My darling I've said this before but you deserve so many more likes, every time i read one of your fics im genuinely expecting it to have thousands of likes on it and it usually has like 20? If i could like every single one of your works 100 times i would :)
Okay but imagine Rex's reactions to the reader wearing his helmet. Like, he walks in and the readers like đ§ââïž and he's like đ§ââïž. And then everyone around them is confused bc why is this even happening in the first place (maybe its a prank? Idk đđ)
Also i know i said Rex but if you want to include any others please do lol i would love to see your interpretation of this with others
<3
Ahhh youâre the absolute sweetestâthank you so much for the kind words, seriously!! I couldnât resist this prompt , so I went ahead and did the whole command batchâs reactions too.
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CAPTAIN REX
Heâd just finished a debrief. He was tired, armor scuffed, and brain fogged from a long string of missions. All he wanted was to collect his helmet and find a quiet place to decompress.
Instead, he opened the door to the barracks and found you standing in the middle of the room.
Wearing his helmet.
You werenât doing anything. Just standing there, arms at your sides, posture too stiff, visor pointed directly at the door like youâd been caught red-handed.
Rex froze mid-step. His eyes flicked to your body, then to the helmet, then back again. The room was dead silent.
You didnât speak. Neither did he.
It felt like some kind of unspoken standoff.
When he finally found his voice, it came out neutral but clipped. âIs there a reason youâre wearing my helmet?â
You reached up and lifted it just slightly off your head, enough to reveal your eyes. âI was trying to understand what itâs like⊠carrying all this responsibility. All the weight. I figured the helmet was part of it.â
Rex blinked.
He should have been annoyed. His helmet was an extension of his identity, not something he usually let anyone touch, let alone wear. But something in your voiceâsincere, tinged with dry humorâsoftened the moment.
He exhaled through his nose. âItâs heavier than it looks.â
You slid the helmet off entirely and held it to your chest. âYeah. I didnât expect that.â
Rex crossed the room and took it from your hands, eyes lingering on your face a moment longer than necessary. âYou can ask next time. I might still say no, but⊠you can ask.â
You gave him a faint smile. âNoted, Captain.â
Later, Rex would sit on the edge of his bunk, polishing the helmet with extra care, thinking about the way youâd stood there. How serious youâd looked. And how much more complicated everything felt now.
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COMMANDER CODY
Cody wasnât used to surprises. He didnât like them.
So when he walked into the clone officer quarters and found you perched on his bunkâwearing his helmet and staring at the floor like some kind of haunted statueâhis brain stalled for a moment.
You didnât look up.
You didnât say a word.
Cody stood in the doorway, arms folded, expression unreadable. It was impossible to tell what he was thinkingâlikely the same thing you were: how did this situation even come to exist?
Eventually, he cleared his throat. âAm I interrupting something?â
You slowly lifted your head. âNo. I just⊠wanted to know what it was like. To be you.â
He arched an eyebrow. âBy wearing my helmet?â
You lifted it off, your hair a little mussed from the fit. âIt felt⊠commanding. Intimidating. Also slightly claustrophobic.â
Cody crossed the room, took the helmet from your hands, and inspected it like you mightâve done something to compromise its integrity. âThatâs about accurate.â
You stood. âDid I at least look cool?â
Cody gave a short, quiet laugh, the kind that rarely made it past his lips. âYou looked like you were trying very hard to be me. But points for effort.â
He turned to go, helmet under one arm. As he walked out, he muttered, âDonât tell Kenobi.â
You smirked. âWouldnât dream of it.â
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COMMANDER FOX
Fox was already in a foul mood. The Senate hearings had run late. A group of Senators had argued about appropriations for nearly three hours. The bureaucrats hadnât approved the funding he needed, and to make things worse, someone had tried to hand him a fruit basket on the way out.
He just wanted to grab his datapad and leave.
Instead, he stepped into his office and stopped cold.
You were behind his desk, arms folded. His helmet was on your head, slightly crooked from the weight.
Fox did not say anything.
You didnât, either.
You watched each other like two predators in a silent, high-stakes standoff.
Finally, he broke the silence. âIs this a joke?â
âNo.â
He narrowed his eyes. âThen explain.â
You pulled the helmet off and set it gently on the desk. âI wanted to see if it felt as heavy as it looks. Thought maybe Iâd understand what itâs like⊠to be you.â
Fox blinked. His voice dropped lower. âThat helmetâs been in more battles than most Senators have meetings.â
You met his gaze, dead serious. âExactly. Thatâs why I put it on.â
He walked over and took the helmet in both hands. For a moment, he didnât speak. Just stood there, the edge of the desk between you, his gloved fingers tracing a scratch across the paint.
âYou look good in red,â he said at last, so quietly you barely caught it.
Then he was gone.
You stood alone, trying not to think too hard about the heat blooming in your chest.
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COMMANDER WOLFFE
Youâd made the mistake of trying it out in the openâwhen Wolffe was still around.
You thought he was in a meeting. He wasnât.
The moment he stepped into the hallway and saw you marching in a slow circle, wearing his helmet and muttering, âI donât trust anyone. Not even my own shadow. Jedi are the worst,â it was already too late to escape.
You froze mid-step when you noticed him watching you.
Wolffe didnât say a word.
You pivoted awkwardly. âI was⊠doing a character study.â
âYou were mocking me.â
âNot entirely.â
He crossed his arms, expression hard, but his voice was lighter than you expected. âYouâre lucky I like you.â
You pulled the helmet off. âItâs a compliment. Youâve got presence.â
Wolffe walked forward, took the helmet, and gave you a look somewhere between amused and exasperated. âYou forgot the part where I sigh and glare at everything in sight.â
You nodded, solemn. âNext time, Iâll prepare better.â
He rolled his eyes, turned to leave, and muttered over his shoulder, âNext time, do it where I canât see you.â
But he was smiling.
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COMMANDER BLY
You were crouched on the floor of the gunship hangar when Bly found you.
You hadnât meant for him to catch you. It was supposed to be a private momentâa little playful impersonation you were going to spring on him later.
But there you were, wearing his helmet, whispering dramatically into the echoing space of the hangar, âGeneral Secura, I would die for you. I would let the whole world burn if you asked.â
You turned and saw him standing behind you.
There was no saving this.
âHi,â you said, voice muffled behind the helmet.
Bly stared. âWhat⊠exactly are you doing?â
You straightened, taking off the helmet. âI was⊠immersing myself in your worldview. For empathy purposes.â
He squinted. âYou were crawling around whispering to yourself in my voice.â
You nodded. âItâs called method acting.â
Bly took the helmet from you like it was fragile. âNext time, try asking.â
âWould you have let me?â
He paused. ââŠProbably not.â
âThen I regret nothing.â
Bly looked at the helmet, then at you. His expression was unreadableâbut his voice was warmer when he said, âTry not to let General Secura catch you doing that. Or she will ask questions.â
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COMMANDER THORN
You were caught mid-spin, dramatically turning to aim Thornâs DC-17 blaster at an imaginary threat.
His helmet covered your face, tilted slightly sideways from the weight. You didnât realize heâd walked into the room until you heard the low, unimpressed voice behind you.
âUnless youâre planning to fight off an uprising by yourself, Iâd recommend not touching my gear.â
You froze.
Lowered the blaster.
Removed the helmet slowly.
ââŠHi.â
Thornâs arms were crossed, and though his tone was flat, his eyes glittered with amusement. âYou couldâve just asked.â
âI figured youâd say no.â
âI wouldâve. But at least I wouldnât have walked in on⊠whatever that was.â
You held up the helmet like an offering. âDo I at least get points for form?â
Thorn stepped forward, plucked the helmet from your hands, and gave you a once-over that lingered slightly too long. âYouâre lucky I like chaos.â
And then he walked off, still shaking his head, muttering, âForce help me, theyâre getting bolder.â
âž»
COMMANDER NEYO
You werenât even doing anything dramatic this time. Just sitting on a crate in the hangar bay, wearing Commander Neyoâs helmet with a calmness that probably made it weirder.
He entered mid-conversation with a deck officer and paused mid-sentence when he saw you.
Neyoâs reputation was infamousâno-nonsense, silent, rarely seen without his helmet. So when you tried it on just to see what the fuss was about, you didnât expect him to walk in.
Now he was staring at you.
Expressionless.
Silent.
Unmoving.
You slowly lifted the helmet off. âCommander.â
âWhere did you find it?â
ââŠIn your locker.â
He blinked once. âYou broke into my locker?â
ââŠHypothetically.â
The deck officer excused himself quickly.
Neyo walked over, took the helmet without saying a word, and stared down at you for a long moment. Then, just as you were starting to sweatâ
âI hope you didnât try the voice modulator. Itâs calibrated to my pitch.â
You blinked. ââŠSo youâre not mad?â
âI didnât say that.â
Then he walked away.
You didnât know if you were about to get reported or flirted with. And somehow, that was very Neyo.
âž»
COMMANDER GREE
Youâd barely slipped the helmet on when Gree stepped into the staging area, datapad in hand, ready to give a mission briefing.
He stopped. His gaze snapped up.
You, standing in the center of the room in his jungle-green helmet, stared back at him like a guilty cadet.
There was a long pause.
âIs that⊠my helmet?â he asked, like he needed verbal confirmation of what his eyes were clearly seeing.
You nodded slowly. âItâs surprisingly comfortable.â
He tilted his head. âYou know itâs loaded with recon tech calibrated to my ocular patterns?â
ââŠNo.â
âTechnically, that means it could backfire and scramble your brain if you activated it.â
ââŠI didnât touch any buttons.â
Gree blinked, then grinned. âGood. Iâd hate to scrape you off the floor. Again.â
You took the helmet off and passed it back. âThatâs⊠oddly sweet.â
Gree shrugged. âOnly because itâs you.â
The next day, he left a field helmetânot his ownâon your bunk with a sticky note: âTest this one. Lower risk of neural frying.â
âž»
COMMANDER BACARA
Youâd always known Bacara was a little intense.
So maybe wearing his helmet was a bad idea.
You didnât expect him to walk into the armory while you were trying it on. You especially didnât expect him to freeze mid-stride and go completely stillâlike a wolf spotting prey.
âTake it off,â he said, voice sharp.
You complied immediately.
âI wasnât trying to be disrespectful,â you added quickly, holding it out with both hands. âJust curious.â
He took it from you in silence. His expression didnât change. But his hands moved carefully, almost reverently.
âThat helmetâs been through Geonosis,â he said quietly. âThrough mud and fire. My brothers died wearing helmets just like it.â
You swallowed. âIâm sorry.â
He looked up. âI know. Just⊠donât try it again. Not without asking.â
You gave a small nod. âI wonât.â
As he turned to leave, he paused. âYou did look decent in it, though.â
He left before you could respond.
âž»
COMMANDER DOOM
Youâd slipped Doomâs helmet on while helping reorganize the command tent. He wasnât aroundâor so you thought.
You were mid-sentence in a very bad impression of his voice when you heard someone behind you.
âIs that how I sound to you?â
You turned, startled, and found Doom leaning against the tent flap with one brow raised.
You straightened awkwardly. âI was, uh, trying to get into your mindset.â
He snorted. âMy mindset?â
âYou know. Calm. Steady. Smiling in the face of doomâironically.â
He walked over, arms folded, and tilted his head as you pulled the helmet off. âDid it work?â
âI think Iâve achieved inner peace.â
He chuckled. âKeep the helmet. It suits you.â
You stared.
âIâm joking,â he added, already walking away.
You werenât so sure.
âž»
Hiya babes! Hope youâre doing well! Just outta say I absolutely adore your writing and always brings a smile to my face when you post!!
I was hoping you could do an angst fic where itâs the boys reactions to you jumping in front of them taking a hit/bolt. You can choose the clone group! Xxx
Thank you so much â seriously, your kind words mean the world to me!! Iâm so glad my writing can bring a little light to your day đ
I hope you donât mind that I decided to go with the Wolf pack for this one. I hope you enjoy đ«¶
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Reader x 104th Battalion (Wolffe, Sinker, Boost)
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You donât think. You just move. Thatâs what instinct does when family is in danger.
The air was thick with heat and cordite, the jungle humid enough to choke on. Blasterfire lit the treeline in wild flashesâred bolts cutting through the green like angry stars. You pressed forward with your saber raised, breath tight in your chest, the Force buzzing like a live wire beneath your skin.
This wasnât supposed to be a heavy engagement. Just a scouting mission. Routine.
But nothing about war ever stays routine for long.
âWolffe, move it! Youâre exposed!â you shouted, watching him duck behind cover just as two more shots chewed bark over his head.
âCopy that,â Wolffe growled, popping off a few retaliatory blasts. âBoost! Sinker! Sweep the right flank and flush that nest!â
âAlready on it!â Boost called from somewhere in the brush.
âWeâre getting pinned down out here!â Sinker added, tone sharp but controlled.
You moved closer to Wolffe, saber up, covering his retreat as he repositioned behind the half-blown trunk of a felled tree. The rest of the battalion had spread out, covering the ridgeline, trying to locate the sniper.
Thatâs when it hit youâthe feeling.
The Force spiked.
Time slowed.
A heartbeat ahead of the moment, you felt it: danger, aimed at someone you couldnât let go.
Wolffe was turning. He wasnât going to make it in time.
You didnât think. You just moved.
A leap. A cry. A single instant of instinct and fear and absolute certainty.
And then the bolt hit you square in the back.
Wolffe didnât register what happened right away. One moment he was turning to call out an order, the next there was a flash of blue, the hum of a saber, and a sickening crack of a body hitting the dirt.
ââ[Y/N]?!â
You were lying on your side, smoke rising from your robes, your saber a few meters away, deactivated.
You werenât moving.
Sinker screamed something wordless over comms. Boost shouted your name.
âMEDIC!â Wolffe was already moving. âGet me a medic now!â
He slid to his knees beside you, hands already tearing open the fabric around the wound, even though he didnât know what the hell he was doingâjust doing. There was too much blood. Too much heat coming off your skin. You were smaller than him, younger, not armored like they were. You were a Jedi, yeah, but also just a kid compared to the rest of them.
His kid. Their kid.
And youâd taken a shot meant for him.
âž»
Hours Later you were in bacta now. Still alive. Barely.
The medics said it was touch and go. The bolt had burned through muscle and clipped something vital. Youâd coded once during evac, but they brought you back. Your saber had been returned to Plo Koon, its emitter dented from where it had slammed into the ground.
Wolffe sat in the corner of the medbay, helmet off, armor streaked with dried bloodâyour blood. He hadnât moved in two hours.
âWhy the hell would she do that?â Sinker muttered, pacing with his helmet tucked under one arm. He was flushed, angry. âWe wear armor for a reason. We train for this. Sheâs a Jedi, not a clone. Sheâs not supposed toââ
âBe willing to die for us?â Boost cut in, voice tired. âGuess she missed that memo.â
Sinker let out a long, low sigh and scrubbed a hand over his face. âWeâre the ones who throw ourselves in front of people. Thatâs the job. Thatâs our job.â
Plo Koon stood at your bedside, one hand lightly resting on the glass of the tank. Heâd been silent for most of it, his calm presence a strange contrast to the chaos.
âShe has always seen you as more than soldiers,â he said gently. âYou are her brothers. Her family.â
Wolffe finally spoke, his voice low and rough. âSheâs part of the pack. And the pack protects its own.â
âBut she nearly died protecting you, Commander,â Boost said. âWhat does that make us?â
âAlive,â Wolffe answered. âThatâs what it makes us. And when she wakes up, sheâs going to be reminded that we never leave one of our own behind.â
Sinker stopped pacing, jaw clenched.
âSheâs not gonna get off easy for this.â
âOh, hell no,â Boost muttered. âSoon as sheâs conscious, Iâm yelling at her.â
âNot before me,â Wolffe said, standing finally. âIâve got seniority.â
They tried to jokeâtried to banterâbut it didnât land. Not yet.
âž»
Your vision was blurry. Everything felt heavy. And sore. So sore.
âHeyâhey! Sheâs waking up!â
Voices. Familiar. Warm.
You blinked hard. One blurry helmet. Then two. Then a third face appearedâscarred, grim, but so full of relief it almost didnât look like Wolffe.
âAbout damn time,â he muttered. âThought we were gonna have to start arguing over who got to carry your sorry ass out of here.â
You tried to speak, but all that came out was a croaky whisper: âPackâŠâ
Boost leaned in closer. âYeah. Weâre here.â
Sinker had a hand pressed to your arm, trying not to squeeze too hard. âDonât you ever do that again.â
You smiled weakly. âDidnât think about it.â
âNo kidding,â Wolffe said, arms crossed now. âYou jump in front of another bolt like that and weâre stapling your robes to the floor.â
Plo Koon stepped forward, voice kind and firm. âRest now, little one. You have done more than enough. The pack is safe. Because of you.â
You let your eyes fall shut again, not from pain this timeâbut because you knew they were watching over you.
Always would.
Commander Wolffe x Princess Reader
R4 trilled while plugging dataâspikes into the sleek shuttleâs navâcomputer; TC polished the boarding ramp as though senators would rate its shine. Inside, [Y/N] sealed a crate of festival giftsâkyberâlaced lanterns, citrusâspiced tihaarâwhen the hangar doors parted.
In strode Master Plo Coon and Kenobi, with his most innocent smile. Behind them Commander Cody and an impeccably straightâbacked Commander Wolffe.
Kenobi surveyed the scene, eyes twinkling. âMy lady, I trust Coruscant treated you⊠memorably?â
Ploâs mask inclined. âYes, I understand youâve already formed aâshall we sayâeffective working rapport with our best security personnel.â
TCâs head swiveled. âIf you refer to last nightâs flawless briefing, Masters, I assure you my presentation notes wereââ
ââcopied from my schematics,â R4 beeped smugly.
Kenobi chuckled. âQuite. Though some reports suggest the princess herself gathered more⊠field intelligence than anticipated.â
Wolffeâs helmet visor dipped a millimeter; only Cody saw the pained grimace. He murmured, âSteady, vod, youâve faced droid armiesâJedi teasing wonât kill you.â
[Y/N] kept a serene smile. âCoruscant was enlightening, Master Kenobi. Your commanders are⊠thorough.â
âThorough,â Kenobi echoed, barely suppressing a grin. âAn admirable quality.â
Plo produced a dataâchip. âYour Highness, these are revised escort protocols for the festival. The Council looks forward to cooperating.â
Cody added, âWolfpack leads the clone detachment. Weâll rendezvous in orbit over Karthuna.â He patted Wolffeâs pauldron. âCommander is eager to ensure everything runs smoothly.â
Wolffe managed, âHonored to serve, Princess.â Translation: please let the floor swallow me.
