hello beloveds ☺️
Tech x Reader
You always had a lot to say. About everything. Planets, food, stories from childhood, dreams you had the night before, conspiracy theories, music recommendations, the absolute travesty that was the vending machine on Cid’s ship. Most people tuned you out after five minutes. Echo smiled politely. Wrecker nodded along even if he didn’t follow. Hunter gave that big brother, I’m listening but please stop look. But Tech—
Well, Tech never said much at all.
You were sitting beside him in the Marauder, your legs crossed on the seat, recounting—quite animatedly—a story about the time you tried to fix a speeder bike and ended up launching it through your neighbor’s wall. Your hands flailed in the air like you were directing a play.
“And I swear, it wasn’t even my fault! The wiring was labeled wrong, and boom! Gone. Just through the wall. Like—whoosh!” You gestured dramatically. “And the guy didn’t even get mad! He just looked at me like, ‘Again?’ Like it was normal! I mean, do you know how often something has to happen for someone to say ‘again’ like that?”
You laughed at your own story, expecting the usual silence or maybe a smirk.
But Tech didn’t even glance away from his datapad. “Statistically, it would take three prior incidents to normalize an event to that degree of resignation.”
You blinked.
“What?”
“Assuming he’s of average emotional intelligence,” Tech continued, typing something, “and factoring in a baseline tolerance for property damage, he would need to experience approximately three similar accidents before responding without distress.”
You stared at him for a moment, a grin creeping onto your face. “That’s… actually really interesting.”
“I ran a simulation once on behavioral desensitization. It was… enlightening,” he added, finally sparing you a glance over his lenses.
“Tech,” you said, leaning in slightly, “do you actually listen when I ramble?”
He looked confused. “Why wouldn’t I?”
“I dunno… I talk a lot. Like, a lot a lot. You’re always so quiet.”
“I am processing,” he replied. “You provide a considerable amount of verbal data, but I do not find it unappealing.”
“…That’s the nicest thing anyone’s ever said about me talking too much.”
He tilted his head, brows slightly raised. “It is?”
You laughed, this time softer. “You’re kind of weird, Tech.”
“Correct.”
“But I like that.”
He hesitated for a beat, then reached into his tool belt and held out a tiny, modified comm unit. “I made this for you.”
You blinked. “What is it?”
“It’s a personal recorder. For your stories. In case I’m not around to listen… or if you wish to remember them later.”
Your heart stuttered.
“Tech… that’s the sweetest, nerdiest thing anyone’s ever done for me.”
He adjusted his goggles. “You are enthusiastic and loud. But I find the consistency of your presence… statistically comforting.”
You bit your lip to keep from grinning too hard.
“Wanna hear another story?” you asked.
“I’ve already adjusted the comm’s storage capacity for it.”
You didn’t know how to describe the warmth blooming in your chest—but you didn’t need to.
Tech already had a formula for it.
⸻
It started with the recorder.
Then came the noise-canceling earpieces—not for him, but for you. “In case you ever want silence but don’t want to stop talking,” he’d explained, eyes glued to a schematic, oblivious to how much your heart melted.
He began cataloguing your favorite snacks and replicating them with a portable food synthesizer. “I’ve programmed your preferred balance of salt and sweetness,” he said one night, handing you a makeshift granola bar that tasted weirdly perfect.
The best part? He never made a big deal about it. Just slipped things into your life like you’d always been part of his code.
One evening, after a mission that left the team bruised but alive, you found yourselves alone in the cockpit of the Marauder. The others were sleeping, recovering. You weren’t tired. You rarely were when Tech was nearby.
You sat cross-legged in the copilot’s seat, chewing absently on a snack bar, eyeing him as he fiddled with his datapad.
“Tech,” you said, drawing his attention with a sing-song tone.
“Hm?”
“You always listen to me talk about my stuff. But you never tell me about yours.”
He didn’t look up. “That is because my interests are largely theoretical and statistically uninteresting to the average person.”
You snorted. “Okay, first, I’m not average. And second—says who?”
He paused. “I… suppose I assumed.”
“Well, you assumed wrong. Come on, tell me something. Anything. What do you like, Tech?”
He shifted in his seat, clearly uncomfortable. “I like many things. Theoretical physics, starship schematics, linguistic anomalies…”
You leaned in. “No, not like a list. Talk to me. Like I talk to you.”
He looked at you. Really looked. You’d never seen him nervous before. But this? This was vulnerable. And Tech didn’t do vulnerable. Not in the usual sense.
Still, after a moment, he gave a small nod.
“I find… gravitational lensing phenomena quite fascinating,” he began, almost shyly. “When a massive object distorts space-time, it bends light around it. It allows us to see stars that would otherwise be hidden. It’s a rare glimpse into the unreachable, a way to observe what we otherwise could not.”
You blinked, taken aback by the sudden spark in his voice.
“And—when you combine that with redshift patterns and the curvature metrics of distant galaxies—”
He was off.
Tech’s eyes lit up behind his goggles. His hands moved as he talked, describing invisible models in the air. The way he spoke was fast, clumsy, full of jargon, and absolutely beautiful. He was so excited. The same way you were when you told your stories.
You didn’t interrupt. You didn’t tease. You just smiled and let him go.
Eventually, his words slowed, and he caught himself, clearing his throat.
“I… apologize. I may have over-answered your question.”
“No,” you said softly. “You were perfect.”
His eyes met yours.
You reached over and touched his hand. He froze, then slowly turned his palm to hold yours.
“Tech,” you murmured, “when you talk like that, it makes me want to kiss you.”
He blinked. “Statistically, that is a highly favorable reaction.”
You grinned. “Tech.”
“Yes?”
“I’m gonna kiss you now.”
He hesitated a beat. “Proceed”
And when your lips touched his, soft and warm and a little clumsy, he exhaled like it was the first time he’d let go of logic and just felt something.
Afterward, still holding your hand, he said, “You make even chaos… feel structured.”
And you decided right then that you were never going to stop talking. Because if you kept talking long enough, Tech would keep listening—and maybe, just maybe, he’d keep answering too.
Can i request the 501's reaction to you being sick? Specifically with a fever or something that's easy to hide. And the reader has rarely been sick before so everyone freaking out when they eventually find out lmao
I love your writing <3 you deserve so many more likes my darling
501st x Reader
You’d dodged blaster fire, explosive shrapnel, and the temper of half the 501st. But this… this damn fever was your greatest adversary yet.
“You’re lookin’ a bit pale, General,” Jesse had noted the day before, squinting at you over a deck of sabacc cards.
“I’m always pale. Comes with the territory,” you’d said, waving him off and trying to ignore the sweat rolling down your spine.
You figured it would pass. It always did. You never got sick. But two days in, your joints ached, your brain felt like it was melting, and even Rex noticed something was off.
“You alright?” he asked after training drills, brows drawn tight beneath his helmet as you leaned too long on the wall.
“Fine. Just tired.”
Rex had narrowed his eyes but let it go. For the moment.
That night, you crawled into your bunk fully dressed, armor still half-on, because even removing your boots felt like a battle. You swore no one would know. You were fine.
The next morning, you nearly face-planted in the mess hall. Nearly. But unfortunately, not before Fives caught your elbow mid-sway.
“Woah—woah! Easy, General!” His arm wrapped around you like a vice. “Are you drunk? Wait, are you drunk? Is that allowed? Why wasn’t I invited?”
“I’m fine,” you rasped, voice barely above a whisper.
Fives blinked. Then frowned.
“…You sound like a malfunctioning comm.”
And suddenly the entire table went silent. Hardcase dropped his tray. Jesse dropped his jaw. Kix, who had just sat down with his caf, froze mid-sip.
“You’re sick?” Kix stood so fast he knocked over his drink. “You’ve never been sick!”
“Statistically speaking,” Echo said cautiously, “this might be an omen.”
“Don’t say omen, she’ll think she’s dying!” Jesse snapped.
“I’m not—” you started, and immediately broke into a coughing fit so violent it made Kix’s med-scanner ping before he even used it.
Rex had walked in by then, and you knew you were doomed when he barked, “What’s going on?”
“She’s sick,” Fives said dramatically, like he was reporting a battlefield casualty.
“Proper sick,” Echo added, wide-eyed.
“Like, fever and everything,” Jesse chimed in.
Rex turned to you slowly, like you’d just declared war on Kamino.
“Is this true?”
You stared, swaying a little. “Maybe.”
Rex took one step toward you and you flinched. “Don’t touch me. You’ll catch it.”
He looked offended. “You think I care about that?”
The moment your knees buckled, six clones lunged at you like you were the last ration bar on the ship.
⸻
Later, in the medbay You were tucked into a cot, surrounded by snacks, water bottles, and what looked suspiciously like a handmade blanket from Fives.
