Hello! I gotta say I love how you write the banter between the clones and it honestly is so funny and cute. Could I get a Fox or Wolfe x reader where maybe he goes to wear something that he doesnât know reveals a few marks from you the previous night and his brother notices and tease him? Thatâs the main request but Iâd love if youâd add anything else plot wise to make it more full and complete Xx
Wolffe x Reader
Wolffe didnât go out often. Boost and Sinker practically had to drag him to 79âs that night, not because he hated it, but because he hated the noise, the chaos, the unwanted attention.
But mostly?
He just preferred being alone with you.
Unfortunately for himâand fortunately for everyone elseâSinker had shouted something about âyou owe us after ditching two poker nights in a row,â and now he was stomping toward the bar in a casual black shirt (one you may or may not have helped him out of the night before), grumbling like a man headed to execution.
He hadnât noticed that the neckline sat just a little wide across the collarbone. Or that a certain faint purple mark was blooming just below the edge of the collar on the left side. Or that there were moreânot too obvious, but definitely visible if you were looking.
And Boost and Sinker? They were looking.
âKriff, Wolffe,â Sinker said, the moment theyâd taken a booth and ordered drinks. âYou finally let off some steam, huh?â
Wolffe blinked, raising a brow. âWhat?â
Boost leaned in with a sh*t-eating grin. âDonât act like you donât know. I can see the bruise on your neck from here.â
Wolffe stiffened. âItâs notââ
âDonât lie to me,â Sinker cut in. âThatâs either a love bite or you got in a fight with a Nexu.â
Boost sipped his drink, eyes glinting. âAnd judging by the one just peeking above your collar? Our dear commander got wrecked.â
Wolffe growled, yanking his collar up slightly. âShut it.â
âWhoâs the lucky one?â Sinker asked, already leaning across the table like he was digging for state secrets.
âNone of your damn business,â Wolffe muttered.
âThat means itâs definitely someone we know,â Boost said with delight.
âIs it one of the medics?â Sinker mused.
âMaybe that intel officer with the legs?â
âI bet itâsâwait.â Boost froze, grinned wider. âItâs that civvie he always walks to the transport bay, isnât it? The one with the nice voiceâwhat was her name again?â
Wolffe looked like he was calculating murder odds.
â[Y/N]!â Sinker snapped his fingers. âSheâs always smiling at you. Maker, I knew it.â
Wolffe stayed dead silent, drinking his beer with the expression of a man who would rather fight General Grievous shirtless than have this conversation.
âWolffe,â Boost said slowly, âyou sly diâkut. Youâve been holding out.â
âYouâre smiling,â Sinker said, pointing. âLook at him, heâs smiling. Thatâs a post-blissful-night smile.â
âI am not smiling.â
âYou are,â Boost confirmed, nodding sagely. âYou look like a man who got thoroughly appreciated. Several times.â
âYou know what,â Sinker said, raising his glass, âIâm just proud. Our boyâs finally unclenched.â
Wolffe muttered, âI will kill both of you.â
⸝
It was well past midnight when you heard a familiar knockâtwo short, one longâon your door.
You opened it to find Wolffe standing there, looking deliciously rumpled. His black shirt was half-untucked, collar slightly askew, his hair a little mussed, and that glare in his eye⌠the one that always meant either someone pissed him off, or he was thinking about you.
He stepped in without a word, the door hissing shut behind him. You crossed your arms, leaning back against the wall, hiding your grin.
âWell, hello to you too, Commander.â
Wolffe stopped in front of you, eyes narrowing.
âYou,â he said lowly, voice rough with exhaustion and a hint of that familiar gravel. âLeft marks.â
You blinked innocently. âDid I?â
He arched a brow. âSinker counted three. Boost said one looked like it bit back.â
You triedâreally triedânot to laugh. âI told you not to wear that shirt.â
âIt was the only clean one,â he growled.
You shrugged with mock innocence. âNot my fault your brothers have eyes.â
Wolffe stepped in closer. His voice dropped, heated now. âThey wouldnât shut up.â
âPoor you,â you cooed, lifting your hand to his collar and gently tugging it further aside to admire your handiwork. âBut if itâs any consolationâŚâ
You leaned in, lips brushing just under his ear.
âIâd be very happy to leave more.â
Wolffe stilled for a moment. Then you felt the sharp exhale of his breath, the way his hands suddenly found your hips, firm and possessive.
âYouâre going to be the death of me.â
You smirked. âNot tonight.â
His mouth was on yours before you could get another word out, rough and hungry and just the right kind of desperate. You didnât mind. Youâd apologize for the marks never.
And judging by the way he walked you backward toward the bedroom?
Neither would he.
Hello, hope this is an ok ask but I was wondering if you could Omega and Fem!Reader where the reader takes an omega on a mother-daughter outing? And the boys see just how much of having a mother figure in omegas life is beneficial? Maybe omega has some attempts of trying to set you up with one of her brothers so you have a reason to stay? Funny shenanigans ensue as omega tries to push her brothers toward you (and succeeds with one of them, your choice of who)
Hope this makes sense! âĽď¸
The Bad Batch x Reader
Omega was practically vibrating with excitement as she tugged your hand through the streets of Pabu, her curls bouncing and her voice a mile a minute.
âWeâre gonna get snacks, and go to the market, and you have to help me pick a new dressâHunter says all mine are covered in grease stains but I think theyâre just lived inâand maybe we can do something with my hair later! Do you know how to braid? Of course you do, youâre amazing!â
You couldnât help but laugh, heart full. âI do know how to braid. You want one with beads or ribbons?â
Omega gasped like youâd just offered her the throne of Naboo.
âBeads. Obviously. Ribbons are for formal events. This is casual fabulosity.â
You smiled, following her into the plaza. âOf course. Casual fabulosity. My mistake.â
Hunter squinted as he watched the two of you walk away, Omegaâs hand in yours, already talking your ear off.
ââŚShe never talks that much to Tech.â
Wrecker laughed. âThatâs âcause Tech tried to explain fabrics to her like he was listing battle specs. She just wanted to know if it was twirly.â
Echo leaned against the wall, arms crossed. âShe needed this.â
âSheâs had us,â Crosshair said simply, though he looked less like he was arguing and more like he was observing.
Echoâs brow lifted. âSheâs had four brothers and a droid. Thatâs not the same thing as having a mother figure.â He glanced at Hunter. âWhich I keep telling you. For years.â
âOh, come on,â Wrecker grinned. âYou were basically the mom until she met [Y/N].â
Echo didnât miss a beat. âAnd you were the big toddler I was babysitting.â
Hunter snorted. âCanât argue there.â
⸝
Omega twirled in her new outfitâa bright tunic youâd helped her pick, complete with beads braided into her hair. Youâd spent the last hour painting your nails and hers, sipping local fruit teas, and chatting about everything from your favorite foods to who the you thought the cutest clone was.
âSoâŚâ Omega said slowly, squinting up at you with faux innocence. âDo you like anyone?â
You blinked. âWhat?â
âYou know. Like like.â She leaned in conspiratorially. âBecause I think one of my brothers likes you.â
You choked on your tea. âIâm sorryâwhat?â
âWell, itâs obvious. Everyone likes you. But I think Echo likes you. Or maybe Hunter.â She tapped her chin. âDefinitely not Crosshair. Heâs weird. He called feelings âtactical liabilities.ââ
You laughed despite yourself. âThat sounds about right.â
âBut you could be the mom! Then youâd have to stay! Iâve decided.â
You raised a brow. âThat why youâve been dragging me by the hand all day like a trophy?â
âYes,â she said proudly.
⸝
You returned to the Batchâs quarters just in time to find the guys lounging around post-dinner. Omega skipped ahead of you, proudly showing off her outfit and beads.
âLook what we did! Sheâs so good at braiding, and she picked this out, andâoh!â She turned, sly grin in place. âYou know, she really likes men who are good with kids.â
Hunter arched a brow.
Echo narrowed his eyes.
Crosshair rolled his.
Wrecker leaned forward excitedly. âOoooh. Is this one of those matchmaking things again?â
âAgain?!â you hissed, turning to Omega.
Omega threw her hands up. âIâm just trying to help! Sheâs amazing, and you all need help with social cues.â
Echo blinked slowly. âIâm going to get blamed for this, arenât I?â
Hunter sighed, rubbing his temple. âOmegaââ
âI mean,â Omega went on innocently, âshe is pretty, and Echoâs the responsible one, but maybe a bit too serious. Hunter, youâre too emotionally constipatedââ
âHey!â
âCrosshairâs a walking red flagââ
âNot inaccurate,â Echo muttered.
ââand Wreckerâs a brother to everyone. Which means Echo is the best option. Or maybe Hunter if he could manage one emotional conversation without running off into the jungle.â
Hunter looked like he was reconsidering all his life choices. âOmega, youâre grounded.â
âYou canât ground me. I have diplomatic immunity,â she beamed.
Wrecker burst out laughing.
You were crying with laughter now, face flushed. âI canât believe you just called Crosshair a red flag.â
âSheâs not wrong,â Crosshair said, leaning back with an almost-smile.
Echo, still composed, finally looked your way. âYouâre really good with her.â
You smiled. âSheâs easy to love.â
He paused. âYeah. She is.â
Your eyes met. The moment hungâjust long enough for Omega to wiggle her eyebrows dramatically in the background like a gremlin.
Echo sighed. âOmega, if you donât stop matchmaking, Iâm going to let Crosshair do your next math lesson.â
Her horror was immediate. âYou wouldnât!â
âOh, I would.â
Crosshair smiled slowly. âIâll make flashcards.â
⸝
Later that night, you were helping Omega with her beads and hair.
âDid I mess it up?â she asked suddenly. âTrying to push things?â
You looked at her in the mirror and smiled softly.
âNo. You just reminded me how lucky I am to be here.â
She smiled back, cheeks a little pink. âYouâre not gonna leave, right?â
You pressed a kiss to her forehead.
âNot unless Crosshair actually makes those flashcards.â
âPlease donât leave,â she said dramatically, âIâm not ready for that.â
Neither were you.
And honestly?
You werenât going anywhere.
⸝
The next morning, you found Omega hunched over the small dining table with a data pad, scraps of paper, crayons, and a very serious expression. Wrecker walked by, glanced at the mess, and raised a brow.
âWhatcha doinâ, kid?â
âMission planning,â Omega said without looking up.
âFor what, exactly?â
She tapped the screen with finality. âOperation Wedding Bells.â
Wrecker blinked. âOh no.â
âOh yes.â
By midday, Hunter had found out.
Because Omega had tried to get his measurements.
âFor the suit, obviously,â she said.
Hunter rubbed his temples like he had a migraine. âWhat suit?â
âFor the wedding. Between Echo and [Y/N].â
You nearly dropped the tray of food you were carrying. âOmega.â
She held up the data pad and pointed to a crude drawing of a beach, some flowers, and what you assumed was Echo in some sort of tuxedo with his armor still on. âDo you want a sunset wedding or a moonlight one? I can make either happen. Iâve already got Crosshair assigned to security. And I told Tech that he could officiate.â
Echo stared at her blankly. âWhy Tech?â
âHeâs got that âwise old manâ vibe now.â
âIâm no older then the rest.â
âYeah, but youâve got the vibe.â
Hunter sighed. âYouâre grounded.â
âYou canât ground me,â Omega said, standing up and striking a dramatic pose. âIâm planning a wedding.â
⸝
The sun was setting, warm orange light spilling over the ocean, casting long shadows across the sand.
You were sitting quietly, sipping a cool drink and letting the breeze brush across your skin, when Echo stepped out and joined you. He had something in his handsâa small, folded piece of paper, clearly drawn by Omega.
âShe gave this to me,â he said, handing it to you.
You opened it.
It was another âwedding plan.â The two of you were stick figures holding hands, surrounded by a bunch of questionably drawn flowers, and what looked like Wrecker as a ring bearer. At the bottom, in bold handwriting, Omega had written:
âYouâre already a family. This just makes it official.â
Your heart squeezed.
âShe really wants you to stay,â Echo said softly, sitting beside you. âWe all do.â
You glanced at him. âYou too?â
He met your eyes, and there was something vulnerable thereâan honesty he didnât often allow himself to show.
âI think Iâve wanted that since the moment you helped her with that first braid. You made her feel⌠safe. And seen. That means everything to me.â
You smiled, heart thudding. âYou know she called you the responsible one, right? Said you were the best option.â
A ghost of a smile pulled at his lips. âGuess Iâve got her endorsement.â
You nudged his arm lightly. âIâd take it seriously. Sheâs planning outfits now.â
Echo chuckled, quiet and warm. âOf course she is.â
The silence between you stretched into something comfortable, like warmth curling around your chest.
