones punished.”
Anakin’s jaw tightened. “Always.”
He came closer, leaning against the wall by your window. “Whatever this is, [Y/N], if you want to protect them—you keep it behind closed doors. Don’t give the Council an excuse.”
Your eyes narrowed, flicking up to him. “And what would you know about secret relationships with forbidden attachments?”
Anakin looked out over the Coruscant skyline. “More than you think.”
R2-D2 gave a sympathetic beep. At his side, your own droid—R9—rolled out from the side hall, curious as ever. Shockingly, the grumpy little astromech gave R2 a pleased warble. The two machines chirped at each other in low binary, exchanging stories, gossip, perhaps a murder plot. You couldn’t tell.
“Great,” you muttered. “My homicidal trash can made a friend.”
VX-7 entered as well, standing sentinel near the door and giving R2 a quick scan before offering a polite, professional greeting. “Designation confirmed. Diplomatic assistant, Anakin Skywalker. Cleared for temporary access.”
“You really upgraded them,” Anakin noted.
“They’re smarter than most senators,” you said with a dry smirk. “And less dangerous.”
He moved to leave, but hesitated. “Just… be careful. I know you think you don’t owe anyone anything—but Hound’s already in too deep. And Fox? He’s starting to crack.”
“Fox doesn’t even know he’s in love,” you said coolly.
“Exactly,” Anakin said. “That makes him more dangerous than the rest of us.”
You gave him a look. “Including you?”
Anakin’s lips quirked. “Especially me.”
Then he and R2 were gone, and the apartment fell quiet again—except for the low, strangely comforting chatter of astromechs speaking in beeps and secrets.
⸻
Previous Part | Next Part
Fox X Reader
Summary: In the heart of the Republic Senate, political tension runs high—and so does romantic rivalry. Senators [Y/N] and Ryio Chuchi both battle for the attention of Commander Fox. Unbeknownst to Fox, he’s walked straight into the a love triangle he has no idea exists.
⸻
The Senate chamber buzzed with tension—not the kind that demanded attention with yelling or gavel-pounding, but the kind that simmered beneath the surface, the kind that danced behind careful words and meticulously prepared statements.
You sat at your designated repulsorpod, leaning back in your seat with an expression of carefully manufactured boredom. A debate over Republic funding for refugee programs droned on, and across from you, Senator Riyo Chuchi’s voice rang out clear and impassioned.
“We cannot in good conscience divert funds from displaced Outer Rim citizens simply to bolster another military initiative,” she said, chin held high, the folds of her blue and violet robes immaculate.
You raised a brow and tapped your data pad lightly, requesting the floor.
“While I admire Senator Chuchi’s ever-vibrant moral compass,” you began smoothly, tone like silk with a hint of mockery, “perhaps the esteemed senator might consider that without a capable military initiative, there won’t be any citizens left to protect—displaced or otherwise.”
Gasps and murmurs broke out, but Chuchi didn’t flinch.
“That’s a dangerous line of thought, Senator. Lives are not chess pieces.”
You offered her a practiced smile. “And idealism doesn’t win wars.”
The Chancellor’s gavel rang out with sharp finality. “Debate concluded for today. This matter will be brought to committee vote at the end of the week.”
The chamber dispersed slowly, senators floating back into the corridors of marble and durasteel. You stepped off your pod and were already pulling your cloak tighter around your shoulders when a voice called out behind you.
“Senator [L/N], a moment?”
Chuchi.
You turned, arching a brow. “Didn’t get enough of me in the chamber?”
She narrowed her eyes. “I’m not interested in trading barbs with you. I simply want to understand how you can so casually justify funding military expansion when entire systems are starving.”
You smiled, but it didn’t reach your eyes. “Because I’ve seen what happens when we don’t. War isn’t pretty, Senator. You might call me heartless—but I call myself prepared.”
“And I call you reckless.”
You stepped forward, closing the distance. “And I call you naïve.”
The air crackled between you, tension thick—not quite hatred, not quite anything else. She was too sincere. You were too guarded. It was inevitable you’d clash.
Then a new voice cut through the air, cool and commanding.
“Senators.”
Both of you turned in unison.
Standing at full height in pristine red armor was Commander Fox, hands clasped behind his back in perfect posture. The red of the Coruscant Guard gleamed under the overhead lighting, the expressionless T-shaped visor trained on you both.
Beside him stood Chancellor Palpatine, his hands tucked neatly into his sleeves, pale face betraying amusement.
“Ah, Senators. I hope I’m not interrupting,” the Chancellor said, eyes glinting. “Commander Fox will be joining the Senate Security Council temporarily as my personal attaché. You may be seeing more of him in the coming weeks.”
You didn’t hear half of what Palpatine said after Commander Fox.
Your eyes met his visor, and though you couldn’t see his face, something in your chest shifted. He looked like a statue carved from war itself—silent, strong, utterly unreadable.
Next to you, Chuchi straightened slightly.
“Well,” she said softly, “that’s… interesting.”
You shot her a look.
She smirked, just the smallest twist of her lips, and in that second, something shifted again—this time between you and her. An unspoken recognition.
You both had the same thought.
Oh. He’s beautiful.
And neither of you was going to back down.
⸻
The Grand Senate Reception Hall shimmered beneath low, golden lights. Crystal goblets clicked, servers weaved between senators with silent grace, and orchestral music hummed in the background like an afterthought.
You hated every second of it.
The champagne was good, but not good enough to justify the politics that oozed from every polished marble corner. A thousand smiles, none sincere. A thousand compliments, each one a calculation.
You leaned against one of the grand pillars, drink in hand, watching the room like a predator waiting for prey to slip.
“Senator [L/N],” came a too-pleasant voice behind you.
You turned to face Bail Organa. Of course.
“Organa,” you said smoothly. “Slumming it with the likes of me?”
His smile was thin. “Just wondering how long you planned to keep needling Chuchi during committee sessions before it turns into a full-on scandal.”
You tilted your glass in his direction. “Oh, I’m counting on it.”
Before he could respond, Mon Mothma joined him with Padmé in tow. All three wore expressions like they’d stepped in something foul.
“Good evening,” Padmé offered stiffly. “Still nursing your taste for conflict, I see.”
You smirked. “Keeps the blood warm.”
Mon Mothma looked you over like she was assessing a wine stain on her robes. “There’s more to governance than combativeness, Senator.”
You sipped your drink. “Says the woman who’s never had to blackmail a warlord into voting for food aid.”
Padmé frowned. “There are other ways to—”
“Sure,” you cut in. “The moral high road. But it’s paved with corpses who couldn’t afford your patience.”
The silence that followed was deafening. Bail gave a tight nod and ushered them away. You watched them go with a smirk. Poking them was too easy.
A moment later, you felt the air shift.
You didn’t need to look to know who had walked in.
Commander Fox. Standing beside Chancellor Palpatine like a silent shadow, red armor pristine, his helmet tucked under one arm.
The murmurs were immediate—political interest, curiosity, and more than a few appreciative glances. But yours wasn’t casual interest. It was sharp, focused.
You tilted your head as you watched him, just for a moment too long.
Then your eyes slid sideways—and met Chuchi’s.
She was across the room, bathed in soft light, delicate hands curled around a glass of something clear. She followed your gaze to Fox, then back to you.
You smiled. She didn’t.
She turned away, cutting through the crowd with all the elegance her status demanded, and joined a cluster of senators.
You drifted toward a table where the more pragmatic senators had gathered— Ask Aak, Orn Free Taa—laughing too loud and sipping drinks too strong.
“[L/N],” Taa grunted, patting the seat beside him. “We were just discussing how flexible some of the outer rim tax restrictions could be… for the right votes.”
“Always such stimulating conversation,” you replied dryly, sitting with an exaggerated sigh. “I assume the ‘right votes’ are the ones that come with a gift basket.”
Laughter. Real, ugly laughter. You loathed them—but they were useful. They liked you because you weren’t afraid to get your hands dirty. Because you didn’t waste time with speeches about justice and peace.
You spotted Chuchi again. She stood near a window, now much closer to Fox—speaking to him, if briefly. His responses were clipped and polite, the kind of efficiency born from a lifetime of standing guard and keeping his thoughts locked behind durasteel.
She laughed lightly at something he said. Her smile was warm. Kind.
You drained your glass.
She was playing the charm angle.
You? You preferred a more direct approach.
You slipped away from the corrupt senators, weaving through the crowd with predator’s ease, and approached the refreshment table just as Fox turned away from Chuchi.
You timed it perfectly.
