Hux padded up his butt for Rise of the Resistanceđ¤Ł
Hereâs my favorite panel from my kylux comic Armistice âĄ
Thank you to everyone who got the comic so far and thanks so much for your tips!!! Iâm 34 downloads away from hitting 1000 downloads on gumroad, WOW. This is more than I ever thought Iâll get! If youâre interested, you can get the Comic here for free https://gumroad.com/queenstardust
Domhnall Gleeson (General Hux) in Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017)
Star Wars fandom reblog with the throne Hux is gonna give to Kylo
He looks disgusted by his job, I love it.
New illustrated playing card of General Hux for the 'STAR WARS UNLIMITED: Jump to Lightspeed' set!
âď¸ David M Buisan
You were new to the rank of General, serving the Order for twelve years, and people could look at you and immediately know you were not cut out for the rank of General. You weren't hardened by being on the Dark Side, you were just scared of leaving it, knowing the Resistance wouldn't except you for your affiliation to the Order. Kylo sensed it, Snoke knew it, somewhere, and yet, they still let you play the role of General.. why?
You go through your routine as normal; making sure no Resistance pilots get anywhere near the Star Destroyer you were in charge of. "General Y\N." You heard a familiar stern voice from behind you, turning you clasp your hands behind your back. "General Hux?" You smile, the façade of being brainwashed by the Order instantly falling at the sight of your only ally. Hux walks towards you, his face as impassive as it normally was. "How is the plan?" He glances at you. "As good at is it can, I believe. What about yours?" It was so difficult to be in his presence, as it made it difficult to breathe and even more difficult to speak. "Very well." He replies simply, gazing out into Space with his hands clasped tightly behind him, posture straight.
"Do you think neither Ren or Snoke suspect anything?" You peer up at the red-haired General, and his face seems to falter, the corner of his mouth twitching. "Not as long as we stick to the plan." He says bitterly, as his face regains it's signature hardness. "We could be killed if found out, you know, and that would mean-" You were interrupted by Hux unexpectedly losing his temper. "Yes, I know! It will not come to that, if we STICK to the plan!" You flinch at the volume of his words and simply nod. "I apologize." You say softly, and he either did not hear you or chose to not. He placed a hand to his temple, rubbing it as he thought. "The rogue Stormtrooper and his group of fiendish rebels, do they suspect I am the spy?" You shook your head. "Of course not. How could they?" You had a point there.
Over the course of the next few days, you went on with your routine as you normally did and as Rey waltzed in, as she always did, you were on guard. You crept near and near the scene of Ren and Rey's fight, of Kylo speaking the truths of Rey's heritage and what she must do, once you saw the glimpse of both Finn and Poe skulking into the ship more and more, you followed, as you knew the plan was going great, so far. As Finn and Poe ran into the Stormtroopers and were caught, sentenced to execution and Hux instructed he do it, only to turn and shoot the Stormtroopers, you came out of hiding. "Woah, woah, what is this?" Finn asked, placing his hands at his sides. "I'm the spy." Hux confesses to the pair and Poe's jaw drops. "You? The ginger? Why?" You gaze at Hux to see his nose scrunch in disgust at being called such a vulgar name. "Because... I've never been on board with Ren, or his pitiful beliefs.. It's pathetic to see someone so undeserving get so close to someone so powerful." Finn looks at Hux, his gaze slightly wavering. "Well, what do you want then?" Hux scoffs. "Isn't it obvious? I need Kylo Ren to lose! I don't care if you win." Poe looks at you. "That your partner?" Hux nods, not bothering to glare at you. Finn nods. "Okay... let's go get Rey." They race past the two of you. "Wait!" Hux commands, Finn stops. "What?" He asks, sounding sort of annoyed. "Blast me in my arm, now. So it doesn't look suspicious." He says, pointing to his left arm and Finn sighs, pulling out his blaster and aiming it at Hux's arm, only to shoot his leg instead.
Gasping softly, you catch Hux before he falls to the floor, and stare after Finn and Poe, glaring daggers at their backs, and aiding your allay. "There is a chance they do not believe me." Hux tells you as you bandage his leg and gift him a walking stick. "Don't say that." You say firmly, not wanting to even think of the thought of losing him, as you both have dreamt of this since you joined the First Order. You followed behind as Hux limped into the room to address General Pryde of Finn and Poe's escape. "They shot me down, General... and escaped." Hux said with a note of repliced disdain in his words. General Pryde rolls his eyes and strides over to a Stormtrooper, takes their blaster, turns to Hux and your eyes widen. In a few seconds time, you try to stop the attempt by saying something that would surely catch them off guard.
"There goes Ren!" You exclaim, knowing well it was a lie, but nonetheless, you were riding everything on the unlikely fact that General Pryde would turn over, if it was even that important to him, and potentially spare Hux's life. Your heart sank when he didn't even flinch and fired, striking Hux's chest immediately. Time stopped, and tears quickly pooled in your eyes and ran down your cheeks at the sight, this man, whom you have known for six of the twelve years you have worked for the Order. A gasp falling from your lips as you see Hux crash into the floor and Pryde and everyone in the room just leave.
You run toward Hux's nearly lifeless body on the floor and the only sound in the room was his labored breathing. You grabbed the back of his head and supported it so you could look into his eyes. "I-I'm so sorry." You sobbed. Hux's pearly and dazed blue eyes swept yours with a new presence, something of affection and tenderness. "I...love you, Y\N." He spoke raspily. That sentence sent chills threw your body and tears poured furiously down your cheeks from your eyes and you hugged him as tightly as possible. His hand rested in yours as his breath disappeared and eyes glazed, he was dead.
Days and weeks passed and you continued to help the Resistance for the downfall of the First Order, eventually, with it's fall you could rest peacefully.
Daisy and Domhnall answers the Web's Most Searched Questions
Cast of Star Wars The Last Jedi
So much comedic potential wasted
ben solo and hux rolling up to the resistance party after defeating palpatine like
Kylo needs more âHuxâ I am in love with his Cat but really bad at drawinâ animals :D
Rating: 9.5 of 10
Once you've reeled yourself from Star Wars: The Force Awakens fever, let's take a moment to look at a previous starring role by one of its star, John Boyega (or Finn in The Force Awakens), in 2011â˛s Attack The Block.
Alternatively, you could also check out the incredible movie in which General Hux (Domhnall Gleeson) and Poe Dameron (Oscar Isaac) got to hang around with their very own droid (pun very much intended) in Ex Machina, reviewed previously here at 9.0 rating (I tell ya, these are all awesome films).
(John Boyega in Attack The Block, and Domhnall Gleeson and Oscar Isaac in Ex Machina, respectively)
But now hereâs the review for Attack The Block. Can I say enough good things about Attack the Block? No I can't, because it's absolutely brilliant.
Attack the Block, brought to you by the guys behind Hot Fuzz, tells the story about a gang of kids in South London who suddenly find that their neighbourhood was being attacked by aliens from outer space. Then they do the only thing that they know: fight for their 'hood.
Attack The Block is awesome, thereâs no need to downplay that. Itâs definitely a popcorn movie, but itâs a really, really good one. Tense and breathless, Attack The Block has everything you want from an action/thriller film. Littered with bikes, baseball bats, and fireworks, itâs definitely not a conventional one--but those facts by no means reflect its adrenaline level. It has some quick bloody scenes, so viewer discretion is advised. The lead character Moses (John Boyega) was especially brilliantly acted, but the movie somehow managed to make all the characters relatable even though they were basically criminals. Almost atmospheric in their choice of neighbourhood, Attack the Block also has great soundtrack (by Basement Jaxx) and visuals, and I especially loved the simple yet effective design of the aliens.
TL;DR Intense, unpredictable and unique, this movie is a hidden gem and goes to show that big budget is not necessary to make good sci-fi action.
*a version of this review was previously posted in 2011.
A very heated conversation out of context. Apply this to whom ever you want
Kylo Ren: *destroys everything*
Hux:Â
Day 43: The Recruit seems to be adjusting well to the Resistance
Some kind of Gingerrose AU: Rose coordinates a spy in the First Order. When he is compromised, Hux comes to the Resistance and Commander Tico is determined to prove he can still be valuable to them aliveâŚ
Inspired by the TRoS bloopers :)
HUX: *sniffing in disgust* my god, what is that smell?!
REY: Teen angst and daddy issues.
*Both look at Kylo*
REN: What?
What the actual fuck??
My bbygworls
Sluttiest thing a man can do is have pronounced cheek bones I stg
Gotta start drawing more Star Wars characters man lol I canât seem to help but draw coven with them though every time I try
General Hux
+my oc Saren
-Resumo: Sua admiração pelo general Hux tem te distraĂdo durante as reuniĂľes.
-Alertas: tensĂŁo sexual, mĂĄ conduta no ambiente de trabalho.
-Palavras: 302.
âQuais sĂŁo suas opiniĂľes sobre a reuniĂŁo que tivemos com Ren, oficial?â O ruivo perguntou a vocĂŞ, apĂłs dispensar todos da sala.
Você não tinha opiniþes, jå que não prestou atenção em nada do que foi dito. A única coisa na qual você conseguia se concentrar hå semanas era nos olhos verdes à sua frente e no quanto o dono deles, o General Hux, era sedutor. E agora, no quanto ele parecia sexy falando pela primeira vez diretamente com você.
âDesculpe, senhor, eu nĂŁo tenho opiniĂľes relevantes a expressar no momento.â VocĂŞ disse timidamente.
Ainda bem que ele nĂŁo pode ler pensamentos.
âEu sei que nĂŁo tem, oficial. HĂĄ tempos vocĂŞ claramente nĂŁo dĂĄ a mĂnima para o que ĂŠ dito aqui. Diga-me, vocĂŞ nĂŁo tem o menor respeito pela Primeira Ordem?â Ele indaga, se aproximando e roubando seu fĂ´legoâ Ou ĂŠ a mim que vocĂŞ nĂŁo respeita?
A voz dele enfraqueceu seus joelhos. Ele começou a andar ao seu redor como se vocĂŞ fosse uma presa encurralada. Rapidamente vocĂŞ negou, com medo e excitação borbulhando em seu estĂ´mago. âNĂŁo, senhor, me desculpe. Eu tenho total respeito pela Primeira Ordem e principalmente pelo senhor, general.
VocĂŞ sentiu o calor do corpo dele se aproximando das suas costas. âTem certeza, oficial?
Sua respiração acelerou. âSim, senhor.â VocĂŞ respondeu com um sussurro, sentindo o hĂĄlito quente se aproximando do seu pescoço. Seus joelhos tremiam indecisos se vocĂŞ se deveria correr ou ficar. Criando coragem, vocĂŞ resolveu virar e encarĂĄ-lo. âComo posso provar minha lealdade, senhor?
Um sorriso arrogante surgiu na expressão gÊlida, as pupilas dilatadas te sugaram com fervor. Duas mãos enluvadas alcançaram sua cintura com força, os låbios quase colaram aos seus.
âPelo jeito que vocĂŞ me olha durante as reuniĂľes, oficial, acho que serĂĄ muito simples... Comece tirando suas roupas.
No seriously how the f**k is a pig muppet winning we can't let this happen
This contest will be in two parts, part one will be Stan vs Miss Piggy and Morticia vs Loop, and the next and last part will be the two winners competing against each other for the title of the Ultimate 2025 Tumblr Sexyperson
Chapter 10
Pairing - General Armitage Hux x Reader
*Set prior to The Force Awakens*
Summary -
Forged in blood. Bound by duty. Broken by desire.
(Y/n) (L/n) is a deadly Umbral of the Covenant - an elite order of vampires sworn to the First Order. Her assignment: serve as General Hux's personal guard. But as buried secrets surface and a rogue vampire faction rises, (Y/n) is forced to confront a past she can't outrun - and feelings she was never meant to have.
In a war of blood, betrayal, and duty, the deadliest threat may be the one that lies still in her chest.
Series contains - Blood, violence, battles/war, betrayal/angst, eventual smut, slow burn
The hangar was bustling with activity as personnel of all kinds scrambled to prepare for their mission. Orders were being barked, soldiers made their way in and out of different ships, carrying and dropping off various items. Some held a level of stress in their posture and expressions, others seemed as if it was just another day to them.Â
The air was thick with the sound of machinery, clanking metal, and low murmurings of troopers and Duskborns checking supplies. Rows of sleek First Order transports lined the hangar floor, receiving final diagnostics. Weapon crates were stacked, gear was being distributed, and squads gathered in tight clusters for final briefings.
Varo, however, was an outlier.Â
(Y/n) walked beside the general, black cloak trailing behind her, her expression sharp and focused. Hux surveyed the hangar with his usual critical eye, his gloved hands clasped neatly nearly behind him as he took in the organized chaos.
âEverything seems to be running on time,â Hux said coolly. âMore or less.â
âMore or less usually means less,â (Y/n) muttered under her breath.
Before he could reply, a familiar voice cut through the clamor.
âNow this ,â a familiar voice started. â This is what Iâve missed,â Varo said from across the hangar as he made his way over to meet them, grinning as he slid a throwing knife into the sheath on his wrist. âThe anticipation. The gear checks. The nervous pacing.â He took a deep, dramatic inhale through his nose. âThe subtle aroma of blood and fuel in the air. Beautiful .â
(Y/n) arched a brow at the sight of him practically glowing with excitement. âYouâre enjoying this way too much.â
âHey, weâve been stuck in recon mode for days. Iâm starving for a real fight,â he said, clearly savoring the energy in the room. âYou donât get to judge me for being excited.â
âYouâre excited the way a hound is excited to chase a transport.â
âExactly. But smarter. And with better hair.â
(Y/n) shook her head, but the corners of her mouth curled in spite of herself.
âCome on, (Y/n),â Varo added. âThis beats standing around the bridge pretending to understand General Huxâs complicated holomaps.â
âI understand them fine,â she said. âItâs his smug commentary thatâs unbearable.â She teased harmlessly.
âRight! That little âhmmâ he does when someone misses a tactical cue,â Varo added.
âI am standing right here,â Hux interjected, deadpanned.
(Y/n) smirked, clearly trying to keep her composure.
Then she made the mistake of looking at Varo again, just as he gave the general a silly expression in the following silence between them.Â
She let out a sharp, unexpected laugh. It started small as she tried to hide it, but it quickly spilled into full-bodied laughter, her hand coming up to cover her mouth. She bent forward slightly, shoulders shaking, her eyes gleaming with mirth.
Varo raised his hands in mock victory. âYes!â
Hux stared at her, momentarily caught off guard. He had never seen her laugh like that, never heard her sound so unburdened, so alive. The sight of it held him still.
When she straightened again, brushing her hair back and shaking her head, she was still smiling.
âYouâre the worst,â she said, voice still thick with amusement.
âBut you love me anyway.â
She turned to fire back some quip, but her gaze flicked to Hux and the moment lingered. For a heartbeat, she just looked at him. He met her eyes, something warm and unfamiliar settling in his chest.
âI think Iâve just witnessed a miracle,â Hux said with hinted amusement.
âDonât make it weird,â she replied, her tone flat but eyes betraying her amusement.
âNo promises,â Varo added, already wandering off to harass another squad about the angle of their blade holsters.
(Y/n) composed herself with a soft exhale and straightened her cloak. She glanced sideways at Hux who was still watching her with something unreadable in his gaze.
âWhat?â she asked, arching a brow.
âNothing,â he replied, tone measured. âItâs just⌠enlightening to see you interact with your counterpart.â
âVaroâs an idiot,â she muttered fondly.
âAnd yet, you laugh more with him than you do with anyone else on this ship,â he noted.
âI laugh at him,â she clarified.
âOf course.â Sensing his sarcasm, she snapped her head with narrowed eyes in question, but he simply cocked his head as a challenge to her defiance. Â
With a dissatisfied hum, she turned for them to resume their walk along the hangar floor, stepping past squads of troopers checking their weapons and finalizing loadouts. A technician approached with a datapad, offering a quick salute to the general before giving a rundown of shuttle assignments, fuel levels, and emergency fallback protocols.
Hux nodded through the information, signing off with a flick of a stylus. When the officer stepped away, (Y/n) glanced towards a row of heavy transports being loaded with Covenant units.
âThey seem like theyâre ready,â she said. âI recognize the itch when I see it.â
âExactly what Iâd expect from your forces,â Hux said, his tone quietly respectful.
She turned her head slightly, her voice lower. âTheyâre not mine. Not really.â
âYou lead them. They follow you. That makes them yours in all the ways that matter.â
The words lingered in her mind as they reached the final row of transports. Captain Phasma was there already, her gleaming chrome armor catching the overhead lights as she reviewed the final squad configurations. She gave a curt nod to the general and (Y/n) as they approached.
âPreparations are on schedule,â Phasma said. âAll squads are at combat readiness. Final systems checks will be complete in twenty minutes.â
âGood,â Hux replied. âEnsure nothing is left to chance.â
Phasma turned and walked with one of her lieutenants as (Y/n) drifted closer to where the command ship was, gazing up at the cockpit.