âSheâs not wrong though,â you said softly.
Echo turned to you, brows lifting just slightly. âAbout what?â
You looked at him then, really looked. At the man who had lost so much, given so much, and still stood tallâquiet, steadfast, kind.
âThat youâre the best option.â
There was a beat. Then another.
He reached out, hesitating only for a second before his gloved fingers brushed yours.
âIâd like to prove her right.â
You didnât need any more words than that.
Your fingers laced with his as the sun slipped below the horizon.
Back inside, Omega leaned over the data pad and added a final touch to the sketch.
A heart.
Right over where your stick figures stood, holding hands.
She beamed.
âMission success.â
⸝
Fixer (RC-1140) x Reader
Your caf shop wasnât fancy.
One countertop. Four chipped booths. A sputtering holosign that read âCAF & CRUNCH â OPENâ with a flicker that hadnât been fixed in years.
You didnât get many clones here.
Too far out. Too quiet. The garrison was small, the rotations fast. They didnât stay long enough to know your name.
Except one.
Helmet always on. Barely spoke. Green armor with white detailing, scuffed and battle-worn. He ordered the same thing every time: strong black caf, no sweetener, no conversation.
You didnât know his name.
So you called him Greenie in your head.
And Greenie had come back five times in two weeks.
Fixer was not⌠sure why he kept returning.
He told himself it was logistical.
The caf was strong. No risk of contamination. The shop was unassumingâgood line of sight to both entrances, windows provided 180-degree visibility, and the booths werenât bolted down, making them usable as cover in case of attack.
It made tactical sense.
But when he sat thereâhelmet on, fingers curled loosely around the mugâhe found himself⌠pausing.
Observing.
You always had a smudge of caf dust on your apron. You were quick with a smile, not pushy. Efficient. Clean workspace. Minimal chatter unless engaged first. He liked that.
And once, when heâd stood up too fast and knocked a napkin holder onto the floor, youâd just picked it up, smiled, and said, âEven commandos have off days, huh?â
Heâd stared at you for three seconds too long. An eternity in commando time.
The next day, he came back.
And the next.
And today, too.
You slid the mug in front of him with a soft clink.
âDouble strength, no frills. Youâre predictable.â
He paused.
ââŚEfficient,â he corrected, voice metallic through the helmet.
You leaned against the counter. âSoâs a vending droid. At least you tip better.â
He almost smiled.
Almost.
It became routine.
You worked mornings. Fixer showed up during early rotation hours. You made the caf before he even ordered it. He never told you anythingânot his name, not his rank, not his missionâbut he watched you like he was memorizing your movements. Not in a creepy way. More like⌠cataloging. Like he was trying to understand something he didnât have the words for.
Like you were the tactical puzzle he couldnât solve.
Once, during a light rain, you asked, âEver thought of taking the bucket off?â
He tilted his head. âNo.â
You laughed. âFigures.â
Fixer didnât feel like he was capable of anything outside the mission.
Thatâs what being a commando meant. Thatâs what Skirata had hammered into them. Thatâs what the Kaminoans designed them for: purpose. Obedience. Kill and move. Survive and follow orders.
He didnât know what to do with the warmth in his chest when he saw you slide him that caf with a smile.
He didnât understand why he had memorized the way you tucked your hair behind your ear when you were annoyed. Or the way you sangâquietly, under your breathâwhen you thought the shop was empty.
He didnât understand why your voice filtered into his mind even when he was on missions. Why he thought about what your laugh might sound like without the helmet filtering it.
So he stayed quiet.
He came back.
Again.
And again.
And again.
It wasnât until the sixth visit that you reached over the counter with a datapad.
âCan I at least know what to call you? Something better than âGreenieâ? Because thatâs what I call you in my head and Iâm not proud of it.â
He blinked under the helmet. âThatâs⌠not mission-critical information.â
âYouâre not on a mission right now.â
âIâm always on a mission.â
You leaned closer, arms crossed, smile playful but firm. âEven when youâre drinking caf?â
He hesitated.
ââŚFixer.â
You raised a brow. âThat your name or your function?â
ââŚYes.â
You laughed, not unkindly. âAlright, Fixer. Iâll remember that.â
He nodded.
He didnât say it, but heâd already memorized your name from the receipt tucked under the register. He knew your schedule. Your preferred blend. The way you wrote cursive Yâs when you took orders by hand.
He knew too much. But not enough.
⸝
A few days later, the war came closer.
There was an explosion not far from the marketplace. Distant but sharp. You flinched when it hit, spilling caf across the counter. Patrons ducked. One of the booths cracked.
And he was thereâimmediately.
Fixer pushed through the front entrance before the echoes even died out, blaster raised, visor scanning the room. He found you kneeling behind the counter, heart racing, but unhurt.
You looked up.
ââŚFixer?â
He crossed to you fast, like the space between you was an obstacle to eliminate.
âStatus?â
âIâm fine.â
He didnât answer. He just knelt in front of you, one gloved hand gently resting on your shoulder, scanning you for wounds like you were a member of his squad.
You put your hand over his. âI told you Iâm okay.â
There was silence. Thenâvery slowlyâhe retracted his hand.
âIâm glad.â
You smiled, a little breathless. âYouâre not supposed to get attached to civilians, you know.â
âI know.â
âYouâre doing it anyway.â
âI know that, too.â
And this time, you reached for his hand. Not as a test. As an answer.
âGood,â you said softly.
He didnât respond. Not verbally.
But he didnât let go.
The warmth of your hand lingered in his glove longer than it should have.
Fixer didnât move at first. Your fingers were still resting gently against his, your eyes steady on his visor, like you could see the man under the armor. Maybe you could.
But thenâ
âFixer, move! Weâve got heat east side, half klick. Now!â
Boss.
Fixerâs helmet comm crackled with urgency. Nothing friendly. All business.
He stood abruptly, the shift from human to commando so clean it almost hurt.
You blinked. âFixerâ?â
But he was already backing away, rifle primed.
âStay inside,â he said shortly. âSecure the back door. Bolt it.â
He paused just before turning to leaveâlike he wanted to say something elseâbut then Delta Squadâs comms lit up again.
âScorch, get your shebs on the west flank. Sev, overwatch from the north tower. Weâre drawing them in.â
Fixer was gone.
⸝
Outside, the air was sharp with smoke and ozone.
A low-flying transport had been taken out above the market squareâprobably a Republic oneâand the Separatist droids were crawling from alleyways and downed cargo haulers like insects swarming a carcass. Civilians screamed in the distance. Blaster fire echoed in tight bursts. Close.
Fixer moved with precision, slipping into cover beside Boss, who was already giving orders like the leader he was.
âSevâs in position. Scorch is making a messââ
âHey! Controlled chaos!â Scorchâs voice chirped over comms, followed immediately by a thunderous explosion and a cheer. âThey loved that one.â
Boss didnât flinch. âFixer, tighten the east corridor. Thermal count says another squadâs flanking through the maintenance tunnels.â
Fixer nodded. âOn it.â
âWait, you came from the caf shop, right?â Scorch broke in again, teasing. âSee your girlfriend?â
Fixer didnât respond.
Sevâs dry voice cut in from the high perch. âConfirmed: Fixerâs still pretending he doesnât care. Target rich environment out here, by the way.â
Boss sighed. âFocus.â
âI am focused,â Scorch muttered. âFocused on how Fixer only starts calling for backup after heâs finished checking on his civilian crush.â
âMission protocol prioritizes non-combatant safety,â Fixer replied flatly, already sweeping a corner with his DC-17m.
âOh sure,â Scorch drawled, âreal tactical of you to hold her hand first.â
There was a brief silence on comms. Boss mightâve smirked behind his visor. Sev definitely did.
Fixer didnât dignify it with a response. Instead, he tapped a few commands into his HUD, redirected two proximity mines, and crouched behind a stack of durasteel crates near the alley entrance.
âContact,â he said coolly.
The moment the droids stepped into range, his trap triggeredâconcise, brutal, clean.
Three droids dropped. One limped, firing blindly. Fixer silenced it with a single shot.
âBoring as ever,â Sev muttered from above, âbut effective.â
âHey,â Scorch chimed in again, still grinning. âYou think if we all survive this, Fixer will ask her out? Or will he file a formal requisition request for feelings first?â
Fixer adjusted his grip on the rifle. âIâm removing your access to my armor diagnostics.â
âYouâd have to admit you have emotions to do that, Fixer.â
âScorch. Focus.â Bossâs voice was flat, but even he sounded amused now.
Delta moved like a single organismâtight communication, seamless roles. Boss pushed forward through the square, marking targets. Scorch covered left, laughing and setting a charge with a little too much enthusiasm. Sev picked enemies off from above with clinical detachment. And Fixerâsilent, efficientâwas always one step ahead, rerouting their tech, coordinating their intel, watching every back but never speaking unless necessary.
But even as he moved through the field, his mind flickered onceâbrieflyâto the warmth of your hand. Your voice. The way youâd looked at him like he wasnât just another armored shadow walking into fire.
It made him hesitate, just for half a heartbeat.
Enough for a B2 to round the corner and raise its arm.
The blaster charge lit up red.
Fixer duckedâtoo slow.
The bolt clipped his shoulder plate, sending him sprawling behind cover.
âFixer, report!â Boss barked.
âStill operational,â Fixer said through gritted teeth, locking down the pain response. âHit left pauldron. Armor held.â
âYou good?â Scorch piped up.
âFocus on the droids,â Fixer snapped.
But he wasnât angry.
Not really.
He was⌠rattled. Not by the injury. By the distraction.
You.
⸝
Back inside the caf shop, the attack faded into muffled blasts and distant fire.
You stayed behind the counter, just like he said, listening. Waiting.
And worrying.
He had said he was always on a mission.
But now, you were his distraction.
And whether that was a danger or something more⌠you werenât sure.
Not yet.
But you planned to find out.
The front bell above the caf shop door gave a soft ding as it opened, and you were already halfway around the counter before you even saw who it was.
Fixer stepped in, pauldron scorched, boots heavy with ash and grime, but otherwise unscathed. Your eyes immediately snapped to the dark blast mark burned into the green-painted armor at his shoulder.
âYouâre hit,â you blurted, crossing to him fast. âAre youâ?â
âIt didnât breach,â Fixer said flatly, already raising a gloved hand as if to calm you. âArmor held.â
You frowned. âThen why is it black?â
âBecause thatâs what happens when youâre shot,â he said matter-of-factly.
âSmartass,â you muttered under your breath, then caught yourself and looked up at him. âYou scared me.â
He hesitated.
The visor tilted slightlyâjust enough for the gesture to feel human.
ââŚDidnât mean to,â he said.
You exhaled and reached toward the damaged armor before pausing. âMay I?â
He nodded once.
Your fingers ghosted over the edge of the charred plate. âI donât see any cracks. Mustâve been a glancing shot.â
âIt was close.â A beat. âGot distracted.â
You looked up. âBy what?â
He paused.
ââŚBy nothing,â Fixer said quickly, though even he knew it wasnât convincing.
The moment stretchedâalmost something there between you, something unspokenâuntil the door slammed open again behind him.
Ding!
âOh, look whoâs still alive,â Scorch called, already marching in and tracking mud across the floor like it was a personal hobby. Sev followed, glowering at the bell above the door like it had offended him.
Scorch spun toward you with a grin. âHope youâre not charging for emotional trauma because this oneâs racked up a tab.â
You stifled a laugh as Fixerâs shoulders stiffened.
âDonât you have ordinance to prep?â he said, still facing you but clearly addressing the clowns behind him.
âWe did that already,â Sev said dryly. âBetween Scorchâs interpretive dance through the war zone and your heroic trip back here.â
âVery heroic,â Scorch added, sauntering toward a table in the corner and dropping heavily into a chair. âHe braved fire for caf and companionship. Thatâs love.â
Fixer didnât even look at them. âI will incapacitate you both.â
âThatâs the most romantic thing heâs ever said to us,â Scorch said, placing a hand on his heart. âHe cares, Sev.â
âThreats of violence are usually how I express affection,â Sev stated, sitting across from his brother and immediately flipping over the sugar jar to poke at it with a spoon.
You tried very, very hard not to laugh.