“Commander,” you said, voice low and silken.
He turned, visor tilting downward to meet your gaze. Even without seeing his face, his posture straightened slightly.
“Senator,” he acknowledged.
“Enjoying yourself?” you asked, voice casual, picking up another glass.
He hesitated. “Not particularly.”
You smiled, genuinely this time. “Good. You’re not missing anything.”
His head tilted slightly. “I assumed as much.”
There was a pause—an odd, quiet moment in the middle of a too-loud room. Then Chuchi reappeared at Fox’s other side.
“Commander,” she greeted, “I hope [L/N] isn’t boring you with cynicism.”
You raised a brow. “I could say the same about your optimism.”
Fox looked between you, the briefest shift of weight betraying his discomfort. If he realized you were fighting over him, he didn’t show it.
“Senators,” he said carefully, “I’m assigned here for the Chancellor’s protection, not personal conversation.”
“Oh, but conversation is protection,” you said. “The more you know what someone’s hiding, the better you know where to aim.”
Chuchi frowned, eyes narrowing. “Not everyone’s out for blood.”
You tilted your head toward her. “No. But everyone’s out for something.”
Fox stared straight ahead, impassive.
He had no idea what he’d just stepped into.
The pause between the three of you had stretched just a breath too long.
Fox, ever the professional, inclined his head. “If you’ll excuse me, Senators. I have to return to my post.”
Without another word, he turned and strode away with mechanical precision, the red of his armor catching the candlelight like a bloodstain.
You watched him go. So did Chuchi.
The second he was out of earshot, her voice dropped like a blade.
“You know,” she said tightly, “the clones aren’t toys.”
You blinked, slowly turning your head toward her.
“They’re people,” she continued, voice soft but steely. “They’re not here for your amusement, Senator. You don’t get to play with them like they’re decorations to be admired and discarded.”
You took a measured sip of your drink, then smiled—razor-sharp and unbothered. “How charming. I didn’t realize we were giving lectures tonight.”
“This isn’t a joke.”
“Oh, I agree. It’s far funnier than that.”
Chuchi’s jaw tensed.
You swirled the liquid in your glass and added, “Tell me, Senator—do you think standing near him and smiling like a saint makes you so different from me?”
“I am different,” she snapped, surprising even herself with the venom behind her words. “I see him as a person. Not a piece of armor. Not a weapon. Not a status symbol.”
You arched a brow. “And what, exactly, do you think I see?”
She folded her arms. “A game. Another victory to notch in your belt. Another soldier to claim until you get bored.”
You laughed, low and cool. “Please. I have senators for that.”
She didn’t laugh. She just stared—eyes narrowing, mouth tight.
“I respect him,” she said. “You—use people.”
You leaned in, just slightly. “You idealize them. Which is more dangerous, really?”
She didn’t answer, but the look on her face said enough. Her hands were clenched now, knuckles white against the soft blue of her gown.
“I don’t need to explain myself to you,” she muttered.
“No,” you said lightly. “You really don’t.”
You watched her go, shoulders stiff, spine straight, like she was marching into battle. It was almost admirable.
You turned back toward the banquet table, tossing back the rest of your drink. Your reflection stared back at you from the polished surface of a silver decanter—smiling, sharp, and just a little bit empty.
Whatever this thing with Fox was, it wasn’t going to be simple.
And now?
It was war.
The echo of Chuchi’s righteous indignation still rang in your ears as you refilled your drink—this time with something stronger, something that bit like guilt and went down like justification.
Across the room, Mas Amedda stood like a shrine to smugness, flanked by a pair of simpering mid-rim senators and dressed in robes so ostentatious they practically screamed I embezzle with style.
You watched him, your jaw shifting slightly.
There were few things more satisfying than needling the Vice Chair of the Senate. He was pompous, corrupt, and so tightly wound with self-importance that it only took a few words to make him unravel. You needed a release, and he was the perfect target.
You crossed the floor with a glide in your step, your voice syrupy sweet as you approached.
“Vice Chair,” you said, feigning surprise, “I was wondering where the stench of smug had gone. I should’ve known you’d be hiding by the brie.”
Mas Amedda turned, expression souring instantly.
“Senator [L/N],” he drawled. “Still mistaking sarcasm for diplomacy, I see.”
You grinned. “Still mistaking your office for relevance?”
One of the mid-rim senators stifled a laugh. Amedda’s nostrils flared.
“You may be comfortable fraternizing with war profiteers and gang-world delegates, but some of us still value the sanctity of Republic law.”
You raised your glass. “How inspiring. And yet I could’ve sworn I saw your name on the same resource contract that mysteriously bypassed ethical review last week. A clerical error, I’m sure.”
He sneered. “You have no proof.”
You shrugged. “I don’t need proof. I have implication. It’s amazing what a rumor can do, especially when whispered in just the right ears.”
Amedda opened his mouth to fire back—but another voice cut in before he could.
“I’ve often wondered how some of those contracts pass committee oversight,” said Bail Organa, sliding into the conversation like a knife through silk.
You blinked, surprised.
Amedda turned on him, fuming. “Senator Organa—surely you don’t mean to stand beside this sort of company.”
Bail glanced at you. His expression was unreadable, but there was the faintest spark in his eyes. “For once, I find myself intrigued by Senator [L/N]’s line of questioning.”
You tilted your head at him. “Well, well. Welcome to the dark side.”
Bail ignored the jab. “Vice Chair, some of your recent dealings have raised questions. Especially regarding those tax exemptions on Nixor. If I recall correctly, your name appeared in four separate communications with the system’s mining guild.”
Amedda’s eyes narrowed. “You tread dangerously close to slander.”
“I tread carefully,” Bail said smoothly, “but not quietly.”
The Vice Chair stormed off, muttering something in Cheunh you assumed was an insult.
You turned to Bail, still stunned. “Never thought I’d see the day you jumped in with me.”
He exhaled. “Let’s just say I’m tired of watching corruption thrive behind ceremonial titles.”
You studied him for a moment. “So this is your rebellious phase?”
“Don’t get used to it,” he said. “And don’t assume it means I like you.”
“I’d never make that mistake,” you said dryly.
He gave you a look—annoyed, maybe impressed, it was hard to tell—then vanished into the crowd again.
You stood there a moment longer, alone again in a sea of masks and shadows, feeling strangely adrift. You hadn’t expected Bail’s support. You hadn’t expected Chuchi’s anger to sting. And you definitely hadn’t expected Fox to keep creeping into your thoughts like a silent ghost.
You sighed, looking toward the far exit where you’d last seen him standing guard.
This war—on the floor, in the heart, in your head—it was only just beginning.
⸻
The night had thinned to only the devoted and the damned.
You slipped through one of the Senate’s shadowed walkways, heels echoing faintly on polished stone. The reception was dying—senators gone or passed out, secrets spilled or swallowed whole. The quiet was a balm. But you weren’t quite ready to leave.
Not without one last indulgence.
You found him near the overlook—Commander Fox, helmet tucked under one arm, posture razor-straight even at this ungodly hour. Three of his guards flanked him a few paces back, slightly slouched and murmuring low.
You let your presence be known by the scent of your perfume and the lazy drag of your voice.
“Well, well. Still on duty, Commander?” you purred, letting your gaze travel unapologetically over his frame.
Fox turned, visor meeting your gaze. “Senator.”
That voice—low, flat, professional. Predictable. Delicious.
You stepped closer, letting your robe fall open just enough at the collar to hint at skin and intent. “Tell me something, Commander… do you sleep in that armor? Or do you ever let yourself breathe?”
Behind him, one of his troopers coughed loudly.
Fox didn’t move. “Senator, is there something you need?”
You tsked softly. “Need? No. Want? That’s another conversation.”
More snickering from the clones behind him. One of them muttered, “Stars, he really can’t tell…”
“CT-6149,” Fox barked without turning. “Stand down.”
“Yessir,” came the sheepish reply, followed by another muffled laugh.
You smiled, slow and deliberate, eyes half-lidded as you stalked one step closer. “You know, they’re right. You really don’t notice, do you?”
“Notice what?”
“That I’ve been undressing you with my eyes all night.”
One of the guards choked. “By the Force—”
“CT-8812. Silence.”
“Yessir!”
You dragged your fingers lightly along the cold railing, leaning in slightly, letting your body language linger somewhere between temptation and challenge. “You’re an impressive man, Fox. Loyal, deadly, painfully disciplined. It’s… compelling.”
“I’m a soldier,” he said stiffly. “Nothing more.”
You tilted your head. “Mm. Funny. That’s not what I see.”