“I’m not dying,” you muttered, as Kix took your temperature for the fifth time.
“You had a fever of 39.5. You were dying,” he said flatly.
Rex was pacing. “Next time you feel off, you tell someone.”
“She thought she could tough it out,” Echo said knowingly. “Classic move.”
Fives leaned on the bedrail. “Don’t worry, General. We’re not letting you go anywhere until you’re back to full sass levels.”
Hardcase grinned. “And I’m standing guard. Fever or not, no one touches our General.”
You coughed again and muttered, “This is ridiculous.”
Jesse threw a blanket over your head. “So are you.”
Hardcase nodded gravely. “This is emotionally devastating.”
Even Anakin showed up halfway through the ordeal. “Heard you caught the plague. Do you need me to file a formal mission postponement?”
“…It’s a cold, sir.”
“That’s what you said before that speeder crash, and we both know how that ended.”
By the time your fever broke the next day, the entire 501st had personally sworn vengeance on germs, replaced your room filters, and started force-feeding you water every hour.
And when you walked into the hangar a day later, freshly cleared by Kix and very much alive?
There was a banner.
“WELCOME BACK FROM THE BRINK OF DEATH.”
Hardcase had made it himself. With glitter.
Day 1 of being cleared by Kix: You felt good. Not perfect, but good enough to want your normal routine back. Unfortunately, the 501st had other plans.
Rex refused to let you do anything strenuous. “You’re still on light duty,” he said as he handed you a datapad and pointed to the command center chair. “You sit, drink water, and look authoritative. That’s it.”
“Can I at least lift the datapad myself?” you asked dryly.
“…Only if it’s under 2 kilograms.”
Fives popped up behind you, placing a fluffy blanket over your shoulders. “You didn’t even cough, but just in case.”
“I’m not cold.”
“You might be cold.”
Hardcase walked by with a steaming mug of something he said was “clone-approved recovery tea,” which suspiciously smelled like caf and fruit rations. You didn’t ask.
Tup slipped a flower behind your ear. “For morale.”
Dogma, meanwhile, was pacing with a clipboard, occasionally checking on your hydration levels. “Eight sips every hour. Non-negotiable.”
At lunch, you tried to sneak away to the mess.
Jesse blocked the doorway like a bouncer. “Authorized personnel only. And by that, I mean people not recently raised from the dead.”
“I had a fever. I didn’t flatline.”
“You might as well have! I had to emotionally process that in real time.”
Echo leaned around him. “I made you soup.”
“…Why are there six different bowls?”
“We all made you soup.”
“I am not eating six soups.”
“Yes, you are,” Kix said from behind you, arms crossed. “Recovery protocol. Article 7B. Look it up.”
You were 80% sure he made that up.
That night, as you returned to your bunk, someone had strung up another banner.
“WELCOME BACK: PLEASE STAY THAT WAY”
There was even a checklist on your locker:
• No dying
• No hiding symptoms
• Tell Kix everything
• At least try to act mortal
You sighed and smiled despite yourself. There was a little sketch of you, wrapped in a blanket, being force-fed soup by Fives. They’d drawn themselves too—grinning like idiots, looming behind you like overprotective brothers.
You curled up that night with a warm stomach, sore cheeks from smiling, and an overwhelming sense of comfort.
You weren’t just better.
You were home.
Warnings: injuries, suggestive content,l
⸻
The jungle was thick with steam and smoke, the scent of burning metal and charred flesh choking the air. Delta Squad’s evac had been shot down. You were the only survivor from your recon team. Boss had taken command of the op—naturally.
“Stick close,” he ordered, his voice rasping through the modulator, sharp like durasteel dragged across stone.
You rolled your eyes, already moving. “I didn’t survive a crashing gunship to get babysat by a buckethead.”
He turned just enough to look at you, that T-shaped visor catching the fading light. “I don’t babysit. I lead.”
“And I slice,” you shot back, shouldering your pack. “Let me do my job.”
“We already have a slicer” he respond, before he turned forward again. But you could feel him watching you—tracking your movements with that eerie commando focus. It had been two days of this now: evading patrols, patching up your leg, sleeping back-to-back under foliage so thick you couldn’t see the stars.
Tonight, it rained. Not the cooling kind—this rain was warm, heavy, pressing the jungle into silence. You sat in a hollowed-out tree, tuning your equipment while Boss kept watch. When he finally returned to your makeshift camp, you didn’t look up.
“How bad’s your leg?”
“Fine.”
“You’re limping harder than yesterday.”
“You’re observant. I’m touched.”
“Stop being stubborn,” he muttered, kneeling in front of you. His gauntlet brushed your knee as he examined the torn fabric and swelling underneath. “You need rest.”
“You need to stop looking at me like that,” you whispered.
Silence stretched. You met his gaze, even if you couldn’t see his eyes behind the visor. Something heavy passed between you. Maybe it was the danger. Maybe it was the exhaustion. Or maybe it was the way he’d hauled you out of that wreckage, swearing he’d get you home.
“You shouldn’t be here,” he said finally, voice lower. “You’re not one of us.”
“No. I’m not. But I’m here now.” You leaned closer, your voice daring. “And so are you.”
His breath caught, almost imperceptible beneath the rain. Then—he reached up and disengaged the seal on his helmet. The hiss of depressurization was drowned out by your heartbeat.
And when he took it off, you saw him—finally. Tanned skin streaked with grime and blood. Jaw tight. Eyes locked on yours like they were burning through you.
“Tell me to stop,” he said.
You didn’t. You leaned in.
He kissed you hard—like everything he’d been holding back had snapped. His gloves were rough on your skin, tugging you closer, anchoring you to him like he was afraid you’d disappear. You curled your fingers into the collar of his armor and pulled until you could feel the heat of his body beneath the plastoid.
“I’ve got one night,” he murmured against your throat. “One night before I’m a soldier again.”
“Then make it count,” you whispered.
And he did.
⸻
The war would keep going. The Republic would keep taking. But in a jungle no one would remember, under a rain no one would care about, Boss let himself be something other than a number—and you let yourself fall for a soldier who wasn’t supposed to love.
⸻
Made for amazing friend and supporter @meneliltare as a tiny gift for a monthly Buymeacoffee donation❤️ Thank you so much for your help and for being a source of support, inspiration, and smiles for me! For bringing Barduil light and stability in my life🫂 This picture was inspired by our "zoo" conversation, hope you don't mind))
Hi! I’m not sure if you’ve heard of Epic the musical and the song “There are other ways” but I was thinking a Tech X Reader where he gets lost and comes across a sorceress and she seduces him and it’s very steamy? Lmk if this is ok, if not feel free to delete. Xx
Tech x Reader
Tech had been separated from the squad before. Statistically speaking, given the volume of missions they undertook in unpredictable terrain, the odds were precisely 3.8% per assignment. He should have been more prepared for it—should have accounted for environmental disruptions, latent electromagnetic fields, or the possibility of the forest itself being… alive.
Still, none of that explained why his visor fritzed out the moment he crossed the river.
Or why the fog grew thicker when he tried to retrace his steps.
Or why the trees whispered his name like they knew him.
“Tech…”
He halted. The voice came from ahead—feminine, melodic. Not from his comm. And certainly not Omega playing a prank. She didn’t sound like a dream.
His grip tightened on his blaster. “Reveal yourself.”
And you did.
You stepped from the mist as if you belonged to it. Bare feet sinking into moss, the water licking around your ankles. The moon crowned you, making the fine threads of your cloak shimmer like woven starlight. Your gaze was ancient. Curious. Smiling.
“I’ve been waiting,” you said, voice like silk over steel.
Tech’s eyes narrowed behind his visor. “Statistically improbable, considering I had no intention of entering this region of the forest, nor becoming separated from my unit.”
“Perhaps I saw what you could not,” you said, tilting your head. “Or perhaps I called, and you listened.”
He ran a diagnostic scan. No lifeforms detected. No hostile readings. The air was too quiet.
“Are you… Force-sensitive?”
You laughed—a soft, knowing sound that made his stomach tighten.
“I’m something like that. Does it matter?”
“It very much does. If you are a threat, I am obligated to neutralize—”
But you were closer now. He hadn’t seen you move. Your fingers touched the edge of his armor with something like reverence.
“I’m not a threat unless you ask me to be.”
His breath hitched. Just once. Just enough for you to notice.
“You’re… a clone trooper. The mind of your little unit.” You circled him slowly. “Always calculating. Always thinking. Never letting go.”
“I find control to be preferable to chaos,” he said sharply.
“And yet,” you whispered, stepping behind him, your hand brushing the nape of his neck, “you walked into the chaos anyway.”
His fingers twitched. He should have stepped forward. Should have recalibrated his scanner. Should have moved—
But he didn’t.
Because something about your presence tugged at the part of him he kept locked away. The part he filed under unnecessary. Indulgent. Weak.