Fixer finally turned, slowly, helmet tilting in their direction. âIf either of you speaks again before I walk out of this shop, Iâm initiating lockdown protocol in your armor suits.â
âOh no,â Scorch gasped, hands in mock horror. âYou wouldnât dare run a diagnostic loop on my HUD in the middle of a firefight!â
âOr reroute his targeting overlay to display motivational quotes,â Sev added blandly. ââYou miss 100% of the shots you donât take.ââ
ââLive, laugh, lob a thermal.ââ
You couldnât hold it in anymore. A laugh escaped, bright and warm.
Fixer turned back to you, somehow looking both flustered and resigned despite the expressionless helmet.
âSorry about them,â he said simply.
âI kind of love them,â you said. âIn a âplease donât ever leave them unsupervised with anything explosiveâ way.â
âToo late for that,â Sev said, deadpan. Almost staring into Scorchâs soul.
Scorch waved. âTell him how much you love him, too! Itâll be great. Cathartic. Might even make his audio receptors short-circuit.â
Fixer sighed audibly through the comm, a long-suffering sound. âIâm going to detonate your ration packs.â
âBold of you to assume I donât already eat explosives.â
Sev nodded. âHe does. Itâs a problem.â
Fixer shook his head and leaned just a little closer to you, as if to reclaim some fraction of normalcy.
âYouâre okay?â he asked again, quieter now.
You nodded. âYeah. Thanks to you.â
He shifted slightly on his feet. ââŚIâll check in again before we redeploy.â
âLooking forward to it.â
For a moment, he didnât move. And then, with the softest rasp of durasteel, he stepped back, already preparing to rejoin the chaos heâd walked away from.
âDonât worry,â you called after him, grinning as Sev and Scorch stood to follow. âIâll keep your seat warm.â
Scorch stopped beside you, stage-whispered, âHe likes you,â and ducked just in time to avoid a light punch to the helmet from Fixer.
The three of them walked out, side by side, back into the fray.
And you watched them go, heart a little lighter.
Hiiiii
I had an idea for a Rex x reader where he's very obviously in love with her and everyone around him can tell but he doesn't want to admit it bc he's afraid she wont feel the same. And its basically just him being completely in love with her and everyone mercilessly teasing him about it.
(and maybe she overhears this teasing and just walks into the conversation like, "you know im in love with you too right?")
I just got this idea into my head and i needed someone to write it ok bye my darling :)
Captain Rex x Reader
You were, in the words of Fives, âthe reason Rex turns into an emotionally repressed marshmallow with a death wish.â
The captain of the 501st was an impeccable soldierâcomposed, sharp, calm under fire. Until you walked into the room.
Then? He forgot how doors worked. Forgot how his voice worked. Forgot how to exist like a functioning adult.
Like this morning.
âHey, Captain,â you called, brushing past him in the mess. âSleep okay?â
Rex nearly dropped his tray. âYeah. I meanâyes. Slept. I slept.â
You gave him a soft little smile. âGood.â
Fives watched the exchange with his spoon frozen in the air, like heâd just witnessed a holo-drama plot twist.
The second you left, Jesse leaned in. âWas that a stroke or a confession?â
âShut it,â Rex muttered, flustered.
âCome on, Captain Crush,â Kix snorted. âYou smiled so hard you got an extra forehead line.â
âI did not,â Rex snapped.
âIt twitched,â Echo deadpanned.
âJust admit it,â Fives drawled, draping himself across the table. âYouâre in love with her.â
Rex didnât answer, whichâby 501st standardsâwas practically a marriage proposal.
âOh no,â Jesse whispered. âHeâs so far gone. Heâs at the âshe smiled at me and I heard musicâ phase.â
Rex ran a hand down his face. âI hate all of you.â
âAffectionately,â Echo added.
⸝
Later, in the hangar, the teasing reached critical mass.
Rex was checking the gunships. He thought he was alone.
He was wrong.
âYâknow,â came Fivesâ voice from behind him, âthe last time you stared at someone that long, you were planning a tactical assault.â
âI wasnât staring.â
âOh? My bad. Meditating on the meaning of her eyes, then?â
Jesse joined them, arms crossed. âPretty sure heâs composing poetry in his head.â
âI donât write poetry,â Rex grumbled.
âThen whatâs this?â Fives produced a crumpled piece of flimsi. ââHer voice is like a thermal detonator to my self-controlâââ
Rex lunged for it. âGive me thatâ!â
ââdetonating everything in me but discipline. Wow. Wow.â
âI will demote you.â
Fives grinned. âYouâd have to catch me firstââ
âWhatâs going on here?â Anakinâs voice cut in as he strolled over, arms folded, suspicious.
âCaptainâs in love,â Jesse reported instantly.
âPainfully,â Echo added helpfully.
âUnprofessionally,â Kix muttered as he passed, shaking his head.
Anakin raised a brow at Rex. âReally?â
Rex, red-faced, said, âItâs nothing. Theyâre being ridiculous.â
âYou know youâre terrible at hiding it, right?â Anakin said, half-laughing.
Fives leaned over like heâd been waiting for this. âOh, and youâre one to talk?â
The group roared.
Rex folded his arms, finally smiling. âTook you long enough.â
âYeah,â Jesse added. âWeâve got bets on how long before you and Senator Secret Marriage finally kiss in front of Obi-Wan.â
âI will write all of you up,â Anakin threatened weakly.
âSure, General,â Fives smirked. âYou can fill out the paperwork on your next secret rendezvous.â
Anakin muttered something under his breath and stormed off. Echo saluted his retreating back. âTrue love never hides well.â
Unbeknownst to them all, you had heard every word.
You had paused just behind the stacks of crates when you heard your nameâand then just⌠stood there, eyes wide, heart pounding, as your entire crush was dissected and laid bare by a group of very loud, very meddling clone troopers.
You waited until Rex tried to escape the roasting.
And then you stepped into view.
ââŚHey,â you said sweetly.
Six heads whipped around. Fives looked like he was about to choke.
â(Y/N),â Rex breathed, stunned.
âJust dropping off the new tactical rotation schedules.â You held up a datapad, then let your eyes drift casually toward Rex. âBut, uh⌠I heard a very interesting conversation.â
Fives whispered, âOh no.â
You raised an eyebrow. âYou boys gossip more than the Senators.â
Rex looked like he might pass out. âIâwe didnât mean toââ
âItâs okay.â You walked toward him, stopping just close enough to see the panic in his eyes soften into something gentler.
âI just figured I should say something before one of them exploded from holding it in.â
âSay what?â Rex asked, barely above a whisper.
You reached out, tugging lightly at the edge of his kama. âThat Iâm in love with you, too.â
The silence was immediate.
Then chaos.
âWHOOOââ
Fives dropped to the floor like heâd been sniped.
Jesse started clapping. âAbout time!â
âI am a trained medic,â Kix muttered, pointing at Rex. âAnd even I donât know if his heart can take this.â
Rex was frozen, then slowlyâso slowlyâhis expression melted into the softest smile youâd ever seen.
ââŚReally?â he asked.
You nodded, brushing your fingers against his gloved hand. âReally.â
He glanced at the others. âDo we⌠have to have this moment with them here?â
âYes,â Fives said, still on the floor. âYes, you do.â
You grinned, lacing your fingers with Rexâs. âWell, Captain? What do we do now?â
Rex looked at you like you were the first sunrise heâd ever seen.
ââŚIâm going to take you to get caf. And not drop my tray this time.â
And with your hand in his, he turned to the squadâflushed, proud, and finally not hiding anything.
Jesse saluted with two fingers. âPermission to say âcalled itâ?â
âNo.â
âDenied,â Fives chimed. âWeâre saying it anyway.â
Hey! Iâm not sure if youâre still doing requests if not completely ignore this lol
But if you are I would love to see a version of TBB x reader where she falls with tech during Plan 99 and they have to survive together and make it back âĽď¸
The Bad Batch x Reader
You saw it happening too late.
Techâs voiceâcalm, resolved, finalâechoed over the comms:
âWhen have we ever followed orders?â
And then he shot the cable.
You screamed his name as the rail car detached and plummeted.
You didnât think. You couldnât think. You just ran and jumped.
The world turned into chaos. Smoke. Fire. Wind tearing at your skin. The others were screaming over the comms, but it all became static in your ears.
Your jetpack roared to life, catching you mid-fall. You dove through the air, scanning through smoke and debrisâ
There.
Tech was falling fast, arms flailing for balance, unable to stabilize.
âI see himââ you gasped.
You slammed into him midair, arms locking tight around his chest.
The jolt nearly knocked the breath out of you both. He twisted in your grip, shocked, eyes wide behind those cracked lenses.
âYouâwhat are you doing?!â
âSaving you, obviously,â you grunted, arms straining as the added weight pulled hard against your pack.
The thrusters shrieked in protest, struggling to adjust. Too much mass. Too much speed.
âIâm going to burn the stabilizers!â you snapped. âHold on!â
The blast from the pack kicked against the drop, slowing your descentâbut not enough. The treeline raced up toward you. Your HUD flashed a critical warning. Youâd burn out before you cleared the ridge.
You flipped, twisting mid-air to cushion him as much as you could.
Thenâ
Impact.
A scream tore from your throat as the world shattered around you. Dirt. Leaves. Stone. The smell of ozone and blood. Something cracked inside your chest. Your pack gave a final shuddering pop before it died completely, hissing smoke.
You rolled, skidding through the underbrush. Your helmet cracked against the earth, and the world blurred at the edges.
Everything hurt.
But you were alive.
And so was he.
You groaned and dragged yourself up, muscles screaming. Your armor was scorched, one gauntlet bent out of shape, ribs probably cracked.
âTech,â you rasped, blinking through your visor. âTechâare youâ?â
He was lying a few meters away, not moving.
Panic surged in your throat. You stumbled over to him, dropping to your knees.
He groanedâloud, agonized.
Good. Groaning was good. That meant breathing.
âAre you hurt?â you asked, fingers trembling as you touched his faceplate, carefully pried the helmet off. His brow was bleeding now, from the impact, not the fall. His lip was split.
âLeft legâŚâ he grit out. âSomethingâs wrong. I heard a pop. Possibly dislocated. And my wristâŚâ
âDonât move,â you said, voice hardening as you hit your survival mode.
He looked at you, dazed. âYouâyou caught me.â
âYeah.â You pulled a half-smirk. âMight wanna say thank you when youâre not bleeding.â
He gave a sharp, breathless huff that mightâve been a laugh.
Then his eyes flicked to your pack, lying in a heap of fried circuits and blackened wires.
ââŚYouâre not flying us out of here, are you?â
You glanced at the damage and exhaled grimly. âNot a chance.â
Your wristplate buzzed. The comm was faint, barely functioning, but you caught Hunterâs voiceâchoppy, panicked. Static swallowed most of it.
You switched it off. If you could hear them, the Empire might too.
You looked back at Tech. His hand was already moving to retrieve his broken goggles. Always thinking. Always working.
You knelt beside him, breath still ragged, and said low, âWeâre not dying here.â
His gaze met yours. Quiet. Sure. Familiar.
âNo,â he said. âWe arenât.â
You tightened your grip on your blaster, your hand brushing his for a second longer than necessary.
âThen letâs move.â
⸝
The forest was dense and unforgiving, branches clawing at your armor like hands trying to drag you down. Your muscles burned, and your ribs throbbed with every breath, but you carried Tech over your shoulder, his leg now firmly splinted with scavenged durasteel rods and cloth from your ruined cape.
He didnât complain once.
He never did.
Even bleeding and pale, his mind was sharp.
âThereâs a decommissioned Imperial scout outpost approximately 6.2 kilometers north. If they havenât wiped the databanks, I might be able to reroute a distress beaconâor override one of their transports.â
âYouâre bleeding out,â you grunted. âAnd I canât run on half a lung, so letâs just focus on getting there without dying.â
A pause.
Then softly, dryly:
âYouâre quite bossy when youâre in pain.â
âYou only just noticing?â You smirked through your cracked visor.
âYour wrist?â you asked, eyes scanning the treeline as you pushed through the brush.
âRelocated,â he muttered, breathless but focused. âPainful, but functional.â
âGood.â
His lip twitched. That half-smile â the one that barely anyone else ever noticed.
It was there for you.
You found the outpost by nightfall, hidden beneath a rock shelf, half-collapsed and long abandoned.
It wasnât empty.
Two scout troopers still patrolled its perimeterâlazy, inattentive. You took them both out silently. One to the throat, the other dropped with a knife to the back.
You dragged Tech inside. He immediately began work at a busted console while you blocked the entry with a broken speeder and set charges at the entrance â just in case.
âCan you fly a Zeta-class transport?â he asked from the shadows.
