Ryio Chuchi x Commander Fox x Reader x Sergeant Hound
The doors hissed closed behind you, muting Coruscantâs constant thrum. Your heels clicked against the marble tilingâwhite-veined, blood-dark stone imported from home, etched with quiet pride.
The apartment was dim, tasteful, and coldâjust 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.
âPerhaps you should consider a protocol droid,â murmured Maera, your senior handmaiden, gliding in with a cup of steaming blackleaf tea. âOne of the newer models. They can help prioritize correspondence and handle⊠the more tedious tasks.â
You looked at her over the rim of your cup. âSo you mean let a metal snitch sit in my office all day?â
âTheyâre quite helpful,â she said, folding her hands. âEspecially with translations, cross-senate scheduling, cultural briefingsââ
âI know what they do.â
Maera gave you a patient lookâthe kind sheâd perfected over years of serving someone who never stopped. âYou donât have to do everything yourself.â
âOf course I do,â you said, already scanning through another briefing. âBecause no one else does it right.â
The chime of your apartment door interrupted further commentary.
You didnât look up. âLet them in.â
Maera bowed, then vanished toward the front foyer.
You heard the faint murmur of pleasantries, the soft wheeze of servos, and thenâ
âOh, this place again,â came the indignant voice of a droid. âWhy does it always smell faintly of molten durasteel and latent judgment?â
âC-3PO,â came PadmĂ©âs 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 heâd 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. âIâd say itâs a surprise, but Iâve been too tired to lie today.â
PadmĂ© gave you a sharp smileâmore real than most. âWe came to discuss the fallout from the Senate hearing. Your⊠performance with Senator Kessen.â
Anakin was already smirking. âYou mean the part where she lit his reputation on fire and danced in the ashes?â
âI didnât dance,â you said mildly. âI just pointed out the arson had been self-inflicted.â
PadmĂ© pressed her lips together. âIt was a bold move. Some say reckless.â
âAnd others say effective.â
âOthers,â PadmĂ© said carefully, âare wondering if youâre trying to provoke more conflict than resolution.â
You rolled your eyes and gestured to the chair opposite your desk. âSit down, Senator. Youâll get a cramp standing on that moral high ground all night.â
She exhaled, andâcredit to herâactually 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.
âSo,â you said abruptly. âDo you enjoy having a protocol droid?â
PadmĂ© blinked. âPardon?â
You leaned forward, expression sly and disarming. âC-3PO. Is he worth the constant commentary and fragility? Or do you keep him around to make you feel more composed by comparison?â
C-3PO squawked. âI beg your pardon, Senator, I am an exceptionally rare and invaluable translation and etiquette droidââ
PadmĂ© raised a hand, silencing him gently. âI find him useful. Occasionally irritating, but⊠helpful.â
âHmm.â You leaned back. âI suppose itâs easier when you donât mind being listened to.â
Anakin stifled a laugh. Padmé gave him a warning glance.
You shifted slightly in your chair, eyeing her again.
âYou didnât come here just for diplomacy. Whatâs the real reason?â
âI did want to talk about Kessen,â PadmĂ© said evenly. âBut⊠yes. Thereâs more. Iâm concerned about the alliances youâre forming. With Skywalker. With⊠certain Guard officers.â
âFox,â you supplied, smiling faintly.
Her expression flickered. âYouâre not subtle.â
âIâve never needed to be,â you said. âSubtlety is for people whose power isnât visible.â
PadmĂ©âs voice softened. âBe careful. People are watching you more closely than ever. Youâve made enemies, and youâre not on neutral ground anymore.â
You stood slowly, brushing nonexistent dust off your skirt. âIâve never had neutral ground.â
Behind her, Anakin leaned on the back of the couch with a half-smirk. âTold you sheâd say something like that.â
Padmé sighed.
The light in your home office softened as the sun began to vanish behind the metallic skyline. Coruscantâs 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.
PadmĂ© stood now, hands folded neatly in front of her, expression calm, composedâbut not cold.
âFor what itâs worth,â she said quietly, âweâve never seen eye-to-eye in the Senate. Our values differ, and our approaches even more so.â
You arched a brow. âA gracious understatement.â
She continued without rising to the bait. âBut I still want you to be safe.â
That made you blink, just for a moment. A flicker of something softened your features, though it disappeared just as quickly.
PadmĂ© took a breath, glancing sidelong at Anakin before she added, âAnd while I donât agree with the friendship you and Skywalker seem to have built, I understand why you formed it.â
You tilted your head. âYou disapprove?â
âI worry,â she corrected. âHe has a habit of getting drawn into⊠chaos. You carry more of it than most.â
You gave a slow, dark smile. âI thought he liked that.â
âHe does,â Anakin chimed in from the corner, hands clasped behind his back.
Padmé gave him a sharp glance. He shrugged like a delinquent Padawan.
âBut regardless,â PadmĂ© said firmly, refocusing on you, âheâll protect you, if you need it. Thatâs what he does. Whether I agree or not.â
You regarded her in silence for a long moment. Then you said, with just enough edge to be honest but not cruel, âItâs strange, Amidala. I donât think weâve ever spoken this long without one of us trying to crush the other in a committee vote.â
PadmĂ© gave a small, tired laugh. âWell. Thereâs a first time for everything.â
You nodded once. âYour concern is noted. And⊠accepted.â
Padmé inclined her head, graceful as ever. Then, with one final look, she turned and made for the door.
C-3PO clanked after her. âOh thank the Maker. Honestly, Senator, I donât think I was designed for this level of tension!â
Anakin lingered a little longer, offering a subtle grin as he passed you.
âDonât do anything reckless while Iâm gone.â
You smirked. âYou make it sound like a challenge.â
The apartment fell into stillness once more, the doors hissing shut behind Senator Amidala and her entourage. Outside, Coruscantâs 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 closelyâtoo closely for comfort.
âYou held your temper,â she said mildly.
You smirked, eyes still on the ceiling. âIâm evolving.â
âI almost miss the yelling.â
You finally looked down. âDonât get sentimental.â
Maera glanced at the datapads still stacked on the desk, then turned her attention back to you. âWhatâs on the agenda for tomorrow?â
You exhaled through your nose and stood, smoothing the front of your robes with a practiced flick of your fingers.
âWeâre going shopping.â
Maera blinked. âShopping?â
You gave her a devilish smileâcool, amused, but exhausted around the edges. âFor a protocol droid.â
She blinked again, just once more slowly. âI thought you hated protocol droids.â
âI do,â you agreed. âBut I hate having to draft a thousand reply letters to planetary governors even more.â
She blinked again. âIs this because Senator Amidala made hers look useful?â
âItâs because Iâve learned that war criminals donât schedule their own executions and Kessenâs supporters wonât shut up in my inbox.â You paused, then added with a shrug, âAnd fine, maybe Iâm tired of forgetting which language the Krayâtok trade delegation prefers.â
Maera offered a rare grin, genuine but subtle. âIâll call the droid district and start vetting models.â
âDo that,â you said. âMake sure whatever we get can take sass, curse in Huttese, and redact documents on command.â
âAnd maybe something that doesnât faint when you pull a blaster on someone mid-sentence?â
âExactly.â
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:
âLetâs see if protocol can keep up.â
âž»
Mid-morning sunlight filtered through the transparisteel roof of Coruscantâs 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 sheâd been plucked from a finishing school and hadnât 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.
âAre they all this⊠rusty?â she asked, wrinkling her nose.
âOnly the cheap ones,â 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 âcompanion droidâ that made Ila blush violently. By the fourth shop, you were regretting everything.
âMaybe we just commission one from Kuat,â Maera muttered.
âWhy? So it can bankrupt us while correcting my grammar?â
Then, in the fifth cramped storefront, you found it.
VX-7. The protocol droid stood motionlessâsleek plating dulled by years, but optics sharp and intelligent. It didnât grovel, didnât 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:
âOf course, Senator. I specialize in tactfully worded hostility.â
You turned to Maera. âIâm keeping this one.â
Then something small rammed into your shin.
You looked down to see a battered astromech droidâpaint chipped, dome scratched, one leg replaced with an old cargo haulerâs stabilizer. It beeped at you. Aggressively.
âWhatâs this?â you asked, raising a brow.
The shopkeeper looked apologetic. âR9-VD. Mean little bastard. Picks fights with power converters. Nearly blew a hole in my storage unit last week.â
Ila gasped. âOh starsâheâs twitching!â
The droid growled.
You grinned. âIâll take him.â
The shopkeeper blinked. âYou will?â
âBuy one, bleed one free. Sounds like a bargain.â
âI was hoping youâd say that,â he muttered, already dragging the crate of restraining bolts out from behind the counter. âTake him before he sets fire to my register again.â
Maera stared at you. âYouâre collecting feral droids now?â
âI collect useful things.â
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.
âSenator!â
You turned to find Sergeant Hound, helmet off, walking toward you in full armorâGrizzer trotting loyally at his side.
âWell, well,â you said. âLook who I find when Iâm burdened with two droids and a fainting noble.â
Hound laughed, scratching behind Grizzerâs ear. âRunning errands?â
âRecruiting staff,â you said, nodding toward the droids. âThe tall one speaks over a thousand languages. The short one hates everything.â
Grizzer growled affectionately at the astromech, who let out an aggressive beep in return.
âCareful,â Hound chuckled. âGrizzer likes him.â
You watched the way he stoodârelaxed but alert, protective but never patronizing. When he met your eyes, there was no awkwardness, no nervous fumbling.
No obliviousness.
âWalking your route?â you asked.
âNorth patrol. Youâre in my sector.â
âHow fortunate for me,â you said, letting your tone shift slightlyâwarm, measured, curious. Not performative.
Just real.
Hound smiled, a little wider than usual. âNeed an escort home again, Senator?â
âOnly if Grizzer promises not to chew on R9âs restraining bolt.â
The droid made a noise like it was loading a weapon. Grizzer barked once, delighted.
Hound looked between you, the droids, your handmaidensâthen back to you.
âI think I could be persuaded.â
You smiled. And for the first time in a while, it reached your eyes.
âž»
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 spaceâuninvited, instinctual, and irritating.
âIla,â you called before your cloak hit the back of the nearest chair. âMake sure the astromech doesnât electrocute anything.â
âYes, Senator!â she said quickly, scrambling after the droid as it began sniffing around the comm terminal like it wanted to chew through the wires.
âMaera,â you continued, already tugging off your gloves. âI want them both repainted, polished, and calibrated by tomorrow morning.â
Maera raised a brow. âThe astromech too?â
âI want it looking like it belongs to a senator, not some spice-smuggler from Nal Hutta.â
âThe protocol droid seems compliant,â Maera said dryly. âThe other one just tried to bite the upholstery.â
You turned and narrowed your eyes at R9-VD, who stared backâoptics glowing, dome twitching.
âI donât care if it wants to die in rusted anonymity. Itâs going to shine. And weâll scrub the attitude off if we have to sandblast it.â
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.
âShall I begin familiarizing myself with your schedule, Senator?â
âStart with everything Iâve put off since the Kessen disaster.â
âThat could take a while.â
âGood,â you said with a small smile. âThat means Iâll finally be caught up.â
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.
âž»
Coruscantâs dusk cast long shadows over the Guard barracks. Inside the command room, Fox stood over a data console, reviewing the latest internal reportâa 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. Heâd been unusually quiet on patrol. Fox noticed.
âYouâve been around the senator a lot lately,â Fox said, voice neutral, still scanning the holoscreen. âShe using you for access?â
Houndâs brow ticked upward, slow and unimpressed. âThat a serious question?â
Fox finally looked up. âShe doesnât keep people close unless she can gain from it.â
âShe doesnât exactly keep you far.â
That made Fox pause.
Hound pushed off the wall and stepped forward, tone low. âYou ever think sheâs not using either of us?â
âSheâs a politician,â Fox said bluntly. âThatâs what they do.â
âAnd youâre a commander,â Hound shot back. âYouâre supposed to see the battlefield. But somehow you canât see that both those senatorsâChuchi and herâdonât just want your vote in a hearing. They want you. And youâkriffing hell, Foxâyouâre so deep in denial, itâs tragic.â
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 entirelyâ
âCommander Fox.â
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. âThese are the updated refugee settlement numbers. I thought it best to deliver them personally.â
Fox took it, fingers brushing hers for half a second too long. âAppreciated, Senator.â
Chuchiâs eyes lingered on him, soft but calculating. âI also hoped to ask you about additional patrol rotations near the lower levels. Iâve hadâŠconcerns.â
Her tone was careful, concern genuineâbut her glance toward Hound didnât 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 wasnât so sure.
âž»
It wasnât 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 astromechânewly repainted in deep senate gold and high-gloss blackâscuttled 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 wereâFox and Chuchi.
She stood closer than usual. Too close.
Her hand brushed his vambrace as she handed him something. Fox didnât pull away. He didnât 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 didnât seem to flinch from it.
A glimmer of something crawled up your spineâirritation? Jealousy? No. You didnât have the luxury of that.
Before you could form a thought sharp enough to fling like a daggerâ
CLANKâwhiiiiiiiiirRRRRRZKâBEEP BEEP BEEP.
R9-VD rounded the corner like a demon loosed from hellâs server room, chased by your newly programmed protocol droid, whose polished plating gleamed like a diplomatic dagger.
âSenator!â the protocol droid trilled. âYour schedule is running precisely six minutes behind! Shall we move?â
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.
âAh,â you said smoothly as you strode into view, âDonât let me interrupt.â
âSenator,â 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. âLooks like everyoneâs getting awfully familiar lately.â
âProfessional coordination,â Chuchi replied, not missing a beat.
âMm,â you hummed, eyes on Fox. âIs that what theyâre calling it now?â
Foxâs brow twitched. Chuchiâs smile remained.
You snapped your fingers, and both droids froze. âLetâs go. Weâve got senators to ignore and corruption to thin out.â
As you swept past, you didnât miss the way Fox glanced at youâjust for a heartbeat.
Not enough.
Never enough.
But still⊠something.
âž»
The rotunda thundered with voicesâsome 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.
âI speak not against the clones themselves,â Chuchi said clearly, firmly. âBut against the idea that we can continue this endless production without consequence. We are bankrupting our future.â
Your fingers tapped against the railing, the only sign of interest until you leaned forward to activate your mic.
âFor once,â you said, voice cutting smoothly through the chamber, âI find myself in agreement with my esteemed colleague from Pantora.â
A ripple of surprise swept through the seats like a silent explosion. A rare allianceâunthinkable.
You continued. âWeâre manufacturing soldiers like credits grow on trees. They donât. The Banking Clan is already circling like carrion. Every new battalion is another rope around the Republicâs neck.â
That set the chamber ablaze.
Senator Ask Aak from Malastare sputtered his disagreement. âOur survival depends on maintaining numerical superiority!â
âAnd what happens when we canât feed those numbers, Senator?â you snapped. âDo we sell your planetâs moons next?â
As chaos unfolded, the usual suspects fell into lineâcorrupt 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.
âStrange day,â she said quietly. âStranger allies.â
You sipped from a flask you definitely werenât supposed to have in the Senate building. âDonât get used to it.â
But before she could respondâ
âSenators,â 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. âYour sudden alliance is⊠fascinating. One might wonder what prompted it. A common bedfellow, perhaps?â
You opened your mouthâbut your protocol droid stepped forward first, blocking your path like a prim, glossy wall.
âSenator Taa,â the droid began in clipped, neutral tones. âWhile 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.â
Taa blinked, thrown off by the droidâs tone. âExcuse me?â
The protocol unit didnât miss a beat. âForgive me, Senator. That was the polite version. I am still calibrating my diplomatic protocols, but Iâve been programmed specifically to identify corruption, incompetence, and conversational redundancy. You seem to be triggering all three.â
A sharp wheeze escaped Taaâs throat. âWhy, I neverâ!â
âI suspect you have,â the droid interjected coolly, âand quite often.â
You didnât even try to hide your smirk. âDonât worry, Senator. Heâs new. Still ironing out his filters. But I must sayâhe has excellent instincts.â
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. âMistress, was I too subtle?â
âPerfect,â you said, patting its durasteel head. âIâll make sure you get an oil bath laced with Corellian spice.â
Beside you, Chuchi finally let her laugh out. âI never thought Iâd say this, but I may actually like your droid.â
âHigh praise coming from you.â
You both stood there for a quiet moment, mutual respect buried beneath mutual exhaustion.
âToday was strange,â she murmured again. âBut⊠maybe not entirely bad.â
You tilted your head. âDonât tell me youâre warming up to me, Chuchi.â
She gave you a lookâwry, but not cold. âIâm starting to wonder if the galaxy would survive it if I did.â
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. âAnd there goes diplomacy.â
Chuchi smiled. âMaybe the Senate could use more of that.â
Maybe.
âž»
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 affairâsponsored by the Supreme Chancellor himself, under the guise of âRepublic Unityâ and âCross-Branch Collaboration.â
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 alwaysânot 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 werenât 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. Houndâs eyes found yours immediately. He didnât look away.
For a few beats, neither did you.
âYouâre staring again,â your handmaiden whispered as she passed, wine in one hand.
âIâm assessing military distribution,â you replied flatly, plucking the glass.
âLiar.â
You smiled over the rim.
The Jedi presence tonight was thick. Kenobi, cloaked in his usual piety. Skywalker, prowling the crowd like heâd rather be anywhere else. Even Plo Koon and Shaak Ti made appearances, the Council exuding quiet power.
You didnât care about them. Not really.
You moved.
Chuchiâs voice reached your ears as you approached the table where she and Fox stood. âI just think the Guard needs greater Senate oversightânot control, but transparency. For their safety.â
Fox nodded. âA fair point, Senator.â
âIâm shocked,â you drawled, appearing at his other side. âYou usually flinch when people imply oversight.â
Chuchiâs smile cooled half a degree. âSome of us donât believe in oversight being synonymous with domination.â
You sipped your wine. âI donât dominate anyone who doesnât want to be.â
Fox choked on his drink. Windu raised a brow and promptly walked away.
Chuchiâs stare could have frosted glass. âYouâre impossible.â
âDebatable,â you replied. Then, sweetly, âCareful, Senator. Youâre starting to sound jealous.â
Before Fox could open his mouthâlikely to misinterpret all of thisâHound appeared beside you.
âSenator,â he said, his voice a little low, a little warm. âI didnât know youâd be here.â
You tilted toward him just slightly. âTrying to avoid me?â
âNot a chance.â
Foxâs eyes flicked toward you both. Sharp. Confused.
Chuchi noticed. Her gaze narrowed.
The conversation fractured as other senators arrivedâMon Mothma offered a cool nod, PadmĂ© a quiet, guarded greeting. Bail approached with that politicianâs smile and a quick, dry joke about the wine being better than the Senate votes.
But your attention split.
Foxâs shoulders were tense. He wasnât making eye contact. Not with Chuchi. Not with you.
You leaned closer to Hound instead. âTell me, Sergeant. Ever get tired of playing guard dog?â
âNot if the person Iâm guardingâs worth the chase.â
That pulled a quiet snort from you. Fox heard it.
Chuchi, lips pressed in a fine line, excused herself and stepped asideâclearly 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 playâstring 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. Sheâd caught sight of your handmaidens lingering near a refreshments table, their gowns modest and their eyes sweeping the room with practiced subtlety.
âExcuse me,â she said with a gentle smile as she approached. âYouâre the senatorâs attendants, yes?â
Your senior handmaiden, Maera offered only a nod. Ila, eager to please and twice as naive, curtsied.
âSheâs fortunate to have you,â Chuchi continued, a kindness in her voice. âIt canât be easy, assisting someone so⊠involved in such controversial matters.â
âIt isnât,â said the younger girl quickly. âBut sheâs not what people say. She justââ
âShe just doesnât care who she angers, as long as it moves the line,â the elder interrupted. âItâs her strength. And her flaw.â
Chuchi tilted her head. âYouâre fiercely loyal.â
âWe donât have the luxury of softness where weâre from, Senator Chuchi,â the elder said simply. âNot all planets grow up in peace.â
Before Chuchi could respond, a sudden flare of static caught attention nearby.
Your protocol droidânewly repainted and proud in fresh navy and chromeâwas engaged in a verbal deathmatch with none other than C-3PO.
âI assure you,â Threepio huffed, âI have been fluent in over six million forms of communication since before you were assembled, andââ
âPerhaps,â your droid cut in smoothly, âbut proficiency does not equal relevance. One might be fluent in six million forms of conversation and still be incapable of saying anything useful.â
âWell, I neverâ!â
âCorrect. And that, sir, is the problem.â
Nearby Jedi Council members were visibly trying not to react, though Plo Koonâs 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 edgeânarrow, cordoned off, affording a view of Coruscantâs skyline.
Fox found you there.
You knew it was him before he spokeâhe moved like precision, shadow and control in equal measure.
âSenator.â
You didnât turn, not right away. âCommander.â
He stepped beside you, stiff in his formal armor, helmet clipped to his belt.
âI noticed your⊠astromechâs absence tonight.â
You smirked faintly. âYes, well. Iâd like to avoid sparking an incident with the Jedi Council over a âmisunderstanding.â He has a habit of setting things on fire and claiming self-defense.â
Fox made a soundâsomething between a huff and a grunt. Amused. Maybe.
You turned your head slightly, catching his expression. âDisappointed? I thought you didnât approve of my companions.â
âI donât,â he admitted. âBut IâmâŠused to them.â
That was, for Fox, practically a declaration of fondness.
âIâd say the same about you,â you said, voice quieter now. âI donât approve of you either. But Iâve gotten used to you.â
His jaw flexed. He didnât answer. Not directly. But his eyes lingered longer than they should have.
Thenâ
âSenator,â Chuchiâs 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.
âž»
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.
âHis behavior has changed,â Windu said. âSubtly. But not insignificantly.â
âHe still reports for duty,â Plo Koon offered, voice gravel-smooth but thoughtful. âStill acts with discipline.â
âAnd yet,â Shaak Ti murmured, âI 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 Ryioâs assignments.â
âNothing has breached protocol,â Anakin interjected. âFox is loyal. Heâs the best the Guard has.â
Shaak Ti gave him a long look. âAnd yet, there is more than one clone whose loyalty might now be divided.â
Anakinâs jaw twitched.
âThis isnât Kamino,â Windu said coolly. âWe cannot afford emotional compromise in the Guardânot now, not when tensions are already splintering the Senate. These clones were not bred for palace intrigue.â
Plo Koon folded his arms. âAnd yet we bring them into the heart of it.â
âWe trained them to follow orders,â Shaak Ti added gently. âNot hearts.â
Anakin looked between them, the shadows of his past bleeding into the tension. He didnât need to ask who else they were talking about. It wasnât just Fox. Hound had been seen near Senator [Y/N]âs apartment. Thorn, too, had lingered far longer than necessary when sheâd been attacked.
âSheâs dangerous,â Mace continued, tone edged in steel. âNot recklessâbut calculating. Clever. Her alliances shift like smoke, and I do not trust her attention toward Fox or the others.â
âSheâs done nothing wrong,â Anakin said.
âYet,â Windu countered. âKeep watch, Skywalker. If sheâs tangled them in personal threads, it must be cut. Quickly.â
âž»
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 thenâunreadable, 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.
âž»
The air inside the Jedi Councilchamber was tense, still, and too quiet. Four members of the Coruscant Guard stood before the Jedi Councilâs 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.
âThis is not an accusation,â Master Windu began, tone steely. âBut a reminder. You are peacekeepers. Defenders of the Republic. Not participants in the political games of its Senate.â
Shaak Ti added gently, âWeâve noted a⊠shift. Certain guards developing close ties to senators. Attachments. Loyalties. Intimacies. We remind you that such relationships blur linesâlines that should never have been crossed.â
Plo Koon looked to them with quiet concern. âIt is not about love, nor about loyalty. It is about danger. Risk. The Republic cannot afford to have its protectors compromised by personal bonds.â
Hound flinched. Barely. Fox didnât move, but Thorn cast him a pointed glance.
âWe wonât name names,â Windu said, âbut this is your only warning. Choose duty.â
Dismissed, the clones saluted and filed out, silent as ghostsâyet burdened more heavily than ever.
âž»
It was nearly midnight when the knock came. You werenât expecting anyoneâMaera 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.
âDonât tell me the Jedi are doing door-to-door interrogations now,â you said, not bothering to stand from your desk.
âJust figured you should hear it from someone who doesnât speak in riddles and judgment,â Anakin replied. âThey warned the Guard today.â
You looked up slowly.
âAbout me?â
âAbout all of it. You. Chuchi. Hound. Fox.â
You leaned back in your chair, lacing your fingers together. âSo the Council knows?â
âThey suspect,â he clarified. âBut theyâve already made up their minds. No direct interference. But theyâll start pulling strings. Reassignments. Surveillance. Sudden policy shifts.â
You exhaled slowly. âLet me guess. The clones are the ones punished.â
Anakinâs jaw tightened. âAlways.â
He came closer, leaning against the wall by your window. âWhatever this is, [Y/N], if you want to protect themâyou keep it behind closed doors. Donât give the Council an excuse.â
Your eyes narrowed, flicking up to him. âAnd what would you know about secret relationships with forbidden attachments?â
Anakin looked out over the Coruscant skyline. âMore than you think.â
R2-D2 gave a sympathetic beep. At his side, your own droidâR9ârolled 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 couldnât tell.
âGreat,â you muttered. âMy homicidal trash can made a friend.â
VX-7 entered as well, standing sentinel near the door and giving R2 a quick scan before offering a polite, professional greeting. âDesignation confirmed. Diplomatic assistant, Anakin Skywalker. Cleared for temporary access.â
âYou really upgraded them,â Anakin noted.
âTheyâre smarter than most senators,â you said with a dry smirk. âAnd less dangerous.â
He moved to leave, but hesitated. âJust⊠be careful. I know you think you donât owe anyone anythingâbut Houndâs already in too deep. And Fox? Heâs starting to crack.â
âFox doesnât even know heâs in love,â you said coolly.
âExactly,â Anakin said. âThat makes him more dangerous than the rest of us.â
You gave him a look. âIncluding you?â
Anakinâs lips quirked. âEspecially me.â
Then he and R2 were gone, and the apartment fell quiet againâexcept for the low, strangely comforting chatter of astromechs speaking in beeps and secrets.
âž»
Previous Part | Next Part
Commander Fox x Reader
You sat back in the medical bay with a fresh bandage on your shoulder, sipping from a flask that definitely did not contain approved Republic stimulant rations.
Across from you, Anakin stood with his arms crossed, watching a medic finish patching up your wound. He looked oddly relaxed for a man who had just murdered someone in a hallway.
âWell,â you said, wincing slightly as you flexed your shoulder, âI guess we can cancel the fireworks and the firing squad.â
Anakin smirked. âProbably for the best. The optics were gonna be a nightmare anyway.â
âPlease,â you said dryly. âOptics are the one thing my people love messy.â
You tapped a commpad resting beside you on the cot and brought up your shipâs navigation interface. A cheerful little message blinked: ARRIVAL IN SYSTEM: 3 HOURS.
You sighed, dramatically. âWell, there goes my logistical planning. Invitations. Vendor contracts. The gallows.â
Anakin chuckled, a dark edge to his grin. âYouâre not seriously disappointed?â
You gave him a look. âI had a speech, Skywalker. A really good one. Rhetoric, flair, applause lines. You ever try to cancel a political execution with less than four hoursâ notice? Itâs a bloody mess.â
There was a knock at the door. The medic stepped back, giving a polite nod as two figures entered: one in Senate Guard blues, the other a high-ranking emissary from your homeworld, flanked by your personal aide.
Your aide looked vaguely panicked. The emissary looked furious.