“Your body,” you murmured, lips brushing the shell of his ear, “wants what your mind won’t allow.”
He stiffened.
You smiled, warm and wicked, stepping in front of him again, your fingers now brushing the soft lining between his chest armor and undersuit. “You wear this like a wall. But you’re still a man beneath it.”
“I am not… easily manipulated,” he managed, though his voice had dropped, deeper than he liked.
“I’m not manipulating you, Tech.” You met his gaze. “I’m offering you a choice. You can walk away. Return to your mission. Your team. Your purpose.”
You stepped closer, and his breath caught as your hand slid beneath the edge of his cowl, your touch feather-light. “Or you can let go. Just for one night. Just this once.”
He shouldn’t. He knew he shouldn’t. He could list a hundred reasons why this was an anomaly. A deviation. A risk.
And yet—
His hand came up, slowly, almost shaking. Not to stop you. To touch you. To feel you. To confirm you were real.
You leaned in.
“I can show you other ways,” you whispered.
Then your lips brushed his—tentative at first, waiting. And when he didn’t pull away, you deepened the kiss, slow and exploratory, as if trying to map the mind he kept so tightly wound.
Tech’s world tilted.
Because for the first time in years, he wasn’t thinking.
He was feeling.
And when he let his blaster fall to the moss, when his hands found your waist and pulled you against him, when he kissed you back with a desperation he didn’t know he had—
He wasn’t the mind anymore.
He was a man.
His breath stuttered.
Tech wasn’t used to this—not the heat rising in his chest, nor the sensation of lips ghosting down his neck like a whisper meant only for the softest, most hidden parts of him.
Your eyes drank him in—not with hunger, but with reverence. His freckles, his sharp cheekbones, the slight twitch in his jaw that betrayed the storm behind his glasses.
“You’re beautiful,” you said softly.
Tech blinked. “That is… an illogical observation.”
You smiled. “Then your logic needs reprogramming.”
He made a noise—half protest, half breathless laugh—but it caught in his throat when your hands touched the bare skin of his collarbone. Your thumbs pressed lightly into the muscles of his neck. Tech didn’t realize how tense he always was until he felt himself melting beneath your touch.
“Tell me to stop,” you whispered.
“I…” His voice caught. “I cannot.”
You nodded, leaning in until your forehead touched his. “Then don’t.”
He didn’t.
Instead, he kissed you—desperately this time, hands curling at your waist as if anchoring himself to something real, something grounding in the swirling chaos of magic and sensation.
You pressed against him, warm and solid and devastatingly soft. One hand curled into his hair, the other sliding beneath the edge of his armor as you slowly coaxed it free. Piece by piece, you helped him shed it—not forcefully, never rushing. Like a ritual. Like he was something sacred.
When the last plate fell into the moss with a thud, he stood before you stripped of all defenses, chest rising and falling in quiet, stunned silence.
“You’re still thinking,” you said gently, brushing your nose against his.
“I—always think,” he breathed.
“Then let me think for you tonight.”
He didn’t protest when you led him backward into the moss, the magic of the forest warming the ground like a living bed. You straddled his lap, kissing him slow, deep, like you wanted to memorize every stifled sound he made.
Tech’s hands roamed—tentative, reverent, needy. He touched like a man learning to live in his own skin for the first time. Every sigh, every moan, every tremble you pulled from him was a tiny rebellion against the order he clung to.
And gods—how he clung to you instead.
Your magic hummed beneath your skin, wrapping around his ribs like silk. It didn’t control him. It didn’t bend his will. It simply amplified everything he was already feeling, pulling him deeper into you, into this—the illusion, the escape, the exquisite loss of control.
Your mouths met again and again. His glasses were somewhere in the moss. His hands splayed along the curve of your back. And when you whispered his name, over and over, like it was the only truth left in the galaxy—
He whispered yours back like a prayer.
Like he had always known it.
Like logic had never mattered at all.
say it with me now:
wrecker👏is👏not👏stupid👏
he is actually pretty smart, you don’t become a demolitions expert without being smart
he is also like 100% the most emotionally intelligent of the entire batch
just because he has a childlike wonder and love of life doesn’t mean he’s dumb
I don't understand how people just Do things without daydreaming. like how are you not off in a silly little fantasy world rn
Summary: Your a friend of Jango Fett’s, he had asked you to come to Kamino to help train clone cadets, more specifically the cadets who were pre selected as commanders. Pre-Clone Wars. Pretty much just a love triangle between my fav clones. Bit angsty towards the end.
⸻
You hadn’t even wanted the job.
Kamino was cold, clinical, and crawling with wide-eyed clones who couldn’t shoot straight or punch worth a damn. But Jango had asked. And when Jango Fett asked, you didn’t exactly say no.
So, you found yourself here, drowning in rain and the hollow clatter of trooper boots on durasteel, overseeing the elite cadets being fast-tracked to become clone commanders.
They weren’t commanders yet. Not officially. But the Kaminoans had flagged a few standouts early—Fox, Wolffe, Cody, Bly, Neyo, Gree—and they were yours now.
Jango called them assets.
You called them projects.
Most of them respected you. Some feared you. And then there were those two.
Fox and Wolffe.
Walking disasters. Brilliant tacticians. Fiercely loyal. And completely, irredeemably idiotic when it came to you.
They’d been vying for your attention since day one—squabbling, sparring, brawling—and you’d brushed it off. Flirting wasn’t new to you. You knew how to shut it down. But these two? These two were stubborn. And clever. And just reckless enough to keep you on your toes.
You stood now at the edge of one of the open training rings, arms folded, T-visor reflecting a dozen cadets going through various drills. Cody was holding his own in a two-on-one blaster sim. Bly was shouting orders like he thought he owned the place. Gree was crouched in the mud, recalibrating his training rifle mid-drill.
But your eyes were on Fox and Wolffe, again.
They were arguing by the supply crates, the tension between them so thick it might’ve passed as heat if Kamino weren’t freezing.
“I’m telling you,” Wolffe was growling, “she was talking to me yesterday.”
“Right,” Fox drawled. “She called you ‘uncoordinated and overconfident.’ Sounds like flirting to me.”
“You don’t get it, she’s Mandalorian. That’s basically a compliment.”
“Boys.” Your voice sliced through the rain like a vibroblade.
They both snapped to attention so fast they nearly knocked heads.
“Get in the ring.” You didn’t even raise your voice. “Now.”
Fox and Wolffe exchanged a look—equal parts dread and defiance.
“Yes, instructor,” they muttered.
“I want five laps if either of you so much as winks.”
You tossed a training staff toward Fox. He caught it clumsily and frowned. “What, no sim?”
“Nope. You’re with me.”
Somewhere behind you, you heard Bly mutter, “He’s dead.”
“Pay attention to your drill, cadet,” you barked.
Fox stepped into the ring with the same confidence he wore into every disaster. “Try not to go easy on me, yeah?”
You didn’t dignify that with a response.
The fight started fast. Fox was quick, smooth, used his weight well—but you’d trained on Sundari’s cliffs, in Death Watch gauntlets, and in the company of monsters who made even Jango look tame.
Fox didn’t stand a chance.
He lasted maybe three minutes before you dropped him with a shoulder feint and a sweep that sent him crashing into the mat.
“Dead,” you said flatly, planting your boot on his chest.
Fox groaned. “You always this brutal with your favorites?”
“You’re not my favorite.”
“Oof.”
Then—Wolffe shoved past the other cadets and stepped into the ring.
“That’s enough,” he said, voice tight. “He’s training, not being punished.”
You cocked your head. “You volunteering?”
“I’m not letting you flatten my brother without a fight.”
You smirked behind the visor. “Your funeral.”
What followed was nothing short of combat comedy.
Wolffe was sharper than Fox. Calculated. But he was still a cadet. You pushed him hard—Mando-style, merciless, unrelenting. Rain slicked the mat, thunder cracked outside, and your staff never slowed.
Wolffe held his own longer.
But he was still losing.
Then, desperate—he lunged.
And bit you.
Right on the bicep.
“Kriffing—”
You staggered back, jerking your arm away, teeth clenching as the pain bloomed under your armor.
“Did you just—did you bite me?!”
Wolffe, still crouched and panting, looked horrified. “You weren’t stopping!”
Fox, flat on his back, howled with laughter. “You feral loth-cat! What, was headbutting too civilized?”
You peeled your glove off and stared at the bite. “You drew blood,” you growled. “I liked this undersuit.”
“Instinct,” Wolffe muttered.
“Idiot,” you shot back.
By now, the other cadets had gathered around the ring, wide-eyed and whispering. You turned slowly to the group.
“Let this be a lesson. I don’t care if you’re a cadet, a commander, or kriffing Supreme Chancellor himself—if you bite me, I bite back.”