You blinked. âI can break a Zeta-class in six different ways. Flying one? Yeah.â
He nodded once, expression unreadable, even as he struggled to stay upright.
âGood. Thereâs one still intact on the lower dock.â
His hands moved fast, bloodied fingers typing commands and bypass codes. âIf we time this right, we can access the flight deck and use their call codes to leave under the guise of a refueling run.â
You stared at him. âYou think of all this while hanging off my shoulder in the forest?â
He didnât look up. âI had time.â
There was a moment of silence between you both.
âYou shouldnât have jumped,â he said suddenly, voice soft.
You didnât look at him. âYou shouldnât have fallen.â
A beat of silence.
ââŚStatistically, your survival odds wereââ
âTech.â
He paused.
You finally turned to him. âIf you say the odds were against me, Iâll break your other leg.â
His eyes flicked down. Another twitch of his lips. âNoted.â
⸝
The escape was anything but smooth.
You blasted off the dock just as alarms blared through the ruined outpost. A TIE patrol picked up your trajectory within minutes, but your flight path was erratic and unpredictable â Tech feeding you nav data mid-chase, even while clutching his leg and gritting his teeth through the pain.
One TIE clipped your right engine.
âWeâre going down.â
âNot on my watch,â you hissed, flipping switches, forcing power to the thrusters with every ounce of skill youâd ever learned. The transport rocked violently but didnât fail.
It took every dirty flying trick in the book, but you broke atmosphere, hit lightspeed, and screamed into the void.
Only when the stars elongated in the viewport did you sag back into the pilotâs seat, chest heaving.
From the co-pilotâs chair, Tech exhaled, his head resting against the panel.
âSee?â you whispered. âTold you we werenât dying.â
His voice came softly. âYouâre infuriating.â
You gave him a faint grin. âYouâre welcome.â
⸝
When you limped off the stolen transport at the far end of the Ord Mantell hangar, the world felt both heavier and lighter.
You barely took two steps before Wrecker barreled into view, yelling your names like a freight train.
âTECH?! (Y/N)?!â
You barely had time to raise your hand before you were scooped up in a Wrecker hug, your cracked ribs screaming in protest.
Tech was half-carried by Echo, who swore under his breath and held him like he was glass.
Hunter came in slower, quieterâeyes wide with disbelief. He said nothing at first, just looked at you both, jaw tight.
You gave a tired nod.
âWe made it.â
âYou jumped after him,â Hunter said hoarsely.
âI wasnât letting him go alone.â
âWe thought we lost you both.â
You shrugged, voice rough. âYou almost did.â
Then, Omega burst through the crowd.
She barreled past the others, braid flying, and threw herself at Tech, tears streaming down her cheeks.
She collided into Tech so hard it nearly knocked him overâarms thrown around his waist, sobbing into his chestplate. He froze for half a second.
Then, slowly, awkwardlyâhe put his arms around her.
âI thought you were gone,â she choked out.
He glanced at you over her shoulder. His voice was soft, quiet, and full of something he didnât have a name for.
âI was. But she caught me.â
Omega pulled back, blinking through tears.
âThank you,â she whispered. âThank you for bringing him back.â
You froze for a second, unsure how to respond.
Then you rested your gloved hand on her head. âCouldnât leave him. Not even if he wanted me to.â
âBut,â you added, âI did have to carry him across half of Eriadu. Thatâs worth something.â
Tech, for once, didnât have a comeback. He simply looked at you with those calculating, unreadable eyes of his.
And in that quiet moment, you understood each other completely.
Later That Night Tech sat beside you on the Marauder ramp, stars glittering overhead.
Neither of you said anything for a while.
Then, softly, he spoke.
âYou risked everything.â
You leaned back against the hull, shoulder grazing his. âSo did you.â
He hesitated. âYou donât⌠expect me to say anything emotional, do you?â
You snorted. âStars, no.â
ââŚGood.â
Another silence.
Then, your fingers brushed his â just slightly. Not grabbing. Just there.
And his hand⌠stayed.
hi!! I adored your recent tech fic âmore than calculationsâ abd was wondering if I could request something between tech and a reader who doesnât flirt or do all the romance things kind of how tech is? I love the idea of them having the same way of showing each other love and they just understand each other even if others donât really understand how they are together! I hope that made a bit of sense đ𩷠thank you!! đ
Tech x Reader
âAre you two⌠together?â
Omega blinked up at you, head tilted with that signature mix of innocent curiosity and surgical precision, like she was investigating the oddities of adult behavior again.
Tech glanced up from his datapad, not the least bit ruffled. You didnât look away from the gear you were calibrating, either. A beat passed.
âYes,â you both said in perfect unison.
Omega squinted, unconvinced.
âBut you donât do anything!â she exclaimed, arms flailing slightly. âNo hand-holding, no kissing, noâughâstaring at each other like Wrecker and that woman from the food stalls!â
You shrugged. âWe fixed the water pump system together last night. That was plenty.â
Tech nodded. âAnd we enjoy our shared quiet time between 2100 and 2130 hours. Typically on the cliffside bench.â
Omega made a face. âThatâs it?â
âThat is a significant amount of bonding,â Tech replied, tapping at his datapad. âJust because it doesnât conform to more overt romantic displays does not mean the bond is any less valid.â
You added, without looking up, âWe donât need to prove anything.â
Omega grumbled and wandered off, muttering something about how weird grownups were. You smirked faintly.
When the datapad made a soft chime, Tech turned it toward you. It was a thermal readingâyour shared analysis project on the geothermal vents near the northern cliffs.
âYou were correct,â he said, adjusting his goggles. âThere is a secondary vent system. I suspect it branches beneath the islandâs reef shelf.â
You leaned closer to the screen. âNice. Thatâll stabilize the water temps around the farms. You wanna go check it out?â
âAffirmative,â he said. Then, after a pause: âI enjoy when we do these things together.â
You looked up at him and nodded, your version of âI do too.â
The two of you set out across Pabu, walking in companionable silence. You didnât talk much. You didnât have to. There was a rhythm, an ease to your presence beside each other. When you handed Tech a scanner without being asked, or when he adjusted your toolbelt with a small, thoughtful flick of his fingers â that was your version of affection.
Sometimes, Wrecker would nudge Crosshair (visiting, grumbling, but always watching) and whisper, âHow do they even like each other?â
Crosshair would reply, âThey donât need to. They get each other.â
Later, the sun dipped low, casting warm gold across the cliffs. You and Tech sat side by side on your usual bench. No words. Just a datapad between you, exchanging quiet theories, occasionally pointing at the sea when a bird swooped or a current shifted strangely.
Tech finally broke the silence.
âMost people⌠expect something different from a relationship. More expression. More effort.â
You looked at him. âThis is effort. Just a different kind.â
His lips curled slightly at the edge â his version of a full grin.
âI concur.â
After a moment, he added, âYou are the first person Iâve encountered who does not require translation of my silence.â
You gave a small smile and leaned just enough to bump your shoulder against his. âAnd youâre the first person who doesnât expect me to say things I donât feel like saying out loud.â
He reached over and adjusted your sleeve where it had folded weirdly. Not romantic. Not flashy. Just⌠quietly right.
Behind you, somewhere near the beach, Omega was laughing, chasing a crab and antagonising Crosshair.
But here, in this quiet little corner of peace, you and Tech sat in absolute understanding.
No need to explain. No need to perform. Just existing.
Exactly as you were.
Exactly together.
Hiya! Since you do song fic requests I was wondering if you could do a Rex X reader with the song Smile by Uncle Kracker? Hope this is ok! Youâre the best! Xx -đ¤
Captain Rex x Reader
The battle was over, the stars above silent witnesses to the quiet aftermath. The field lights flickered, the hum of med droids and murmurs of relief blending into a lullaby of warâs end â at least for tonight.
You found him alone near the gunship, helmet off, back turned, shoulders tight with exhaustion. Captain Rex. Leader. Brother. Soldier. And lately⌠something more.
âHey,â you said softly, brushing your hand along his arm as you stepped beside him.
He turned, and despite the dirt smudged across his face, the faint blood along his jaw, and the deep shadows beneath his eyes â he smiled.
A slow, crooked thing. Honest. Rare.
âDidnât think youâd still be up,â he said.
âI could say the same for you.â
You watched each other in silence for a breath, the night pressing close around you both. Youâd seen that look before â not pain, not exactly. More like weariness that went bone-deep. The kind that made you want to reach in and hold someoneâs soul together.
âYouâre always around when I need it most,â Rex said suddenly, voice barely above a whisper. âI donât think Iâve told you how much that means.â
You smiled, heart tugging.
âYou donât have to,â you replied. âI know.â
He took a half-step closer, eyes searching yours like he was afraid the war would take you too if he blinked. But you werenât going anywhere. Not tonight.
âI never thought Iâd have this,â he said, his voice a low rasp. âSomeone who makes me forget⌠even if just for a moment.â
You reached up, cupping his face gently, thumb brushing the edge of the scar near his eye.
âYou donât have to forget,â you said. âJust⌠let me be the good part.â
Rex leaned into your touch. For once, he let go of the weight, let you be the anchor.
âYou make me smile,â he murmured, voice cracking like it surprised even him. âWithout even trying.â
Your heart ached and lifted at once. That song youâd played for him once â just once â on a shared night off at 79âs, came back to you. He hadnât said a word when it played. But youâd seen it: the way his fingers stilled around his drink, the flicker in his eyes. Heâd been listening.
And now he remembered.
âIâm not going to promise Iâll always be okay,â Rex said, brow furrowing slightly. âBut I want to try. With you.â
You leaned in, resting your forehead against his.
âWeâll be okay together,â you said.
And there, under the stars and the dust of a hundred wars, Rex smiled again.
Just for you.
⸝
Every now and again I think about how we never see Stone again after his stint on Florrum, and how one time my partner said "despite the success the Clones had with Jar Jar being kept alive and the some enemy faction being apprehended, the fact important political figures died and they didn't catch Dooku - he probably got decommed when they returned back to Coruscant." I'm ripping my hair out over it every time đ Tbh going with the whole Palpatine was overtly and purposefully holding the CG tight in his grasp, having Stone decommed as an example and then Thire getting promoted to take his spot would make sense.
in fanfiction we must sometimes ask ourselves not if he would do that but under what conditions would he would do that
This definitely isnât all of them but some of my favorites.
Scp: filoniversepacks
Has this been done yet
Scorch should be 100% silly but the man who cracks most jokes something something
Inspired by @minosprimeenjoyer's command batch version
Sergeant Hound x Reader
Coruscantâs upper levels were all steel and structure, but down hereâbeneath the polished platforms and Senate façadesâwas the Coruscant Guardâs territory. Order in chaos. The pulse of the city was felt more than seen, vibrating faintly under your boots as you stepped into the Guard kennel compound for the first time.
You took a slow breath. It smelled of durasteel, sanitizing agents, and wet fur.
Perfect.
Youâd worked with animals your whole life. Big ones. Aggressive ones. Ones people gave up on, called dangerous or impossible. Thatâs how you landed the jobânew mastiff handler for the Coruscant Guardâs prized unit.
A few troopers passed you with curious looksâsome respectful, some dismissive. It wasnât common for civilians to be embedded here. It was rarer still for one to be given a job involving him.
Grizzer.
The massiff lay in the shadowed corner of the compound, head lifted, ears twitching. His yellow eyes locked on you immediately.
The massiff was a fixture in Guard circles. A creature bred for control, raised on structure, trained in pain response and patrol aggression. He wasnât a pet. He wasnât a soldier, either. He was something in betweenâlethal and loyal, the way a war dog should be.
And he didnât like anyone but his handler. The clone in crimson-striped armor waiting for you outside the kennels stood with arms folded, helmet clipped to his belt, posture sharp as a vibroblade.
â[Y/N]?â he asked, voice clipped.
âYes, sir. Reporting for assignment.â
âSergeant Hound,â he introduced. No small talk, no smile. âYouâll be assisting with behavioral oversight and training reinforcement for the precinctâs massiffs. That doesnât mean taking liberties. You observe. You follow orders. You stay out of the way.â
Not exactly a welcome mat.
You nodded. âUnderstood.â
He turned on his heel and led you inside.
The kennels were quietâclean, organized. The soft shuffle of claws on durasteel echoed from a side corridor. Grizzer was massiveâthick-muscled, scarred, and alert. His hackles rose the moment his yellow eyes landed on you. His lip twitched in a soundless growl.
You kept your posture loose but grounded. Not threatening. Not submissive.