âSenator,â the emissary said stiffly. âWeâve just received word. The prisoner is dead?â
You raised your flask in a lazy toast. âCorrect. Chose to improvise. Very dramatic.â
âImprovised?â he blinked. âHe was executed aboard a Republic vesselâwithout ceremony, without audienceââ
âWithout getting any of my damn blood on the carpets,â you interrupted, smiling thinly. âYouâre welcome.â
The emissary sputtered. âWhat are we supposed to tell the people?â
âThat the bastard who butchered their families tried to escape justice,â you said, standing slowly, âand one of the Republicâs finest cut him down mid-flight to protect their senator from assassination. Thatâs better than the show, honestly.â
The aide blinked. âSo⊠we donât need to delay the post-execution feast?â
You looked to Anakin, deadpan. âShould I bring the corpse in a box as proof, or do you think theyâll take my word for it?â
Anakin shrugged. âYouâve got good stage presence. Iâd believe you.â
The emissary pinched the bridge of his nose. âYouâve just upended half our ceremonial protocolââ
âAgain,â you said, brushing past him and grabbing your cloak, âyouâre welcome.â
As the others filtered out, grumbling and muttering about decorum and wasted resources, Anakin lingered by the door.
âYouâre seriously going back home just to give a speech over a dead manâs ashes?â he asked.
You pulled the clasp on your cloak, expression smooth. âOf course. Let them mourn what they wanted and didnât get. Itâs better that way.â
He studied you for a moment, curious. âYou always like this?â
You gave him a sidelong glance. âOnly when I win.â
And with that, you walked off down the corridor, steps steady, shoulder soreâbut spine unbowed.
The execution was over.
But the theatre?
That had only just begun.
âž»
The ship landed at dusk.
Twin suns spilled molten gold across the obsidian landing pads of your capital, casting long shadows that reached toward you like claws. The air was warm and heavy with the scent of spice, steel, and storm-bruised flowers that only bloomed after blood rain.
As the boarding ramp lowered, you felt it. The shift.
You straightened your shoulders.
Slowed your breath.
And shed the Coruscanti bite from your posture like an old coat.
You werenât the sharp-tongued, rage-baiting senator anymore. Not here.
You were their senator.
The gatekeeper.
The sword and seal of a people forged in war and survival.
You walked down the ramp in silence, your cloak a trailing shadow, your expression unreadable. Behind you, Obi-Wan and Anakin followedâKenobi, cautious and observing; Skywalker, loose-limbed and openly curious.
A fanfare of percussion instruments and throat-chanting rose from the procession waiting at the foot of the stepsâguards in ceremonial armor, banners fluttering, emissaries standing tall.
Your people did not weep for the prisoner. There were no black sashes or flowers laid in mourning.
Instead, there was fire.
Braziers lined the boulevard, flames flickering high to honor justice fulfilledâeven if it came wrapped in chaos.
Anakin leaned toward you as you walked. âThis is what you call restraint?â
You gave him the barest tilt of your head. âIf we wanted excess, weâd have brought the corpse.â
At your side, Kenobi sighed softly. âAs disturbing as that image is⊠your people do have a knack for spectacle.â
âI told you,â you said, keeping your gaze forward. âWe donât flinch from consequences. We honor them.â
âž»
The feast hall was carved from volcanic stone, long and low with vaulted ceilings that shimmered with luminescent moss and jewel-tone metals. The air smelled of roasted meat, spiced fruit, and sweet liquor.
Dancers moved like smoke through the crowd.
There was laughter.
Music.
Toasts shouted in five languages.
You stood near the high table, nursing a goblet of deep amber wine, wearing a formal garment that draped your frame like armor. Every angle of you was honedâgraceful, powerful, untouchable.
Anakin was already on his second round with a group of soldiers, trading war stories and draining shots like they were water. He looked alive here, among warriors and firelight.
Kenobi stood off to the side, wine in hand, watching the scene with the expression of a man trapped between judgment and genuine enjoyment.
Eventually, he approached you.
âThis,â he said, lifting his glass slightly, âis far more pleasant than I anticipated.â
You arched a brow. âI assumed youâd be sulking about the moral implications of toasting over a would-be assassinâs death.â
âOh, I still disapprove,â he said, sipping. âBut your liquorâs very persuasive. And your musicians have excellent rhythm.â
You gave him a faint smirk. âWe donât mourn the removal of threats. We celebrate survival.â
âYou celebrate very well.â
There was a pause. A rare, companionable quiet.
Then Kenobi added, dryly âThat said⊠if I wake up with a tattoo and no memory of where my boots went, Iâm blaming Skywalker.â
You let out a low, surprised laughâreal, not performative.
For a moment, the night softened around the edges.
But only for a moment.
Because tomorrow, there would be politics again. Corpses to explain. Reports to file.
But tonight?
Tonight, your world danced in flame.
And you let yourself be theirs.
Even just for one night.
âž»
Coruscant was grey that morning.
Muted sun behind clouds. Rain beading softly against the durasteel windows of Guard HQ.
Inside his office, Commander Fox sat alone behind his desk, datapads stacked in neat columns, stylus in hand, expression unreadable. He didnât slouch. He didnât fidget. He just⊠read.
A private fileâheavily encryptedâglowed on the display in front of him.
Subject: Senator [Name] â Incident Debrief & Homeworld Response Log
Status: Prisoner deceased. Jedi casualty: none. Senator: minor injury. Civil unrest: negligible. Execution status: voided. Celebratory feast: confirmed.
He stared at that last line.
Feast.
Fox blinked once. Slowly. Then set the stylus down with clinical precision.
âOf course,â he muttered to himself, tone bone-dry. âFeast.â
There was a polite knock at the door. Sharp, deliberate.
âEnter,â he called.
The door hissed open.
Senator Riyo Chuchi stepped inside, her presence as calm as alwaysâmeasured, graceful, dressed in soft blues that made her look like something born of snowfall and silence.
âCommander,â she said with a faint smile. âI hope Iâm not intruding.â
Fox stood, instinctively straightening his spine. âSenator Chuchi. Not at all.â
She stepped closer, hands folded neatly. Her gaze flicked to the screen behind him, just for a second.
âMore reports from the Senatorâs trip home?â she asked lightly.
Foxâs mouth twitchedâalmost a smile, almost a grimace. âYou could call it that.â
âI heard there was an incident,â she said, voice softening. âI trust sheâs unharmed?â
âMinor injury,â he confirmed. âThe prisoner attempted to escape en route. Neutralized.â
Chuchi nodded slowly, then tilted her head. âAnd the execution?â
âCanceled,â Fox said simply. âShe improvised.â
Something flickered across Chuchiâs faceâan expression caught somewhere between relief and concern. âThat sounds like her.â
Fox gave a faint nod, eyes dropping back to the datapad. âIâm not here to question methods. Itâs not my place.â
âYou think thatâs all it is?â Chuchi asked gently. âMethods?â
He glanced up, brow furrowed slightly.
She stepped closer, just a little. Not pushingâjust enough to be noticed.
âSome of us see people,â she said. âNot just politics.â
Fox blinked.
Then looked at herâreally looked.
Chuchi smiled, small and earnest. âI thought Iâd bring you this,â she added, producing a small insulated container from her satchel. âFresh caf. Brewed properly. I thought you might need it.â
He stared at it. A beat passed before he took it, careful not to brush her fingers.
ââŠThank you,â he said, voice rough with habit more than emotion.
She hesitated. Then: âYou donât have to be polite with me all the time, Commander.â
He glanced up, puzzled.
She smiled again, this one quieter. âYouâre not a report.â
With that, she turned to leave, the hem of her cloak brushing the doorway.
Fox stood there for a long moment, caf in hand, staring at the empty space sheâd just occupied.
He finally sat back down, the weight of the morning returning to his shoulders.
Report after report.
Fire and feast.
Senators and swords.
He sipped the caf.
It was excellent.
He hated that it made him feel anything at all.
âž»
Coruscant gleamed with its usual sterile indifference as your ship cut through its airways, docking silently under a hazy afternoon sun.
You stepped out dressed not for war, but for the game, a tailored ensemble of muted power, the cut precise, the lines sharp. Behind you, aides hurried, datapads flickering with messages and half-formed excuses for missed committee meetings. You let them speak for you. You didnât need to explain your absence.
The moment you stepped into the Senate halls again, the shift was palpable.
Your gait was unhurried.
Your expression? Immaculately unreadable.
But the whispers started anyway.
They always did.
âž»
Elsewhere in the Senate Building Padmé Amidala folded her arms in her office, standing at the window with narrowed eyes.
âSheâs getting close to you,â she said quietly.
Anakin, sprawled on a chaise like a man without a single political care in the galaxy, frowned up at her. âClose to me? She nearly got murdered last week. I was doing my job.â
PadmĂ© turned. âYouâre spending a lot of time with her. You were always⊠sympathetic to her methods.â
âSheâs not wrong about everything,â Anakin said with a shrug. âHer worldâs brutal. So she makes brutal calls. Doesnât mean sheâs dangerous.â
âSheâs persuasive,â PadmĂ© said flatly. âAnd you like people who fight like you do. It concerns me.â
Anakin held her gaze. âI know what Iâm doing, PadmĂ©.â
Her expression didnât budge. âIâm not sure she does.â
âž»
The lights in the guard hallway were dimmed. Hound and Thorn sat on a bench outside Foxâs office, casually snacking on ration bars, half-listening to the low murmur of voices inside.
âYou reckon sheâs finally getting somewhere?â Thorn muttered, cocking his head toward the door.
Hound snorted. âShe could wear a sign around her neck saying Fox, take me now, and heâd still think she was lobbying for more security funding.â
Inside, Fox stood at his desk, arms crossed, frowning as you paced slowly in front of him with deliberate grace.
âIâm just saying,â you murmured, tone silk-soft, âthe Guardâs response time was impressive. Efficient. Youâve trained them well.â
Fox didnât blink. âThank you, Senator.â
You leaned slightly on his desk, watching him with a glint in your eye. âThough I did miss your voice shouting orders over a comm. Itâs oddly reassuring.â
He hesitated, just a flicker.
ââŠIt wasnât necessary to involve myself directly.â
You smiled. âStill. It wouldâve made for a good view.â
That one landed.
A slight pause. A faint shift in his stance.
You leaned in, voice low. âDonât tell me you didnât miss me, Commander.â
Fox cleared his throat, stiffening slightly. âIâm glad you returned safely.â
âAre you?â you asked, a smirk playing at your lips. âBecause the last time I left, I almost died. And when I got back, my favorite clone didnât even send me a message.â
Fox opened his mouth.
Closed it.
Regrouped.
âI⊠didnât want to presume.â
You tilted your head. âShame. I do like a man with initiative.â
Just outside the office, Thorn elbowed Hound, grinning like an idiot. Hound had a hand over his mouth to keep from laughing.
âTen credits says he short-circuits before the end of the conversation,â Thorn whispered.
Back inside, Fox glanced toward the doorâhe knew exactly who was eavesdropping. His voice dropped to a murmur.
ââŠSome of us arenât trained in politics.â
You took a slow step closer. âGood. Politics is boring. I prefer action.â
Fox blinked. âIââ
The door creaked.
Fox turned sharply. âThorn. Hound. Get back to your rounds.â
Two half-stifled laughs vanished down the hall.
You chuckled, slow and rich.
Fox looked somewhere between exasperated and confused. âYou enjoy this.â
âImmensely,â you purred. âYouâre one of the few people here who doesnât lie to my face or fawn over my power. Itâs refreshing.â
He looked at you for a long moment. The barest crack in the armor.
ââŠYouâre hard to read.â
You stepped back, just slightlyâenough to give him space, enough to keep him off balance.
âGood,â you said softly. âLetâs keep it that way.â
Then you turned, brushing past him with a swish of fabric and control.
âGoodnight, Commander.â
ââŠGoodnight, Senator.â
Outside, Hound was already counting his credits.
âž»
Your office was dim, sunlight creeping in through the high windows like it feared being too bold in your domain. You were lounging in your chair, glass in handâliquor, not cafâwhen the door slid open with a hiss.
Skywalker stepped in, alone. No guards. No cloak of diplomacy.
You raised your brows. âNo dramatic entrance? Iâm disappointed.â
Anakin shrugged as he shut the door. âIâm not here for a debate.â
âPity. Iâm good at those.â
He folded his arms, studying you like he was trying to decide if you were a real threat or just too much trouble to be worth it.
âPadmĂ©âs worried about you,â he said without greeting.
You didnât even blink. âSheâs always worried. Itâs her default state.â
âSheâs worried about you. And me.â
You blinked once, then tilted your head. âAre you flattered or terrified?â
Anakin cracked a dry grin. âBoth.â
Anakin gave you a look. âShe thinks youâre manipulating me.â
You smiled, slow and amused. âAre you easily manipulated, Skywalker?â
âNo,â he said, too fast, then caught himself. âBut youâre not exactly subtle, either.â
âIâm not trying to seduce you,â you said lazily. âIf I were, youâd already know. And youâd be very uncomfortable about it.â
That drew a genuine laugh from him.
âI like you,â he said, leaning back against the window frame. âYou donât pretend. Everyone else here pretends.â
You shrugged. âI was raised by men who gutted liars before dinner. I have little patience for masks.â
âYouâre going to get eaten alive in here,â he warned.
You grinned. âSkywalker, I am a wolf dressed in velvet. Iâll be okay.â
He turned, and for a moment, you saw itâthat same sliver of you in him. Something sharp and secret and smoldering. He respected it.
âž»
Later that afternoon, a message arrived. Private channel. Encrypted.
Johhar Kessen.
Senator of Dandoran. Blunt nails dipped in old blood. His smile always looked like it was hiding something, and his suits were cut with the arrogance of a man whoâd never once been held accountable.
He requested a âdiscreetâ meeting in one of the lesser-used conference lounges beneath the rotunda.
You went, of course. Alone.
He welcomed you like a merchant offering cursed jewels.
âSenator,â he purred, âI believe we can help each other.â
You said nothing. Just sat and let him dig the hole himself.
âIâve noticed your recent⊠power plays,â he continued. âDecisive. Controversial. Admirable.â
He poured himself a drink but not you.
âI know there are those who would love to see your world scrutinized. Public executions donât go over well with the Jedi. Or the press.â
You smiled, slow and cold.
He didnât notice.
âI can smooth that over,â he offered. âHelp manage the narrative. In return, Iâd like your support on my latest trade deregulation bill. Simple. Clean.â
He leaned closer. âSay yes, and no one ever sees your less polished traditions. Say noâŠâ
He shrugged. âWell. People love a scandal.â
You pressed a button beneath the table.
Recording active.
Your eyes gleamed. You loved a good conflict.
âž»
They packed the rotunda. Senators from the core and mid-rim worlds, trade delegates, press from The Core Chronicle, and the ever-judgmental whispers of Senator murmuring like priestesses behind veils.
You stood at the central platform, spine straight, voice calm.
âI present this recording to the full body.â
The playback began.
Kessenâs voice filled the chamber: smug, slimy, and devastatingly clear.
ââŠsay yes, and no one ever sees your less polished traditionsâŠâ
Shock rippled like thunder.
Johhar Kessen stood, red-faced, sputtering. âThis isâthis is a breach ofââ
âOf what, senator?â you snapped, voice like a whip. âDecorum? Legality? You attempted to blackmail a member of this chamber. Do not insult this room by feigning innocence.â
The senators exploded into sound.
Kessen stood, fists clenched. âThereâs a process for accusations like thisâ!â
âToo slow,â you cut in. âToo easily buried.â
Orn Free Taa looked at you like youâd just spit blood onto his robe.
âYour methods are grotesque,â He whispered.
You turned your head. âSo are the ones used by half the worlds you turn a blind eye to.â
Chuchi rose slowly. Her eyes never left you.
âEven if heâs guilty⊠there are better ways.â
âI donât play by your rules,â you said coolly. âBecause your rules were written to protect people like him.â
Kessen had gone dead quiet.
He knew.
And thenâ
âI support the senatorâs actions.â
The room fell silent.
Bail Organa rose, voice calm, but firm.
âI do not support the tactic, but I support her refusal to be intimidated. If we condemn the exposure more than the crime, then we are not a governing bodyâwe are a club.â
Gasps. Murmurs. A few stunned stares.
You watched him.
He looked you in the eye. Gave you a single nod.
Respect. Conditional. Earned.
âž»
Outside the Chamber Chuchi followed you out. You could feel her presence without turning.
âYouâve made enemies.â
âI was never here to make friends.â
Her voice was soft. âYouâre going to get hurt.â
You glanced at her over your shoulder. âLet them try.â
And with that, you vanished into the corridors, cloak billowing behind you like a shadow with teeth.
âž»
The report came in clean and quiet, just like the man who delivered it.
Fox stood behind his desk, fingers locked behind his back, posture perfect. Not a single muscle twitchingâexcept for the subtle clench of his jaw as Hound finished reading the datapad aloud.
ââŠexposed the blackmail attempt on the Senate floor, publicly. Senator Johhar Kessenâs credibility is in tatters. Organa backed her up. So did Organaâs wife.â
A beat of silence.
Fox didnât move.
âSir?â Hound prompted.
Fox blinked once, slow. Then nodded.
âSheâs reckless,â he said, tone dry and clinical. âBut I canât fault her for exposing corruption.â
âNever said you could,â Hound muttered, crossing his arms. âJust that the fireworks were impressive.â
Fox didnât smile. Of course he didnât.
But his silence lingered.
ââŠyou donât approve?â
âI donât comment,â Fox corrected.
Hound exhaled through his nose, looking far too amused. âOf course not, Commander.â
The door chimed.
Foxâs eyes flicked up. âEnter.â
Senator Riyo Chuchi stepped in with her usual graceâsoft-voiced and composed, carrying two steaming cups of caf like offerings at a shrine.
âCommander,â she greeted gently. âI hope Iâm not interrupting.â
Fox straightened a touch more, if that was even possible. âNot at all, Senator.â
Chuchi smiled and handed him one of the mugs. âThought you might need this. You looked tired last time I saw you.â
He accepted it like someone unfamiliar with gifts. âThatâs⊠appreciated.â
âI also wanted to check in,â she added, voice lighter now. âAfter all the excitement in the Senate. Your guards were quick to respond when Senator [L/N] was attackedâThorn and Stone handled it excellently.â
âShe alerted us herself,â Fox said. âGave detailed information. Her timing was precise.â
Chuchi hesitated. âYouâve⊠spoken with her?â
âA few times,â Fox said neutrally, sipping the caf. âUsually regarding security.â
Chuchi tilted her head. âAnd outside of security?â
Fox blinked at her, expression unreadable behind the helmet of his professionalism. âWhy would I?â
She laughed softly. âNo reason. Just seemed like she had a certain⊠fondness.â
Fox blinked again. âFor the Guard?â
She smiled politely. âSure.â
You had come by for a casual follow-up, half-expecting the door to be open, half-expecting to breeze in and rile Fox just for the fun of it. But the sight through the transparent panel brought your steps to a halt.
Fox, standing stiff with a cup in hand.
Chuchi, closeâtoo closeâleaning in, speaking softly.
He was focused, respectful, unreadable.
But sheâŠ
Her interest was carved into every careful sentence, every flicker of her eyes. She was making her move.
And you werenât going to interrupt that.
Not directly.
You turned away, pretending not to look.
âSurprised you didnât barge in.â
You turned to find Hound leaning casually against the corridor wall, arms crossed and helm off, watching you with a wry smile.
âYou think I shouldâve?â
âWouldâve made good entertainment.â He smirked. âThough maybe Foxâs heart would short-circuit. Pretty sure he still thinks you and Chuchi are just trying to get in his good graces for Senate leverage.â
You snorted.
âHeâs blind,â Hound added, shrugging. âIf someone looked at me the way you look at him⊠well. I wouldnât be wasting it.â
You tilted your head, amused. âIf someone looked at you that way, would you even recognize it?â
He grinned. âIâm not the one holding a damn caf like itâs a live grenade while a senator stares at me like I hung the moons.â
You looked back at the door. Your expression softenedâjust a fraction. âHe deserves better than what either of us could give him.â
âMaybe,â Hound said. âBut people donât choose who they make weak for.â
You didnât reply.
Just watched as the door slid open againâand Chuchi stepped out, graceful as ever, her smile fading the moment she saw you standing there.
You gave her a slow, lazy smile. âSenator.â
âSenator,â she replied coolly, before walking past you without another word.
Fox didnât follow her out.
You didnât go in.
The hallway still buzzed faintly from Chuchiâs perfume and perfect poise as she vanished down the corridor.
You stood in silence a moment longer, thoughts tangled, arms crossed.
Hound remained leaned against the wall, watching you carefully. Grizzer sat quietly by his side.
âFeeling dangerous,â Hound murmured, âor just wounded?â
You didnât take the bait. âYou patrol near the East Residential Block?â
âEvery other night.â He raised an eyebrow. âWhy?â
You gave him a faint smile, more tired than your usual games. âEscort me home.â
He looked you over, caught the guarded tone, the lack of venom, and straightened.
âSecurity concern?â
âSomething like that.â You turned on your heel, cloak flaring softly behind you. âUnless youâve got a caf date too?â
âOnly with Grizzer.â
The massiff gave a pleased huff and trotted after you both.
The three of you walked in rhythm. The quiet buzz of speeders hummed high above, and the lights of Coruscant shimmered like artificial stars.
Grizzer stayed close to your side, his large eyes occasionally flicking up at you like he understood more than he let on.
You glanced at Hound. âI think I lost him.â
âFox?â he asked, even though he knew the answer.
âChuchiâs winning,â you muttered. âOr at least⊠not losing.â
Hound shoved his hands into his belt, voice casual. âYou in love with him or just hate the idea of someone else having what you want?â
You didnât answer right away.
Grizzerâs claws clicked against the polished duracrete. The street was empty, private, lined with the red glow of low-lit signs.
âI donât do love,â you said finally. âBut I respect him. And I liked being the only one who saw the cracks in his armor.â
Hound was quiet a beat. âFox is hard to read. Heâs trained himself not to need anything.â
âI noticed.â
âBut needing and wanting are different things.â Hound glanced sideways at you. âYou mightâve gotten through to the part of him that wants. Doesnât mean he knows what to do with it.â
You sighed. âHe doesnât have to do anything. Iâve already made enough of a fool of myself.â
âYou havenât,â Hound said, voice firmer. âYou just got tired of playing a game where he doesnât know the rules.â
You smiled a little. âMaybe he never learned how to play.â
Grizzer grunted and nosed your hand, seeking affection. You obliged, stroking his warm, armored head.
âHe likes you,â Hound said. âOnly growls at people who give off the wrong scent.â
You raised a brow. âI smell like trouble.â
âYeah,â Hound agreed. âBut not bad trouble.â
You reached your apartment complex, a tall, dark-glassed tower behind a gilded gate. The entrance lights flickered as you approached, and the two guard droids posted at the front scanned you with routine precision.
You turned back to Hound. âThanks for walking me.â
âAnytime,â he said. âIâve got five more blocks to hit anyway.â
âStay safe.â
He smirked. âSays the senator who blew up half the chamber with one datapad.â
You grinned, but it didnât quite reach your eyes.
Grizzer barked once, deep and throaty, then followed Hound as they headed into the city shadows.
You stood alone at your door, looking out into the dark.
The city blinked back like a thousand indifferent eyes.
âž»
Previous Part | Next Part
Commander Fox x Reader
The silence of your office was deceptive.
Outside the transparisteel windows, Coruscant glittered like a serpent coiled around its secretsâunblinking, beautiful, and always listening. Inside, the low buzz of your private holoterminal grew louder, more urgent.
You closed the thick file in front of youâanother half-legal mining contract youâd need to publicly denounce and quietly rerouteâand leaned forward. You keyed in your security clearance, and the image that appeared wasnât what you expected.
Your senior planetary attaché flickered into view, pale-faced and breathing hard.
âSenator,â he said without preamble, âwe have a situation. Prison Compound Nineâcompromised. Four fugitives escaped.â
You frowned, blood going cold. âWhich fugitives?â
âLevel-Seven threats. Political dissidents. Former intelligence operatives. Rumor is⊠theyâre already offworld. Possibly Coruscant-bound.â
You sat back slowly, every thought sharpening to a bladeâs edge. âThat information stays contained until I say otherwise. Send me all identicodes and criminal profiles now.â
âYes, maâam.â
The transmission ended. You stared at the terminal for a beat longer, then stood, pulling your cloak from the back of the chair. There was only one place this belonged: in the hands of Coruscantâs best-armed babysitters.
And if that just so happened to bring you face-to-face with a certain thick-headed, utterly blind red-armored commander?
All the better.
âž»
The Corrie Guard precinct near the Senate was buzzing with the quiet energy of military protocol. You were met outside the checkpoint by two familiar faces.
âSenator [L/N],â Sergeant Hound greeted you, visor dipping respectfully.
Beside him, Stone offered a nod. âDidnât expect to see you here, maâam. Something wrong?â
âVery,â you said crisply, handing over a sealed datapad. âLevel-Seven fugitives from my home system. Recently escaped. Highly trained, extremely dangerous, and possibly on Coruscant as we speak.â
Houndâs brow furrowed behind the helmet. âThatâs a hell of a situation.â
âTheyâre targeting something,â you said. âOr someone. My planetâs intelligence division flagged odd comm-traffic patterns aligning with a senatorâs office hoursâmine.â
Stone shifted, suddenly sharper. âSo itâs personal.â
You nodded. âPossibly revenge. Or leverage. Either way, Iâm not taking chances.â
As they scanned the datapad, footsteps echoed from the far hallâmore measured, more commanding.
Fox.
You turned just in time to see him and Commander Thorn walking down the corridor, deep in conversation.
Thorn spotted you first, expression flickering with mild surprise. âSenator [L/N]. Youâre out of your element.â
Fox glanced overâand immediately straightened. âSenator.â
Thorn raised a brow at the datapad in Stoneâs hands. âTrouble?â
âTrouble likes to follow me,â you said smoothly. âThis time itâs not my fault.â
Fox approached, glancing at the display. His eyes skimmed the alert, the images, the profilesâdanger written in every line.
âLevel-Sevens,â he said. âYou should have come straight to me.â
You smiled, something sharp curling at the edges. âI did.â
He blinked. âYou⊠did.â
You tilted your head. âI thought noticing things was your new skillset.â
Thorn let out a quiet chuckle behind you. Hound tried to look innocent. Stone was grinning outright.
Fox cleared his throat. âWeâll open an internal security file. Assign additional patrols near your office and residence.â
âPerfect,â you said. âThough Iâd feel even safer with you around, Commander.â
His silence was almost impressive.
Thorn looked between the two of you, a slow, knowing smile spreading across his face. âFox, you might want to run a few extra drills. Something tells me youâre going to be⊠distracted.â
âCommander Thorn,â Fox said, voice ice-cold. âNoted.â
You turned to Fox, voice lower now. âThese fugitives are clever. Theyâll adapt. You may need someone who knows how they think.â
âYou?â he asked.
You gave him a look that could melt glass. âIâm not just a senator, Commander. Iâm a survivor. And I donât play fair.â
He held your gaze.
And again⊠said nothing.
You smiled. Of course he didnât. The perfect soldier.
But one day? Youâd crack that armor. Even if it killed you.
Foxâs jaw was set like stone behind his helmet. When he finally spoke, the words dropped with the weight of command.
âNo, Senator,â he said flatly. âThis is a Guard matter now. Youâre not to involve yourself in the investigation further.â
The sharp, satisfied click of his words shouldâve ended it. Shouldâve sent you back to your office to stew in silence.
Instead, it made you smile.
âMm,â you hummed, crossing your arms slowly. âI donât recall asking permission, Commander.â
Stone glanced at Hound with barely concealed amusement. Thorn shifted his weight, arms folded, eyes dancing between the two of you with the air of someone watching a high-speed speeder crash.
Fox didnât flinch. âYour involvement would compromise security and escalate risk. Youâre a high-value targetââ
âAnd that makes me an even higher priority to be looped in,â you cut in, voice silk over steel. âYou want to contain risk? Then keep me informed.â
Foxâs silence bristled like a drawn blade.
You took a step closer, voice softening just enough to imply intimacy while still pressing hard against his control. âI understand your chain of command, Commander. But I wasnât asking to be in the field.â
You leaned in just slightly, enough to force him to register the space between you.