Fox wheezed. “She’s not joking. I’ve seen her take out two bounty hunters with a broken fork.”
You jabbed a finger at him. “Fifteen laps, Fox. For running your mouth.”
Fox dragged himself upright and groaned, limping toward the track.
Wolffe started to follow.
You grabbed his pauldron.
“Don’t ever use your teeth in a fight again, unless you’re actually dying.”
“Yes, instructor.”
“…And next time, if you are gonna bite, aim higher.”
He blinked.
And you walked off, bleeding, storming, and already plotting their next humiliation.
Commanders?
Kriff.
They were barely house-trained.
⸻
The morning after the Bite Incident started like most—grey skies, howling wind, and Kaminoan side-eyes.
You strode onto the training deck in full gear, fresh bandage wrapped over the healing bite mark on your arm. The clones were already lined up, posture rigid, eyes straight. You could feel the tension radiating from the group like a bad smell. No doubt they’d all heard the rumors.
One of them bit you. And lived.
You stopped in front of them, hands behind your back. “Which of you thought it was smart to bet on me losing?”
Half the group tensed. Cody coughed.
You didn’t wait for an answer. “Double rations go to the one who bet I’d win and that one of you idiots would end up chewing on my armor.”
That got a chuckle—nervous, brief—but it broke the tension. Good. You weren’t here to baby them. You were here to make them legends.
“Group drills today. Partner up.”
Predictably, Fox beelined for your side. “So. How’s the arm?” he asked, lips twitching.
You turned slightly, giving him just enough of a smirk. “Tender. Wanna kiss it better?”
Fox visibly froze. For the first time in all the months you’d trained him, he blinked like a man who’d just taken a thermal detonator to the soul.
Wolffe, watching from across the training floor, snapped his training blade in half.
Like, literally snapped it.
You didn’t even react.
Cody whistled low. “He’s gonna kill someone.”
“Hope it’s not me,” Fox muttered under his breath, heart rate visibly climbing.
You raised your voice. “Wolffe. Grab a new blade and meet me in the ring. Fox, go help Gree with his stance. The last time I saw someone hold a blaster like that, they were five and trying to eat it.”
Fox, now flustered beyond recognition, stumbled off. Wolffe stalked over, eyes dark.
“You flirting with him now?” he asked, low and sharp, as you passed him a fresh blade.
You leaned in—just close enough for your voice to dip like smoke. “He flirted first.”
“And you flirted back.”
You tilted your head. “You gonna bite me again if I do it twice?”
Wolffe looked like he might combust.
The spar started aggressive—Wolffe striking fast, sharp, his technique tighter than usual, anger giving him extra momentum. You blocked him easily, letting him wear himself out. Letting him stew.
“Jealousy looks good on you,” you taunted, hooking his leg mid-swing and sweeping him to the mat with a sharp twist.
He landed with a grunt, breathless. You knelt beside him, blade tip pressed to his chestplate.
“I flirt with the one who keeps his teeth to himself,” you said, tone casual. “Consider that motivation.”
Wolffe didn’t answer. He just stared at you, cheeks flushed, jaw clenched so tight you swore you could hear it grinding through the floor.
By the time drills ended, Fox was glowing. Wolffe was feral. And you?
You were thriving.
Let them fight over you. Let them stew, and sulk, and throw punches at each other behind the mess hall.
This was war training. They’d better get used to losing battles.
Especially the ones with their own hearts.
⸻
You were late.
Not tactically late. Intentionally late.
The cadets were already lined up, soaked to the bone from outdoor drills—Kamino’s rain coming in sideways like daggers. You made your entrance like a storm, dripping wet and smirking like you hadn’t made half the room lose sleep last night.
Fox was waiting at the front, eyes locked on you. He didn’t salute. He didn’t even smirk. He just looked—calm, steady, sharp.
And you felt it. That shift.
Wolffe was off to the side, glaring holes into the back of Fox’s head. You caught it all in a sweep of your gaze.
“Who wants a live-spar match to start the morning?” you called.
Several cadets groaned. Cody actually muttered something about defecting to Kaminoan administration.
But Fox? Fox stepped forward. “I do.”
You tilted your head. “Sure you want that smoke, pretty boy?”
He smiled, slow and dangerous. “You think I didn’t train for this?”
You narrowed your eyes, intrigued.
The match was brutal. Not because Fox was stronger—but because Fox was different. Controlled. Confident. Calculated. He didn’t let your taunts shake him. He dodged quicker, pushed harder. When he caught your leg and sent you crashing to the mat, the cadets gasped.
Even Wolffe made a strangled noise like a dying animal.
You coughed, winded, pinned under Fox’s knee, his hand resting against your collarbone.
“Yield?” he asked.
You blinked up at him. “Don’t get cocky.”
“Already did,” he said, low enough for only you to hear. “You like it.”
You shoved him off you with a grin, rolling to your feet.
“Not bad,” you admitted. “But I’m still prettier.”
Fox actually laughed.
Wolffe walked off the mat.
Straight to the armory.
Because of course he did.
Later, when the others had cleared out and you were wiping sweat from your brow, you felt that familiar weight behind you—boots heavier than a clone’s, presence impossible to ignore.
“Jango,” you greeted, not turning.
“You’re playing with them.”
You wiped your blade clean. “I’m training them.”
“You’re toying with them,” he said, voice flat. “They’re assets. Not toys. Not lovers. Not soldiers you can break for fun.”
You turned, arching a brow. “I know the difference between a weapon and a man, Fett.”
He stepped closer. “Then stop pulling the trigger when you don’t mean to shoot.”
That one hit—low and sharp.
You swallowed hard, eyes narrowing. “They’re soldiers, Jango. If a little heartbreak cracks them, the war will kill them faster.”
“They need guidance. Not confusion.”
“And what about me?” you asked, arms crossing. “What do I need?”
His eyes didn’t soften. “You need to choose. Or leave them both alone.”
You didn’t answer.
He left you with the silence.
That night, you found Fox alone in the mess, bruised, hungry, and tired.
“You did good today,” you said quietly.
He didn’t look up from his tray. “So did you. Playing with me until Wolffe snapped?”
“Wolffe snapped because he thinks I’m yours.”
Fox looked up now, slow and dangerous. “Are you?”
You leaned in. Close. Almost touching. “I could be.”
Fox’s jaw clenched. “Then stop making him think he has a chance.”
You didn’t reply.
Not right away.
And that pause? That breath of hesitation?
That was the crack in everything.
⸻
You stopped showing up to the mess.
You didn’t call on Fox or Wolffe for sparring. You rotated them into group drills only. You stopped lingering after hours. No more teasing remarks. No more slow smirks and heat behind your eyes.
No more touch.
It was easier, at first. For you.
They were cadets. Not yours. Not meant to be anything more.
Jango’s voice echoed every time you started to second-guess yourself.
“Stop pulling the trigger when you don’t mean to shoot.”
So you holstered your weapon. Locked the fire down. Played it straight.
And watched them start to unravel.
Fox was the first to try and confront you.
He caught you in the hallway outside the training rooms. Quiet, calm, alone.
“You ignoring me on purpose?” he asked, voice low.
You didn’t stop walking. “You’re a soldier. I’m your instructor. That’s all.”
Fox stepped in front of you, blocking your path.
“So that was all it ever was? The fights? The flirting? Me on top of you on the mat?” His voice cracked slightly at the end, despite his best efforts.
You looked at him, jaw tight. “Fox—”
He laughed. Bitter. “No. Say it. Say it meant nothing.”
You couldn’t.
And that was the problem.
“It’s better this way,” you said instead, and slipped past him.
He let you go.
That was what broke your heart most of all.
Wolffe was worse. He didn’t say anything—at first.
He trained harder. Fought rougher. Every drill was a warzone now. He snapped at Cody. Nearly dislocated Gree’s shoulder. Wouldn’t meet your eyes. Until one night—
You caught him in the dark on the training deck, punching into a bag like it owed him his life.
“Wolffe.”
He didn’t stop.
“I said, stand down—”
He spun on you.
“Why?” he snapped. “So you can ignore me again?”
You froze.
“You think I don’t know what you’re doing?” he growled. “You pulled away from both of us. Playing professional like you weren’t the one making Fox look like a damn lovesick cadet. Like you weren’t the one making me feel like I was yours.”
Your chest tightened. “It wasn’t like that.”
“Yes, it was!” he shouted. “And now you think pulling back fixes it? You think it makes the want go away?”
You opened your mouth to reply, but Wolffe stepped forward, eyes burning.
“Let me make it real easy for you,” he said. “If you didn’t mean any of it—tell me you never wanted me. Say it.”
You couldn’t.
You didn’t.
You just turned and walked away.
Again.
And behind you, in the dead silence of the deck, you heard something break.
⸻
They started showing off.