His visor didn’t flinch. “With respect, Senator, I’m not here to entertain your flirtations.”
You let out a soft, amused sound. “Oh, Commander. I’m not looking for entertainment. I’m looking for cracks. And you… you wear your armor like a second skin, but I wonder how thin it is around your heart.”
Fox said nothing.
You stepped in so close you could almost feel the heat from his chestplate. “Tell me—do you ever let someone get close? Or are you afraid of what you might feel if you did?”
The silence stretched.
Behind him, the clones were practically vibrating with suppressed laughter, every single one of them watching their commanding officer get emotionally outmaneuvered and still not realize he was in a battlefield.
Fox’s voice came eventually, low and sharp. “Return to your patrol routes. Now.”
“Yes, Commander,” they chimed as one, jogging off down the corridor, not even pretending to keep a straight face.
Once they were gone, Fox exhaled slowly. Whether it was relief or tension, you couldn’t tell.
“You should be careful what you say,” he murmured at last.
You arched a brow. “Why? Because you might start listening?”
He was quiet again. Not a refusal. Not an acceptance. Just the weight of something unspoken hanging between you both.
You leaned in once more, lips near his ear.
“You make it so easy, Commander. Standing there like a statue, pretending you don’t know exactly what effect you have on people.”
“I don’t,” he said flatly.
You pulled back, smiling with all teeth and sin. “Exactly.”
You started to turn, then hesitated, gaze flicking to his. “For what it’s worth, I think you’re beautiful when you’re confused.”
He blinked once behind the visor.
Then you were gone—cloak sweeping behind you like the shadow of a secret. You didn’t look back.
Let him stand there and figure it out.
If he could.
The red of your cloak had barely disappeared down the corridor when another figure stepped from the shadows of a nearby archway.
Senator Riyo Chuchi.
Fox turned slightly at the sound of her footsteps—calm, measured, as if she hadn’t just been eavesdropping. But she had. Her composure was pristine as always, but her eyes… they were brighter than usual. Sharp with unspoken thoughts.
“Commander,” she said softly, folding her hands in front of her, voice light as snowfall. “You’re still working?”
Fox nodded. “Ensuring the area’s secure before we rotate out.”
“Diligent as ever.” Her smile was gentle. “Though I imagine your last conversation was… less standard protocol?”
Fox blinked. “Senator?”
Chuchi gestured toward the hallway where you’d just vanished. “Senator [L/N] can be… theatrical, can’t she?”
“She was… being herself,” Fox said cautiously.
Chuchi tilted her head, studying him. “And what do you make of her?”
He was quiet a moment.
“She’s strategic,” he said finally. “Sharp-tongued. Difficult to ignore.”
Chuchi hummed softly in agreement. “Yes. She often commands the room, even when she’s not trying to.”
She stepped beside him now, close—but not too close. Enough that the scent of her light floral perfume barely reached his senses. Enough that if she’d worn armor, she might’ve brushed shoulders with him.
“I couldn’t help but overhear,” she said, voice still soft, but with an edge Fox couldn’t quite place. “She seemed very… intent. On you.”
Fox tensed slightly. “She was teasing.”
“Was she?”
He turned to look at her. “Wasn’t she?”
Chuchi met his gaze, and there was something sad and sweet in her expression. “You don’t see it, do you?”
“See what?”
“That you matter,” she said simply. “To people.”
Fox straightened. “I matter to the Guard. To the Republic.”
“That’s not what I meant.”
She held his gaze a moment longer, then offered a small, fond smile—half kind, half wistful.
“She may flirt like it’s a weapon, but even weapons point at something.”
Fox stared at her, clearly still processing.
“I should go,” she said gently. “I have an early committee session. But, Commander…”
She paused, brushing a nonexistent wrinkle from her sleeve, her voice lower now.
“You may want to start noticing. Before someone gets hurt.”
She turned before he could respond, her steps light, her presence like a soft breeze after a storm.
Fox stood alone again, staring into nothing.
And somewhere deep behind the red of his helmet… confusion bloomed like a silent fire.
⸻
Next part
⸻
Blaster fire lit up the crumbling ruins like lightning in a dead storm. You ducked behind a scorched column, heart pounding, comms blaring with garbled voices. Another skirmish, another senseless conflict in a war that never stopped taking.
You weren’t a soldier, not really. Intelligence officer, field analyst—whatever title the Republic slapped on you, it didn’t change the fact that you ended up on the frontlines more often than not. Especially when you were assigned to the 501st.
Especially when he was there.
“Behind you!”
Fives’ voice cut through the noise, sharp and commanding. You dropped low just in time for him to fire over your head, taking down the droid that had been about to fry you. He slid into cover beside you, breathing hard, face streaked with soot and blood.
“Close one,” you muttered.
“You really know how to pick your spots,” he said, flashing that grin—the one that used to make your knees weak. Still did, if you were being honest.
You laughed, short and bitter. “This war’s got a habit of throwing us into hell together, huh?”
“Yeah,” he said, voice quieter now. “It does.”
You looked at him then, really looked. Fives wasn’t just tired—he was worn, stretched thin by secrets, loss, and the weight of being more than just another number. He was alive, but barely hanging on. And you hated that the Republic didn’t see it. That they didn’t see him.
He caught your gaze, like he always did, reading you like a datapad.
“What?” he asked softly.
You shook your head. “Just thinking.”
“Dangerous habit.”
“Maybe in another life,” you said before you could stop yourself, “you and I would’ve had peace. Time. A place not drowning in war and death.”
His eyes darkened. “Maybe.”
You turned away, blinking fast. The next words came without permission. “I would’ve loved you, Fives. Fully. Properly. Without fear of losing you every time we touch ground.”
He was quiet for a beat too long. Then: “Why not this life?”
Your breath caught. “Because this life isn’t made for love. Not for us.”
“It could be,” he said, voice raw. “If we fought for it. If we carved it out from the chaos.”
You looked at him, heart breaking. “You’d really risk everything?”
He leaned in, forehead brushing yours. “I already have.”
And then the comms cracked to life. New orders. Pull out. Another planet to bleed for. Another reason to bury the moment.
You both stood, back to war. No promises. No declarations. Just a look that said maybe—maybe in another life. But neither of you could help hoping:
Why not this one?
Hi! I have a request for Wolffe x fem!reader. They have a established relationship but Wolffe has been a little distant since order 66 happened... one night when he's sleeping in the readers coruscant apartment, she decides to ask him about it. Wolffe sort of pushes her away, thinking he's too broken and has already done too much bad, but she stays no matter what. She soothes him with some love and cuddles?
“Still Yours”
Commander Wolffe x Fem!Reader
⸻
The city lights of Coruscant cast a soft glow through the wide windows of your apartment, dancing across Wolffe’s armor where it lay discarded on the floor.
He lay on your bed now, back turned, shirt half-pulled on, one arm slung under his head like a shield.
You watched him breathe.
Even in sleep, it wasn’t easy. His breaths were shallow, uneven. Like he never really relaxed anymore. Like his body didn’t know how.
Since the end of the war—and the day everything changed—he’d been distant. Still present. Still Wolffe. But quieter. Withdrawn. Touch-starved but pulling away when you tried.
You couldn’t take it anymore.
You slid into bed beside him, soft and careful.
“Wolffe,” you whispered.
He didn’t open his eye.
“Are you awake?”
A beat of silence.
Then, “Yeah.”
You reached out, brushing your fingers across the back of his shoulder. “You’ve been… far away lately.”
He tensed under your touch. “I’ve just been tired.”
“No. You’re not tired. You’re hurting.” You sat up beside him, pulling the sheets with you. “You barely look at me anymore. You flinch when I say your name. You hold me like I’m something you’re about to lose.”
Wolffe turned over slowly, sitting up and running a hand down his face.
“Mesh’la, don’t do this right now.”
“I have to,” you said. “You think I don’t notice how hard you’ve been trying to pretend you’re fine? You sleep in my bed like a ghost.”
His jaw clenched. “What do you want me to say? That I followed orders that led to Jedi dying? That I don’t know what was real and what was the chip? That I still see it—them—when I close my eye?”
He stood, taking a few steps away like he could outrun it.
“I’m not who I used to be. I’m not your Wolffe anymore. I’m just—what’s left.”
You stood, quietly wrapping the sheet around yourself as you crossed the room to him.
“I don’t need the man you used to be. I love the man you are. Even when he’s broken. Even when he’s hurting.”
He shook his head. “You’re a senator. You’re out there fighting for clone rights beside Chuchi, risking your damn career. You still believe we’re worth saving. That I’m worth saving.”