âHopefully this will be our last time dealing with this damned faction.â She murmured.
âAre you nervous?â Hux asked, stepping up beside her.
âNot for myself,â she admitted. âFor the ones Iâm responsible for. We lose even one, and it stays with us.â
Huxâs eyes flicked over her face, noting the calm resolve beneath her words. âYouâre ready, (Y/n).â
She looked at him then, and for a moment there was no rank, no orders. Just two people on the edge of something dangerous and defining.
âI know,â she said. âI just need them to be.â
He watched as she turned to look back at her Covenant troops again.
As final prep commands echoed across the vast hangar, one of them - tall, but clearly younger than the rest - stood just slightly apart, fumbling with the thick straps of his tactical harness. The rest of his squad was nearly ready, their posture straight and unreadable, but the younger Duskbornâs jaw was clenched in frustration.
Without a word, (Y/n) veered away from Huxâs side.
The clinking of metal buckles and the rustling of his uniform greeted her as she approached. The Duskborn noticed her too late to compose himself fully, and when he looked up, his expression shifted from surprise to embarrassment.
âUmbral (L/n),â he said quickly, bowing his head.
âAt ease,â she murmured. Her voice was low, but not cold. Calm and steady. âWhatâs the issue?â
âMy harness, maâam,â he admitted, fidgeting. âI canât get the spine guards to stay centered. Iâve adjusted it twice already, but it keeps shifting to the right.â
âHold still.â She offered assistance without hesitation.
She stepped in close and began adjusting the straps herself. Her movements were swift, practiced. Each pull and buckle done with silent precision. The Duskborn stood rigid but didnât flinch under her touch. She could feel the tension radiating off of him, the anxious buzz of youth beneath the discipline.
âYouâre new,â she said quietly, her eyes on the harness. âFirst field deployment?â
âYes, maâam. I transferred from the Sanghollow garrison two months ago.â
(Y/n) gave one last tug on the strap, locking it into place. âThis gear is heavier than what youâre used to. Youâll adjust in the drop. Trust it and itâll take care of you.â
He looked at her, hesitating. âIâve studied your academic campaigns. What you did during the Tarsyn Rebellion - how you held the shield line when everyone else had fallen back. We were told you shouldnât have survived.â
(Y/n)âs brow twitched slightly, but she said nothing.
âYou did,â he added. âI just wanted you to know that leadership like you is the reason Iâm proud to be where I am.â
(Y/n)âs gaze softened just a touch. âWell, people like us donât survive for the legacy. We survive so the next ones donât make the same mistakes that we did.â
He nodded solemnly, the nervousness in his expression fading to something steadier.
âYouâll do well,â she said, stepping back. âKeep your head up, follow your orders, and donât try to be the hero. It gets people killed.â
âYes, maâam.â
(Y/n) gave his shoulder a small, almost imperceptible squeeze before moving down the line. She stopped at each Duskborn, checking gauntlets, securing weapons, quietly giving a nod or muttering something only they could hear. None of them questioned her presence. They welcomed it, a silent reverence in the way they stood taller when she passed.
From a distance, Hux observed.
He remained still, eyes tracking her movements as she moved through her people. Heâd seen her command before. Heâd seen her fight, train, nearly kill - but this was something different.
There was strength in her gentleness. The way the Duskborns looked at her - like she was a myth walking among them - it told him everything he needed to know about the kind of leader she truly was.
When she finally returned to him - pace unhurried, expression composed - he spoke softly.
âYou have their loyalty.â
âThey have mine,â she replied. âA good leader doesnât expect the loyalty of their people. They earn it.âÂ
He held her gaze for a second longer before offering a small nod of admiration and approval.Â
Before he could speak, a comms officer approached at a brisk pace, datapad in hand.
âGeneral, Umbral,â the officer said, stopping short. âWe intercepted a short-range coded signal from the target location. We believe itâs a call for extraction.â
(Y/n)âs eyes narrowed. âHow long ago?â
âLess than five minutes. Theyâre trying to get the target off-world.â
Hux took the datapad, reading the decoded line. âTheyâre aware of our planning. Weâll lose our chance if we delay.â
(Y/n) looked towards the transports, her mind already racing.
âWeâll advance the timeline,â Hux said, handing the datapad back. âMove the infiltration squads out immediately. Inform Captain Phasma - she coordinates deployment from the ground with Umbral Drenn.â
âYes, sir.â The officer nodded and sprinted off.
Just then, Varo appeared beside them, already geared up.
âWe launching early?â he asked, breathless with excitement.
âResistance extraction attempt,â (Y/n) said, watching another squad load up. âMissionâs starting now.â
Varo gave a wide grin. âPerfect. I love when plans get interrupted. It makes things interesting.â
She arched a brow at him. âOnly you would enjoy last-minute chaos.â
âIt builds character.â
He turned to go, but gave her a nod.Â
âSee you on the other side, Umbral.â
As he vanished into the transport line, (Y/n)âs eyes lingered on the group of Duskborns. Hux moved beside her, letting her know that they needed to leave.
Their own vessel awaited nearby. Sleek, reinforced, and fully equipped for high-level command operations. A small crew of officers and pilots stood ready at the base of the ramp.
âWe stay close,â he started as they made their way towards the ship. âJust outside of striking range. If the mission goes awry, weâll intervene.â
(Y/n) gave one last look towards the hangar before following him up the ramp.
The hum of the command vessel was steady as it powered on, its interior as sleek as the outside and minimal compared to the Finalizerâs grand design. It wasnât built for intimidation, it was built for precision.Â
Hux and (Y/n) stood side-by-side at the front, displays illuminating their faces with scrolling readouts, tactical data, and live-feed visuals as the pilots flipped various switches and managed the central console.Â
The two of them watched as others in the hangar ran into their appropriate ships before the ramps lifted shut, TIE fighters and transport ships turning to zip out towards the large expanse of space and down to their targeted coordinates.Â
(Y/n) held onto the chair of the pilot in front of her to steady herself as their ship lifted just as the last TIE fighter left, signaling for them to follow.Â
Her heart raced with adrenaline as the ship sped, her grip tightening and the general looked over at her with an expression of mild concern.Â
Catching his movements, she glanced over at him with the ghost of a smirk. âI may be a little more excited than Iâd like to admit.â She said quietly. Hux simply shook his head before looking forward again.Â
As the surface of the dark planet closed in, the ships slowed and initiated their cloaking.Â
The silence was deafening, the only sound being the engine of the ship and occasional beeping from the controls. In the distance, they could see faint movement of either the faction or Resistance personnel scrambling to prepare for extraction.
â TIE fighters on standby. â A voice came through the comms quietly, as if afraid to speak.Â
â Delta team preparing to deploy. Standby.â
Everyone on the command ship held their breath as the other squads reported the same.Â
â Stealth teams have deployed .â One of the pilots of a transport ship reported in finality.
âSignal confirms no Resistance sensors have picked them up yet.â An officer on the command ship notified Hux and (Y/n) who nodded in acknowledgement.
âMaintain course,â Hux instructed coolly.Â
(Y/n) stood tall beside him, arms folded, her eyes locked on one of the overhead monitors. Through the helmet cam of a Duskborn operative, she could see the darkened corridors of the relay station, every movement silent and efficient.
âNo signs of Resistance forces yet,â another officer said. âInterior heat signatures are minimal.â
âTheyâre hidden,â (Y/n) murmured. âClassic misdirection. If the call for extraction was real, the Resistance should be inbound soon.â
âWell, weâll just have to greet them properly, then, wonât we?â Hux voiced. âBring up the orbital pathways.â
An officer nodded, transferring a new map to the main display. The orbital path of the planet appeared, layered with potential hyperspace exit points.
âIf they attempt to jump from low orbit as expected, theyâll come out here or here.â Hux tapped two coordinates. âI want TIE fighters repositioned in those coordinates to cut them off.â
As the officers relayed commands, (Y/n) leaned in closer to one of the screens, watching the team advance. She could see Varo at the front, weaving between shadows like a phantom.
âHeâs enjoying himself,â she muttered dryly.
Hux glanced towards her, a faint smirk tugging at his mouth. âHe always does in controlled chaos.â
The console flickered, red light briefly sweeping across the interface.
â Enemy movement detected ,â Came a quiet voice through the comms.Â
âWeâve got an incoming ship, likely their extraction team.â
Hux straightened. âIdentify and engage. I want their escape paths closed before they make contact.â
âYes, sir.â
(Y/n)âs gaze didnât leave the screens, but her stance shifted, more alert now. âOnce the targetâs secured, theyâll try to punch through us.â
âThey wonât,â Hux said firmly. âNot with the Covenant in play.â
On the ground, the station corridors were cold and metallic, barely lit, the humming of machinery providing a low thrum beneath the silence. Varo stalked at the front of the formation, hand raised to signal a stop. Behind him, the Duskborns and stealth troopers fanned out along the corridor, weapons drawn, silent as wraiths.
The quiet didnât last.
From around the corner, bootfalls echoed, rushed and uneven.Â
The Resistance had come early.
Varo barely had time to signal before the firefight erupted.
Blaster bolts tore through the corridor, lighting up the shadows with rapid flashes of red and blue. Varo evaded and sped to cover, firing off a precise volley that dropped two advancing soldiers. The Duskborns engaged with frightening coordination, some vanishing into the shadows before reappearing behind them, blades drawn.
A scream echoed, and then another - followed by a thundering sound from above.
Above them, TIE fighters screamed through the void, engaging the Resistance X-wings in a high-speed dogfight above the station. Laser fire lit the space in a chaotic dance, illuminating the planet below. One TIE spiraled down in flames, colliding with a wing of the station in a burst of debris.
âWeâve got incoming on both sides!â Varo shouted over the chaos, ducking behind a steel pillar as another blast hit too close. âPush them back! Donât let them bottleneck us!â
A Duskborn soldier leapt across the corridor, spinning mid-air with an unnatural grace and hurling a dagger into a Resistance soldierâs chest before disappearing into the shadows again.
âWeâre too exposed here,â one Duskborn warned. âWe need to move now!â
âNegative,â Varo snapped, eyes tracking the Resistance squad leader through the chaos. âWe hold position until the area is cleared. If they break through, theyâll manage to escape.â
He stepped from cover, dual daggers drawn, and engaged a pair of soldiers in close quarters, moving like water. Sharp, fast and lethal. One went down with a slash to the throat, the other disarmed and stunned with a punch to the jaw.
A nearby Duskborn called out, âUmbral! Theyâre flanking left!â
âI see them!â he replied, pivoting and launching a throwing knife across the hall. It struck true, dropping another enemy.
Just then, the comms crackled to life.
â Umbral Drenn, this is Command. Resistance fleet has arrived. Weâve repositioned to cut them off. Whatâs your status? â General Hux alerted them.
He ducked behind cover again, breathing shallow, adrenaline high. âMessy. But weâve got it under control for now. Tell (L/n) she owes me a drink.â
There was a pause on the other end.
â Duly noted .â (Y/n). â Hold the line. Reinforcements are on standby if necessary. â
As the comms went silent, Varo grinned despite the madness. âShe better make it the expensive stuff.â
Behind him, the Duskborns surged forward once more, pressing the advantage. And above them, the skies continued to burn.
âBravo and Charlie team,â Varo addressed the First Order soldiers through their comms. âHold position and guard the entrance, Delta will push through.âÂ
The air grew colder the deeper they pushed. Not the kind of chill that came from faulty temperature controls. It was something older, more primal. The shadows stretched longer, the lights flickering in a way that set every instinct of theirs on edge.
Varo led the squad with calculated precision, blood from the last encounter still smeared across his neck guard. His eyes narrowed as he held up a clenched fist, signaling silence.
âWeâre getting close,â he said, voice barely audible. âTheyâve gone quiet, but theyâre here.â
The atmosphere had changed. There was no longer the frantic resistance of panicked soldiers. They were entering territory claimed by something more dangerous.Â
Kin.
A sharp hiss echoed down the corridor and, in an instant, three shadows dropped from the ceiling, landing with unnatural grace. The corridor exploded in movement.
Rogue Covenant.
One launched towards Varo with feral speed, but he caught the attack, bracing with a grunt as he was shoved back. The rogueâs eyes were glowing with bloodlust, fangs bared.
âCareful!â Varo shouted. âRemember, they used to be Covenant!â
The Duskborns split into formation. Blades clashed in a flurry of strikes too fast for the human eye to follow. One Duskborn was hurled into a wall with a sickening crack. Another managed to impale a rogue through the ribs, but the vampire hissed and yanked the blade deeper to get close enough to bite before he was finally thrown off.
Varo ducked a wild slash and countered with a dagger to the thigh, pivoting behind his opponent and grabbing them in a chokehold. âYouâve fallen far,â he snarled into their ear, âbut I know you remember how this ends.â
The rogue thrashed, eyes flashing with fury before Varo twisted the silver blade up and under their sternum, dusting them in a shimmer of gray ash.
âHold formation!â he ordered, breath heavy. âPush forward - weâre close.â
Back aboard the command ship, (Y/n) and Hux stood before the central display, watching the real-time updates unfold. Red markers pulsed where resistance forces were concentrated - handled by First Order troopers - but now faint gray sigils were beginning to appear deeper in the structure, identifiers to denote vampire presences.
âTheyâve engaged the faction,â (Y/n) said quietly, recognizing the marks. Her jaw clenched. âIt wonât be a clean fight.â
âTheyâll hold,â Hux replied firmly.Â
The Covenant forces continued down the dark passage, slower now, watching every shadow. The silence returned, but it was heavier, like it was waiting.
As they rounded the next corridor where a large set of doors stood, they came to a stop and looked on, preparing themselves for what was behind them.Â
Then they suddenly opened and more shapes emerged from the dark. More vampires stood in their path, cloaked and still.Â
One stepped forward. Tall, severe. Her eyes focused on Varo with chilling familiarity.
âNice to see you again, Varo,â she said softly.Â
Varoâs eyes widened ever so slightly. âZera?â
âIâll admit, I didnât expect to run into you again.â
âI wish I could say the same, but I had a hunch.â Zeraâs head tilted in amusement. âItâd explain the attempt at Umbral tactics. Decided to train yourself instead?â He asked cautiously.Â
He hit a nerve.
She growled and suddenly the rogues engaged, and they quickly found that they outnumbered the Duskborns.Â
Varo didnât have time to shout before three Duskborns were tackled to the ground in a screech of blade and claw.
âHold the line!â he roared, drawing both knives, back pressed to a pillar. âTheyâre trying to cut us down before we can reach her!â
Steel clanged, sparks flew, and bodies slammed into walls. The Duskborns fought fiercely, but they were short in numbers.
One of the rogues struck with dual blades, spinning into the formation and wounding two of the Duskborns with equally expert slashes. Another lunged at Varo from above, and he barely managed to intercept the strike, the impact sending him skidding across the floor.
âCommand, this is Drenn,â Varo hissed into his comm, teeth bared as he parried another blow. âConfirmed visual on the leader but weâre outnumbered - we need immediate reinforcements!â
Static buzzed and he panicked for a brief second.
Then a reply came through.Â
â Copy.â (Y/n) responded.Â
(Y/n) stood at the center of the ship, already halfway to the exit when the call came through. Her eyes gleamed under the dim red lighting.
She didnât wait for Hux to say anything.
âIâm going,â she said flatly. Hux looked at her with mixed emotions, torn between duty and the pull in his chest that told him she couldnât go.Â
Never before had his personal affiliations affected his work. But as he stared at (Y/n) for what felt like precious minutes, he knew that what was between them was far more than simple romantics.Â
After seeing the determined, almost begging look in her eyes, he nodded firmly in approval. Â
The Covenant ship descended through the clouds like a blade falling from the heavens, engines flaring bright against the bleak terrain.
The moment it touched down, the ramp hissed open. But just before she stepped off, Hux stopped her with a hand on her chest.Â
âUmbral.â He addressed firmly, her face hardened as she looked at him.
The gaze they shared spoke more than words ever could - promises of return and safety.Â
âNo mercy.â Hux commanded her with finality.Â
A sadistic smile stretched on her lips.Â
Finally, she descended the ramp and from the smoke and light, (Y/n) emerged.
She didnât run. She walked with measured calmness, cloak flowing, blades strapped to either side of her thighs, eyes burning with focus.
Rogue scouts now stationed on the roof barely had time to signal before (Y/n) blurred into motion, scaling the structure with preternatural speed. Two guards moved to intercept -
She ducked under the first strike, came up hard, and drove her dagger through the rogueâs chin. The second turned to flee, only to be caught by the back of his uniform and hurled from the rooftop with a deadly twist of his neck.
The battle inside turned desperate. One Duskborn was on his knees, bleeding from a gash in his thigh. Another was pinned against the wall, fangs bared just inches from her throat as the others struggled in their own personal battles.
Then a door flew open inward with a loud bang , sending everyone scattering.