R4 gave a warbling laugh. TC translated dryly, âR4 suggests the commander already has extensive knowledge of our customsâparticularly nightlife.â
Kenobi coughed into his sleeve; even Ploâs mask seemed to smile.
[Y/N] ascended the ramp, pausing beside Wolffe. Low enough for only him: âTry not to judge anyone before second breakfast, Commander.â
He answered just as quietly, âNext time, title first, drinks second.â
Her wink was pure mischief. âWhereâs the fun in that?â
With diplomatic farewells exchanged, the Jedi departed, Cody dragging a stillâsmirking Kenobi. Wolffe lingered as engines warmed, visor reflecting the princess who had upended his meticulously ordered world.
R4âs hatch closed, TC waved primly, and the shuttle lifted skywardâtoward open borders, a fiveâday festival, and a reunion sure to test the Wolfâs composure more than any battlefield.
âž»
Commander Wolffe had survived orbital bombardments, trench sieges, and General Grievousâs cacklingâbut nothing tested endurance like the embassyâs protocol droid at full lecture speed.
TC strode the aisle between jumpâseats where Wolffe, Boost, and Sinker buckled in.
ââŠand the Festival of Dawning begins with a kuurâvaan procession. That translates roughly as âdance of a thousand sparks,â involving microâkyber filaments that ignite in sequenceâquite breathtaking, provided you wear appropriate eye shielding. Now, the correct greeting is âGalâsharaâ with palms outwardânever inward, or you imply the listener lacks honor. Also, avoid offering your left handâhistorically used for bloodletting rituals dating backââ
Sinker slumped. âCommander, permission to eject myself through the airâlock.â
Boost whispered, âCould be worseâcould be a Senate speech.â
TC continued, undeterred. ââand if youâre offered sapphire tihaar, remember itâs an apology drink, not casual refreshment. Accepting without cause is tantamount to admitting fault. Speaking of fault, did you know the northern faultâlineââ
Wolffe pinched the bridge of his nose. âDroid, compile this in a datapad. My men will study quietly.â
âOh, certainly, Commander. I have already prepared a 312âpage primer, complete with holoâgraphs.â
Sinker mouthed threeâhundredâtwelve?! Boost mimed choking.
âž»
[Y/N] sat crossâlegged in her cabin, R4 projecting a secure blue holo of King Talrenâsilverâbearded, stern eyes softened only for his daughter.
âLittle Dawn,â he greeted, using her childhood nickname, âI wonât waste time. Loyalist scouts uncovered three insurgent cells. Extremists insist reopening our borders is betrayal; some whisper of Separatist aid.â
A map flared beside himâred sigils in mountain passes.
âI need those cells silenced before the festival opens,â the king said. âYou know the terrain. Take whatever force is required, but keep offâworlders uninvolved. This must look like an internal matter.â
[Y/N] bowed her head. âIt will be done, Father.â
The holo faded. R4 beeped a query.
âPrep infiltration loadouts,â she answered. âLowâflash sabers, sonic mines, and two squads of Shadow Guard on standby. We strike first nightfall.â
R4 warbled approval, projecting tactical overlays. She added waypoints, carving silent routes Wolffeâs clones would never notice.
âž»
Later, passing Wolffe in the corridor, [Y/N] offered a casual nod. He paused, as if sensing undercurrents, but protocol kept him silent.
Behind him TC called, âCommander, I neglected to mention Karthunese dining orderâif the Princess serves you last, itâs actually a sign of high esteemââ
Wolffe muttered a prayer for battlefield blasterfire to drown out etiquette lessons.
In her quarters, [Y/N] traced insurgent sigils on the holo with a gloved fingertip, resolve hardening. Opening Karthunaâs doors to the galaxy meant showing strength the old wayâquiet, decisive, unseen.
And if the Wolf and his troopers never learned how the festival stayed peaceful, all the better.
âž»
The twin suns of Karthuna cast copper light over the obsidianâpaved skyâdock as the Republic cruiser settled with a hiss of repulsors. King Talren stood flanked by honor guards whose sunâmetal armor threw brilliant flares into the air. Behind him waited the planetary senator, Senator Vessar, and the everâskeptical Governor of Interior Works, Governor Rhun.
The ramp dropped. Out strode Masters PloâŻCoon and Kenobi, Chancellor Palpatine in ceremonial crimson, a cluster of senators, and the clone detachment led by Commanders Cody and Wolffe flanked by Boost and Sinker.
Talren bowed with a warriorâs economy. âKarthuna welcomes the Republic. May the Force greet you as friend and guest.â
A respectful murmur answered. Yet even before introductions concluded, his daughter slipped to his side, murmured, âUrgent Shadow Guard matter, Father,â andâstill in civilian vest and braidâbeelined for a sandâsilver speeder.
Wolffeâs visor tracked her, but protocol held him. Engines howled; the speeder vanished down a cliffâside liftâtube toward the high passes.
Talren inhaledâthe first lie ready on his tongue.
âž»
Kenobi stepped forward, large smile in place. âYour Majesty, we look forward to your famous Festival of Dawning.â
âAs do we all,â Talren replied, steering the party toward the citadelâs balcony overlooking the festival valleyâfar from launch bays or military comms.
Chancellor Palpatine clasped gloved hands. âYour daughter leads the festivities, does she not? I had hoped to congratulate her.â
âShe prepares aâŠsurprise presentation,â Talren said smoothly. âArtistsâ temperaments, Chancellor.â
Governor Rhun muttered just loud enough, âMore like a warrior itching for mischief.â
Senator Vessar chimed in, tone dripping dry humor, âI assure our offâworld partners the princess habitually vanishes moments before debuting something spectacularâor spectacularly dangerous.â
Talren fixed them both with a steelâedged smile that promised discussion later.
PloâŻCoon shifted his weight, KelâDor mask unreadable. âYour Highness, Clone Commander Wolffe will require coordination with your security captain.â
âOf course.â Talren gestured toward the fortress doors. âCommander, my staff will relay schematics over luncheon. Meanwhile, allow me to show the Chancellor our kyberâterraced gardensâquite safe, I assure you.â
Wolffeâs unspoken protest died behind the visor; duty bound, he followed Cody toward a briefing alcove where TC awaited with yet another dataâslab. Talren breathed easier: one crisis delayed, if not averted.
As the king guided the diplomats through colonnades, Governor Rhun leaned in: âYou risk interstellar incident if the princess sparks bloodshed while the Republic picnics outside our walls.â
Talrenâs voice stayed velvet, danger beneath. âBetter insurgent blood in the mountains than senator blood in the streets.â
Senator Vessar added, halfâteasing, âIf she returns with soot on her boots, I shall schedule extra press holos to reframe it as heroic cultural demonstration.â
Kenobi caught the whisper, grin curving. âYour court seemsâŠspirited, Majesty.â
Talren allowed the tiniest exhale of amusement. âKarthuna has waited fifteen years to step back onto the galactic stage, General. We intend to give a performance worth the ticket.â
Above them, fireworks crews tested microâsparklers; bright hisses masked the distant roar of a speeder blazing toward insurgent territory.
In a quiet moment against the balcony rail, Talren gazed over valley tents blooming for festival week, mind split between choreography of diplomats and the razorâwork his daughter undertook beyond those peaks.
He whispered to the wind, âReturn swift, Little Dawn.â
âž»
By midâafternoon the princess was still missing.
Commander Wolffe stood on the citadel parapet overlooking the valleyâs bustling festival city, visor fixed on the distant scar of mountains her speeder had taken.
Local SunâGuard Captain Arven stepped up, spearhaft tapping stone.
âEnjoying the view, offâworlder?â
âIâd enjoy it more if your crown heir were within comârange,â Wolffe replied. âTransmit her last coordinates.â
âPrincess has classified authority.â
Wolffeâs servoâjoint clicked as his gauntlet clenched. âMy mandate is to protect every Republic dignitary on this rockâincluding her.â
Arven smirked. âKarthuna protected itself centuries before troopers in white armor needed it. Stand down, Commander.â
Codyâs voice crackled through Wolffeâs comlink: âEasy, vod. Diplomacy first.â
Wolffe never took his eye from the peaks. Diplomacy ends when the VIP bleeds, he thoughtâand weighed the odds of âborrowingâ a gunship.
New LAATs screamed in, disgorging Jedi and clones.
Anakin Skywalker and Ahsoka Tano with the 501st, assigned to guard Senator PadmĂ© Amidala of Naboo and a cadre of CoreâWorld legislators.
Masters Mace Windu and KiâAdiâMundi arrived with Commanders Ponds and Bacara respectively, doubling ground strength.
Skywalker clapped Wolffeâs pauldron. âHeard your princess pulled a disappearing actâsounds like my kind of trouble.â
âNot helping, General,â Wolffe growled, though Ahsokaâs sympathetic grin eased his temper a notch.
Senators debarked in a flurry of aides, holoârecorders, and fashion impractical for mountain air. Festival staff hustled to reroute them toward reception hallsâdistraction, Talren hoped, until his daughter returned.
Master Yoda, leaning on his gimer stick, sought King Talren atop a sunâwarmed terrace strewn with kyber windâchimes. The diminutive Jedi regarded the monarchâs sunâmetal cuirass and the twinâbladed saber at his hip.
âStrong in the Force, your people are,â Yoda began. âYet light and dark you name not. Curious, this is.â
Talren inclined his head. âMaster, on Karthuna we are taught: there is no dawn without night. Deny darkness, and daylight loses meaning. Balance is not the absence of shadow, but its harmony with light.â
âHmmm.â Yodaâs ears twitched thoughtfully. âUnnatural, you say, to void one side?â
âAs unnatural as silencing half a heartbeat,â Talren answered. âWe do not fear the shadow; we fear imbalance.â
Windâchimes chimed like distant sabers. Yoda closed his eyes, absorbing the resonance.
âMuch to learn, even I have,â he murmured. âAnd much to guard, we both must.â
Talrenâs gaze drifted to the mountains. âAgreed, Master Yoda. Balance must sometimes be defended by hidden blades.â
âž»
Sunset torched the valley when a sandâsilver speeder roared through the citadel gates. Clone guards scrambled aside as [Y/N] leapt off, still in dustâstreaked vest and combat shorts. She vaulted a barricade, sprinting for the grand foyer.
âHeyâcivilian access is restricted!â bellowed Commander Fox, Crimson Guard staff lowered across her path.
She halted, breath steady despite the climb. âI live here, thanks.â
Before Fox could run ID, Chancellor Palpatine emerged from a delegation knot, eyes narrowing with foxâlike curiosity.
âMy dear, racing through secure halls in suchâŠpractical attireâis something amiss?â
[Y/N] offered a flawless court bow that contrasted sharply with her grimeâspattered boots. âMerely lastâminute festival preparations, Chancellor. Please excuse me; I must dress for the gala.â
Palpatineâs smile sliced thin. âAh, duty never rests. I look forward to your presentation this evening.â
Fox straightened as realization dawned. âWaitâyouâreââ
She winked. âClassified, Commander.â Then slipped past, leaving red armor and red robes equally bemused.
In her chamber, TC fussed with brocade gowns while R4 powered a sonic shower.
âYour Highness, the schedule is punishing: welcome gala at nineteenâhundred, holoâaddress at twentyâtwo, and saber exhibition by dawn.â
âThen weâd better look lethal and lovely,â [Y/N] said, toweling off. She chose a floorâlength gown of midnight silk that clung to sculpted muscle, high slits revealing thigh holsters for compact hilts. Sunâmetal pauldrons mirrored her crown, but the gownâs sleeveless cut displayed the lattice of scars down both armsâplasma burns, shrapnel lines, duelist nicksâeach a story she refused to hide.
TC clipped the circlet into her damp hair. âMight I suggest gloves to soften the, ah, impression?â
She flexed scarred fingers. âNo. Let the galaxy see what Karthunaâs balance looks like.â
R4 projected her entrance route. She studied it, then smiled. âTime to charm senators, silence rumors, andâperhapsâmake a wolf squirm.â
âž»
A fanfare of crystal horns cut through conversation. Doors parted, revealing PrincessâŻ[Y/N] radiant in midnight silk and sunâmetal crown, scars on her bare arms glinting like silver filigree. Senators gaspedâhalf at the regality, half at the unapologetic battleâmarks.
Master Kenobi murmured to Skywalker, âGrace and menace in equal measureâdefinitely your type, Anakin.â
Skywalker smirked. âSheâd have me for breakfast.â
PadmĂ© Amidala complimented the gownâs craftsmanship; [Y/N] returned praise for Nabooâs relief programs, steering talk away from rumored insurgents.
Master Windu approached her, he attempted to discuss security perimeters; the princess assured him Karthunaâs Shadow Guard had âevery shadow covered.â
Across the room, Governor Rhun whispered to holoreporters, stoking stories of her âreckless mountain excursion.â TC hovered, intercepting leading questions with cutting etiquette lessons.
Commander Wolffe, helmet clipped to belt, stood near a terrace arch with Cody and PloâŻCoon. When [Y/N] approached, conversation faltered like a blaster misfire.
She offered a delicate curtsyâmischief in her eyes. âCommander, I trust the briefing notes wereâŠilluminating?â
âThey were extensive,â Wolffe said evenly. âYet somehow omitted your talent for disappearing.â
âAh, but every good security test includes an unscheduled drill.â She stepped closer, voice just for him: âYou passedâeventually.â
The faintest flush darkened Wolffeâs neck. âNext time give me a comm frequency, not a cliff to chase.â
[Y/N] arched a brow. âAnd deny you the exercise?â Her fingers brushed the edge of his pauldron as she glided past. âMeet me on the terrace at midnightâstrictly business, of course.â
Wolffe exhaledâhalf growl, half laughâas Cody elbowed him, grinning. âCareful, vod. That one dances with both halves of the Force.â
Strings struck up Karthunaâs dawnâwaltz. Jedi mingled with diplomats while clone troopers ringed the hallâs perimeter. Suspicion, politics, and bright music braided in the airâyet for a heartbeat, harmony held.
In the high galleries, R4 scanned faces, feeding the princess data on a Separatist envoy concealed among trade delegatesâtonightâs real threat.
Midnight loomed, and outside the terrace doors, mountain winds whispered of balance, blades, and a wolf answering a princessâs call.
âž»
PrincessâŻ[Y/N] leaned against the balustrade, moonâsilver kissing the scars on her shoulders. Commander Wolffe stood close, arms foldedâattempt at stoic ruined by her playful tug on the strap of his pauldron.
âStill on duty, Commander?â she teased.
âAlways.â
âSo devoted,â she murmured, fingers ghosting along the seam where synthâskin met armor. âMakes a woman wonder how else that focus mightââ
A scarlet bolt sizzled through the ballroom windows. Shouts. Glass rained like crystal hail.
Inside, Governor Rhun lay sprawled behind an overturned buffet, cloak smoking at the shoulder. Clone guards returned fire toward upper galleries; a masked shooter vaulted onto a chandelier cable and vanished in a flashâgrenadeâs glare.
Skywalker, Ahsoka, Windu ignited sabers; Codyâs troopers fanned out. Wolffe ushered [Y/N] through the shattered doors into the throne corridor, senators scrambling behind.
âž»
Heavy doors slammed. Present: King Talren, Chancellor Palpatine, Masters Yoda, Windu, Kenobi, Commanders Cody, Wolffe, Ponds, Bacara, Senator PadmĂ©, and a handful of shaken delegates. Rhun, arm bactaâwrapped, was dragged in by medics.
Tension whipped like live wire.
[Y/N] broke the silence, voice flat: âPity the shooter missed.â
Gasps; Wolffeâs helmet snapped toward her.
Rhun snarled. âShouldâve been you that got shot!â
She advanced, eyes blazing. âI opposed reopening our borders. Tonight proves me right. We invited every power broker in the war to one valleyâpainted a target the size of a moon.â
King Talrenâs tone cut ice. âPeace requires risk.â
âBlind risk courts massacre,â she shot back. âInsurgents in our mountains, Separatist agents in our ballroomânow assassins under our roof.â
Palpatine interjected silkily, âSurely, Princess, the Republic can strengthen your security.â
âMore soldiers wonât erase the bullâsâeye you represent, Chancellor.â
Mace Winduâs gaze narrowed. âYou suggest isolation while the galaxy burns?â
âI suggest survival,â she answered.
Arguments flaredâsenators citing diplomacy, clones citing protocol. Wolffe stepped between factions, voice drillâsergeant sharp: âFocus. Assassin is still loose. Mandates later, lockdown now.â
PloâŻCoon, calm amid storm, nodded approval.
King Talren exhaled. âCommander Wolffe, you have joint authority with my Shadow Guard. Hunt the shooter.â
Wolffe met [Y/N]âs gazeâheat of earlier flirtation replaced by razor respect. âPrincessâcoming?â
She clicked twin sabers to her belt. âLead the way, Commander.â
Rhun blanched; PadmĂ© exchanged a knowing look with Kenobiâbattle partners born.
The moment the throneâroom doors slammed behind them, [Y/N] was already movingâmidnight gown gathered in one fist, the other dropping her double sabers into waiting palms.
Wolffe fell in at her shoulder, DCâ17 raised. The marble corridor echoed with their synchronized footfalls.
âShadow Guard breach tunnelâs this way,â she hissed, sweeping aside a wallâtapestry to reveal a spiral stair cut straight into obsidian.
He nodded once. âAfter you, Princess.â
The air grew cooler, alive with a faint crystalline hum. Iridescent kyber veins glowed within the stone, casting violet and jade shadows across their path.
Wolffe switched his helmet lamp to lowâband; [Y/N] didnât botherâher peopleâs Forceâattuned sight caught every shimmer.
A blaster scorch on the stair railing.
âFresh,â she murmured.
âMeans weâre close,â Wolffe replied, pulse settling into the calm that preceded battle.