âDonât speak,â Hound said quietly. âJust kneel. Hands visible.â
You obeyed without hesitation.
Grizzer approachedâslow, ears rotating slightly. You didnât reach out. You simply held your ground, steady, and let him scent the air between you.
Then, to Houndâs quiet surprise, Grizzer sat. Not completely relaxed. But watching you, calm.
Hound blinked.
âHe doesnât do that,â he muttered.
You finally glanced up. âHe does now.ââ
⸝
Grizzer had taken to you faster than anyone expected. It was subtleâhe didnât become affectionate or eagerâbut he tolerated your touch, followed your directions, even mirrored your body language during patrol drills. The clone officers noticed. Fox himself dropped a comment during one of the rotation briefings.
âGrizzerâs got a new favorite,â he muttered as he passed you.
You caught Hound watching you more often nowâsometimes in silence during shift changes, sometimes while adjusting Grizzerâs gear. Not hostile. Just⌠thoughtful. Assessing.
That night, while off-duty, you found yourself sitting on the edge of a service stairwell overlooking the lower hangar levels. A small moment of quiet between patrols.
Boots echoed behind you.
âYouâre off duty,â Hound said, approaching. âYou could be sleeping.â
You smirked without looking back. âYou could be too.â
He stood beside you for a moment, then satâgrudgingly, like it offended him to admit he needed rest.
Silence lingered. But not heavy this time. Companionable.
âIâve seen Grizzer bite men for less than standing too close to me,â he said eventually.
You turned to him, arching a brow. âShould I be worried?â
âNo.â He paused. âThatâs whatâs strange.â
A beat passed.
âHe trusts you,â Hound continued. âThatâs not something I trained into him. Thatâs something he chose.â
You studied himâhis scarred knuckles, the stiffness in his shoulders that never fully eased. A soldier first. A handler second. A man⌠somewhere beneath all of that.
âThen I guess heâs smarter than both of us,â you said softly.
Hound looked at you.
Not sharply. Not critically.
Just looked. And for the first time, you saw something tired in him. Not weak. Just worn down from too many deployments, too many arrests, too many shifting rules in a galaxy that didnât make sense anymore.
âMaybe,â he murmured. âOr maybe he just sees what Iâm too used to ignoring.â
You tilted your head. âWhatâs that?â
âYou care. And you donât ask for anything in return.â
Another pause. A flicker of something in his gaze.
âThatâs rare in this job,â he added.
Grizzer padded over from the shadows and laid his heavy head on your lap, letting out a slow sigh.
Hound stared at the massiff, then at you again.
âI was wrong about you,â he said simply. âYouâre not here to handle the animals.â
You raised a brow.
âYouâre here to remind us weâre more than just uniforms.â
You didnât respond.
Grizzerâs weight was comforting. His head rested on your lap, massive chest rising and falling in sync with your breathing. You absently scratched behind his coarse ears, your fingers finding the notch from some old skirmish or riot bite. Hound had gone quiet beside you, his elbows resting on his knees, head slightly bowed.
He was still wearing half his armorâgreaves, chestplate, the red markings catching the glow from the hangar lights below. He looked tired. But not worn down. Just quiet.
The kind of quiet soldiers earned, not feared.
âYou always this silent off-duty?â you asked gently.
Hound exhaled a faint laughâjust enough breath to make it real. âOnly when Iâm trying not to ruin something.â
You turned toward him slightly. âRuin what?â
He met your gaze. And something about itâabout the lack of armor in his eyesâmade the silence between you shift. He didnât answer right away.
Instead, his hand liftedâcallused and glovedâalmost as if to brush a stray strand of hair from your face. But he stopped, fingers hovering just near your cheek.
âIâm not good at this,â he said quietly.
You swallowed. âYou donât have to be.â
A breath passed.
He leaned inâbarely. The kind of lean that spoke of hesitation, of a soldier measuring risk, calculating damage, even here. Even now.
And you leaned in, too.
It wasnât a kiss. Not yet. But the space between you narrowed to a thread, the kind you didnât want to break. His eyes flicked to your mouth, then back up.
Thenâ
âSergeant.â
The voice cracked the moment apart like a blaster round through glass.
Both of you jerked slightly apart, tension resetting in your shoulders. Grizzer lifted his head from your lap, a low rumble forming deep in his throat.
Commander Fox stood at the top of the stairwell, arms folded, expression unreadable. His helmet was clipped to his belt, and his voice was flat.
âWeâre short a patrol on Sector C-14. I need you on rotation, now.â
Houndâs jaw clenched, but he nodded once, efficient and emotionless.
âCopy that.â
Foxâs gaze slid to you, then to Grizzerâwho was now fully on his feet, hackles half-raised, eyes locked on the Commander like he was prey. A low growl echoed across the steel.
âCall off your mutt,â Fox said sharply.
âHeâs not a mutt,â you said before thinking, standing slowly and resting a hand on Grizzerâs flank. âHe just doesnât like people who interrupt.â
Foxâs brow twitched. Hound gave you the faintest side-glanceâhalf warning, half impressed.
âSee that heâs leashed and off the hangar levels by 2200,â Fox added, then turned and walked off without another word.
Silence returned, but it wasnât the same.
Hound rose to his feet beside you. Grizzer stayed close to your leg, still staring toward the stairwell.
You broke the quiet first. âAlmost.â
He nodded, quiet.
âYeah.â
Neither of you said it. You didnât need to.
But as he stepped away, pausing just long enough for one last look, you caught the faintest flicker of something in his voiceâsomething that sounded like hope.
âIâm on rotation âtil 0300,â he said. âBut Iâll be back.â
You nodded once, heart steady but loud. âIâll wait.â
Grizzer huffed.
Hound gave the massiff a rare half-smile.
âTry not to bite Fox next time,â he muttered.
But even you could tell⌠he wasnât entirely serious.
⸝
You were still awake.
The barracks were quiet. Youâd been sitting on a folded crate just outside the kennel med bay, a stim-caf growing cold between your hands, eyes scanning the darkened corridor.
When the outer hatch hissed open, your breath caught.
Hound stepped through firstâhelmet on, armor dulled with soot and carbon scuffs. But it wasnât him your eyes locked on.
It was Grizzer.
He limped in beside his handler, front right paw curled tight to avoid weight, blood drying in a jagged smear up his shoulder. His thick tail was low but not tuckedâstill alert, still proud, but hurting.
âBlaster graze,â Hound said as he approached, voice clipped, too calm.
You were already moving.
âIâm not a vet, butâbring him in. Now.â
Hound didnât argue.
He followed you through the kennelâs side hall into the back medical stallâone of the few areas with proper light and clean storage drawers. You cleared the low bench, grabbing antiseptic, gauze, a med-spray from your locker.
Grizzer lay down without command, eyes tracking you but not fighting. You took that as trust.
You worked in silence. Gently shaving back the singed fur, dabbing the graze clean. It wasnât deep, but it had burned skinâangry, red, raw.
You caught Houndâs hands twitching at his sides more than once.
âHeâll be okay,â you said softly. âNo nerve damage. Heâll walk it off in two days.â
Hound crouched beside Grizzer, resting one hand on the massiffâs uninjured shoulder, his other brushing through the thick fur behind his ear.
The silence that settled wasnât emptyâit was full.
Full of the sound of breath evening out. Of blood pressure lowering. Of armor creaking as a soldier finally let go.
âYou care about him like heâs more than a partner,â you said, not as a question.
âHeâs the only constant Iâve had since Kamino.â
The way he said itâlow, quiet, unsentimentalâlanded heavy.
âI get that,â you replied. âYou lose enough people, the ones who stay matter more.â
Grizzer let out a tired huff and nudged your wrist with his nose.
You smiled. âAnd heâs got good taste in people.â
Hound looked up at you.
Not guarded this time. Not assessing. Just looking.
âYou stayed up,â he said.
âI said Iâd wait.â
He stood slowly, watching you as you finished wrapping the bandage. The space between you narrowed againâthis time in quiet exhaustion, quiet care.
You didnât flinch when he reached upâjust brushed a hand over your cheek, gentle, almost reverent.
He exhaled.
Then you leaned into him.
And he kissed you.
It wasnât desperate or sharpâjust honest. The kind of kiss that says I trust you, the kind that follows after weeks of tension and hours of worry. You melted into it, letting your hand rest over the back of his neckplate, letting him feel that he wasnât alone anymore.
Thenâ
Grizzer groaned and shifted between your legs, snout nudging the both of you apart. He pushed his head under your arm and leaned hard into your ribs, jealous and affectionate all at once.
You laughed, breathless. âYou little saboteur.â
âHeâs worse than Fox,â Hound muttered.
You and Hound both turned as the side hall door hissed open again.
âOh for kriffâsââ
Commander Thorn stood in the doorway, a datapad in hand, brows raised.
He took one look at the sceneâGrizzer crammed between the two of you like a possessive third wheel, Hound with his hand still at your waist, you flushed and tousled.
There was a long pause.
Thorn blinked once. Then he pivoted neatly on his heel.
âI donât wanna know about it,â he said, walking off.
The door hissed shut again behind him.
Silence.
Then Hound let out a low chuckleâjust a puff of breath, really, but it was genuine. He looked down at you, still holding your waist.
âAt least it wasnât Fox.â
You smiled. âIâll take it.â
Grizzer gave one last grunt of satisfaction and nosed between you both again.
Hound shook his head, but his hand didnât leave your side.
Not this time.
Boss (RC-1138) x Reader
Theedâs skyline shimmered under the afternoon sun, its golden domes reflecting the light in a display of serene beauty. Yet beneath this tranquil facade, tension simmered. The recent assassination attempts on Queen Jamillia and Senator PadmĂŠ Amidala had prompted the Royal Security Forces to request additional protection from the Republic.
You stood at attention in the palace courtyard, your crimson uniform crisp, hand resting on the hilt of your blaster. As a member of the Royal Naboo Guard, your duty was to protect the monarchy and its representatives. Today, that duty extended to welcoming the Republicâs elite clone commando unit: Delta Squad.
The low hum of a Republic gunship grew louder as it descended, kicking up dust and causing your cape to flutter. The ramp lowered, revealing four armored figures stepping out in formation.
Leading them was RC-1138, known as Boss. His orange-striped armor bore the marks of countless battles, and his posture exuded authority.
Behind him, RC-1140, or Fixer, moved with calculated precision. His green-accented armor was immaculate, and his visor scanned the surroundings methodically.
To Fixerâs left was RC-1207, Sev. His armor bore red markings resembling blood splatter, a reflection of his grim sense of humor and reputation as a fierce sniper.
Bringing up the rear was RC-1262, Scorch. His armor was marked with yellow accents, and he carried himself with a relaxed confidence.
As they approached, Boss stepped forward, his helmet concealing his expression.
âSergeant RC-1138, reporting in,â he stated, his voice modulated through the helmetâs speaker. âDelta Squad is at your service.â
You offered a formal nod. âWelcome to Theed, Sergeant. Iâm Lieutenant [Y/N], Royal Naboo Guard. Weâve been briefed on your assignment.â
Boss inclined his head slightly. âUnderstood. Our primary objective is to ensure the safety of Queen Jamillia and Senator Amidala.â
âCorrect,â you affirmed. âWeâll coordinate patrols and share intelligence. Your squad will be integrated into our security protocols.â
Behind Boss, Scorch leaned slightly toward Sev and whispered, âThink they have any good caf here?â
Sev replied dryly, âAs long as it doesnât taste like ration packs, Iâll consider it a luxury.â
Fixer, without looking up from his wrist-mounted datapad, interjected, âFocus, Deltas. Weâre here for a mission, not a vacation.â
Boss turned his head slightly. âMaintain discipline. Weâre guests here.â
You raised an eyebrow, a hint of amusement tugging at your lips. âYour squad has a unique dynamic.â
Bossâs tone remained neutral. âWe operate efficiently.â
⸝
Over the next few days, Delta Squad integrated into the palaceâs security framework. Joint patrols were established, and you found yourself frequently paired with Boss. His stoic nature made conversation sparse, but his presence was reassuring.
One evening, during a perimeter check, you decided to break the silence.
âYour squadmates have distinct personalities,â you observed.
Boss glanced at you. âTheyâre effective.â
âIâve noticed,â you replied. âScorchâs humor, Sevâs intensity, Fixerâs precision. And youâyouâre the anchor.â
He paused, considering your words. âLeadership requires stability.â
You nodded. âItâs commendable.â
A brief silence settled before he spoke again. âYour team is well-trained.â
âThank you,â you said. âWe take pride in our duty.â
As the patrol continued, a comfortable silence enveloped you both, the foundation of mutual respect beginning to form.