It wasn’t even subtle.
Fox perfected his bladework, spinning twin vibroknives in a blur, always training just where you could see. Wolffe started calling out cadets for slacking mid-drill, standing straighter, yelling louder, fighting longer.
Every time you passed, there was tension—tight like a wire, straining.
And you kept pushing.
Harder, faster drills. No breaks. No leniency. You called them out in front of the others when they slipped. You sent them against each other in spar after spar, knowing they’d go all out.
They did.
Until Fox went down hard—breathing ragged, cut bleeding at his brow, fingers trembling.
And you snapped: “Get up. Again.”
He looked at you. Not angry. Not sad. Just tired.
Wolffe stepped between you before Fox could even move.
“No.”
You blinked. “Excuse me?”
“I said no,” Wolffe growled. “He’s bleeding. He’s exhausted. He’s not a toy you wind up just to see how far he’ll go.”
“This is training—”
“This is punishment,” Fox cut in, standing up slow behind Wolffe. “And we’re done letting you use us to beat your own feelings into the ground.”
The silence that followed hit harder than a punch.
You looked at both of them—Wolffe, tense and furious, jaw clenched; Fox, bleeding but still looking at you like he cared.
“You think this is about feelings?” you spat. “I’m preparing you for war. You’re not ready.”
“We were,” Wolffe said quietly. “Until you made yourself the battle.”
That hit you straight in the ribs.
You stared at them, breathing hard, adrenaline high, rage burning under your skin—and then you turned away.
“Training’s over,” you muttered.
Neither of them moved.
When you left the room, they didn’t follow.
And for the first time since setting foot on Kamino, you realized what losing both of them might actually feel like.
⸻
The sky on Kamino never changed.
Just endless grey. Rain like a drumbeat. A constant hum of sterile light and controlled air.
You stood at the edge of the landing platform, your gear packed, your armor slung over your shoulder like it didn’t weigh a hundred kilos in your gut.
“I thought you were done bounty hunting,” Jango said behind you.
You didn’t turn.
“I thought I was too.”
He walked up beside you, slow and even. No judgment in his stride. No comfort either.
“They got to you,” he said.
You didn’t answer.
“They’re good soldiers. You saw that. You made them better. You drilled discipline into their bones.” A pause. “So why run?”
You clenched your jaw.
“Because I stopped seeing them as soldiers,” you muttered. “I started seeing them as—”
You broke off. Not because you didn’t know the word. But because it hurt too much to say it.
Jango sighed. “I told you not to toy with the assets.”
“I wasn’t.”
“You flirted. You made them think—”
“I didn’t make them think anything,” you snapped, turning to him finally. “I felt something. I didn’t mean to. But I did. And now it’s bleeding into training and—” your voice cracked. “They’re getting hurt.”
Jango looked at you for a long, quiet second.
Then, almost gently: “You never had the stomach for clean lines. You’re too human for that.”
You laughed bitterly. “Maybe. But I won’t be the reason they break.”
Jango gave you a nod. Subtle. Approval, maybe. Or just understanding. He turned to leave, boots echoing on the wet metal.
“Where will you go?” he asked over his shoulder.
You looked back out at the grey sea. Thought of neon lights. Cold bounties. Silence without faces you cared about.
“Somewhere I don’t have to see their eyes.”
Jango didn’t say goodbye.
He never did.
And when your ship lifted off, you didn’t look back.
⸻
The cadets lined up in silence.
There was tension in the air. They could feel it—like a shift in pressure right before a storm hits.
Wolffe had a sick feeling crawling up his spine. Fox had barely spoken all morning.
You hadn’t shown up for dawn drills. Again.
Then the door opened.
Boots. Not yours.
Jango Fett strode in—full beskar, helmet tucked under his arm, scowl like a thunderhead.
Every cadet stiffened.
“Form up,” he barked.
The lines straightened immediately. But all eyes were looking past him—waiting.
Wolffe’s voice cut through the stillness.
“Where’s our instructor?”
Jango’s lip curled slightly. “Gone.”
Fox frowned. “Gone where?”
Jango stared them down.
“She left Kamino. She won’t be returning.”
Just like that.
Silence exploded across the room.
Wolffe’s fists clenched.
Fox’s mouth opened—then closed. His jaw locked.
“She didn’t say goodbye,” Neyo whispered.
Jango looked at them like they were stupid.
“She didn’t need to.”
No one breathed.
Then Jango paced in front of them, slow and deliberate.
“You were here to be trained to lead men in battle. Not to fall for someone who made you feel special. You don’t get attachments. You don’t get comfort. You get orders. Understand?”
No one answered.
Jango stepped closer to Wolffe, then Fox, his voice low and cold.
“She gave you the best of her and got out before you ruined it. Don’t make the mistake of chasing ghosts.”
And with that—he barked for drills to begin.
They ran until their lungs burned, until every cadet dropped to their knees from exhaustion. Jango didn’t ease up once.
Wolffe didn’t speak the entire time.
Fox trained like he wanted the pain.
And no matter how hard they hit, how fast they moved, how sharp they became—
You didn’t come back.
⸻
The job was supposed to be clean.
A simple retrieval on Xeron V—a mid-tier Republic contractor gone rogue, hiding in the crumbling husk of an old droid factory. Get in, grab the target, drag him to a shadowy contact with credits to burn and questionable allegiance.
But you should’ve known better.
The second you got your hands on him, everything went sideways. Someone tipped off the Republic. Gunships rained from the sky. Your target fled. You got cut off. Cornered.
And then the unmistakable howl of clone comms filled the air.
The 104th.
You almost laughed when you saw the markings—gray trim, wolf symbols, bold and sharp.
Fate had a sick sense of humor.
You were disarmed in seconds, pinned to the floor with your cheek pressed against cold durasteel.
Even then, you didn’t fight.
Wolffe was the one who yanked off your helmet.
You expected a reaction.
All you got was silence.
Not even a curse. Not even your name.
Just a stiff order to “secure the bounty hunter” and a curt nod to the troopers flanking you.
And then he walked away.
Like you were nothing.
Now you sat in the Republic outpost’s holding cell, bruised but mostly fine—aside from your ego and whatever parts of your heart still hadn’t gone numb. The armor plating of your new life, as a notorious bounty hunter, felt thinner by the second.
He hadn’t even looked you in the eye since they dragged you off the ship.
Not when you spat blood onto the hangar floor.
Not when they clamped the cuffs on your wrists.
Not when your helmet rolled to his feet like some ghost from a forgotten life.
Just protocol. Just silence.
Just Wolffe.
Outside the cell, Master Plo Koon approached his commander, his quiet presence always felt before it was seen.
“She knew your name,” Plo said gently.
Wolffe’s armor flexed as his fists curled. “She trained us. All of us. Before the war.”
“But there is more, isn’t there?”
Wolffe glanced sideways. “Sir, with respect—”
“I am not scolding you, Wolffe.” Plo’s voice remained steady. “But I sense a storm in you. I have since the moment she arrived.”
Wolffe said nothing.
“She left something behind, didn’t she?”
And for just a second, Wolffe’s mask cracked.
“Yeah,” he said, jaw tight. “Us.”
⸻
The hum of the gunship in hyperspace filled the silence between you.
You were cuffed to a seat, armor stripped down to a flight-safe bodysuit. Your posture was relaxed, but your gaze never left the clone across from you.
Wolffe sat still—helmet in his lap, eyes fixed straight ahead. He hadn’t spoken since takeoff.
“You gonna give me the silent treatment the whole way?” you asked, voice dry.
He didn’t even blink.
You sighed and leaned back, jaw clenching. “Fine. I’ll do the talking.”
No response.
“I didn’t think they’d make you my escort,” you continued. “You’d think after our history, that might be considered a conflict of interest.”
“Maybe they thought I’d shoot you if you acted up,” he muttered.
You smirked. “I thought about acting up. Just to see if you still care.”
That got him.
His head snapped toward you, eyes burning. “Don’t.”
“What? Push your buttons?” You arched a brow. “That used to be my specialty.”
“You used to be someone else.”
The smile dropped from your lips.
So did your heart.
Wolffe looked away again, tightening his grip on the helmet in his hands.
You turned your head toward the window, hiding the sting behind sarcasm. “You look good in Commander stripes.”
“And you look good in chains.”
There it was again—that damn tension. Sharp and unresolved. You almost welcomed the sting.
Almost.
⸻
Coruscant.
The gunship touched down in the GAR security hangar. Sterile, bright, swarming with guards in crimson-red armor.
You knew who ran this show before you even stepped off the ramp.
Fox.
The last time you saw him, he was still a smart-ass cadet fighting over who could land a blow on you first.
Now?
He wore the rank of Marshal Commander like a second skin. Polished. Cold. Untouchable.
The second your boots hit the durasteel, he was there.