“I do.”
“You’re wrong.”
You stepped in front of him, tilting his chin up until he had no choice but to look at you.
“I’m never wrong about you.”
Wolffe’s breath hitched, his hands trembling faintly at his sides.
“I let them die,” he said, voice breaking. “I didn’t even try to stop it. I just—followed orders like I always do. Like a good little soldier.”
“You didn’t have a choice.”
“Does that matter?” he rasped. “They’re still gone. I still pulled the trigger.”
You wrapped your arms around him, burying your face in his chest, speaking against his skin.
“You’re not a weapon, Wolffe. You’re a man. One who has done everything he could to survive. And I know you. I know the way you fought for your brothers. I know how much you loved them. I know how hard it’s been for you to stay.”
His arms slowly, reluctantly, came around you. Tight. Desperate.
“I don’t want to lose you,” he said quietly. “But I don’t know how to keep you either. I’m not what you deserve.”
You pulled back just enough to kiss the scar at the edge of his temple, then rested your forehead against his.
“Then let me decide what I deserve. And I choose you.”
He let out a shaky breath, pressing his face into your neck like he was finally letting himself feel.
You guided him back to bed, pulling the covers over the both of you, holding him close—his arms around your waist this time.
You whispered, “I’m still here, Wolffe. And I’m not going anywhere.”
And for the first time in weeks, he slept without flinching.
⸻
Commander Thorn x Senator Reader
It was late—later than it should’ve been for a senator still in heels and warpaint, sprawled across the plush bench of her apartment’s balcony with a drink in hand.
You heard the door behind you hiss open and didn’t need to look.
“Come to stand in the shadows again, Commander?” you asked, not unkindly.
Thorn didn’t answer right away. His boots were heavy against the stone. Methodical. Closer.
“I never left,” he said.
You turned your head, gaze trailing up from the rim of your glass to where he stood in that same godsdamn perfect stance. Helmet in hand. Armor lit by the city’s glow.
“You know, I’ve had men try to seduce me with less intensity than you just standing there.”
Thorn’s jaw tightened. “That’s not what I’m here for.”
“No,” you said, rising to your feet, slow and measured. “You’re here because someone tried to kill me and the Chancellor likes keeping his headaches alive.”
You stepped toward him. Close. Too close.
“When I had lunch with Sheev today,” you murmured, voice quiet and dangerous. “He said nothing. Smiled too wide. Dodged every answer like a trained politician, which—fine, he is. But he’s also worried. About me. About you.”
Thorn said nothing.
Your fingers brushed the edge of his pauldron, then up to the rigid line of his neck. He didn’t move.
“Fox had a talk with you, didn’t he?” you whispered, tipping your head to the side. “Warned you off. Told you I was dangerous.”
His breath hitched, barely audible. “You are.”
You laughed softly. “And yet here you are.”
You reached up—slow, deliberate—and your fingers touched his face. A gloved hand caught your wrist, but not before your thumb brushed his cheekbone. Warm. Real.
He held your wrist, not tightly, but firmly. And still, he didn’t pull away.
His eyes searched yours like they were looking for the part of you that might break him.
“I can’t,” he said hoarsely.
“I know,” you said, and your voice was softer now. “But you want to.”
His eyes closed briefly. The silence that followed was full of all the things he would never say. Couldn’t say.
You leaned forward—just a breath, your lips a whisper from his—but you stopped yourself. A sharp inhale. A blink of clarity.
You pulled back slowly, letting your hand fall.
And this time, he let you.
“I should go inside,” you said quietly, and without looking back, you walked toward the open doors.
Thorn stayed behind, jaw clenched, hands shaking ever so slightly at his sides.
He’d stood on a hundred battlefields without faltering.
And tonight, he’d barely survived a senator’s touch.
⸻
The next morning, he was already stationed by your office door when you arrived. Helmet on. Posture locked. Every line of his body radiating do not engage.
You slowed as you approached, coffee in hand, sunglasses still perched over bloodshot eyes from last night’s excess. You looked like a warning label wrapped in silk.
But when your eyes flicked over Thorn, something in your expression shifted. Slowed.
“Morning, Commander,” you said casually.
“Senator,” he returned. Clipped. Cool.
You quirked an eyebrow. “Oh. So it’s that kind of day.”
He didn’t reply.
You brushed past him, close enough that your perfume clung to his senses long after you’d disappeared into your office. He didn’t turn. Didn’t let it show. But his hands curled into fists at his sides.
Meetings. Briefings. More political backpedaling. You were fire at the podium and glass behind closed doors, cracking in places no one else could see.
Except him.
He stayed silent, always a step behind, always watching. Always wanting.
And never letting it show.
Until you cornered him in a quiet corridor outside the lower senate chambers, away from aides and datapads and Fox’s watching eyes.
“Alright,” you said, arms folded. “Let’s talk about this act you’ve got going.”
“There’s nothing to talk about.”
“Commander, you looked like I stabbed you when I pulled away last night, and now you won’t even look at me.”
“I’m doing my job,” he bit out, low and tight.
You took a step forward. He didn’t move. Not away.
“I didn’t imagine it,” you said, voice gentler now. “You wanted it too.”
“Of course I did.” His voice cracked, just a fraction. “But what I want doesn’t matter.”
You blinked, caught off-guard by the raw honesty.
He finally looked at you. And Maker, it hurt—because it wasn’t coldness in his eyes. It was restraint. Desire, wound so tightly around duty it was bleeding.
“I won’t compromise your safety,” he said. “Or your career. Or mine.”
“I never asked you to.”
“No,” he said softly. “But if you touched me like that again, I wouldn’t stop you.”
Silence fell.
And then you stepped back, giving him what he needed—space, control.
But not before saying, “You’re allowed to want something for yourself, Thorn.”
You left him standing there, strung taut, jaw clenched so hard it ached—haunted by the echo of your voice and the ghost of your fingertips on his skin.
⸻
The Coruscant sky was painted in golds and coppers by the time you slid into the dimly lit booth across from Padmé Amidala at one of the few upscale lounges senators could disappear into without the weight of a thousand datapads.
“I needed this,” you sighed, tugging off your blazer and waving down a server. “Vodka. Double. And whatever she’s having.”
Padmé smirked behind the rim of her glass. “Rough week?”
You snorted. “The republic is falling apart, I’m the new poster child for controversial ethics, and my head of security is the embodiment of celibacy and self-restraint.”
Padmé choked. “Thorn?”
“Mmhmm,” you hummed, swirling your drink as it arrived. “The man is built like a war god and treats me like I’m a senator made of glass and moral decay. Which, fair, but still.”
She laughed gently. “He’s just doing his job.”
You rolled your eyes, leaning in, voice lowering to a conspiratorial hush. “I nearly kissed him two nights ago.”
Padmé’s eyebrows lifted in delight. “And?”
“And I stopped myself. But he didn’t stop me.”
You tipped your drink back, and Padmé’s smile softened into something knowing.
“He wants you,” she said.
“I know. And I can’t stop wanting him either. And it’s making me insane.” You exhaled, flopping back in your seat. “It’s all sharp edges and stolen glances and him standing too close every time I breathe. He says he won’t compromise me, but every time he brushes past, it feels like he’s about to snap.”
Padmé was quiet for a moment, sipping her wine. “You’re falling.”
You snorted, tossing your head back with a dramatic groan. “I’m not falling. I fell. And now I’m stuck circling the drain with a blaster-proof blockade standing guard outside my bed.”
She burst out laughing. “Well… at least you’re not in love with a Jedi.”
You blinked. “Wait—”
Padmé smiled sweetly. “We all have secrets, darling.”
Neither of you noticed the clone commander positioned a discreet ten meters away—far enough to respect your privacy.
Close enough to hear every kriffing word.
Thorn stood in the shadows of the wall column, jaw clenched so tight it hurt. Every muscle locked. Every sense burning.
She’d nearly kissed him. She wanted to.
She’d fallen.
And Maker help him… so had he.
His comm buzzed in his ear.
Fox: You good?
Thorn: Fine.
Fox: You don’t sound fine.
Thorn: Drop it, Fox.
But even Fox would’ve known—standing there, listening to her spill her soul to someone else, Thorn was no longer in control.
He was already hers.
⸻
The walk back to your apartment was a symphony of drunken laughter, slurred gossip, and Padmé’s increasingly animated storytelling as she dramatically recounted a botched undercover op involving Anakin, Obi-Wan, and a fruit cart on Saleucami.