The stair disgorged them into a vast cavernâkyber pillars rising like frozen lightning. At the far end, the assassinâs silhouette leapt between crystal spires, cloak tattered by security bolts.
Wolffeâs comm clicked twiceâBoost and Sinker sealing exits above.
âCorner him,â Wolffe ordered.
âAlive,â [Y/N] added. âI want intel before he bleeds out.â
They split wordlessly: Wolffe low along a mineral ridge, [Y/N] sprinting the high ledge, gown whipping behind like a warâbanner.
The assassin spun, twin WESTARs barking scarlet. Wolffe dove, bolts sparking off crystal as [Y/N] sprang from above, sabers igniting.
A vibroâdagger flicked from the assassinâs wristâmet by Wolffeâs gauntlet, beskad plating deflecting the strike. He slammed the butt of his pistol into the assailantâs ribs.
âYield,â the commander growled.
A hissed curse the killer smashed a detonator against the pillar. Kyber screamed as fractures spiderâwebbed, light flaring.
[Y/N] threw Wolffe back with a Forceâshove and thrust both sabers into the crystal, channeling energy away in a surge of blinding radiance. The explosion muted to a concussive thump; shards rained harmlessly.
When vision cleared, the assassin lay dazed, binders already clamping on under Wolffeâs practiced hands.
âWho hired you?â the princess demanded.
The prisoner spat blood, defiant. âKarthunaâs own who crave true freedomâand the Confederacy rewards such courage.â
Wolffeâs visor tipped toward [Y/N]. Confirmation.
âž»
Governor Rhunâs voice boomed across the ballroom remnantâholocams hovering:
âThis outrage proves openness invites anarchy! I petition immediate curfew, martial oversight by local forces, and expulsion of unnecessary offâworld elements!â
Several senators, rattled, murmured agreement. Separatist sympathizers whispered through the crowd, feeding fear.
Master Windu folded his arms. âGovernor, the assassin wielded Separatist tech. Cooperation with the Republic, not isolation, thwarts such threats.â
Rhunâs smile was razorâthin. âYet my princess would see me dead; perhaps the Council should examine internal loyalties first.â
King Talrenâs reply was cut short by the distant rumble of kyberâcatacomb fight vibrations reaching high halls. Panic rippled anew.
Wolffe and [Y/N] emerged, armor and gown dusted in crystal powder, prisoner in tow. Gasps rippled through assembled officials.
âGovernor Rhun,â [Y/N] announced, voice carrying. âYour assassin failed. And heâs confessed to Separatist backingâbacking that feeds on fear you happily sow.â
Rhunâs complexion drained.
Palpatine stepped forward, tone silken. âA grave accusation, Princess. Proof?â
Wolffe activated the assassinâs cracked vambrace: a holoâsigil of the Techno Union flickered. That, plus recorded confession from his helmetâcam, filled the air in chilling blue.
Yodaâs ears drooped, sad but certain. âDarkness invited not by borders, but hearts seeking power, yes.â
Arguments flared, but now the tide shifted: senators demanding inquiry into Rhunâs dealings, Jedi reinforcing joint patrols, clones and SunâGuard sharing data rather than territory. The assassin was led away.
In the aftershock, [Y/N] turned to Wolffe, adrenaline still bright in her eyes.
âYou kept up,â she said softly.
âYou lit up half a mountain,â he retorted, relief threading the words.
A grin tugged her lips. âBalance, Commanderâlittle light, little dark.â
His chuckle surprised them both. âNext time, maybe just a dance.â
She offered her armâscarred, unhidden. He took it, escorting her back into the fractured ballroom where a new balanceâuneasy, hardâwonâwaited to be forged.
Previous Part
Commander Wolffe x Princess Reader
Summary: On the eve of her planetâs first cultural festival in fifteen years, a disguised princess shares an unforgettable night with Clone Commander Wolffe on Coruscant. By morning, secrets, sassy droids, and a highâstakes security briefing threaten to upend duty, reputation, and the delicate opening of her world to the Republic.
A/N: The planet and culture is entirely made up.
The gunship descended through Coruscantâs evening traffic like a steel predator, repulsors howling against the crossâwinds that curled between transparisteel towers. Inside, six clone commandersâCody, Bly, Gree, Fox, Bacara, and Wolffeâoccupied the troop bay in various stages of fatigue. They were returning from OuterâRim rotations, summoned straight to the capital for what the Chancellorâs aide had called a âpriority diplomatic security brief.â
Wolffe used the flight to skim intel. A blue holotablet glowed in his fleshâandâsteel hands, displaying the dossier of the delegation scheduled to arrive from Karthunaâan independent MidâRim world geographically unremarkable, culturally singular.
Karthuna: quick file
âą Isolated, mountainous planet of evergreen valleys and obsidian cliffs.
âą Atmosphere saturated with trace kyber particulatesâreason scholars cite for the populationâs universal Force sensitivity.
âą Government: hereditary monarchy tempered by a warrior senate.
âą Religion: none. Karthunese creed teaches that the Force is lifeblood, neither moral compass nor deity.
âą Average citizen competency: lightsaber fabrication by age fifteen; stateâsponsored martial tutelage from age six.
The data fascinated the commandersâespecially the byâline marked Princess [Y/N], Crown Heir, WarâChief, locals refer to her as âThe Butcher.â
Wolffe scrolled. Combat footage played: a tall woman striding through volcanic ash, twinâbladed plasmablade in constant motion, severing MagnaGuards like wheat. Every slash bled molten silver where molten metal met crystalâlaced air.
Psychâprofile excerpt
âDisplays strategic brilliance and extreme kinetic aggression.
Disregards conventional âlight/darkâ dichotomyâidentifies only âstrengthâ and âweakness in harmony with the Force.â
Postâengagement behavior: known to laugh while binding her own wounds.â
Fox leaned over, eyebrow visible above his red ocher tattoo. âThatâs the princess weâre babysitting?â
âExactly,â Wolffe answered, voice rough like gravel in a barrel. âAnd tomorrow she sits across the table from half the Senate.â
Bly grinned, toying with the jaigâeyes painted on his pauldron. âAt least the briefing wonât be boring.â
âž»
79âs was hellishly loud tonight: drumâbass remixes of Huttese trance, vibroâfloors that tingled through plastoid boots, neon that reflected off rows of white armor like carnival glass. The smell was ionic sweat, fried nuna wings, and spiced lum.
Wolffe anchored the bar, helmet on the counter, already two fingers into Corellian rye. Cody lounged to his left, Rex to his rightâfresh in from a 501st escort shift and still humming combat adrenaline.
âCanât believe you two convinced me out,â Wolffe growled.
âBrother, you need it,â Rex said, clinking glasses. âWhole Wolfpack can feel when youâre wound tighter than a detonator.â
âGive him five minutes,â Cody stageâwhispered. âHeâll be scanning exits instead of the drink menu.â
âAlready am,â Wolffe deadpanned, which made them both laugh.
The cantina doors parted and conversation sagged a noteâshe glided in. Cropped flight jacket, fitted vest, highâwaist cargo shorts; thighâhigh laces and a thin bronze braid that caught the lights like a comet tail. She had the effortless cheer of someone stepping onto a favorite holovid setâeyes round with delight, grin wide enough to beam through the floor.
She wedged in beside Wolffe, flagging the bartender with two raised fingers. âDouble lum, splash of tihaarâone for me, one for the glum commander.â
Wolffe arched a brow but accepted the glass. âYou always buy drinks for strangers?â
âOnly the ones glaring at their reflection.â She tapped his untouched visor. He couldnât help a huff of amusement.
Codyâs own brow shot up; Rexâs eyes widened in instant recognition. Princess [Y/N] of KarthunaâThe Butcherâyet here she was in civvies, acting like any tourist whoâd lost a bet with Coruscant nightlife.
Rex leaned close to Cody, speaking behind a raised hand. âThatâs her, isnât it?â
âCredits to spiceâcakes.â
âShe hasnât told him?â
âNot a word.â
Rex smirked. âFiveâcredit chip says Wolffe figures it out before sunrise.â
Cody shook his head. âHe wonât know until she walks into the briefing at 0900. Make it ten.â
They clasped forearms on it.
The woman matched Wolffe sip for sip, story for story. Where his anecdotes were sparse, hers were colorâsplattered and comedic.
When the DJ shifted into a thumping remix of the Republic anthem, she grabbed Wolffeâs wrist.
âI donât dance,â he protested.
âYou walk in circles around objectives, right? Close enough!â
She dragged him into the crush of bodies. To his surprise, he found a rhythmâleft, pivot, step; her laughter bubbled each time his armor plates bumped someone elseâs. Cody whooped from the bar. Rex held up a timer on his datapad, mouthing 48 minutes left.
At the chorus, She spun under Wolffeâs arm, back colliding with his chest. Up close he saw faint, silvery scars beneath the vestâs armholeâevidence of battles that matched his own. Yet her eyes stayed bright, unburdened, as if scars were simply postcards of places sheâd loved.
âCommander,â she teased above the music, âtell me something you enjoy that isnât war.â
He paused. âMechanic workâtuning ATâRT gyros. Clean clicks calm my head.â
âSee? You do have hobbies.â She tapped his nose. âNext round on me.â
Back at the bar Rex leaned over to Cody, âHeâs smiling. That counts as suspicion.â
âWolffe smiles once a rotation. Still ignorant.â
âž»
Near 02:00, after shared tihaar shots and a disastrous attempt at holoâsabacc, She flicked a glance toward the exit.
âCity lights look better from my place,â she offered, voice honeyâslow. âIâve got caf strong enough to wake a hibernating wampa if you need to report at ohâdarkâhundred.â
Wolffeâs lips twitched. âLead the way.â
As they weaved out, Cody elbowed Rex. âTimerâs off. Still clueless.â
âSunrise isnât here yet,â Rex countered.
âCredits say briefing,â Cody insisted, pocketing the imaginary winnings.
âž»
Lift doors slid open to a loft bathed in cityâglow: vibroâharp strings hanging from ceiling beams, halfâassembled speeder parts on the coffee table, and a breathtaking skyline framed by floorâtoâceiling transparisteel. Nothing screamed royaltyâjust a warriorâs crashâpad with too many hobbies.
She kicked the door shut, tossed her jacket aside, then hooked a finger in the lip of Wolffeâs breastplate. âArmor off, Commander. CafĂ©âs percolating, but firstâI want to map every one of those scars.â
His growl was more pleasure than warning. âFair trade. Iâm charting yours.â
Outside, airspeeder traffic stitched luminous threads across Coruscant night. Inside, two soldiersâone famous, one incognitoâlost themselves in laughter, caf, and the slow unbuckling of secrets yet to be told.
âž»
Warm dawn slanted through the loftâs unshaded transparisteel, painting the tangled figures on the bed in amber and rose. Wolffe lay on his back, left arm pillowing [Y/N] against the curve of his chest; her hair falling softly, draped over his cgest. For the first time in months heâd slept past first light, lulled by the quiet cadence of another heartbeat.
A sharp bweepâbwapâBWAA! shattered the calm.
The door whisked open and a battered R4âseries astromech barreled in, dome spinning frantic red. Right behind it minced a sandâgold TCâprotocol unit with polished vocabulator grille and the prissiest posture Wolffe had ever seen.
âWHRRâbweep!â the astromech shrilled, panels flapping.
The protocol droid placed metal hands on its hips. âReally, R4âJ2, barging into Her Highâ er, into my ladyâs private quarters is most uncouth. Though, to be fair, so is oversleeping when a planetâs diplomatic reputation depends on punctuality.â
[Y/N] groaned into Wolffeâs shoulder. âFive more minutes or I demagnetise your motivators.â
âI calculate you have negative twentyâtwo minutes, my lady,â TC sniffed. âWe have already been signaled thrice.â
Wolffe swung out of bed, discipline snapping back like a visorâclip. He retrieved blacks and armor plates, fastening them while [Y/N] rummaged for flight shorts and a fresh vest.
âGot a briefing myself,â he said, adjusting the collar seal. âHighâpriority security consult for the Senate. Some warlord princess from Karthuna is in systemâCouncil wants every contingency.â
[Y/N] paused, turning just enough that sunrise caught the concern softening her features. âI heard talk of her,â she ventured lightly. âWhatâs your take?â
âFiles say sheâs lethal, unpredictable. Planet locals call her The Butcher.â He shrugged into his pauldron. âFrankly, senators donât need another sword swinging around. Volatile leaders get people killed.â
A flicker of hurt crossed her eyes before she masked it with a crooked grin. âMaybe sheâsâŠmisunderstood?â
âMaybe,â Wolffe allowed, though doubt edged his tone. âEither way, jobâs to keep the civvies safe.â He slid his helmet under an arm, suddenly uncertain how to classify the night theyâd shared. âIâhad a good time.â
She rose on tiptoe, pressed a quick kiss to the corner of his mouth. âSo did I, Commander. Try not to judge anyone before breakfast, hmm?â
He touched the braid beads lightlyâa silent promise to see her againâthen strode out, door hissing shut behind him.
Y/N] exhaled, shoulders slumping. R4 emitted a sympathetic wooâoop.
TC clucked. âI did warn you anonymity breeds complications. Still, we must hurry. The Chancellor expects you in the Grand Convocation Chamber at 0900.â
A wicked spark replaced her melancholy. âNo, the Chancellor expects a Karthunese representativeâhe never specified which.â
She strode to a wardrobe, withdrawing a slim holoprojector and thrusting it at TC. âCongratulations, youâre promoted.â
TCâs photoreceptors brightened alarm-red. âMâmy lady, I am programmed for etiquette, translation, and the occasional moral lecture, not military security architecture!â
âRecite the briefing notes I dictated last night, answer questions with condescensionâyour specialtyâthen schedule a followâup on the command ship. R4 will project the holomaps.â
The astromech warbled enthusiastic profanity at the prospect.
[Y/N] buckled a utility belt over her civvies and moved toward the balcony doors. âIf anyone asks, I was delayed calibrating kyber flow regulators. Iâll review the security grid this afternoonâafter I explore a certain Commanderâs favorite gyroâshop.â
TC gathered the holoâpads in a flurry. âVery well, mistress, but mark my vocabulatorâthis deception will shortâcircuit spectacularly.â
âRelax.â She flashed a grin eerily similar to last nightâs barroom mischief. âWhatâs diplomacy without a little theater?â
âž»
Senators, Jedi, and clone commanders straightened as doors parted.
âbut instead of a sunâcircled warâprincess, a polished TCâprotocol droid glided to the rostrum with an astromech rolling at its heel.
TCâs vocabulator rang out, crisp as a commâchime.
âHonored Supreme Chancellor, venerable Jedi Council, distinguished Senators: Karthuna greets you.âŻMy lady regrets that urgent kyberâcompressor calibrations prevent her personal attendance, yet she bids me convey our joy at opening our borders for the first time in fifteen standard years so all may share our fiveâday Cultural Festival Week. We trust todayâs briefing will guarantee every guestâs safety and delight.â
R4âJ2 pitched a starry holomap above the dais; TC segued into ingress grids, crowdâflow vectors, and defensive perimeter options with dazzling fluency.
At the back rail, Commander Wolffeâs remaining eye narrowed.
âThatâs her astromech,â he mutteredâheâd tripped over the same droid enâŻroute to the cafâmaker two hours earlier.
Cody leaned in, voice low. âSoâhow was your night with the princess?â
Wolffeâs brain locked, replaying dawn kisses, scars⊠and the sudden absence of any surname.
âKriff.â His helmet nearly slipped from under his arm.
Next to them, Rex sighed, fished from his belt pouch, and slapped the credits into Codyâs waiting palm. Cody tried not to smirk too broadly.
Bly caught the exchange and coughed to hide a laugh. Gree murmured, âTold you the Wolf doesnât sniff pedigree till it bites him.â
Unaware of the commotion between the Commanders, TC finished with a flourish.
âKarthuna will provide one hundred honor guards, full medical contingents, and open saber arenas for cultural demonstration only. We look forward to celebrating unity in the Force with the Galactic Republic.â
Polite applause rippled through the chamber. Mace Windu nodded approval, even ChancellorâŻPalpatineâs smile looked almost genuine.
Wolffe, cheeks burning behind his visor, managed parade rest while his thoughts sprinted back to a kiss and the words try not to judge anyone before breakfast.
The princess had played him like dejarikâyet somehow he respected the move.
Cody clapped a gauntlet on his pauldron. âCheer up, vod. At least your about to spend more time with her.â
âž»
Next Part
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
âž»
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 consolationâŠâ
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.
|â€ïž = Romantic | đ¶ïž= smut or smut implied |đĄ= platonic |
Wolf Pack
âFor The Packâ đĄ
Commander Wolffe
- x Jedi Reader (order 66)â€ïž
- x âVillage Crazyâ readerâ€ïž
- x Jedi Reader â€ïž
- x Reader (79âs)â€ïž
- Rebels Wolffe x reader âsomewhere only we knowââ€ïž
- x reader âCommand and Consequenceââ€ïž
- x reader âCommand and Consequence pt.2ââ€ïž
- x Fem!Reader âstill yoursââ€ïž
- x Reader âhit me (like you mean it)ââ€ïž
- x Reader âTactical Complicationsââ€ïž
- âBattle Scarsâ â€ïž/đ¶ïž
- âThe Butcher and The Wolfâ â€ïž multiple parts
Overall Material List
Hey! Iâm from Australia(Melbourne) too!! I had a request for a Wollfe X Fem!Reader where he has to rescue her but itâs like disneys Hercules where Meg says âIâm a damsel and Iâm in distress, I can handle thisâ and itâs a bunch of cute banter and flirting and maybe some spice thrown in? Love your work! Xx
Hey lovely! Thank you for your request, I hope the below is somewhat what you were hoping for!
Commander Wolffe x Reader
Blaster bolts screamed overhead, debris rained from the shattered rooftop, and your heelsâgorgeous, custom, Senate-issueâwere now coated in soot.
Typical.
You were pinned behind the shattered remains of what used to be a speederânow a flaming, sparking coffin. Your blaster was out of charge, your dress had a tear the size of a hyperspace route down the side, and your thigh throbbed from where shrapnel had bit deep.
So no, this wasnât ideal.
But it wasnât your first disaster either.