⸝
The days turned into weeks, and the collaboration between your unit and Delta Squad deepened. Shared meals and joint exercises fostered camaraderie. Scorchâs jokes became a familiar background noise, Sevâs rare smirks were victories, and Fixerâs occasional nods signaled approval.
With Boss, the connection grew subtly. Shared glances during briefings, synchronized movements during drills, and the occasional exchange of dry humor.
One night, after a successful operation thwarting an assassination attempt, you found yourselves alone on a balcony overlooking Theed.
âThe cityâs peaceful tonight,â you remarked.
Boss nodded. âA welcome change.â
You turned to him. âDo you ever think about life beyond the war?â
He was silent for a moment. âSometimes. But duty comes first.â
You smiled softly. âAlways the soldier.â
He looked at you, his gaze intense. âItâs who I am.â
âAnd yet,â you said, stepping closer, âthereâs more to you.â
He didnât respond verbally, but the way his hand brushed against yours spoke volumes.
The city lights glittered below like the reflection of a thousand quiet thoughts. The silence between you and Boss wasnât strainedâit was gentle, natural. It had become that way over the last few weeks. You stood shoulder to shoulder, close enough to feel the warmth of his armor radiating softly through the Naboo evening chill.
His helmet was still on, the ever-present barrier between his world and yours. But something in his posture shifted, a subtle drop in his shoulders, a small exhale that sounded more like a sigh than static.
Thenâquietlyâhe said, âItâs strange.â
You turned to look at him. âWhat is?â
âPeace.â A beat. âThis planet. The quiet.â He paused, like he was deciding whether to say more. âIâm used to marching into warzones. Places that smell like carbon and blood. Where the airâs thick with ash and tension. But here⌠itâs almost too quiet. Makes you feel like⌠something could go wrong any second.â
You studied him for a moment, surprised he was sharing this. âMaybe itâs not that something will go wrong. Maybe itâs just that youâve never known anything but chaos.â
There was a pause. Then, slowly, his hands came up to his helmet. You heard the hiss of pressure release before he pulled it off and cradled it against his side.
This was the first time youâd seen his face. You had imagined itâmany timesâbut the reality was softer than youâd expected. Strong features, yes, but tired eyes. Eyes that had seen too much, too fast. He looked younger without the helmet, and older all at once.
He didnât look at you right away. His gaze stayed fixed on the skyline.
âI donât usually take it off,â he admitted. âFeels⌠exposed.â
You smiled gently. âYou donât have to explain. But thank you for trusting me.â
His eyes finally met yours then, sharp and searching, but not cold. âYouâre different from the officers Iâve worked with before.â
âGood different?â you teased softly.
He didnât smile, exactlyâbut something softened around his mouth. âReal different.â
You leaned against the railing beside him, your fingers brushing his. This time, he didnât move away. He turned his hand slightly until his gloved pinky hooked around yours.
âI donât know what happens after this assignment,â you said quietly. âBut I know Iâll remember this. You.â
He nodded once. âSame.â
The moment stretchedânot romantic in the overly dramatic way holodramas would tell it, but intimate in its honesty. The weight of your fingers against each other. The hush of the Naboo breeze. The flickering of torchlight behind you, and the way his gaze lingered on your face like he was memorizing it.
And then, with the kind of quiet confidence that came from someone who rarely acted on impulse, Boss leaned in slightlyâslowly, giving you time to stop him if you wanted. His forehead came to rest gently against yours. It was a simple thing. No kiss, no dramatics. Just contact. Shared breath. A moment stolen from the endless march of duty.
âI canât afford to be soft,â he murmured, voice barely above a whisper. âBut you make me want to be.â
You closed your eyes, forehead still pressed to his. âThen let this be the place where you can.â
His hand, calloused and heavy, rose to cup the side of your neck for a second before falling away. Not because he didnât want moreâbut because he wasnât ready yet. And maybe you werenât either. But that was okay. It was enough.
Tonight, it was enough.
kind of actually soooo fucking funny that my man jung was like âIâm toast anyway they know what Iâm up toâ and then the ISB was like âwe lost a great man and dedra meero is a rebel spyâ
Star Wars Republic Commando Concept Art: Commandos in action
Lyco woke up and chose violence
Captain Howzer x Reader
You didnât remember the escape.
You remembered the cellâthe sting of cold stun cuffs, the fluorescent hum of sterile walls, the shadow of an Imperial officerâs boots crossing your field of vision.
You remembered pain.
And silence.
And waiting for the end.
But now, you woke to the sound of wind.
Real windânot the artificial filtered kind used to simulate nature in Imperial holding zones. This was dry and real, carrying the scent of rock, dust, and maybe desert flowers if you were still sane enough to tell.
You lay on a cot, wrapped in a scratchy wool blanket. Dim golden light crept across the floorboards of what looked like an old storage roomârepurposed into a makeshift sleeping space. There were crates stacked in the corner, and a small table with two chipped mugs.
You sat up slowly. Your body ached like it had been stitched together too quickly. And thenâmovement.
A man was sitting in a chair across from you, unmoving. Broad-shouldered, armored only in the bare essentials of his gear. He stood when he saw you stir.
You flinched. It was instinct. You hadnât seen his face yetâjust the outline, and the authority in his posture.
âHey,â he said quickly, palms lifting, voice calm and low. âYouâre safe. Youâre out. No oneâs gonna hurt you.â
You blinked up at him as his face came into focus. Not a stormtrooper. Not an officer. A clone.
But not just any clone. There was something different in his eyesâsomething soft. He wasnât holding a weapon. Wasnât armored head to toe. He looked almost⌠tired. Grounded.
âNameâs Howzer,â he added, watching you carefully. âI was with the squad that got you out. Captain Rex sent me.â
You opened your mouth, but your throat wouldnât work. You clutched the edge of the blanket tighter around your shoulders, fingers trembling.
âYou were in that cell a long time,â he said gently. âYou donât have to talk yet. Just breathe. Thatâs enough.â
Your eyes burned, but you nodded. That felt like something you could do.
Howzer stepped back a pace, giving you space. He moved with a kind of deliberate calmâlike he knew exactly how close not to get. Like he understood trauma too well to make it worse.
âI put some tea on the burner,â he said after a beat. âItâs not great. Local stuff. But it helps.â
You didnât answer. You werenât sure you could. Your whole body still felt like it was waiting for the next scream, the next interrogation, the next blow.
You watched him move to the small table and pour something steaming into one of the mugs. Then, without pressure, he set it down on the crate beside you and stepped away again.
âIâll sit right over here,â he said, nodding to the chair. âYou donât owe me anything. I just⌠thought maybe you shouldnât wake up alone.â
That sentence.
That sentence hit something in you.
You stared at the mug. It was shaking. Noâit was your hand. You gripped the blanket harder to stop it.
âI thought I was going to die in there,â you rasped. âI didnât think anyone would come.â
He didnât say youâre safe now. He didnât say itâs over. Instead, his voice dropped low and sincere.
âI know,â he said. âIâve seen what they do. To people who speak out. Who know too much.â
Your eyes lifted to his again.
âWhy are you helping?â
A ghost of a smile touched his face. âBecause someone should.â
You stared at him, then looked down again. The silence stretched between you, but it wasnât oppressive. It breathed.
âI didnât think any of you clones cared,â you admitted softly.
Howzer let out a slow exhale. âA lot donât. Not anymore. Chips saw to that.â
You didnât know what that meant yet, but you filed it away. It sounded like something buried deep.
He rubbed the back of his neck, then added, âBut there are still some of us who remember what we fought for. What it was supposed to mean.â
You looked up. âAnd me?â
âYou spoke up against the Empire. You tried to protect civilians. You mattered.â He paused, voice softening. âYou still do.â
A strange sound escaped your throatâhalf sob, half laugh. You covered your face with your hands, shoulders curling inward. It was too much. Too kind. Too intimate after so long spent dehumanized.
âI donât know how to be around people again,â you confessed. âI feel⌠broken.â
âThen be broken,â he said gently. âYouâre allowed to be.â
You lowered your hands, blinking at him. His expression hadnât changed. Steady. Open.
He moved againâslow, cautiousâkneeling beside your cot so he didnât loom.
âI can leave if you want,â he said. âOr I can stay. I wonât touch you unless you ask. But you donât have to go through this next part alone.â
Your throat clenched. You didnât know this man. And yet, his presence was the first thing since your arrest that felt real. Safe.
âI donât want to be alone,â you whispered.
He nodded. âThen Iâll stay.â
You shifted the blanket, and after a momentâs hesitation, reached out. Your hand found his gauntleted wristâjust the edge of it, where skin met armor.
He didnât move. Just stilled, like he didnât want to scare you. Like the contact meant something to him, too.
âThank you,â you whispered, voice cracking.
He gave a small nod. âYou donât have to thank me. You made it out. Thatâs enough.â
You held onto his wrist for a long time.
And when your breathing slowed, and the tears dried, he stayed right there, kneeling beside your cot, steady as a lifeline. No words. Just quiet company in a broken world.
And in that small, silent room, lit by the desert sun and filled with nothing but the sound of two survivors breathing, you finally began to believe that healing might be possible. That not all soldiers followed orders blindly. That kindness hadnât been stamped out entirely.
Captain Howzer didnât promise to fix you.
He simply offered to stay.
And in that moment, it was more than enough.
⸝
You couldnât sleep.
Even in safety, your body hadnât learned how to rest. The cot creaked when you shifted, the blanket tangled around your ankles, and the stale air felt heavier the longer you lay awake.
But what really kept you up were the memoriesâthe sterile cell walls, the screaming, the waiting. The echo of boots outside a door that never opened. You hadnât realized how deeply loneliness could burrow inside your ribs until you were finally out.
You sat up and pulled the blanket tighter around your shoulders, feet touching the cool floor.
A creak sounded outside the room.
You froze.
ThenâHowzerâs voice, quiet, near the door. âDidnât mean to wake you.â
âI wasnât asleep,â you answered softly.
He hesitated. Then, his silhouette appeared in the doorway, bathed in the soft yellow glow of the hallway lantern.
He was wearing only the bottom half of his armorâno chestplate, no pauldrons. Just a plain dark shirt, sleeves pushed to his elbows. His expression was open, calm. He looked more like a man than a soldier tonight.
âCanât sleep either?â you asked, voice hushed.
He shook his head once. âToo quiet, sometimes. Feels wrong.â
You understood that too well. The silence that had once meant peace now scraped against your thoughts like broken glass.
âI made some tea,â he offered after a pause. âDidnât want to drink alone.â
You stood slowly and followed him into the main room. The safehouse was smallâtwo bedrooms, one main area, and a kitchenette that looked like it hadnât seen Republic service in years. It was old, but clean. Familiar now.
You sat across from him at the small table. The light was dim, warm. Between you sat two steaming mugs.
âThis is becoming tradition,â you said, fingers wrapping around the warm ceramic.
Howzer gave a low hum of amusement. âItâs the only thing I know how to make that doesnât involve rations.â
You took a sip. âStill better than what the Empire served.â
His smile faded, and for a moment, he watched you too carefullyâlike he was searching for bruises no one could see.
âYouâre sleeping more,â he said. âThatâs good.â
âNot dreaming less,â you admitted.
âHow long were you in there?â
You hesitated. âThree months. Maybe more. They stopped marking the days. I think they thought Iâd break.â
A silence settled between you. But not a heavy one.
âThey donât like people who speak too loudly,â he said eventually.
âI didnât scream when they came for me,â you murmured, almost surprised to hear the words aloud. âI thought⌠maybe that would mean something. That I stayed quiet. Dignified.â
Howzerâs voice was soft. âYou donât owe them your silence. Or your strength.â
You looked at him. Really looked.
His eyes werenât cold, like the ones behind stormtrooper helmets. They were warm and tired and human. He looked like a man who had seen too much and decided to carry it anyway.
âYouâre not like the others,â you said.
He shook his head once. âNot anymore.â
âWhy not?â
His jaw tightened, and for a long moment, you thought he might not answer.
âI saw what they did to Ryloth,â he said finally. âThe Empire. The orders. I followed them for too long. But one day⌠I just couldnât anymore.â
He didnât sound proud. He didnât sound angry either.
He just sounded real.
âDo you regret it?â you asked.
âEvery day. And Iâd do it again.â
You swallowed hard. âThatâs brave.â
âNo,â he said quietly. âThatâs necessary. Brave wouldâve been doing it sooner.â
The silence between you changed. It warmed. Stretched. Your eyes lingered on his handsâstrong, scarred, fingers curled around the mug like he was anchoring himself to something.