âIâm telling you,â you murmured, âthat the moment those fugitives are capturedâor killedâI expect to be notified. Immediately. Do you understand me?â
There was a subtle twitch in his stanceâbarely noticeable to anyone else, but you caught it.
He was used to command. Not negotiation.
Not you.
Thorn let out a long, slow whistle. âWell, kark. Should we leave you two alone, orâŠ?â
Fox didnât move a muscle. âUnderstood,â he said eventually. âYouâll be notified.â
You offered him a slow, almost sultry smile. âGood. I knew you could be reasonable.â
Then you turned on your heel, cloak swirling, brushing his vambrace with just the whisper of contact.
âKeep your comms open, Commander,â you called over your shoulder. âYou might miss me.â
Fox stared after you, helmet tucked under one arm, face unreadable. Thorn stepped in beside him, arms crossed loosely.
âSheâs a wildfire,â Thorn said, his voice low. âAnd you, vod⊠youâre the dry brush.â
Fox let out a breath that was neither amused nor frustratedâjust heavy.
âSheâs dangerous,â he muttered.
âWhich part?â Thorn asked, grinning. âThe intel, the fugitives, or the way she looks at you like sheâs already won?â
Fox didnât answer.
Because honestly?
He wasnât sure.
âž»
The operations room was lit only by a few soft holoscreens, each projecting sectors of Coruscantâs underlevels and the networked security grid. The city never slept, and neither did the Guardânot with a potential Level-Seven threat loose.
Fox stood at the main display table, eyes scanning red-highlighted routes and names. His jaw worked in quiet rhythm, processing, calculating, assigning.
Thorn leaned against the far wall, helmet off, arms crossed, watching him.
âOkay,â Thorn said eventually, âletâs talk about it.â
Fox didnât look up. âAbout what?â
âAbout the fact that two senatorsâtwo, Foxâkeep finding excuses to orbit around you like youâre the damn sun.â
Fox didnât pause in his typing. âTheyâre politicians. They orbit whoeverâs most useful.â
Thorn snorted. âThat what you think this is? Strategic kissing up?â
Fox nodded once. âSenator [L/N] plays the long game. She pushes limits, stirs chaos, then waits to see who blinks. Getting in good with the Guard gives her a protective buffer. She knows how valuable we are in a city like this.â
âAnd Chuchi?â
Fox hesitated. Just a second.
âSheâs more direct. But sheâs still a senator. Donât let the soft voice fool youâsheâs calculating too. They all are.â
Thorn pushed off the wall and stepped closer. âYou really think theyâre both suddenly invested in you because they want to cash in political favors?â
Fox gave him a look. âWeâre enforcers, Thorn. Leverage. If a senator ends up needing a security report buried or a background skipped on a staffer, who do they think will make that disappear quietly?â
âRight,â Thorn said slowly. âBecause Riyo Chuchi is famous for corruption.â
Fox didnât reply.
âAnd Senator [L/N] practically breathes ethics, right?â Thorn added, deadpan.
Fox allowed the faintest twitch of his mouthâalmost a smirk, if you squinted hard enough.
âShe breathes something,â he said under his breath.
Thorn barked a laugh. âOkay, now weâre getting somewhere.â
Fox turned back to the holo. âNeither of them is interested in me, Thorn. Theyâre playing a game. One loud, one quiet. Same goal.â
âAnd what goal is that?â Thorn pressed, watching him closely.
Fox tapped a point on the map. âControl.â
âFunny,â Thorn said. âFrom where Iâm standing, itâs not them trying to control you⊠Itâs you trying to control the story you tell yourself.â
Fox didnât answer.
Because what could he say?
That you, with your blade-sharp grin and eyes like traps, werenât manipulating himâthat you were something else entirely? That Chuchi, kind and composed, looked at him like she meant it?
No. That wasnât part of the file.
So instead, he changed the subject.
âAssign units to levels 1315 through 1320. Full perimeter sweep. If these fugitives surface, I want them surrounded before they can draw breath.â
Thorn sighed, shaking his head as he pulled his helmet back on. âYouâre a kriffing idiot, Fox.â
Fox didnât respond. Not to that.
He had work to do.
And feelings?
Those were someone elseâs mission.
âž»
The Guardâs central command was a hive of movementâtroopers reporting in from the lower levels, holoscreens flickering with faces flagged for surveillance, and the quiet undercurrent of discipline humming through every corridor.
Chuchiâs arrival was quiet. Intentional. No Senate aides, no parade of protocol. Just a simple dark-blue cloak, datapad in hand, and a cup of steaming caf that she carried carefully through the armored sea of troopers.
She earned a few surprised glances.
Not many senators walked into the Guardâs domain alone.
But Chuchi wasnât just any senator.
She spotted Fox just outside the debriefing chamber, helmet tucked under his arm, deep in conversation with Sergeant Boomer. His expression was all sharp lines and worn intensityâhe hadnât slept, that much was obvious.
âCommander Fox,â she said gently.
He turned, startled by her presence. âSenator Chuchi.â
âI heard about the alert,â she said, extending the cup toward him. âI thought you might need this more than I do.â
Fox blinked, hesitated⊠then accepted the caf with a nod. âAppreciated.â
Chuchi gave a soft smile. âYou look like you havenât slept.â
He didnât respond to that. Instead, he took a measured sipâcautious, as if caf were unfamiliar ground.
âI imagine the search has consumed your every waking moment,â she said gently.
âLevel-Sevens donât give us much room to breathe,â he admitted. âWeâre covering three sectors simultaneously.â
She nodded. âIf thereâs anything I can do to assistâŠâ
Fox shook his head. âThis is Guard jurisdiction. Weâll handle it.â
Chuchiâs smile didnât falter. âI donât doubt you will. But sometimes⊠support comes in quieter forms.â
She didnât press further. Instead, she stepped closerâjust enough to close the conversational space, not the physical one. Her voice lowered.
âYouâve never seemed the type who allows himself to be supported, Commander.â
Fox looked at her, eyebrows just slightly drawn. âI wasnât trained for that.â
âNo,â she said softly. âYou were trained to protect others. Not to be seen. Not to be known.â
He said nothing.
So she went on.
âYouâve stood by the Chancellor more times than I can count. Protected the Senate through more crises than half its members realize. And yet⊠youâre always in the background.â
Fox shifted slightly, as if the weight of her gaze was more difficult to carry than his armor.
âI just wanted you to know,â Chuchi said quietly, âthat I see you. As more than just the red and white armor. As more than a commander.â
His grip on the caf cup tightened.
âYou donât have to say anything,â she added quickly, catching the flicker of something unreadable in his eyes. âI know itâs not easy to believe someone might care⊠without wanting something in return.â
Foxâs voice was quiet, careful. âYouâre a senator.â
âI am,â she agreed. âBut that doesnât mean Iâm incapable of compassion.â
Silence stretched between them.
âIâll⊠see to the patrol reports,â he said after a beat, taking a step back.
âOf course,â Chuchi said with a graceful nod. âThank you for the work you do, Commander.â
She didnât watch him walk away. She didnât need to.
The caf cup still steamed in his hand.
And that was enoughâfor now.
âž»
The light in your office was dim, filtered through Coruscantâs constant twilight haze. You sat at your desk, datapad in hand, appearing the perfect picture of a diligent senator.
But your posture was too still. Too deliberate.
Because you could feel them.
The air had shiftedâtoo quiet. The usual hum of outer security was gone. Either bypassed or silenced.
You didnât look up. Instead, you keyed a silent alert under your deskâone flick of your finger against the embedded panel, and the Guardâs emergency line was pinged. No lights. No sound. Just data.
Then you continued working. Quiet. Calm. Like prey that hadnât realized the snare was already closing.
âI know youâre here,â you said aloud, tapping your stylus against the desk. âYou may as well stop playing ghost.â
No answer.
âUnless youâre scared,â you added, voice cool and measured. âI get it. Iâd be terrified of me too.â
Silence again.
Thenâmovement.
From the shadowed arch near the bookshelves, two figures stepped into view. Dark clothing, military-grade sidearms. Faces you recognized from the prison files: former intelligence officers, turned insurgents.
âSenator [L/N],â the first said, voice low and amused. âYouâve grown sharper since your time at home.â
âYouâve grown sloppier,â you replied, still seated. âThree seconds late on your entrance. I almost got bored.â
The second man sneered. âYou always did love the sound of your own voice.â
âAnd you always hated being outwitted. Funny how littleâs changed.â
The leader raised his blaster, leveling it at your chest. âWe didnât come to talk.â
âNo,â you said, leaning back in your chair. âYou came to threaten. To make a statement. Isnât that what you always wanted? Your glorious revolution of one?â
He stepped closer. âWeâll leave a message they wonât ignore.â
âI donât think you realize,â you said, voice velvet and steel, âthat this isnât my first time with a gun pointed at me.â
âWeâre not politicians, [L/N]. Weâre executioners.â
You smiled.
âCute.â
And then, without breaking eye contact, you slid your hand to the underside of your desk, thumb brushing against the pressure lock.
The drawer snapped open.
Before they could react, your concealed blaster was up and firing.
The shot hit the second insurgent square in the chestâburned through his armor and dropped him cold. The first shouted and dove for cover, return fire slicing across your desk, sparks flying.
You ducked low, rolled sideways, fired again. Missed.
âShouldâve aimed higher,â he snarled.
âShouldâve stayed dead,â you shot back.
The blast doors behind you hissed open with a thunderous echo.
Red armor flooded inâGuard troopers, weapons drawn.
Fox was at the lead, eyes sharp, voice a command. âStand down! Drop your weapon!â
The insurgent froze, wild-eyed.
âNow!â Stone barked.
He hesitated⊠then dropped the blaster with a clatter and raised his hands.
Two troopers rushed him, slamming him to the ground and cuffing him with swift, brutal efficiency.
You stood slowly, brushing dust and ash from your robes. Your desk was scorched, half your datapads destroyedâbut your eyes glittered like victory.
Fox approached, surveying the wreckage. âYouâre injured?â
âOnly my decor,â you said, voice breezy. âThough I wouldnât mind a stiff drink.â
He stared at you. âYou couldâve been killed.â
âI was bait,â you said coolly. âAnd it worked.â
His jaw clenched. âThat was reckless.â
âThat was necessary.â
âYou shouldâve let us handle it.â
âI did,â you said, meeting his gaze. âEventually.â
He said nothing, just studied you with that unreadable expression of his.
But this time⊠something shifted.
Because now heâd seen you in action.
Not just as a mouthpiece in the Senateâbut as someone who could kill, survive, and smile while doing it.
And maybeâjust maybeâthat stuck with him.
Even if he couldnât admit it yet.
âž»
Your office still bore the scars of the assaultâwalls patched hastily, scorch marks half-scrubbed from the floor, the faint odor of blaster fire clinging to the air like the memory of a scream.
You sat behind a temporary desk, legs crossed, reviewing a datachip containing the criminal record of the man who now sat in Guard custodyâhands shackled, rights revoked, dignity already gone.
The knock came soft, followed by the hiss of the door.
Senator Chuchi stepped in first, flanked by Bail Organa, Mon Mothma, and Padmé Amidala. Their expressions were taut, somewhere between concern and condemnation.
You didnât bother standing. You simply looked up, calm as ever.
âWe came as soon as we heard,â Chuchi said. âAre youâ?â
âFine,â you interrupted, voice clipped and dry. âSome scorch marks. Ruined upholstery. One corpse. One live capture.â
PadmĂ©âs eyes widened. âYou killed one of them yourself?â
âWith a desk blaster,â you said. âExcellent reaction time, if I do say so myself.â
Bail stepped forward. âAnd the surviving fugitive? Whatâs the process now?â
You set down the datapad and met his gaze evenly. âExtradition. Heâll be transported back to my homeworld within the next standard cycle.â
Chuchi blinked. âThat quickly?â
âExpedited process,â you said smoothly. âEmergency clause. Due to the direct assassination attempt.â
Mon Mothmaâs voice tightened. âAnd what will happen once heâs returned?â
You leaned back in your chair, folding your hands. âHeâll be tried for war crimes. The verdict wonât take long. Weâve got extensive documentation.â
âAnd the sentence?â Bail asked, already bracing.
âExecution,â you said, flat and final. âPublic, of course. Weâve already begun preparations.â
Silence.
PadmĂ©âs face paled. âYou canât be serious.â
You smiled thinly. âDeadly.â
âThatâs barbaric,â Mon snapped. âHe surrendered. Heâs a prisoner now.â
âHeâs a monster,â you replied. âOne who orchestrated mass executions, bombed medical shelters, and personally ordered the deaths of over four hundred civilians on my world. Surrender doesnât bleach his sins.â
Chuchi stepped forward. âThere must be a processââ
âThere is,â you cut in. âHeâll be tried under our planetary law, as is our right under interplanetary accords. And Iâll be overseeing the proceedings personally.â
âYouâre making a spectacle out of this,â Bail said, disgusted.
âNo,â you said calmly. âIâm making a warning.â
âTo who?â PadmĂ© demanded. âEveryone who disagrees with you?â
âTo everyone who thinks Iâll hesitate,â you said. âWho thinks power means we have to play nice while murderers laugh in our faces.â
Monâs eyes narrowed. âAnd what will the people think of a senator who sanctions public execution?â
You stood, slowly, the heat in your gaze simmering just beneath the surface. âTheyâll think I finally gave them justice. And if they want more? Iâll build the stage myself.â
A stunned silence followed.
No one knew what to say.
You picked up the extradition order and signed it with a practiced flick of your stylus.
âIâd offer caf,â you said as you slipped it into a courier tube, âbut Iâve got a war criminal to ship and an execution schedule to finalize.â
You walked out without waiting for permissionâcloak swaying, boots clicking like a countdown.
Behind you, the moral senators were left standing in the ash of their expectations.
And Chuchi?
She watched you leave, lips parted in silent disbelief.
Not because youâd shocked her.
But because she couldnât decide if she wanted to save youâ
âor if she just wanted to know what it felt like to burn like you did.
âž»
The Guardâs HQ buzzed with low-level activity, but Foxâs office was calmâsilent save for the faint hum of surveillance holos and the occasional clipped murmur from the comms console.
He stood by the window when you arrived, arms folded behind his back, posture locked in that familiar brace of discipline. He didnât turn when the door hissed open.
But he didnât need to.
âSenator,â he said without looking.
âCommander.â
You crossed the threshold slowly, letting the door seal behind you with a soft hiss. No grand entrance. No entourage. Just you.
And the news that was already spreading through the Senate like wildfire.
He finally turned.
Expression unreadable. Just that damn mask of duty, soldered so tight it nearly passed for indifference. But his eyesâthose betrayed a flicker of something else. Not judgment. Not pity.
Something harder to name.
âSo itâs true,â he said quietly.
You raised an eyebrow. âYouâd know better than most. Your troopers ran the background check. You processed the transfer yourself.â
He gave a slight nod. âDoesnât mean I expected the⊠outcome.â
âYou mean the execution.â
He hesitated. âItâs not my place to comment.â
âIsnât it?â You stepped closer, boots soft against the polished floor. âYouâre in charge of security for the most powerful government body in the Republic. You keep the peace. You enforce the law. Surely you have thoughts when one of us decides to sharpen justice into something a little more⊠terminal.â
Fox met your gaze steadily. âIâve seen worse done for less.â
That caught you off guardânot because of what he said, but because of how simply he said it. No hesitation. No theatrics.
Just fact.
You tilted your head. âSo you donât disapprove?â
He looked down briefly, jaw tense. âItâs not about approval. I canât blame you for wanting blood. Not after what he did.â A pause. âBut I was bred for protocol. Not for vengeance.â
You gave a wry smile. âThen itâs a good thing I wasnât.â
Fox looked at you again, searchingâthough for what, you couldnât say.
He finally spoke, voice lower now. âYou couldâve left it to a tribunal.â
âI couldâve,â you admitted. âBut tribunals donât speak to grieving families. They donât look children in the eye and say, âWe remember what they did to you.ââ You stepped in just a little closer. âBut a public execution? That does.â
Fox didnât flinch.
But he didnât move, either.
A long silence passed between you, taut and electric.
Then you reached for your datapad, keyed something in, and glanced up again.
âIâll be leaving within the cycle,â you said. âFinalizing everything on my end.â
His voice was quieter now. âAnd after?â
You smiled. Not cruel, not softâjust sharp.
âIâll be seeing you in a week.â
He didnât respond.
You turned to leave.
But just before the door opened, he spoke.
âSenator.â
You glanced back.
âI donât know if what youâre doing is justice,â he said. âBut I know youâre not doing it out of weakness.â
You looked at him for a beat longer.
Then you nodded, just once.
âI never do.â
And then you left, cloak trailing behind like a shadow that never needed the light.
âž»
The ship hummed with the steady lull of hyperspace, stars streaking into lines beyond the viewports. It was the kind of quiet most would call peaceful.
But peace was a foreign language aboard this vessel.
You sat in the command lounge, sipping strong liquor from a crystal glass, the kind produced exclusively by your planetâs border provinces. It tasted like burning and bitter roots.
Fitting.
The two Jedi seated across from you couldnât have been more different, though both wore concern like armor.
Kenobi was upright and composed, legs crossed, his fingers laced in his lap. Anakin sprawled, arms draped over the chair back, a shadow smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth.
âYou still have time to change your mind,â Kenobi said gently.
You didnât bother looking up. âNo. I donât.â
âItâs not too late for a trial. A tribunal through the Republic, something with transparency.â
âObi-Wan,â Anakin cut in, voice bored, âyou know that wouldnât stick. Half those tribunals are performative at best. Heâd be out in five years under some technicality.â
Kenobi shot him a look. âAnd that justifies state-sanctioned public killing?â
âIâm not justifying it,â Anakin said. âIâm just saying⊠I get it.â
You finally looked up, eyes cool. âI donât need either of you to justify it. This isnât your decision. Youâre here as escorts, not advisors.â
âThat may be,â Kenobi said, tone frustratingly calm, âbut weâre Jedi. Itâs our duty to speak when we see paths leading to darkness.â
You leaned back in your chair, holding his gaze. âMy planet was born in darkness. Raised in blood and ruin. Still today, itâs ruled by warlords and syndicates that think justice is something bought with blade and coin.â
Kenobi frowned. âBut youâre not them.â
You tilted your head. âA public execution is nothing compared to the horrors most of my people have endured. At least this death comes with a verdict.â
Anakin was watching you now, intrigued, leaning forward slightly.
Kenobi looked pained. âYou canât build peace through fear.â
You smiled, slow and cold. âYou cannot sell dreams to someone who has walked through nightmares.â
That silenced them both for a beat.
The hum of the engines filled the space. Then, softer, you added:
âWhen youâre not fed love from a silver spoon, you learn to lick it off knives.â
Kenobi flinched. Not physicallyâbut in that subtle tightening of his jaw, that flicker behind his eyes.
You didnât enjoy it.
But you didnât shy away from it either.
âYou want to talk of ideals,â you continued, voice quiet but sharp, âbut ideals donât stop warlords. They donât scare insurgents. And they certainly donât bring back the families that thing murdered in my name.â
Anakin nodded slowly, almost imperceptibly.
âIâm not here to make you comfortable,â you finished. âIâm here to make a point.â
Kenobi opened his mouth, hesitated, then closed it.
He knew he wouldnât change your mind.
And deep down, a part of him feared you might be right.
âYouâre confusing retribution for justice,â Obi-Wan said, tone sharp but calm, like a man trying to hold onto the edge of a cliff while the rocks crumbled beneath him.
You didnât rise to the bait.
Anakin did.
âSheâs doing what the Republic wonât,â he snapped. âWhat it canât.â
Kenobiâs brow furrowed. âSheâs about to put a man to death in front of a crowd.â
âHe slaughtered civilians, Obi-Wan. Entire villages. Sheâs not executing a manâsheâs putting down a rabid dog.â
âThatâs not our place.â
âItâs not yours,â Anakin said darkly, âbut donât presume to speak for everyone.â
You leaned forward, voice low and deliberate. âIâm not doing this because I want to. Iâm doing it because someone has to.â
Kenobi looked at you with something dangerously close to pity.
âJustice,â he said, âshouldnât come from hatred.â
You met his gaze, unflinching. âAnd yet here we areâriding toward it in a Republic ship, escorted by Jedi who canât agree on what it even means.â
But before he could reply the red flash of alarms cut through the room like a blade.
âSecurity breach,â a mechanical voice droned. âCell block override. Prisoner containment compromised.â
You were already moving.
The Jedi rose in sync beside you, cloaks whipping as they turned down the corridor.
âStay behind us,â Kenobi ordered.
You didnât.
The three of you reached the lower deck fast, guards already running in the opposite direction, blasters raised. âHeâs loose!â one yelled. âDeck 3, sector Câheâs going for the main hall!â
Your blood ran cold.
That was your route.
You pivoted, cloak flaring behind you as you ran the opposite wayâAnakin and Obi-Wan close behind. You passed scorch marks. Broken panels. A dead guard slumped by the bulkhead, throat slashed with something jagged.
You slowed.
And then you saw him.
He stood at the end of the corridor, blaster in one hand, stolen vibroblade in the other. His face was twisted in fury, blood already drying across his temple.
âSenator,â he sneered. âThought Iâd come say goodbye.â
He fired.
You dove.
Searing pain lanced your shoulder as the bolt grazed youâburning, but not fatal. You hit the ground, rolled behind a crate.
Obi-Wan moved first, saber igniting in a clean hum of blue.
âDonât do this,â he warned.
The prisoner laughed. âYou think Iâm afraid of death?â
âNo,â Anakin said, stepping forward, saber hissing to lifeâbrighter, more furious. âBut you should be afraid of me.â
And then the prisoner lunged.
The hallway became chaosâblaster fire, blade against saber, the scream of metal and the hiss of near-misses. You pressed your hand to your wound, blood seeping through your fingers, watching through a haze of pain and fury.
Kenobi parried and dodged, trying to disarm.
Anakin didnât bother.
His strikes were violent. Purposeful. He fought like a man unbothered by consequence.
A blurâmetal clashing, sparks flying.
Anakin drove his saber through the prisonerâs chest.
The man gasped.
Stiffened.
And crumpled to the floor, smoke rising from the wound, eyes staring at nothing.
Silence fell.
You breathed hard, trying to steady your vision.
Kenobi stepped back, saber slowly disengaging, expression grim.
Anakin stood over the body, chest rising and falling.
He looked back at youânot regretful.
Just⊠resolved.
âYou okay?â he asked.
You nodded, clutching your shoulder. âI will be.â
Obi-Wan crouched beside the corpse, checking for a pulse he already knew wasnât there. âThis wasnât supposed to happen.â
âNo,â you said coldly, âbut it saves me the paperwork.â
Anakin gave the ghost of a grin.
Kenobi didnât.
He looked up at you with haunted eyes, and for the first time in hoursâmaybe everâhe had nothing to say.
Not because he agreed.
But because he finally understood:
Some people were born into dreams.
You were forged in nightmares.
âž»
Previous Part | Next Part
hello beloveds âșïž
Fox X Reader
Summary: In the heart of the Republic Senate, political tension runs highâand so does romantic rivalry. Senators [Y/N] and Ryio Chuchi both battle for the attention of Commander Fox. Unbeknownst to Fox, heâs walked straight into the a love triangle he has no idea exists.
âž»
The Senate chamber buzzed with tensionânot 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 Chuchiâs voice rang out clear and impassioned.
âWe cannot in good conscience divert funds from displaced Outer Rim citizens simply to bolster another military initiative,â 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.
âWhile I admire Senator Chuchiâs ever-vibrant moral compass,â you began smoothly, tone like silk with a hint of mockery, âperhaps the esteemed senator might consider that without a capable military initiative, there wonât be any citizens left to protectâdisplaced or otherwise.â
Gasps and murmurs broke out, but Chuchi didnât flinch.
âThatâs a dangerous line of thought, Senator. Lives are not chess pieces.â
You offered her a practiced smile. âAnd idealism doesnât win wars.â
The Chancellorâs gavel rang out with sharp finality. âDebate concluded for today. This matter will be brought to committee vote at the end of the week.â
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.
âSenator [L/N], a moment?â
Chuchi.
You turned, arching a brow. âDidnât get enough of me in the chamber?â
She narrowed her eyes. âIâm 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.â
You smiled, but it didnât reach your eyes. âBecause Iâve seen what happens when we donât. War isnât pretty, Senator. You might call me heartlessâbut I call myself prepared.â
âAnd I call you reckless.â
You stepped forward, closing the distance. âAnd I call you naĂŻve.â
The air crackled between you, tension thickânot quite hatred, not quite anything else. She was too sincere. You were too guarded. It was inevitable youâd clash.
Then a new voice cut through the air, cool and commanding.
âSenators.â
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.
âAh, Senators. I hope Iâm not interrupting,â the Chancellor said, eyes glinting. âCommander Fox will be joining the Senate Security Council temporarily as my personal attachĂ©. You may be seeing more of him in the coming weeks.â
You didnât hear half of what Palpatine said after Commander Fox.
Your eyes met his visor, and though you couldnât see his face, something in your chest shifted. He looked like a statue carved from war itselfâsilent, strong, utterly unreadable.
Next to you, Chuchi straightened slightly.
âWell,â she said softly, âthatâs⊠interesting.â
You shot her a look.
She smirked, just the smallest twist of her lips, and in that second, something shifted againâthis time between you and her. An unspoken recognition.
You both had the same thought.
Oh. Heâs beautiful.
And neither of you was going to back down.
âž»
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.
âSenator [L/N],â came a too-pleasant voice behind you.
You turned to face Bail Organa. Of course.
âOrgana,â you said smoothly. âSlumming it with the likes of me?â
His smile was thin. âJust wondering how long you planned to keep needling Chuchi during committee sessions before it turns into a full-on scandal.â
You tilted your glass in his direction. âOh, Iâm counting on it.â
Before he could respond, Mon Mothma joined him with PadmĂ© in tow. All three wore expressions like theyâd stepped in something foul.
âGood evening,â PadmĂ© offered stiffly. âStill nursing your taste for conflict, I see.â
You smirked. âKeeps the blood warm.â
Mon Mothma looked you over like she was assessing a wine stain on her robes. âThereâs more to governance than combativeness, Senator.â
You sipped your drink. âSays the woman whoâs never had to blackmail a warlord into voting for food aid.â
PadmĂ© frowned. âThere are other ways toââ
âSure,â you cut in. âThe moral high road. But itâs paved with corpses who couldnât afford your patience.â
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 didnât 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 immediateâpolitical interest, curiosity, and more than a few appreciative glances. But yours wasnât casual interest. It was sharp, focused.
You tilted your head as you watched him, just for a moment too long.
Then your eyes slid sidewaysâand met Chuchiâs.
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 didnât.
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 gatheredâ Ask Aak, Orn Free Taaâlaughing too loud and sipping drinks too strong.
â[L/N],â Taa grunted, patting the seat beside him. âWe were just discussing how flexible some of the outer rim tax restrictions could be⊠for the right votes.â
âAlways such stimulating conversation,â you replied dryly, sitting with an exaggerated sigh. âI assume the âright votesâ are the ones that come with a gift basket.â
Laughter. Real, ugly laughter. You loathed themâbut they were useful. They liked you because you werenât afraid to get your hands dirty. Because you didnât waste time with speeches about justice and peace.
You spotted Chuchi again. She stood near a window, now much closer to Foxâspeaking 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 predatorâs ease, and approached the refreshment table just as Fox turned away from Chuchi.
You timed it perfectly.
âCommander,â you said, voice low and silken.
He turned, visor tilting downward to meet your gaze. Even without seeing his face, his posture straightened slightly.
âSenator,â he acknowledged.
âEnjoying yourself?â you asked, voice casual, picking up another glass.