“…and then Ahsoka—gods—she’s stuck under the vendor stall, Anakin’s dressed like a spice runner and flirting to distract the guards, and Obi-Wan’s standing there insisting that he does not negotiate with food smugglers!”
You were cackling, one heel dangling from your fingers, the other foot still strapped in. “How did no one get arrested?!”
“They did!” Padmé said brightly. “Three hours in local custody until Bail Organa bailed them out. Still won’t talk about it.”
You wheezed, tears threatening to smudge your eyeliner. Thorn walked a respectful distance behind as you stumbled into your apartment with Padmé on your arm. He was stone-silent, unreadable. Watching. Waiting.
Padmé leaned in close, kissed your cheek, and whispered, “Try not to give him a stroke tonight.” Then she drifted toward the guest room with a final tipsy wave. “Night, Thorn.”
“Ma’am,” he said with a curt nod.
You locked the door behind her, turned, and leaned your back to it. Barefoot. Half-laced dress clinging to your form. Hair a little messy. Eyes gleaming with drink and danger.
“You didn’t laugh at the story,” you said, smiling.
“I’m not paid to laugh.”
“You’re not paid to stare at me like that either, but here we are.”
His jaw clenched.
You took a few slow, swaying steps toward him, gaze locked on his. “You heard what I said to Padmé, didn’t you?”
Silence.
“You stood there all night listening. That wasn’t professionalism, Thorn. That was want.”
He didn’t move. Didn’t flinch. But you could feel the energy bleeding from him—taut, trembling restraint.
“So here’s the question,” you whispered, standing toe to toe now. “If I reached up and touched you again… would you stop me this time?”
He breathed, sharp and low. “Don’t.”
“Don’t what?”
“Don’t push me.”
“I’ve been pushing you since the day we met.” You smiled, close enough now your breath mingled with his. “And you haven’t moved.”
His hand shot up, slamming palm-flat against the wall beside your head—not touching you, but caging you in.
His voice was gravel and fire.
“You don’t understand what you’re asking for.”
“I think I do.”
“You think this is about self-control,” he growled. “It’s not. It’s about what happens after I lose it.”
You stilled.
He was trembling, just slightly. His hand hovered for a moment longer… then he stepped back.
“You’re drunk. Go to bed.”
And with that, Thorn turned and walked toward the front door—but not before you saw it.
His hands were shaking.
The morning sun filtered through the floor-to-ceiling windows of your Coruscant apartment like a rude guest who hadn’t been invited.
Your head throbbed.
Your mouth tasted like fruit cocktails and regret.
You groaned and turned over, expecting Thorn’s ever-silent figure to be near the front door, arms crossed, stoic and unshakable as always.
But he wasn’t there.
Instead, a different clone stood guard—rookie by the look of him. Eyes flicked to you, then away fast. Too fast.
Thorn had rotated off.
Or maybe… he’d walked out.
You weren’t sure which hurt more.
You flopped back against the bed with a dramatic sigh, pressing your hand to your forehead like a dying duchess. A moment later, the bedroom door creaked open.
“Is it safe to enter the lair of the hungover she-beast?” Padmé’s voice called softly.
“Barely.”
She tiptoed in, curls wild and eyeliner smudged, and flopped down onto your bed like she owned it.
You cracked one eye open. “I thought Naboo nobles were trained to rise at dawn with no signs of vice.”
Padmé gave you a dry look. “I was trained to fake it with dignity. There’s a difference.”
You both groaned in tandem, limbs tangled under silk sheets and discarded shawls.
A beat of silence.
Then you muttered, “He wasn’t there this morning.”
“Thorn?”
You nodded.
Padmé looked at you, then looked at the ceiling. “Anakin stopped answering my comms last night. didn’t say a word to me after we got back here. Just disappeared like a ghost.”
You turned your head. “He’s angry?”
“He’s scared.”
“…Same.”
Another pause.
Padmé sighed. “You know what the worst part is?”
“What?”
“I don’t want to stop. Not with him. Not even when I know how it ends.”
Your throat tightened.
“Yeah,” you whispered. “Me too.”
You both lay there, two senators, two hearts bruised in different ways. Hiding in a bed that smelled like perfume, politics, and unanswered questions.
“I think,” Padmé said softly, “we forget we’re allowed to want something for ourselves.”
You blinked up at the ceiling.
“Maybe I just want someone to choose me,” you admitted, the words foreign and terrifying on your tongue. “Not the senate. Not the speech. Me.”
Padmé reached over and gently took your hand.
“You deserve that,” she said.
And for one small moment, you believed her.
⸻
It was early.
Coruscant’s sky was painted in slow-shifting purples and pale gold, the air crisp for once as the morning traffic lulled just above the skyline.
You walked with Sheev Palpatine through one of the Chancellor’s private botanical gardens—a curated oasis of rare flora nestled between towering Senate spires. Your shoes crunched over smooth stones, the air filled with the faint hum of security droids and rustling leaves.
A few steps behind, your clone escort—a quiet rookie with a barely scuffed pauldron—trailed dutifully. Ahead, Marshal Commander Fox and two of his Coruscant Guard flanked the Chancellor like the shadows of death.
“You look tired, my dear,” Sheev said smoothly, hands folded behind his back. “Rough night?”
“You know exactly how rough,” you replied, a dry smirk tugging at your lips. “I assume you read every surveillance report that crosses your desk.”
“I skim.”
You arched a brow.
He chuckled. “Fine. I skim the interesting ones.”
The rookie behind you choked softly on his breath. You didn’t look back, but your lip twitched in amusement.
“You really shouldn’t waste government resources on my personal misadventures,” you said.
“On the contrary,” Palpatine replied, voice shifting cooler, “your… associations are becoming part of the problem.”
Your smile faltered.
“I hear you’re planning a speech this week,” he continued, not looking at you now. “Regarding clone rights. Voluntary service. Benefits. Citizenship.”
“I’m not planning it. I’m delivering it.”
He gave you a long look. “You’ve made enemies before. But this will paint a much larger target.”
“Then maybe they’ll finally stop aiming for my head and start aiming for something I can survive.”
He did not laugh. Instead, he stepped a little closer.
“I’ve heard more whispers, you know. Another attempt. And this time…” His voice lowered. “I fear it won’t be smoke and shadows.”
You were about to respond when a shriek of blaster fire tore the morning open.
Shots rained down from above the garden terrace. Red bolts split the air as bark and leaves exploded around you. You felt the burn before you heard yourself scream—your upper arm searing with heat as a bolt caught flesh.
“GET DOWN!”
Fox’s voice thundered across the garden.
The rookie guard shoved you behind a large stone fountain, blaster drawn. Fox had already reached the Chancellor’s side, shielding him with practiced efficiency.
But Palpatine didn’t retreat.
Instead, he snapped, “Protect her. Now.”
Fox hesitated—one second, maybe two.
Then he turned on his heel, growled a command to his men, and raced for you.
You slumped behind the fountain, clutching your arm, heart hammering in your chest.
Fox skidded into cover beside you. “You hit?”
“Yeah,” you gasped, pressing your jacket against the burn. “Not bad. Not good either.”
He scanned the rooftops. “We need evac—NOW!”
The rookie stayed glued to your side, face pale but steady.
And Palpatine?
Still standing.
Watching from the distance like the eye of a storm.
He didn’t flinch once.
⸻
The antiseptic sting of the medcenter did little to distract from the throbbing in your arm or the adrenaline still lacing your blood.
You sat upright on the edge of the durasteel cot, jacket discarded, bandages wrapped snugly around your bicep. A healing patch hummed faintly under the gauze, but your mind was elsewhere.
Specifically, down the hall.
You’d heard the boots before you saw the storm that followed them.
Commander Thorn.
Now on his rotation.
He moved through the corridor like a thundercloud given armor and a mission. Dried rain still clung to his kama, helmet clipped under one arm. His expression was stone—tight-jawed, unreadable, but his eyes flicked over every corner like he was calculating the fastest way to kill every man in the building.
He didn’t ask questions.
He issued orders.
You watched from the cracked door as he spoke with the medical officer, then turned on his heel toward the security wing—until another familiar voice cut through the silence.
“Thorn.”
Marshal Commander Fox.
Thorn didn’t flinch. He stopped mid-stride, then turned with slow precision, as if he already knew what Fox was about to say.
You should’ve left it alone.
You should’ve shut the door and gone back to pretending none of this mattered.
But instead, you stepped off the cot, crept quietly to the side of the doorway, and listened.
“You were off shift this morning,” Fox said evenly. “And yet you’re here before the updated security logs.”