(Y/n) stepped through and the entire room shifted.Â
The rogues froze mid-strike, eyes going wide as recognition dawned. One even backed up instinctively.
â(Y/n),â Varo breathed, blood on his brow, chest heaving. âYou took your time.â
She didnât answer. Just lifted one blade, spinning it once in hand.
âI prefer âfashionably lateâ.â She took another step forward and practically snarled her next words. âIâve always hated parties.â
The tension cracked like lightning.
She launched herself into the nearest rogue like a storm given form. Her strikes were precise, brutal. Honed from years of restraint. In a blur, she cut one down, pivoted, and disarmed a second, finishing them with a silver dagger through his spine.
The battlefield tipped violently in their favor.
With (Y/n) at the front and Varo at her side, the Covenant surged forward.Â
The rogue vampires felt it. An oppressive weight in the air, as if the very presence of the Umbral disrupted the natural order.
One rogue lunged at her, shrieking with clawed hands outstretched. (Y/n) met him without hesitation. She stepped inside his guard in a flash, parried his strike with her forearm, and stabbed upward into his ribs. The blade buried deep, and as he shrieked in pain, she twisted it, then shoved him aside.
Another rogue tried to flank her, drawing a hooked dagger. (Y/n) turned on him just in time, ducked under his swing, and struck his knee with a brutal kick that collapsed him sideways.Â
To her right, two Duskborns struggled to hold off a pair of rogues who moved with feral, reckless speed. (Y/n) was already in motion, sliding between them in a blur. She grabbed one rogueâs shoulder mid-strike and yanked him back, slamming him hard into the wall. Her dagger found his heart with surgical precision.
The second rogue turned on her, blade spinning, teeth bared.
(Y/n) blocked his strike with a quick upward sweep, twisted around him with fluid grace, and landed a crushing elbow into his throat. As he staggered back choking, she drove her knee into his gut and finished him with a heart-piercing thrust.
Varo shouted from across the chamber, throwing a blade to one of the wounded Duskborns. âKeep pushing! Weâre clearing a path!â
(Y/n)âs focus never wavered. Blood splattered across her armor and skin, but she moved with calm brutality. She was calculating every step, strike, and movement as if it were second nature.Â
One of the older rogue vampires, more disciplined than the rest, snarled and darted towards her with dual blades, flipping through the air to close the distance.
He landed in front of her with a crash and swept his daggers toward her neck.Â
(Y/n) ducked, blocked, and countered. The exchange between them was fast, nearly imperceptible. Flashes of silver, the clash of bone and blade, the hiss of air being carved by movement. But she read him.
He overextended. And she punished him for it.
With one hand, she disarmed him. With the other, she grabbed the back of his head and slammed it into her rising knee. Bone cracked. He dropped.Â
Silence began to settle, broken only by ragged breathing and the groans of the wounded.
She looked over at one rogue who still stood, clutching a broken weapon. He looked at (Y/n), eyes wide - not with rage, but fear.
She stared back, her voice low and cold as her eyes drifted over the other disabled rogues.
âYield.â She commanded as a threat.
They didnât move. But the defeat in their eyes was enough and the Duskborns quickly closed in to detain them.
Varo approached from behind, sheathing his blades with a sharp exhale. âI donât know whether to be proud or terrified right now.â
(Y/n) didnât answer at first. She looked down at the blood-soaked floor, her breathing steady. Then finally turned to him.
âBoth are acceptable.â
A flicker of a smirk touched her lips, just for a second.
Behind them, the reinforced door loomed, and Varo looked to her.Â
âReady?â
She nodded once, eyes sharp, blades still steady in her grip.
The door groaned open, hinges straining as (Y/n) and Varo stepped inside. The space beyond was dimly lit, the stale air thick with dust and tension.
Zera stood alone in the center, arms loosely at her sides, a single blade sheathed at her back. But she made no move to draw it. Her eyes lifted as the pair entered, slowly landing on (Y/n).
There was no surprise in her expression.
âI heard the screaming,â Zera said with solemn defeat. âKnew it had to be you.â
(Y/n) didnât respond with words. She approached without hesitation, her boots echoing off of the metal floor. Varo followed close behind, tense but steady. When they stopped in front of Zera, the silence was heavy.
âYou came all this way,â Zera said, gaze flicking between them. âTo kill me?â
(Y/n)âs voice was flat. âNo. Not yet.â She stepped towards her old friend turned enemy, a shift in her gaze showing something new. Something different than burning rage and vengeance.Â
It was disappointment.
âYou studied our techniques and implemented them yourself.â (Y/n) stated with a saddened voice. She looked down for a moment to collect herself before she met Zeraâs gaze once more. âYou wouldâve made a fine Umbral.âÂ
The hatred instantly left Zeraâs eyes, now sorrowful and conflicted.Â
Before Zera could respond, Varo stepped forward and grabbed her arm in one swift movement. She didnât resist. But there was a flicker of something in her expression as he twisted her arm behind her back.
âMove,â Varo ordered.
Zera hesitated, then took a step. Then another.
They dragged her out through the corridor, back through the chaos of the relay station. And then into the heart of what remained.
The carnage was undeniable. Rogue vampires lay dead in dusty piles, blood smeared across the walls and floor. A few survivors knelt in manacles, guarded closely by Duskborns who still bore fresh wounds. Their eyes followed Zera as she was led into view.
The moment her boots hit the blood-slick floor, her shoulders tensed.
Varo shoved her down to her knees.
Her gaze swept across the bodies. The failure, the betrayal, the loss. Then finally landed back on (Y/n), who stood above her like judgment incarnate.
A younger Duskborn approached and placed manacles around Zeraâs wrists, the sharp clink of metal a grim punctuation.
Zera didnât fight it. But her jaw clenched.
âYou lost them,â (Y/n) said coldly. âAll of them.â
Zera lifted her eyes, defiance flickering under the weight of shame. âWe were fighting for something better.â
âYou were fighting for yourself,â Varo snapped. âAnd you killed your own to do it.â
He turned away, raising a hand to activate his comm.
âCommand, this is Umbral Drenn. Weâve secured the objective. Target Zera Veyne is in custody.â
â Copy that, Umbral. Stand by for extraction coordinates. â The pilot responded.
As the transmission ended, (Y/n) crouched slightly, lowering herself to Zeraâs level. Not in empathy, but so her words struck closer.
âYou wanted to burn it all down. Now look at whatâs left.â
Zera said nothing.
But (Y/n) could see it. In her silence. In her posture. The reality had finally caught up with her.
(Y/n) stood again, walking away without another word.
Behind her, the other Duskborns moved in to lift Zera and the other rogues from the ground.
The battered survivors, led by their defeated leader, were marched out of the relay station, each of them exhausted, bloody, and broken. The full weight of their loss was evident in their gait, and the air around them hummed with a heavy tension.
At the far end of the landing zone, the command ship loomed, large and imposing. The shipâs engines hummed softly, its silhouette a shadow.
The Duskborns who had captured Zera and the rogues kept their grip firm, but they moved with a silent precision, ensuring that none of their captives could escape. Zeraâs eyes were fixed ahead, her face a mask of calculated defiance, but the flicker of doubt in her gaze betrayed her true emotions.
They were brought to their knees before the waiting group of Storm Troopers, stealth troopers and Captain Phasma. Behind them, General Hux descended the ramp and made his way over to them.
Standing at the front with (Y/n) joining, he observed the scene with the cool detachment of someone who had seen it all before, his sharp eyes gleaming with a sadistic satisfaction as he surveyed the group of detainees.
(Y/n)âs expression was as cold and unforgiving as his, but with a sharper edge. Her eyes flicked briefly to Zera, lingering with a mixture of disdain and something harder to pinpoint, almost⌠sympathetic, though it was quickly masked.
Hux finally spoke, his voice a smooth, venomous drawl.
âWell⌠it seems the great leader of the rogue faction has finally been captured. Tell me, did you truly think this would end any differently?â
Zeraâs eyes locked with his, unflinching. There was no fear in her expression. Only a stubborn defiance.
âThe Order will fall.â
Hux smirked. âPerhaps. But not under my command.â
He took a step closer to her, slowly, deliberately, his gaze never leaving hers.
âI have to admit, I was expecting more of a challenge. You disappointed me. You were the leader of a faction that promised so much⌠but in the end, you couldnât even keep your own soldiers in line.â
Zeraâs jaw clenched, but she kept silent. She wouldnât give him the satisfaction of a retort.
Hux turned to (Y/n), his gaze lingering on her for just a moment before he continued.
âAnd you, my dear⌠you proved your worth yet again.â
(Y/n) didnât respond immediately. She only nodded once, her cold eyes scanning the remaining detainees with a steady, calculating gaze. But beneath the surface, her heart fluttered at the new term of endearment, let alone at the fact that it was used in front of the others.
âI did my duty, General. Nothing more.â
Hux smirked again, clearly enjoying the small exchange of power between them. Then, he nodded at her.
âDo as you wish with them, Umbral.â
(Y/n) turned to the rogues, stepping forward. âBy order of the Blood Accord, punishment for treason is beheading.â
As (Y/n) continued, Zera looked up at her slowly, menacingly. Meeting her with an unwavering gaze. And then, without warning, she shouted.Â
âBy the blood of our kind and the law of The Covenant!âÂ
The words echoed across the landing zone, surprising those in the vicinity, and the Duskborns who had captured her stiffened, knowing what was to come.
(Y/n)âs eyes widened, lips parting in disbelief as Varo stepped forward to express the same.Â
âI, Zera Veyne, call forth the Rite of Severance!â
The Challengerâs Oath was an ancient rite, a final means of demonstrating dominance and honor among the Covenantâs warriors. To challenge someone to a duel meant that one was not just testing skill. It was a fight to the death.Â
It was a ritual, a declaration that the challenger did not accept defeat, would never accept submission. A challenge only for the truly desperate or the fiercely prideful.
âLet honor and strength determine our fate, for only one shall walk away from this trial.â
Hux watched as the air exponentially tensed, everyone looking at each other as if to ask if what was occurring was real, and what they should do. He stepped forward next to Varo who explained.Â
âItâs a sacred challenge in the Covenant. To the death.âÂ
Huxâs gaze immediately flew to look at (Y/n) who simply stared at the ground in front of Zera.Â
He stepped up to her to speak with her quietly.Â
â(Y/n). Youâve already captured her. It is done. Do not give into pride.â He attempted to turn her away from the idea.Â
He was met with silence. Varo was next.Â
âYou have no right! You forfeited the second you turned your back on us!â He backfired to Zera.Â
(Y/n) then held up her hand, causing silence.Â
âThe Covenant does not abide traitors.â She started solemnly. Then, she looked up at Zera, a darkness in her eyes. âBut by my blade and my will, I accept your challenge.â She stepped forward threateningly. âAnd by the law of our order, I will see this ended.â
(Y/n) took a steady breath, the anger in her chest simmering but contained.Â
Varo stepped to Hux to convince him to order her to change her mind, uncharacteristically panicked. âSir, itâs not too late. We can execute Zera without the duel. (Y/n)âs bound by her assignment to listen to you.â
âNo!â (Y/n) finally shouted, a fiery gaze settled on her comrade. âVaro, you will witness. Iâve made up my mind.âÂ
Varo looked at Hux one last time, stomach dropping when the general nodded. âTrust her.â
Varo looked back at (Y/n) with his eyebrows furrowed in concern and fear. He swallowed before sighing and nodding.Â
âUnbind her.â He ordered the Duskborns with Zera.Â
They followed his order hesitantly, quickly removing her manacles and stepping away.
Like two tigers in a cage, (Y/n) and Zera made their way to stand in front of each other, their gazes heavy. Varo stood off to the side, centered between the two.Â
âThe Rite of Severance is called.â His gaze faltered. âBy the will of the Covenant, this battle shall be fought to its rightful conclusion. Only the victor shall remain.â Varo begrudgingly confirmed the rite.
He took a deep breath before continuing.Â
âInterference and ranged weapons are forbidden. This duel is to be fought at close range only .â He looked at Zera. âThere is no retreat once engaged. To turn away is to forfeit and face immediate execution.â He looked to (Y/n), then motioned to the two of them and took a step back. âAt the ready.â
Zeraâs lip curled in distaste as she slowly unsheathed her blade, a sword of the Covenant.Â
(Y/n) held an even expression, but her eyes burned with the adrenaline of what was to come. Her hand lifted to her neck, unclipping her cloak and letting it fall to the ground. Her hands moved to the harnesses on her thighs, pulling out her daggers.Â
A heavy silence gripped the air as the combatants began to circle each other, the gathered First Order and Covenant members watching from a wide berth. The wind stirred the dust and ash beneath their boots, swirling the tension tighter.Â
(Y/n) moved with calculated precision, every step grounded in years of brutal Umbral training. Zeraâs stance, though, was raw and furious - less refined, more instinctive. Dangerous.
They struck first at the same moment.
Silver blurred through the air. Clashed.
Zera came in with a heavy downward arc, forcing (Y/n) to dart to the side and deflect with both blades, the force jarring up her arms. (Y/n) retaliated with a flurry of swift, shallow strikes meant to wear Zera down, but Zeraâs strength was unrelenting. She tanked the hits and shoved forward, nearly knocking (Y/n) off balance with a powerful sweep.
The duel dragged across the landing zone. One moment elegant and deadly, the next, savage and visceral. Neither held back. Fangs flashed. Sparks erupted as blades scraped. There were no words now, only breathless grunts and metal on metal.
Zera slammed her shoulder into (Y/n)âs chest, knocking her back several feet. Before (Y/n) could recover, Zera charged, blade high.
(Y/n) ducked just in time, Zeraâs sword barely missing her neck. She spun and carved her daggers upward in a cross slash, scoring deep across Zeraâs ribs. But Zera didnât falter - she pivoted into a punishing backhand that flung (Y/n) to the ground.
âSheâs pushing too hardâŚâ Varo muttered anxiously.
Hux responded with a tightened jaw. âShe knows what sheâs doing. She has to.â
(Y/n) scrambled back to her feet just as Zera swung again. She blocked with both daggers, the force rattling her bones. Their blades locked, and - for a split second - their eyes met. Zera bared her fangs in a hiss.
âYou donât deserve their loyalty.â A flash of vulnerability made its way into (Y/n)âs expression and Zera took the chance, kneeing (Y/n) in the stomach and knocking one dagger loose.
(Y/n) staggered, her breath gone and barely able to react in time. Zera kicked her back again, and the silver sword came down hard. (Y/n) rolled, but not fast enough. The blade carved across her upper arm, searing pain flaring hot and immediate.
She hissed at the pain and quickly looked back up at Zera who advanced, towering over her.
âIsnât this what you wanted, (Y/n)?â She raised her sword high, but (Y/n) quickly spun and her legs kicked Zera off of her feet with a thud.Â
As she recovered from the fall, (Y/n) quickly grabbed her lost dagger and readied herself once more.Â
âI never wanted this.â She replied to Zera bitterly.Â
Zera stood once more, sword readied as she glared. âYou wanted to fight together in Umbral academy, no?â She spat, stepping forward. âSo letâs fight then!âÂ
They crashed into each other with a flurry of strikes, each blow more desperate than the last. (Y/n) slipped behind Zera mid-strike and elbowed her between the shoulder blades, but Zera twisted and slashed backward, catching (Y/n) across the upper thigh. Blood spattered the dirt.
(Y/n) staggered.
Zera capitalized, tackling her to the ground. Sword pressed against (Y/n)âs throat, only her daggers wedged between them kept her alive. They struggled, locked in a deadly stalemate, blades trembling under the pressure.
âYou were always the better fighter. But you hesitated.â Zera spoke through gritted teeth.
âNot anymore.â (Y/n) snarled.
With a surge of strength, (Y/n) twisted her hips, throwing Zera off balance. They rolled, (Y/n) now atop her, and she plunged her dagger downward. Zera caught her wrist just in time and both women grunted.
A sudden headbutt from Zera dazed (Y/n), knocking her back. The sword sliced upward, grazing her ribs. (Y/n) gasped but recovered, leaping back to her feet.
Blood dripped from both of them now. Uniforms torn. Movements slower. But their eyes never wavered.
Suddenly, Zera lunged with a thrust aimed straight for (Y/n)âs heart.
(Y/n) parried it with her left dagger, spun, and used the momentum to dodge around the slash that followed - flipping her grip and stabbing one dagger into Zeraâs side. Zera cried out, twisting in pain.Â
And (Y/n) used that moment.
She brought her daggers up, crossed them at Zeraâs throat, and in a single, swift motion, sliced outward.
Zeraâs eyes widened, breath caught.
The silver sword fell from her hand.
Her body collapsed to her knees. Then, slowly, it slumped forward. Lifeless.
The head rolled to the side a moment later, cleanly severed.
(Y/n) stood above the body, covered in sweat and blood, chest heaving. She held her daggers loosely, her eyes fixed on the now crumbling, dust riddled body of someone who had once been her closest friend.