He hesitated. âNot particularly.â
You smiled, genuinely this time. âGood. Youâre not missing anything.â
His head tilted slightly. âI assumed as much.â
There was a pauseâan odd, quiet moment in the middle of a too-loud room. Then Chuchi reappeared at Foxâs other side.
âCommander,â she greeted, âI hope [L/N] isnât boring you with cynicism.â
You raised a brow. âI could say the same about your optimism.â
Fox looked between you, the briefest shift of weight betraying his discomfort. If he realized you were fighting over him, he didnât show it.
âSenators,â he said carefully, âIâm assigned here for the Chancellorâs protection, not personal conversation.â
âOh, but conversation is protection,â you said. âThe more you know what someoneâs hiding, the better you know where to aim.â
Chuchi frowned, eyes narrowing. âNot everyoneâs out for blood.â
You tilted your head toward her. âNo. But everyoneâs out for something.â
Fox stared straight ahead, impassive.
He had no idea what heâd just stepped into.
The pause between the three of you had stretched just a breath too long.
Fox, ever the professional, inclined his head. âIf youâll excuse me, Senators. I have to return to my post.â
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.
âYou know,â she said tightly, âthe clones arenât toys.â
You blinked, slowly turning your head toward her.
âTheyâre people,â she continued, voice soft but steely. âTheyâre not here for your amusement, Senator. You donât get to play with them like theyâre decorations to be admired and discarded.â
You took a measured sip of your drink, then smiledârazor-sharp and unbothered. âHow charming. I didnât realize we were giving lectures tonight.â
âThis isnât a joke.â
âOh, I agree. Itâs far funnier than that.â
Chuchiâs jaw tensed.
You swirled the liquid in your glass and added, âTell me, Senatorâdo you think standing near him and smiling like a saint makes you so different from me?â
âI am different,â she snapped, surprising even herself with the venom behind her words. âI see him as a person. Not a piece of armor. Not a weapon. Not a status symbol.â
You arched a brow. âAnd what, exactly, do you think I see?â
She folded her arms. âA game. Another victory to notch in your belt. Another soldier to claim until you get bored.â
You laughed, low and cool. âPlease. I have senators for that.â
She didnât laugh. She just staredâeyes narrowing, mouth tight.
âI respect him,â she said. âYouâuse people.â
You leaned in, just slightly. âYou idealize them. Which is more dangerous, really?â
She didnât answer, but the look on her face said enough. Her hands were clenched now, knuckles white against the soft blue of her gown.
âI donât need to explain myself to you,â she muttered.
âNo,â you said lightly. âYou really donât.â
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 decanterâsmiling, sharp, and just a little bit empty.
Whatever this thing with Fox was, it wasnât going to be simple.
And now?
It was war.
The echo of Chuchiâs righteous indignation still rang in your ears as you refilled your drinkâthis 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.
âVice Chair,â you said, feigning surprise, âI was wondering where the stench of smug had gone. I shouldâve known youâd be hiding by the brie.â
Mas Amedda turned, expression souring instantly.
âSenator [L/N],â he drawled. âStill mistaking sarcasm for diplomacy, I see.â
You grinned. âStill mistaking your office for relevance?â
One of the mid-rim senators stifled a laugh. Ameddaâs nostrils flared.
âYou may be comfortable fraternizing with war profiteers and gang-world delegates, but some of us still value the sanctity of Republic law.â
You raised your glass. âHow inspiring. And yet I couldâve sworn I saw your name on the same resource contract that mysteriously bypassed ethical review last week. A clerical error, Iâm sure.â
He sneered. âYou have no proof.â
You shrugged. âI donât need proof. I have implication. Itâs amazing what a rumor can do, especially when whispered in just the right ears.â
Amedda opened his mouth to fire backâbut another voice cut in before he could.
âIâve often wondered how some of those contracts pass committee oversight,â said Bail Organa, sliding into the conversation like a knife through silk.
You blinked, surprised.
Amedda turned on him, fuming. âSenator Organaâsurely you donât mean to stand beside this sort of company.â
Bail glanced at you. His expression was unreadable, but there was the faintest spark in his eyes. âFor once, I find myself intrigued by Senator [L/N]âs line of questioning.â
You tilted your head at him. âWell, well. Welcome to the dark side.â
Bail ignored the jab. âVice 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 systemâs mining guild.â
Ameddaâs eyes narrowed. âYou tread dangerously close to slander.â
âI tread carefully,â Bail said smoothly, âbut not quietly.â
The Vice Chair stormed off, muttering something in Cheunh you assumed was an insult.
You turned to Bail, still stunned. âNever thought Iâd see the day you jumped in with me.â
He exhaled. âLetâs just say Iâm tired of watching corruption thrive behind ceremonial titles.â
You studied him for a moment. âSo this is your rebellious phase?â
âDonât get used to it,â he said. âAnd donât assume it means I like you.â
âIâd never make that mistake,â you said dryly.
He gave you a lookâannoyed, maybe impressed, it was hard to tellâthen vanished into the crowd again.
You stood there a moment longer, alone again in a sea of masks and shadows, feeling strangely adrift. You hadnât expected Bailâs support. You hadnât expected Chuchiâs anger to sting. And you definitely hadnât expected Fox to keep creeping into your thoughts like a silent ghost.
You sighed, looking toward the far exit where youâd last seen him standing guard.
This warâon the floor, in the heart, in your headâit was only just beginning.
âž»
The night had thinned to only the devoted and the damned.
You slipped through one of the Senateâs shadowed walkways, heels echoing faintly on polished stone. The reception was dyingâsenators gone or passed out, secrets spilled or swallowed whole. The quiet was a balm. But you werenât quite ready to leave.
Not without one last indulgence.
You found him near the overlookâCommander 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.
âWell, well. Still on duty, Commander?â you purred, letting your gaze travel unapologetically over his frame.
Fox turned, visor meeting your gaze. âSenator.â
That voiceâlow, flat, professional. Predictable. Delicious.
You stepped closer, letting your robe fall open just enough at the collar to hint at skin and intent. âTell me something, Commander⊠do you sleep in that armor? Or do you ever let yourself breathe?â
Behind him, one of his troopers coughed loudly.
Fox didnât move. âSenator, is there something you need?â
You tsked softly. âNeed? No. Want? Thatâs another conversation.â
More snickering from the clones behind him. One of them muttered, âStars, he really canât tellâŠâ
âCT-6149,â Fox barked without turning. âStand down.â
âYessir,â came the sheepish reply, followed by another muffled laugh.
You smiled, slow and deliberate, eyes half-lidded as you stalked one step closer. âYou know, theyâre right. You really donât notice, do you?â
âNotice what?â
âThat Iâve been undressing you with my eyes all night.â
One of the guards choked. âBy the Forceââ
âCT-8812. Silence.â
âYessir!â
You dragged your fingers lightly along the cold railing, leaning in slightly, letting your body language linger somewhere between temptation and challenge. âYouâre an impressive man, Fox. Loyal, deadly, painfully disciplined. Itâs⊠compelling.â
âIâm a soldier,â he said stiffly. âNothing more.â
You tilted your head. âMm. Funny. Thatâs not what I see.â
His visor didnât flinch. âWith respect, Senator, Iâm not here to entertain your flirtations.â
You let out a soft, amused sound. âOh, Commander. Iâm not looking for entertainment. Iâm looking for cracks. And you⊠you wear your armor like a second skin, but I wonder how thin it is around your heart.â
Fox said nothing.
You stepped in so close you could almost feel the heat from his chestplate. âTell meâdo you ever let someone get close? Or are you afraid of what you might feel if you did?â
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.
Foxâs voice came eventually, low and sharp. âReturn to your patrol routes. Now.â
âYes, Commander,â 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 couldnât tell.
âYou should be careful what you say,â he murmured at last.
You arched a brow. âWhy? Because you might start listening?â
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.
âYou make it so easy, Commander. Standing there like a statue, pretending you donât know exactly what effect you have on people.â
âI donât,â he said flatly.
You pulled back, smiling with all teeth and sin. âExactly.â
You started to turn, then hesitated, gaze flicking to his. âFor what itâs worth, I think youâre beautiful when youâre confused.â
He blinked once behind the visor.
Then you were goneâcloak sweeping behind you like the shadow of a secret. You didnât 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 footstepsâcalm, measured, as if she hadnât just been eavesdropping. But she had. Her composure was pristine as always, but her eyes⊠they were brighter than usual. Sharp with unspoken thoughts.
âCommander,â she said softly, folding her hands in front of her, voice light as snowfall. âYouâre still working?â
Fox nodded. âEnsuring the areaâs secure before we rotate out.â
âDiligent as ever.â Her smile was gentle. âThough I imagine your last conversation was⊠less standard protocol?â
Fox blinked. âSenator?â
Chuchi gestured toward the hallway where youâd just vanished. âSenator [L/N] can be⊠theatrical, canât she?â
âShe was⊠being herself,â Fox said cautiously.
Chuchi tilted her head, studying him. âAnd what do you make of her?â
He was quiet a moment.
âSheâs strategic,â he said finally. âSharp-tongued. Difficult to ignore.â
Chuchi hummed softly in agreement. âYes. She often commands the room, even when sheâs not trying to.â
She stepped beside him now, closeâbut not too close. Enough that the scent of her light floral perfume barely reached his senses. Enough that if sheâd worn armor, she mightâve brushed shoulders with him.
âI couldnât help but overhear,â she said, voice still soft, but with an edge Fox couldnât quite place. âShe seemed very⊠intent. On you.â
Fox tensed slightly. âShe was teasing.â
âWas she?â
He turned to look at her. âWasnât she?â
Chuchi met his gaze, and there was something sad and sweet in her expression. âYou donât see it, do you?â
âSee what?â
âThat you matter,â she said simply. âTo people.â
Fox straightened. âI matter to the Guard. To the Republic.â
âThatâs not what I meant.â
She held his gaze a moment longer, then offered a small, fond smileâhalf kind, half wistful.
âShe may flirt like itâs a weapon, but even weapons point at something.â
Fox stared at her, clearly still processing.
âI should go,â she said gently. âI have an early committee session. But, CommanderâŠâ
She paused, brushing a nonexistent wrinkle from her sleeve, her voice lower now.
âYou may want to start noticing. Before someone gets hurt.â
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.
âž»
Next part
You are SO TALENTED!!!! I love reading your fics so much. There is something so comforting and perfect about how you write. I canât put my finger on how to explain what I mean other than I really love your style and how you describe things and write the characters. You always start the fics off in a unique way and I love how to interpret peopleâs ideas into your style!! Would it be okay if I make a tech request please? I was thinking about something kind of idiots to lovers where they are both obviously interested in each other but havenât made that step yet and everyone is relaxing on the beach (because they deserve it) and reader canât stop staring at tech and is super obvious and helpless about it. Maybe he gets all flustered and shy about it and the others are teasing them and pushing them together? If you want of course only if you feel inspired! Thank you đđđ so much love for you and your fics!
That means so muchâthank you! Seriously, Iâm really honored by your words, truly means a lot đ€
Tech x Reader
The beach wasnât part of the mission.
It was justâŠthere. Unoccupied. Warm. Irresistible.
Clone Force 99 had been rerouted after a failed rendezvous with Cidâs contact, and with no immediate threats or intel to chase down, Hunter declared something miraculous:
âStand down for the day. Youâve earned it.â
And thatâs how you found yourself on a quiet, sun-drenched coast with the sound of waves in your ears, sand between your toes, and a distinct inability to stop staring at Tech.
You told yourself you were being subtle. Sitting beside him while he recalibrated his datapad, watching him tap at the screen with focused precision, eyes half-hidden behind his signature goggles. You probably looked like you were zoning outâbeachy daydreaming, normal and relaxed.
But inside? Inside you were on fire.
It was embarrassing, really, the way your stomach flipped every time he pushed his glasses up or muttered to himself. The man could be describing planetary topography and youâd nod along like he was whispering sweet nothings.
And you werenât slick. Not even a little.
âY/N, youâre staring again,â Echo said, not even trying to be discreet as he passed by with a makeshift towel slung around his neck. His prosthetic hand glinted in the sun as he pointed an accusatory thumb your way.
âIâm not,â you mumbled, heat rushing to your face.
âYou are,â Wrecker chimed in from where he was wrestling with Omega in the shallows. âEven I noticed. And I was busy winning.â
âYou were not!â Omega shouted, shoving at Wreckerâs broad chest as he laughed and face-planted into the surf.
You groaned and covered your face. This was fine. Totally fine. They were just teasing. They always teased.
But Tech?
Oblivious.
He didnât even look up, still scrolling through data with maddening focus, the sunlight glinting off his goggles. You watched as he adjusted his posture on the towel beneath him, arms flexing under the light linen of his casual shirtâof course he rolled his sleeves. Of course.
âYou know,â Crosshair drawled from behind you, âheâs been stealing glances at you all day.â
You jumped.
âWhat?â
âMm.â Crosshair didnât elaborate. He just took a slow sip from the coconut drink Wrecker had found earlier and tilted his head, smirking. âTook you long enough to notice.â
You turned back to Tech quickly, trying not to look like you were checkingâbut yes. His head was angled just a bit too stiffly toward his datapad, like heâd jerked his gaze away the moment you turned. His fingers werenât moving. He was paused.
Flustered?
That couldnât be right. This was Tech. The man had calculated the thermal resistance of Wreckerâs cooking experiments and quoted entire military texts without blinking. Emotion wasnât his operating system.
âŠBut his ears were a bit pink.
You squinted. No way.
âHunter,â you hissed toward the Batchâs defacto leader, hoping for confirmation.
He looked up from where he was lounging with a smug expression that had definitely been inherited from Crosshair at some point.
âHe likes you. Donât ask me to interpret howâbut yeah. Youâre just as obvious as he is.â
You buried your face in your hands again.
This was a mess. A ridiculous, tangled, sun-soaked mess.
And yetâ
âY/N?â Techâs voice was right beside you. Quiet. Tentative. You startled a littleâwhen had he moved closer?
âIâI didnât mean to disturb you,â he said, and you watched his throat bob as he swallowed hard. âBut I noticed a discrepancy in your hydration levels. You havenât had water in two hours and thirty-seven minutes.â
You blinked. âYouâreâŠtracking my water intake?â
âWell, Iâve been tracking everyoneâs. But yours in particular was⊠below optimal parameters.â
You stared.
He cleared his throat.
âI made this for you,â he added, holding out a homemade drink container fashioned from a modified canteen and what looked like part of a fruit rind. âItâs rehydration-optimized. With, um⊠taste. I believe that matters to you?â
Your heart did a completely traitorous little leap. âYou made me a beach drink?â
His ears turned very pink. âYes.â
Crosshair made a gagging sound from somewhere behind you.
You took the drink, fingers brushing Techâs. He didnât pull away.
âThanks,â you said softly. âThatâs⊠really sweet.â
He stared at you for a second, expression flickering behind his goggles.
âWould youââ he blurted, then stopped himself. âWould you⊠be interested in accompanying me on a walk along the beach? For scientific reasons.â
âScientific reasons?â
âYes. Iâd like to examine the tidal patterns. But also⊠Iâd like to spend time with you.â
You almost laughed in relief, and it was so him, so endearing and awkward and precise, that you couldnât say no.
âYeah,â you said, and smiled. âIâd like that.â
The walk started slow.
He kept his hands behind his back at first, clearly trying to keep things casual, but he couldnât help rattling off bits of data about the tides and the weather patterns. You nodded, asked just enough to keep him talkingâbut you were watching him more than anything else.
His brow furrowed when he talked, like every thought had to be carefully handled and shaped before it left his mouth. But he got passionate. Excited. Animated.
He gestured toward a tide pool and nearly tripped over a rock, catching himself with a flustered noise that made you giggle. His cheeks turned pink again.
âThis is ridiculous,â he muttered suddenly.
âWhat is?â
He turned to you, still awkward, but determined. âIâve run the probabilities. Of outcomes. Of this⊠situation.â
âThis situation beingâŠ?â
âYou and me,â he said, like it was a confession heâd been holding in for weeks. âStatistically, the indicators are positive. Even when accounting for external variables and potential mission constraints.â
You bit your lip. âTechâare you saying what I think youâre saying?â
He hesitated. Then: âI like you. Very much. In a not entirely logical way.â
Your breath caught.
âYou do?â
âI have for some time,â he admitted. âI didnât say anything because I assumed the feelings were not⊠mutual. And I didnât want to make things awkward among the squad.â
âOh,â you said, voice breathy. âYou absolute idiot.â
He blinked.
âI like you too,â you said, taking a step closer. âIn a totally not-logical-at-all way. Everyone else figured it out ages ago.â
Tech looked stunned.
You took his handâhe startled, but didnât pull away.
âI wanted to tell you,â you said. âBut I didnât want to make you uncomfortable.â
âI am, in fact,â he said slowly, âvery comfortable at the moment.â
The silence stretched between you, warm and fizzing with promise.
And thenâ
âFinally!â
You both turned. Wrecker and Echo were standing waist-deep in the surf, cheering.
âI owe you five credits,â Crosshair muttered to Hunter.
You groaned, but couldnât stop smiling.
âLet them gloat,â Tech said softly, fingers brushing yours again. âWe have better things to do.â
âLike?â
âAnother kilometer of beach to explore. And perhaps later⊠dinner. Just the two of us.â
Your stomach fluttered.
âSounds perfect.â
âž»
Dinner arrived in pieces.
Wrecker had scavenged half the ingredients from the nearby forestâsafe and edible, confirmed by Hunterâand Omega, ever the creative one, had helped wrap them in broad leaves and skewer them over a makeshift spit. Echo insisted on seasoning, mumbling something about dignity, and Crosshair contributed by not poisoning the mood with snark.
But you and Tech?
You barely noticed.
Youâd spent the entire afternoon orbiting one another, caught in the gravitational pull of what had finally been said and shared. And when Tech suggested you take your food to the far end of the beachâjust the two of youâthere was no hesitation.
You walked in silence at first, the smell of salt and roasted fruit mingling with the low roar of the tide. The sand cooled beneath your feet as the sun dipped lower, shadows stretching long and purple-blue across the coast. When you reached a quiet, rocky cove framed by tidepools and a sloping dune, Tech paused.
âThis will do,â he said.
You laid out the blanket Omega had packed, and he helped you unpack the food with the same precision he brought to every mission. Only this time, you noticed the small thingsâthe way his fingers brushed yours when handing you a wrapped meal, the quiet way he lingered near your side as if anchoring himself.
You sat cross-legged beside him on the blanket. He adjusted his goggles. Again.
âYou can take those off, you know,â you said gently.
âIâwell, yes, I could, butâŠâ
âBut?â
âI prefer to see you clearly.â
Your breath caught. He wasnât even trying to be smooth. That was the worst partâit was just honesty, simple and unaffected, and it made your chest feel like it had been sun-warmed from the inside out.
He mustâve noticed your reaction because he fumbled with his fork.
âI apologize. Was that too forward?â
âNo,â you said quickly. âJust⊠unexpected.â
A small smile touched his lips. He nudged his glasses up slightly anyway, so you could see more of his eyes.
âThen I shall try to surprise you more often.â
The meal was deliciousâmaybe not restaurant quality, but easily one of the best things youâd tasted in weeks. The food was secondary, though. The real warmth came from being beside Tech, talking about nothing and everything. His shoulders relaxed the longer you chatted, especially when you teased him lightly about how long it had taken for him to make a move.
âI calculated risk scenarios,â he said indignantly, mouth twitching at the corners.
âUh-huh. And howâd that go?â
âWell, clearly, I underestimated you.â
You laughed. âYou really did.â
After dinner, the sky deepened into indigo, and stars began to prick through the darkness.
You lay back on the blanket with a contented sigh, staring up at the galaxy above. Beside you, Tech adjusted his posture, lying just close enough for your arms to brush.
âThe constellations are different from Kaminoâs sector,â he murmured. âSee that cluster? Thatâs the Aurigae Trine. Itâs only visible from this hemisphere.â
You turned your head to look at him.
âAnd the one over there?â you asked, pointing.
He followed your gaze, expression thoughtful. âThatâs informal. Not officially charted. But some smugglers call it The Serpentâs Tongue.â
âRomantic,â you teased.
âPerhaps not. ButâŠâ
He hesitated, then shifted slightly, turning onto his side to face you fully.
âI once thought romance was a variable I would never encounter with clarity,â he said. âIt seemed inefficient. Distracting.â
You raised an eyebrow. âAnd now?â
âNow I find it⊠illuminating. Like gravitational lensing. Everything bends, but you can see further.â
Your chest tightened with something sweet and aching.
âYou always talk like that?â you asked quietly.
He tilted his head. âDo you prefer I donât?â
âNo,â you whispered. âI love it. I love how you see things.â
His gaze softened, and this time, it was his hand that reached for yours.
âI may not always say the right words,â he murmured. âBut I will always mean them.â
You laced your fingers with his.
âI know.â
The sky stretched endless above you, starlight threading between the waves and wind. And for once, there was no war. No danger. Just you, and him, and a night that felt like it had waited for years to happen.
a printer error is an attempt from god to get you to kill yourself but you must be stronger and you must must must beat the printer to death with a large object like object
more angst since yâall liked it last time
I had a crazy thought today: What if Echo wasn't the only part of the Algorithm? What if the Techno Union had another person (Reader) hooked up at a separate location? They would have both Echo and Reader work together to solve complex strategic problems. What kind of relationship would form between the two, and what would happen after Echo was rescued?
Echo x Reader
The first time you heard his voice, it was distortedâfiltered through wires, machinery, and pain.
âWho are you?â
You blinked through the sluggish haze of chemical sedation. The light above you flickered, casting your enclosure in sickly green. For a moment, you thought it was another hallucination. The Techno Unionâs experimental sedatives had a way of blending reality with memory.
But the voice came again, clearer this time.
âYouâre⊠not one of them.â
âNo,â you rasped, throat raw. âAnd you?â
He paused. Then, quietly, like a truth long buried:
âCT-1409. Echo.â
That nameâEchoâstirred something in the recesses of your mind. A ghost of a clone youâd heard rumored to be dead. Lost on the Citadel. But if he was here⊠then you werenât alone in this twisted hell.
They Called It the Algorithm.
The Techno Union had no use for your bodyâjust your mind. Your military experience, your understanding of Jedi tactics, your intuition. Youâd been captured during a failed mission on Raxus, and while you expected torture or death, you hadnât expected this: to be strung up like some living datastream, brain siphoned and cross-linked to an interface you didnât understand.
They called it a miracle of modern war-efficiency. You called it a cage.
And Echo⊠he was the other half of it.
You werenât in the same roomâyour pods were separatedâbut your minds were connected via the neural interface. Whenever they activated the system, your consciousness merged with his, just enough to collaborate on what they called âStrategic Simulations.â War games. Problem solving. Target prioritization.
You both knew the truth: they were using your combined intellect to predict Republic troop movements. Every algorithm you helped solve, every solution you helped generate, killed people you once called comrades.
âI hate this,â you whispered one day, during a low-activity cycle when the painkillers dulled your tongue. âI hate being part of this.â
A pause. Then his voiceâsteady but soft.
âSo do I. But I think better when youâre here.â
You blinked. ââŠThanks?â
âNo, I mean it.â There was an awkward silence. âWhen I thought I was the only one⊠I was slipping. Couldnât hold onto myself. But then you came. You reminded me who I am. Even in here.â
You swallowed, chest aching at the vulnerability in his voice.
âYouâre not just a number, Echo,â you said. âYouâre a person. And I see you.â
He didnât answer right away.
âI see you too.â
âž»
Over Time, a Bond Formed.
There were days the interface ran endlesslyâyour minds linked for hours, pressed together in shared thought. You knew when he was angry, when he was calm, when he wanted to scream. You learned the rhythm of his reasoning, the cadence of his sarcasm, the echo of grief.
You shared stories in the dead zones. When the machines werenât listening.
He told you about the 501st. About Fives. About Rex.
You told him about the Temple, your Master, your reckless flying.
Sometimes, you joked about escaping together. About finding a beach somewhere.
âToo many clones for me to trust the ocean,â heâd mutter. âOne tide shift and half of them are trying to build a battalion out of sand.â
Youâd laughed, a rusty sound. It felt foreign in your throat.
But that laughter became a kind of resistance. So did your connection.
The Techno Union noticed.
They began separating your sessions. Isolating your minds. Severing the link.
The day they cut the neural tether entirely, Echoâs voice disappeared from your thoughts like a light going out. You screamed against the restraints, powerless.
He was gone.
Days Passed. Then Weeks.
You started talking to yourself. Pretending he could still hear. Whispering plans youâd never execute, memories you werenât sure were yours anymore.
Your mind began to unravel.
Until one day, the alarm blared.
You jerked awake as the facility shook. Outside your pod, Skakoans ran like ants. The machinery sparked. Your interface glitched.
And in the flicker of emergency lightsâ
A face.
Metal and flesh. Scarred and beautiful.
âEcho?â Your voice broke.
His eyes widened. âYouââ
And then the moment was gone. Soldiers stormed in behind him. A trooper in matte black and redâClone Force 99, you recognized them in a flashâpulled him back.
âThey have another one,â Echo shouted. âSheâs hooked into the systemâsheâs part of it!â
The taller clone, Hunter, paused. âWhere?â
âThere!â Echo pointed. âDonât leave her!â
You tried to scream, but the interface surged, flooding your mind with static. Your body spasmed. Everything went white.
âž»
You Woke Up in a Medical Bay.
For a terrifying second, you thought it was still the Techno Unionâuntil you saw the blue stripes on the armor around you.
The 501st.
And standing beside your cot, his Scomp link resting awkwardly against his side, was Echo.
Alive.
Free.
He looked thinner than you remembered. Hollow-eyed. As if he still didnât quite believe it was real.
Neither did you.
âHey,â you whispered, tears stinging.
He swallowed. âHey.â
He crossed to you, hands trembling slightly as he reached for yours.
âI told them not to leave you,â he said. âIâI made them go back.â
âI knew you would.â
He laughedâa shaky, broken soundâand sat beside you.
âI thought I lost you,â he admitted. âWhen they cut the tether, I thoughtââ
âI know,â you murmured. âI felt it too.â
For a long moment, neither of you spoke. There was no need. Youâd already shared your minds. Now all that remained was your hearts.
But Freedom Wasnât Simple.
You were debriefed for days. The Jedi Council wanted answers. The Republic wanted data. Rex and Anakin debriefed Echo constantly, praising his resilience while ignoring the toll.
The 501st welcomed you cautiously. You werenât a clone, not a general, just⊠someone in between. A survivor like Echo. A curiosity. A symbol.
The worst part? The silence between you and Echo.
Not intentional. Not cruel.
Just⊠fragile.
He was different now. Wary. Reserved.
You tried to reach him. But he kept walls up.
He still spoke to Rex and Jesse and the occasional whisper to Fivesâ ghost, but you could tellâsomething had changed. Like being out of the system had broken something inside him.
One night, after lights-out in the barracks, you found him alone in the hangar.
âI miss the link,â you said.
He turned, surprised. âWhat?â
âI miss knowing what you felt. What you were thinking. Now⊠I donât know how to reach you.â
His face twistedâpain, guilt, grief.
âI donât want you to see what I am now,â he said. âIâm not the man you met in there. Iâm more machine thanââ
âDonât say that.â
He looked at you, exhausted. âYou donât understand.â
âI do,â you said, stepping closer. âI was there. They took everything from both of us. But that connection we had? That wasnât because of wires or data streams. That was real. And it still is.â
He stared at you like a drowning man seeing shore.
And thenâfinallyâhe let you hold him.
He didnât kiss you. Not yet. The pain was still too fresh.
But when you curled into him that night, metal against flesh, scars against scars, you both knew: the war wasnât over.
But you werenât alone anymore.
Hello!!! Hopefully I wonât bother you but i loved the 501 x reader where they all are crushing on her!!! Do you think thereâs the possibility that we could get a part two? I just want them all to be happy together -but a little angsty moments are great too! Thank you and i love your writing! Best clone scenario page on tumblrrr đ„°đ„°đ„°
Of course! A part 2 for this fic has been requested nearly 10 times.