“I don’t trust anyone else with her,” Thorn replied, voice low and unshakable.
A pause. Footsteps.
“You’re losing control.”
Thorn didn’t respond.
“You know what she is to the Chancellor. You know what she is to the Senate.”
Thorn’s voice was gravel. “She was almost killed today.”
Fox’s tone sharpened. “And if she had been, what would you have done? Gone rogue? Abandoned post? Killed for her?”
Silence.
A silence so loud, you nearly stepped away—until you heard Thorn’s reply:
“I already would’ve.”
The world stopped.
You pressed your back to the wall, heart skidding.
Fox exhaled harshly. “She’s not yours to protect like that.”
“She’s not a piece of property,” Thorn said, the edge in his voice darker than you’d ever heard it. “Not yours. Not his. And if anyone thinks they can use her without consequence, they’ll answer to me.”
“Careful, Thorn.” Fox’s voice dropped. “You’re starting to sound like you care.”
A beat passed. Then Thorn spoke again, quieter this time:
“I care enough to know I’ll never have her. And too much to stop myself if she’s ever in the crosshairs again.”
That was it.
You stepped back silently, breath caught in your throat.
You didn’t know whether to cry or find him and kiss him like your life depended on it.
⸻
Previous Part | Next Part
Captain Rex x Reader x Commander Bacara
(A/N, this fic is purely for my own amusement, enjoy it if you must. I simply wanted to create the most random, somewhat unhinged, love triangle I could think of)
The Jedi Temple stood still that morning.
Even with the war breathing down the galaxy’s neck, even with whispers of clones and Kamino and Separatist strongholds, the Temple had not forgotten how to hold its silence.
A rare breeze swept through the Pillars of the hall, rustling the gold-edged tapestries that hung like memories between the columns. The high, vaulted ceiling glowed dimly from the skylights overhead—no harsh illumination today. Just solemn sun and shadow.
You knelt at the center of it all, the marble cool beneath your knees, the hem of your robes curled slightly from movement. Your hands, for once, were still.
Before you stood Master Windu.
And as always, he was a wall.
A composed, unmoving force of principle and power—yet even now, in his rigid stance and unreadable expression, you could feel it. That slight shift in his presence. That guarded warmth he never allowed the others to see. His version of pride was like his version of affection: precise. Controlled. But real.
“You’ve grown into a warrior the Council did not expect,” he said quietly. His voice echoed through the chamber, flat but grounded. “That is both your strength… and your warning.”
A wry smile tugged at your lips before you could stop it. “That sounds like you, Master.”
“Former Master,” Mace corrected, though the corner of his mouth almost twitched. “As of today.”
You glanced sideways, just enough to catch a glimpse of Master Yoda seated beside the ceremonial flame, nodding with quiet approval. A few other Masters flanked the hall—Plo Koon, Shaak Ti, Obi-Wan. Anakin was here too, arms crossed, a smirk barely hidden. Of course he would be. He’d want to see someone else screw with the rules for once.
Mace raised his amethyst saber.
The room fell into breathless quiet, save for the snap-hiss of energy igniting.
“For your skill in battle,” he said. “For your persistence in training. For your commitment to the Force—despite your unorthodox methods.”
You heard the faintest beat of amusement in his voice, even as the blade hovered above your right shoulder.
“I name you Jedi Knight.”
The saber passed over your left shoulder, then extinguished in a smooth hiss. The light faded.
So did the weight.
You rose to your feet, your chest oddly tight.
You’d imagined this moment a thousand times. You thought you’d grin. You thought you’d make a joke. Maybe wink at Anakin, toss your braid in celebration.
But instead, you looked at Mace.
And for the first time since you’d been a reckless thirteen-year-old hurling training sabers at his back in the practice ring… you saw the crack in his armor.
Pride.
Not spoken. Never spoken.
But it was there.
He stepped forward and quietly handed you your old braid, cut clean through and wrapped carefully in cloth. His gloved hand lingered a second too long as you took it.
“You’ll never be like me,” he said, low enough for only you to hear.
You looked up at him, caught off-guard.
“And that is the greatest relief I’ve known in some time.”
Your throat tightened, emotion flashing hot behind your eyes, but you swallowed it.
“I learned from the best,” you managed, voice rough.
He didn’t smile. But he gave you a look that you would remember when the sky fell—when the war bled through every part of your soul. A look that said: I see who you are. I will always see it.
And then the moment passed.
Yoda called the next words.
The crowd shifted. Masters murmured. A few clones, newly commissioned, stood near the archway in pristine armor. The air already smelled like smoke. War was coming, and peace was being written into the margins of your life.
You were a Jedi Knight now.
And you were already being sent to assist the Galactic Marines on Mygeeto.
⸻
The Venator-class cruiser was silent in the way warships always were before deployment—tense, mechanical, full of breath held in systems and lungs alike.
You stepped onto the hangar deck with your boots echoing, the hem of your new robes catching the gust from a passing LAAT. The smell of oil and ozone hit like a punch. The air was cooler than the Temple. Less forgiving.
The Galactic Marines didn’t look your way when you passed.
They didn’t need to.
Their reputation had preceded them—shock troopers bred for winter warfare and brutal sieges, trained under a commander who was as known for his silence as he was for his kill count.
Commander Bacara.
You spotted him almost immediately near the forward transport: broad frame, maroon-striped armor, helmet on. He didn’t salute. Didn’t approach. Just stood, arms crossed over his DC-15, as if sizing you up from thirty paces.
You let the moment hang before making your way to him, slow and purposeful.
“Commander Bacara,” you greeted, offering a nod. “I’m [Y/N], attached to this campaign per Council orders.”
Silence.
Not a word. Not even a hum of acknowledgment.
You arched a brow.
“Right. Strong, silent type. Got it.”
Still nothing. His visor remained locked on you, unreadable.
“Did the clones get assigned vocal cords or are you just allergic to Jedi in general?”
That got a reaction—a tilt of the helmet, ever so slight. Then, at last, a gravel-thick voice rumbled from the vocoder:
“Only the loud ones.”
Your mouth quirked into something halfway between irritation and amusement. “Guess it’s your lucky day.”
Before he could reply—or walk off, which you sensed he very much wanted to do—a voice cut in behind you.
“[Last Name].”
You turned, spine stiffening.
Ki-Adi-Mundi stood at the foot of the boarding ramp, flanked by two clone officers. His long fingers were clasped behind his back, face pinched in that constant mix of detachment and disdain.
You bowed, briefly.
“Master Mundi.”
“I’ve been reviewing the battle plan for Mygeeto,” he said, skipping any preamble. “We’ll be launching a three-pronged assault on the main Separatist refinery. Bacara will lead the frontal push with his battalion, supported by armor units and orbital fire.”
Your jaw clenched.
“With all due respect, Master, a frontal push against entrenched droid cannons is going to get a lot of men killed.”
Ki-Adi blinked at you, calmly. “That is war. They are soldiers. They understand the risks.”
“They understand orders. Not suicidal tactics.” Your voice rose just slightly, heat creeping in. “If we reroute half the armor for flanking and force the droids to split, we could avoid heavy losses and push them off the ridge before nightfall.”
“I did not ask for a tactical critique,” Mundi said, tone sharpening. “And I trust Commander Bacara’s ability to execute the current plan.”
You glanced at Bacara. He hadn’t moved. Hadn’t spoken. Just stared.
Of course he agreed with Mundi. They were cut from the same ice.
“I didn’t realize Jedi Master meant immune to input.”
Silence fell over the deck. The clones nearby tensed. Bacara’s helmet shifted an inch toward you.
Mundi stepped closer, lowering his voice. “You are newly knighted, [Last Name]. This war will demand obedience, not bravado.”
You took a slow breath.
Then offered the barest, tightest smile. “Then it’s a good thing I never had much of either.”
Mundi turned and strode up the ramp without another word.
You exhaled once he was gone, rolling your shoulders like you could shrug off the frustration. You could feel Bacara still watching.
“What?” you snapped without looking at him.
There was a beat of silence.
“You better be half as good as you think you are.”
You turned. “Or what?”
“I’ll be requesting a reassignment.”
Your laugh came out bitter. “Better men have tried.”
He paused. Then, with a tilt of his head, said lowly: “I’m not a better man. I’m a soldier.”
Then he turned and walked away.
You stood there a moment longer, heat buzzing under your skin. You weren’t sure if it was from anger—or something worse.
⸻
The descent onto Mygeeto was chaos.