âYouâre going to regret this,â you muttered to the squad of droids advancing with heavy steps. âBecause Iâm very well-connected, and alsoââ you raised the empty blaster like it was worth something, ââkind of terrifying when cornered.â
The droids didnât seem impressed.
And thenâ
Blasterfire. Sharp, clean, precise.
Heads popped. Limbs flew. The last droid barely had time to turn before its chest caved inward from a single, well-placed bolt.
Smoke curled in the air as silence fell.
You didnât look surprised when he stepped into viewâtall, armored, and absolutely furious.
Commander Wolffe.
âYou took your time,â you called, voice dry. âI was two seconds from charming them into an alliance.â
He didnât answer right away. Just stared at youâsoot-smudged, limping, bleedingâlike you were a glitch in his mission log he couldnât delete.
âYouâre injured.â
âYouâre observant.â
He stormed toward you, ignoring your sass, and crouched beside your leg. âHold still.â
âCareful,â you breathed, as his fingers brushed your bare thigh to check the wound. âYou keep touching me like that, people might talk.â
âYouâre bleeding through your sarcasm,â he said coolly. âTry being quiet for five seconds.â
You leaned closer, voice low. âThat sounded suspiciously like a request.â
He looked up at you then, helmet off, one brow twitching with something like restraint. His hands were steady. His jawâtight.
âYou disobeyed direct evacuation orders,â he muttered, wrapping a field bandage tight. âAnd you think Iâm the one being reckless.â
âI had intel,â you shot back. âI stayed to gather it. The mission mattered.â
âYou nearly got vaped.â
âPlease. Iâve had worse nights in the Senate.â
The corner of his mouth twitched. Just for a second. A crack in the façade.
âI should drag you out of here by your pretty little neck,â he muttered.
âPretty?â you echoed, pretending to swoon. âWolffe, I didnât know you cared.â
âI donât.â
âLiar.â
He lifted you with ease, one arm under your knees, the other around your back. You hissed through your teeth at the movement, clutching his pauldron.
âYou donât have to carry me.â
âIâm not arguing with a senator who thinks sheâs immortal.â
You stared up at him as the evac ship loomed in view. âYouâre angry.â
âIâm furious.â
You smirked. âAnd yet, you still came for me.â
His grip tightened.
âI always come for whatâs mine.â
Your breath caught.
He didnât look at you again, didnât say another word. But you felt itâthat heat simmering under all his armor, all his rules.
And you knew next time⊠he wouldnât be so professional.
âž»
The cantina on Vradros IV reeked of sweat, desperation, and synth-spice. Which is to say, it smelled exactly like a place Wolffe would pick for a âquiet recon op.â
You leaned against the bar, twirling your drink with one hand, your blaster slung low on your hip like a challenge. You felt him before you saw himâCommander Wolffe moved like a ghost in armor, all steel and unspoken tension.
âYou missed our meeting,â he said, voice low and gruff behind that half-scorched vocabulator.
You smirked. âI was busy. Didnât realize I needed your permission to have a life.â
âYou donât.â He paused. âJust seems like yours always conveniently conflicts with mine.â
You turned, sipping your drink lazily. âAw. You miss me, Commander?â
Wolffe didnât flinch, but the corner of his mouth twitched like it wanted to. âYouâre a pain in my shebs.â
âAnd yet,â you drawled, âhere you are.â
He looked tired. Noâpast tired. He looked hollowed out, like someone whoâd been running on fumes since the war ended, and no one remembered to tell him he could stop.
You tilted your head. âYou sleep at all?â
âEnough.â
âEat?â
âWhen I remember.â
âTouch anyone lately?â
That got his attention.
His gaze flicked to yours, sharp and startledâbut not offended. Never offended. Not with you.
âThatâs a hell of a question.â
You shrugged. âItâs a hell of a galaxy.â
He was quiet for a beat, jaw tight.
Then, out of nowhere, he said, âYou gonna hit me, or just keep talking?â
You blinked. âExcuse me?â
âYou heard me.â He stepped closer, chest brushing yours. âYouâve been itching for a fight since I walked in.â
âNo, youâve been begging for one.â You looked him up and down. âWhy?â
âMaybe I deserve it.â
âOh, donât get all martyr on me, Commander.â You narrowed your eyes. âWhatâs really going on?â
He didnât answer. Just stared at you, every inch of him coiled and unreadable.
And then he said, almost too quiet: âI just want to feel something.â
Ah.
There it was.
The crack in the armor.
Not in his phrasingâWolffe would never be that directâbut in the weight behind the words. Youâd seen it before. In soldiers who lost brothers. In children who never got hugged enough. In yourself, sometimes, when the nights were long and the stars too loud.
âFine,â you said, stepping in close. âYou wanna get hit?â
He nodded once, stiff.
You swung. Not hardâbut enough to snap his head to the side.
The cantina didnât even blink. No one cared. It was that kind of place.
Wolffe exhaled, slow and shaky. Turned his head back toward you.
And smiled.
A real one. Lopsided. Crooked. Full of pain and something almost like relief.
You grabbed the front of his armor and pulled him down to your level. âNext time you need to be touched, maybe try asking, instead of playing wounded karking bantha.â
He leaned in, voice rough. âWould you say yes?â
You kissed him.
It wasnât gentle. It wasnât sweet.
It was raw. Like striking flint to stone.
His hands came to your waist, holding on like he didnât trust the ground to stay solid. You felt the tremor in himânot fear. Not hesitation. Just need.
You pulled back, just enough to murmur against his mouth: âTouch-starved bastard.â
He looked at you like youâd reached inside him and flipped a switch he forgot existed. âI deserved that punch.â
âYouâll deserve the next one too.â
He smirked. âLooking forward to it.â
âž»
âž»
She wasnât just their trainer. She was the trainer. The hard-ass Mandalorian bounty hunter who whipped the clone cadets into shape, showed them how to survive, and maybe, quietly, showed them something like love.
They werenât supposed to fall for her.
She wasnât supposed to leave.
But they did. And she did.
Now sheâs backâin chains. On trial. And neither of them has forgiven her. But neither of them has stopped feeling, either.
âž»
Wolffe was gone.
Off to a frontline somewhere, chasing a ghost on someone elseâs leash. He hadnât said goodbye. Just stood in her cell, said her name like it tasted like blood, and left.
She told herself it didnât sting.
Told herself that right up until the door hissed open again.
This time, it was him.
Fox.
She felt him before she saw himâevery hair on the back of her neck standing at attention. She didnât lift her head until she heard the soft clink of his boots on the duracrete.
âYou always did have the heaviest damn footsteps.â
No answer.
Just the soft hum of the ray shield between them and the weight of six years of unfinished conversations.
She sat back against the wall of her cell, tilting her head to study him through the barrier. âYou used to take your helmet off when you saw me.â
Fox didnât move.
âYou smiled, too,â she added. âEven blushed once.â
Still nothing.
She leaned forward. âWhy donât you take it off now, Fox? Scared Iâll see what I did to you?â
That one hit.
His shoulders shifted. Just enough.
âI loved you both,â she said, voice softer. âYou and Wolffe. It wasnât just training. You know that.â
âYou walked away.â
âI had to.â
âNo,â Fox said, voice hard behind the visor. âYou chose to. We needed you. And you ran.â
He stepped closer to the shield.
âYou trained us to survive, to lead, to kill. You were everything. You looked at us like we were people before anyone else ever did. And then you were gone. No note. No goodbye. Just gone.â
She stood now. Toe to toe with him on opposite sides of the shield.
âDonât pretend like it was easy for me.â
âIâm not pretending anything,â Fox bit out. âBut every time I close my eyes, I see the cadet barracks. I see you, pulling us out of bed, making us fight through mud and stun blasts and live fire. And every time I put this helmet on, I remember the woman who made me who I am.â
âAnd you hate her now?â
âNo,â he said, almost too quiet.
âI wish I did.â
The silence between them wasnât emptyâit was heavy, loud, aching.
Then the lights flickered. Once. Twice.
Foxâs helmet snapped up.
âYou planning something?â he demanded.
She blinked, surprised. âNot me.â
An explosion rocked the building.
Fox swore and turned toward the hallâtoo late.
The backup power cut in, and the shield between them dropped.
She moved first.
Elbow. Throat. Disarm.
Fox recovered instantly. Mandalorian training burned into his bonesâher training.
They fought dirty. Brutal. No flourish. No wasted motion. Just rage and history and sweat.
He slammed her into the wall, forearm to her neck. âDonâtââ
She headbutted him. âToo late.â
He threw her to the ground. She rolled, kicked out, caught his knee. He staggered. She was up in an instant, swinging.
He caught her wrist. âYou left us.â
She broke the hold, breathless. âAnd you never stopped loving me.â
That cracked him.
She tackled him.
They hit the floor hard.
His helmet came loose, skittering across the ground.
And for a heartbeatâ
There he was.
Fox.
Red-faced. Bloodied lip. Eyes blazing with pain and love and fury.
He flipped her. Pinned her down.
âThis is what you wanted?â he growled. âTo be hunted? To fight me?â
âNo,â she whispered. âBut Iâm not dying in a cell.â
Her elbow caught his jaw. He reeled. She moved fast, straddling him, fist raisedâ
And paused.
Just for a second.
He looked up at her like she was the sun and the storm.
So she closed her fist.
And knocked him out cold.
âž»
She ran.
Again.
Bleeding. Gasping. Free.
But not the same.
Not anymore.
Because this time, she left something behind.
And it wasnât just her past.
It was him.
âž»
(Flashback - Kamino)
It was raining.
Then again, it was always raining on Kamino.
She stood in the simulation room, arms crossed, helmet tucked under one arm, a long line of adolescent clones in front of her. Twelve cadets. Identical on the outside. Nervous. Curious. Eager.
She hated this part. The part where they still looked like kids.
She paced down the line like a wolf sizing up prey. They were still, silent, disciplined.
Good.
But she could already see itâthe cracks, the personality slipping through despite their efforts to appear identical. That one on the end with the defiant chin tilt. The one in the middle hiding a limp. The one watching her like he already didnât trust her.
She knew it the second they marched inâtwelve cadets, lean and lethal for their age. Sharper than the usual shinies. These werenât grunts-in-the-making. These were the Commanders. The ones Kaminoâs high brass whispered about like they were investments more than soldiers.
She smirked. âYou all have CT numbers. Serial designations. Statistics.â
No one spoke.
She dropped her helmet onto a nearby crate and leaned forward. âThatâs not enough for me.â
Eyes tracked her, alert.
âYou want to earn my respect? You survive this program, you get through my gauntlet? You donât just get to be soldiers. You get to be people. And people need names.â
A flicker of something passed between themâconfusion, curiosity, maybe even hope.
âBut I donât hand them out like sweets. Names have weight. Youâll earn yours. One by one.â
She paused.
âAnd I wonât name you like some shiny ARC trainer handing out joke callsigns for laughs. Your name will be the first thing someone hears before they die. Make it count.â
âYou survive my program, youâll earn a name,â she said. âA real one. Something from the old worlds. Something that means something. Not because you need a nickname to feel specialâbecause names have teeth. They bite. They leave a scar.â
The silence was sharp. But the room listened.
The first week nearly broke them.
She saw it in their bruised knuckles, in the fire behind their eyes. None of them quit.
So she came in holding a data slate. Her list.
âCT-2224,â she said, nodding to the clone who was always coordinating, always calm under fire. âIâm calling you Cody.â
A pause.
âNamed after an old soldier from history. Scout, tactician, survivor. He fought under another manâs flag but always kept his own code. You? Youâll know when to follow and when to break the chain.â
CT-2224 tilted his chin, something like pride in his eyes.
âCT-1004,â she called next. âGree.â
He quirked a brow.
âNamed after an Astronomer. A mind ahead of his time. You like to challenge the rules. You think differently. Thatâll get you killedâor itâll save your whole damn battalion. Your call.â
He smirked.
âCT-6052,â she said, turning to the one with the fastest draw in the sim tests. âBly.â
âBly?â he echoed.
âNamed after a naval officer. Brutal. Unrelenting. Survived mutinies and shipwrecks. Your squad will challenge you someday. Youâll either lead them through the stormâor end up alone.â
He went quiet.
âCT-1138.â She stepped toward the quietest of the bunch. âBacara.â
That got his attention.
âNameâs from an old warrior sect,â she said. âReal bastard in the heat of battle. No fear, no hesitation. Youâve got that in youâbut youâll need something to tether you. Rage alone wonât get you far.â
âCT-8826,â she barked. âNeyo.â
He didnât flinch.
âNamed after a colonial general in a lost war. Known for precision and cruelty in equal measure. You fight with cold logic. Thatâs useful. But one day itâs going to cost you something you didnât know you valued.â
His stare didnât break.
She nodded to herself.
Then she stopped in front of CT-1010.
This one was different. Always stepping in front of the others. Always first into the fire.
âYou,â she said. âYouâre Fox.â
He tilted his head. Curious. Suspicious.
âNot the animal,â she said. âThe man. He tried to blow up a corrupt regime. People remember him as a traitor. But he died for what he believed in. He wanted to burn the world down so something better could rise.â
Fox looked at her like he wasnât sure whether to be proud or afraid.
Good.
And finallyâ
CT-3636.
She exhaled. Quiet.
âYouâre Wolffe. Spelled with two fâs.â
He arched a brow.
âYou ever heard of General Wolffe? He died leading a battle he won. Knew it would kill him. Did it anyway. Thatâs who you are. Youâd die for the ones you lead. But youâre not just a soldier. Youâre a ghost in the making. You see things the others donât.â
Something flickered across Wolffeâs expression. Not quite gratitude. Not yet. But something personal. Something deep.
She stepped back and looked at them all.
âYouâre not just commanders now. Youâre names with weight. Remember where they come from. Because somedayâsomeoneâs going to ask.â
She didnât say why she chose those names.
But Fox knew.
And Wolffe⊠Wolffe felt it like a blade between his ribs.
âž»
That night, neither of them slept.
Fox sat on his bunk, staring at the nameplate freshly etched on his chest armor.
Wolffe couldnât stop replaying the sound of her voice, the precision of her words.
It wasnât just what she called them.
It was how she saw them.
Not clones.
Not numbers.
Men.
And in that momentâbefore war, before death, before heartbreakâboth of them realized something:
They would have followed her anywhere.
âž»
âTarget last seen heading westbound on foot. Sheâs injured,â Thornâs voice snapped through the comms, sharp and clear as a vibroblade. âBleeding. She wonât get far.â
Commander Fox didnât respond right away.
He didnât need to.
He was already movingâboots pounding against ferrocrete, crimson armor flashing in the underglow of gutter lights. His DC-17s were hot. Loaded. Heâd cleared the last alley by himself. Found the blood trail smeared across a rusted wall. Confirmed it wasnât fresh. Confirmed she was smart enough to double back.
Foxâs jaw tensed behind the helmet. That voice. That memory. He hated that it still echoed.
He hated what sheâd made him feel back thenâwhat she still made him feel now.
âShe was ours,â Thorn said suddenly, voice low on a private channel. âShe trained us. Named us. And now sheâsââ
âA liability,â Fox snapped.
A pause.
Then Thorn said, âSo are you.â
Sheâd been moving for thirty-six hours straight.
Blood caked her gloves. Her ribs were cracked. One eye nearly swollen shut. And stillâstillâsheâd smiled when she saw the Guard flooding the streets for her.
âMiss me, boys?â she whispered, ducking into an old speeder lot, sliding through a maintenance tunnel like sheâd been born in the underworld.
Fox was five minutes behind her. Thorn was closer.
She was running out of time.
So she did what she swore she wouldnât.
She pressed a long-dead frequency into her wrist comm and whispered:
âYou still owe me.â
âž»
Fox was waiting for her at the extraction point.
He stood in front of the old freight elevator. Helmet on. Blaster raised. Shoulders squared. He hadnât spoken in five minutes. Hadnât moved in ten.
When she limped into view, he didnât aim. Not yet.
âYouâre bleeding,â he said, voice flat.
âYouâre still wearing your helmet,â she rasped.
He didnât answer.
âWhy?â she asked. âWhy donât you ever take it off anymore?â
That hit something.
He didnât move, but the silence that followed was heavier than armor.
âYou think if you bury the man I trained, the one I named, then maybe you donât have to feel what you felt?â she asked, stepping closer. âOr maybeâmaybe you think the helmet will stop you from loving the woman youâre supposed to kill.â
Fox raised his blaster.
âIâm not that man anymore.â
âAnd Iâm not the woman who left you behind,â she said.
Then she charged him.
They hit the ground hard.
She drove her elbow into his side, but he blocked itâtwistedâslammed her onto the deck. She kicked his knee, flipped him over, caught a glimpse of his face beneath the shifting helmet sealâeyes wild. Angry. Broken.
Their fight wasnât clean. It wasnât choreographed.
It was personal.
Every strike was a memory. Every chokehold a betrayal.
She got the upper handâuntil Fox caught her wrist, yanked her forward, and headbutted her hard enough to split her lip.
âStay down,â he growled.
But she was already back on her feet, staggering.
âYou first.â
She lunged. He met her.
For one second, he nearly won.
And thenâ
The roar of repulsors screamed overhead.
A shipâlow and meanâswooped in like a vulture. Slave I.
Foxâs head snapped up.
From the cockpit, Boba Fett gave a two-fingered salute.
From the ramp, Bossk snarled: âHurry up, darlinâ. Weâre on a timer.â
She spun, landed one final kick to Foxâs side, and leapt.
He caught her footâjust for a second.
Their eyes locked.
She whispered, âYouâll have to be faster than that, Commander.â
Foxâs grip slipped.
She vanished into the belly of the ship.
The ship shot skyward, cutting between the towers of Coruscant, gone in a blink.
Fox lay back on the duracrete, chest heaving, blood in his mouth.
Thornâs voice crackled in his comm:
âYou get her?â
Fox didnât answer.
He just stared at the sky, helmet still on, and muttered:
âNext time.â
âž»
The hum of hyperspace thrummed through her ribs like a heartbeat she hadnât trusted in years.
She sat on the edge of the med-bench, wiping blood from her mouth, cheek split open from Foxâs headbutt. Boba threw her a rag without looking.
âYou look like shab.â
She gave a low, painful laugh. âBetter than dead. Thanks for the pickup.â
Boba didnât answer right away. He just leaned back in the co-pilotâs chair, helmet off, arms crossed over his chest like a teenager who wasnât quite ready to say what he meant.