I may need to turn this into a series. There will definitely be a part 3 at least đ«¶
âž»
501st x Reader
You were still reeling from the contact.
Rexâs hand, steady at your waist, had felt like it burned through your tunic. Not with heat, but with something more dangerousâsomething forbidden. And it had lingered just a second too long. Enough for you to realize he wanted to hold you there. Enough for him to realize that he couldnât.
Now he wouldnât meet your eyes. Not during the rest of the rotation. Not at the debrief. Not even in the mess later that night.
Hardcase had gone back to his usual boisterous self, none the wiser, but Kix glanced between you and Rex with the subtle awareness of someone too observant for his own good. You tried to brush it off. Smile. Pretend. But it was like breathing around broken glass.
Later that night, you found yourself staring up at the ceiling of your quarters, eyes wide open, body still.
And then the door chimed.
You sat up fast, heart racing. âCome in,â you called, voice steady despite the storm inside.
It was Rex.
He stepped in and the door hissed shut behind him. No armorâjust blacks. He looked exhausted. And maybe something else. Haunted, almost.
âYou shouldnât be here,â you said quietly, more to yourself than to him.
âI know.â
Silence stretched between you. And then he finally looked at you.
âI didnât mean to cross a line,â he said, voice low, gravelly. âBack in the training room.â
âYou didnât,â you lied.
Because the truth was worse. He didnât cross itâyou wanted him to. You still did.
He rubbed a hand over the back of his neck. âItâs not supposed to happen like this. Youâre a Jedi. Iâm⊠Iâm a soldier.â
âYouâre Rex.â
That made him pause.
You stood up, crossing the small space between you, pulse thundering.
He didnât touch you. He didnât move. But the way he looked at youâlike you were the last light in the galaxyâthat was enough to break you.
âWeâre not allowed this,â he said, finally.
âI know.â
But you also both knew something else, something unspoken: if the war didnât kill you, this would.
âž»
You thought things might settle after that night with Rex. But they didnât. If anything, the tension only thickened. Because it wasnât just Rex watching you a little too long anymore.
It was Kix, catching your arm after a mission with fingers that lingered too long on your wrist as he checked for injuries.
âYou push yourself too hard,â he murmured, voice low as his eyes searched yours. âSomeday, you wonât come back. And IâŠâ He trailed off before finishing, but the weight of what he didnât say clung to the air between you.
It was Fives, who cracked jokes louder than usual when Rex entered the room, his laugh a little too sharp. When he caught you alone, he dropped the act.
âYou know heâs not the only one who cares, right?â he said, eyes dark with something more serious than you were used to seeing in him. âHeâs not the only one who notices.â
It was Jesse, who always sat beside you at the mess, quietly pushing your favorite ration pack your way without saying anything. You caught him watching you once, and when you met his gaze, he didnât look away.
âYou deserve better than this,â he said, voice tight. âBetter than silence. Better than having to hide.â
Hardcase didnât hide a damn thing. He wore his affection on his sleeveâlaughing too loud, standing too close, finding excuses to spar. âYou know Iâd follow you anywhere, right?â he asked one evening, sweaty and bruised, grinning. âNo questions asked.â
Tup was quieter, but it was there. In the way he always made sure you were covered. In the way he sat across from you during ship travel, stealing glances when he thought you werenât looking. You caught him once, and he blushed so hard he looked like he might combust.
Then there was Dogma, who clung to rules like they were life raftsâbut his devotion to you bent those rules every damn day. He flinched when others got too close. Spoke up when he thought someone pushed you too hard. And when you called him out on it, he just said, âYou matter. More than they think.â
They were a unit. Brothers. But when it came to you, that unity was starting to fray.
You could feel it in the silences.
In the way they hesitated to speak freely when Rex was in the room. In the way Jesse squared off subtly when Fives stood too close. In the tension crackling in every quiet corridor.
You were the Jedi they shouldnât have fallen for. The light they wanted to protect. But you were also one personâand they all knew that.
And maybe the worst part?
You didnât know who you were falling for.
âž»
The op on Vanqor shouldâve been simple: recon the outpost, confirm Separatist movement, exfil. No drama. No losses.
But nothing was simple anymore.
You split the squad in two. Rex led one team, you led the other. Standard formation. Except the tension was anything but standard.
From the start, Fives was running his mouth.
âOh, so Rex gets to babysit the high ground,â he said as he checked his rifle. âHow convenient.â
âBecause Iâm the Captain,â Rex snapped without looking up. âAnd because someone needs to stay focused on the mission.â
âFocused?â Jesse muttered under his breath. âThatâs rich coming from you.â
You glanced at them all sharply. âCut the chatter.â
They didâsort of. Kix shot Jesse a look. Jesse shot Fives one back. Even Tup, usually calm, was twitchier than usual. And Dogma was walking like he was seconds away from snapping someoneâs neck.
Still, the op moved forward.
You took Hardcase, Tup, and Jesse with you. Rex had the others. Two klicks into the canyon, comms lit up.
Rex: âGeneral, got movement near the ridge. Confirmed clankers. Looks like a patrol.â
You: âCopy. Proceeding to secondary overlook.â
Then static. Followed byâ
Fives: âWeâve got this, General. Donât worry, Iâll keep him from throwing himself in front of a blaster for you.â
There was a sharp click before Rex cut him off: âFives, stay off the channel unless itâs tactical.â
Back with your team, things werenât much better.
Hardcase was bouncing on the balls of his feet. âCanât believe I missed the team with the romantic tension. You shouldâve seen Rexâs face, Tupâguyâs wound tighter than a wire.â
Jesse barked a laugh. âAt least heâs not pretending heâs subtle. Unlike some.â
Tup sighed. âPlease donât start again.â
You stopped in your tracks, glaring at them. âYou think this is a game? You want to bicker while droids are swarming a ridge less than a klick away?â
They fell silent, shame flickering in their eyes.
Then came the ambush.
Blasterfire erupted from the cliffs. Shouts, heat, chaos.
Rexâs voice came through the comm againâsharp, controlled. âEngaging hostiles. Kix is hit but stable.â
You snapped orders, leading your squad into flanking position, instincts taking over. You caught sight of Rex across the ridge, laying down cover, Fives behind himâbut they were arguing even mid-fire.
âCover me!â Rex shouted, moving up.
âCouldâve said please,â Fives muttered, though he did as told.
Jesse nearly got clipped trying to keep you shielded. âI said Iâve got you!â he snapped when you tried to redirect him.
After the skirmish, when the smoke cleared and the ridge was secure, the tension boiled over.
âIs this how itâs going to be now?â Rex growled, throwing his helmet down. âWe canât run a clean op because every one of you is too busy acting like kriffing teenagers.â
âDonât pin this on us,â Jesse snapped. âYouâre the one sneaking around with her after lights out.â
âNothing happened,â Rex shot back.
Kix scoffed. âNo, but something wants to.â
Tup looked between them, torn. âThis isnât what weâre supposed to be.â
And Dogma, silent until now, spoke with cold finality: âFeelings donât belong on the battlefield. Youâre all risking her life.â
The silence that followed was heavier than the blasterfire.
You stood there, heart pounding, breath caught somewhere between fury and grief.
This war was pulling you apart from the inside. Not from wounds or droidsâbut from love, jealousy, and every unspoken word between them.
The silence stretched long after Dogmaâs words hit the ground like a blaster bolt.
You could see itâevery line in their faces taut, wounded. The guilt. The fear. The ache.
And still, you stood tall.
Composed. Cold, maybe. But you had to be.
âI need every one of you to listen to me,â you said, voice even, sharp like a vibroblade. âAnd I need you to understand this the first time, because I will not say it again.â
No one spoke. Even Fives went still.
âI am a Jedi,â you continued. âAnd whether or not that means something to you anymoreâit still means something to me. The Code forbids attachment. That isnât a guideline. It isnât a suggestion. It is a foundational truth of who I am and what I chose to be.â
Rex looked away. His jaw tightened.
âThis war has blurred the lines between soldier and brother, between ally and⊠more. But that does not change the Code. It does not change the expectations I hold for myself.â
You took a breath, feeling the heat rise behind your ribsâbut not letting it show.
âI am not your hope. I am not your escape. I am not something you can cling to in the middle of this chaos. I am your general. I will fight beside you. I will protect you. I care about you. But I will notâI cannot return these⊠feelings.â
Hardcase looked like youâd slapped him. Kixâs mouth parted, then closed again. Fives had nothing to say.
And then you said the thing none of them wanted to hear:
âIf any of you truly respect meâif you truly believe in the Jedi you claim to admireâthen let me go. Detach. Redirect whatever it is you feel into something that will not get one of us killed.â
Tup stepped forward, hesitant. âBut you do care. We know you do.â
You didnât deny it. You couldnât. But you answered with the quiet, unmoving weight of Jedi truth.
âYes,â you said. âBut caring is not the same as holding on.â
Another pause.
âIâm not your way out,â you finished. âIâm the one leading you into the fire. Donât follow me with your heart. Follow me with your discipline. Or donât follow me at all.â
And with that, you turnedâcloak sweeping, boots hitting durasteel with finality.
You didnât look back.
Because if you did⊠you werenât sure the Jedi in you would win.
âž»
The moment she disappeared into the shadows of the canyon pass, the squad felt gutted. Not woundedâhollowed out.
The silence wasnât peace. It was pressure. It built between them like a thermal detonator waiting for a trigger.
âShe didnât have to say it like that,â Hardcase muttered first, breaking the quiet. âShe made it sound like weâre a liability.â
âSheâs not wrong,â Dogma snapped, arms crossed tight over his chest. âWe lost focus. We compromised the mission.â
Fives scoffed. âOh, come off it, Dogma. Youâre not exactly guilt-free just because you pout from a distance instead of making a move.â
âDonât start,â Jesse growled. âWe wouldnât even be in this mess if you hadnât made a scene during the damn firefight.â
âI wasnât the one staring at her like a lovesick cadet while blaster bolts were flying!â
âYou want to go?â Jesse stepped forward.
Kix shoved himself between them. âEnough. Youâre all making this worse.â
âNo,â Rex said sharply, his voice cutting through the air like a blade. âIâll take it from here.â
Everyone turned. Rexâs helmet was still tucked under his arm, his face unreadableâcontrolled, cold, and deadly calm.
âSheâs right,â he said, no hesitation. âEvery word. We let our feelings get in the way. We made it personal. Thatâs not what we were bred for. Thatâs not what she needs.â
Fives shifted, jaw clenched. âSo whatâjust pretend it doesnât exist?â
Rex stepped closer, tone steely. âWe have to. Because if we donât, she dies. Or we do. Maybe all of us.â
Tup looked away. Jesse stared at the ground. Even Hardcase, for once, didnât have a joke.
âYou think I donât feel it?â Rex said, quieter now. âYou think I havenât thought about what it would be like to give in? To tell her how I feel?â
He shook his head. âThatâs not what love looks like. Love is discipline. Restraint. We follow her lead. We put her safety above what we want. Thatâs our job. Thatâs who we are.â
Nobody argued.
Because they all knew he was right.
âž»
They all handled it differently.
Dogma pulled back first.
He barely spoke during prep. Stood at parade rest with surgical stillness. Didnât sit with the squad, didnât meet your eyes. He obeyed, to the letterâbut colder now, like retreating behind a regulation shield.
Fives, on the other hand, spiraled.
He picked fights. With Kix, with Jesse, even with Rex. His banter turned sour, jokes laced with venom.
âShe doesnât mean it,â he muttered to Jesse in the hangar. âYou donât just fight beside someone for years and feel nothing. Sheâs trying to protect us. But that doesnât mean we stop caring.â
Jesse didnât answer.
Because Jesse was the one pushing harder.
He wasnât loud about itâbut you noticed. He stayed closer during patrols. Walked you to your quarters even when you didnât ask. Spoke softer. Asked if youâd eaten. You knew the intent behind it. And it terrified you.
You needed clarity. Solitude.
But the moment you stepped outside the command tent to breatheâTup was already waiting.
He didnât say anything at first. Just offered you a ration bar with a small, tentative smile. Like he didnât expect you to take it, but needed you to know heâd tried.
You sat beside him anyway.
âItâs a lot,â he said after a beat, voice low. âToo much, sometimes.â
You didnât speak.
He didnât push.
âIâm not gonna say theyâre wrong to feel it,â he added, eyes on the dirt. âBut I get why you had to say what you did. It hurts. But I get it.â
You turned your head slowly. âDo you?â
He met your eyes. Soft. Steady. âYeah. Because when you love someone⊠really love them⊠you donât ask them to break themselves just to make you feel better.â
That quiet truth stuck in your chest like a blade.
Tup didnât reach for your hand. He didnât move closer. He just stayed there, beside you, letting you breathe.
And for the first time in days⊠you felt like maybe someone saw youânot as something to win. But as someone to understand.
You didnât want to fall apart.
But with Tup sitting next to you, not expecting anythingânot even an answerâit was hard to keep everything held together.
The ration bar stayed in your hand, unopened. You stared at it like it held answers you didnât have the strength to look for.
âYou know,â Tup said gently, âyou donât have to be the strong one all the time.â
You gave him a dry look. âThatâs rich, coming from a soldier bred to never break.â
He smiled faintly. âYeah, well. We all crack different. Some of us just do it quieter.â
You laughedâsoft and broken. âIs this you trying to cheer me up, Tup?â
âMaybe,â he said with a small shrug. âMaybe I just wanted to sit beside someone who makes the war feel a little less like war.â
You looked away. His words landed somewhere deep, somewhere dangerously tender.
There was a momentâjust a momentâwhen you let your shoulders drop. When you leaned just barely toward him, not enough to cross a line, but enough to feel how close the edge really was.
And Tupâs voice, softer still: âYou donât have to be alone.â
Your breath caught. Eyes burning. Just a blink from letting it slipâjust a few more seconds and you might have said something you couldnât unsay.
But thenâ
âGeneral?â
You turned sharply, straightening.
Kix.
He looked between the two of you. His gaze landed on Tupâs proximity, on your expressionâcracked, vulnerable.
Too late.
âIââ He cleared his throat, eyes guarded now. âI was coming to check on you. Thought maybe youâd want to talk.â
Tup shifted, quietly rising to his feet. âSheâs alright. Just needed some quiet.â
You could feel the tension coil between themâone of them arriving first, the other arriving just late enough to lose something that hadnât even happened.
You stood too. âThank you, Kix. Iâm okay. Just tired.â
He gave a short nod, but the disappointment was unmistakable. He wasnât angry. But he felt it.
And you knew that by tomorrow, the silence between some of them would stretch even deeper.
Because kindness had turned competitive. And comfort was starting to feel like a battlefield too.
âž»
Previous part
Star Wars: These are the clones. They're soldiers, warriors, they're bred for war and absolute dangerous killing machines. They're tough and loyal and hard to beat. Theyre-
Fandom: Baby boys? đ„ș Little Babys who need love and care đ„ș ? Brothers with parental instincts that I will protect with my life and soul đ„ș ? Sweet pure innocent boys-
Hiya babes! Hope youâre doing well! Just outta say I absolutely adore your writing and always brings a smile to my face when you post!!
I was hoping you could do an angst fic where itâs the boys reactions to you jumping in front of them taking a hit/bolt. You can choose the clone group! Xxx
Thank you so much â seriously, your kind words mean the world to me!! Iâm so glad my writing can bring a little light to your day đ
I hope you donât mind that I decided to go with the Wolf pack for this one. I hope you enjoy đ«¶
âž»
Reader x 104th Battalion (Wolffe, Sinker, Boost)
âž»
You donât think. You just move. Thatâs what instinct does when family is in danger.
The air was thick with heat and cordite, the jungle humid enough to choke on. Blasterfire lit the treeline in wild flashesâred bolts cutting through the green like angry stars. You pressed forward with your saber raised, breath tight in your chest, the Force buzzing like a live wire beneath your skin.
This wasnât supposed to be a heavy engagement. Just a scouting mission. Routine.
But nothing about war ever stays routine for long.
âWolffe, move it! Youâre exposed!â you shouted, watching him duck behind cover just as two more shots chewed bark over his head.
âCopy that,â Wolffe growled, popping off a few retaliatory blasts. âBoost! Sinker! Sweep the right flank and flush that nest!â
âAlready on it!â Boost called from somewhere in the brush.
âWeâre getting pinned down out here!â Sinker added, tone sharp but controlled.
You moved closer to Wolffe, saber up, covering his retreat as he repositioned behind the half-blown trunk of a felled tree. The rest of the battalion had spread out, covering the ridgeline, trying to locate the sniper.
Thatâs when it hit youâthe feeling.
The Force spiked.
Time slowed.
A heartbeat ahead of the moment, you felt it: danger, aimed at someone you couldnât let go.
Wolffe was turning. He wasnât going to make it in time.
You didnât think. You just moved.
A leap. A cry. A single instant of instinct and fear and absolute certainty.
And then the bolt hit you square in the back.
Wolffe didnât register what happened right away. One moment he was turning to call out an order, the next there was a flash of blue, the hum of a saber, and a sickening crack of a body hitting the dirt.
ââ[Y/N]?!â
You were lying on your side, smoke rising from your robes, your saber a few meters away, deactivated.
You werenât moving.
Sinker screamed something wordless over comms. Boost shouted your name.
âMEDIC!â Wolffe was already moving. âGet me a medic now!â
He slid to his knees beside you, hands already tearing open the fabric around the wound, even though he didnât know what the hell he was doingâjust doing. There was too much blood. Too much heat coming off your skin. You were smaller than him, younger, not armored like they were. You were a Jedi, yeah, but also just a kid compared to the rest of them.
His kid. Their kid.
And youâd taken a shot meant for him.
âž»
Hours Later you were in bacta now. Still alive. Barely.
The medics said it was touch and go. The bolt had burned through muscle and clipped something vital. Youâd coded once during evac, but they brought you back. Your saber had been returned to Plo Koon, its emitter dented from where it had slammed into the ground.
Wolffe sat in the corner of the medbay, helmet off, armor streaked with dried bloodâyour blood. He hadnât moved in two hours.
âWhy the hell would she do that?â Sinker muttered, pacing with his helmet tucked under one arm. He was flushed, angry. âWe wear armor for a reason. We train for this. Sheâs a Jedi, not a clone. Sheâs not supposed toââ
âBe willing to die for us?â Boost cut in, voice tired. âGuess she missed that memo.â
Sinker let out a long, low sigh and scrubbed a hand over his face. âWeâre the ones who throw ourselves in front of people. Thatâs the job. Thatâs our job.â
Plo Koon stood at your bedside, one hand lightly resting on the glass of the tank. Heâd been silent for most of it, his calm presence a strange contrast to the chaos.
âShe has always seen you as more than soldiers,â he said gently. âYou are her brothers. Her family.â
Wolffe finally spoke, his voice low and rough. âSheâs part of the pack. And the pack protects its own.â
âBut she nearly died protecting you, Commander,â Boost said. âWhat does that make us?â
âAlive,â Wolffe answered. âThatâs what it makes us. And when she wakes up, sheâs going to be reminded that we never leave one of our own behind.â
Sinker stopped pacing, jaw clenched.
âSheâs not gonna get off easy for this.â
âOh, hell no,â Boost muttered. âSoon as sheâs conscious, Iâm yelling at her.â
âNot before me,â Wolffe said, standing finally. âIâve got seniority.â
They tried to jokeâtried to banterâbut it didnât land. Not yet.
âž»
Your vision was blurry. Everything felt heavy. And sore. So sore.
âHeyâhey! Sheâs waking up!â
Voices. Familiar. Warm.
You blinked hard. One blurry helmet. Then two. Then a third face appearedâscarred, grim, but so full of relief it almost didnât look like Wolffe.
âAbout damn time,â he muttered. âThought we were gonna have to start arguing over who got to carry your sorry ass out of here.â
You tried to speak, but all that came out was a croaky whisper: âPackâŠâ
Boost leaned in closer. âYeah. Weâre here.â
Sinker had a hand pressed to your arm, trying not to squeeze too hard. âDonât you ever do that again.â
You smiled weakly. âDidnât think about it.â
âNo kidding,â Wolffe said, arms crossed now. âYou jump in front of another bolt like that and weâre stapling your robes to the floor.â
Plo Koon stepped forward, voice kind and firm. âRest now, little one. You have done more than enough. The pack is safe. Because of you.â
You let your eyes fall shut again, not from pain this timeâbut because you knew they were watching over you.
Always would.
Over ten years of reading fanfics and I still have yet to come across a single oc/reader insert that was actually well written
Canât tell if this is meant to be an insult orâŠ?
Either way Iâm happy to recommend a few fics that I personally enjoy.
Radiant.Â
say it with me now:
wreckerđisđnotđstupidđ
he is actually pretty smart, you donât 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 doesnât mean heâs dumb
Dominoes fall, but no one ever tells you what happens to the last one. Lyrics from: Wait for Me - Hadestown (2:47-3:11) ...with a little lyric change at the end. Beep beep, emotional damage truck coming through! Also this is the result of my WIP featured on my Last Line Challenge.
mon mothma getting wasted and dancing to space pop music because one of her oldest friends is about to get assassinated and she feels guilty while her cousin sits and mopes because she just saw her situationship for the first time in ages and it was only because she's here to carry out said assassination. andor is AWESOME.
Every time you answer one of my requests i giggle and kick my feet while having a little happy meltdown as i read it. Your fics genuinely brighten my day and they make me so happy <3
Anyways-
What about a crosshair x reader where the reader is really happy go lucky and doesn't care about his snarky comments at all (sometimes shooting back a few). BUT- cross lowkey has a crush on them and his comments are his way of flirting. The reader picks up on this and starts "flirting" back with insults and the rest of tbb thinks they're crazy.
Also maybe the reader is also a really good sniper which is why they even caught crosshair's attention in the first place
Ok bye darling i hope you have a good dayïŒnight <3
Thank you xx I truly appreciate all the love and comments I get on all my fics â€ïž
Crosshair x Reader
Blasterâclean silence ruled the gunârack alcove until you flipped the longârange sight guard open with a soft click.
Crosshairâs pale eyes slid your way. âThat latch is louder than your entire trigger discipline.â
You grinned. âFunnyâcoming from the guy who coughs every time he exhales. You swallowing sand again, longâneck?â
Echo, working on the nav console across the corridor, winced as though a thermal detonator had rolled under his boots. Wrecker mouthed Theyâre both crazy, and went back to benchâpressing a cargo crate.
Crosshairâs lips tugged into what passed for a smile. âKeep rattling, sunshine. Wonât change the grouping on your last target sheet.â
You tilted the datapad so he could see the tight cluster of holesâdeadâcenter, halfâcredit size. âLooks like it changed yours, though. Jealousy kicks the barrel left, apparently.â
For half a heartbeat his eyebrows liftedâbarelyâbut you caught it. That microscopic flash of youâimpressedâme that he could never quite smother.
He lounged against the bulkhead, toothpick rolling between his lips. âBlind luck.â
ïżŒ
âLuckâs just skill nobody believes in yet,â you shot back, sliding the toothpick from his mouth with two fingers before he could react. You tucked it behind your ear, matching his lazy stance. âBesides, youâve been staring since Ord Mantell. If my shootingâs so bad, why watch?â
Hunterâs tread slowed as he passed, sensing the static but wisely continuing on. Tech muttered from the upper gantry, âStatistical probability of combustive banter reaching critical mass: ninetyâtwo percent.â
Crosshairâs voice dropped, all gravel and embarrassment heâd rather chew than admit. âMaybe I appreciate a challenge.â
You leaned in, noses a breath apart. âMaybe you appreciate the view.â
Wreckerâs crate hit the deck with a clang. âIâŻknewâŻit! They likeâlike each other!â Echo groaned, âPlease donât say âlikeâlike.ââ
Crosshair didnât move, but the tip of his ear darkened. âPut my toothpick back.â
You placed it between his lips, brushing gloved fingertips over the scratch on his chin. âEarn it aftâside, sharpshooter.â
He caught your wristânot rough, just sure. âNext op, fiftyâmeter wind, angled shot, moving speeder. One bullet. Loser buys rations for a month.â
âMake it two shots,â you purred, pulling free. âOne for the targetâone to carve my initials in your ego.â
Behind you, the squadâs collective groan thudded louder than artillery. But as you strode toward the weapons locker, you felt his gaze marking every stepâsteady, precise, unmistakably interested.
And for once, Crosshair let the toothpick rest perfectly still, the curve of his mouth admitting what his words never would: heâd just been outâsniped at his own gameâand he liked it.
Hello! I had an idea for a Kix x Fem!Reader where she transfers into his medbay but she stands out because she remembers every clones name. Regardless if she hasnât even met them she has read all the files and committed them to memory and heâs like astonished but also touched. Maybe his brothers are like âif you donât make a move I willâ Hope this is good! Have a good weekend! â„ïž
Kix x Reader
Hyperspace thrummed beyond the transparisteel ports while Kix tried to tame the Resoluteâs perpetually crowded medâbay. Bacta monitors chimed, troopers squabbled over whose scar looked âcoolest,â and Kixâs gloves were still sticky with drying crimson when the hatch whispered open.
A quiet but confident voice announced, âNew medâtech reporting, sirâ[Y/N].â
Kix flicked off his gloves, surprised. âYou picked a kriffing busy shift to arriveâwelcome.â
From the nearest cot, Hardcase crowed, âWhat dâyou bet she faints when she sees my arm?â
You crossed to him without blinking. âCTâ0217 Hardcaseâthroughâandâthrough blaster hit, distal humerus, yesterday. Dermabindâs due for a swap.â
Hardcase shut up so fast Fives snorted.
You pointed down the line:
âCTâ5597 Jesseârib bruise, deâpressurised plating on Râ3. Threeâhour ice intervals.
âCTâ5555 Fivesâfragment nick, upper thigh; youâll pretend it doesnât hurt until it infects.â
âCTâ0000 Dogmaâscalp laceration, eight stitches. Stop picking at them.â
Each trooper stared like youâd grown a second head.
Kix folded his arms. âYou read our charts?â
âMemorised the battalion manifest on the shuttle. Names separate patients from barcodes.â
A low whistle: Jesse grinned around a painâkiller stick. âKix, vodâif you donât lock that down, Iâm escorting her to 79âs myself.â
Fives elbowed him. âBrother, thatâs my line.â
Dogma muttered, âShow some discipline.â
âShow some charm,â Fives shot back.
Kix cleared his throat, ears reddening. âSettle, vod. Let the medic workâunless you want a protocol droid doing your stitches.â
âž»
Kix found you reâstocking kolto packs. âMost rookies need a week to learn nicknames; you quoted service numbers.â
âYouâre not rookiesâyouâre veterans. Acting like it matters.â
His voice softened. âWe spend our lives as copies. Remembering us by name⊠thatâs a rare kind of medicine.â
Across the bay, Hardcase bellowed, âKix! She fixinâ your ego yet?â
Jesse added, âTimerâs ticking, sir!â
You hid a smile. âI still need orientation, Kix. Maybe⊠a tour of the âcultural hubâ Iâve heard about?â
Kixâs grin was pure reliefâand a little wonder. âMedâofficerâordered R&R, 79âs cantina, 2000. Mandatory.â
Hardcase whooped. âHa! Called it!â
âž»
Blue and gold holoâlights flashed off clone armor stacked by the door. Fives tried teaching you a rigged sabacc hand; Jesse heckled from behind; Dogma nursed one drink like it was contraband; Hardcase danced on a tabletop until Rex appeared, helmet tucked under his arm.
Rex eyed the scene, then you. âHeard the new medic can ID every trooper in the Legion.â
âOnly the ones whoâve been shot today, sir,â you said, straightâfaced.
Hardcase cheered. Jesse rapped knuckles on the table. Even Rex let a ghost of a smile slip before nodding to Kix: Good find.