The landing zone had fallen silent.Â
Dust and blood still hung in the air, the remnants of a fight that had gripped everyone in its thrall. The rogue vampires were now fully subdued, forced to kneel and witness the fall of their leader.Â
(Y/n) stood near the center of it all, her daggers still in hand, arms trembling faintly from exhaustion and adrenaline. Her clothes were torn, streaked in blood - both hers and Zeraâs - but her posture remained firm. Stoic. Victorious.
Then she heard the familiar crunch of polished boots against gravel.
She didnât have to turn to know it was him.
General Hux crossed the field with brisk, purposeful strides, but his composure was fraying at the edges.Â
His usual expression of poise was shadowed by barely contained emotion. Relief, fear, something deeper. He halted just a breath away from her, eyes scanning her face and then flicking briefly down her frame, checking for injuries.
He didnât reach for her - not here, not in front of the soldiers - but his voice softened in a way that only she would hear.
âYouâre hurt.â
âIâm alive.â She replied hoarsely.
Her tone was matter-of-fact, but there was a quiet edge to it. The fight had left more than physical marks.
He exhaled slowly, tension bleeding out of his shoulders, but his hands still clenched at his sides. Every inch of him screamed to hold her. To check every wound. To say something more. But they werenât alone.
So instead, he met her gaze and gave the smallest, subtlest nod, a wordless exchange between them. Later , it said.
A respectful beat passed, and then Varo approached, still high on the tail end of the fight. His uniform was dusted with ash, and there was a cut above one brow, but his grin was unmistakable as he broke into their silent moment.
âWell, I guess we know who wonât be challenging (Y/n) anytime soon.â
(Y/n) let out a low, tired huff of amusement. Her mouth twitched upward, almost a smile. Varo clapped a hand gently on her shoulder.
âYou did good, (Y/n). She was clearly stronger than we remembered. That wasnât an easy win.â
âIt was never going to be.â She replied quietly.
She finally sheathed her daggers and wiped the blood from her brow. Hux remained nearby, his presence quiet but unwavering. He didnât speak, but his eyes never left her.
Varo smirked. âNow for the fun part.â He leaned his head towards the detained rogues and (Y/n) nodded, walking past both him and Hux to stand before the detainees. Her hands were clasped behind her back, head held high as she glared down each rogue.
âBy order of the Blood Accord,â she said for the second time. âPunishment for treason is execution by beheading.âÂ
Immediately and in perfect synchronicity, each Duskborn standing next to a rogue stepped forward, unsheathing their swords at the same time with a spin of the blade. They each stood in front of the rogues, awaiting their command.Â
âExecute!â
A harmonious slash sounded and the rogueâs heads rolled.
Chapter 9
Pairing - General Armitage Hux x Reader
*Set prior to The Force Awakens*
Summary -
Forged in blood. Bound by duty. Broken by desire.
(Y/n) (L/n) is a deadly Umbral of the Covenant - an elite order of vampires sworn to the First Order. Her assignment: serve as General Hux's personal guard. But as buried secrets surface and a rogue vampire faction rises, (Y/n) is forced to confront a past she can't outrun - and feelings she was never meant to have.
In a war of blood, betrayal, and duty, the deadliest threat may be the one that lies still in her chest.
Series contains - Blood, violence, battles/war, betrayal/angst, eventual smut, slow burn
Armitage stirred first, blinking against the soft light as his senses came back to him one by one. The weight of a body against his side registered next. Cold. Solid. The absence of breathing a unique reminder of who it was.
He turned his head slightly.
(Y/n) lay beside him, half-buried beneath the sheets, hair tumbled and unbound, one arm rested upon his chest with her head tucked under his chin. Her expression, usually composed and sharpened by discipline, was peaceful. It was a version of her heâd never seen before, one reserved for these rare, unguarded moments.
He didnât move for a long time. Just watched her.
He wasnât sure what surprised him more. That she had let him this close⌠or that he had allowed himself to meet her there.
Her eyes fluttered open, slow and amber in the dim light. For a heartbeat, she looked at him as if unsure whether the moment was real. Then she gave the faintest smile, quiet and reserved, but unmistakably genuine.
âYouâre staring,â she murmured, voice still husky with sleep.
âItâs difficult not to.â He admitted, not bothering to look away.Â
She raised an eyebrow at that but didnât push. Instead, she shifted so her head was resting on the curve of his shoulder.
There was silence again, comfortable.
Eventually, (Y/n) broke it. âI thought Iâd feel conflicted,â she said quietly, âBut I donât.â
He glanced at her, brushing a stray lock of hair behind her ear. âGood to know that weâre on the same page, then.â
Another pause.Â
Then he leaned in slowly, pressing a kiss to her temple. âWe should be on the bridge soon.â
(Y/n) sighed. âLetâs give it five more minutes.â
âFive,â he agreed softly. âBut no more.â
After they finished getting ready and checking in for updates at the bridge, the two of them made their way to the generalâs office.Â
Just as they settled themselves, the door hissed open with its usual sharp efficiency.Â
Phasma entered first - polished and imposing in her chrome armor - followed by Varo with a datapad clutched in his hand.
Hux and (Y/n) stood behind his desk patiently as they approached. And if there was any tension lingering from the intimacy of the previous night, neither showed it.Â
(Y/n) stood tall in her uniform, hair pulled back to perfection, eyes sharp once again. Though Varoâs knowing glance didnât miss the faint glow in her complexion. He said nothing, but a smug grin tugged briefly at the corner of his mouth.
âGeneral. Umbral,â Phasma greeted coolly, giving a slight nod of acknowledgment.
âReport?â Hux requested.Â
âWe finished processing the remaining rogue prisoners last night,â Phasma said, her voice smooth and unyielding. âNothing useful from three of them. Too scared or too loyal to give us anything beyond what we already know. But one of them slipped.â
Varo stepped up, tapping on the datapad and projecting a faint holo display over the table. âOne of the younger ones mentioned a location unintentionally. They were arguing with one of the guards and let it slip while cursing about âwasting time near the dead moon.â We cross-referenced it with known Resistance supply routes.â
âWe found activity consistent with a hidden relay station,â Phasma finished. âItâs remote, but its location makes it a perfect fallback point for the remaining rogues and potentially their leader.â
(Y/n)âs jaw tightened, her eyes flicking over the projection. âDead moon⌠Thatâs near the Obraxis Veil. Itâs unstable territory.â
âExactly,â Varo said. âWhich means anyone hiding there is either desperate or confident that they wonât be followed.â
Huxâs expression darkened. âWe canât afford to ignore this. If theyâre regrouping, it means their leader could already be en route.â
âThey will be,â (Y/n) said quietly. âThis wasnât just an attack. It was a distraction.â
Phasmaâs tone didnât waver. âWeâll need to act soon, sir. If you authorize it, we can begin planning a strike team. Smaller, mobile, precise.â
Hux nodded once. âBegin preparations with both your Troopers and the Covenant. I want operational parameters ready within six hours.â
âYes, sir,â Phasma replied crisply before turning and exiting without another word.
Varo lingered just a beat longer. âIâll coordinate and have them ready to deploy.â His gaze drifted briefly to (Y/n), and he added with a quiet smirk, âYou good?â
She gave a tight nod. âGood.â
With a short salute, Varo followed Phasma out, the office door hissing shut behind him.
Silence settled again between Hux and (Y/n), the weight of the intel heavy in the air.
âThis is accelerating,â Hux said lowly.
(Y/n) nodded. âTheyâre forcing our hand.â
He studied her for a moment, his expression unreadable, then said softly, âThen weâll make sure weâre ready.â
Once again, the two found themselves inside the briefing room, lit only by the soft blue glow of the encrypted holoprojector in the center of the room.Â
General Hux stood with his hands clasped behind his back, face expressionless but alert. (Y/n) stood to his right, arms folded, sharp-eyed and composed. Though her posture was rigid, Hux could feel the tension beneath it.Â
The holoprojector hummed to life, flickering before stabilizing into two distinct projections. On one side, the tall, imposing form of the Supreme Leader of the First Order emerged in holographic light. His features were partially obscured, but the cold, piercing eyes were unmistakable.
On the other, the figure of the Covenantâs Grand Master took shape. Tall and regal, skin pallid like marble and eyes ancient with knowledge. His ornate robes flowed with ethereal stillness, and the emblem of the Covenant pulsed faintly across his chest.
âGeneral,â the Supreme Leader greeted, allowing the briefing to start.
Hux nodded once and spoke clearly. âThe rogue Covenant group we engaged has yielded new information. Through interrogation, weâve confirmed the existence of a possible fallback position used by the rogues near the Obraxis Veil. We believe their leader may be regrouping their forces there due to the complexity of the location and growing activity that intelligence is collecting.â
The Grand Master tilted his head slightly, voice like cold velvet. âAnd you are confident in the validity of this information?â
âYes, Grand Master,â (Y/n) answered. âThe source was⌠resistant. But they broke. We believe this was a coordinated distraction meant to divide our attention.â
The Supreme Leaderâs eyes narrowed slightly. âThen youâll deal with it before they can mount anything further. I expect a clean strike.â
âWeâre already preparing a mobile unit,â Hux confirmed. âCaptain Phasma and Umbral Drenn are coordinating troop selection. The Covenant will be deployed in tandem.â
The Grand Masterâs gaze slid to (Y/n). âAnd what of the interrogation personally? Did it provide anything else of value?â
(Y/n) hesitated for half a breath, but her voice remained steady. âThere were personal complications. But they didnât interfere with the mission. The prisoner is being held for further interrogation, should more be needed.â
The Grand Masterâs expression barely shifted, but something flickered in his eyes. Understanding, or perhaps warning. âComplications have a way of multiplying, Umbral (L/n). Ensure they do not cloud your purpose.â
âThey wonât, Grand Master.â (Y/n) said, cool and resolute.
The Supreme Leaderâs hologram leaned forward slightly. âYouâve been granted considerable support, General. Further proving alliance with the Covenant remains necessary. I want results. Fast.â
âYouâll have them, Supreme Leader.â Hux replied without hesitation.
The two projections exchanged one final glance. The Supreme Leader and Grand Master both united in purpose if not in ideology. Then, in perfect synchronicity, they cut transmission. The holoprojector dimmed, and silence returned to the room.
(Y/n) exhaled slowly. âThey donât trust us.â
âNo,â Hux said quietly. âBut theyâll trust what we deliver.â
He turned towards her, and for a brief moment, their expressions softened.Â
âI should brief my soldiers now. Iâm sure theyâre itching to get more information on what exactly is happening.â (Y/n) nearly complained as she picked up her datapad to contact Varo.
Unsurprisingly, he immediately picked up.Â
âYeah, boss?â He greeted in his usual casual tone.Â
âGather the Covenant into the briefing room. I want to go over the new intel with them.âÂ
âYou got it. Iâll make sure theyâre there in 15.â The screen blipped, signaling the call ending.Â
(Y/n) rubbed at her forehead with a sigh, her arm dropping down by her side.Â
âTired?â Hux quipped with a tinge of playfulness, hinting at their activities from the night prior. (Y/n) tossed him a look and he raised a brow at her defiance.Â
Minutes later, just as Varo had said, the Duskborns stood in formation around the briefing table, tall and cloaked.Â
(Y/n) stood at the head of the table, Varo and Hux stepping to the far side of the room, choosing to remain out of the spotlight.Â
(Y/n)âs eyes scanned the room as each Duskborn straightened under her gaze, a mix of respect and readiness resonating in the still air.
âThis mission will not be simple,â (Y/n) began, her tone clipped and clear. âThe faction knows theyâve been exposed and - as we all know - desperation makes people dangerous.â
A soft hum from the holotable populated a projection. (Y/n) gestured to a narrowed valley system just outside of a decommissioned relay tower. âThese are their projected fallback coordinates. Intel confirms their leader is still unaccounted for, but we anticipate they will return once the rogues transmit the message of unresponsive personnel.â
She looked up, sharp eyes locking with each of the operatives.
âYou are not just here to fight. You are here to make a statement. The Covenant does not tolerate traitors. This mission is to uphold the Blood Accord and by treason, their punishment is execution by beheading. Cold and swift.â
There was a ripple of quiet approval through the Duskborns.
One of the newer members, a younger male, raised his hand. âUmbral (L/n),â he said carefully, âis it true that some of the rogues were once part of noble lines? Possibly even family?â
(Y/n) froze for just a fraction of a second.
Her posture remained rigid, her expression unreadable, but a storm passed behind her eyes.
âYes,â she said flatly. âBut that is irrelevant to the mission. Regardless of who they once were, they swore their oath and chose treason against their own people.â
A stillness settled over the room. Even the Duskborn whoâd spoken looked uneasy, as if he realized too late the weight of what heâd asked.
Across the room, Varo shot the general a sidelong glance and whispered under his breath, âTold you sheâs scary when she gets that tone.â
Huxâs eyes didnât leave (Y/n) as he hummed in agreement, and something more.
(Y/n) continued smoothly, voice unwavering.
âYou will all work as a team, but will be assigned in pairs. Umbral Drenn will lead the central push alongside the Orderâs stealth troopers. General Hux and myself will direct from the command ship that will be following your transport. We will keep our distance, but close enough to intervene if necessary. AdditionallyâŚâ (Y/n) paused.
â Thereâs the dramatic effect.â Varo mumbled with a smirk.
âI want to make it perfectly clear that the Grand Master has authorized the full extent of both Covenant and Umbral engagement. Mercy does not exist in this mission.â
A ripple of anticipation swept through the Duskborns. For many, it had been decades since theyâd acted under such authority, and the thought of it made them itch for a fight.
(Y/n) stepped forward, shoulders squared, her presence almost magnetic.
âIf any of you falter, I will know. And I will not hesitate to pull you for questioning.â
A beat of silence. Then the Duskborns struck their chests in unison. A solid, thudding vow.
Varo leaned towards Hux again. âShe really does the âterrifying vampire warlordâ thing well.â
Hux allowed a faint, private smirk.
âTruly,â he murmured.Â
(Y/n) gave one final look to the team.
âFurther details will be provided to you soon. Dismissed.â
As the Duskborns filed out like silent shadows, Hux and Varo remained behind. (Y/n) lingered at the holotable, eyes fixed on the map, though her thoughts clearly drifted elsewhere.
Varo approached carefully. âThat question back there, about the rogues and familyâŚâ
âI handled it,â (Y/n) said sharply, too quickly.
Varo nodded once and backed off, giving her space. But Hux lingered a second longer, watching her with something unreadable behind his gaze.
She didnât turn to face him, but he didnât press. Something between them said he understood, and that he wouldnât let her carry the weight alone.
The door hissed closed behind the last of them with a finality that somehow felt heavier than usual.
(Y/n) stayed in place, her arms folded as she gazed out in front of her. Her shoulders were squared like always, but her stillness betrayed her. Armitage stepped in quietly behind her.
âYou handled the briefing well,â he said.
Her response was slow, deliberate. âI know.â
Hux gave a small nod, then caught her off guard as he moved to lean against the edge of the table in front of her, watching her. Silence lingered a moment longer than comfort allowed.
âThat Duskborn,â he said, âas ignorant as he was -â
(Y/n) finally looked at him. âIt doesnât matter. Theyâll all find out eventually. Itâs better that they heard it that way, without room for doubt.â
âYou were⌠composed,â Hux said carefully.
(Y/n)âs mouth twitched, not quite a smile. âThatâs not what you were going to say.â
He didnât correct her.
âAttractive?â He attempted, the word feeling foreign to him, and the context even more so. Â
She looked down bashfully for a moment, then uncrossed her arms and took a slow breath.
âItâs strange,â she admitted. âTo feel something burn when you thought youâd already cauterized the wound. I shouldnât care. I donât know why I do.â
âBecause youâre not heartless,â he said simply.
That made her eyes darken. Not from anger, but from quiet emotion.
âHas it ever been a requirement for you?â she asked softly. âTo be in this world and not feel?â
âNot a requirement,â he said, voice lower now. âA means of survival.â
(Y/n) stepped closer, her presence steadying the space around her.
âI hate that part of me still listens for her voice. Still waits for her approval.â
Hux nodded, then after a moment, reached out. Not commanding, not demanding. Just offering.
She took his hand.
âYou donât need her voice,â he said, quietly now. âNot when you have your own.â He gently pulled her to move closer, stopping mere inches away from him.
(Y/n) stared at their joined hands for a moment, thumb brushing over his knuckles. âSomehow, you always say the right thing.â
âI donât,â he said with a flicker of a smile. âI simply say the truth.â
That earned a soft, real breath from her. Not quite a laugh, but something close.
âAre you ready for tomorrow?â he asked gently.