“Prisoner in my custody,” he said to Wolffe, not even sparing you a glance.
“She’s your problem now,” Wolffe replied, handing over the datapad.
You smirked. “Nice armor, Foxy. Didn’t think you’d climb so high.”
He didn’t even blink.
“No jokes. No names. You’re not special anymore.”
The smile dropped off your face like a blade.
“I see the Senate really squeezed all the fun out of you.”
Fox stepped in close, nose-to-nose. “That bounty you botched? Republic senator’s aide was caught in the crossfire. He’s still in critical care.”
Your mouth opened, but he kept going.
“You may think you’re the same snarky Mandalorian who used to throw cadets around on Kamino. But you’re not. You’re a liability with a kill count—and you’re lucky we didn’t shoot you on sight.”
You swallowed hard.
Wolffe stood off to the side, helmet tucked under one arm, watching. Quiet. Controlled.
But his gaze never left your face.
Fox turned to his men. “Take her to holding. I’ll debrief in an hour.”
You were grabbed by the arms again, dragged off without ceremony. As you passed Wolffe, your eyes met just for a second.
You opened your mouth to say something—anything.
But Wolffe looked away first.
And this time, it hurt worse than anything else ever had.
The room was cold. Not physically—just sterile. Void of anything human.
One table. Two chairs. Transparent durasteel wall behind you.
And Fox, across the table, red armor like a warning light that never shut off.
He hadn’t said a word yet.
Just stood in the doorway, datapad in hand, watching you like he was trying to decide whether to question you or put a bolt in your head.
Finally, he sat down.
“You’re in a lot of trouble.”
You leaned back in the chair, manacled wrists resting against the tabletop. “Let me guess. That senator’s aide I accidentally shot was someone’s nephew?”
Fox didn’t flinch. “You’re lucky he’s not dead.”
“I’m lucky all the time.”
He stared you down. “Tell me why you took the job.”
You rolled your eyes. “Credits.”
“That’s not good enough.”
“It’s the truth.”
His fingers tapped against the datapad. A slow, rhythmic pulse that echoed through the silence.
“Target was mid-level intel—why would someone like you take a low-rank job like that?”
“I don’t screen my clients. I don’t ask questions.”
He leaned forward slightly. “You used to.”
You stilled.
There it was. The first crack.
“Back on Kamino,” he added, voice quieter. “You asked questions. You gave a damn.”
You looked away. “That was a long time ago.”
Fox’s jaw tightened. “Then help me understand what changed.”
You laughed once, bitter. “Why, Fox? This isn’t an interrogation. This is you trying to pick apart what’s left of someone you used to know.”
“No,” he said, too quickly. “This is me trying to figure out whether the person I used to trust is still in there.”
Your gaze snapped to his.
He didn’t blink.
Didn’t break.
But you saw it.
That same flicker he used to show you, late in training when he couldn’t hide how much he hung on every word you said. That look when he fought with Wolffe over who got to spar with you first. That silence after you left Kamino without saying goodbye.
“I trained you to be a good soldier,” you muttered. “Not to sit behind a desk and spit Senate lines.”
“I became a good soldier because of you,” he shot back. “But you left before you could see it.”
Silence settled again.
He dropped the datapad to the table and leaned back in his chair. “Do you even care who you’re working for these days?”
You smirked, tired. “You want me to say I regret it. But I don’t think you’d believe me if I did.”
Fox stood abruptly. “You’re right. I wouldn’t.”
He moved to leave—then hesitated, fingers flexing at his side. He looked back once, gaze sharp and unreadable.
“We’re not done.”
You lifted your brow. “Didn’t think we were.”
He stared at you another heartbeat longer.
Then left.
The door hissed closed behind him.
And still, his questions lingered.
⸻
It was past midnight, but Coruscant never slept.
The holding cell lights were dim, humming faintly above your head. You sat on the edge of the cot, elbows on your knees, staring through the thick transparisteel wall like you could still see stars.
Your wrists ached from the manacles.
Your chest ached from everything else.
When the door hissed open, you didn’t look.
You already knew who it was.
He stepped inside, slow and careful—like maybe if he moved too quickly, he’d change his mind and leave.
“Didn’t expect to see you again,” you said quietly.
“I’m not supposed to be here.”
“Figured.”
You turned your head. Wolffe was still in full armor, helmet off, but the tension in his shoulders was more than battlefield wear.
He stepped closer but didn’t sit. He just looked at you. Like he hadn’t had the chance to really see you until now.
“You really left,” he said.
You huffed a breath. “You mean Kamino?”
He nodded once.
“Jango warned me,” you said. “Told me not to mess with the assets.”
His jaw clenched. “You weren’t messing with us.”
“Weren’t I?”
Wolffe looked down, quiet for a moment. Then:
“We would’ve followed you anywhere.”
The silence between you cracked open—raw, vulnerable.
“I couldn’t stay,” you whispered. “Not after that. Not when I knew I was screwing with your heads. You and Fox were fighting over a ghost. I was your first crush, not your future.”
“You were more than that.”
“No,” you said gently. “I was just the one who got away.”
Wolffe looked like he wanted to argue. Wanted to reach out. But he stayed exactly where he was, arms stiff at his sides.
“You’re going to be court-martialed,” you said with a dry smile. “Visiting the prisoner. Real scandal.”
“I don’t care.”
“Yes, you do. You always did. That’s what made you a good soldier.”
He didn’t reply to that. Just let the silence stretch.
Finally, you asked, “So what happens now?”
Wolffe’s eyes hardened—not cold, but braced. “You’re staying. Senate wants answers. GAR wants a scapegoat.”
“And you?”
“I want—”
He stopped himself.
You sat up straighter. “Say it.”
He exhaled, jaw flexing, voice low. “I want you to walk out of here. I want you on my squad, back where you belong. I want to forget you ever left.”
You didn’t look away.
“I want to stop wondering if we ever meant anything to you.”
You stepped toward the barrier between you.
Then the comm in his vambrace flared to life.
“—Commander Wolffe, this is General Koon. We’re wheels up in five. Rendezvous at Pad D-17.”
He didn’t answer it. Just looked at you.
“I guess that’s your cue,” you said, trying to smile. “Duty first.”
“Always.”
But this time, he didn’t move.
He just stared at you like maybe—just maybe—he’d stay.
“I’m not asking you to forgive me,” you said. “I made my bed. I’ll lie in it.”
He nodded slowly. “You always did sleep like hell anyway.”
You laughed once. It hurt.
“I’ll see you again,” he said finally.
“You sure about that?”
“I’ll make sure of it.”
Another call came through. Urgent.
He stepped back, slow, deliberate, like every footfall cost him.
You stood alone behind the transparisteel wall.
And he left without another word.
Because he was a commander.
And you were the one who got away.
Command Squad x reader
The Kaminoan rain never stopped. It pounded endlessly against the sleek platform outside Tipoca City, a cold and hollow sound that seemed to echo the clinical detachment of the place. Even standing in full beskar, the chill somehow crept in — not through the armor, but somewhere deeper.
You stood on the edge of the landing pad, arms crossed, helmet clipped to your belt, dark hair damp with saltwater mist. This place felt wrong. Too sterile. Too… quiet. Even the air smelled like antiseptic and damp steel. But you'd come because he had asked.
Footsteps. Precise. Heavy. You didn’t need to turn around to know who it was.
“Su cuy’gar,” Jango Fett said in that gravel-deep voice, stopping beside you. He didn’t smile. He rarely did. But something in his eyes told you he was glad to see you.
You gave a nod. “Didn’t think you’d come calling, Fett. Figured you liked working alone.”
“I do.” He glanced out at the sea, then back at you. “But this… this isn’t something I can do alone.”
You raised a brow. “Clones?”
He nodded once. “Ten thousand strong already. All of them made from me.”
You let out a slow breath. “You never struck me as the paternal type.”
“I’m not,” he said. “But they’ll need more than Kaminoan routines and simulations. They need real training. Real people. Mandalorians.”
You studied him for a moment. “And you want me to babysit them?”
His lips twitched — almost a smirk. “No. I want you to help forge commanders. The Kaminoans have preselected cadets they think show leadership potential. I want them to have someone who can teach them more than drills. Someone they’ll listen to. Someone they’ll respect.”
“And that someone is me?”
“They’re kids,” he said quietly. “They’ll be soldiers in a few years. But right now, they need a guide. A warrior. And someone who remembers what it means to be Mandalorian.”
You looked at him, thoughtful. “What about Skirata? Or Vau?”
“They’re here. Kal’s working with Nulls. Vau’s got his own batch. But I need you to take this one. They’re special, and they’re watching everything. The others are rougher around the edges. You’ve got… a way.”