Jesse leaned close while Kix ordered drinks. âTake care of him, cyarâika. Our medic patches everyone but himself.â
You watched Kix laugh, shoulders finally loose for the first time all day. âCount on it,â you said, lifting a glass.
Across the cantina, Hardcase elbowed Fives. âTold you names matter.â
Fives clinked his mug to Jesseâs. âHereâs to finally being more than numbers.â
Andâfor a few riotous hours beneath 79âs flickering lightsâevery soldier of the 501st felt like the only trooper in the Grand Army, thanks to one medic who never forgot a name.
Hi! I love your works! I was wondering if you could write a fic about the 501st who is in love with their female Jedi general?
501st x Reader
Felucia was vibrant and lethal in equal measureâtowering mushrooms filtering alien sunlight, thick air buzzing with unfamiliar insects, and a dense undergrowth that clung to your boots like molasses. You pushed aside a broad-leafed plant and stepped into a small clearing where the 501st had already begun establishing a temporary perimeter.
âGeneral on deck,â Jesse called, half out of breath, tossing a lazy salute.
You waved him off with a faint grin. âAt ease. Just scouting ahead.â
âThought we told you weâd handle that,â Rex said as he approached, already brushing bits of foliage off your shoulder with practiced familiarity.
You smiled faintly at the gesture. âYou did, and I ignored you. As usual.â
âYeah, weâre used to that,â Fives muttered to Tup under his breath. âStill doesnât stop us from trying to keep her alive.â
âShe thinks itâs loyalty,â Jesse murmured with a chuckle. âAdorable, isnât it?â
Hardcase, lugging a heavy case of thermal charges, barked a laugh. âMore like tragic. This whole squadâs gone soft.â
âSpeak for yourself,â Dogma grunted. âIâm focused.â
âFocused on what? Her ass?â Kix quipped without looking up from his medical kit.
You, of course, had no idea what they were whispering about. The clones had always been close with youâprofessional, dedicated, respectful. If you noticed the way conversations halted whenever you walked into the room, or how they always seemed to compete for your attention in subtle, strangely personal ways, you chalked it up to a particularly tight-knit unit. One bonded through battle. Through trust.
After all, you shared the front lines. You slept in the dirt beside them. Bled with them. Saved themâand been saved by them more times than you could count.
âGeneral,â Tup said quietly, stepping up beside you, his cheeks dusted pink despite the heat. âHydration. You havenât taken a break in hours.â
You took the canteen with a grateful nod. âThanks, Tup. Youâre always looking out for me.â
He looked like heâd been knighted.
âž»
That evening, near the field base You sat cross-legged in the command tent, analyzing the terrain projections while the familiar hum of clone chatter drifted in from the campfire outside. Anakin and Ahsoka lingered near the entrance, arms crossed, watching you work.
âShe really doesnât know,â Ahsoka said quietly, shaking her head.
Anakin followed your movements with an amused glance. âNope. Not a clue. I donât think she even realizes she could have the entire 501st building her a temple if she asked.â
âShe did ask Fives to carry her backpack last week and he nearly cried.â
âI remember. Jesse said it was âthe most spiritual moment of his life.ââ
They both stifled their laughs as you looked up. âSomething funny?â
âNope,â they said in unison.
âJust, uhâŠâ Anakin motioned vaguely toward your datapad. âHope thatâs got better answers than the last one.â
You raised a brow, but let it go. âWeâll hit the eastern ridge at dawn. Iâll lead the recon.â
âOf course you will,â Ahsoka said, grinning.
The fire crackled low in the center of the camp. Most of the men had finished maintenance checks and settled into their usual banter.
âI swear she said my name differently today,â Jesse said, eyes half-lidded like he was remembering a song. âLike, softer.â
âShe says everyoneâs name soft,â Kix argued. âItâs called being kind.â
âNo, she looked at me,â Jesse insisted.
âShe handed me her lightsaber to inspect,â Fives cut in. âDo you hand your saber to someone you donât trust with your life?â
âShe asked me if I was sleeping enough,â Dogma added with a hint of reverence.
âPretty sure she just worries about your death wish, brother,â Hardcase quipped.
âYou lot are pathetic,â Rex muttered, but there was no bite to it. He was staring into the fire, silent for a moment. âShe trusts us. Thatâs enough.â
But even Rex didnât believe thatânot really. Not when you laughed that easy laugh after a mission went right. Not when your shoulder brushed his during strategy briefings and his thoughts short-circuited for a full five seconds. Not when you called him by name, soft and sure, like it meant something more.
âž»
You lay awake in your tent, the soft drone of Feluciaâs wild night barely louder than the murmured clone banter outside. You smiled faintly, listening to the comfort of their voices, and whispered to yourself:
âBest unit in the galaxy.â
You really had no idea.
âž»
The jungle had closed in tighter the deeper you went. Trees loomed like ancient sentinels, their bioluminescent vines casting blue and green hues across the mist. Your boots squelched through thick moss as you signaled the squad to halt, raising two fingers to point toward a cluster of Separatist patrol droids sweeping the ridge ahead.
âFives, Jesse, flank left. I want eyes from that outcrop,â you whispered. âDogma, with me. Kix, hang back with the heavyâjust in case this gets loud.â
They all moved in sync. Always so responsive. Always so ready.
What you didnât notice was the flicker in Jesseâs eyes when you called Fivesâ name first. Or the way Dogmaâs jaw tensed when you brushed close to him as you moved up the ridge. Or how Kix lingered a beat too long, watching your retreating form before shaking his head and muttering something under his breath.
The skirmish was over in minutesâclean, quiet, surgical. A dozen droids scattered in pieces across the clearing.
You turned to Fives, heart still beating fast. âThat was textbook work. Great movement on the flank.â
He beamed. âJust following your lead, General.â
But something about the way he said it made your stomach flutter. That grin was too⊠warm. Too personal.
You blinked, trying to shake it off. Heâs just proud. Thatâs normal. Right?
âž»
You sat by a small portable lamp in the command tent, jotting down notes from the recon while the jungle buzzed around you. The flap rustled and Jesse ducked inside, holding a steaming cup.
âThought you might want some caf,â he said, offering it with a smileâless playful than usual. Quieter.
âThanks.â You took it, letting your fingers brush his without meaning to. âYou didnât have toââ
âI wanted to,â he said simply.
You paused. The heat from the mug had nothing on the warmth spreading up your neck.
He stayed, quiet, hands tucked behind his back like a soldier at parade rest. But he didnât leave, and you didnât tell him to.
Not until Fives walked in.
âGeneral,â Fives said, a little too loudly. âJust checking if youâve eaten. Youâve got a nasty habit of forgetting.â
Jesse straightened slightly. âSheâs fine. I brought her caf.â
Fivesâ smile faltered. âRight. Well⊠I made stew. Her favorite.â
You glanced between them. âYou two okay?â
âPeachy,â Jesse muttered, stepping out of the tent without another word.
Fives watched him go, lips thinning. Then he turned to you and said, âDonât let him guilt-trip you. He gets weird about stuff.â
You looked at him sideways. âStuff like me?â
Fives blinked, like he hadnât expected the question to come so directly.
âI didnât meanânevermind. Iâll just eat later. Thanks for the stew.â You stood, grabbing your datapad and pushing past him, mind whirling.
Something was shifting. You werenât sure what, but you werenât imagining it anymore.
The fire was lower now, casting shadows over their faces as the clones gathered close. You sat among them, quiet, watching the way they moved. Noticing things you hadnât before.
Jesse sat closer than usual, shoulders brushing yours. Fives kept shooting glances your way whenever you laughed at one of Kixâs jokes. Dogma didnât say muchâbut his eyes barely left you the entire night. And when you stood up to grab your bedroll, Rex was already there, unfolding it with a softness that caught in your throat.
âThanks, Rex,â you said.
He hesitated, eyes searching yours. âOf course, General.â
And thatâthat was what did it.
Something in his voice. The way he said your title like it hurt. Not because it was formal, but because it wasnât enough.
You barely slept that night.
âž»
The next morning you stood at the front of the squad, explaining the route to a newly discovered Separatist supply outpost when you noticed them: Jesse, Fives, and Dogmaâall standing just slightly apart. Not fighting. Not even speaking to each other. But the air between them was tense.
Kix noticed too. He leaned in as the others filed out. âYou might want to watch that triangle youâve unknowingly wandered into, Commander.â
You blinked. âTriangle?â
He gave you a long, knowing look. âMore like a pentagon, if weâre being honest.â
You stared after him as he left, that fluttering in your chest blooming into something a little heavier. A little realer.
You thought you understood them. Thought they were just loyal. Just dedicated.
But maybeâŠ
Maybe there was more to this than you let yourself see.
And now, you werenât sure what to do about it.
âž»
Felucia hadnât gotten any cooler overnight. The muggy heat clung to your skin like armor, but it wasnât just the weather that had you feeling unsteady lately.
The clones had always been devotedâbut now, their focus on you felt sharper. Their glances lingered longer. Their voices dropped when they spoke your name.
You werenât imagining it anymore.
And that⊠scared you more than it should have.
âž»
You crouched over a portable console with Rex, fingers brushing as you both reached for the same wire.
He paused. Just a second too long.
You looked up. âYou okay, Captain?â
âFine,â Rex said. But he didnât move. Not right away.
âIâm not fragile, you know,â you said gently, trying to smile.
âI know,â he said, voice low. âThatâs⊠kind of the problem.â
Before you could ask what he meant, Hardcase stomped up, practically glowing with pride and holding two ration bars.
âBrought the last of the chocolate ones! And look who Iâm giving it to,â he said with a wink, tossing you one.
âYouâre too good to me, Hardcase,â you laughed, catching it.
âI try,â he said, puffing out his chest before flicking his gaze toward Rex. âCaptain looked like he needed one too, but I figured you deserved it more.â
âSubtle,â Rex muttered.
Hardcase just grinned wider.
âž»
Later that night you paid a visit to the medical tent. Your wrist was bruised. Not badâjust a scuffle with a tangle of thornvineâbut the medics insisted on a check-up.
âI told you not to block a shot with your arm,â Kix muttered, gently applying salve as you sat on the edge of a cot.
âI didnât block it. I intercepted it creatively.â
He snorted, soft. âYou know you scare the hell out of us sometimes?â
You looked up. âUs?â
âAll of us,â he admitted, quieter now. âRex wonât say it, but he barely sleeps when youâre on mission. Fives gets twitchy if he canât see you in his line of sight. Jesse doesnât even pretend to hide it anymore.â
You blinked at him.
âYou too?â you asked before you could stop yourself.
Kix held your gaze. âWould it really surprise you?â
You didnât answer. Because it did. And it didnât. And that was⊠confusing.
Before he could say more, Coric stepped into the tent.
âEverything good?â he asked, glancing between the two of you.
âFine,â Kix said shortly. âSheâs taken care of.â
Coric raised a brow but said nothing, just gave you a faint smile and left.
The silence afterward buzzed like static.
âž»
The morning started off normally enough.
Warm-up sparring. Partner rotations. But when you paired off with Rex, things shifted.
He was precise, careful, calculated. He always had been. But when your saber skimmed a little too close, and he reached out to stop your momentumâ
His hand settled at your waist. Not for balance. Not for combat.
You froze.
So did he.
ââŠSorry,â he said, voice hoarse, withdrawing quickly.
You didnât speak. You couldnât. Because your heart was pounding.
And then came Hardcase, throwing himself between you two, laughing as he tossed you a training staff. âMind if I cut in?â
Rex stepped back without a word.
You sparred with Hardcase next, but the smile you gave him didnât quite reach your eyes. Not anymore.
Next chapter
Commander Wolffe x Princess Reader
R4 trilled while plugging dataâspikes into the sleek shuttleâs navâcomputer; TC polished the boarding ramp as though senators would rate its shine. Inside, [Y/N] sealed a crate of festival giftsâkyberâlaced lanterns, citrusâspiced tihaarâwhen the hangar doors parted.
In strode Master Plo Coon and Kenobi, with his most innocent smile. Behind them Commander Cody and an impeccably straightâbacked Commander Wolffe.
Kenobi surveyed the scene, eyes twinkling. âMy lady, I trust Coruscant treated you⊠memorably?â
Ploâs mask inclined. âYes, I understand youâve already formed aâshall we sayâeffective working rapport with our best security personnel.â
TCâs head swiveled. âIf you refer to last nightâs flawless briefing, Masters, I assure you my presentation notes wereââ
ââcopied from my schematics,â R4 beeped smugly.
Kenobi chuckled. âQuite. Though some reports suggest the princess herself gathered more⊠field intelligence than anticipated.â
Wolffeâs helmet visor dipped a millimeter; only Cody saw the pained grimace. He murmured, âSteady, vod, youâve faced droid armiesâJedi teasing wonât kill you.â
[Y/N] kept a serene smile. âCoruscant was enlightening, Master Kenobi. Your commanders are⊠thorough.â
âThorough,â Kenobi echoed, barely suppressing a grin. âAn admirable quality.â
Plo produced a dataâchip. âYour Highness, these are revised escort protocols for the festival. The Council looks forward to cooperating.â
Cody added, âWolfpack leads the clone detachment. Weâll rendezvous in orbit over Karthuna.â He patted Wolffeâs pauldron. âCommander is eager to ensure everything runs smoothly.â
Wolffe managed, âHonored to serve, Princess.â Translation: please let the floor swallow me.
R4 gave a warbling laugh. TC translated dryly, âR4 suggests the commander already has extensive knowledge of our customsâparticularly nightlife.â
Kenobi coughed into his sleeve; even Ploâs mask seemed to smile.
[Y/N] ascended the ramp, pausing beside Wolffe. Low enough for only him: âTry not to judge anyone before second breakfast, Commander.â
He answered just as quietly, âNext time, title first, drinks second.â
Her wink was pure mischief. âWhereâs the fun in that?â
With diplomatic farewells exchanged, the Jedi departed, Cody dragging a stillâsmirking Kenobi. Wolffe lingered as engines warmed, visor reflecting the princess who had upended his meticulously ordered world.
R4âs hatch closed, TC waved primly, and the shuttle lifted skywardâtoward open borders, a fiveâday festival, and a reunion sure to test the Wolfâs composure more than any battlefield.
âž»
Commander Wolffe had survived orbital bombardments, trench sieges, and General Grievousâs cacklingâbut nothing tested endurance like the embassyâs protocol droid at full lecture speed.
TC strode the aisle between jumpâseats where Wolffe, Boost, and Sinker buckled in.
ââŠand the Festival of Dawning begins with a kuurâvaan procession. That translates roughly as âdance of a thousand sparks,â involving microâkyber filaments that ignite in sequenceâquite breathtaking, provided you wear appropriate eye shielding. Now, the correct greeting is âGalâsharaâ with palms outwardânever inward, or you imply the listener lacks honor. Also, avoid offering your left handâhistorically used for bloodletting rituals dating backââ
Sinker slumped. âCommander, permission to eject myself through the airâlock.â
Boost whispered, âCould be worseâcould be a Senate speech.â
TC continued, undeterred. ââand if youâre offered sapphire tihaar, remember itâs an apology drink, not casual refreshment. Accepting without cause is tantamount to admitting fault. Speaking of fault, did you know the northern faultâlineââ
Wolffe pinched the bridge of his nose. âDroid, compile this in a datapad. My men will study quietly.â
âOh, certainly, Commander. I have already prepared a 312âpage primer, complete with holoâgraphs.â
Sinker mouthed threeâhundredâtwelve?! Boost mimed choking.
âž»
[Y/N] sat crossâlegged in her cabin, R4 projecting a secure blue holo of King Talrenâsilverâbearded, stern eyes softened only for his daughter.
âLittle Dawn,â he greeted, using her childhood nickname, âI wonât waste time. Loyalist scouts uncovered three insurgent cells. Extremists insist reopening our borders is betrayal; some whisper of Separatist aid.â
A map flared beside himâred sigils in mountain passes.
âI need those cells silenced before the festival opens,â the king said. âYou know the terrain. Take whatever force is required, but keep offâworlders uninvolved. This must look like an internal matter.â
[Y/N] bowed her head. âIt will be done, Father.â
The holo faded. R4 beeped a query.
âPrep infiltration loadouts,â she answered. âLowâflash sabers, sonic mines, and two squads of Shadow Guard on standby. We strike first nightfall.â
R4 warbled approval, projecting tactical overlays. She added waypoints, carving silent routes Wolffeâs clones would never notice.
âž»
Later, passing Wolffe in the corridor, [Y/N] offered a casual nod. He paused, as if sensing undercurrents, but protocol kept him silent.
Behind him TC called, âCommander, I neglected to mention Karthunese dining orderâif the Princess serves you last, itâs actually a sign of high esteemââ
Wolffe muttered a prayer for battlefield blasterfire to drown out etiquette lessons.
In her quarters, [Y/N] traced insurgent sigils on the holo with a gloved fingertip, resolve hardening. Opening Karthunaâs doors to the galaxy meant showing strength the old wayâquiet, decisive, unseen.
And if the Wolf and his troopers never learned how the festival stayed peaceful, all the better.
âž»
The twin suns of Karthuna cast copper light over the obsidianâpaved skyâdock as the Republic cruiser settled with a hiss of repulsors. King Talren stood flanked by honor guards whose sunâmetal armor threw brilliant flares into the air. Behind him waited the planetary senator, Senator Vessar, and the everâskeptical Governor of Interior Works, Governor Rhun.
The ramp dropped. Out strode Masters PloâŻCoon and Kenobi, Chancellor Palpatine in ceremonial crimson, a cluster of senators, and the clone detachment led by Commanders Cody and Wolffe flanked by Boost and Sinker.
Talren bowed with a warriorâs economy. âKarthuna welcomes the Republic. May the Force greet you as friend and guest.â
A respectful murmur answered. Yet even before introductions concluded, his daughter slipped to his side, murmured, âUrgent Shadow Guard matter, Father,â andâstill in civilian vest and braidâbeelined for a sandâsilver speeder.
Wolffeâs visor tracked her, but protocol held him. Engines howled; the speeder vanished down a cliffâside liftâtube toward the high passes.
Talren inhaledâthe first lie ready on his tongue.
âž»
Kenobi stepped forward, large smile in place. âYour Majesty, we look forward to your famous Festival of Dawning.â
âAs do we all,â Talren replied, steering the party toward the citadelâs balcony overlooking the festival valleyâfar from launch bays or military comms.
Chancellor Palpatine clasped gloved hands. âYour daughter leads the festivities, does she not? I had hoped to congratulate her.â
âShe prepares aâŠsurprise presentation,â Talren said smoothly. âArtistsâ temperaments, Chancellor.â
Governor Rhun muttered just loud enough, âMore like a warrior itching for mischief.â
Senator Vessar chimed in, tone dripping dry humor, âI assure our offâworld partners the princess habitually vanishes moments before debuting something spectacularâor spectacularly dangerous.â
Talren fixed them both with a steelâedged smile that promised discussion later.
PloâŻCoon shifted his weight, KelâDor mask unreadable. âYour Highness, Clone Commander Wolffe will require coordination with your security captain.â
âOf course.â Talren gestured toward the fortress doors. âCommander, my staff will relay schematics over luncheon. Meanwhile, allow me to show the Chancellor our kyberâterraced gardensâquite safe, I assure you.â
Wolffeâs unspoken protest died behind the visor; duty bound, he followed Cody toward a briefing alcove where TC awaited with yet another dataâslab. Talren breathed easier: one crisis delayed, if not averted.
As the king guided the diplomats through colonnades, Governor Rhun leaned in: âYou risk interstellar incident if the princess sparks bloodshed while the Republic picnics outside our walls.â
Talrenâs voice stayed velvet, danger beneath. âBetter insurgent blood in the mountains than senator blood in the streets.â
Senator Vessar added, halfâteasing, âIf she returns with soot on her boots, I shall schedule extra press holos to reframe it as heroic cultural demonstration.â
Kenobi caught the whisper, grin curving. âYour court seemsâŠspirited, Majesty.â
Talren allowed the tiniest exhale of amusement. âKarthuna has waited fifteen years to step back onto the galactic stage, General. We intend to give a performance worth the ticket.â
Above them, fireworks crews tested microâsparklers; bright hisses masked the distant roar of a speeder blazing toward insurgent territory.
In a quiet moment against the balcony rail, Talren gazed over valley tents blooming for festival week, mind split between choreography of diplomats and the razorâwork his daughter undertook beyond those peaks.
He whispered to the wind, âReturn swift, Little Dawn.â
âž»
By midâafternoon the princess was still missing.
Commander Wolffe stood on the citadel parapet overlooking the valleyâs bustling festival city, visor fixed on the distant scar of mountains her speeder had taken.
Local SunâGuard Captain Arven stepped up, spearhaft tapping stone.
âEnjoying the view, offâworlder?â
âIâd enjoy it more if your crown heir were within comârange,â Wolffe replied. âTransmit her last coordinates.â
âPrincess has classified authority.â
Wolffeâs servoâjoint clicked as his gauntlet clenched. âMy mandate is to protect every Republic dignitary on this rockâincluding her.â
Arven smirked. âKarthuna protected itself centuries before troopers in white armor needed it. Stand down, Commander.â
Codyâs voice crackled through Wolffeâs comlink: âEasy, vod. Diplomacy first.â
Wolffe never took his eye from the peaks. Diplomacy ends when the VIP bleeds, he thoughtâand weighed the odds of âborrowingâ a gunship.
New LAATs screamed in, disgorging Jedi and clones.
Anakin Skywalker and Ahsoka Tano with the 501st, assigned to guard Senator PadmĂ© Amidala of Naboo and a cadre of CoreâWorld legislators.
Masters Mace Windu and KiâAdiâMundi arrived with Commanders Ponds and Bacara respectively, doubling ground strength.
Skywalker clapped Wolffeâs pauldron. âHeard your princess pulled a disappearing actâsounds like my kind of trouble.â
âNot helping, General,â Wolffe growled, though Ahsokaâs sympathetic grin eased his temper a notch.
Senators debarked in a flurry of aides, holoârecorders, and fashion impractical for mountain air. Festival staff hustled to reroute them toward reception hallsâdistraction, Talren hoped, until his daughter returned.
Master Yoda, leaning on his gimer stick, sought King Talren atop a sunâwarmed terrace strewn with kyber windâchimes. The diminutive Jedi regarded the monarchâs sunâmetal cuirass and the twinâbladed saber at his hip.
âStrong in the Force, your people are,â Yoda began. âYet light and dark you name not. Curious, this is.â
Talren inclined his head. âMaster, on Karthuna we are taught: there is no dawn without night. Deny darkness, and daylight loses meaning. Balance is not the absence of shadow, but its harmony with light.â
âHmmm.â Yodaâs ears twitched thoughtfully. âUnnatural, you say, to void one side?â
âAs unnatural as silencing half a heartbeat,â Talren answered. âWe do not fear the shadow; we fear imbalance.â
Windâchimes chimed like distant sabers. Yoda closed his eyes, absorbing the resonance.
âMuch to learn, even I have,â he murmured. âAnd much to guard, we both must.â
Talrenâs gaze drifted to the mountains. âAgreed, Master Yoda. Balance must sometimes be defended by hidden blades.â
âž»
Sunset torched the valley when a sandâsilver speeder roared through the citadel gates. Clone guards scrambled aside as [Y/N] leapt off, still in dustâstreaked vest and combat shorts. She vaulted a barricade, sprinting for the grand foyer.
âHeyâcivilian access is restricted!â bellowed Commander Fox, Crimson Guard staff lowered across her path.
She halted, breath steady despite the climb. âI live here, thanks.â
Before Fox could run ID, Chancellor Palpatine emerged from a delegation knot, eyes narrowing with foxâlike curiosity.
âMy dear, racing through secure halls in suchâŠpractical attireâis something amiss?â
[Y/N] offered a flawless court bow that contrasted sharply with her grimeâspattered boots. âMerely lastâminute festival preparations, Chancellor. Please excuse me; I must dress for the gala.â
Palpatineâs smile sliced thin. âAh, duty never rests. I look forward to your presentation this evening.â
Fox straightened as realization dawned. âWaitâyouâreââ
She winked. âClassified, Commander.â Then slipped past, leaving red armor and red robes equally bemused.
In her chamber, TC fussed with brocade gowns while R4 powered a sonic shower.
âYour Highness, the schedule is punishing: welcome gala at nineteenâhundred, holoâaddress at twentyâtwo, and saber exhibition by dawn.â
âThen weâd better look lethal and lovely,â [Y/N] said, toweling off. She chose a floorâlength gown of midnight silk that clung to sculpted muscle, high slits revealing thigh holsters for compact hilts. Sunâmetal pauldrons mirrored her crown, but the gownâs sleeveless cut displayed the lattice of scars down both armsâplasma burns, shrapnel lines, duelist nicksâeach a story she refused to hide.
TC clipped the circlet into her damp hair. âMight I suggest gloves to soften the, ah, impression?â
She flexed scarred fingers. âNo. Let the galaxy see what Karthunaâs balance looks like.â
R4 projected her entrance route. She studied it, then smiled. âTime to charm senators, silence rumors, andâperhapsâmake a wolf squirm.â
âž»
A fanfare of crystal horns cut through conversation. Doors parted, revealing PrincessâŻ[Y/N] radiant in midnight silk and sunâmetal crown, scars on her bare arms glinting like silver filigree. Senators gaspedâhalf at the regality, half at the unapologetic battleâmarks.
Master Kenobi murmured to Skywalker, âGrace and menace in equal measureâdefinitely your type, Anakin.â
Skywalker smirked. âSheâd have me for breakfast.â
PadmĂ© Amidala complimented the gownâs craftsmanship; [Y/N] returned praise for Nabooâs relief programs, steering talk away from rumored insurgents.
Master Windu approached her, he attempted to discuss security perimeters; the princess assured him Karthunaâs Shadow Guard had âevery shadow covered.â
Across the room, Governor Rhun whispered to holoreporters, stoking stories of her âreckless mountain excursion.â TC hovered, intercepting leading questions with cutting etiquette lessons.
Commander Wolffe, helmet clipped to belt, stood near a terrace arch with Cody and PloâŻCoon. When [Y/N] approached, conversation faltered like a blaster misfire.
She offered a delicate curtsyâmischief in her eyes. âCommander, I trust the briefing notes wereâŠilluminating?â
âThey were extensive,â Wolffe said evenly. âYet somehow omitted your talent for disappearing.â
âAh, but every good security test includes an unscheduled drill.â She stepped closer, voice just for him: âYou passedâeventually.â
The faintest flush darkened Wolffeâs neck. âNext time give me a comm frequency, not a cliff to chase.â
[Y/N] arched a brow. âAnd deny you the exercise?â Her fingers brushed the edge of his pauldron as she glided past. âMeet me on the terrace at midnightâstrictly business, of course.â
Wolffe exhaledâhalf growl, half laughâas Cody elbowed him, grinning. âCareful, vod. That one dances with both halves of the Force.â
Strings struck up Karthunaâs dawnâwaltz. Jedi mingled with diplomats while clone troopers ringed the hallâs perimeter. Suspicion, politics, and bright music braided in the airâyet for a heartbeat, harmony held.
In the high galleries, R4 scanned faces, feeding the princess data on a Separatist envoy concealed among trade delegatesâtonightâs real threat.
Midnight loomed, and outside the terrace doors, mountain winds whispered of balance, blades, and a wolf answering a princessâs call.
âž»
PrincessâŻ[Y/N] leaned against the balustrade, moonâsilver kissing the scars on her shoulders. Commander Wolffe stood close, arms foldedâattempt at stoic ruined by her playful tug on the strap of his pauldron.
âStill on duty, Commander?â she teased.
âAlways.â
âSo devoted,â she murmured, fingers ghosting along the seam where synthâskin met armor. âMakes a woman wonder how else that focus mightââ
A scarlet bolt sizzled through the ballroom windows. Shouts. Glass rained like crystal hail.
Inside, Governor Rhun lay sprawled behind an overturned buffet, cloak smoking at the shoulder. Clone guards returned fire toward upper galleries; a masked shooter vaulted onto a chandelier cable and vanished in a flashâgrenadeâs glare.