âI am,â she said. âBecause youâll be there.â
Their eyes met - his hand still in hers - and for a long second, neither said a word.Â
(Y/n), in a moment of bravery, leaned into him. Her arms slowly settled around his waist, head resting against his chest as he did the same, his head on top of her own.Â
It was a foreign comfort to be embraced by someone other than themselves, a dangerous comfort. One that they found to be a quickly growing addiction the longer they strayed in the otherâs presence. They still had much to explore emotionally, but for now, it was just enough.Â
Eventually, they had to pry themselves apart - albeit begrudgingly. They still had to go over planning for the all-too-quickly nearing mission that had everyone involved on their toes.
The briefing room was quiet save for the hum of the holomap and the occasional flicker of shifting data. (Y/n) stood beside Armitage at the table, both of them deep in concentration.Â
Tactical reports hovered in midair beside the map. Enemy movement patterns, terrain schematics, and intercepted transmissions scrolling in real time.
Armitage selected a section of the display, rotating the terrain of the target zone with precise movements. âTheyâve fortified the main entrance. Weâll need to breach from the east or south. Preferably somewhere we can mask the teamâs entry long enough to get through the outer perimeter.â
(Y/n) nodded, eyes scanning the projections. âThereâs a patch of dense forest here,â she pointed, âif we move in under the cover of night, with the right cloaking and noise suppression -â
âItâs still too close to the secondary patrol route,â Armitage interrupted, adjusting the map again. âIf they sweep early, our unitâs compromised before they even touch the ground.â
âThey wonât sweep early,â (Y/n) countered. âWeâve tracked the intervals. Their pattern hasnât changed in over a month.â
âWhich is exactly why theyâre due for it to change.â
There was a beat of silence, the kind that sat heavy between two people who were both too smart and too stubborn for their own good. (Y/n)âs eyes flicked towards him, brows raised. Hux stood straight, unfazed, still looking over the map like it would bend to his will.
She folded her arms. âYouâre planning for variables that donât exist.â
âIâm planning for the worst-case scenario.â
âAnd you think Iâm not?â
They stared at each other, tension mounting again. It wasnât the anger of enemies, more the clash of sharp minds refusing to yield. There was something in the air, simmering just beneath the surface. Not quite frustration, not quite admiration⌠but undeniably something.
Armitage stepped around the table to get a better angle of the terrain projection, then gestured sharply at a ridge. âFine. Then letâs go over your precious landing spot one more time. Tell me exactly how you intend to keep them hidden here.â
âI just did,â (Y/n) said, stepping around to meet him. âBut you werenât listening and were instead trying to win, so Iâll repeat it.â She stiffly stepped towards the map closer and pointed, words more pronounced in simmering agitation. âIf we drop the team here ,â She said sharply, âtheyâll have both cover and elevation. It gives them visibility over both known entrances to the base while still remaining hidden.â
Armitageâs eyes narrowed. âIt may be a cloak, but it also puts them at risk of scan detection. The Resistance scans for signs of incoming ships in that valley in quick, short intervals. Our last recon proved it.â
âTheyâll be cloaked and will be moving between intervals where the scans are not active,â (Y/n) retorted. âUnless the Resistance has acquired a new array of sensor tech weâre unaware of -â
âThey donât need new sensors if we hand them a clean shot on a silver platter,â Armitage cut in. âWe use the ridge and weâre compromising their stealth. Theyâll be spotted in minutes.â
âNot if they move quickly and precisely, which my people are known to do.â (Y/n) argued.
âIâm not gambling with their lives based on if , (Y/n).â
(Y/n)âs mouth opened, a retort ready, but before it could leave her tongue the door to the room hissed open.Â
Varo and Phasma stepped in to find both of them nearly shoulder to shoulder, the holomap between them like a line in the sand. They watched as both of their heads whipped to face them, the heat of their previous discussion still burning in their eyes.
Varo gave a low whistle and a grin. âInterrupting something tactical or something personal?â
(Y/n) stepped back slightly, clearing her throat. âStrategic discussion.â
Phasmaâs helmet turned to the holomap. âOf course it is.â
Hux gestured to the holomap, a gentle huff escaping past his lips before he spoke. âWeâre finalizing the drop zones. She wants to use the high ridge. I say itâs too exposed.â
âAnd I say stealth cloaking will keep them hidden if they move quickly and efficiently out of the drop zone before theyâre caught in a scan,â (Y/n) added with clipped precision.
Varo and Phasma stepped closer, surveying the layout.
Varo leaned over the glowing terrain map and pointed. âWe could use the ridge for their initial descent and have them rappel directly into tree cover before advancing. That way the transports can evade the scans in time as soon as theyâve dropped. We know theyâre capable.â
Phasma gave a small nod. âItâs viable. Terrain there is steep but manageable for trained units. Weâve done it before.â
(Y/n)âs shoulders dropped just slightly. âItâll be tight, but it works.â
Hux gave a short exhale, the tension in his stance loosening. âAlright.â
Varo crossed his arms and shot (Y/n) a teasing look. âYou two always like this?â
âOnly when heâs wrong,â (Y/n) muttered under her breath.
Huxâs brow twitched, but he turned away to adjust a tactical overlay.
Phasma didnât comment. Only slightly shook her head, perhaps to hide the trace of amusement.
The sounds of daggers clashing and slicing through the air filled the matted training room, echoing off of durasteel walls. (Y/n) ducked and pivoted, her blade a silver blur as Varo dodged many close calls.Â
Neither spoke now. This was their language. Precision, movement, and endurance.
Varo grunted as (Y/n) feinted left, then spun into a calculated strike that he just barely blocked. âStarting to think youâre enjoying this more than usual,â he said between breaths.
âI am,â (Y/n) replied coolly, not missing a beat.
Then the doors hissed open.
Neither flinched at the sound. They kept moving, trained to never let their guard down. But (Y/n)âs gaze flicked briefly towards the figure that entered.
Hux, hands clasped behind his back, eyes already fixed on them with keen interest.
Still, they kept going.
He said nothing, only stepping in far enough to stand just off to the side. Observing.
He watched closely. The sharpness of (Y/n)âs posture, the swift control in her strikes, the clean and lethal grace she carried like second nature. It was different from everything else heâd seen from her. Different from her stoic professionalism on the bridge or the romantic partner she was evolving into.
This was raw. Focused. Unapologetically in her element.
âYouâre throwing too wide,â (Y/n) told Varo mid-duel. âAgain.â
âIâm trying to make you sweat,â he replied, breath hitching with effort.
âYouâll need a better plan.â
She stepped in with a quick flurry of strikes that pushed Varo backward, forcing him to readjust his footing. Huxâs brow lifted slightly. She wasnât even winded.
After another exchange, Varo finally gave a sharp exhale and disengaged, lowering his blades with a low chuckle. âYou see what Iâve had to put up with, sir?â he called toward Hux, half-joking, half-exhausted. âSheâs all calm and quiet until you put a weapon in her hand. Then she turns into that thing.â
Huxâs mouth twitched in the barest hint of a smile. âIâve noticed.â
(Y/n) said nothing, simply stepping back and tilting her head toward Varo in acknowledgment of the match. Her breathing was controlled, but her eyes glinted with intensity, skin gleaming and shadowed by the low light of the chamber. She looked at ease.Â
âWant to go again?â Varo asked, rotating his shoulder.
âProbably wouldnât be a good idea. Donât want to tire ourselves too much before the mission,â she replied, her gaze now shifting to Hux.
Varo raised both hands. âI can take a hint.â
But he didnât leave. Just moved to one of the side benches, giving them space but clearly still within earshot if needed.
Hux stepped forward, studying her carefully. âImpressive.â
(Y/n) tilted her head slightly. âYouâve never seen me fight.â
âNo. But I suspected.â
âAnd now?â she asked, her voice still laced with that post-spar calm.Â
âNow Iâm even more glad that youâre not a rogue.â
She allowed a flicker of a smile to pass before turning to grab a towel, blotting her neck and face. Varo stretched out on the bench with a sigh.
âCanât wait to tell the others I survived sparring with the Umbral herself,â he muttered.
âYouâre lucky she was holding back,â Hux remarked dryly, still watching (Y/n).
Varo turned to her in disbelief. âYou were holding back?â
(Y/n) tossed the towel over her shoulder and shrugged with a mischievous smile as he rolled his eyes. She then looked back at Hux, her expression unreadable now. âDid you come to pull me back to the bridge?â
âNo,â Hux said softly. âI came to see you.â
Varo, now very much pretending to scroll something on his datapad, smirked.
(Y/n)âs gaze lingered on Huxâs a moment longer, her voice quieter as she replied teasingly, âWell, youâre seeing me.â
And Hux - despite everything he knew of war, strategy, and command - was at a loss for what to say to that.
But he nodded once. Because he had seen her. And it had changed everything.
So he settled on saying the only thing he could manage.Â
âCare for a walk?âÂ
(Y/n)âs eyebrows raised slightly before smirking. âMind if I shower first? It wonât be long, I promise.â
âOf course.â He nodded, then watched as she made her way to the showers and disappeared.Â
He glanced over at Varo who still sat on the bench and the latter gave him a knowing look.
âWhat?â The male Umbral held his hands up in surrender before standing.
âNothing, General.â He passed by Hux to leave with a smirk. âNothing at all.âÂ
A few minutes passed and (Y/n) finally emerged, hair let down and wet, out of uniform in an undershirt, leggings and her boots.Â
âShall we?â She asked him after he stared at her for a moment. He caught himself and nodded, the two of them making their way out of the room.Â
Armitage and (Y/n) walked side by side, a comfortable silence lingering between them after the intensity of the sparring session. Armitageâs hands were tucked behind his back, ever composed.Â
âYou fight differently than I imagined,â Armitage said after a stretch of silence.
(Y/n) glanced over, brow arching slightly. âIs that a compliment or a concern?â
He let out a low breath, almost a laugh. âA compliment. Though I admit, there was a moment I feared for Varoâs life.â
She gave a small, amused hum. âHe should be used to it by now.â
âYouâve always been dangerous,â Armitage continued, his tone quieter now, more thoughtful. âBut that was⌠different. Thereâs a clarity in you when you fight. Like itâs the only place your mind is truly at ease.â
(Y/n) didnât answer at first. That struck a little too close. Instead, she looked straight ahead, eyes sharp even as they softened.
âItâs the only time I feel in control,â she said finally. âEverything else⌠thereâs too much room for uncertainty.â
Armitage glanced over at her, brow furrowing just slightly. âIncluding myself?â
She slowed her pace before she stopped entirely. He stopped beside her.
âEspecially you,â she said honestly, voice low.
They stood there for a beat in silence, the air between them heavy, but not uncomfortable.Â
He spoke thoughtfully. âIâve devoted everything to this fleet. This cause. And then youâŚâ He sighed, words failing him for a moment. But (Y/n) was already watching him like she understood everything he hadnât said.
âI didnât expect it either,â she murmured. âBut I donât regret it.â
He studied her for a long moment, thinking. He looked around them, the corridor empty as personnel slept through the night cycle, leaving the skeleton crew to themselves.Â
He then offered his arm in a rare, almost shy gesture.
She looked down at it, then back up at him with a faint smirk before linking her arm with his. âCareful, General. Youâre starting to look sentimental.â
He let out a quiet, dry laugh. âOnly with you, Umbral.â
They continued their walk, together now in stride and silence, with more said between them in that quiet than any words could.
They rounded another corner, neither in a rush to return to their respective quarters. There was a tension between them, but it was a quiet, mutual thing now - no longer volatile, but charged in a different way.
Finally, Armitage slowed to a stop outside of his door. He hesitated for a moment before he turned to face her with a thoughtful expression.
âWould you think -â He stopped himself for a second. âSince I saw your quarters, I think itâd only be appropriate for you to see my own, yes?â he said carefully before opening his door. He gestured for her to enter and (Y/n) glanced at him in question before stepping in.Â
His quarters were pristine, larger than her own. Fitting for a general. But something else was different, something softer.Â
The lighting was dimmer, warmer than usual. A strange contrast to the harshness of his office. It still held a sense of strict order and discipline, but it had an odd comfort to it as well.Â
âI assume youâre hungry after training?â He asked as he hung up his overcoat and made his way to the kitchen.Â
âStarving, even.â (Y/n) sighed as she took in the room, wandering over to where he stood in the kitchen and leaning against the counter beside him, watching.Â
The soft hum of the heating element filled the room as Armitage moved with practiced precision, setting out two mugs and a tin of loose-leaf tea. His posture was, as always, precise - spine straight, movements calculated - but there was an ease to his presence that only showed in these rare, private moments.
(Y/n) lifted a curious brow when he went into the fridge, then her lips parted when he pulled out a blood back and went to warm it up. He gave her a mischievous side glance.
âSince when did you start having blood packs in your quarters?â She asked in disbelief.Â
âSince I figured you would visit at some point.â He shot back with a faint smirk.Â
âAnd when would that be?â
He raised a brow at her. âIâd say last night.â He nodded as if he actually had to think about it.
(Y/n) giggled quietly, a hint of amusement tugging at her lips as she watched him fix his tea once the water heated.
âYou even prepare tea like youâre orchestrating a military campaign,â she remarked, arching a brow.
Armitage glanced over his shoulder with a dry look. âPrecision is key. Unlike some, I prefer my beverages not tasting like dishwater.â
(Y/n) smirked. âThat almost sounded like a personal jab.â
âIt was,â he said evenly, turning back to the tea. âI once had a droid bring me a tea that tasted like it was put in a dirty mug with the bag only steeped for five seconds.â
(Y/n) chuckled. âIâm assuming youâve had serious trust issues since then?âÂ
Once finished making his own tea and the blood pack was warmed, he poured the thick substance into her own mug and turned to hand it to her.Â
âI had trust issues before then, imagine where the bar is now.âÂ
(Y/n) graciously took the mug with thanks and shook her head, following him to the living room to sit on one of the couches.Â
As they settled in pleasant silence, sipping from their mugs, (Y/n) could feel Armitageâs gaze linger every now and then as she drank. She was used to it coming from other people, but from him it was amusing.Â
âIf youâre curious, just ask. Youâre not going to offend me.â She offered gently from the edge of her mug.Â
She locked eyes with him for a moment, watching as he debated himself internally on what to ask, if he should even ask.Â
âDoes it help?â The question finally slipped, his head lowering to gesture towards her mug.
âThe blood?â
Armitage hummed. âIâve been meaning to ask. Are the packs enough? Being synthetic - they are synthetic, correct?âÂ
(Y/n) couldnât help but giggle again at his genuine curiosity, finding it endearing. âYes, theyâre synthetic. Itâs not the same as organic blood, but itâs enough to make do. Itâs more humane, anyways.â
âHow often do you need it?â
She paused for a moment in thought before answering.Â
âIâd say every few days if Iâm not exerting myself. More often during missions or when I train - like today.âÂ
âAnd what if itâs not available when you are hungry?â Armitage caught her finger twitch, a subtle sign of discomfort. âIf itâs too much -â
âItâs fine.â She cut him off softly before answering his question, but not before sighing. âThe Covenant trained us under starving conditions during our field exercises. We were taught to exist in it, to harness it rather than be controlled by it to ensure we wouldnât be a liability.â
Armitageâs brows lifted slightly. âYou were starved on purpose?â
(Y/n) shrugged indifferently. âIt was just part of the process,â she said. âIn our final trials, we went without blood for weeks. Hardly any sleep. They wanted to see if weâd break, and anyone who did failed the academy.â
She met his eyes and smirked at his near incredulous expression.Â
âI think it made me a better person for it, anyhow. Even for those not in the Covenant, itâs a good learning lesson for our kind to keep them from going on a murdering spree.â She attempted a jest at the end.
Armitage hummed in thought as he eyed her. She set down her mug and carefully brushed her fingers over the top of his gloved hand. He turned his palm up to intertwine their fingers, his eyes never leaving her face.Â
âWe should get some rest. I imagine tomorrow is going to be quite busy.â He suggested softly.Â
(Y/n) nodded in agreement, taking a deep breath before slowly resting her head on his shoulder.Â
âQuite busyâŚâ She repeated in a murmur as she stared at the coffee table.Â
Chapter 8
Pairing - General Armitage Hux x Reader
*Set prior to The Force Awakens*
Summary -
Forged in blood. Bound by duty. Broken by desire.
(Y/n) (L/n) is a deadly Umbral of the Covenant - an elite order of vampires sworn to the First Order. Her assignment: serve as General Hux's personal guard. But as buried secrets surface and a rogue vampire faction rises, (Y/n) is forced to confront a past she can't outrun - and feelings she was never meant to have.
In a war of blood, betrayal, and duty, the deadliest threat may be the one that lies still in her chest.
Series contains - Blood, violence, battles/war, betrayal/angst, eventual smut, slow burn
The door slid shut behind General Hux as he entered his office, footsteps light yet heavy with unspoken thoughts. The atmosphere in the room was thick, weighed down by the events of the interrogation, and (Y/n)âs presence only seemed to intensify that tension. She stood by the viewport behind his desk, her back turned to Hux as she gazed out at the stars. It was hard to tell if she was looking for answers from the vastness of space or simply trying to avoid the thoughts swirling in her mind.