You exhaled slowly, eyes scanning the grey horizon. He wasn’t wrong. You’d trained younglings before. Fostered war orphans on Concord Dawn, taught them how to survive, how to fight. This was different, but maybe not by much.
Finally, you looked back at him. “Alright. I’ll do it.”
He nodded again, and for a moment — just a moment — you saw gratitude flicker in his expression.
---
The hallways inside Tipoca were too white. Too clean. Too... wrong. Like they were afraid dirt might somehow corrupt the clones.
Jango led you through the corridors toward the training barracks. “They’re all designated cadets, but these ones are pre-coded for advanced training. Commanders and captains, if the Kaminoans have it their way.”
He stopped before a wide blast door. “You’ll be living in the barracks. You eat with them. Train with them. Earn their respect.”
You raised an eyebrow. “I’m not that much older than them.”
“No,” he said. “But they’ll see you as a superior anyway. That’ll matter.”
With a hiss, the door opened.
Inside were about two dozen boys, aged around nine or ten, all with identical faces — his face. But their expressions varied. Curious. Alert. Some stiff, trying to look tough. Others hiding behind wide eyes.
They straightened the moment they saw Jango. You stepped in behind him, hands on your hips, a smirk tugging at your lips.
“Cadets,” Jango said, his voice sharp and commanding. “This is your new instructor. She’s Mandalorian. She’s been in more fights than you’ve had meals. She’s here to make sure you don’t get yourselves killed before the war even starts.”
The boys’ eyes widened slightly at that.
You stepped forward, giving them a once-over. “Name’s [Y/N]. You don’t need to salute me, and I’m not here to yell at you every time you mess up. But I will push you. Hard. Because I’m not interested in making you follow orders. I’m interested in making you leaders.”
There was a long pause. Then, one of them — a little shorter than the rest — raised his hand.
“Yes?” you said.
“Are you going to teach us Mando’a?”
You grinned. “First lesson starts tomorrow. Right after we run the perimeter course. In full gear.”
A few groaned. Some grinned. One boy, standing just a little taller, gave a silent nod of approval.
You had a feeling that one would be your troublemaker. The kind who’d grow up to wear yellow.
“Get some sleep,” you said. “You’re mine now.”
As the lights dimmed and the boys returned to their bunks, murmuring quietly among themselves, Jango watched you with that unreadable expression of his.
“You think they’ll listen?” he asked quietly.
You nodded. “They already are.”
And in that moment, surrounded by the future soldiers of a galaxy-wide war, you didn’t feel like a babysitter. You felt like something else.
A guide to warriors yet forged.
And maybe — just maybe — the one thing standing between them and the emptiness that awaited.
---
The Kamino rain pounded on the durasteel above, a dull rhythmic hammer that never seemed to end. It echoed through the open training yard, where the clone cadets stood at attention, armor damp, expressions locked into disciplined stillness.
They were still young. Barely ten. Not quite boys, not quite soldiers — something in between. Something manufactured, yet undeniably alive.
You stood in front of them, arms crossed, cloak shifting with the wind.
These were the Kaminoans’ selections. Future commanders. Leaders. Advanced training candidates, chosen by behavior patterns, genetic nuance, projected loyalty metrics — whatever sterile system the aiwha-huggers had cooked up in their labs.
But you weren’t interested in the science. You were interested in them.
You stepped forward, slow and deliberate.
“You’ve been trained,” you began. “You know your formations. Your tactics. How to handle a blaster and break down a droid line. You’re sharp. Efficient. You’ve passed every metric the Kaminoans put in front of you.”
They stayed still.
“But I’m not them,” you said. “I don’t care about their spreadsheets and projections. I care about who you are when everything breaks down. When orders aren’t clear. When it’s your call.”
A few eyes flicked to you. Subtle. Curious.
You stopped in front of the tallest in the line. Sharp jaw. Controlled stance. Commanding presence already starting to form.
“You. Designation?”
“CC-2224, Instructor.”
You moved to the next one. The one with the fast eyes — always scanning, always calculating.
“CT-7567.”
Another.
“CC-1010.”
“CC-5052.”
“CC-5869.”
“CC-4477.”
It was like listening to a datapad reading off serial codes. Precise. Identical. Empty.
You looked down the line again — at all of them. All these boys with the same face, but not the same fire behind their eyes. Not if you knew how to look.
And you did.
You let the silence stretch.
“I know that’s what they call you,” you said quietly. “Your CCs and CTs. Your numbers. But let me tell you something. Numbers are easy. You lose a number, you assign a new one. But a name? That’s earned. That’s kept.”
A shift in the air. Barely noticeable, but it was there.
They were listening now. Not because they had to. Because they *wanted* to understand what you meant.
You didn’t say more. Not yet. You weren’t ready to name them. They weren’t ready to carry it.
But you were watching.
You glanced at CC-2224 again — precise, sharp, already holding himself like a commander. He’d be the first. Eventually. But not yet.
CT-7567 — the quiet focus, the twitch of awareness every time someone moved. Tactician in the making. You could feel it.
CC-1010 — the shield. No emotion on the surface, but his squad respected him, followed him without hesitation. That meant something.
And the smaller ones — the ones who tried harder to stand out, to be something more than the face next to them. They would rise too. Some through grit. Some through pain. Some through sheer, unrelenting heart.
You stepped back, letting your gaze sweep across the line.
“One day,” you said, voice calm but clear, “you’ll have names. Not because I give them to you, but because you’ll earn them. Through blood. Through choice. Through fire. And when you do… they’ll mean something.”
The wind howled between you all, tugging at your cloak, flapping against the plastoid armor of twenty-three boys trying to be men.
“Until then — on the field. Four perimeter laps. In full gear. Then squad sim rotations. Move.”
They ran hard.
Harder than they needed to.
Because for the first time, you hadn’t seen twenty-three clones.
You’d seen twenty-three stories waiting to be told.
---
The rain was still coming down in sheets, but no one noticed anymore. The training sim was running full tilt inside Tipoca’s open-air field chamber — a perfect recreation of a small ruined city block. Crumbling walls, wrecked speeders, low visibility.
Perfect chaos.
You stood above the sim on the observation platform, arms crossed, helmet tucked under one arm. Down below, your cadets were mid-exercise: split into two squads, one to defend a location, the other to take it. Non-lethal stun rounds, full armor, comms restricted to local chatter only.
They were doing well — mostly.
“CT-7567, you’ve got a flank wide open,” you muttered, watching his marker blip across the holo. “Come on…”
A blur of movement below — one of the smaller clones dove through a gap in the wall, skidding behind cover and popping off two clean stuns. A third clone — one of his own squad — shouted through the comms, “You weren’t supposed to breach yet!”
The smaller one’s voice came through half a second later. “You’re too slow, ner vod!”
You smirked.
Below, the chaos grew. Blasterfire crackled against shields, tactics fell apart, a few cadets started improvising wildly. A few… maybe too wildly.
“CC-5052,” you snapped into the comm. “What are you doing on the roof?”
A pause.
“Recon, Instructor.”
“There’s no recon objective.”
“Thought it’d look cool.”
You closed your eyes, exhaled. “It doesn’t. Now get down!”
Another pause.
“I’ve got good balance.”
You pressed your fingers to your temple.
A second voice cut in — this one from the other team. “He doesn’t have good balance.”
“I do!”
“Last week you fell off a bunk.”
“That was sabotage—”
“Enough!” you barked through the comm, trying to hold off a laugh. “ I swear, if I have to come down there…”
You leaned over the railing, watching as CT-7567 moved into position. He’d adapted quickly — circled his squad around, set up a pincer, and was moments away from breaching the enemy defense. Tactical. Efficient. Sharp.
You watched the moment unfold — the way he made a silent hand signal, the way the squad moved as one, trusting him without a word. They cleared the position in seconds.
And he didn’t celebrate.
He just started checking on the stunned cadets.
You smiled to yourself. Not yet, you thought. But soon.
Later, when the sim ended and they were all dragging themselves out of the chamber — soaked, tired, armor scuffed — you leaned against the bulkhead by the exit, arms crossed.
CC-5052 walked by first, helmet under his arm, smug as ever. “Still think I looked cool.”
You raised a brow. “Keep this up and I’ll name you ‘Clown’.”
A cadet snorted behind him. “Told you.”
5052 flipped him off behind his back — you saw it.
CT-7567 was next. Quiet. Focused. His brow furrowed like he was still playing through the whole thing in his head. You gave him a nod, subtle. He didn’t react much — but the way his shoulders squared said he noticed.
CC-2224 followed, calm and methodical, giving a half-report before you even asked. “Squad cohesion broke down mid-sim. We’ll run fireteam drills tomorrow, break the habits.”
“You’re not wrong,” you said. “But your breach response was solid.”
He gave a nod, firm and confident. “We’re learning.”
“I can see that.”