Even through the LAAT’s thick hull, you could feel the storm—icy wind slicing across the city’s skeletal towers, artillery screaming through clouds of smoke and crystalline ash. The Separatists had fortified every corner of the industrial sector, their cannon fire lighting up the skyline like a cursed sunrise.
As the dropship pitched, the clones inside with you braced without a word. Focused. Ready. Not afraid—just used to dying.
Your hand gripped the support bar as the doors peeled open mid-hover, revealing a battlefield straight from a nightmare. Turbolaser fire scorched the skyline. Glimmering bridges of ice and shattered durasteel crumbled beneath the weight of battle tanks. Somewhere far below, you saw a battalion caught in a choke point—blaster bolts raining down from enemy artillery nested in a half-collapsed tower.
Your stomach turned.
“Is that Bacara’s forward unit?” you shouted over the roar.
“Yes, sir!” one of the clone gunners confirmed. “Pinned since the last push!”
You turned to the pilot. “Drop me there. Now.”
The pilot hesitated. “But orders—”
“Now.”
The gunship banked sharply, the icy wind slamming into you as you leapt onto the fractured platform below, lightsaber already blazing to life.
It took less than ten minutes.
Droids fell in pieces, turrets melted under redirected blaster bolts, and you pushed your way to the trapped Marines like a blade through frost. You helped them retreat behind makeshift cover, shielding them with the Force and your saber, yelling for them to move. Not all of them made it.
But more than would have.
When the smoke cleared, and the men were medevaced out, you stood amid the wreckage, panting, cut along one shoulder and streaked with soot.
And Bacara was waiting for you.
He stormed toward you from the north ridge, visor locked onto yours, stride like a thunderhead.
You straightened, chin high, refusing to flinch.
“You disobeyed direct chain-of-command,” he growled, voice deep and cold. “That was my operation.”
“Your men were dying,” you snapped. “I made a call.”
“It wasn’t your call to make. I had them.”
“They were pinned with zero cover, Bacara! If you had a plan, it was to bury them in ice!”
His helmet came off in one sharp motion.
You hadn’t seen his face until now.
Shaved head. Sharp scar across the side of his cheekbone. And a scowl that looked carved from stone.
“Don’t pretend you know my men better than I do, Jedi.”
You stepped forward. “And don’t pretend that your silence is strategy. You may be good at war, but you’re not the only one fighting it.”
Before he could reply, another voice cut through the comms.
“Commander Bacara. Young [Last Name]. Report to the north command post immediately.”
It was Mundi.
The command post was a hollowed-out transport, half-frozen and lit by dim tactical screens. Ki-Adi-Mundi stood in the center, flanked by officers.
He didn’t look at you when he spoke.
“You endangered the mission with your reckless disobedience.”
“I saved your troopers.”
“You undermined your commander. You undermined me.”
You stared at him, jaw locked.
Mundi finally turned, his tone colder than the planet itself. “You may carry a lightsaber, but you are not exempt from consequence. Effective immediately, you are being reassigned.”
“What?” you breathed. “You can’t be serious.”
“You will report to General Skywalker and the 501st at once. They’ve requested Jedi support. You’re clearly more suited to their methods.”
You laughed once, bitter. “You mean chaos? No rules? You’d get rid of me in an instant?”
“If it will keep you from sabotaging another campaign, then yes.”
You looked to Bacara.
He said nothing. Didn’t even look at you.
It stung more than it should have.
Mundi turned away, already dismissing you. “Dismissed.”
You stood there a moment longer, anger a low drum in your ribs.
Then you turned sharply and left—your boots loud, your breath hot, and the ice of Mygeeto clinging to your back like regret.
⸻
The drop onto Christophis was smoother than Mygeeto.
No bitter wind. No ice underfoot. Just the blue-tinged glass of a besieged city glowing beneath your boots, and the hum of LAAT engines fading into the dusk.
You exhaled slowly.
For once, it didn’t fog the air.
The 501st was already dug in—half-built barricades, mounted cannons, troopers weaving through lines of duracrete rubble and smoldering droid parts. The camp smelled like burned plastoid and caf. And somehow… it didn’t feel like death.
Not yet.
You adjusted your gear and crossed into the center of the forward line, where a knot of officers stood around a portable holo table. A tall familiar figure turned toward you before you could announce yourself.
“General [Last Name], I presume?” the man asked with a bright smirk and a heavy Core accent. “You’re just in time. Dinner’s still warm—if you like ration bricks and bad company.”
General Anakin Skywalker. He grinned at you like an old friend.
You blinked. “I… wasn’t expecting a warm welcome.”
“You’re not coming from the High Council,” Anakin replied, clearly picking up on your edge. “You’re here to fight. That’s more than enough for us.”
A few troopers nearby chuckled. One even offered a small wave before returning to repairs on a nearby speeder. You weren’t used to clones acting so… relaxed.
Anakin slung an arm across the shoulders of the nearest officer, a clone with a blond buzz cut, blue markings on his pauldron, and eyes sharp with experience.
“This is Captain Rex,” Anakin said. “He keeps me alive and makes sure I don’t get court-martialed.”
Rex offered his hand. “It’s good to have another General on the line. The men could use someone steady. Master Skywalker tends to… improvise.”
“I prefer the term creative solutionist.”
You shook Rex’s hand firmly. “I’ve been assigned to assist for the duration of this campaign. Support, field command, and lightsaber damage control, apparently.”
“Don’t let the last bit worry you,” Rex said, voice warm but measured. “Most of us like having a Jedi around. Just don’t get yourself shot trying to do everything alone.”
You hesitated. That’s the only way I’ve ever done it.
But instead, you said, “Copy that, Captain.”
Anakin returned with two ration packs and tossed one at you.
“Come on,” he said. “Briefing starts in ten. Might as well eat something before the next artillery barrage.”
You caught the ration and followed him into the makeshift war room. The 501st felt… alive. Not like a machine, or a tool. Like people. Clones joked with each other between shifts. Someone was fixing a vibro-guitar in a corner. Laughter drifted through the halls of war like smoke.
He studied you for a moment while chewing a bite of compressed stew.
“So,” he said, grinning. “You’re Windu’s kid.”
You blinked. “I’m not his kid.”
“Please,” Anakin scoffed. “You practically are. He used to lecture me about setting a better example because you were watching.”
You smirked despite yourself. “He does that with everyone. It’s how he shows affection. Judgement equals love.”
“I don’t think he’s capable of affection,” Anakin said, half-muttering into his rations. “But you? You’re the exception.”
You leaned back against the wall, tone softening. “He trained me to be better. Sharper. Not just strong with a saber, but… clear. Even when I didn’t want to be.”
Anakin tilted his head. “He proud of you?”
“Yeah,” you said. “Not that he says it, but… yeah. I think so.”
He grinned. “Bet he didn’t love you getting assigned to me.”
You laughed under your breath. “Not exactly. He said, ‘Skywalker needs someone with both instinct and control. Be that someone.’ Then he stared at me for an uncomfortably long time.”
Anakin chuckled. “Yep. That sounds like Mace.”
You took another bite of your ration and glanced around the lively camp—clones talking, techs laughing, life humming even in the lull before battle.
“Feels different here,” you said.
Anakin raised an eyebrow. “Good different?”
You nodded. “Yeah. It feels like… they’re not just soldiers.”
He offered a quiet smile. “They’re not. You’ll see.”
And you would.
But not before the war reached its cold fingers toward you once again.
You ate in silence while Skywalker outlined the next assault—tight push through Separatist-occupied towers, with limited casualties expected. He spoke quickly, clearly, and didn’t interrupt you when you pointed out structural weak points or alternate flanking positions. In fact, he nodded along, visibly impressed.
Anakin raised a brow. “Did you and Mace ever clash?”
You hesitated. “He sees obedience as strength. I’ve always… leaned more toward instinct.”
Skywalker grinned. “Good. You’ll fit in just fine here.”
And for the first time in weeks—since the icy silence of Bacara’s helmet and Mundi’s cold dismissal—you felt the tension in your chest loosen. Just a little.
⸻
The Separatists had fortified the western spires overnight, turning crystalline towers into sniper nests and droid chokepoints. A slow siege was no longer an option. The 501st was going in—fast, loud, and all in.
“Your unit’s with me,” Rex said, voice clipped as he secured his helmet. “Skywalker and Torrent Squad are flanking left. We punch through the center, collapse the staging platform, and pull back before reinforcements converge.”
You adjusted the grip on your lightsaber hilt, watching the blue blade snap to life with a hum. “You lead. I follow.”