âYou couldâve called sooner, you know,â he finally muttered. âWouldâve come faster.â
âI know,â she said, quiet.
Bosk snorted from the cockpit. âSentimental karkinâ clones. Always needinâ someone to save their shebs.â
She ignored him.
Boba didnât. âStow it, lizard.â
After a beat, he glanced back at her. âYouâre not going back, are you?â
She didnât answer.
âYou should stay,â Boba said. âThe crewâs solid. And youâre⊠you were like an older sister. On Kamino. When it was just me and those cold halls. You didnât treat me like a copy.â
That one hit her like a vibroblade to the gut.
âI couldnât stand seeing your face,â she admitted. âAll I saw was Jango.â
He looked away. âYeah. Well⊠I am him.â
She stood, stepped over to him, and rested a bruised hand on his shoulder.
âYouâre better. You got his spine, his stubbornness. But youâve got your own code, too. Jango⊠Jango wouldâve left me behind if it suited him. You didnât.â
He looked at her, lip twitching. âYeah, well. You trained half the commanders in the GAR. You think I was about to let Fox be the one to kill you?â
She smirked. âSentimental.â
He rolled his eyes. âShut up.â
She moved toward the ramp. âThank you, Boba. But I canât stay.â
âYou donât have to run forever.â
âNo,â she said, voice thick. âJust long enough to finish what I started.â
And with that, she slipped through the rear hatch, into the wind, into whatever system they dropped her in next.
âž»
Wolffe stood silent, arms folded, helmet tucked under one arm. Thorn sat across from him, jaw tight, armor scraped and bloodied.
Plo Koon entered without fanfare, his robes trailing dust from the Outer Rim.
âYou two look like youâve seen a ghost,â the Kel Dor said mildly.
âShe might as well be,â Thorn muttered.
âWe had her,â Wolffe said. âFox did. And she slipped through his fingers.â
Plo regarded them both for a long moment.
âI assume there is tension because Fox and Thorn were in charge of the op?â
Wolffeâs jaw tightened.
Thorn spoke first. âSheâs dangerous. Sheâs working with bounty hunters now. Itâs only a matter of time before she turns that knife toward the Republic.â
âPerhaps,â Plo murmured, folding his hands. âOr perhaps she is a wounded soldier, betrayed by the very people she once called vode.â
Wolffeâs shoulders stiffened.
âShe made her choice,â he said flatly.
âAnd yet,â Plo said, gently, âI sense hesitation in you, Commander. Pain.â
Wolffe didnât respond.
âShe is off-world now,â the Jedi continued, glancing at a tactical holo. âPotentially aligned with Separatist sympathizers. The Senate will push for her recapture. But I believe it would be wiser⊠more effective⊠for the 104th to take point on tracking her.â
Thorn straightened. âThe Guardâs been assignedââ
âAnd you failed,â Plo said, not unkindly. âLet Wolffe try. Perhaps whatâs needed now is not more firepower⊠but familiarity.â
Wolffe met Ploâs gaze. âYouâre using this as a chance to fix me.â
âIâm giving you a chance,â Plo corrected. âTo understand. To remember who she really is. Not what she became.â
Silence.
Then Wolffe slowly nodded.
âThen Iâll bring her in.â
Ploâs gaze softened beneath his mask.
âOr maybe,â he said, turning to leave, âyouâll let her bring you back.â
âž»
The atmosphere stank like rust and rot. Arix-7 was a graveyard of ships and skeletonsâmetal, bone, old wreckage from a thousand forgotten battles. The 104th picked through it like wolves in a burial field.
Wolffe moved ahead of the squad, visor low, silent.
Boost sidled up beside him. âYou know, this place kinda reminds me of her. Sharp, full of ghosts, and ready to kill you if you step wrong.â
Sinker snorted. âYeah, but she smelled better.â
âCut the chatter,â Wolffe growled, tone clipped.
Boost shrugged. âJust saying. Weird to be tracking the person who taught you how to hold a blaster.â
âWorse to be planning how to shoot her,â Sinker added, quieter.
Wolffe didnât respond.
He just kept moving.
They found her in the remains of a Republic frigate, buried deep in the moonâs crust, converted into a hideout. Cracked floors, scattered gear, a heat signature blinking faint and woundedâbut moving.
She knew they were coming.
She was waiting.
âž»
They found her in the wreck of an old Separatist cruiser, rusted deep into the jagged crust of the moon. Sinker and Boost had gone in firstâquick, confident, all muscle and old banter. That didnât save them from being outmaneuvered and knocked out cold.
Wolffe found their unconscious bodies first. And then, her.
She stepped into the light like a shadow peeling off the wallâhood pulled low, face scraped and bloodied but eyes still burning.
âYou always send the pups in first?â she asked. âOr were they just stupid enough to come on their own?â
Wolffe charged her without a word.
Hand-to-hand. Just like she trained him.
But she didnât hold back this timeâand neither did he.
She was still faster. Still sharper. Still cruel with her movements, a blade honed by years outside the Republicâs rule.
But Wolffe had strength and control, and heâd stopped pulling punches years ago.
They traded blows. She bloodied his mouth. He cracked her ribs. He pinned her. She slipped free.
Then came him.
The air shiftedâsharp with ozone and tensionâand suddenly Plo Coon was between them. Calm. Powerful. Alien eyes behind his antiox mask, watching her without familiarity, without sentiment.
âStep down,â Plo said.
She bristled. âAnother Jedi. Wonderful. Let me guessâhere to âredeemâ me?â
âI donât know you,â Plo answered. âBut I know what youâve done. And I know you were once theirs.â
âI was never yours.â
âGood,â Plo said, igniting his saber. âThen this will be easier.â
They fought.
The air crackled.
She struck firstâfast and brutal, close-range, aiming to disable before he could bring the Force to bear. But Plo Coon had fought Sith, droids, beasts. He wasnât unprepared for feral grace and dirty tricks.
He parried. Dodged. Let her come to him.
âYouâre angry,â he said through gritted teeth. âBut not lost.â
She lunged. âYou donât know me.â
âNo. But I sense your pain. Youâre not just running. Youâre bleeding.â
âPain is whatâs kept me alive!â
He knocked her off balance, sent her tumbling. She scrambled, but he held her in place with a subtle lift of the hand, the Force pinning her in a crouch.
âEnough,â he said, not unkindly.
She panted, teeth grit, shoulders trembling.
âI donât know why you left them. I donât care. I only ask you stop now, before someone dies who doesnât need to.â
Her gaze flicked past him, to Wolffeâwho stood in silence, jaw tight, one eye focused and guarded.
âYou Jedi think you know everything,â she hissed. âBut you donât know what itâs like to train them. To love them. And to choose between them.â
That made Plo pause.
âI chose nothing,â she said. âAnd it still broke them.â
The silence that followed was colder than the void outside.
Plo stared at her for a long moment.
Then, slowlyâhe stepped back.
Released the Force.
âYouâll run again,â he said, saber still lit. âBut I wonât be the one to kill someone trying to hold herself together.â
She blinked.
âYouâre⊠letting me go?â
âIâm giving you a moment,â he said. âWhat you do with it is yours to answer for.â
Wolffe took a step forward.
Plo stopped him with a look.
âSheâs off world. Unarmed. Andââ his voice lowered, ââno longer a priority.â
Wolffeâs fists clenched.
She didnât wait.
She bolted into the wreckage, shadows swallowing her whole. Gone again.
This time, no one followed.
Hi! I have a request for Wolffe x fem!reader. They have a established relationship but Wolffe has been a little distant since order 66 happened... one night when he's sleeping in the readers coruscant apartment, she decides to ask him about it. Wolffe sort of pushes her away, thinking he's too broken and has already done too much bad, but she stays no matter what. She soothes him with some love and cuddles?
âStill Yoursâ
Commander Wolffe x Fem!Reader
âž»
The city lights of Coruscant cast a soft glow through the wide windows of your apartment, dancing across Wolffeâs armor where it lay discarded on the floor.
He lay on your bed now, back turned, shirt half-pulled on, one arm slung under his head like a shield.
You watched him breathe.
Even in sleep, it wasnât easy. His breaths were shallow, uneven. Like he never really relaxed anymore. Like his body didnât know how.
Since the end of the warâand the day everything changedâheâd been distant. Still present. Still Wolffe. But quieter. Withdrawn. Touch-starved but pulling away when you tried.
You couldnât take it anymore.
You slid into bed beside him, soft and careful.
âWolffe,â you whispered.
He didnât open his eye.
âAre you awake?â
A beat of silence.
Then, âYeah.â
You reached out, brushing your fingers across the back of his shoulder. âYouâve been⊠far away lately.â
He tensed under your touch. âIâve just been tired.â
âNo. Youâre not tired. Youâre hurting.â You sat up beside him, pulling the sheets with you. âYou barely look at me anymore. You flinch when I say your name. You hold me like Iâm something youâre about to lose.â
Wolffe turned over slowly, sitting up and running a hand down his face.
âMeshâla, donât do this right now.â
âI have to,â you said. âYou think I donât notice how hard youâve been trying to pretend youâre fine? You sleep in my bed like a ghost.â
His jaw clenched. âWhat do you want me to say? That I followed orders that led to Jedi dying? That I donât know what was real and what was the chip? That I still see itâthemâwhen I close my eye?â
He stood, taking a few steps away like he could outrun it.
âIâm not who I used to be. Iâm not your Wolffe anymore. Iâm justâwhatâs left.â
You stood, quietly wrapping the sheet around yourself as you crossed the room to him.
âI donât need the man you used to be. I love the man you are. Even when heâs broken. Even when heâs hurting.â
He shook his head. âYouâre a senator. Youâre out there fighting for clone rights beside Chuchi, risking your damn career. You still believe weâre worth saving. That Iâm worth saving.â
âI do.â
âYouâre wrong.â
You stepped in front of him, tilting his chin up until he had no choice but to look at you.
âIâm never wrong about you.â
Wolffeâs breath hitched, his hands trembling faintly at his sides.
âI let them die,â he said, voice breaking. âI didnât even try to stop it. I justâfollowed orders like I always do. Like a good little soldier.â
âYou didnât have a choice.â
âDoes that matter?â he rasped. âTheyâre still gone. I still pulled the trigger.â
You wrapped your arms around him, burying your face in his chest, speaking against his skin.
âYouâre not a weapon, Wolffe. Youâre a man. One who has done everything he could to survive. And I know you. I know the way you fought for your brothers. I know how much you loved them. I know how hard itâs been for you to stay.â
His arms slowly, reluctantly, came around you. Tight. Desperate.
âI donât want to lose you,â he said quietly. âBut I donât know how to keep you either. Iâm not what you deserve.â
You pulled back just enough to kiss the scar at the edge of his temple, then rested your forehead against his.
âThen let me decide what I deserve. And I choose you.â
He let out a shaky breath, pressing his face into your neck like he was finally letting himself feel.
You guided him back to bed, pulling the covers over the both of you, holding him closeâhis arms around your waist this time.
You whispered, âIâm still here, Wolffe. And Iâm not going anywhere.â
And for the first time in weeks, he slept without flinching.
âž»
Summary: Your a friend of Jango Fettâs, he had asked you to come to Kamino to help train clone cadets, more specifically the cadets who were pre selected as commanders. Pre-Clone Wars. Pretty much just a love triangle between my fav clones. Bit angsty towards the end.
âž»
You hadnât even wanted the job.
Kamino was cold, clinical, and crawling with wide-eyed clones who couldnât shoot straight or punch worth a damn. But Jango had asked. And when Jango Fett asked, you didnât exactly say no.
So, you found yourself here, drowning in rain and the hollow clatter of trooper boots on durasteel, overseeing the elite cadets being fast-tracked to become clone commanders.
They werenât commanders yet. Not officially. But the Kaminoans had flagged a few standouts earlyâFox, Wolffe, Cody, Bly, Neyo, Greeâand they were yours now.
Jango called them assets.
You called them projects.
Most of them respected you. Some feared you. And then there were those two.
Fox and Wolffe.
Walking disasters. Brilliant tacticians. Fiercely loyal. And completely, irredeemably idiotic when it came to you.
Theyâd been vying for your attention since day oneâsquabbling, sparring, brawlingâand youâd brushed it off. Flirting wasnât new to you. You knew how to shut it down. But these two? These two were stubborn. And clever. And just reckless enough to keep you on your toes.
You stood now at the edge of one of the open training rings, arms folded, T-visor reflecting a dozen cadets going through various drills. Cody was holding his own in a two-on-one blaster sim. Bly was shouting orders like he thought he owned the place. Gree was crouched in the mud, recalibrating his training rifle mid-drill.
But your eyes were on Fox and Wolffe, again.
They were arguing by the supply crates, the tension between them so thick it mightâve passed as heat if Kamino werenât freezing.
âIâm telling you,â Wolffe was growling, âshe was talking to me yesterday.â
âRight,â Fox drawled. âShe called you âuncoordinated and overconfident.â Sounds like flirting to me.â
âYou donât get it, sheâs Mandalorian. Thatâs basically a compliment.â
âBoys.â Your voice sliced through the rain like a vibroblade.
They both snapped to attention so fast they nearly knocked heads.
âGet in the ring.â You didnât even raise your voice. âNow.â
Fox and Wolffe exchanged a lookâequal parts dread and defiance.
âYes, instructor,â they muttered.
âI want five laps if either of you so much as winks.â
You tossed a training staff toward Fox. He caught it clumsily and frowned. âWhat, no sim?â
âNope. Youâre with me.â
Somewhere behind you, you heard Bly mutter, âHeâs dead.â
âPay attention to your drill, cadet,â you barked.
Fox stepped into the ring with the same confidence he wore into every disaster. âTry not to go easy on me, yeah?â
You didnât dignify that with a response.
The fight started fast. Fox was quick, smooth, used his weight wellâbut youâd trained on Sundariâs cliffs, in Death Watch gauntlets, and in the company of monsters who made even Jango look tame.
Fox didnât stand a chance.
He lasted maybe three minutes before you dropped him with a shoulder feint and a sweep that sent him crashing into the mat.
âDead,â you said flatly, planting your boot on his chest.
Fox groaned. âYou always this brutal with your favorites?â
âYouâre not my favorite.â
âOof.â
ThenâWolffe shoved past the other cadets and stepped into the ring.
âThatâs enough,â he said, voice tight. âHeâs training, not being punished.â
You cocked your head. âYou volunteering?â
âIâm not letting you flatten my brother without a fight.â
You smirked behind the visor. âYour funeral.â
What followed was nothing short of combat comedy.
Wolffe was sharper than Fox. Calculated. But he was still a cadet. You pushed him hardâMando-style, merciless, unrelenting. Rain slicked the mat, thunder cracked outside, and your staff never slowed.
Wolffe held his own longer.
But he was still losing.
Then, desperateâhe lunged.
And bit you.
Right on the bicep.
âKriffingââ
You staggered back, jerking your arm away, teeth clenching as the pain bloomed under your armor.
âDid you justâdid you bite me?!â
Wolffe, still crouched and panting, looked horrified. âYou werenât stopping!â
Fox, flat on his back, howled with laughter. âYou feral loth-cat! What, was headbutting too civilized?â
You peeled your glove off and stared at the bite. âYou drew blood,â you growled. âI liked this undersuit.â
âInstinct,â Wolffe muttered.
âIdiot,â you shot back.
By now, the other cadets had gathered around the ring, wide-eyed and whispering. You turned slowly to the group.
âLet this be a lesson. I donât care if youâre a cadet, a commander, or kriffing Supreme Chancellor himselfâif you bite me, I bite back.â
Fox wheezed. âSheâs not joking. Iâve seen her take out two bounty hunters with a broken fork.â
You jabbed a finger at him. âFifteen laps, Fox. For running your mouth.â
Fox dragged himself upright and groaned, limping toward the track.
Wolffe started to follow.
You grabbed his pauldron.
âDonât ever use your teeth in a fight again, unless youâre actually dying.â
âYes, instructor.â
ââŠAnd next time, if you are gonna bite, aim higher.â
He blinked.
And you walked off, bleeding, storming, and already plotting their next humiliation.
Commanders?
Kriff.
They were barely house-trained.
âž»
The morning after the Bite Incident started like mostâgrey skies, howling wind, and Kaminoan side-eyes.
You strode onto the training deck in full gear, fresh bandage wrapped over the healing bite mark on your arm. The clones were already lined up, posture rigid, eyes straight. You could feel the tension radiating from the group like a bad smell. No doubt theyâd all heard the rumors.
One of them bit you. And lived.
You stopped in front of them, hands behind your back. âWhich of you thought it was smart to bet on me losing?â
Half the group tensed. Cody coughed.
You didnât wait for an answer. âDouble rations go to the one who bet Iâd win and that one of you idiots would end up chewing on my armor.â
That got a chuckleânervous, briefâbut it broke the tension. Good. You werenât here to baby them. You were here to make them legends.
âGroup drills today. Partner up.â
Predictably, Fox beelined for your side. âSo. Howâs the arm?â he asked, lips twitching.
You turned slightly, giving him just enough of a smirk. âTender. Wanna kiss it better?â
Fox visibly froze. For the first time in all the months youâd trained him, he blinked like a man whoâd just taken a thermal detonator to the soul.
Wolffe, watching from across the training floor, snapped his training blade in half.
Like, literally snapped it.
You didnât even react.
Cody whistled low. âHeâs gonna kill someone.â
âHope itâs not me,â Fox muttered under his breath, heart rate visibly climbing.
You raised your voice. âWolffe. Grab a new blade and meet me in the ring. Fox, go help Gree with his stance. The last time I saw someone hold a blaster like that, they were five and trying to eat it.â
Fox, now flustered beyond recognition, stumbled off. Wolffe stalked over, eyes dark.
âYou flirting with him now?â he asked, low and sharp, as you passed him a fresh blade.
You leaned inâjust close enough for your voice to dip like smoke. âHe flirted first.â
âAnd you flirted back.â
You tilted your head. âYou gonna bite me again if I do it twice?â
Wolffe looked like he might combust.
The spar started aggressiveâWolffe striking fast, sharp, his technique tighter than usual, anger giving him extra momentum. You blocked him easily, letting him wear himself out. Letting him stew.