âYouâre the first person whoâs made me feel safe sinceâŚâ You trailed off, unsure if you could finish.
He didnât press. Just said, âYou donât have to explain.â
âBut I want to.â
That surprised both of you.
You lowered your eyes to the table, your thumb tracing the rim of the mug. âI didnât think Iâd ever feel normal again. Or⌠human. But with you, I donât feel broken. Just⌠healing.â
Howzerâs voice dropped to a hush. âYou are human. You never stopped being.â
You looked up.
And the way he looked back at youâgentle, unwaveringâmade your chest ache.
âI donât know how to do this,â you said. âI donât know how to be close to someone again.â
Howzer reached outâslowly, carefullyâand laid his hand on the table, palm up. He didnât touch you. He didnât move any closer.
But he offered.
And after a long moment, your hand found his.
You curled your fingers around his palm. The warmth of his skin grounded you, anchored you in the present.
âYou donât have to know how,â he said. âWe can just sit here. Thatâs enough.â
The silence that followed was the good kindâthe kind that let you breathe.
You didnât realize how close youâd leaned until his forehead touched yours.
The contact was feather-light. Chaste. His breath ghosted across your cheek. His eyes stayed closed, and his free hand hovered near your elbow, waiting for you to pull away.
You didnât.
Your forehead stayed against his, your fingers tightening around his.
âYouâre gentle,â you whispered.
He smiled, barely a breath. âI have to be. Youâve had enough pain.â
Your heart stuttered.
âI donât know if I can feel everything yet,â you admitted.
âThatâs okay,â he said. âWe donât have to rush anything.â
And godsâhow many people had said that and meant it?
You leaned into him, letting your weight rest partially against his chest. He adjusted, gently guiding you closer, until your cheek pressed against the space just below his collarbone. His arms wrapped around you slowly, hesitantly, then held you like you were something precious.
He didnât try to deepen the moment. Didnât press for more. He just held you. One hand in your hair, the other resting low on your back. His heartbeat against your cheek. Steady. Warm. Alive.
âI donât want this to be temporary,â you whispered.
âThen it wonât be.â
You stayed like that until the lantern burned low, and your body stopped flinching at shadows.
And when you finally fell asleepâheld safely in Howzerâs arms, your fingers still twined with hisâyou didnât dream of the cell.
You dreamt of the desert wind.
And hands that never hurt.
Commander Bly x Twiâlek Reader
⸝
Your lekku ached by the end of the dayâdust, sun, and tension clinging to your skin like static. The Republic base on Saleucami wasnât built for comfort, especially not for Twiâleks. The durasteel walls felt colder, the clone stares felt longer.
But not his.
Commander Bly didnât stare. He observed. Quietly. Constantly. With that golden visor that gave nothing awayâand still, somehow, everything.
Youâd first met him patching up his troops in the med bay you ran. Your hands worked quicklyâpracticed, efficientâbut Blyâs attention never left the soldier on the table. Not until you touched his shoulder.
âCommander,â youâd said, âheâs stabilized. You can breathe.â
His helmet turned slowly toward you. âI am breathing.â
You hadnât been so sure.
Now, weeks later, youâd come to expect him. He brought his troopers in for treatment like clockwork. Always formal. Always quiet. Always⌠watching.
Tonight, the base was quiet. Too quiet. Even the droids had stopped advancingâpulling back, regrouping. A storm was coming. You could feel it in your bones.
So could Bly.
He stood near the perimeter, hands behind his back, helmet off for once. His golden markings shimmered faintly in the dying sun, and his gaze was turned toward the horizon like it had something to answer for.
You walked up beside him, wrapping your arms around yourself.
âYou always stand like that,â you said softly.
âLike what?â
âLike youâre bracing for something to hit you.â
He was quiet a moment.
âI usually am.â
You turned to look at him. His face was as hard as durasteel, but the lines were tired. Older than he should be. Too much war. Not enough sleep. Not enough peace.
âYouâre not just watching the horizon, are you?â you asked. âYouâre thinking.â
He exhaled through his nose. âYes.â
âAbout what?â
Another pause. Longer this time.
âAbout you.â
That stopped you.
âIâve seen a lot of medics,â he continued, his voice low, gravelly, careful. âBut Iâve never seen someone patch a man up like sheâs stitching together something sacred. You treat every soldier like they matter.â
âThey do matter.â
âI know. Thatâs what scares me.â
You looked away, heart tight. âBecause they die?â
âBecause I could.â
You turned back. He was staring at you nowâtruly staring. No visor. No armor. Just him.
âAnd if I did,â he said, softer now, âI wouldnât want to go without⌠knowing what this is.â
You didnât breathe.
âI donât know how to say it right,â he added. âNever learned. But when I see youâitâs like thereâs a part of the war that isnât ugly.â
You reached out, fingers brushing his hand. âYou donât need to say it right, Bly. You already did.â
His hand curled around yours. Warm. Rough. Real.
And there, on the edge of battle, surrounded by silence and fading light, Commander Bly leaned in and pressed his forehead gently to yoursâTwiâlek to clone, soldier to healer, broken to breaking.
And you let him.
Because love didnât always come with declarations.
Sometimes, it came painted in gold.
⸝
YAAA IM SUCH A HUGE FAN OF YOUR TBB WORK AND I FINALLY HAVE A REQUEST IDEAâŚ
Mandalorian reader who speaks in Mandoâa to herself when she thinks sheâs alone, and one day cf 99 overhears her!!
tysm if you do this, like I said I love your work and Iâm so excited to read more <3 take care lovely!!
Thank you x
I hope this is somewhat close to what you had in mind.
Bad Batch x Reader
The cantina was loud as usual, reeking of stale spotchka and poor decisions. You sat in the corner booth at Cidâs, helmet off but gauntlets still on, nursing a cheap drink and a cheaper job. Youâd just come back from a run that paid in credits so light they could float off your palm. Figures.
You muttered to yourself, low and in a tongue most beings on Ord Mantell didnât understand.
âKriffing dikkut,â you muttered under your breath, just loud enough for your own ears. âNi ru'kir not even cuyir sha borarir today⌠bal par megâ
You swirled your cup, leaned back with a scowl. In your mind Cidâs got no honor, no plan. Just her greasy fingers in every job on this rock.
Another sip. You were speaking louder now. You thought you were alone. âMeh Ni had options, Ni Ru'kel tettar kaysh shebs off a roofâ
âInteresting,â came a voice just behind you.
You froze. Slowly, you turned your headâand saw the familiar faces of Clone Force 99. Hunter stood with his arms folded, head tilted. Tech was already tapping on his datapad. Crosshair had a toothpick in his mouth and that smug glint in his eye. Wrecker was smirking like you just said something hilarious. Echo said nothing, but his gaze was sharp.
âYou speak Mandoâa,â Tech noted, without looking up. âQuite fluently.â
You stood quickly, not bothering to hide your annoyance.
âNo osik,â you snapped. âDidnât exactly mean for the whole squad to eavesdrop.â
Crosshair chuckled. âYou talk to yourself in a dead language, and weâre the weird ones?â
Your visor snapped down. âItâs not dead. Just sleeping. Like a rancor with teeth.â
Hunter took a step closer. âWhy keep it quiet?â
You didnât answer at first. Just stared, then finally said, âBecause itâs mine. Because people like Cid donât deserve to hear it. Because you aruetiise donât know what it means to carry a name that was earned, not assigned.â
Wrecker looked genuinely hurt. âHey, weâve fought with you, bled with youââ
âDoesnât make us vod,â you interrupted. âNot yet.â
Echo stepped forward, quieter than the rest. âWeâre not trying to be something weâre not. But we do understand what itâs like to have your culture stolen and your purpose used.â
That made you pause.
You looked at him for a long time, the words catching in your throat. Then, finally, you said itâsoft, but clear.
âNi ven, oriâvod. But you tell that chakaar Cid if she lowballs me again, Iâll weld her bar shut.â
Crosshairâs smirk widened. âIâll get the torch.â
Hunter let out a rare chuckle. âFair enough. Next time, maybe just let us know when youâre venting in Mandoâa. Weâll knock first.â
You gave a subtle nod and walked past them, muttering under your breath again.
âI donât trust you. Not yet.â
But your pace slowed at the door. Just for a second.
And none of them missed it.
|â¤ď¸ = Romantic | đśď¸= smut or smut implied |đĄ= platonic |
The Bad Batch
- x Jedi Reader âAbout time you showed upâ đĄ
- x Reader âpermission to feelâ đĄ
- x Fem!Reader âoursâ â¤ď¸/đĄ
- x Fem!Reader âSecondsâđĄ
- x Fem!Reader âundercover temptationâ đśď¸
- x reader âSay that again?ââ¤ď¸
- x reader âEchoes in Dustâ â¤ď¸đĄ
- x Reader âSecrets in the Shadowâ
- âThe Scent of HomeâđĄ
- Helmet Chaos â¤ď¸đĄ
Hunter
- x Mandalorian Reader pt.1â¤ď¸
- x Mandalorian Reader pt. 2â¤ď¸
- x Pabu Readerâ¤ď¸
- x reader âgood lookingââ¤ď¸
- x reader âRideâ đśď¸
- x reader âWhat is that smellââ¤ď¸
- x Plus sized reader âAll the parts of youâ â¤ď¸
- x Reader âFlower Tacticsâ
Tech
- x mechanic reader â¤ď¸
- x Jedi Reader âuncalculated variablesââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âTheoretical Feelingsâ â¤ď¸
- x Reader âStatistical Probability of Loveâ â¤ď¸
- x Reader âSweet Circuitsâ â¤ď¸
- x Reader âyou talk too much (and I like it)â
- x Fem reader âRecalibrationâ đśď¸
- x Jealous Reader âMore than Calculationsâ
- x Reader âThere are other waysâ
-âExactly Usâ â¤ď¸
- âThe Fall Doesnât End Youâ đĄ/â¤ď¸
- âHeat Indexâ â¤ď¸
- âTerminally Yoursâ â¤ď¸
Wrecker
- x Shop keeper readerâ¤ď¸
- x Reader âI wanna wreck our friendshipââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âGrumpy Hearts and Sunshine Shouldersââ¤ď¸
- x reader âBig enough to hold youââ¤ď¸
- x Torguta Reader âThe Sound of Your Voiceââ¤ď¸
- âHeart of the Wreckageâ â¤ď¸
Echo
- x Senator!Readerâ¤ď¸
- x reader âsafe with youââ¤ď¸
- âOperation: Stay Foreverâ â¤ď¸
Crosshair
- x reader âThe Stillness Between Wavesâ¤ď¸
- x reader âjust like the restââ¤ď¸
- x Fem!Reader âRight on Targetâ đśď¸
- âSharp Eyesâ â¤ď¸
Captain Howzer
- x Twiâlek Reader âQuiet Rebellionââ¤ď¸
- âA safe place to fallâ â¤ď¸
Overall Material List
|â¤ď¸ = Romantic | đśď¸= smut or smut implied |đĄ= platonic |
Commander Cody
- x Twiâlek Readerâ¤ď¸
- x Queen Readerâ¤ď¸
- x Jedi reader âmeet me in the woodsââ¤ď¸
- x Jedi Reader âCold Windââ¤ď¸
- x Bounty Hunter Reader âCrossfireâ multiple chapterâ¤ď¸
- x GN Mandalorian Reader âOne Too Manyâ â¤ď¸
- âDiplomacy & Detonationsâ â¤ď¸
- âI Think They Call This Loveâ
Waxer
- x Twiâlek Reader âpainted in dustââ¤ď¸
Overall Material List
|â¤ď¸ = Romantic | đśď¸= smut or smut implied |đĄ= platonic |
Wolf Pack
âFor The Packâ đĄ
Commander Wolffe
- x Jedi Reader (order 66)â¤ď¸
- x âVillage Crazyâ readerâ¤ď¸
- x Jedi Reader â¤ď¸
- x Reader (79âs)â¤ď¸
- Rebels Wolffe x reader âsomewhere only we knowââ¤ď¸
- x reader âCommand and Consequenceââ¤ď¸
- x reader âCommand and Consequence pt.2ââ¤ď¸
- x Fem!Reader âstill yoursââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âhit me (like you mean it)ââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âTactical Complicationsââ¤ď¸
- âBattle Scarsâ â¤ď¸/đśď¸
- âThe Butcher and The Wolfâ â¤ď¸ multiple parts
Overall Material List
|â¤ď¸ = Romantic | đśď¸= smut or smut implied |đĄ= platonic |
Overall
- âThe Warmth Between WarsâđĄ