They filed past, dripping water, bickering quietly. Someone slapped someone’s helmet off. Someone else tried to act innocent. You let it all happen.
Because this — this was the good part. The growing pains. The chaos before clarity. The laughter between brothers.
They weren’t ready for names yet.
But they were getting closer.
And when the day came — when one of them truly showed you who he was — you’d give him the first name.
And it would mean something.
---
Kamino’s storms didn’t rest, but the facility did.
Lights dimmed in the barracks, casting long shadows across the corridor as you walked the cadets back to their bunks. Their chatter had softened into yawns and half-whispered jokes. The chaos of the sim was gone, replaced by the quiet fatigue of young soldiers trying not to admit they were still just boys.
You moved beside them like a silent sentinel, hands tucked behind your back, helmet clipped to your belt. You stopped at their dormitory door, letting them file in — one by one — muttered "Instructor," and "Night, ma’am," as they passed.
“You’re not getting extra stimcaf tomorrow if you stay up talking all night,” you warned as the last few ducked inside.
CC-5052 gave you a tired smirk. “Even if it’s tactical debrief?”
“You say ‘tactical’ like it’ll stop me from making you do perimeter drills in the rain.”
A few chuckles, then a wave of yawns as they climbed into the bunks. Blankets tugged over armor-clad bodies, helmets set neatly at bedsides. The rain beat a gentle rhythm outside.
You lingered at the doorway a moment longer, watching as their movement slowed, heads rested back, breath evened out.
And then you turned.
Your own quarters were spartan — a small room not far from theirs, but far enough to give them space. You sat on your bunk, pulled off your boots, leaned forward with a sigh. It wasn’t exhaustion so much as weight. Of command. Of care. Of responsibility for twenty-three lives that had never known anyone but you who treated them like they were something more.
You didn’t hear the door open at first — it slid open quiet, hesitant. It was the breath that gave him away. Soft. Uneven.
You glanced up, hand instinctively reaching toward the blaster on your bedside.
CC-1010 stood there.
Helmet off. Shoulders stiff. Eyes uncertain in the low light. Not afraid of you — not exactly. Just… afraid.
“Couldn’t sleep?” you asked, voice low.
He nodded, once. His hands were clenched into tight fists at his sides.
“Didn’t want the others to see,” he said finally. “They’d think something’s wrong.”
You stood slowly, motioned him in. “Close the door.”
He obeyed.
You sat back on the edge of the bed, letting the silence settle before you spoke again. “Wanna tell me what’s on your mind?”
He didn’t answer right away.
“What if I mess up?”
You turned slightly to look at him. His brow was furrowed. His jaw clenched hard. “Not in sims. In real combat. What if I give an order and someone dies? What if I don’t see something, or I freeze, and my brothers—”
His voice cracked and stopped.
You stood again — close enough to reach out, but you didn’t touch him. Not yet.
“1010,” you said quietly, “you’re already thinking about how your choices affect others. That alone makes you better than half the commanders I’ve seen.”
“That doesn’t make it easier,” he said. “I’m supposed to protect them. What if I can’t?”
You looked at him — really looked.
Behind the calm, behind the training, behind the cloned perfection, there was a kid terrified of not being enough.
You stepped closer.
“You remember what I said about names?”
He nodded slowly.
“They’re not just earned in battle. They’re earned in who you are. And I’ve watched you since the first day.”
You didn’t hesitate this time — you placed a hand gently on his shoulder.
“You carry more than the others realize. You hold it all in so they don’t have to. You think before you speak. You lead without needing the spotlight. You protect your brothers before yourself. That makes you a shield.”
You looked him in the eyes.
“And you’re strong enough to take the hit.”
A beat of silence. Then another.
“That’s why your name is Fox.”
His breath caught. For a second, he looked like he wasn’t sure if he was allowed to feel something about it. Then his shoulders dropped — not in defeat, but in relief.
“…Fox,” he repeated, testing it. “That’s me?”
You nodded. “That’s you.”
He didn’t cry. He didn’t need to. But he gave you a look you’d never forget — one of raw, unfiltered trust. The kind that meant you weren’t just his instructor.
You were *his person.*
“Get some sleep,” you said softly. “You’ve earned it.”
He turned to go, then hesitated. “Thank you… for seeing me.”
You smiled.
“Always.”
When the door slid shut behind him, you sat back down on the bed and leaned back against the wall. The rain drummed steady outside.
Fox.
The first to earn his name.
One down.
Twenty-two to go.
---
Next Chapter
Commander Cody x Village Leader Reader
Their ship barely had time to land before blaster rifles were pointed at them.
“I told you I didn’t want help,” came a voice from the treeline—sharp, challenging, full of attitude.
Commander Cody raised a hand to signal the 212th to hold. From behind him, Obi-Wan calmly stepped forward.
“We’re not here to interfere, only to support your defense—”
“You are interference,” the voice snapped.
Then you stepped into view.
A whirlwind of belts, loose straps, feathers, and leather. Goggles shoved to your forehead, hands on hips, expression full of contempt. You looked at the fully armored, clean-cut clones like they were an invasive species.
Obi-Wan bowed slightly. “You must be the village leader—”
You held up a hand. “No, no, don’t butter me up with that Jedi etiquette crap. You’re uninvited.”
“I think you’ll want to hear what we have to say,” Cody said, stepping forward.
You blinked at him. Then walked slowly around him, circling like a predator.
“Mm. Square jaw. Soldier posture. Serious as a stun baton to the ribs. You’re the commander?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Unfortunate.” You gave a nasty grin. “I was hoping for someone I could beat in an argument.”
He didn’t flinch. “You’re welcome to try.”
You smirked.
Just as you squared your shoulders, ready to argue—maybe throw a punch—a group of kids came tumbling out from the trees. A little one tugged your coat.
“Boss! Are we really getting Republic soldiers? That means laser tanks, right? And hot rations?”
You didn’t even turn. “Not now, shitheads, I’m busy beating up strangers.”
Cody blinked. Waxer coughed to hide his laughter. Ahsoka’s eyes went wide. Anakin mumbled, “Oh, Force.”
Later, around a crackling fire in your chaotic half-open planning tent (made of repurposed sailcloth and wire), Obi-Wan laid it out clearly.
“The Separatists are planning a full invasion. Three battalions of B1 units, two AATs, and an orbiting cruiser for support.”
You sipped from a cup of what smelled like fermented jungle fruit and blinked slowly. “So… what you’re saying is… there’s gonna be a fight?”
“Yes.”
“And it’ll be… big?”
“Yes.”
You sat up straighter. Your grin turned hungry.
“Fine. I accept your help.”
Cody raised a brow. “That fast?”
You threw your arms out dramatically. “You brought me violence! You should’ve led with that!”
Boil leaned over to Waxer. “She’s gonna get us all killed, isn’t she?”
Waxer whispered back, “Yeah. But it’ll be fun.”
⸻
Two days later, you were mid-dismantle of a thermal sensor when Cody approached.
“You shouldn’t be in the blast zone. This isn’t standard military procedure.”
You blew a strand of hair from your face and smirked. “I’m not a standard anything, Commander.”
Cody exhaled. “You’re reckless.”
You held up a small grenade. “I call it chaotic innovation.”
“It’s dangerous.”
You grinned. “So are your cheekbones, but I don’t hear anyone complaining.”
He blinked. “…What?”
You tossed the grenade to him. He caught it reflexively.
“Good hands,” you said. “I like that.”
He stared down at the live grenade in his palm.
“Is this—armed?”
You winked. “Might wanna disarm before you end up splattered on that wall.”
⸻
When the droids finally attacked, you were thriving.
You rode into battle standing on a makeshift hover-skiff, brandishing a long spear with fireworks tied to it, cackling like a banshee.
Cody shouted into the comm: “Can someone please get her out of the crossfire?”
Waxer replied: “We tried. She bit Boil.”
Boil yelled: “She did NOT! I just tripped—!”
“You tripped because she kicked you!”
⸻
Later that night, after the battle, the village lay safe. The droids were in pieces. And you sat on a fallen log with your knees tucked up, staring at the jungle.
Cody approached, helmet off.
“You did well today.”
You sighed. “Don’t ruin it with compliments.”
He smirked. “I’m trying to be civil.”
You eyed him. “Why? Planning to ask me to dinner?”
A pause.
“…Would you go?”
You stared.
Then laughed. “Commander. If you take me to dinner, I’ll probably start a bar fight and make you pay the tab.”
“Noted.”
You tilted your head. “You’d really take me?”
Cody shrugged, voice quiet. “You fight for your people. You’re unpredictable, reckless… and you’ve got guts. I respect that.”
You squinted. “That’s either the sweetest thing anyone’s said to me… or the scariest.”
He held out a hand.
You took it, grinning wide. “Alright, Tensejaw. Maybe I’ll let you stick around.”