Rex gave a short nod, visor glinting in the low light. He didn’t say much. He didn’t need to. He moved with the weight of trust already earned—his men mirrored his focus, his readiness.
You hadn’t seen command like this on Mygeeto. Not from Ki-Adi-Mundi. And definitely not from Bacara.
The gunships roared over the skyline.
“Drop in ten!” a trooper shouted, clinging to the side rail of the LAAT. You stood beside Rex as the bay doors opened, revealing the shimmering battlefield below—glass and stone, fire and blue lightning crashing from tower to tower.
The LAAT banked hard and you leapt, landing in the center of a collapsing avenue as blaster fire rained down from the towers above. Rex hit the ground a second later, blasters up, already shouting to his men.
“Push forward! Second squad—cover the left lane!”
You spun your saber, deflecting bolts as the first wave of droids charged. The 501st advanced in perfect coordination—like flowing water, shifting and reforming around obstacles as if they’d rehearsed it a hundred times.
You slipped into the rhythm with them, striking hard through advancing B1s, clearing the rooftops with mid-air leaps, redirecting sniper fire with narrow, deliberate swings. The clones covered you, trusted you, fell into sync with you like you’d been fighting beside them for years.
No hesitation. No resistance.
Just trust.
You didn’t know what that felt like until now.
At the front of the charge, Rex cleared the last of the droid forces on the platform with brutal efficiency. You landed beside him, both of you breathing hard but steady, the wind howling through broken towers.
You looked at him.
He looked at you.
“Good work,” he said, like it was fact, not flattery.
“You too,” you replied, meeting his gaze.
A pause stretched between you. Not silence, not in the middle of war—but something else. A mutual understanding. The beginning of something… not yet defined.
The comm crackled.
“501st—fall back to Rally Point Aurek. Enemy movement on the east ridge.”
“Copy,” Rex said, turning away. “Let’s move.”
You followed without hesitation, eyes scanning the horizon.
War didn’t allow time for reflection. But as you fell into step with Rex—side by side—you couldn’t help but think:
This felt different.
⸻
The sky over Christophis had finally quieted.
The battle was won—for now. The towers no longer pulsed with enemy fire, the droids had retreated deeper into the city’s core, and the crystals that jutted from the landscape reflected nothing but the dull orange haze of a weary sunrise.
You walked side-by-side with Rex, the only sound between you the soft crunch of shattered glass beneath boots and armor. This was your fourth perimeter sweep since the offensive. He didn’t talk much. You didn’t either.
Still, it wasn’t silence. It was… companionable.
“I thought Jedi preferred peace,” Rex said after a while, his voice muffled through his helmet.
“I do,” you replied, stepping over a cracked durasteel beam. “But I’m good at war.”
Rex turned slightly to look at you. “You don’t sound proud of that.”
You shrugged. “I’m not.”
Another beat passed. You slowed your pace, scanning an alley where the shadows felt too thick. Just scavengers. Nothing moved.
“You were better in battle than I expected,” Rex added. “The way you covered the west flank—that was clean. Calculated.”
You snorted. “I thought Jedi weren’t supposed to be calculating.”
He paused at the edge of a shattered courtyard. “You’re not like the others I’ve seen.”
You tilted your head. “That a compliment?”
Rex didn’t answer right away. He just looked out over the city, where blue light still shimmered in the air like a war that refused to die completely.
“I don’t think you care whether it is or not,” he said eventually.
That earned a quiet laugh from you. “Now that sounds like a compliment.”
The moment stretched a little longer this time. Not heavy. Not awkward. Just a thread of something starting to pull taut between you, quiet and unspoken.
Then the comms chirped.
:: This is General Kenobi. 212th battalion has entered the theater. Coordinates sent. ::
Rex exhaled through his nose. “Great. The cavalry.”
You smirked. “Not a fan of the beard?”
“He’s fine. His men are loud.”
From the high ridge, you could already see them—yellow-marked troops of the 212th fanning out like wildfire, Obi-Wan walking ahead with the patient authority of someone used to saving the galaxy before breakfast.
“General Kenobi,” you called as you approached. “You’re late.”
Kenobi raised a brow. “Fashionably. You’re holding up well, Padawan.”
“Knight, actually,” you said, quirking a brow. “But thanks for the demotion.”
Rex nodded politely as Cody jogged up beside him. The two commanders exchanged a quick, wordless handshake—the kind only shared between soldiers who’d bled on similar soil.
“Looks like things just got louder,” you murmured.
Rex glanced sideways at you. “You sure that’s a bad thing?”
You didn’t answer.
⸻
Next Chapter
Hello! I saw that you do song fics and I had the idea for a Cody X Reader with the song “I think they call this love” by Elliot James. Been obsessed over this song for awhile and I think it would be really cute! Xxx (and if it’s possible to add a few of the others clones teasing Cody even obi wan?)
Commander Cody x Reader
Coruscant at night was too loud for someone trying not to fall in love.
Cody wasn’t even sure when it started. It might’ve been the day you were transferred to his unit. Might’ve been the first time you fixed the aim on a malfunctioning turret like it was nothing. Or maybe—just maybe—it was the first time he heard you hum.
You always did that—murmured little melodies under your breath when you thought no one was paying attention. You’d tap your fingers along your belt or your mug, shoulders swaying lightly to some old Core World tune. It was never full-on singing—just enough to hook in Cody’s brain like a memory.
And tonight? You were humming that one again.
“I think they call this love… I think they call this love…”
You were dancing with Waxer near the bar at 79’s, laughing so hard your drink almost spilled, one hand gripping his vambrace as he attempted to twirl you—poorly. Boil leaned against the counter, snickering into his glass.
“I swear, she’s gonna break your neck,” Boil said. “And then Cody’s gonna have to fill out the paperwork.”
Cody sat a few stools down, arms crossed, pretending very hard that he wasn’t staring.
“You know,” Boil added loudly, “if Cody glared any harder, he’d melt the floor.”
“Shut up,” Cody muttered.
“Yeah, sure. Real subtle, Commander,” Waxer called over, catching your hand before you nearly toppled him over. “You’ve been watching her like she’s a walking war crime.”
Wolffe chuckled beside Cody, taking a long sip of his drink. “He gets like this every time. We’ve placed bets. So far, Obi-Wan’s winning.”
Cody turned slowly. “Obi-Wan’s betting on me?”
As if summoned by sass, Obi-Wan appeared behind them, raising a glass like he’d been lurking all night. “Only because I believe in you, Cody. Also because I know how utterly incapable you are at expressing your feelings.”
“Fantastic.”
“Don’t worry,” Rex added dryly. “You’ve got time. She only flirts with you every time she breathes.”
Cody groaned and looked back toward the dancefloor—and you were already walking his way.
Boots light, smile glowing, music catching the end of your latest hum as you slid into the stool beside him. You didn’t look at the others. Just him.
“You okay there, Commander?” you asked, head tilted. “Or should I get you a medic for whatever emotional crisis you’re currently going through?”
Cody blinked. “I—what?”
You leaned closer, voice lower now. “They’re not exactly subtle,” you said with a smile. “And neither are you.”
“I wasn’t staring.”
“You were,” Boil chimed in behind you.
Waxer raised his hand. “Respectfully, he’s been staring for about four months.”
You laughed under your breath and turned fully to Cody, your knees brushing his. “You gonna keep letting them talk for you?”
Cody exhaled slowly. You were so close. Your eyes searched his, not playfully now—but curiously. Hopefully. The hum of the bar faded as your presence filled his whole damn world.
“I think…” he started, voice a little hoarse. “I think I’m in love with you.”
A pause.
Then you grinned. Not surprised. Not mocking. Just relieved.
“That’s funny,” you said softly. “Because I’ve been waiting for you to figure that out.”
And then—you kissed him.
Quick, warm, but everything changed in that second. His hand slid to your waist before he could stop it, and you smiled against his lips like it was the most natural thing in the galaxy.
Behind you, cheers erupted.
“Finally!” Waxer crowed.
“You owe me twenty credits!” Rex shouted at Wolffe.
Boil let out a low whistle. “Hope you’re ready to be the only thing Cody stares at now.”
Obi-Wan raised his glass and added, “It’s about time our fearless Commander admitted he had a heart.”
You didn’t even look back. You just pressed your forehead to Cody’s and whispered, “Don’t let go of me, okay?”
He didn’t.
Not now.
Not ever.
The music swelled again behind you, and for once, Cody let himself listen.
“If this is what they call love…”
He smiled.
Then he wanted all of it—with you.
We interrupt your regularly scheduled political tragedy to bring you SPACE PIGEONS.