Hux lingered near his desk, watching her carefully. He hadnât missed the shift in her demeanor since the interrogation. There was something different about her now, something subtle but undeniable. He knew that what had transpired in that room had left a mark on her.Â
â(L/n),â Hux began, his voice steady but tinged with curiosity, âYouâre quiet.â
(Y/n) remained silent, her fingers tightening on her arms where they were crossed in front of her. It was as if she were weighing something inside herself, something she didnât know how to voice. After a moment, she exhaled slowly, but didnât turn to face him.
âWhat she said,â she murmured. âAbout us.â
Hux responded plainly, but his averted gaze showed otherwise. âShe seemed to think it was significant.â
(Y/n) finally turned, her expression guarded. But there was a flicker of something in her eyes, something vulnerable. âIs it?â
The question hung in the air, leaving no space for games or half-truths. Hux felt a strange twist in his chest, a tightening he wasnât accustomed to. He studied her as (Y/n)âs gaze faltered, her shoulders tense as if she were bracing herself for an answer she wasnât sure she was ready to hear.Â
âDo you thinkâŚâ She paused and took a deep breath. âDo you think she was right?â
Hux slowly rounded the table closer to her, his expression softening as he drew closer to her. âWell, that depends,â he began, his voice more earnest now, âIf I think she was, then it would mean something. Wouldnât it?â
She swallowed, the words lodged in her throat. She had expected him to brush it off, to dismiss it like so many other things she had been told to suppress. But his response wasnât what she had imagined. It made her heart beat a little faster, her pulse quickening at the thought of facing the truth of what was building between them.
âYou know, I didnât expect you to humor talking about it,â she admitted, her voice softer now. âBut⌠I canât stop thinking about it. Especially after what she said.â
Hux studied her carefully, his eyes narrowing slightly as he searched her face for any trace of the controlled stoicism that had defined her for so long. But it wasnât there. Not now. Instead, there was something raw, something that made him feel exposed, as if the walls they had both kept between them were slowly crumbling.
âYouâre not the only one trying to make sense of it.â Hux admitted, much to their surprise.
(Y/n)âs breath caught at his words. It was disorienting, in a way, to hear him say what had been silently understood between them. And yet, it was the first time in what felt like forever that something real, something genuine, was spoken aloud.
âMy focus has always been on the mission. Iâve tried to justify it as my loyalty to my assignment, but thisâŚ?â She paused. âItâs different.â
Hux took another step closer, now barely a foot away from her as his expression grew more tender than she had ever seen it before. âIt is different. But we donât have to figure it all out right now. Not everything has an immediate answer.â
(Y/n)âs gaze flickered to the floor for a moment, but slowly lifted to look at him again once she felt the brush of his gloved fingers against her arm. She knew there was so much they couldnât say, not yet. The words were all tangled up inside of her, but she felt a shift in the air, an understanding that neither of them had ever truly acknowledged until now.
âWe canât pretend this is nothing,â (Y/n) said, her voice a little firmer now. â I canât pretend it.â
Hux studied her for a long moment, his gaze softening. âThen we wonât.â
(Y/n) glanced up at him, her eyes searching his face, looking for some sign that this wasnât just a fleeting moment of honesty. It was as if they were both testing the waters, unsure of how deep they were willing to go. But for once, she didnât want to pull back.Â
And they didnât.Â
The silence between them grew thick with the weight of unspoken words and shared realizations. (Y/n) stood there, the distance between them closing, yet neither one made a move. The tension was palpable, the quiet stretching out in a way that felt almost unbearable, like they were both standing on the edge of something they didnât fully understand, but wanted to.
Huxâs eyes never left hers, his expression still soft but full of intent, even hesitation. There was a moment of vulnerability there that (Y/n) had never seen in him before, a rawness that made her breath catch. It was clear now that they were both standing on the precipice of something new, and though neither of them could predict where it would lead, neither of them seemed ready to walk away from it, either.
Slowly, (Y/n) stepped forward, closing the space between them and causing the hand on her arm to shift higher. Sheâd never been this close to him before. Not like this. It felt like every breath she took was shared with him, every beat of his heart hers to share. She could feel the heat of his body, his scent. And it made her feel as if everything else had melted away.
For a brief second, she hesitated, unsure whether to continue or pull back. But then, she saw something in his eyes. An openness that mirrored her own. It was in that fleeting moment that she realized she didnât have to be afraid of what they were becoming. She didnât have to hide from this. From him.
His hand reached up, fingers brushing lightly against her jaw, testing the boundaries between them. Her own hand came up to rest on top of his chest, feeling the thrumming of his heartbeat beneath her palm. It was an intimate sensation, one she never had the luxury of feeling.Â
Hux didnât flinch, didnât pull back. He remained still, waiting, letting her make the decision.
For a moment, time seemed to stand still. She was acutely aware of how close they were now, of the electricity crackling between them, urging them forward. She could feel his breath warm against her face, his gaze steady and searching. Everything in her screamed to lean in, to finally bridge the gap that had always been there.
And then, without thinking, without words, she closed the distance.
Her lips met his, tentative at first. Testing, unsure. But when he responded, both of them moved together as if they had always known how. It was slow at first, tentative, as if they were both discovering this new part of themselves.
(Y/n)âs hand slid up to his neck, fingers threading into his hair, pulling him closer, and Huxâs arm wrapped around her waist, pulling her into him. The intensity of the kiss deepened, and for the first time in a long while, (Y/n) felt a sense of peace, as if everything had come full circle.Â
She had always been so guarded, so controlled. But now, with him, she didnât have to hide anymore. There were no expectations, no pressures. Just them, in this moment, finding something real.
They finally pulled apart, breathless, both of them looking at each other as if they were seeing one another for the first time.
Huxâs fingers gently brushed her cheek, his thumb brushing away a stray piece of hair that was out of place from its usually perfected style. âWe shouldâve done this sooner,â he whispered, his voice low and full of meaning.
(Y/n) let out a breathless laugh, the sound soft and genuine. âMaybe. But Iâm glad we didnât rush it.â
Hux hummed in agreement.Â
The room was still, and for once, the weight of the war, the orders, and the missions didnât seem so heavy. It was just the two of them.
âI donât know exactly what this means, but Iâm not as afraid of it as I think I should be.â
(Y/n) felt a knot in her chest loosen at his words. It wasnât a declaration of love, not yet, but it was something. It was enough for now.
âNeither am I,â she said, almost to herself, before looking up at him with a softer expression. âI donât know what happens next, but Iâm not afraid either.â
Hux gave her a small nod, his lips curling into the faintest of smiles. âWeâll find our way.â
Neither of them had all the answers, but they knew one thing for certain - they were no longer pretending. And that, in itself, felt like the first step forward for them.Â
(Y/n)âs voice broke the stillness first, soft and almost hesitant. â(Y/n),â she said, her voice a little unsure as she spoke her own name. It was an offering, an invitation. It felt almost too personal, too intimate to say aloud.
Her gaze dropped for a moment, mind racing as she tried to gauge his reaction. It felt like she was crossing an invisible line, one that might make everything feel different. But she didnât regret it.
Huxâs eyes softened, his expression unreadable for a moment as he looked at her. It wasnât the name of an officer or a superior. it was something else entirely. It was personal.
âI -â He stopped himself, the words getting caught in his throat. âArmitage.â He nearly choked out, his heart racing uncharacteristically. But the gentle smile she gave him made it worth it.Â
âArmitage.â His heart skipped. He wasnât used to hearing his name spoken with such sincerity, but somehow, hearing it from her felt natural.
Huxâs lips twitched upward, and he couldnât help but feel a little lighter, as if a weight had been lifted. He hadnât expected it, hadnât even realized he wanted it, but hearing his name from her own lips felt like a bond. A commitment, maybe, even if they both didnât fully understand it yet.
Her gaze softened as she looked at him, and for a moment, it seemed like the weight of their shared experiences had brought them to a place of understanding. They both knew that this wasnât just about the mission anymore. There was something here, something that was no longer hidden beneath their armor.
âI suppose we should prepare to brief Drenn and Phasma.â Armitage reluctantly reminded both himself and (Y/n), not wanting to ruin their moment. The latter sighed and nodded before they slowly peeled away from each other and turned towards his desk.Â
Once the two others arrived, Hux was standing behind his desk with (Y/n) to his left, the others on the other side. They all knew the nature of what had transpired, the importance of the information that had been gathered. But the air still held some form of thickness with the remnants of the intense interrogation.
âIâm pleased to say that the interrogation was successful. But now it is imperative that we act quickly from what we received. (L/n), if you will.â The general began.
(Y/n) straightened slightly, acknowledging the order. She had become used to this dynamic, this balance of trust and command between them. Her gaze shifted from Hux to Varo and Phasma as she spoke.
âIt was confirmed that the rogue faction is still in contact with Resistance forces, but their next location is still not clear enough for us to target,â (Y/n) began, her voice steady but tinged with something colder now, something sharp. âHowever, Elira,â She paused, just for a moment, to steady herself. âMade it clear that there is a larger play at hand.â
There was a brief flicker of recognition in Varoâs eyes, and Captain Phasmaâs unreadable expression didnât change, though the air seemed to tighten. The information had clearly shaken them both, but none of them dared to show it.
âIt seems the Resistance has a heavier involvement with the faction than what was originally assumed.â Hux added, his tone darkening. âTheyâve been providing the rogues with supplies and safehouses. Coordinating and assisting each other to perform these recurring strikes on First Order establishments.â
Varo frowned, his eyes narrowing. âAnd theyâre preparing a larger strike?â he asked, his voice full of masked concern.
(Y/n) nodded. âThey wanted to regroup, build momentum, and meet the others at the next location. What they failed to consider was the Covenantâs involvement. Thatâs what ultimately led to their capture.â
Hux didnât let his gaze falter. âBut the remaining rogues are more elusive, believe it or not.â He commented with a hint of annoyance.
Phasma spoke up, her voice as calm and measured as ever. âWhatâs our next move?â
(Y/n)âs eyes were cold now, her focus entirely on the task at hand. âWe still have the other four prisoners to pull information from so weâll be able to finalize a more stable plan once thatâs taken care of. We need names, contacts, any possible location. They have to know something if they were planning to meet the others.â
Hux glanced at her, a flicker of admiration in his eyes before he turned back to the others. âOnce all information is extracted, we must act swiftly, and with precision. This isnât about eliminating the rogues anymore. This is about stopping a much larger operation.â
Varo looked to (Y/n), a slight smirk tugging at his lips before turning back to the general.Â
(Y/n) gave a nod, her expression firm. âMore than stop them. Weâll send a message. Make sure this never happens again.â
Captain Phasma stepped forward. âThen itâs settled. Iâll have droids assigned to interrogations during the scheduled timeframes.â
Hux nodded in approval. âThat is all for now. I will notify you after information is collected from the interrogations and ready to brief. Dismissed.â
Phasma and Varo nodded, the latter casting her a final, knowing look before turning to leave.Â
Following the brief, Hux and (Y/n) reached the entrance to the bridge, the sound of their footsteps echoing in the otherwise silent corridor. The doors slid open and they stepped in with purpose. The crew worked in near silence, their movements efficient and synchronized, the controlled hum of the shipâs engines providing a constant backdrop.
âReport?â Hux asked immediately, his gaze sweeping across the room as he approached the control console where a subordinate officer stood.
The lieutenant snapped to attention. âGeneral Hux, Umbral (L/n). No significant updates since the last transmission. However, weâve managed to locate a few more traces of rogue activity. Itâs a small, hidden network. It seems weâre closing in on one of their projected targets based on the patterns we are seeing.â
Huxâs eyes narrowed slightly, a dangerous edge to his voice. âAre they still active or attempting to relocate?â
The officerâs fingers flew over the console, bringing up new data âWe have a rough location, but there are no confirmed movements yet.â
(Y/n) stepped forward, her eyes scanning the information that flashed across the screen.Â
Her hand rested on the console, her fingers brushing lightly against it as she leaned in closer, and inevitably closer to the lieutenant who hadnât moved away. He held his breath at her proximity, frozen in place by the intimidation of her presence. And he had a sinking feeling as he looked at her that he even found her slightly attractive.Â
Hux looked between the two of them, blood simmering beneath his skin. He would never admit it, but his glare towards the subordinate was more than enough to express what he was feeling.Â
The lieutenant finally looked up at the general and his eyes widened slightly, immediately taking a step away from her.
âSet a course to the location,â she finally said, her tone firm. âWe canât afford to take any chances of losing them.â
The officer hesitantly glanced at the general who gave a node of approval. âYes, Umbral.â
Hux stepped back, his gaze shifting to (Y/n), watching her as she took charge. There was an intensity about her now that matched his own, and it stirred something in him that he had to push down. He couldnât afford to let distractions cloud his focus. Not now.
âGood,â Hux said, his voice was particularly hardened, but still carrying authority. âKeep me updated if anything changes.â
âYes, General.â The officer acknowledged before the two of them left the bridge once more.
Later on, (Y/n) found herself within the alcove where she and Armitage had their first moment together, a quiet stillness settled in the later hours of the night cycle. (Y/n) sat on the bench just the same, her back against the wall, her dark uniform replaced by simple black attire. The issued sleepwear was comfortable, yet still representative of the Covenant. The lights were dim, casting long shadows over the space. She wasnât used to this kind of quiet as of late, but tonight, it was a welcome change.
Her thoughts were a tangled mess, the events of the day and the intensity of her feelings for Hux weighing on her in ways she didnât know how to process.Â
The kiss. The words they hadnât fully said. The subtle shift between them that she couldnât ignore.Â
She had spent enough time thinking about it, enough to start overanalyzing every single moment, trying to understand it all.
She was lost in thought when the soft sound of footsteps echoed from the corridor. She glanced up, finding Varo rounding the corner. His ever-present smirk was softened tonight, though. A far cry from the playful taunts he usually threw her way.
âThought Iâd find you here,â Varo said with a casual shrug, his eyes scanning the space before landing on her.Â
(Y/n) didnât respond immediately, her eyes flicking towards the corner of the alcove.
âYeah,â she said quietly, her voice betraying a trace of emotion she couldnât quite hide. She quickly cleared her throat. âItâs been a long day.â
Varo took a seat beside her, his posture relaxed, his arms casually resting on his knees. âYou know, for someone whoâs usually an uptight prick, youâre not as composed as you usually are. Whatâs going on?â
(Y/n) remained silent for a moment, her eyes focused on a distant point in the alcove, not wanting to meet his gaze. She could feel the weight of his expectant stare, the way Varo seemed to have this uncanny ability to know when something was off.
Varo grinned, sensing her hesitation. âIâm guessing this isnât about your mother or the rogue vampires. Youâve had plenty of that already. So, what is it?â
(Y/n) hesitated, taking a deep breath. âItâs⌠about the general.â she admitted, her tone softer than she intended.
Varo raised an eyebrow, a knowing glint in his eyes. âAh. That explains a lot.â
She shot him a quick, almost defensive look, but Varoâs expression remained calm, casual. He clearly wasnât going to push. At least, not too much. He leaned back against the wall, folding his arms and waiting, a quiet smile tugging at the corner of his lips.
(Y/n) sighed, finally meeting his gaze, her eyes guarded but honest. âItâs not as simple as I thought it would be, Varo. I -â She paused, unsure of how to continue. âI didnât expect this to happen the way it did. It was completely unexpected.â
Varo didnât interrupt. He just let her speak, waiting for her to continue at her own pace. He knew better than to press, especially when (Y/n)âs walls were this high.
âIâve been focused on duty. On my assignment. Iâve kept myself guarded for so long, and now⌠now thereâs this.â Her voice trailed off, a mixture of uncertainty and something else she couldnât place.
âSounds like youâve got some feelings there,â Varo said lightly, his tone teasing but not unkind.
(Y/n) didnât laugh at his joke. Instead, she nodded, her eyes distant. âI do. We both do. But itâs more than that. Itâs⌠I donât even know how to explain it.â She took a moment, glancing down at her hands, her fingers twitching nervously. âHeâs⌠different. Iâve never allowed anyone to tear me apart so quickly. To leave me so open and vulnerable. I donât know what to do with it.â
Varo watched her closely, his gaze softening for a moment. âYou donât need to figure it all out at once, you know. You gotta understand that we were trained to be soldiers. Weâve never had the luxury of dwelling on things like this.â
(Y/n)âs lips tightened into a thin line. âI know. But this isnât about the mission anymore. Not entirely.â
âAnd yet,â Varo said, leaning forward slightly, âYouâre still thinking like a soldier. Even with him. Youâre afraid, (Y/n). Youâre afraid that if you give in to this, itâll distract you. But it wonât. Itâll just change things. And sometimes⌠thatâs the best kind of change.â
(Y/n) let out a slow breath, her eyes lowering again as the weight of his words sank in. âYou think so?â
Varo didnât answer immediately. Instead, he leaned back against the wall again, crossing his arms and looking at her with a thoughtful expression.