- âYour What?!"đĄ
- âArmour for the Skinâ đĄ
- âHearts of the 501stâ â¤ď¸
Arc Trooper Fives
- x bounty hunter reader pt.1â¤ď¸
- x bounty hunter reader pt.2 â¤ď¸
- x reader âThis Lifeââ¤ď¸
- x reader âName First, Then Troubleâđśď¸
- x Sith!Reader âThe Worst Luckââ¤ď¸
Captain Rex
- x Jedi Readerâ¤ď¸
- x Villager Reader â¤ď¸
- x reader âwhat remainsââ¤ď¸
- x Sith Assassin Reader âonly one targetââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âGhosts of the Gameâ
- x Bounty Hunter Reader âCrossfireâ multiple characters â¤ď¸
- x Jedi Reader âWar On Two Frontsâ multiple parts
- âSmileââ¤ď¸
- â501st Confidential (Except itâs Not)â â¤ď¸
Arc Trooper Echo
- x Old Republic Jedi Readerâ¤ď¸
- x Old Republic Jedi Reader pt.2â¤ď¸
- âA Ghost in the Circuitâ đĄâ¤ď¸
Hardcase
- x medic reader â¤ď¸
Kix
- x Jedi reader âstitches & secretsââ¤ď¸
- âFirst Name Basisâ â¤ď¸
Overall Material List
|â¤ď¸ = Romantic | đśď¸= smut or smut implied |đĄ= platonic |
Boss
- x reader âdirective breachââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âShadows of Theedââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âDuty Calls, Desire Waitsââ¤ď¸
Sev
- x Reader âstill just a rat in a cageââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âStorm and Starlightââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âVertical Evacââ¤ď¸
Scorch
- x reader âPull the Triggerââ¤ď¸
- âWhereâs your head atâ đĄ/â¤ď¸
Fixer
- x Reader âCaf Breakâ â¤ď¸
Overall Material List
|â¤ď¸ = Romantic | đśď¸= smut or smut implied |đĄ= platonic |
Commander Fox
- x Singer/PA Reader pt.1â¤ď¸
- x Singer/PA Reader pt.2â¤ď¸
- x Singer/PA Reader pt.3â¤ď¸
- x Singer/PA Reader pt.4â¤ď¸
- x Caf shop owner reader â¤ď¸
- x reader âcommand and consequenceââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âCommand and Consequence pt.2ââ¤ď¸
- x Senator Reader âRed and Loyalâ multiple parts â¤ď¸
- âRed Linesâ multiple parts
- âsoft spotâ â¤ď¸
Commander Thorn
- x Senator Reader âCollateral Moralsâ multiple partsâ¤ď¸
- x Senator Reader âthe lesser of two warsâ multiple parts â¤ď¸
Sergeant Hound
- X Reader âGrizzerâs Choiceâ
Overall Material List
|â¤ď¸ = Romantic | đśď¸= smut or smut implied |đĄ= platonic |
Gregor
X Reader âThe Brightest Flameââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âSynaptic Sparksââ¤ď¸
Commander Doom
- x Jedi Readerâ¤ď¸
Jango Fett
- x reader âcats in the cradleââ¤ď¸
Commander Bacara
- x Reader âCold Frontââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âWar on Two Frontsâ multiple parts
Commander Bly
- x Jedi reader âitâs on againââ¤ď¸
- x Twiâlek Reader âPainted in Goldââ¤ď¸
Commander Neyo
- x Senator Reader âRules of Engagementââ¤ď¸
- x Reader âSolitude and Street Lightsââ¤ď¸
Command Batch (Clone Commanders)
- x Reader âMy Boys, My Warriorsâ multiple parts đĄ
- x Reader âSteele & Stardustâ â¤ď¸
- x âBrothers in the Makingâ multiple chapters đĄ
- Helmet Chaos â¤ď¸đĄ
Overall Material List
Commander Cody x Village Leader Reader
Their ship barely had time to land before blaster rifles were pointed at them.
âI told you I didnât want help,â came a voice from the treelineâsharp, challenging, full of attitude.
Commander Cody raised a hand to signal the 212th to hold. From behind him, Obi-Wan calmly stepped forward.
âWeâre not here to interfere, only to support your defenseââ
âYou are interference,â the voice snapped.
Then you stepped into view.
A whirlwind of belts, loose straps, feathers, and leather. Goggles shoved to your forehead, hands on hips, expression full of contempt. You looked at the fully armored, clean-cut clones like they were an invasive species.
Obi-Wan bowed slightly. âYou must be the village leaderââ
You held up a hand. âNo, no, donât butter me up with that Jedi etiquette crap. Youâre uninvited.â
âI think youâll want to hear what we have to say,â Cody said, stepping forward.
You blinked at him. Then walked slowly around him, circling like a predator.
âMm. Square jaw. Soldier posture. Serious as a stun baton to the ribs. Youâre the commander?â
âYes, maâam.â
âUnfortunate.â You gave a nasty grin. âI was hoping for someone I could beat in an argument.â
He didnât flinch. âYouâre welcome to try.â
You smirked.
Just as you squared your shoulders, ready to argueâmaybe throw a punchâa group of kids came tumbling out from the trees. A little one tugged your coat.
âBoss! Are we really getting Republic soldiers? That means laser tanks, right? And hot rations?â
You didnât even turn. âNot now, shitheads, Iâm busy beating up strangers.â
Cody blinked. Waxer coughed to hide his laughter. Ahsokaâs eyes went wide. Anakin mumbled, âOh, Force.â
Later, around a crackling fire in your chaotic half-open planning tent (made of repurposed sailcloth and wire), Obi-Wan laid it out clearly.
âThe Separatists are planning a full invasion. Three battalions of B1 units, two AATs, and an orbiting cruiser for support.â
You sipped from a cup of what smelled like fermented jungle fruit and blinked slowly. âSo⌠what youâre saying is⌠thereâs gonna be a fight?â
âYes.â
âAnd itâll be⌠big?â
âYes.â
You sat up straighter. Your grin turned hungry.
âFine. I accept your help.â
Cody raised a brow. âThat fast?â
You threw your arms out dramatically. âYou brought me violence! You shouldâve led with that!â
Boil leaned over to Waxer. âSheâs gonna get us all killed, isnât she?â
Waxer whispered back, âYeah. But itâll be fun.â
⸝
Two days later, you were mid-dismantle of a thermal sensor when Cody approached.
âYou shouldnât be in the blast zone. This isnât standard military procedure.â
You blew a strand of hair from your face and smirked. âIâm not a standard anything, Commander.â
Cody exhaled. âYouâre reckless.â
You held up a small grenade. âI call it chaotic innovation.â
âItâs dangerous.â
You grinned. âSo are your cheekbones, but I donât hear anyone complaining.â
He blinked. ââŚWhat?â
You tossed the grenade to him. He caught it reflexively.
âGood hands,â you said. âI like that.â
He stared down at the live grenade in his palm.
âIs thisâarmed?â
You winked. âMight wanna disarm before you end up splattered on that wall.â
⸝
When the droids finally attacked, you were thriving.
You rode into battle standing on a makeshift hover-skiff, brandishing a long spear with fireworks tied to it, cackling like a banshee.
Cody shouted into the comm: âCan someone please get her out of the crossfire?â
Waxer replied: âWe tried. She bit Boil.â
Boil yelled: âShe did NOT! I just trippedâ!â
âYou tripped because she kicked you!â
⸝
Later that night, after the battle, the village lay safe. The droids were in pieces. And you sat on a fallen log with your knees tucked up, staring at the jungle.
Cody approached, helmet off.
âYou did well today.â
You sighed. âDonât ruin it with compliments.â
He smirked. âIâm trying to be civil.â
You eyed him. âWhy? Planning to ask me to dinner?â
A pause.
ââŚWould you go?â
You stared.
Then laughed. âCommander. If you take me to dinner, Iâll probably start a bar fight and make you pay the tab.â
âNoted.â
You tilted your head. âYouâd really take me?â
Cody shrugged, voice quiet. âYou fight for your people. Youâre unpredictable, reckless⌠and youâve got guts. I respect that.â
You squinted. âThatâs either the sweetest thing anyoneâs said to me⌠or the scariest.â
He held out a hand.
You took it, grinning wide. âAlright, Tensejaw. Maybe Iâll let you stick around.â
Hello! I saw that you do song fics and I had the idea for a Cody X Reader with the song âI think they call this loveâ by Elliot James. Been obsessed over this song for awhile and I think it would be really cute! Xxx (and if itâs possible to add a few of the others clones teasing Cody even obi wan?)
Commander Cody x Reader
Coruscant at night was too loud for someone trying not to fall in love.
Cody wasnât even sure when it started. It mightâve been the day you were transferred to his unit. Mightâve been the first time you fixed the aim on a malfunctioning turret like it was nothing. Or maybeâjust maybeâit was the first time he heard you hum.
You always did thatâmurmured little melodies under your breath when you thought no one was paying attention. Youâd tap your fingers along your belt or your mug, shoulders swaying lightly to some old Core World tune. It was never full-on singingâjust enough to hook in Codyâs brain like a memory.
And tonight? You were humming that one again.
âI think they call this love⌠I think they call this loveâŚâ
You were dancing with Waxer near the bar at 79âs, laughing so hard your drink almost spilled, one hand gripping his vambrace as he attempted to twirl youâpoorly. Boil leaned against the counter, snickering into his glass.
âI swear, sheâs gonna break your neck,â Boil said. âAnd then Codyâs gonna have to fill out the paperwork.â
Cody sat a few stools down, arms crossed, pretending very hard that he wasnât staring.
âYou know,â Boil added loudly, âif Cody glared any harder, heâd melt the floor.â
âShut up,â Cody muttered.
âYeah, sure. Real subtle, Commander,â Waxer called over, catching your hand before you nearly toppled him over. âYouâve been watching her like sheâs a walking war crime.â
Wolffe chuckled beside Cody, taking a long sip of his drink. âHe gets like this every time. Weâve placed bets. So far, Obi-Wanâs winning.â
Cody turned slowly. âObi-Wanâs betting on me?â
As if summoned by sass, Obi-Wan appeared behind them, raising a glass like heâd been lurking all night. âOnly because I believe in you, Cody. Also because I know how utterly incapable you are at expressing your feelings.â
âFantastic.â
âDonât worry,â Rex added dryly. âYouâve got time. She only flirts with you every time she breathes.â
Cody groaned and looked back toward the dancefloorâand you were already walking his way.
Boots light, smile glowing, music catching the end of your latest hum as you slid into the stool beside him. You didnât look at the others. Just him.
âYou okay there, Commander?â you asked, head tilted. âOr should I get you a medic for whatever emotional crisis youâre currently going through?â
Cody blinked. âIâwhat?â
You leaned closer, voice lower now. âTheyâre not exactly subtle,â you said with a smile. âAnd neither are you.â
âI wasnât staring.â
âYou were,â Boil chimed in behind you.
Waxer raised his hand. âRespectfully, heâs been staring for about four months.â
You laughed under your breath and turned fully to Cody, your knees brushing his. âYou gonna keep letting them talk for you?â
Cody exhaled slowly. You were so close. Your eyes searched his, not playfully nowâbut curiously. Hopefully. The hum of the bar faded as your presence filled his whole damn world.
âI thinkâŚâ he started, voice a little hoarse. âI think Iâm in love with you.â
A pause.
Then you grinned. Not surprised. Not mocking. Just relieved.
âThatâs funny,â you said softly. âBecause Iâve been waiting for you to figure that out.â
And thenâyou kissed him.
Quick, warm, but everything changed in that second. His hand slid to your waist before he could stop it, and you smiled against his lips like it was the most natural thing in the galaxy.
Behind you, cheers erupted.
âFinally!â Waxer crowed.
âYou owe me twenty credits!â Rex shouted at Wolffe.
Boil let out a low whistle. âHope youâre ready to be the only thing Cody stares at now.â
Obi-Wan raised his glass and added, âItâs about time our fearless Commander admitted he had a heart.â
You didnât even look back. You just pressed your forehead to Codyâs and whispered, âDonât let go of me, okay?â
He didnât.
Not now.
Not ever.
The music swelled again behind you, and for once, Cody let himself listen.
âIf this is what they call loveâŚâ
He smiled.
Then he wanted all of itâwith you.
I love this picture so much like⌠thatâs mom and dad (platonic)