âJealousy looks good on you,â you taunted, hooking his leg mid-swing and sweeping him to the mat with a sharp twist.
He landed with a grunt, breathless. You knelt beside him, blade tip pressed to his chestplate.
âI flirt with the one who keeps his teeth to himself,â you said, tone casual. âConsider that motivation.â
Wolffe didnât answer. He just stared at you, cheeks flushed, jaw clenched so tight you swore you could hear it grinding through the floor.
By the time drills ended, Fox was glowing. Wolffe was feral. And you?
You were thriving.
Let them fight over you. Let them stew, and sulk, and throw punches at each other behind the mess hall.
This was war training. Theyâd better get used to losing battles.
Especially the ones with their own hearts.
âž»
You were late.
Not tactically late. Intentionally late.
The cadets were already lined up, soaked to the bone from outdoor drillsâKaminoâs rain coming in sideways like daggers. You made your entrance like a storm, dripping wet and smirking like you hadnât made half the room lose sleep last night.
Fox was waiting at the front, eyes locked on you. He didnât salute. He didnât even smirk. He just lookedâcalm, steady, sharp.
And you felt it. That shift.
Wolffe was off to the side, glaring holes into the back of Foxâs head. You caught it all in a sweep of your gaze.
âWho wants a live-spar match to start the morning?â you called.
Several cadets groaned. Cody actually muttered something about defecting to Kaminoan administration.
But Fox? Fox stepped forward. âI do.â
You tilted your head. âSure you want that smoke, pretty boy?â
He smiled, slow and dangerous. âYou think I didnât train for this?â
You narrowed your eyes, intrigued.
The match was brutal. Not because Fox was strongerâbut because Fox was different. Controlled. Confident. Calculated. He didnât let your taunts shake him. He dodged quicker, pushed harder. When he caught your leg and sent you crashing to the mat, the cadets gasped.
Even Wolffe made a strangled noise like a dying animal.
You coughed, winded, pinned under Foxâs knee, his hand resting against your collarbone.
âYield?â he asked.
You blinked up at him. âDonât get cocky.â
âAlready did,â he said, low enough for only you to hear. âYou like it.â
You shoved him off you with a grin, rolling to your feet.
âNot bad,â you admitted. âBut Iâm still prettier.â
Fox actually laughed.
Wolffe walked off the mat.
Straight to the armory.
Because of course he did.
Later, when the others had cleared out and you were wiping sweat from your brow, you felt that familiar weight behind youâboots heavier than a cloneâs, presence impossible to ignore.
âJango,â you greeted, not turning.
âYouâre playing with them.â
You wiped your blade clean. âIâm training them.â
âYouâre toying with them,â he said, voice flat. âTheyâre assets. Not toys. Not lovers. Not soldiers you can break for fun.â
You turned, arching a brow. âI know the difference between a weapon and a man, Fett.â
He stepped closer. âThen stop pulling the trigger when you donât mean to shoot.â
That one hitâlow and sharp.
You swallowed hard, eyes narrowing. âTheyâre soldiers, Jango. If a little heartbreak cracks them, the war will kill them faster.â
âThey need guidance. Not confusion.â
âAnd what about me?â you asked, arms crossing. âWhat do I need?â
His eyes didnât soften. âYou need to choose. Or leave them both alone.â
You didnât answer.
He left you with the silence.
That night, you found Fox alone in the mess, bruised, hungry, and tired.
âYou did good today,â you said quietly.
He didnât look up from his tray. âSo did you. Playing with me until Wolffe snapped?â
âWolffe snapped because he thinks Iâm yours.â
Fox looked up now, slow and dangerous. âAre you?â
You leaned in. Close. Almost touching. âI could be.â
Foxâs jaw clenched. âThen stop making him think he has a chance.â
You didnât reply.
Not right away.
And that pause? That breath of hesitation?
That was the crack in everything.
âž»
You stopped showing up to the mess.
You didnât call on Fox or Wolffe for sparring. You rotated them into group drills only. You stopped lingering after hours. No more teasing remarks. No more slow smirks and heat behind your eyes.
No more touch.
It was easier, at first. For you.
They were cadets. Not yours. Not meant to be anything more.
Jangoâs voice echoed every time you started to second-guess yourself.
âStop pulling the trigger when you donât mean to shoot.â
So you holstered your weapon. Locked the fire down. Played it straight.
And watched them start to unravel.
Fox was the first to try and confront you.
He caught you in the hallway outside the training rooms. Quiet, calm, alone.
âYou ignoring me on purpose?â he asked, voice low.
You didnât stop walking. âYouâre a soldier. Iâm your instructor. Thatâs all.â
Fox stepped in front of you, blocking your path.
âSo that was all it ever was? The fights? The flirting? Me on top of you on the mat?â His voice cracked slightly at the end, despite his best efforts.
You looked at him, jaw tight. âFoxââ
He laughed. Bitter. âNo. Say it. Say it meant nothing.â
You couldnât.
And that was the problem.
âItâs better this way,â you said instead, and slipped past him.
He let you go.
That was what broke your heart most of all.
Wolffe was worse. He didnât say anythingâat first.
He trained harder. Fought rougher. Every drill was a warzone now. He snapped at Cody. Nearly dislocated Greeâs shoulder. Wouldnât meet your eyes. Until one nightâ
You caught him in the dark on the training deck, punching into a bag like it owed him his life.
âWolffe.â
He didnât stop.
âI said, stand downââ
He spun on you.
âWhy?â he snapped. âSo you can ignore me again?â
You froze.
âYou think I donât know what youâre doing?â he growled. âYou pulled away from both of us. Playing professional like you werenât the one making Fox look like a damn lovesick cadet. Like you werenât the one making me feel like I was yours.â
Your chest tightened. âIt wasnât like that.â
âYes, it was!â he shouted. âAnd now you think pulling back fixes it? You think it makes the want go away?â
You opened your mouth to reply, but Wolffe stepped forward, eyes burning.
âLet me make it real easy for you,â he said. âIf you didnât mean any of itâtell me you never wanted me. Say it.â
You couldnât.
You didnât.
You just turned and walked away.
Again.
And behind you, in the dead silence of the deck, you heard something break.
âž»
They started showing off.
It wasnât even subtle.
Fox perfected his bladework, spinning twin vibroknives in a blur, always training just where you could see. Wolffe started calling out cadets for slacking mid-drill, standing straighter, yelling louder, fighting longer.
Every time you passed, there was tensionâtight like a wire, straining.
And you kept pushing.
Harder, faster drills. No breaks. No leniency. You called them out in front of the others when they slipped. You sent them against each other in spar after spar, knowing theyâd go all out.
They did.
Until Fox went down hardâbreathing ragged, cut bleeding at his brow, fingers trembling.
And you snapped: âGet up. Again.â
He looked at you. Not angry. Not sad. Just tired.
Wolffe stepped between you before Fox could even move.
âNo.â
You blinked. âExcuse me?â
âI said no,â Wolffe growled. âHeâs bleeding. Heâs exhausted. Heâs not a toy you wind up just to see how far heâll go.â
âThis is trainingââ
âThis is punishment,â Fox cut in, standing up slow behind Wolffe. âAnd weâre done letting you use us to beat your own feelings into the ground.â
The silence that followed hit harder than a punch.
You looked at both of themâWolffe, tense and furious, jaw clenched; Fox, bleeding but still looking at you like he cared.
âYou think this is about feelings?â you spat. âIâm preparing you for war. Youâre not ready.â
âWe were,â Wolffe said quietly. âUntil you made yourself the battle.â
That hit you straight in the ribs.
You stared at them, breathing hard, adrenaline high, rage burning under your skinâand then you turned away.
âTrainingâs over,â you muttered.
Neither of them moved.
When you left the room, they didnât follow.
And for the first time since setting foot on Kamino, you realized what losing both of them might actually feel like.
âž»
The sky on Kamino never changed.
Just endless grey. Rain like a drumbeat. A constant hum of sterile light and controlled air.
You stood at the edge of the landing platform, your gear packed, your armor slung over your shoulder like it didnât weigh a hundred kilos in your gut.
âI thought you were done bounty hunting,â Jango said behind you.
You didnât turn.
âI thought I was too.â
He walked up beside you, slow and even. No judgment in his stride. No comfort either.
âThey got to you,â he said.
You didnât answer.
âTheyâre good soldiers. You saw that. You made them better. You drilled discipline into their bones.â A pause. âSo why run?â
You clenched your jaw.
âBecause I stopped seeing them as soldiers,â you muttered. âI started seeing them asââ
You broke off. Not because you didnât know the word. But because it hurt too much to say it.
Jango sighed. âI told you not to toy with the assets.â
âI wasnât.â
âYou flirted. You made them thinkââ
âI didnât make them think anything,â you snapped, turning to him finally. âI felt something. I didnât mean to. But I did. And now itâs bleeding into training andââ your voice cracked. âTheyâre getting hurt.â
Jango looked at you for a long, quiet second.
Then, almost gently: âYou never had the stomach for clean lines. Youâre too human for that.â
You laughed bitterly. âMaybe. But I wonât be the reason they break.â
Jango gave you a nod. Subtle. Approval, maybe. Or just understanding. He turned to leave, boots echoing on the wet metal.
âWhere will you go?â he asked over his shoulder.
You looked back out at the grey sea. Thought of neon lights. Cold bounties. Silence without faces you cared about.
âSomewhere I donât have to see their eyes.â
Jango didnât say goodbye.
He never did.
And when your ship lifted off, you didnât look back.
âž»
The cadets lined up in silence.
There was tension in the air. They could feel itâlike a shift in pressure right before a storm hits.
Wolffe had a sick feeling crawling up his spine. Fox had barely spoken all morning.
You hadnât shown up for dawn drills. Again.
Then the door opened.
Boots. Not yours.
Jango Fett strode inâfull beskar, helmet tucked under his arm, scowl like a thunderhead.
Every cadet stiffened.
âForm up,â he barked.
The lines straightened immediately. But all eyes were looking past himâwaiting.
Wolffeâs voice cut through the stillness.
âWhereâs our instructor?â
Jangoâs lip curled slightly. âGone.â
Fox frowned. âGone where?â
Jango stared them down.
âShe left Kamino. She wonât be returning.â
Just like that.
Silence exploded across the room.
Wolffeâs fists clenched.
Foxâs mouth openedâthen closed. His jaw locked.
âShe didnât say goodbye,â Neyo whispered.
Jango looked at them like they were stupid.
âShe didnât need to.â
No one breathed.
Then Jango paced in front of them, slow and deliberate.
âYou were here to be trained to lead men in battle. Not to fall for someone who made you feel special. You donât get attachments. You donât get comfort. You get orders. Understand?â
No one answered.
Jango stepped closer to Wolffe, then Fox, his voice low and cold.
âShe gave you the best of her and got out before you ruined it. Donât make the mistake of chasing ghosts.â
And with thatâhe barked for drills to begin.
They ran until their lungs burned, until every cadet dropped to their knees from exhaustion. Jango didnât ease up once.
Wolffe didnât speak the entire time.
Fox trained like he wanted the pain.
And no matter how hard they hit, how fast they moved, how sharp they becameâ
You didnât come back.
âž»
The job was supposed to be clean.
A simple retrieval on Xeron Vâa mid-tier Republic contractor gone rogue, hiding in the crumbling husk of an old droid factory. Get in, grab the target, drag him to a shadowy contact with credits to burn and questionable allegiance.
But you shouldâve known better.
The second you got your hands on him, everything went sideways. Someone tipped off the Republic. Gunships rained from the sky. Your target fled. You got cut off. Cornered.
And then the unmistakable howl of clone comms filled the air.
The 104th.
You almost laughed when you saw the markingsâgray trim, wolf symbols, bold and sharp.
Fate had a sick sense of humor.
You were disarmed in seconds, pinned to the floor with your cheek pressed against cold durasteel.
Even then, you didnât fight.
Wolffe was the one who yanked off your helmet.
You expected a reaction.
All you got was silence.
Not even a curse. Not even your name.
Just a stiff order to âsecure the bounty hunterâ and a curt nod to the troopers flanking you.
And then he walked away.
Like you were nothing.
Now you sat in the Republic outpostâs holding cell, bruised but mostly fineâaside from your ego and whatever parts of your heart still hadnât gone numb. The armor plating of your new life, as a notorious bounty hunter, felt thinner by the second.
He hadnât even looked you in the eye since they dragged you off the ship.
Not when you spat blood onto the hangar floor.
Not when they clamped the cuffs on your wrists.
Not when your helmet rolled to his feet like some ghost from a forgotten life.
Just protocol. Just silence.
Just Wolffe.
Outside the cell, Master Plo Koon approached his commander, his quiet presence always felt before it was seen.
âShe knew your name,â Plo said gently.
Wolffeâs armor flexed as his fists curled. âShe trained us. All of us. Before the war.â
âBut there is more, isnât there?â
Wolffe glanced sideways. âSir, with respectââ
âI am not scolding you, Wolffe.â Ploâs voice remained steady. âBut I sense a storm in you. I have since the moment she arrived.â
Wolffe said nothing.
âShe left something behind, didnât she?â
And for just a second, Wolffeâs mask cracked.
âYeah,â he said, jaw tight. âUs.â
âž»
The hum of the gunship in hyperspace filled the silence between you.
You were cuffed to a seat, armor stripped down to a flight-safe bodysuit. Your posture was relaxed, but your gaze never left the clone across from you.
Wolffe sat stillâhelmet in his lap, eyes fixed straight ahead. He hadnât spoken since takeoff.
âYou gonna give me the silent treatment the whole way?â you asked, voice dry.
He didnât even blink.
You sighed and leaned back, jaw clenching. âFine. Iâll do the talking.â
No response.
âI didnât think theyâd make you my escort,â you continued. âYouâd think after our history, that might be considered a conflict of interest.â
âMaybe they thought Iâd shoot you if you acted up,â he muttered.
You smirked. âI thought about acting up. Just to see if you still care.â
That got him.
His head snapped toward you, eyes burning. âDonât.â
âWhat? Push your buttons?â You arched a brow. âThat used to be my specialty.â
âYou used to be someone else.â
The smile dropped from your lips.
So did your heart.
Wolffe looked away again, tightening his grip on the helmet in his hands.
You turned your head toward the window, hiding the sting behind sarcasm. âYou look good in Commander stripes.â
âAnd you look good in chains.â
There it was againâthat damn tension. Sharp and unresolved. You almost welcomed the sting.
Almost.
âž»
Coruscant.
The gunship touched down in the GAR security hangar. Sterile, bright, swarming with guards in crimson-red armor.
You knew who ran this show before you even stepped off the ramp.
Fox.
The last time you saw him, he was still a smart-ass cadet fighting over who could land a blow on you first.
Now?
He wore the rank of Marshal Commander like a second skin. Polished. Cold. Untouchable.
The second your boots hit the durasteel, he was there.
âPrisoner in my custody,â he said to Wolffe, not even sparing you a glance.
âSheâs your problem now,â Wolffe replied, handing over the datapad.
You smirked. âNice armor, Foxy. Didnât think youâd climb so high.â
He didnât even blink.
âNo jokes. No names. Youâre not special anymore.â
The smile dropped off your face like a blade.
âI see the Senate really squeezed all the fun out of you.â
Fox stepped in close, nose-to-nose. âThat bounty you botched? Republic senatorâs aide was caught in the crossfire. Heâs still in critical care.â
Your mouth opened, but he kept going.
âYou may think youâre the same snarky Mandalorian who used to throw cadets around on Kamino. But youâre not. Youâre a liability with a kill countâand youâre lucky we didnât shoot you on sight.â
You swallowed hard.
Wolffe stood off to the side, helmet tucked under one arm, watching. Quiet. Controlled.
But his gaze never left your face.
Fox turned to his men. âTake her to holding. Iâll debrief in an hour.â
You were grabbed by the arms again, dragged off without ceremony. As you passed Wolffe, your eyes met just for a second.
You opened your mouth to say somethingâanything.
But Wolffe looked away first.
And this time, it hurt worse than anything else ever had.
The room was cold. Not physicallyâjust sterile. Void of anything human.
One table. Two chairs. Transparent durasteel wall behind you.
And Fox, across the table, red armor like a warning light that never shut off.
He hadnât said a word yet.
Just stood in the doorway, datapad in hand, watching you like he was trying to decide whether to question you or put a bolt in your head.
Finally, he sat down.
âYouâre in a lot of trouble.â
You leaned back in the chair, manacled wrists resting against the tabletop. âLet me guess. That senatorâs aide I accidentally shot was someoneâs nephew?â
Fox didnât flinch. âYouâre lucky heâs not dead.â
âIâm lucky all the time.â
He stared you down. âTell me why you took the job.â
You rolled your eyes. âCredits.â
âThatâs not good enough.â
âItâs the truth.â
His fingers tapped against the datapad. A slow, rhythmic pulse that echoed through the silence.
âTarget was mid-level intelâwhy would someone like you take a low-rank job like that?â
âI donât screen my clients. I donât ask questions.â
He leaned forward slightly. âYou used to.â
You stilled.
There it was. The first crack.
âBack on Kamino,â he added, voice quieter. âYou asked questions. You gave a damn.â
You looked away. âThat was a long time ago.â
Foxâs jaw tightened. âThen help me understand what changed.â
You laughed once, bitter. âWhy, Fox? This isnât an interrogation. This is you trying to pick apart whatâs left of someone you used to know.â
âNo,â he said, too quickly. âThis is me trying to figure out whether the person I used to trust is still in there.â
Your gaze snapped to his.
He didnât blink.
Didnât break.
But you saw it.
That same flicker he used to show you, late in training when he couldnât hide how much he hung on every word you said. That look when he fought with Wolffe over who got to spar with you first. That silence after you left Kamino without saying goodbye.
âI trained you to be a good soldier,â you muttered. âNot to sit behind a desk and spit Senate lines.â
âI became a good soldier because of you,â he shot back. âBut you left before you could see it.â
Silence settled again.
He dropped the datapad to the table and leaned back in his chair. âDo you even care who youâre working for these days?â
You smirked, tired. âYou want me to say I regret it. But I donât think youâd believe me if I did.â
Fox stood abruptly. âYouâre right. I wouldnât.â
He moved to leaveâthen hesitated, fingers flexing at his side. He looked back once, gaze sharp and unreadable.