Skywalker, Ahsoka, Windu ignited sabers; Codyâs troopers fanned out. Wolffe ushered [Y/N] through the shattered doors into the throne corridor, senators scrambling behind.
âž»
Heavy doors slammed. Present: King Talren, Chancellor Palpatine, Masters Yoda, Windu, Kenobi, Commanders Cody, Wolffe, Ponds, Bacara, Senator PadmĂ©, and a handful of shaken delegates. Rhun, arm bactaâwrapped, was dragged in by medics.
Tension whipped like live wire.
[Y/N] broke the silence, voice flat: âPity the shooter missed.â
Gasps; Wolffeâs helmet snapped toward her.
Rhun snarled. âShouldâve been you that got shot!â
She advanced, eyes blazing. âI opposed reopening our borders. Tonight proves me right. We invited every power broker in the war to one valleyâpainted a target the size of a moon.â
King Talrenâs tone cut ice. âPeace requires risk.â
âBlind risk courts massacre,â she shot back. âInsurgents in our mountains, Separatist agents in our ballroomânow assassins under our roof.â
Palpatine interjected silkily, âSurely, Princess, the Republic can strengthen your security.â
âMore soldiers wonât erase the bullâsâeye you represent, Chancellor.â
Mace Winduâs gaze narrowed. âYou suggest isolation while the galaxy burns?â
âI suggest survival,â she answered.
Arguments flaredâsenators citing diplomacy, clones citing protocol. Wolffe stepped between factions, voice drillâsergeant sharp: âFocus. Assassin is still loose. Mandates later, lockdown now.â
PloâŻCoon, calm amid storm, nodded approval.
King Talren exhaled. âCommander Wolffe, you have joint authority with my Shadow Guard. Hunt the shooter.â
Wolffe met [Y/N]âs gazeâheat of earlier flirtation replaced by razor respect. âPrincessâcoming?â
She clicked twin sabers to her belt. âLead the way, Commander.â
Rhun blanched; PadmĂ© exchanged a knowing look with Kenobiâbattle partners born.
The moment the throneâroom doors slammed behind them, [Y/N] was already movingâmidnight gown gathered in one fist, the other dropping her double sabers into waiting palms.
Wolffe fell in at her shoulder, DCâ17 raised. The marble corridor echoed with their synchronized footfalls.
âShadow Guard breach tunnelâs this way,â she hissed, sweeping aside a wallâtapestry to reveal a spiral stair cut straight into obsidian.
He nodded once. âAfter you, Princess.â
The air grew cooler, alive with a faint crystalline hum. Iridescent kyber veins glowed within the stone, casting violet and jade shadows across their path.
Wolffe switched his helmet lamp to lowâband; [Y/N] didnât botherâher peopleâs Forceâattuned sight caught every shimmer.
A blaster scorch on the stair railing.
âFresh,â she murmured.
âMeans weâre close,â Wolffe replied, pulse settling into the calm that preceded battle.
The stair disgorged them into a vast cavernâkyber pillars rising like frozen lightning. At the far end, the assassinâs silhouette leapt between crystal spires, cloak tattered by security bolts.
Wolffeâs comm clicked twiceâBoost and Sinker sealing exits above.
âCorner him,â Wolffe ordered.
âAlive,â [Y/N] added. âI want intel before he bleeds out.â
They split wordlessly: Wolffe low along a mineral ridge, [Y/N] sprinting the high ledge, gown whipping behind like a warâbanner.
The assassin spun, twin WESTARs barking scarlet. Wolffe dove, bolts sparking off crystal as [Y/N] sprang from above, sabers igniting.
A vibroâdagger flicked from the assassinâs wristâmet by Wolffeâs gauntlet, beskad plating deflecting the strike. He slammed the butt of his pistol into the assailantâs ribs.
âYield,â the commander growled.
A hissed curse the killer smashed a detonator against the pillar. Kyber screamed as fractures spiderâwebbed, light flaring.
[Y/N] threw Wolffe back with a Forceâshove and thrust both sabers into the crystal, channeling energy away in a surge of blinding radiance. The explosion muted to a concussive thump; shards rained harmlessly.
When vision cleared, the assassin lay dazed, binders already clamping on under Wolffeâs practiced hands.
âWho hired you?â the princess demanded.
The prisoner spat blood, defiant. âKarthunaâs own who crave true freedomâand the Confederacy rewards such courage.â
Wolffeâs visor tipped toward [Y/N]. Confirmation.
âž»
Governor Rhunâs voice boomed across the ballroom remnantâholocams hovering:
âThis outrage proves openness invites anarchy! I petition immediate curfew, martial oversight by local forces, and expulsion of unnecessary offâworld elements!â
Several senators, rattled, murmured agreement. Separatist sympathizers whispered through the crowd, feeding fear.
Master Windu folded his arms. âGovernor, the assassin wielded Separatist tech. Cooperation with the Republic, not isolation, thwarts such threats.â
Rhunâs smile was razorâthin. âYet my princess would see me dead; perhaps the Council should examine internal loyalties first.â
King Talrenâs reply was cut short by the distant rumble of kyberâcatacomb fight vibrations reaching high halls. Panic rippled anew.
Wolffe and [Y/N] emerged, armor and gown dusted in crystal powder, prisoner in tow. Gasps rippled through assembled officials.
âGovernor Rhun,â [Y/N] announced, voice carrying. âYour assassin failed. And heâs confessed to Separatist backingâbacking that feeds on fear you happily sow.â
Rhunâs complexion drained.
Palpatine stepped forward, tone silken. âA grave accusation, Princess. Proof?â
Wolffe activated the assassinâs cracked vambrace: a holoâsigil of the Techno Union flickered. That, plus recorded confession from his helmetâcam, filled the air in chilling blue.
Yodaâs ears drooped, sad but certain. âDarkness invited not by borders, but hearts seeking power, yes.â
Arguments flared, but now the tide shifted: senators demanding inquiry into Rhunâs dealings, Jedi reinforcing joint patrols, clones and SunâGuard sharing data rather than territory. The assassin was led away.
In the aftershock, [Y/N] turned to Wolffe, adrenaline still bright in her eyes.
âYou kept up,â she said softly.
âYou lit up half a mountain,â he retorted, relief threading the words.
A grin tugged her lips. âBalance, Commanderâlittle light, little dark.â
His chuckle surprised them both. âNext time, maybe just a dance.â
She offered her armâscarred, unhidden. He took it, escorting her back into the fractured ballroom where a new balanceâuneasy, hardâwonâwaited to be forged.
Previous Part
Star Wars Rebels and Andor both begin in 5 BBY but are aimed at two different audiences and even if they weren't it's entirely realistic to expect that even in dark times like the Empire there's going to be silly light-hearted days for our heroes
All this to say it's kinda funny to imagine that while Andy Serkis was giving a rousing speech to prisoners to rebel against a fascist gulag system building a nuclear weapon, somewhere across the galaxy some punk-ass street rat who always calls himself Jabba the Hutt is trying to corral a herd of panicked pigs that literally turn into giant balloons when they get scared
ScorchâŻĂâŻReader
Blaster bolts lit the Shipyards catwalks like strobe lights in a nightâclub. Not the vibe youâd planned when you sliced the maintenance door for a clean bounty grab. One step inâboomâthree Separatist commandos, a Vultâdroid wing overhead, and four Republic commandos in matte Katarn armor stacking up beside you.
Bossâorange pauldrons, voice like a field sergeant holoâadâbarked, âUnknown armed asset on deck Câ7, identify.â
You spun your WESTAR pistol. âAsset? Cute. Nameâs [Y/N]. Freelance.â
To your right, the greenâstriped commando muttered, âFreelance complication.â
Behind him, the crimsonâvisored sniper gave a low chuckle. âComplicationâs bleeding already.â
And then the demolition expertâScorch, yellow stripes, joking even under fireâleaned out, lobbed a flash, and yelled over the alarm, âHey, freelancer! Whereâs your head at? Left or right? Pick a lane before someone decorates the floor with it.â
Something about the grin in his voice made you smirk. You dropped behind a crate with them just as the flash popped. âGuess itâs with you nerfâherders for the next five minutes.â
Five minutes stretched into an hour of shutdown corridors, hacked bulkheads, and mortar echo. Fixer sliced the security mainframe; you handled the underside maintenance ports he couldnât reach without alerts. Your bounty (a Neimoidian logistician) was fleeing in the same direction as Deltaâs target datapackâperfect overlap.
Sev provided overwatch, grimly amused, âBounty hunterâs got decent trigger discipline. Donât shoot her yet.â
Bossâ voice echoed over the comms, âMission first. Everyone out aliveâoptional.â
Scorch, planting shaped charges, kept the tone light. âCâmon, Boss. Optional? I was just getting to like her. She laughs at my jokes.â
âIâm laughing at the absurd probability I survive this.â
âStick with me, youâll live. Probably. Ninetyâish percent.â
you and Scorch sprinted down a service tunnel to place the last charge.
He tossed you a spare detonator. âPush that when Sev says âugly lizard,â okay?â
âWhy that code?â
âBecause he only says it when a Trandoshan shows up, and thatâs exactly when we want the bang.â
Sure enough, Sevâs dry voice soon crackled, âUgly lizard, twelve oâclock.â You hit the switch. The deck buckled, cutting off enemy reinforcements. Scorch whooped, slammed his gauntlet against yours. âTold ya. Harmonic teamwork.â
âž»
With the datapack secured and your bounty stunned in binders, you and Delta reached the evac gunship. Boss motioned you aboard. âRepublic intel could use your debrief.â
You eyed the Neimoidian. âHeâs my paycheck.â
Fixer chimed in âRepublic will pay more for him and the pack.â
âAnd we didnât vaporize you. Factor that into the fee.â Sev said dryly.
Scorch stepped closer, visor tilting. âLook, [Y/N]âheadâs gotta be somewhere, right? Why not keep it above water instead of floating in space? Ride with us, collect a bonus, maybe grab a drink later.â
You raised a brow. âWith commandos?â
He shrugged. âI make a mean reactorâcore cocktail. Ask Sev, he hates it.â
âBecause itâs toxic,â Sev deadpanned.
You exhaled, Chaos, adrenalineâthese kriffers matched the tempo of your life better than any cartel employer had.
âFine,â you said, hauling the Neimoidian up the ramp. âBut the drinkâs on you, DemoâBoy.â
Scorchâs laugh filled the gunship bay. âKnew your head was in the right place.â
âž»
.Hours later, in a Republic forward hangar, the bounty transfer finished. Boss handed you a credâchip far heftier than expected. âHazard compensation,â he explained.
Fixer simply noddedârespect acknowledged. Sev offered a halfâgrin. âNext time I say âugly lizard,â you better still be on our channel.â
Then Scorch leaned against a crate, helmet off, sandy hair plastered, scorchâmark across one cheek. âSo⊠drink?â
You twirled the chip between gloved fingers. âWhereâs your head at now, Scorch?â
He winked. âCurrently? Somewhere between âmission accomplishedâ and âhoping you stick around long enough for me to find out what other explosives we make together.ââ
You laughedâa real laugh, no alarms or blasterfire backing it. âBuy me that reactorâcore cocktail, and weâll see.â
As you walked out side by side, the distant clang of sortie sirens sounded almost like drums.
And in the thrum of the hangar lights, you realized: this rhythmâwild, unpredictable, deafeningâmight be exactly where your head belonged.
Commander Wolffe x Princess Reader
Summary: On the eve of her planetâs first cultural festival in fifteen years, a disguised princess shares an unforgettable night with Clone Commander Wolffe on Coruscant. By morning, secrets, sassy droids, and a highâstakes security briefing threaten to upend duty, reputation, and the delicate opening of her world to the Republic.
A/N: The planet and culture is entirely made up.
The gunship descended through Coruscantâs evening traffic like a steel predator, repulsors howling against the crossâwinds that curled between transparisteel towers. Inside, six clone commandersâCody, Bly, Gree, Fox, Bacara, and Wolffeâoccupied the troop bay in various stages of fatigue. They were returning from OuterâRim rotations, summoned straight to the capital for what the Chancellorâs aide had called a âpriority diplomatic security brief.â
Wolffe used the flight to skim intel. A blue holotablet glowed in his fleshâandâsteel hands, displaying the dossier of the delegation scheduled to arrive from Karthunaâan independent MidâRim world geographically unremarkable, culturally singular.
Karthuna: quick file
âą Isolated, mountainous planet of evergreen valleys and obsidian cliffs.
âą Atmosphere saturated with trace kyber particulatesâreason scholars cite for the populationâs universal Force sensitivity.
âą Government: hereditary monarchy tempered by a warrior senate.
âą Religion: none. Karthunese creed teaches that the Force is lifeblood, neither moral compass nor deity.
âą Average citizen competency: lightsaber fabrication by age fifteen; stateâsponsored martial tutelage from age six.
The data fascinated the commandersâespecially the byâline marked Princess [Y/N], Crown Heir, WarâChief, locals refer to her as âThe Butcher.â
Wolffe scrolled. Combat footage played: a tall woman striding through volcanic ash, twinâbladed plasmablade in constant motion, severing MagnaGuards like wheat. Every slash bled molten silver where molten metal met crystalâlaced air.
Psychâprofile excerpt
âDisplays strategic brilliance and extreme kinetic aggression.
Disregards conventional âlight/darkâ dichotomyâidentifies only âstrengthâ and âweakness in harmony with the Force.â
Postâengagement behavior: known to laugh while binding her own wounds.â
Fox leaned over, eyebrow visible above his red ocher tattoo. âThatâs the princess weâre babysitting?â
âExactly,â Wolffe answered, voice rough like gravel in a barrel. âAnd tomorrow she sits across the table from half the Senate.â
Bly grinned, toying with the jaigâeyes painted on his pauldron. âAt least the briefing wonât be boring.â
âž»
79âs was hellishly loud tonight: drumâbass remixes of Huttese trance, vibroâfloors that tingled through plastoid boots, neon that reflected off rows of white armor like carnival glass. The smell was ionic sweat, fried nuna wings, and spiced lum.
Wolffe anchored the bar, helmet on the counter, already two fingers into Corellian rye. Cody lounged to his left, Rex to his rightâfresh in from a 501st escort shift and still humming combat adrenaline.
âCanât believe you two convinced me out,â Wolffe growled.
âBrother, you need it,â Rex said, clinking glasses. âWhole Wolfpack can feel when youâre wound tighter than a detonator.â
âGive him five minutes,â Cody stageâwhispered. âHeâll be scanning exits instead of the drink menu.â
âAlready am,â Wolffe deadpanned, which made them both laugh.
The cantina doors parted and conversation sagged a noteâshe glided in. Cropped flight jacket, fitted vest, highâwaist cargo shorts; thighâhigh laces and a thin bronze braid that caught the lights like a comet tail. She had the effortless cheer of someone stepping onto a favorite holovid setâeyes round with delight, grin wide enough to beam through the floor.
She wedged in beside Wolffe, flagging the bartender with two raised fingers. âDouble lum, splash of tihaarâone for me, one for the glum commander.â
Wolffe arched a brow but accepted the glass. âYou always buy drinks for strangers?â
âOnly the ones glaring at their reflection.â She tapped his untouched visor. He couldnât help a huff of amusement.
Codyâs own brow shot up; Rexâs eyes widened in instant recognition. Princess [Y/N] of KarthunaâThe Butcherâyet here she was in civvies, acting like any tourist whoâd lost a bet with Coruscant nightlife.
Rex leaned close to Cody, speaking behind a raised hand. âThatâs her, isnât it?â
âCredits to spiceâcakes.â
âShe hasnât told him?â
âNot a word.â
Rex smirked. âFiveâcredit chip says Wolffe figures it out before sunrise.â
Cody shook his head. âHe wonât know until she walks into the briefing at 0900. Make it ten.â
They clasped forearms on it.
The woman matched Wolffe sip for sip, story for story. Where his anecdotes were sparse, hers were colorâsplattered and comedic.
When the DJ shifted into a thumping remix of the Republic anthem, she grabbed Wolffeâs wrist.
âI donât dance,â he protested.
âYou walk in circles around objectives, right? Close enough!â
She dragged him into the crush of bodies. To his surprise, he found a rhythmâleft, pivot, step; her laughter bubbled each time his armor plates bumped someone elseâs. Cody whooped from the bar. Rex held up a timer on his datapad, mouthing 48 minutes left.
At the chorus, She spun under Wolffeâs arm, back colliding with his chest. Up close he saw faint, silvery scars beneath the vestâs armholeâevidence of battles that matched his own. Yet her eyes stayed bright, unburdened, as if scars were simply postcards of places sheâd loved.
âCommander,â she teased above the music, âtell me something you enjoy that isnât war.â
He paused. âMechanic workâtuning ATâRT gyros. Clean clicks calm my head.â
âSee? You do have hobbies.â She tapped his nose. âNext round on me.â
Back at the bar Rex leaned over to Cody, âHeâs smiling. That counts as suspicion.â
âWolffe smiles once a rotation. Still ignorant.â
âž»
Near 02:00, after shared tihaar shots and a disastrous attempt at holoâsabacc, She flicked a glance toward the exit.
âCity lights look better from my place,â she offered, voice honeyâslow. âIâve got caf strong enough to wake a hibernating wampa if you need to report at ohâdarkâhundred.â
Wolffeâs lips twitched. âLead the way.â
As they weaved out, Cody elbowed Rex. âTimerâs off. Still clueless.â
âSunrise isnât here yet,â Rex countered.
âCredits say briefing,â Cody insisted, pocketing the imaginary winnings.
âž»
Lift doors slid open to a loft bathed in cityâglow: vibroâharp strings hanging from ceiling beams, halfâassembled speeder parts on the coffee table, and a breathtaking skyline framed by floorâtoâceiling transparisteel. Nothing screamed royaltyâjust a warriorâs crashâpad with too many hobbies.
She kicked the door shut, tossed her jacket aside, then hooked a finger in the lip of Wolffeâs breastplate. âArmor off, Commander. CafĂ©âs percolating, but firstâI want to map every one of those scars.â
His growl was more pleasure than warning. âFair trade. Iâm charting yours.â
Outside, airspeeder traffic stitched luminous threads across Coruscant night. Inside, two soldiersâone famous, one incognitoâlost themselves in laughter, caf, and the slow unbuckling of secrets yet to be told.
âž»
Warm dawn slanted through the loftâs unshaded transparisteel, painting the tangled figures on the bed in amber and rose. Wolffe lay on his back, left arm pillowing [Y/N] against the curve of his chest; her hair falling softly, draped over his cgest. For the first time in months heâd slept past first light, lulled by the quiet cadence of another heartbeat.
A sharp bweepâbwapâBWAA! shattered the calm.
The door whisked open and a battered R4âseries astromech barreled in, dome spinning frantic red. Right behind it minced a sandâgold TCâprotocol unit with polished vocabulator grille and the prissiest posture Wolffe had ever seen.
âWHRRâbweep!â the astromech shrilled, panels flapping.
The protocol droid placed metal hands on its hips. âReally, R4âJ2, barging into Her Highâ er, into my ladyâs private quarters is most uncouth. Though, to be fair, so is oversleeping when a planetâs diplomatic reputation depends on punctuality.â
[Y/N] groaned into Wolffeâs shoulder. âFive more minutes or I demagnetise your motivators.â
âI calculate you have negative twentyâtwo minutes, my lady,â TC sniffed. âWe have already been signaled thrice.â
Wolffe swung out of bed, discipline snapping back like a visorâclip. He retrieved blacks and armor plates, fastening them while [Y/N] rummaged for flight shorts and a fresh vest.
âGot a briefing myself,â he said, adjusting the collar seal. âHighâpriority security consult for the Senate. Some warlord princess from Karthuna is in systemâCouncil wants every contingency.â
[Y/N] paused, turning just enough that sunrise caught the concern softening her features. âI heard talk of her,â she ventured lightly. âWhatâs your take?â
âFiles say sheâs lethal, unpredictable. Planet locals call her The Butcher.â He shrugged into his pauldron. âFrankly, senators donât need another sword swinging around. Volatile leaders get people killed.â
A flicker of hurt crossed her eyes before she masked it with a crooked grin. âMaybe sheâsâŠmisunderstood?â
âMaybe,â Wolffe allowed, though doubt edged his tone. âEither way, jobâs to keep the civvies safe.â He slid his helmet under an arm, suddenly uncertain how to classify the night theyâd shared. âIâhad a good time.â
She rose on tiptoe, pressed a quick kiss to the corner of his mouth. âSo did I, Commander. Try not to judge anyone before breakfast, hmm?â
He touched the braid beads lightlyâa silent promise to see her againâthen strode out, door hissing shut behind him.
Y/N] exhaled, shoulders slumping. R4 emitted a sympathetic wooâoop.
TC clucked. âI did warn you anonymity breeds complications. Still, we must hurry. The Chancellor expects you in the Grand Convocation Chamber at 0900.â
A wicked spark replaced her melancholy. âNo, the Chancellor expects a Karthunese representativeâhe never specified which.â
She strode to a wardrobe, withdrawing a slim holoprojector and thrusting it at TC. âCongratulations, youâre promoted.â
TCâs photoreceptors brightened alarm-red. âMâmy lady, I am programmed for etiquette, translation, and the occasional moral lecture, not military security architecture!â
âRecite the briefing notes I dictated last night, answer questions with condescensionâyour specialtyâthen schedule a followâup on the command ship. R4 will project the holomaps.â
The astromech warbled enthusiastic profanity at the prospect.
[Y/N] buckled a utility belt over her civvies and moved toward the balcony doors. âIf anyone asks, I was delayed calibrating kyber flow regulators. Iâll review the security grid this afternoonâafter I explore a certain Commanderâs favorite gyroâshop.â
TC gathered the holoâpads in a flurry. âVery well, mistress, but mark my vocabulatorâthis deception will shortâcircuit spectacularly.â
âRelax.â She flashed a grin eerily similar to last nightâs barroom mischief. âWhatâs diplomacy without a little theater?â
âž»
Senators, Jedi, and clone commanders straightened as doors parted.
âbut instead of a sunâcircled warâprincess, a polished TCâprotocol droid glided to the rostrum with an astromech rolling at its heel.
TCâs vocabulator rang out, crisp as a commâchime.
âHonored Supreme Chancellor, venerable Jedi Council, distinguished Senators: Karthuna greets you.âŻMy lady regrets that urgent kyberâcompressor calibrations prevent her personal attendance, yet she bids me convey our joy at opening our borders for the first time in fifteen standard years so all may share our fiveâday Cultural Festival Week. We trust todayâs briefing will guarantee every guestâs safety and delight.â
R4âJ2 pitched a starry holomap above the dais; TC segued into ingress grids, crowdâflow vectors, and defensive perimeter options with dazzling fluency.
At the back rail, Commander Wolffeâs remaining eye narrowed.
âThatâs her astromech,â he mutteredâheâd tripped over the same droid enâŻroute to the cafâmaker two hours earlier.
Cody leaned in, voice low. âSoâhow was your night with the princess?â
Wolffeâs brain locked, replaying dawn kisses, scars⊠and the sudden absence of any surname.
âKriff.â His helmet nearly slipped from under his arm.
Next to them, Rex sighed, fished from his belt pouch, and slapped the credits into Codyâs waiting palm. Cody tried not to smirk too broadly.
Bly caught the exchange and coughed to hide a laugh. Gree murmured, âTold you the Wolf doesnât sniff pedigree till it bites him.â
Unaware of the commotion between the Commanders, TC finished with a flourish.
âKarthuna will provide one hundred honor guards, full medical contingents, and open saber arenas for cultural demonstration only. We look forward to celebrating unity in the Force with the Galactic Republic.â
Polite applause rippled through the chamber. Mace Windu nodded approval, even ChancellorâŻPalpatineâs smile looked almost genuine.
Wolffe, cheeks burning behind his visor, managed parade rest while his thoughts sprinted back to a kiss and the words try not to judge anyone before breakfast.
The princess had played him like dejarikâyet somehow he respected the move.
Cody clapped a gauntlet on his pauldron. âCheer up, vod. At least your about to spend more time with her.â
âž»
Next Part
Palpatine: Sneezes
Fox, hiding in his vents, aiming a sniper through the slats: Bless you.
Palpatine, looking up: God?
Fox, cocking the sniper: You won't be seeing him where your going.
501st x Reader
The overhead lumens slam on like artillery. Groans ripple through the barracks, but you roll out of your bunk already gathering your contraband caddyâa slim duraplast kit labeled âMkâIII MedPatchâ
Fives, halfâdressed and wholly curious, nods at the kit. âAlright, mystery boxâyou packing bacta or blasters in there?â
You flick the latch. Bottles, tubes, and sachets unfold like a miniature armoryâjust shinier and pastelâcolored.
âMoisturizer,â you say, dotting cream onto your cheeks. âSPFâŻ50. Sun in space still finds a way.â
Fives blinks. âYouâre lotionâplating your face before breakfast?â
You smile. âArmor for the skin.â
As you pat the sunscreen in, Fives watches, fascinated. âHow long does all that take? We get, like, sixty seconds to hit the refresher.â
âPractice,â you reply, capping the tube. âAnd a bit of multitasking.â
Across the aisle, Jesse mutters, âSheâs waxing her cheeks?ââwhich earns him a smack from Kix.
The medic tilts his head, curious. âActually, hydrating the epidermis reduces microâtears that form when helmets chafe. Fewer microâtears, fewer infections.â
Fives groans. âKix, not you too!â
Tup perks up. âWill it stop my forehead from peeling on desert drops?â
âOnly if you commit,â you reply, tossing him a travelâsize tube.
Tup bobbles it. âCommit to⊠face goop?â
âCommit to selfâcare, shiny,â Jesse teases, but he secretly dabs a fingertip of cream on the scar running over his temple when he thinks no oneâs watching.
Hardcase flips down from the top bunk, dangling upsideâdown. âWhat about night routine? Can we weaponize it?â
You laugh. âWeaponize hydration?â
You begin to rattle off the list for your routines while shoving items back into the caddy.
Jesse whistles. âThatâs more steps than disassembling a DCâ17.â
âItâs upkeep,â you say, snapping the kit shut. âBlasters, armor, skin. Treat them right and they wonât fail midâmission.â
Kix, ever the medic, hums thoughtfully. âPrevention over cureâsound protocol.â
Rex marches past the doorway, barking for PT. He notices the cluster around your bunk, eyes the lotions, then decides heâs not paid enough to investigate at 0500. âFive minutes to muster. Whatever youâre doingâdo it faster.â
The squad scrambles. You close your caddy with a click, satisfied. Step one: curiosity planted.
As you pass Fives he murmurs, âArmor for the skin, huh?â
âExactly, vod,â you grin, tapping his chest plate. âAnd just like yoursâitâs personal issue.â
He barks a laugh, then jogs after the othersâalready plotting how to requisition micellar water under âoptical clarity supplies.â
Curiosity piqued, routine revealed. Now the real fun begins.
âž»
An hour later, after PT and standard mess rations, the 501st files toward the strategy room. Youâre meant to present local intel, but you duck into the refresher first to rinse sweat and slap on a leaveâin hair mask.
Inside, Tup stares at his reflection, damp curls drooping. âHow tight is the towel supposed to be?â
âSnug, not suffocating.â You demonstrate the twistâandâtuck, shaping his towel into a tidy turban. He looks like a spa holoâadâif spa ads featured wideâeyed clone troopers in duty blacks.
Rex storms in midâlesson. The captainâs expression cycles through confusion, exasperation, acceptance in under a second. âExplain.â
âDeepâconditioning,â you answer. âHelmet hairâs a war crime.â
Dogma, arms folded behind Rex, scowls. âRegulation headgear only.â
You pat the towel. âTechnically, still a head covering.â
Hardcase bursts from a stall, face covered in neonâgreen clay. âI CANâT MOVE MY MOUTH! THIS STUFF SETS LIKE DURASTEEL!â
Kix swoops in with a damp cloth. âThatâs the detox mask, vod. Rinse at four minutes, not forty.â
Fives leans in the doorway, filming everything. âHistorical documentation, Rex. Posterity.â
Rex pinches the bridge of his nose. âYou have two minutes to look like soldiers before General Skywalker arrives.â
Tup whispers, âUh⊠do I rinse orâŠ?â
You yank the towel free with a flourish; his curls bounce, glossy. âReady for battle,â you declare.