âDonât think too hard about it. You donât have to be the perfect soldier all the time. Hell, if you ask me, Hux needs someone like you.â
(Y/n) looked at him sharply, a little surprised. âWhat do you mean?â
Varo shrugged casually. âHux⌠he doesnât always know what to do with himself. But with you?â He chuckled lightly. âHeâs definitely got someone to keep him on track if something happens. Emotionally and professionally.â
(Y/n) shook her head slightly, the smallest of smiles tugging at her lips. âYou think so?â
âTrust me. Iâve been watching.â Varoâs smirk widened. âBut, more importantly - you two? Thereâs something there.â
(Y/n) glanced at him, her smile turning into a soft laugh. âI donât know what Iâm doing. Iâve never done this before.â
Varo grinned, his eyes twinkling with mischief. âWell, thereâs only one way to figure it out.â
(Y/n) rolled her eyes, but the tension in her shoulders seemed to ease just a little. âYouâre right.â
âI know,â Varo said with a knowing smile. âIâm just here to remind you that you donât have to have everything figured out. Sometimes, you just need to⌠let it happen.â Her eyed her for a moment. âYou wanna know something else?â
She glanced at him curiously, encouraging him to continue.Â
âIâve heard that relationships with personal assignments are actually encouraged by High Lords.â
(Y/n)âs brow furrowed. âWhy?â
âIt creates a deeper sense of loyalty. Which, in turn, would mean a more successful assignment.â
(Y/n) sat in silence for a moment, her thoughts swirling as she took in what Varo had said. For once, she allowed herself to relax, to let the uncertainty sit without trying to fix it. There was a strange comfort in that, even if it didnât feel entirely natural.
âThanks, Varo,â she said softly, turning to face him.
He winked at her. âAnytime.â
(Y/n) and Varo remained seated in comfortable silence. She leaned back against the wall with her arms loosely folded, her thoughts still lingering on the kiss, on the shift between herself and Armitage.
That shift seemed to arrive in person only moments later as footsteps approached.Â
Varo lifted his head first, eyebrows raising with amusement as the tall, unmistakable figure of General Hux rounded the corner into the alcove.
Hux paused when he saw them, his expression unreadable but his gaze lingering on (Y/n) a fraction longer than protocol might have allowed. He wore his uniform still - sharp, pristine, and composed - though there was something faintly softer in his eyes as they flicked between the two.
âDrenn,â Hux greeted stiffly, polite but distant as ever in tone.
Varo rose to his feet smoothly, flashing a smile that didnât quite hide the glint of mischief in his eyes. âGeneral,â he replied with mock formality, brushing nonexistent dust from his jacket. âI was just keeping her company, but I think sheâs in good hands now.â
(Y/n) gave him a mildly exasperated look.
âIâll take the hint,â Varo added under his breath as he passed her. Then more loudly, to both, âIâll be in my quarters if you need me.â
As he walked off, he gave (Y/n) one last, knowing glance. She rolled her eyes at him behind Huxâs back.
Once he was gone, a quiet settled again. Armitage stood a few feet away, his hands folded behind his back. There was a pause, the kind that stretched just long enough to hint that he hadnât come here by accident.
âI was looking for you,â He said finally. âI stopped by your quarters.â
(Y/n) glanced over at him, still seated, her expression open but cautious. âIs everything alright?â
He hesitated, then took a few steps closer. âI thought you might want company. After everything today.â
Her eyes flicked downward, then back up to him. âYou didnât have to.â
âI know.â He looked down for a moment, then met her gaze again.
There was something in his voice. Tentative, unfamiliar. Like the footing beneath him was uncertain and he didnât quite know how to steady himself in this territory. She understood the feeling.
(Y/n) pushed herself up from the bench slowly, now standing beside him in the soft lighting of the alcove. Her hair was down, and the shift from her usual rigid posture made her seem more human, more vulnerable. Armitage saw it and found it hard to look away.
âItâs strange,â she murmured, âHow everythingâs changed so quickly.â
âI canât believe Iâm saying this,â Armitage paused. âBut sometimes change can be good.â
She met his gaze, studying him. âYouâre right, thatâs very strange coming from you.â
Armitage threw her a side glance of disapproval. âI have my moments. Just that no one ever sees them.â
(Y/n) gazed at him a moment longer, her sharpness dulled by weariness and something far more tender.
Then her voice, quiet but sure, made a simple offer.
âI suppose I should have my dinner now.â A faint curve tugged at one corner of her lips. âWould you like to join me?âÂ
Armitage blinked once, as if surprised. Not by the invitation itself, but by how much he wanted to accept it. His expression gave away little, save for the slight lowering of his shoulders and the flicker of something softer behind his eyes.
âI would, actually.â
(Y/n) inclined her head in a simple nod. âCome on, then.â
She turned and began walking without ceremony, confident that he would follow.Â
He did.Â
His stride falling in just behind hers, his hands still clasped behind his back in a subconscious effort to maintain composure. But as he walked, he realized with a strange sense of peace that for the first time in longer than he could remember⌠he didnât feel the need to be composed.
Not with her.
And in that silence, he let himself fall into step beside (Y/n), hands slowly unclasping themselves from behind him. He walked beside her not as the General of the Finalizer, but simply as the man she had invited in.
The door shut behind them with a soft hiss.Â
(Y/n)âs quarters were sparse but lived-in, dimly lit with the gentle glow of low lumen panels. There were few personal touches. Just a few old Covenant relics lining the shelf near her desk, and folded training attire draped neatly across the back of a chair. Still, it was warmer than most quarters on a First Order vessel. Warmer than his.
(Y/n) moved first, her posture more relaxed than usual, her movements quieter.
âSit wherever you like,â she said, brushing past him to a compact kitchenette where she retrieved two mugs. âThe lightingâs adjustable if itâs too dim. I just keep it darker for obvious reasons.â
Armitage glanced around, then chose the loveseat built into the wall across from her bed. He sat back with his hands resting in his lap, posture still perfect.Â
(Y/n) then brought over both mugs. She handed him his - a pale amber tea with a faint herbal scent - and kept the dark crimson one for herself.Â
Armitage nodded to her as a thank you before she settled in beside him without a word.
For a moment, they just sat in silence. Sipping slowly, the quiet stretching comfortably between them.
Then Armitage spoke, low and thoughtful.
âI think I could get used to seeing you this relaxed.â
(Y/n)âs brow rose as she took another sip. âWhyâs that?â
âItâs oddly comforting, I think. Even reminds me of myself outside of working hours.â
She set the mug down on the coffee table in front of them. âWell, no one stays sharp forever. Not even me.â
Hux gave a short, amused huff. âDonât let the others hear you admit that. It would shatter their entire perception of you.â
(Y/n) turned slightly towards him, resting one elbow against the back of the couch and leaning her head on her hand. âLet them believe what they want. Fear has its uses.â There was a pause. Then she added, quieter, âExcept with you, of course.â
He turned his head slowly to look at her, and found her already watching him.
Her expression was unreadable, but her eyes.Â
Those eyes .Â
They were open. Clear. Trusting.
âIâve spent most of my life hiding what I feel,â (Y/n) said softly. âFrom my parents, from the Covenant, from the Order. But I somehow find myself not wanting to have to hide from you.â
Hux set his mug aside, his fingers accidentally brushing her hand that rested on her thigh. It wasnât intentional - not exactly. But he didnât move away either.
âIâm not used to this,â he admitted. âAny of this. But I canât deny that I find myself wanting it.â
A beat.Â
âWanting you.â
Her breath hitched just slightly, but her hand cautiously turned beneath his, palm to palm, fingers threading together in a tentative hold. She thought about Varoâs words before Armitage arrived.Â
âThen have me,â she practically pleaded quietly.
His thumb brushed the edge of her knuckles. For all his control, he still looked like a man trying not to fall too fast. But in her presence, he was already halfway there.
They leaned towards each other - not a rush. But a slow, inevitable draw. When their lips touched, it wasnât urgent. It was grounding.
(Y/n)âs hands instinctively reached for him, her fingers tangling in his short, gelled hair as she pulled him closer. His arms wrapped around her waist, his touch firm yet gentle, as if he was afraid she might shatter.
The kiss deepened, entwining in a dance that spoke of pent-up desire and unspoken longing. (Y/n) could taste the remnants of the tea he drank, the warmth of his breath mingling with her own.Â
As they broke apart, breathless, Armitage rested his forehead against hers, his hands sliding down to her hips. âIâve wanted this for so long,â he murmured, his voice thick with desire.
(Y/n) asked, her gold eyes glinting. âAnd what is it you want?â
âYou.â He nearly growled. â All of you.â
Her hands traced the contours of his uniform, her touch deliberate with barely contained desire. âThen take it.â
Armitageâs eyes darkened as he suddenly pulled her on top of him, relishing the light gasp that slipped past her lips which he quickly captured once more. Their hands began to wander over one another as their tongues mingled and danced.Â
Armitageâs fingers then began to tease the hem of her shirt, slipping up beneath it to let the unnaturally cold temperature of her skin meet his warmth. He broke apart from her lips to wander down her neck as she sighed at the feeling of his warmth, eagerly welcoming the foreign sensation.Â
As his hands continued to caress higher, his fingertips carefully brushed the underside of her breasts, following the curvature to their outer edges. (Y/n) let out a particularly loud sigh as his thumbs ghosted over her erect nipples, hips growing restless as she squirmed on top of him.Â
He hummed against her neck at the feeling of her brushing against the growing tent in his uniform and grabbed her hips, pulling her down onto him to elicit a low groan. Her own vocal satisfaction mixed with his at the feeling of him pressed against her now throbbing core, head tilting back with her mouth agape.Â
âArmitage,â The man hummed at the sound of his name. âPlease.â (Y/n) begged and he pulled away to look up at her.Â
They breathed heavily for a small moment. Then Armitage stood, taking (Y/n) with him who wrapped her legs around his waist. He brought them over to her bed, delicately laying her on top of it.Â
His frame leaned over her to capture her lips once more. The kiss was messier, filled with more passion that had been built up from them pining over each other for too long.Â
He began to grind himself into her, their voices mingling with pleasure as her hands pulled him into her.Â
Armitage clung to her, hands wandering and caressing every dip and curve, committing it to memory. He gripped the hem of her shirt and began to pull it up, (Y/n) lifting her torso enough to slide it off.Â
He sighed as he looked down at her bare torso, not knowing where to start until he felt her hand pull him down to her neck.Â
His mouth grazed over her skin, kissing and sliding over it until he reached one of her breasts. His lips wrapped around its nipple, tongue tickling and circling it as her other breast was massaged by his still gloved hands.Â
She looked down at him when he growled and pulled away, watching as he peeled his gloves off with his teeth before continuing his ministrations.Â
Slowly, he trailed his way down her abdomen, his mouth tickling the surface along its path until he reached the waistband of her pants and underwear.Â
He kissed along the edge of it, fingers hooking under the seam as he looked up at her for approval.
When she slightly lifted her hips for him to pull them down, he did so without hesitation. They slid off of her legs and he kissed around her pelvis, her sighs of pleasure egging him on.Â
He turned to her inner thighs - biting, nipping and sucking as he grew closer to her femininity. His warm breath fanned over it, practically panting as he took it in.
Then, without warning, his mouth gently attached itself to her.Â
(Y/n) threw her head back as a moan escaped her lips, hand latched into his fiery locks. Armitage hummed at her pull, tongue lapping at her center as his hands left momentarily to undo his uniform top.Â
As it slipped off of his form, he pulled away from her. She felt his fingers replace his mouth as she looked down at him in question, watching as he crawled his way up to loom over her as the digits teased.Â
His face settled barely an inch away from her own, gazing intently into her golden irises as he eased two fingers into her. He watched as her eyebrows furrowed, a soft gasp slipping past her lips before her eyes closed.Â
He slowly began to pump his fingers, curling them to pull different reactions from her, testing to see what was more effective. At a particular angle, she let out a particularly sharp moan and he smirked to himself, feeling her nails carefully claw at his back.Â
As his pace quickened along with her moans, he leaned down just next to her ear and whispered.Â
â Donât you dare hold back from me. âÂ
The burning coil in her pelvis suddenly snapped and she nearly screamed, back arching as Armitage felt her juices thickening around his fingers. He groaned when her nails finally dug into him, no doubt drawing blood.Â
He pulled back slightly to work his uniform trousers as she recovered. (Y/n) gazed at him with hooded eyes as he pulled them off along with his boots, dropping them to the floor with a soft thud.Â
He drew close to her once more, one hand rubbing over his stiffened cock while the other supported his weight.Â
Their breaths shook as he teased at her entrance, already drawing another soft moan from her as the head teased over her sensitive clit.Â
âArmitage -â She pressed, cut off by him pushing into her. They both sighed at the foreign sensation, eyeing each other with unmatched intensity.Â
(Y/n) pulled him closer so they were chest-to-chest before he rolled his hips, groaning with his lips pressed together in barely contained pleasure.Â
She pulled him down by the back of his head into a kiss, moaning into each other as his pace gradually quickened. Her hands gripped at his arms and shoulders, feeling them tense and his muscles shift as he now pounded into her. Â
Her moans were no longer quiet, and she prayed that the walls were sound proof. But they couldnât care less in that moment as she felt his warm body against her, her cold skin keeping him cool as he nearly broke into a sweat.Â
His hair fell out of place as pieces hung over his forehead, face buried in her neck as he groaned and huffed. Her sounds flooded his ears, filling his head as his cock throbbed from inside of her, feeling her tighten around him as he angled himself in the same way his fingers angled to bring her over the edge.Â
His pace grew hasty, chasing his own release and desperate to hear her lose herself once more as her hands tightened their grip on him.
At last, she cried out and practically sobbed at her second orgasm. She felt weightless. Dizzy and absent as her voice no longer felt like her own in that moment as he continued to push through her release.Â
Just as she began to feel overstimulated, he quickly pulled out and pumped his cock over her stomach, watching as he groaned as strings of cum landed on her skin.Â
Everything seemed to slow as he breathed heavily, searching her face for anything negative.Â
When he found nothing but peace and content, he leaned down and pressed a kiss onto her cheek, landing one on her lips before he stood and disappeared into the washroom.Â
She heard the sink run as he most likely cleaned himself, throwing an arm over her eyes as she replayed the intimate moment in her head.Â
Armitage emerged from the room, pausing to admire what he considered was an ethereal beauty laying across the bed.Â
How he was ever able to turn one of the most intimidating forces in the First Order into a delicate flower beneath his hands, he would never understand. But he knew he would never take it for granted.Â
Silently, with a rag in hand, he made his way over to her and cleaned up the mess he made of her, surprisingly gentle compared to his more strict persona that everyone else knew him for.Â
After it was discarded, he returned to the bed, placing a delicate hand on her waist to coax her into getting under the covers.Â
She complied mindlessly, brain still fuzzy as she sighed with pure satisfaction. (Y/n) watched as he moved to his uniform on the floor, picking it up piece by piece.Â
Just as he was about to begin dressing himself, she called out to him softly.Â
(Y/n) watched as his head snapped to her with a mix of concern and newfound fondness, a smile nearly showing on her lips.Â
âDo you think you could stay tonight?â
His shoulders barely dropped, undetectable to anyone who was not familiar with his character. But to her it said everything she needed to know.Â
Surprise. Hesitation. Disbelief.Â
A long moment passed between them before he finally responded.Â
âI believe I could.â He answered, a corner of his lip upturning ever so slightly in endearment.Â
Chapter 7
Pairing - General Armitage Hux x Reader
*Set prior to The Force Awakens*
Summary -
Forged in blood. Bound by duty. Broken by desire.
(Y/n) (L/n) is a deadly Umbral of the Covenant - an elite order of vampires sworn to the First Order. Her assignment: serve as General Hux's personal guard. But as buried secrets surface and a rogue vampire faction rises, (Y/n) is forced to confront a past she can't outrun - and feelings she was never meant to have.
In a war of blood, betrayal, and duty, the deadliest threat may be the one that lies still in her chest.
Series contains - Blood, violence, battles/war, betrayal/angst, eventual smut, slow burn
The hiss of the door was nearly silent as it slid open. The general stepped inside with purposeful strides, datapad in hand, the pale lights of the corridor casting shadows along the walls. He paused just inside the threshold, eyes landing on the figure ahead.
(Y/n) stood motionless at the far end of the room, back to the door, arms stiff at her sides and head hung low. Her entire silhouette coiled like a wire pulled taut.
Hux froze.
She wasnât speaking. She wasnât moving. But the air felt heavier. Thicker.
Like a storm about to break.
He watched her in silence for a long second before speaking, voice cautious and measured.
âTheir shuttle is approaching. Theyâll be docking within the next few minutes.â
She didnât respond at first. Then slowly, deliberately, she turned.
Her eyes met his. Ice-cold. Still. Controlled. And somehow far more dangerous.
Her face was a mask of serenity, but it was the kind of calm that lived just before a strike. The kind of silence that waited before violence.