âWeâre not done.â
You lifted your brow. âDidnât think we were.â
He stared at you another heartbeat longer.
Then left.
The door hissed closed behind him.
And still, his questions lingered.
âž»
It was past midnight, but Coruscant never slept.
The holding cell lights were dim, humming faintly above your head. You sat on the edge of the cot, elbows on your knees, staring through the thick transparisteel wall like you could still see stars.
Your wrists ached from the manacles.
Your chest ached from everything else.
When the door hissed open, you didnât look.
You already knew who it was.
He stepped inside, slow and carefulâlike maybe if he moved too quickly, heâd change his mind and leave.
âDidnât expect to see you again,â you said quietly.
âIâm not supposed to be here.â
âFigured.â
You turned your head. Wolffe was still in full armor, helmet off, but the tension in his shoulders was more than battlefield wear.
He stepped closer but didnât sit. He just looked at you. Like he hadnât had the chance to really see you until now.
âYou really left,â he said.
You huffed a breath. âYou mean Kamino?â
He nodded once.
âJango warned me,â you said. âTold me not to mess with the assets.â
His jaw clenched. âYou werenât messing with us.â
âWerenât I?â
Wolffe looked down, quiet for a moment. Then:
âWe wouldâve followed you anywhere.â
The silence between you cracked openâraw, vulnerable.
âI couldnât stay,â you whispered. âNot after that. Not when I knew I was screwing with your heads. You and Fox were fighting over a ghost. I was your first crush, not your future.â
âYou were more than that.â
âNo,â you said gently. âI was just the one who got away.â
Wolffe looked like he wanted to argue. Wanted to reach out. But he stayed exactly where he was, arms stiff at his sides.
âYouâre going to be court-martialed,â you said with a dry smile. âVisiting the prisoner. Real scandal.â
âI donât care.â
âYes, you do. You always did. Thatâs what made you a good soldier.â
He didnât reply to that. Just let the silence stretch.
Finally, you asked, âSo what happens now?â
Wolffeâs eyes hardenedânot cold, but braced. âYouâre staying. Senate wants answers. GAR wants a scapegoat.â
âAnd you?â
âI wantââ
He stopped himself.
You sat up straighter. âSay it.â
He exhaled, jaw flexing, voice low. âI want you to walk out of here. I want you on my squad, back where you belong. I want to forget you ever left.â
You didnât look away.
âI want to stop wondering if we ever meant anything to you.â
You stepped toward the barrier between you.
Then the comm in his vambrace flared to life.
ââCommander Wolffe, this is General Koon. Weâre wheels up in five. Rendezvous at Pad D-17.â
He didnât answer it. Just looked at you.
âI guess thatâs your cue,â you said, trying to smile. âDuty first.â
âAlways.â
But this time, he didnât move.
He just stared at you like maybeâjust maybeâheâd stay.
âIâm not asking you to forgive me,â you said. âI made my bed. Iâll lie in it.â
He nodded slowly. âYou always did sleep like hell anyway.â
You laughed once. It hurt.
âIâll see you again,â he said finally.
âYou sure about that?â
âIâll make sure of it.â
Another call came through. Urgent.
He stepped back, slow, deliberate, like every footfall cost him.
You stood alone behind the transparisteel wall.
And he left without another word.
Because he was a commander.
And you were the one who got away.
Summary: Wolffe x Medic!Reader set post-Order 66 during the Rebels era. Listened to the song âsomewhere only we knowâ by Keane and made me think of old man Wolffe.
âž»
The sky of Seelos burned orange as another sun dipped beneath the jagged horizon. The Ghost had landed hours ago, stirring the sand, dust, and old ghosts from their resting places.
You stood at the edge of the clearing, arms crossed, scanning the ramshackle AT-TE turned-home ahead. Your breath caught when you saw himâhelmet under one arm, same eye scar, same heavy gait. But time had added weight to his shoulders and silver to his hair.
Wolffe.
He hadnât seen you yet. Or maybe he had and just didnât believe it. You smiled.
âWell, kark me,â you called, stepping forward, âeither Iâm dreaming or the years have not been kind to you, old man.â
He froze mid-step. His one eye widened, flickering with something too raw to be masked. His voice was gravel when he finally spoke.
âMedic?â
You raised an eyebrow. âStill calling me that after all this time? Not even a âhey, great to see you, thought you were deadâ?â
He dropped his helmet, closing the distance in long, heavy steps. You didnât realize you were trembling until he reached youâuntil his gloved hand gently took your arm like he wasnât sure if youâd disappear.
âYou left,â he said. Not accusing. Just fact.
âSo did you,â you whispered. âWar ended. Republic died. So many of us died with it.â
A moment passed where neither of you breathed. The wind whistled over cracked metal and dry earth. The sun dipped a little lower.
Wolffeâs eye searched your face like it had answers to questions he never dared to ask. âWhy now?â he said. âWhy here?â
You glanced back toward the Ghost, where Sabine and Zeb were offloading supplies, Hera and Kanan deep in discussion. âIâm with them now. The Ghost crew. Ezra brought us out here. Said there were⊠good men worth finding.â
Wolffe looked away. âNot sure thatâs true anymore.â
You touched his cheekâscarred, weathered, familiar. âStill wearing your guilt like a second set of armor, huh?â
âMaybe.â
âI remember when you used to smile,â you murmured. âUsed to fight like hell, patch your brothers up, then sit with me under stars on Ryloth like the war wasnât chewing us to pieces.â
His silence was heavy, but he didnât pull away. Just watched you with that quiet intensity he always had.
âIâve thought about you,â you said. âOver the years. Wondered if you made it. Wondered if you found peace somewhere.â
âThis is the closest I got,â he said, glancing back at the AT-TE. âItâs not much.â
âItâs something,â you offered. âSomewhere only we know.â
A tired smirk tugged at his lips. âStill quoting that old song you used to hum in the medbay?â
You shrugged. âCatchy. And depressing. Fit the vibe.â
He chuckledâactually chuckled. It was a rare sound, worn and dry but still alive. âYou really havenât changed.â
You leaned in, nudging his shoulder. âYou have. More lines. More grump. Less hair.â
âI shaved it.â
âSure, sure. Thatâs what they all say.â
He shook his head, muttering a fond âdamn smartassâ under his breath.
The sun was nearly gone now, and the stars began to appear, faint and blinking like the ghosts of all youâd lost.
You stepped closer, chest brushing his armor. âYou think we could find that peace again?â you asked, soft. âMaybe not like before, but⊠something close?â
He didnât answer right away. But his hand found yoursâcalloused, warm, grounding.
âStay a while,â he said. âJust⊠stay.â
You squeezed his hand.
âFor now,â you said. âIâll stay.â
And under a Seelos sky, two remnants of a broken galaxy found the smallest sliver of something whole. A memory made real. A place only you two remembered.
Somewhere only you knew.
âž»
It was another night at 79âs, the bar where the clones and the occasional visitor came to unwind after a long day of battle. The flickering lights cast shadows on the grungy walls, but the lively chatter, laughter, and clinking of glasses created a comforting hum in the background. You leaned against the bar, swirling your drink, eyes scanning the room when your gaze landed on a familiar face.
Commander Wolffe, as always, had a commanding presence even when he was off-duty, but tonight he was uncharacteristically relaxed. His armor was discarded in favor of the usual clone-issue tank top and fatigues, his black-and-grey hair tousled in a way that made him look rugged, even more so than usual. Youâd bumped into him here plenty of times, always with the same playful banter and flirtatious remarks that made you look forward to your time at 79âs.
Tonight, however, something was different. You werenât alone.
A new faceâa clone commander you didnât recognizeâwas sitting at a nearby table, chatting you up with ease. His dark hair was shaved close, a subtle scar above his eyebrow, and his grin was disarming, though his overconfidence was starting to wear on your patience. You were just humoring him for the moment, enjoying the banter and not entirely bothered by the attention. After all, it was 79âs, and a little flirtation never hurt anyone.
It was harmless enough, or at least you thought so, until you noticed Wolffe watching the exchange from a distance.
It wasnât the first time youâd been flirted with by clones here, but you could sense Wolffeâs usual relaxed demeanor had shifted. The intensity in his eyes was unmistakable as he made his way over to you, standing a little too close, his presence commanding the room.
You flashed him a smile, unfazed by the tension that had suddenly thickened between them. âWhatâs up, Wolffe? You seem a little tense tonight.â
âEverything alright here?â Wolffeâs tone was sharp, his eyes flicking to Cody, who was now giving him a questioning look. He then turned his gaze back to you, his expression softening for a moment before he added, âIs this guy bothering you?â
You raised an eyebrow, a mischievous grin pulling at your lips. âNo,â you teased, âweâre just having a drink.â
Wolffeâs jaw tightened as he turned to Cody, who hadnât broken his cool demeanor. âWell, heâs bothering me,â Wolffe said, and before anyone could react, he delivered a quick, sharp punch to Codyâs jaw.
Cody staggered slightly, more out of surprise than anything, his usual calm expression barely cracking. He recovered quickly, though, smirking as he rubbed his shoulder. âWell, thatâs one way to say hello, Wolffe,â Cody said, voice tinged with amusement.
âJust a friendly reminder,â Wolffe grumbled
The room fell silent for a brief moment before laughter erupted from the nearby tables, the other clones eyeing the two commanders like they were about to see something more entertaining than a training session. The bartender, however, wasnât as amused.
âYou three! Out!â The bartender called, waving a hand at the trio of you, his patience running thin.
Wolffe flashed Cody a final look, an unspoken challenge in his eyes, before he gave a half-smile in your direction. âGuess weâre kicked out,â he muttered, already stepping toward the door.
Outside, the cool night air hit you, the chaos of the bar quickly fading behind you as you all stood on the street. You couldnât help but laugh at the absurdity of it all.
âWell, that was interesting,â you said, grinning. âCouldnât help myself, you know? Itâs hard to resist a little harmless flirtation with handsome clones.â
Wolffe smirked, crossing his arms over his chest. âYouâre trouble,â he muttered, though there was an unmistakable warmth in his eyes. âNext time, try not to get two clones in a punch-up over you.â
Cody, rubbing his jaw with a slight wince, chuckled. âIâve had worse, Wolffe. But maybe youâll want to keep that temper in check next time.â
You grinned, raising an eyebrow. âYeah, Iâll have to think about it. I mean, youâre both so handsome. Itâs hard not to get a little distracted.â
Wolffe shot Cody another look, then glanced at you with a half-smile. âWell, I suppose itâs good to know where I stand,â he said dryly. âBut just remember, no oneâs going to flirt with you as much as I do. So maybe Iâll keep punching my way to your heart.â
Cody snorted, shaking his head. âBrotherly rivalry at its finest, huh?â
You laughed, amused by the two of them. âYeah, looks like it.â You gave Wolffe a playful look. âBut I have to admit, I like the way you fight for my attention.â
Wolffe grinned, his usual cool demeanor returning. âGood,â he said, voice low and steady. âBecause Iâm not going to let anyone else take it.â
The three of you shared a brief, comfortable silence, and though the situation had been far from ordinary, there was a sense of camaraderie that you wouldnât have traded for anything. And even though it had been an unexpected turn of events, you couldnât help but enjoy the playful rivalryâespecially when it involved such intriguing company.
âYou two are something else,â you said, shaking your head, a smile tugging at your lips. âBut it looks like Iâm going to have to pick a side, huh?â
Wolffe gave you a smirk that told you everything you needed to know. âIâm already on your side,â he said, his voice full of quiet confidence.
Cody chuckled, stepping away with a wink. âDonât think Iâll let you forget this, Wolffe.â
âWouldnât dream of it,â Wolffe shot back with a grin. And with that, the three of you parted ways for the night, the bond of camaraderieâand the subtle, unspoken rivalryâlingering between you all.
The hangar ramp hissed open, and your boots hit the deck like you owned it. Technically, you didn'tâbut you were Plo Koon's former Padawan, still carrying his signature balance of unshakable calm and cutting sarcasm.
You tugged your hood down and grinned as you spotted two familiar figures on the bridge: Plo Koon, standing with serene patience, and Commander Wolffe beside him, looking like someone had just asked him to smile. Again.
"Master," you greeted with a playful bow. "Commander."
Without turning, Plo said, "You're late... again."
You smirked. "As long as I'm not late to my own funeral. You must know by now I consider this punctual."
Wolffe crossed his arms. "With your timing? It's a miracle you've not already had one."
You gave him a slow once-over. "Still charming as ever, I see. The scowl really brings out the war-torn veteran vibes. Very scarred and emotionally unavailable of you."
Wolffe didn't even flinch. "And you're still running your mouth like we've got time for it."
Before you could reply, Boost and Sinker passed behind him, lugging crates and throwing looks.
"Someone's in love," Boost sang under his breath.
"Poor Commander," Sinker added, "didn't stand a chance."
Wolffe didn't even turn around. "I can still reassign both of you to sewage detail."
You held back a laughâbarely.
"Are all your men like this now?" you asked your old Master.
Plo Koon gave a low hum. "Sassy. Grumpy. Aggressively loyal."
"So you picked them to remind you of me."
"I missed you," he said without missing a beat.
Your heart actually squeezed at that, but you covered it with, "Well, I hope you're ready, because if Commander Growl here is leading the op, I might die from sarcasm before I die from blaster fire."
Wolffe raised an eyebrow. "I don't babysit Jedi."
You stepped closer. "Good. I don't need a babysitter. I need someone who won't cry when I outrank him in sass."
He stared at you, deadpan. "You won't."
You stared back. "You sure?"
Pause.
"Unfortunately."
Plo Koon interrupted before one of you ended up biting the other. "We deploy in two hours. I expect both of you to survive long enough to get along."
You and Wolffe answered at the same time.
"No promises."
---
The landing zone was chaos.
Blaster fire lit the sky, droids rained from drop ships, and the ground was already smoking. You and Wolffe hit dirt side by side, crouched behind the smoldering wreckage of what used to be a tactical transport.
"Well," you said, deflecting a bolt with your saber, "this is cozy."
"You call this cozy?" Wolffe growled, firing a shot so clean it sent a super battle droid straight to the scrap heap.
You smirked. "I've had worse first dates."
He didn't look at you, just reloaded. "You're bleeding."
You glanced at your shoulder. Blaster graze. "A little paint off the speeder. I'm fine."
"You should patch it."
"Are you worried about me, Commander?"
"No. I just don't want to carry your dramatic ass off the battlefield."
"You mean you can't carry me."
"Try me."
Before you could sass him again, Boost's voice crackled through comms.
"Commanderrr, she's making that face again."
"You mean the one that says 'I flirt by mocking your trauma'?"
Sinker's voice joined in, deadpan: > "So... her default face."
"Copy that, shutting off comms now," Wolffe said drylyâand actually turned his comm off.
"Coward," you muttered, slashing through another droid.
But underneath all the banter, you were moving in sync. You ducked when he fired. He stepped when you struck. Like muscle memory. Like old training and shared violence. Like maybe, somehow, this shouldn't feel so... natural.
_ _ _
The op was a win. Barely.
You were bruised, bleeding, and parked on a cold medbay cot with a bandage wrapped around your shoulder. Wolffe was sitting across from you, helmet off, that glorious scar catching the sterile light.
You stared at it. Again.
"I can feel you looking at it," he grumbled, arms crossed.
"Can't help it. It's criminally hot."
He blinked. "It's a war wound."
"Exactly."
He shook his head. "You're weird."
"You're pretty," you shot backâmostly to see him flinch.
And oh, he flinched. Glared like you'd punched him in the stomach.
"Iâwhatâdon'tâ" he sputtered. "You can't just say things like that."
"You mean compliments?"
He looked genuinely appalled. "You take one like it's a threat!"
"Because they usually are! Last guy who called me beautiful tried to shoot me two hours later."
Wolffe rubbed his face. "We are so emotionally damaged."
You grinned. "You like it."
He muttered something about Jedi being a menace, and you stepped closer. Right into his space. Close enough to see the tension in his jawâand the way he didn't move away.
"Wolffe," you said quietly. "You're allowed to like me. Even if I'm mouthy. Even if I scare you a little."
"You don't scare me."
You leaned in.
"Good."
Then you kissed him. And stars, he kissed you back.
It wasn't sweet. It wasn't gentle. It was the kind of kiss you gave a person when you both knew tomorrow might not come. Hard, real, desperate in that quiet, aching way soldiers kissâthe kind that says I know we're doomed, but just for tonight, pretend we're not.
When you finally pulled back, he was breathing a little heavier.
"...You're exhausting," he whispered.
"You love it."
"...Unfortunately."
From the next room, Boost called, "If you're done making out, the rest of us are bleeding."
Sinker added, "Bleeding and emotionally neglected."
Wolffe let his head thunk against your shoulder.
You just smiled. "Same time tomorrow?"
"Maker help me," he muttered.
But he didn't say no.
âž»
The mission was simple: a supply drop to a small village that had been hit hard by the Separatists a few weeks ago. The 104th were tasked with delivering medicine, food, and supplies, and Master Plo had insisted on accompanying themâhis calm presence often a welcome relief in tense situations. It was a peaceful village now, recovering from the wreckage, though it had its oddities.
And one of those oddities stood waiting on the village outskirts as the shuttle carrying the 104th came in to land.
You were a local, though you didnât seem to fit the mold of the average villager. You were known as the âvillage crazy,â a title you wore with pride. You were eccentric, a little wild, and, to put it bluntly, you were unlike anyone the soldiers had ever met. You spent most of your days wandering the village, dancing on the shoreline, speaking in riddles, and telling storiesâstories that were elaborate, nonsensical, and always different from the last. You had a gift for spinning tales that no one could follow, and you never told the same story twice. There was always something new, something unexpected, and most importantly, you never left anyone with the same sense of reality.
The shuttle doors opened, and Commander Wolffe was the first to step off, his helmet glinting in the sunlight. He scanned the area, taking in the sight of the quiet village, a few villagers waving at him and his men. The 104th were used to these kinds of missionsâhelping out the people who needed it, always the soldierâs duty.
But the moment his eyes landed on you, standing in the middle of the village with your arms raised to the sky, spinning in slow circles, he stopped.
âWell, this is going to be⊠interesting,â Warthog muttered from behind him, a grin creeping up on his face as he watched you twirl, completely oblivious to the soldiersâ presence.