Rex sighs. âOne minute fortyâfive.â
âž»
The 501st rolls in after an endless maintenance drill, expecting lightsâout. Instead, youâve transformed the common room into a makeshift spa: footlockers draped in clean towels, maintenance lamps angled like vanity lights, and rows of mysterious packets labeled hydrating, brightening, volcanic detoxâŠ
Rex stops dead in the doorway, helmet under his arm.
âVod, why does it smell like a medâbay and a flowerâshop had a firefight?â
You beam. âTeamâbuilding. Captainâs orders.â
Rex narrows his eyesâhe definitely did not give those ordersâbut one look at the exhausted squad convinces him to play along. You pass out microfiber headbandsâTupâs bun peeks through adorablyâthen cue soft loâfi on a datapad.
âž»
The 501st rolls in after an endless maintenance drill, expecting lightsâout. Instead, youâve transformed the common room into a makeshift spa: footlockers draped in clean towels, maintenance lamps angled like vanity lights, and rows of mysterious packets labeled hydrating, brightening, volcanic detoxâŠ
Rex stops dead in the doorway, helmet under his arm.
âVod, why does it smell like a medâbay and a flowerâshop had a firefight?â
You beam. âTeamâbuilding. Captainâs orders.â
Rex narrows his eyesâhe definitely did not give those ordersâbut one look at the exhausted squad convinces him to play along.
You pass out microfiber headbandsâTupâs bun peeks through adorablyâthen cue soft loâfi on a datapad.
Fives foams cleanser like heâs icing a ration cake, flicks bubbles at Jesse.
Hardcase grabs an industrial solvent bottle. You snatch it away. âWrong kind of chemical peel, blasterâbrain.â
Kix demonstrates gentle circular motions; the squad copies, mumbling mock mantras.
Faces disappear beneath colors and cartoons.
Fives foams cleanser like heâs icing a ration cake, flicks bubbles at Jesse.
Hardcase grabs an industrial solvent bottle. You snatch it away. âWrong kind of chemical peel, blasterâbrain.â
Kix demonstrates gentle circular motions; the squad copies, mumbling mock mantras.
Faces disappear beneath colors and cartoons.
Jesse paints Dogmaâs clay mask into perfect camo stripes; Dogma tries to protest, fails, secretly loves it.
Rex sighs as you smooth the sheet onto his face. âIf this vid leaks, Iâm demoting everyone.â
Tup giggles when the nerfâprinted mask squeaks. Fives records the sound bite for future memes.
Everyone reclines on mesh webbing strung between crates.
The timer pings. Masks come offârevealing eight glowing, ridiculously refreshed faces.
Hardcase flexes. âFeel like I could headâbutt a super tactical droid and leave an imprint.â
Fives snaps a holo of Rexâs newfound radiance. âCaptain, youâre shining.â
Rex grumbles, but his skin does glow under the fluorescents. âGet some rack time, troopers. 0600 briefing. And⊠keep the extra packets. Field supply, understood?â
A chorus of cheerful âYes, sir!â
You watch them file out, each tucking a sheetâmask packet into utility belts like contraband. Mission accomplished: the 501st is combatâreadyâand complexionâreadyâfor whatever tomorrow throws at them.
âž»
ObiâWan strolls through the hangar, robe billowing. He pauses midâconversation with Cody, eyes widening at the radiant 501st lined up for deployment.
âMy word, gentlemen, youâre positively effulgent.â
Jesse grinsâdazzling. âTraining and discipline, General.â
Cody sideâeyes Rex. âWhatever youâre doing, send the regimen to the 212th.â
Anakin trots up, spying a stash of leftover masks tucked behind Rexâs pauldron. He plucks one. âCharcoal detox? PadmĂ© swears by these.â He pockets it with a conspiratorial wink.
Rex mutters, âNecessary field supplies, General.â
You walk by, sling a goâcup of caf into Rexâs free hand. âDonât forget SPF,â you remind, tapping his helmet.
Rex looked over to Cody, Deadpan âNonânegotiable, apparently.â
âž»
Blaster fire and powdered sand fill the air. Jesse dives behind a ridge. âDoubleâcleanse tonightâthis dust is murder on my pores!â
Fives snorts through the comms. âCopy, gorgeous. Bring the aloe.â
Hardcase detonates a bunker, cheers, then yelps, âMask first, explosions laterâgot it!â
Rex stands, sand sifting off armor, skin protected under a sheer layer of sunscreen that miraculously survived the firefight. He shakes his head but canât hide the small smile.
âAlright, 501st,â he calls. âLetâs finish this opâtonight we rehydrate, tomorrow we conquer.â
You chuckle, loading a fresh powerâcell. The war may rage on, but for this legion, victory now comes with a healthy glow.
âž»
A/N
This was a request, however I accidentally deleted the request in my inbox.
Boss x Reader
The door to your quarters hissed open, and before you even turned around, you felt him. That familiar presenceâsilent, commanding, unwavering. Boss was back.
You didnât need words. The way his heavy boots hit the floor, slow and steady, told you everything. The weight of the mission still hung in his posture, but beneath it, something softerâa need. For you.
He finally looked up, eyes dark behind that helmetâs visor, and you caught a flicker of relief. You stepped forward, your hand reaching for his arm, fingers curling around the reinforced armor. The tension in his shoulders eased, just a fraction.
No words were spoken, none needed.
Your fingers traced the edge of his visor, then slid down to his neck plate, where the cold metal met bare skin. Bossâs hand found your waist, pulling you closerâno space left between you now.
The heat built slowly, burning through the quiet. His grip tightened, and you tilted your head up, brushing your lips lightly over the rim of his helmet as if to remind him you were here. That this was home.
A low, almost inaudible sound vibrated from his chestâa promise, a confession. You smiled, heart racing.
Then, the world faded until it was only you and Boss, the steady beat of two hearts finding their rhythm again.
He finally took off his helmet to reveal his eyesâintense, dark, tired. The kind of tired that comes from seeing too much but still standing tall.
âYouâre here,â his voice was low, rough around the edges like gravel, but steady.
You reached up, fingertips brushing over his cheeks. âIâm not going anywhere.â
A shadow of a smile touched his lips. âEvery time I leave, I wonder if Iâll come back.â
Your hand slid from his neck to his chest, feeling the steady beat of his heart beneath the armor. âYou always do.â
His other hand cupped your cheek gently, thumb stroking as if trying to memorize your face. âYouâre my anchor. The only thing keeping me grounded when everything else is chaos.â
You leaned into his touch. âThen stay grounded. Stay with me.â
For a moment, all the walls around him seemed to crumble, and he looked vulnerableâthe soldier behind the mask.
âI want to,â he admitted, voice barely above a whisper. âMore than anything.â
You closed the small distance between you, resting your forehead against his. âThen show me. Stay.â
The tension between you was electric, but it wasnât just desireâit was relief, connection, and the unspoken promise that no matter how dark the mission, you were both each otherâs light.
He pulled you closer, the strength in his embrace both protective and tender.
And in that quiet space, with nothing but the sound of your breathing and his steady heartbeat, you both knew this was home.
Bossâs hands slid lower, tracing the curve of your waist, pulling you tighter against him. The heat between you grew, the space shrinking until the world outside ceased to exist.
His voice was a low growl near your ear. âIâve waited too long for this.â
You whispered back, âMe too.â
Just as his lips brushed yours, soft and promising, the sudden buzz of the comms cracked through the silence.
Boss pulled back slightly, annoyed but alert.
ââScorch here. Uh⊠I mightâve accidentally blown up the supply depot. Again,â came the familiar voice, a mix of sheepish and panicked.
Sevâs harsh reply followed, âYouâre gonna pay for that, Demo. Iâm coming for you.â
Boss shook his head, a smirk tugging at his lips despite himself. âSo much for a demolition expert.â
You laughed softly, the moment broken but the warmth lingering as Boss reached for his helmet.
âDuty calls,â he muttered, eyes meeting yours one last time. âBut Iâll be back.â
You nodded, voice steady. âIâll be here.â
With that, he was gone, leaving you both wanting more â and counting down until the next time.
Flower boy đ»
Prettiest man ever!?? Fives in a flowercrown is something i didnt know i needed to draw for therapy â€ïžâđ©č
Sev x Reader
The Senate landing pad still stank of charred durasteel when the four commandos in Katarn armor strode out of the dawn mist. Boots hit duracrete in perfect cadence, and every aide around you startled, skittering out of their way like spooked tookas.
The one in the center stopped in front of you.
âSenator,â the vocoder rasped, calm as a metronome, âDeltaâŻSquad assumes your protection detail.â
Youâd asked for one discreet guard after the Separatist torpedoes punched holes in your shuttle last night. Instead youâd been delivered a miniature shock battalion.
âI requested subtle,â you said dryly, sweeping your gaze over identical Tâvisors. âInstead Iâve been issued four portable war crimes.â
A bark of laughter crackled through the comms. The clone on the leftâarmor scorched black at the shouldersâtapped two fingers to his helmet. âPortable war crime, thatâs a new one, Senator. Iâm Scorch. Demo expert. You break it, I blow it.â
âStand down, Scorch,â the leader murmured. âIâm Boss. These are Fixer and Sev.â
The tallestâSevâinclined his helmet a millimeter. âWeâll try not to stain the carpets.â
You almost smiled.
âž»
Your suite looked less like a workspace and more like a forward operating base. Scorch crawled through the ceiling vents, humming while he tucked microâdet charges behind every ornate sconce. Fixer was wristâdeep in the security terminal, ripping out obsolete boards and muttering about âcode that predates the Jedi Order.â Boss paced, mapping angles of fire that only a clone commando would notice.
Sev took the window.
He didnât move, didnât even swayâjust stood with the DCâ17m sniper attachment snug against his shoulder, visor tracking the boulevard five stories below.
You returned from the kitchenette with a tray of caf. âI assume troopers run on caffeine the way senators run on spite.â
Fixer declined with a grunt. Scorch popped down from a vent to snag two cupsâone for himself, one he tried to hand to Sev by clinking the rim against the sniperâs elbow. Sev accepted without breaking sightâline.
âThanks,â he muttered. The voice behind the filter was low, gravel under ice.
You leaned against the sill beside him. âHow long can you stare at traffic before you see stars?â
âLong as it takes.â
âHealthy.â
He gave a quiet huff that might have been a laugh. âHealth is secondary. Mission first.â
Your lips twitched. âLetâs keep them aligned, Trooper.â
He finally turned his head. The visor reflected your own weary expression. âCall me Sev.â
âSo,â you ventured, âSev. Whatâs that actually short for? Your brothers keep calling you âOhâSeven.ââŻâ
A low rasp filtered through his vocoder. âSerial: RCâ1207. Clones donât waste syllablesâturns into âZeroâSeven,â then âSev.â Vau tried to rename me onceâStrillâbaitâbut Sev stuck.â
âEfficient,â you mused. âI was hoping for something poetic.â
âClosest thing to poetry we got,â he answered, âwas Sergeant WalonâŻVau reading afterâaction reports aloud and marking every missed shot in red. I preferred numbers.â
You huffed a laugh. âNumbers never filibuster.â
âExactly.â He tipped the caf under his helmet, then added with a shrug you felt more than saw: âStill, seven isnât a bad omen. Seven Geonosian snipers on my first real op. Theyâre the stripes.â
Your gaze dipped to the driedâmaroon slashes across his plate. Those kills were in the official recordâno campfire exaggeration, just Sev doing Sev. âBetter trophy than a Senate commendation,â you said.
âCommendations donât stop blaster bolts,â he agreed. âArmor paint might. Enemies aim for the bright bit.â
âNote to selfâadd highâvisibility stripes to every lobbyist I want removed.â
He chuckled, deep and short. âYou handle it with speeches, I handle it with DC charges. Same outcome; mineâs louder.â
The ceiling vent banged open and Scorchâall riotâyellow hazard marksâdropped in upsideâdown. âLouder? Did someone say louder? Because I have a threeâdet primer thatâll make democracy sing.â
Sev kept his rifle steady, unamused. âYou done wiring the vents?â
âFinished! Whole place is a merry little grave waiting to happen.â Scorch swung like a lothâmonkey. âWhatâs the banterânumerology and murder? Count me in. My favorite numberâs fortyâsevenâarms, legs, whateverâs left.â
Fixer snapped from the terminal, voice flat. âScorch, your âfestiveâ cabling is shorting the main feed. Touch another conductor and Iâll teach you binary via bluntâforce trauma.â
âHarsh love, Fix.â Scorch saluted invertedlyâŠand clipped a coil. Screens died, lights cut; the buildingâs distant alarm groaned awake.
Penâlight clickedâSevâs, white beam spearing the dark. âStay with me, Senator.â He toggled comms. âBoss, primaryâs down in the principalâs suiteâunknown cause, probably Scorch.â
Boss answered, calm and clipped. âAssume breach until proven Scorch Error. Fixer: backups. Scorch: vent lockdown. Sev, keep the package intact.â
âCopy.â Sev shifted, square in front of you. Above, Scorchâs grin hovered in the torch.
âBright side,â Scorch quipped, âif hostiles come now, they wonât see the scorch marks!â
âTouch that wire again,â Fixer warned in the dark, âand the next blackoutâs permanentâfor you.â
The auxiliary kicked in; light flooded back. Scorch fled up the duct, chastened but humming. Boss appeared in the doorway, orange visor band bright.
âClear. Scorch is off detâdetail,â he declared.
Sevâs low chuckle rumbled. âDiscipline, Deltaâstyle.â
You toasted him with the caf. âTo functional anarchy. First amendment: electrified committee chairs.â
He gave a tiny nod. âSecond amendment: motion passes with highâexplosive majority.â
A distant âI CAN SUPPLY THOSEâ echoed from the shaft.
Sideâbyâside at the window, you both let the cityâs neon river roll past, sharing bruised humor and the mutual certainty that, whatever happened next, youâd handle itâwhether by votes or by very precise blaster fire.
âž»
Sleep never really came. You were halfâdraped across a stack of datapads when every pane of transparisteel in the lounge shattered inward at onceâa prismatic roar of sound and stinging air.
A glareâwhite projectile streaked through the breach, thunked against the far wall, and bloomed into a spiderweb of crackling ion static. Lights died. Gravâconduits hiccupped. Gravity itself seemed to wobble.
âContact, east aspectâbreach charges and ion!â Bossâs voice snapped from the darkness, all business. Heâd been on silent watch in the corridor.
Sev materialised out of the gloom between you and the ruined window, rifle already hot. âDroid jumpâsquadâminimum six. Senator, with me.â
You barely had time to register the whirring hiss of BXâseries commando droids vaulting the balcony rail before Sevâs gauntlet closed around your forearm.
Boss kicked the apartmentâs panic door open with enough force to shear its hinges, emergency chemlights flickering along his orangeâstriped armour.
âFixer, Scorchâstatus?â he barked into squadâcomms while shoving a palmâsized beacon into your hand. An amber arrow blinked on its surface: PROXâCODE DELTA.
âDining areaâs a toaster, Boss. Iâm boxedâtwo droids.â
âVent shafts compromisedâmake that three,â Scorch added, laughing like it was Life Day.
âHold and delay,â Boss ordered. âWeâre exfil Alpha with the principal.â
Sev herded you down the service hall, DCâ17m coughing scarlet bolts that popped droid skulls as they rounded corners. A ricochet sizzled past your ear; you felt the heat, smelled scorched upholstery.
âKeep your head ducked,â he growled. âThat helmet budget of yours is still pending.â
You shot back, breathless, âFiled under agricultural subsidiesânobody reads those.â
âSmart.â He clipped a spare vibroblade from his thigh and pressed it into your palm. âIf it comes to closeâquartersâstab the gap at the jaw hinge.â
âCharming bedside manner, Sev.â
âBetter than a funeral eulogy.â
The maintenance lift doors yawned openâjust in time to reveal the empty shaft beyond. Gravity stabilisers flickered; wind howled up the vertical tunnel.
Boss lobbed a glowâstick; it spiralled downward, showing two hundred metres of nothing before emergency nets. âMain liftâs offline. We rappel.â
A cable launcher thunked against the upper frame. Sev snapped the line to your belt, then to his own. âClip in and step off on my count. Boss goes first.â
Blasterâfire rattled down the corridorâFixerâs voice on comms: âThird droid down, corridor secure.â
âCopy, Fix,â Boss replied. Then to you, calm and steady: âThree⊠two⊠one.â He vanished over the edge.
Sev guided you after him. The world flipped; you were suddenly running down a wall of permacrete, black void on either side, cable humming overhead. You focused on Bossâs glowing armour below, and on Sevâs hand firm between your shoulder blades.
Halfway down, a BX droid leaned out a blownâopen access door and fired upward. The cable near your hip sparked.
Sev twisted midâdescent, rifle spitting crimson. The droidâs chest plate caved; it pinwheeled into darkness.
âCable integrity?â Boss called.
âNominal,â Sev grunted. To you: âStill with me?â
âNot filing that helmet request after all,â you gasped.
âGood. Wouldâve been a waste of paperwork.â
Boots hit deck plating beside Boss. An auxiliary hangar gaped before youâservice speeders, loading cranes, and, at the far end, a battered LAAT/i gunship painted civilian grey.
Boss punched the hatch codes. âBorrowing that. Scorch, Fixerâvector to my beacon.â
Scorch: âRogerâbringing the fireworks!â
Fixer: âAnd the repair bill.â
Sev swept the bay, visor pinging heatâsigs. âTwo more droids on the gantry.â
âIâll drive,â you said, surprising yourself.
Sev angled his helmet. âCan you?â
âCommittee on Combat Logistics. I made sure senators kept their pilotâs certs current.â
Boss tossed you the cockpit datakey. âThen fly it like you filibusterâfast and ruthless.â
âž»
The gunship thundered out of the subâlevel exit just as Scorch vaulted aboard, demoâsatchel first, Fixer brokenâarmed behind him. Sev slammed the side hatch; Boss took the troop bay guns.
City lights blurred past. Sirens dopplered below. Somewhere behind, your shattered apartment flickered with fresh explosionsâScorchâs parting gift.
Sev crouched beside the cockpit, shoulder braced against the bulkhead. âSecondary safeâhouse is eighteen klicks. Weâll clear traffic for you.â
You tightened your grip on the yoke. âAppreciate it. Next housing allowance better cover blast windows.â
âThat, or we install the windows we likeâthree metres thick, transparisteel.â His tone was almost light. âAdds character.â
You glanced back, met his visor. âAnd here I thought I was the expensive one in this arrangement.â
âWorth every credit, Senator,â he saidâand for the first time you heard a smile in RCâ1207âs gravelled voice.
Outside, the dawn line crept over Coruscantâs horizonâcrimson, like Sevâs warâpaintâwhile Delta Squad regrouped in the hold, bruised but intact. The war would send more droids, more nights like this, but for now you flew toward the rising light, the commandoâs words lingering like an unspoken promise.
âž»
The scarlet bloom of predawn still clung to Sevâs visor as Delta Squad escorted you across the durasteel bridgeway toward the Sienar Senatorial Cutter waiting in docking cradle Gâ43.
Youâd only decided an hour agoâpapers signed, aideâteam recalledâthat it was time to go home: to the domed foundries of your world, to the committees that actually listened. Coruscant could keep its marble tombs.
Fixer had already swept the cutterâs navâcore; Scorch grumbled that the fuel cells were âtoo clean, suspiciously sober.â Boss, always by the datapad, had plotted the twentyâsixâhour jump. Sev walked at your left flank, rifle slung but senses wired tight.
âI still think the Senate Medical Board could clear you in two days,â he said through the vocoder, voice low.
âAnd I think if I stay two days more, the war will veto me permanently.â You managed a wry smile. âBesides, your safeâhouse couch is murderous on the lumbar.â
âCould requisition a better couch.â
âYouâd blow it up for target practice.â
âFair.â
A claxon whooped overhead, routine preâlaunch. Hangar crews gave thumbsâup as they sealed the cutterâs boarding ramp, crimson Republic insignia catching the light.
Scorch jogged back from the refuel pylon, yellow armor bright against the grey deck. âAll greenâshipâs thirstier than a cadet, but sheâs topped.â
Boss nodded. âMount up. We launch in eleven.â
You rested a hand on the cool hull, exhaled. Going home. For the first time in weeks, the knot behind your ribs loosened.
A muffled whumpâmore vibration than soundârippled underfoot. You frowned; Sevâs helmet snapped toward the cutter. An instant later a second, deeper concussion rolled across the ring. Cries echoed; deck crew scattered.
Sevâs shout hit like blaster fire: âDOWN!â
He tackled you behind a cargo skid just as the Senatorial Cutter blossomed into whiteâhot shrapnel. The blastâwave hammered the gangway, ripping durasteel like foil. Chunks of hull screamed overhead, flaming arcs against the pale sky.
Bossâs orders barked through squadâcommsââPerimeter! Trawl for secondaries!ââeven as Fixer dragged a stunned tech from the collapsing ramp. Scorch ran straight into the haze, thermal scanner up, searching for unexploded ordnance.
Your ears rang. Liquid fire licked the wreck thirty meters away; atmosphere pull whipped the flames sideways until emergency forceâscreens slammed down.
Sevâs weight still covered you, armour shielding against stray shards. Heat washed over the two of you; the copper tang of scorched electronics filled your lungs.
He leaned close, voice pitched for your ears only. âSenator, you all right?â
Heart hammering, you forced a nod. âYes.â The word came thin. âOur shipââ
âGone,â he said, absolute. âSomeone timed a shaped charge for preâboard.â
You felt the knot snap tight againârage this time, not fear. âThat hangar was Level Three clearance. Only Republic personnel.â
âOr someone wearing their code cylinder.â Sevâs visor reflected the inferno. âSaboteurâs still out there.â
Fireâsuppression foam oozed from ceiling vents; medâdroids hissed down the smokeâcurtains. Boss herded survivors past you, every gesture clipped, professional.
âSaboteur planted thermal baradium in the starboard fuel neck,â Fixer reported, one gauntlet cradling his bandaged arm. âTimed off the pressure equaliserâno remote signal.â
Scorch skidded up, visor flecked with soot. âFound partial detonator casing. Separatistâpattern, but tractable.â
Boss looked to you. âSenator, the ring isnât secure. I recommend immediate extraction to Defenderâclass corvette VigilantâCommand has a cabin we can hardâseal.â
You opened your mouthâI still have to reach my planetâbut Sev cut across gently, âYour world can wait eight more hours. You canât if thereâs a second bomber.â
You met his visor, saw your own shaken reflection. A breath in, out. âCorvette it is.â
The Vigilant detached from the ring on emergency vector, hyperdrives spooling. Through the small viewport the docking cradle burned, a smear of smoke against the stratosphere.
You sat on a cot, jacket singed, palms trembling. Sev posted at the door, Boss conferring with the bridge. Fixer typed oneâhanded at a forensic padd; Scorch fussed, pulling charred slivers from his pauldrons.
âYou know the irony,â Scorch called across the room, irrepressible even now. âHangars scare me more than battlefields. Too many things that go âboomâ when theyâre supposed to behave.â
Fixer grunted. âStatistically still safer than letting you cook ration bars.â
You managed a weak laugh, rubbing temples. âGentlemen, pleaseâone trauma at a time.â
Sev stepped forward, offered a flask of electrolyte water. âSip slowly.â
You obeyed, then asked, âAnyone else hurt?â
âMinor burns only,â Boss answered, approaching. âBut the Separatists just escalated. Cutterâs manifest leaked thirty minutes agoâonly a very short list knew youâd leave today.â
âWhich means,â Sev finished, âthereâs a mole in Republic logistics.â
Silence pressed in, broken by the corvetteâs hyperdrive howlâthe stars outside stretched to lines.
You set the flask aside, straightened. âSo we find them.â
Boss inclined his helmet. âThatâs the plan.â
Sevâs voice dropped, meant only for you. âAnd until we do, no transports. No public schedules. We move when we control every variable.â
A beat. Then you asked, quietly fierce, âDoes that include better couches?â
The sniperâs helmet tipped, the faintest nod. âAnd blast windows thick enough for a rancor.â
Despite everythingâthe smoke, the dead crew, the gutâdeep dreadâyou felt a spark of something steadier than fear. Delta had you. And you werenât done fighting.
Outside, hyperspace opened like a blue fracture, swallowing the Vigilantâbut not the promise Sev had made, soft as a sniperâs breath: Theyâd failed to kill you twice. Third time would never come.
âž»
The Vigilant slipped into hyperspace hours ago, but sleep never boarded with the rest of you.
When the muted corridor lights dimmed for shipânight, you found yourself driftingârestlessâuntil the muffled clank of a familiar gait guided your steps.
Most racks were dark, humming behind containment fields, yet one bench lamp burned low. Sev sat there, helmet off, the harsh light carving shadows along the scar that split his right temple. He was fieldâstripping the DCâ17m with the same care a jeweler gives crystal.
You halted at the threshold. âCouldnât sleep either?â
Crimson eyes flicked upâtired, alert, softening when they found you. âBlaster lubricantâs cheaper than sedatives.â
You ventured closer, palms tucked in your sleeves to hide the tremor still living there. âI wanted to thank you. You put yourself between me andââ You gestured at empty air that smelled faintly of ionized smoke. âEverything.â
He reassembled the last actuator, set the rifle aside. âThatâs the job.â
âI know when duty ends and choice begins.â You lowered onto the next bench. âSaving me was duty. Staying here polishing gun parts at three a.m.âthatâs choice.â
For a moment the only sound was the distant thrum of hyperdrive coils. Sevâs gaze dropped to your hands. âYouâre still shaking.â
âAdrenalineâs a stubborn tenant.â
He reached into a medâpouch, produced a flat stim patch. âCortical calmative. Wonât knock you outâjust tells the nerves the shootingâs done.â
You accepted it, hesitated. âCould put it on my own neck, but I imagine youâre more precise.â
His expression did something rareâsoftened into a hint of a smile. He peeled the backing, brushed your hair aside with surprising gentleness, and pressed the patch below your ear. Heat bloomed, then a slow coolness spread through muscle and marrow alike.
âBetter?â he asked, thumb lingering against your pulse as if counting the beats to be sure.
âGetting there.â You studied the scar on his templeâwhite against tan skin, the kind Kamino medâdroids never fully erased. âGeonosis?â
He nodded once. âTurret ricochet. Left a mark. Reminds me to keep my head down.â
âYou kept mine down today.â
A silence stretched, warm instead of awkward, until he said, low: âWhen the cutter blew, time slowed. Thoughtâif thatâs the last thing I do, itâs enough.â
Your breath hitched. âDonât say that.â
âItâs true.â His hand dropped to the bench between you, openâpalmedâan invitation without expectation.
You laid your fingers across his. Armorâcalloused knuckles felt like forged durasteel, but the grip he returned was careful, almost reverent.
âIâm glad,â you whispered, âthat âenoughâ didnât end there.â
His lips curvedâa small, earnest thing. âMe too, cyarâika.â The Mandalorian endearment slipped out before he caught it; color touched his cheeks. âSorryâ.
âDonât be.â You squeezed his hand. âI speak fluent subtext.â
From the passageway came Scorchâs distant voice complaining about ration bars; somewhere Fixer muttered diagnostics. But inside the armory a hush settledâtwo steady heartbeats, the scent of cleaning solvent, the promise of unexploded tomorrows.
Sev reclaimed his rifle, but his other hand never left yours. âStay a while. The patch works better with company.â
You leaned your shoulder to his, felt the tremor finally subside, and decided the armory was, for tonight, the safest place in the galaxy.