âYou sure sheâs not a droid in disguise?â Boost asked, his brow raised as he adjusted his rifle.
Wolffe only sighed. âSheâs definitely not a droid.â
At that moment, you caught sight of Master Plo, and your face lit up with an expression of delight. You skipped over to him, arms wide, your bare feet brushing the ground as you moved with a fluid grace that felt otherworldly. âMaster Plo! The sky told me you would be here today! The wind, the oceanâit all speaks when itâs time.â
Master Plo gave you a serene smile, ever the diplomat. âIâm glad to see you, [Y/N]. What news do the stars share with you today?â
âThe stars are confused,â you replied cryptically, your voice playful yet serious. âTheyâve lost their way, Master Jedi. The moons are turning, but the tides are still.â
Wolffe, standing a few paces back, exchanged a glance with Warthog. His brow furrowed, and he couldnât suppress a mutter under his breath. âThis is going to be a long mission.â
You, however, took no notice of his cynicism. You had already moved to the next subject, dancing in circles as you spoke. âI once saw a giant fish the size of a mountain! It came out of the sea and roared at the sun! It was blue, but it wore a cape made of cloudsâlike a king of the waves!â
Wooly snorted. âYeah, right,â he muttered, shaking his head. âA fish that wears a cape?â
âIâm telling you, Wooly,â you replied with a wink, âIâm never wrong. Youâve just never looked at the ocean the way I do.â
âAnd howâs that?â Boost asked, raising an eyebrow.
With a sly smile, you leaned in closer to him, speaking in a lowered voice. âWith the eyes of a mermaid, of course. You can see everythingâbeneath the waves, beneath the stories, beneath the stars. You just have to listen.â
Wolffe, arms crossed, watched the exchange with growing confusion. âRight,â he muttered, glancing over to Master Plo. âIs she always like this?â
Plo chuckled softly, his calm demeanor unwavering. âYes, but thereâs wisdom in her madness. [Y/N] sees the world in a way that few of us can. Sometimes, we just have to let the river flow.â
âRiverâŠ?â Wolffe raised an eyebrow but didnât press further. Heâd seen his fair share of strange characters, but none quite like this one. You were certainly different.
Master Plo turned back to you with a smile. âAnd how have you been, [Y/N]? The village looks well, I see.â
You spun once more, eyes twinkling with a mix of amusement and mystery. âIâm good! But⊠oh, the tideâs about to turn again, Master Jedi. I can feel it! I can hear the whales calling from the mountains, and the ground feels restless. Somethingâs stirring.â You leaned in toward him conspiratorially, whispering as though sharing a great secret, âThe skyâs eyes are looking this way, and I think⊠I think itâs about time for a visit from the stars.â
Wolffe watched, unimpressed but intrigued nonetheless. âGreat, more riddles.â He muttered under his breath, but Plo only chuckled.
âThereâs more to her words than you think, Commander,â Plo said gently. âShe is⊠connected to the Force in ways that donât always make sense to us.â
You, still twirling, suddenly stopped and looked directly at Wolffe, catching him off guard. âThe moon is rising, Commander. The shadows are long, and the stories are ready to be told. But be carefulâthere are wolves in the woods that sing songs of fire.â
Wolffe raised an eyebrow. âWolves in the woods?â
You nodded, as though everything you said made perfect sense. âThe kind that howl with the wind. But no need to worry; they only come when the stars fall.â
He gave you a half-hearted smile, his skepticism never wavering. âIâll keep that in mind.â
You grinned widely. âGood, Commander. You must always listen to the stars and the wolves. They know things we cannot.â
As the day wore on, Wolffe, Boost, Warthog, and Wooly found themselves working alongside the villagers, setting up the relief supplies and ensuring that everything was distributed properly. You flitted around the camp, speaking to anyone who would listen with your wild stories and cryptic observations.
At one point, you approached Wolffe again, who was overseeing the unloading of medical supplies.
âYouâre not going to find what youâre looking for in the boxes, Commander,â you said, giving him a pointed look.
He glanced at the crates and then back at you, a little bemused. âAnd what exactly am I looking for, [Y/N]?â
âThe truth,â you answered with a knowing smile, your voice soft and almost tender. âBut itâs hiding behind the moon. It always is.â
Wolffe blinked, processing the strange words. For a moment, he wanted to laugh it off, to brush you aside as just another eccentric villager. But something in the way you spokeâso sure, so confident in your own worldâmade him pause.
Maybe, just maybe, there was more to you than the others saw. And maybe, just maybe, your wild stories held a grain of truth.
âž»
The days passed in a haze of strange encounters and stories as the 104th continued their relief mission in the village. Commander Wolffe found himself oddly drawn to the âvillage crazy,â as she was affectionately known. You were an enigmaâone moment spinning wild tales about stars, the next, dancing barefoot along the shore or chatting to animals as though they were old friends. It was baffling, and Wolffe couldnât help but find a strange charm in your unpredictability.
He would catch glimpses of you wandering around the camp, your eyes gleaming with excitement as you spoke to the sky, or weaving through the villagers as though you were part of something larger than what any of them could comprehend. There was an air of serenity about you, a sense of knowing that Wolffe couldnât quite place. You were unpredictable, yes, but there was a peacefulness in your madness that was strangely⊠grounding.
The oddest part? Master Plo seemed to have no issue with it. Heâd often smile as he watched you interact with the world around you, a knowing look in his eyes.
âI think, Commander,â Master Plo had said one evening as they watched you from a distance, âthere is wisdom in her madness. She sees the world through a different lens, but that lens allows her to glimpse truths we might miss.â
Wolffe gave him a skeptical look. âSheâs a little⊠strange.â
Master Plo chuckled softly. âWe all are in our own way, Commander. Sometimes, itâs not the surface that matters, but what lies beneath. [Y/N] may have more to offer than she lets on.â
Wolffe didnât respond, instead just watching you as you twirled across the village square, talking animatedly to an empty chair as though it was a long-lost friend. He couldnât deny that there was something captivating about youâsomething that made him want to learn more, despite himself.
Meanwhile, the rest of the 104th had their own thoughts on the matter. Sinker and Boost in particular werenât quite as enchanted by your eccentricities. They had grown used to following orders, taking things seriously. And the constant stream of bizarre stories you told and your odd behavior didnât sit well with them.
âYou know, Iâm starting to think weâre all in the middle of some bizarre dream,â Sinker grumbled as he leaned against a crate, watching you dance in the distance. âSheâs like a walking, talking riddle.â
âSheâs a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside a headache,â Boost added with a smirk, crossing his arms as he watched you spin around.
You had been telling tales about the stars and the oceans again when they spotted youâthis time, however, you werenât just dancing by the shore. You were out in the water, waist-deep, moving gracefully around a strange creatureâa sort of aquatic alien, with shimmering scales and bioluminescent markings that flickered like the stars themselves. It was an oddity they had never seen before.
âWhat in the galaxy is that?â Sinker asked, eyes wide in disbelief.
âIt looks like some kind of alien fish⊠thing,â Boost said with a chuckle. âThatâs one way to make a splash.â
You didnât seem to care that they were watching. You danced with the creature, laughing and singing softly to it in a language none of them recognized. Your voice blended with the sound of the waves as you seemed to communicate with the animal, a soft bond of mutual understanding between you and the strange creature.
Wolffe had joined the two clones at the edge of the village, having finished his patrol. He looked over at the scene in the distance, his brow furrowing slightly as he saw you in the water, laughing with the alien. His first instinct was to protect you, but the sight was strangely calming. You were unbothered by their stares, completely immersed in the moment.
âSheâs definitely got some screws loose,â Sinker muttered under his breath, watching you from a distance.
Boost snorted. âI donât know, Sinker. Maybe sheâs onto something. Who else do we know who can communicate with random sea creatures?â
âSheâs not communicating with it, Boost,â Wolffe said, his voice surprisingly soft. âItâs⊠just a connection. You canât understand it unless youâve seen it for yourself.â
Sinker and Boost exchanged looks before Sinker laughed. âYouâre starting to sound like her, Wolffe. Watch out, you might start dancing with fish too.â
Wolffe didnât respond. He just watched you, a flicker of something uncertain passing through his mind. He was⊠intrigued. Fascinated, even. The way you seemed to fit into the world so effortlessly, the way you didnât care what anyone thought. It was a sharp contrast to the rigid, regimented life of a clone trooper.
âž»
The relief mission was drawing to a close, and the 104th were preparing to leave. The shuttle would be ready for takeoff within the hour. Supplies had been delivered, the villagers were starting to rebuild, and the atmosphere of quiet recovery settled over the village. It was a peaceful ending to a mission that had, in its own strange way, been one of the more memorable ones.
The 104th had gathered near the shuttle, preparing to board, when Wolffe found himself standing a little further back from the others. His helmet was tucked under his arm, and he was quietly observing the bustling village one last time. His thoughts, however, were far from the mission. His mind kept wandering back to youâthe village âcrazy.â You were unlike anyone he had ever met, and even now, as he watched the villagers wave goodbye to the clones, he couldnât quite shake the feeling that you had somehow made your way into his thoughts.
You werenât far off. As always, you had a way of slipping into the edges of their world without anyone noticingâuntil it was too late.
Wolffeâs eyes caught sight of you as you wandered over to him, your bare feet making no sound against the dirt path. You were humming a tune that didnât seem to belong to any world the clones knew, a soft, almost haunting melody that drifted in the warm air.
âCommander Wolffe!â you called out, your voice light and filled with the same mystery that seemed to surround you. âI have something for you.â
He turned to face you, raising an eyebrow as you approached. âSomething for me?â he asked, his tone flat, though his interest was piqued. âWhatâs that?â
You stopped just in front of him, your eyes sparkling with mischief, and held out your hand. In it was a small, smooth rockânothing extraordinary, but there was something special about the way you presented it. It glinted in the sun, and the edges were rounded, worn down by time, smooth like a river stone.
âThis is a gift from the stars,â you said cryptically, a playful smile tugging at your lips. âYouâll need it where youâre going. It will remind you to listen to the waves, the winds, the stars⊠and to yourself.â
Wolffe hesitated for a moment, eyeing the rock in your hand. âI donât need reminders, [Y/N],â he said, though his voice softened at the end. âIâm not the kind of man who needs⊠stars.â
You smiled wider, a knowing look in your eyes. âThatâs why youâll need it,â you replied with a wink. âWhen the time comes, youâll hear them. I promise.â
For a long moment, Wolffe simply stared at you, unsure of how to respond. Your words, as always, felt like a riddle wrapped in a mystery, but there was a sincerity to them that made him want to believe you. He could hear the faint whisper of the wind through the trees, the faint sound of the ocean nearby. Maybe⊠just maybe, there was truth to what you were saying. And maybe, you were right.
âAlright,â he muttered after a moment, taking the rock from your hand. âIâll keep it. But donât expect me to start listening to the waves.â
You smiled brightly, as if youâd won a great victory. âItâs not the waves you need to listen to, Commander,â you said softly. âItâs the silence between them.â
There was a brief silence between you two, neither of you moving. Wolffe felt something shift in the airâa quiet, inexplicable connection that, despite his reservations, had grown over the past few days. You had a way of making him feel⊠less like a soldier and more like a man, someone capable of hearing the things he normally ignored. Even if it didnât make sense, it didnât feel wrong.
The moment was interrupted by the sound of Warthog shouting from the shuttle, his voice carrying over the wind. âCommander! Get over here! Weâre ready to leave!â
Wolffeâs shoulders stiffened, but he didnât immediately turn away. Instead, he glanced back at you. Your eyes were filled with that quiet understanding againâlike you could see right through him.
âWell, I guess this is it,â you said softly, spinning the rock in your fingers like a talisman. âDonât forget to listen.â
âI wonât forget,â Wolffe said, his voice surprisingly gentle. âBut I might not listen, either.â
You chuckled, a sound that seemed to carry across the entire village. âYou never know when the stars will choose to speak to you, Commander.â
With that, you stepped back, giving him space to go. But just before he turned away, you added one final word. âIâll be here when youâre ready to listen.â
Wolffe stood there for a moment, staring at you with a mixture of confusion and something elseâsomething he couldnât quite name. You were so strange, so utterly different from anyone he had ever met. And yet⊠there was something comforting in your oddity. Something that made him feel less alone in a world that often felt too rigid, too predictable.
He finally gave you a small nod, almost imperceptible. âTake care of yourself, [Y/N].â
And then, with a final glance over his shoulder, Wolffe walked toward the shuttle, leaving you standing there at the edge of the village, your figure bathed in the soft glow of the setting sun.
âž»
As the shuttle lifted off, Wolffe leaned against the side of the ship, looking down at the small rock in his hand. He had no idea what it would mean, or why it felt like the weight of the universe was pressing against it. But somehow, he didnât mind. There was something about that village, something about you, that had made him believeâif only for a momentâthat there was more to life than just the orders he followed.
And maybe, just maybe, thatâs what the stars were trying to tell him.
*warnings* - death
And then, there was Wolffe.
Commander Wolffeâone of the few clones who had earned your trust completelyâstood in the corner, his helmet in hand, his broad shoulders relaxing for the first time today. His gaze met yours, and for a moment, neither of you spoke, content simply to share the quiet that filled the space between you.
Despite the war and the strict boundaries of your roles, you had always felt something more for him. It started as camaraderieâtwo soldiers who understood the price of dutyâbut over time, the bond deepened into something more complicated, something you could never speak of aloud.
"How are the men?" you finally asked, your voice breaking the silence.
Wolffe's lips curved into a half-smile, though there was a sadness behind his eyes. "They're good. Holding steady. As long as I'm around, they know what's expected." His gaze softened, but there was something unreadable about his expression. "What about you, Jedi? Are you holding steady?"
Your heart fluttered slightly at the sound of your titleâJedi. It still felt strange to hear it from him. You were no longer the young Padawan of Master Plo Koon, his silent guidance ever-present, but now you were a Jedi Knight, responsible for countless lives. But it didn't make the distance between you and Wolffe any easier to bear.
You didn't know how to answer him, how to explain that, while you were a Knight of the Order, part of you was constantly torn between duty and the feelings you had for him. It was forbiddenâJedi and soldiers were not meant to share such attachmentsâbut those lines had blurred long ago.
"I'm..." You paused, searching for the right words. "I'm here, Wolffe. Just trying to keep us all alive."
His gaze never wavered from yours, and the weight of his look made your pulse quicken. There was a silent understanding between you, a quiet admission that neither of you could ever truly voice aloud. You wanted to be close to him, to be more than comrades, but the Jedi Codeâyour dutyâkept you at arm's length.
He stepped closer, the usual tension in his posture relaxing just a fraction. "I know what you want, Jedi," he murmured, his voice low, almost a whisper. "But I can't have you distracted. We've been through too much for that."
You swallowed, the knot in your throat tightening. "And I can't ignore what I feel," you replied quietly. "But I won't let it affect my duty, Wolffe. Not now."
He chuckled softly, but it lacked its usual humor. "The war's not kind to people like us."
The silence hung between you for a long moment, both of you standing there, unsure of what to say next. But the unspoken truth between you lingered, undeniable, even in the midst of the endless war.
Then, you both heard the sharp hiss of the door opening, and you quickly broke your gaze, stepping back as though the moment had never happened. Wolffe returned to his usual stoic demeanor, but there was still a flicker in his eyes.
It was always like thisâmoments stolen in between the chaos, stolen moments that both of you knew couldn't last.
The mission had been successful, the Separatist threat neutralized. Yet, a strange heaviness filled the air as you returned to the cruiser. You couldn't shake the feeling that something was about to changeâsomething was coming, something that neither you nor Wolffe could stop.
As the day wore on, you found yourself drawn to the Jedi temple for brief meditation. But then, the unmistakable buzzing of your commlink interrupted the rare moment of peace.
Before you could even comprehend it, the cold realization hit like a tidal wave. The clones, your brothers, the soldiers who fought beside youâthey were ordered to execute all Jedi. Including you.
You didn't hesitate. Your instincts kicked in, and you sprinted through the hallways, hoping against hope that somehow, the clones wouldn't be able to carry out the order. Wolffe, however, was waiting in the shadows, and the moment you laid eyes on him, your breath caught in your throat.
"Wolffe," you called, voice trembling but determined. "You have to listen to meâthis isn't you."
His eyes flickered for a moment, uncertainty clouding his usually steadfast gaze. "I have no choice, Jedi," he said, his voice a hollow echo.
The words hit you like a blow to the chest, but you refused to back down. "Wolffe, pleaseâthis isn't you. This is an order, an order you can't control. You're not just a soldier. You're more than this."
His helmeted face was a mask, but you could see the hesitation in his stance, the way his hands shook as they held his weapon. For a split second, you thought he might break free from the mind control, might step away and abandon the mission to kill you. But that hesitation was fleeting.
"I'm sorry," he muttered, voice strained as though the words themselves were foreign to him. "I'm sorry... but I have to do this."
Your lightsaber ignited with a snap-hiss, and you tried to reach him, tried to make him understand, but the clonesâyour brothersâwere already moving in, following the orders they were given, following the programming they couldn't fight.
Wolffe fired, the blaster bolt striking you square in the chest. You barely had time to react, your body forced into the unforgiving cold of the ship's hull.
You gasped, your vision blurring as the world tilted, everything fading into darkness. Your last thought was of Wolffeâof the man who had meant so much to you, the man you loved, and the man you knew would never have the chance to love you back. You reached out with your hand, trying to call out to him, but no words came.
Wolffe stood frozen in place, his heart shattering as he watched you fall, the weight of the blaster's shot sinking deep into his soul. He had never wanted this. Never wanted to hurt you. But the order... the order had been too strong, too powerful.
As the last of the life left your eyes, Wolffe's knees buckled, his helmet clattering to the floor as he collapsed beside your body. His hands trembled as they hovered over you, unable to fix the damage, unable to undo the pain.
"I'm sorry," he whispered again, the guilt crushing him from within.
But the war, the Orderânothing could undo what had been done. And Wolffe was left alone, stricken with guilt and a heart full of love he could never express. His final regret was that he'd never told you how much you meant to him before it was too late.
|â€ïž = Romantic | đ¶ïž= smut or smut implied |đĄ= platonic |
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