Hux swallowed. Just once. His pulse kicked against his collar despite himself.
â(L/n)?â
(Y/n)âs lips twitched, just slightly.
âReady.âÂ
Her voice is calm. Measured. Controlled.
Too controlled.
Hux stared at her, his own expression unreadable for a moment before he gave a slow nod, stepping aside.
âThen letâs not keep our guests waiting.â
She moved towards the door, walking past him with silent purpose. He watched her go, jaw set tight as he followed.
He couldnât help but wonder what it was that waited behind that eerily perfect composure. Wondered how close she was to unraveling⌠and what would happen if she did.Â
The massive expanse of the hangar was clouded with tension. The transport ship settled into place, steam hissing as the ramp descended with a mechanical whine.
Troopers and techs held back, keeping a wide berth as Varo emerged first before turning to the Covenant flanking the detained rogues.
Their uniforms were similar to that of the Umbral, however instead of black, the uniform was more of a grey, along with their cloak. Though, unlike the Umbrals, they wore sleek, black Eva helmets, adding to their intimidation. Yet also kept them from any individual distinction.
âRestrained and on their knees.â Varo ordered.
The Duskborns moved with practiced precision, grabbing each of the five rogues and forcing them forward. The detainees were bloodied but breathing, their mouths bound, hands cuffed with reinforced mag-restraints. They struggled. Some were defiant, some afraid.Â
Then their eyes landed on two figures quickly approaching with determination in their long strides as they were shoved to their knees in a line.
(Y/n) stood beside the general, her gaze sharp and fixed on them like a predator tracking prey. Her expression was unreadable, but her posture was tight with restrained fury.
One of them, a woman with faded dark hair and hollow eyes, faltered as she saw (Y/n).
Her eyes widened.
She didnât speak. Couldnât with the gag in place. But her stare was laced with recognition, disbelief, and something sharp and uncomfortable.
(Y/n) didnât blink as they came to a stop in front of them. Her eyes were locked on her mother like twin blades.
The generalâs presence was cold and commanding as he addressed the kneeling rogues with both disdain and sadistic satisfaction in their capture.
âYour brood of vipers have made this an interesting couple of weeks, I must say. But all good things must come to an end, unfortunately.â His lips stretched into an evil smile as he slowly stepped closer. âOh, weâre going to have fun breaking you.â He gestured to the squad behind him. âTake them to the holding cells.â
The Troopers moved to comply, accompanied by a few Duskborns. (Y/n) then spoke. Low, calm, and without looking away from her mother.
âThat one.â Her head lowered in the direction of the older woman. âSheâll be the first interrogated.â
Hux looked at her briefly but said nothing. There was no question in his mind that she wouldnât falter on her decision.
He nodded once, silently giving the order. A pair of troopers roughly yanked (Y/n)âs mother to her feet, separating her from the others as they began escorting the prisoners away.
The remaining rogues were dragged down the corridor, their footsteps echoing in the hangar, accompanied by the growls of the Duskborns.
Varo watched them go, his expression grave. But once they were out of sight, he stepped up to (Y/n), his voice low and careful.
â(Y/n).â It was his first time using her first name in the presence of others on the ship, let alone the general. But with the look in her eyes that was present since she entered the hangar, he couldnât care less about titles and formality.
She didnât answer.
âYou doinâ alright?â He tried again, more gentle as Hux carefully watched the exchange, equally invested.
Her eyes finally flicked to Varoâs. And though she didnât say a word, her expression was enough. An expression Varo had seen only a few times before.
The look of a wild animal held in a cage.
He didnât press her. He just stood beside her, silent in his support.
Huxâs gaze bounced between the two of them, eyes narrowing ever so slightly.
There would be much to discuss. But first, there would be blood.
The air remained heavy with the aftershock of what happened before (Y/n) turned slowly from where her mother was dragged away. Her eyes cut across the hangar to the remaining Covenant who awaited her orders in a neat, disciplined formation.
She didnât hesitate as she stepped towards them.
âCaptain.â She called. A man quickly rushed forward with unnatural speed, stopping directly in front of her at attention. His darker cloak marked his distinction as the squad leader for their group.Â
âYes, Umbral?â He spoke, voice slightly distorted by his helmet.Â
âSecure perimeter patrols around the detention wing. No shifts longer than four hours. You will rotate in pairs only, no one guards alone. We donât know if they are capable of anything outside of Covenant training.â
The captain nodded, taking her words with strict obedience.
âI want you and one other Duskborn to reinforce engineering access points as well as bioscans at every bulkhead and atmospheric control gate. If theyâre smart, theyâll try to sabotage next.â
âYes, Umbral. Understood.â
âIf anyone on this ship attempts to prevent you from doing any of these tasks, you report it to me immediately and I will personally handle it.â
âAs you command, Umbral.â
âDismissed.â With a snap of his heels, the captain spun around and began barking orders to the Duskborns. They broke off in precise movements, scattering to carry out their directives.
The general, still standing behind her, watched the exchange with sharp focus. Hands clasped behind his back, lips drawn into a contemplative line. There was no cold detachment in his gaze this time.
There was something else.
Admiration. A hint of surprise. And buried somewhere deeper⌠a flicker of desire.
She hadnât just taken control. She commanded. Cool, composed, and utterly lethal in presence. A weapon shaped into a leader.
Beside him was Varo, arms casually crossed and expression unbothered as he leaned slightly towards Hux.
âShe always gets like this when sheâs pissed.â
Huxâs brow lifts slightly, attention still fixed on (Y/n).
Varo continued with a grin. âIâve been taking notes. Someday Iâm gonna give orders like that and peopleâll actually listen instead of laugh.â
âDoubtful.â Hux deadpanned.
âFair.â
(Y/n) finally turned towards them, her features carefully neutral once again, though Hux caught the sharp edge still hiding in her eyes.
Hux gave her a single nod, though his gaze lingered longer than it should.
âExcellent work, (L/n).â He paused, then spoke lower, almost thoughtful. âImpressive.â
She tilted her head, the faintest flicker of acknowledgment in her expression, but it was hard to tell if it was from the praise or the unspoken tension hanging between them.
âYou make the rest of us look like amateurs.â Varo teased. âItâs honestly infuriating.â
âYou do that all on your own, Drenn.â She replied flatly.
Varo mocked being offended and pointed at her. âThat was uncalled for. Accurate, but uncalled for.â
Despite everything, the prisoners, the tension, the weight of what was coming. There was a breath of ease between them. A fragile but welcome reprieve.
Hux exhaled quietly, eyes trailing (Y/n) again.
âWe need to begin preparing for the interrogations. And then youâll be able toâŚâ he thought for a moment. âHandle⌠your subject.â
(Y/n) nodded before her and Varo followed behind the general as they made their way to his office. Varo gave (Y/n) a sly look, voice pitched low.
âHe was staring.â He spoke bluntly. âLike, full-on âIâm going to write poetry about her in my quartersâ staring.â
(Y/n) grit her teeth as Varo grinned. âVaro.â
âJust saying.â He put his hands up in surrender. âYouâre terrifying when you take command, but Iâm pretty sure he thought you were something else. Might wanna warn him next time before he -â Varo was cut off by a harsh slap on his arm.
But as she looked at Hux in front of them, there was something else flickering in her expression.
The office carried a heavy silence save for the soft clicks of data being organized. Hux stood beside his desk, reviewing the preliminary files of the detainees, his posture rigid, focused. (Y/n) remained near the far wall, her back partially turned, arms folded tightly across her chest.
The silence between them stretched until Hux finally broke it.
âFirst interrogation is scheduled to begin in 15 minutes.â
(Y/n) didnât respond immediately.
âIâm sure you have questions,â she spoke quietly. âElira (L/n).â Huxâs gaze snapped to her at the mention of the same last name. âMy mother.â
Huxâs fingers froze above the datapad. His expression was unreadable, though something in his eyes softened slightly.
âI see,â he said carefully.Â
Telling herself that it was necessary information prior to the interrogation, she continued, her voice steady but subdued. âI thought Iâd never see her again. The last time I did, she disowned me.â
She inhaled slowly through her nose, grounding herself as her gaze lowered to the floor.Â
âMy parents supported the Resistance, so naturally I followed. Growing up, they told me that the stories of what happened to our people were fabricated lies. That the Covenant was just another form of control used by the First Order.â
Her voice grew quieter.
âWhen I told them I enlisted in the Covenant, that Iâd met Varo - who told me the truth - they were furious.â
Hux took a few steps toward her, listening.
âShe told me I was brainwashed. That the Resistance was the only path forward for people like us. I told her I didnât want to forget what they did to our people. I wanted justice. She said if I walked out that door, I would no longer be her daughter.â (Y/n) swallowed the tightness in her throat, eyes flicking up to meet Huxâs. âI left anyway.â
He watched her for a moment longer, taking in the weight of her words. The rare vulnerability threading through the calm composure she wore like armor. When he finally spoke, his voice was quieter.
âYou made the right choice.â
âI donât need reassurance,â she said, turning away slightly.
âNo,â Hux said, âbut you deserve it.â
(Y/n) let out a breath, shaky despite her effort to control it. âI donât know how Iâll feel when I see her. I want to be cold. I want to act like sheâs just another prisoner. ButâŚâ
âBut sheâs not,â he finished for her.
âShe looked surprised,â (Y/n) murmured with partial amusement. âWhen our eyes met in the hangar. I donât know if she was ashamed⌠or just didnât expect to see me.â
Hux stepped closer, careful not to invade her space, but close enough that his voice dropped into something more human.
âYouâve turned out loyal. Capable and unshakably devoted to your cause. She should be grateful you didnât let their cowardice define you.â
(Y/n)âs lips parted as if to speak, but she stopped herself, nodding once instead. The silence returned, heavy but less suffocating now.
Finally, Hux spoke again.
âIâll attend the interrogation with you. You wonât go in there alone.â
(Y/n) turned to him, surprised. âYou donât have to -â
âI want to.â He replied firmly.
She met his gaze, and this time, there was no veneer of command or control in either of them. Only something quietly understanding. A long, steadying moment passed between them.
Then (Y/n) nodded.
âThank you,â she said, her voice barely above a whisper.
Hux didnât respond with words. Just a quiet nod⌠and the comfort of silence shared with someone who understood what it meant to be abandoned.Â
And to keep going anyway.
The metallic corridor outside of the detention wing was chilled, dimly lit with harsh overhead fluorescents that buzzed faintly, casting pale light across polished black floors. Two Duskborns stood stationed on either side of the sealed blast doors of the interrogation room, their heads locked forward in unblinking silence. A pair of stormtroopers flanked them, weapons held steady against their armor.
Varo stood waiting nearby, his posture alert but relaxed in that uniquely casual way of his. At the sound of approaching footsteps, he turned to see (Y/n) and General Hux striding towards them together.
(Y/n)âs expression was unreadable, her eyes cold, her jaw clenched. She moved with unwavering purpose, every step measured and silent. But Varo knew her too well to miss the tension simmering just beneath the surface.
He stepped forward, glancing at Hux with a short nod before turning his attention to her.
âYou donât have to pretend with me,â he said quietly.
(Y/n) blinked, her lips twitching as if caught between a grimace and a smile. âAm I pretending?â
Varo shrugged. âYouâre walking like youâre about to go into battle. And Iâd say youâve got that âvengeful spirit of the ancestorsâ look in your eyes again.â
Her shoulders tensed slightly before she forced a breath through her nose.
âIâm fine,â she muttered.
âNo, youâre angry. And hurt. And about to go talk to the person who did that to you.â Varoâs voice softened. âYou donât have to be fine, (Y/n). You just have to be in control.â
There was a brief pause.
She looked up at him, expression guarded but grateful beneath the steel.
âI donât know what Iâm going to say to her,â she admitted, barely above a whisper.
âStart with what you want her to hear,â he said. âThen say what you need to say.â
He placed a hand lightly on her shoulder, giving it a brief squeeze. âYouâve faced worse. Youâve survived worse. She wonât break you.â
From behind them, the general waited silently, allowing the moment between them to settle. His hands were folded behind his back, his gaze unreadable but sharp as ever. But there was no judgment in his eyes, only a rare flicker of something quieter.Â
(Y/n) turned to Hux, nodding once.
His gaze lingered on her for a heartbeat longer than usual before he offered a nod in return.Â
The blast doors hissed as they began to part, the light beyond flickering on with a sterile, clinical chill.
Together, (Y/n) and Hux stepped through - side by side - into the chamber where the ghost of her past waited to speak.
The room was black steel and held a sense of brutality. Devoid of comfort, drenched in sterilized silence. A single spotlight poured down from above onto the table bolted to the floor in the center of the room. Restraints clamped down on the prisonerâs wrists and ankles, tight and unmoving as the table was inclined for her to lay upright.
On that table sat her ghost. (Y/n)âs mother.
Still sharp-featured and graceful despite the grime of capture, but aged in a way that had nothing to do with time. Her clothes, though stripped of insignia, still held the vague air of Resistance sympathies. Her gold eyes burned with a smug, knowing light, even now.
(Y/n) stood before her. Unmoving. Focused.
Her cloak was gone, boots echoing across the metal as she paced in measured steps around the chair. The sharp hiss of the sealed blast door sounded behind them, where Hux now stood silently in the shadows. He said nothing. Observed everything.
â(Y/n),â her mother purred, voice far too casual for the weight in the air. âMy daughter, standing like a First Order dog. I always imagined youâd outgrow your rebellion against us. But look at you. Still clinging to the leash someone else put around your neck.â
(Y/n) ignored the bait. She circled again, cool and collected.
âYou were found in the company of known ex-Covenant fugitives. Now Resistance operatives.â Her tone was flat, clinical. âYou will give us names, contacts, safehouses, and supply lines. Do this, and perhaps youâll be granted leniency.â
Her mother tilted her head, a bitter laugh escaping her lips. âThe Covenant mustâve broken you more than I thought. They told you a new history, gave you new fangs, and now look. Youâre snarling at your own blood.â
(Y/n) stopped walking. Her arms stayed at her sides, her posture impeccable, but the line of her jaw was sharp now, locked tight.
âIâm snarling at traitors.â
Her motherâs expression twisted.
âTo our people?â she hissed. âOr to the family you discarded for the sake of your friendâs myth? You think they care for you? You think that man behind you,â Her gaze flicked to Hux. âWould even look your way if it werenât for how useful you are? How obedient you are?â
That landed.
(Y/n) didnât flinch, but her breath hitched. Subtle. Small. But there.
âMy loyalty is to my assignment. And to the Covenant and First Order.â She replied tightly, her voice lower.
Her motherâs lips curled. âThatâs not what I see in your eyes when you glance at him.â
From the back of the room, Hux shifted slightly. He remained composed, unreadable. But his gaze sharpened with interest.
(Y/n)âs eyes darkened, fangs just barely visible behind a clenched jaw.
âYou know nothing about me,â she said, voice steady but low with restrained threat.
âI know you,â her mother pressed, eyes glowing. âI see the girl who wanted to belong so badly she let herself be molded into a weapon. And now youâre falling for your handler. How poetic.â
(Y/n) stepped forward too fast. Her hand gripped the edge of the table, close to her motherâs throat, but not touching.
âI said you know nothing about me,â she seethed. âYou forfeited that right when you threw me out.â
The words rang sharper than anything that had come before. Her motherâs smugness wavered just slightly.
Behind her, Hux took a single step forward, voice cutting cleanly through the silence.
âWhere were your orders coming from?â He redirected.
His voice cut cleanly across the air. Calm, precise, commanding.
Her mother blinked, pulled abruptly from the rising tension between her and her daughter. She turned toward Hux with a subtle sneer, clearly displeased with the shift in control.
âWe intercepted coded transmissions routed through an old Resistance frequency,â Hux continued, stepping forward into the light with quiet authority. âYouâre going to tell us where the next operation is planned, and how long youâve been in contact with the rogue factionâ
A beat passed.
Then another.
The silence gave (Y/n) time to steel herself again. She folded her arms, lips drawn in a firm line, and resumed her position at Huxâs side, this time more guarded, more resolved.
Her mother looked between the two of them. That smug gleam in her eyes had dulled slightly.
âYou two really do make quite the team,â she said, colder now.
Hux said nothing. (Y/n) stared through her like she was already ash.
And somewhere, deep beneath the chill in her voice, something cracked in (Y/n)âs chest that she refused to look at too closely.
A long, dragging silence lingered in the room. (Y/n)âs mother didnât speak for a moment. Her eyes flicked between him and (Y/n), no longer filled with smugness, but calculation. Weighing.
Then she exhaled, slow and bitter.
âYou think Iâll sell them out? That Iâll betray everything for you?â she said, turning her gaze fully back to (Y/n). âYouâre a child playing war. You have no idea what weâve sacrificed to keep the truth buried. What the Resistance gave us in exchange for silence. You think youâre righteous now because the Covenant gave you a uniform and purpose -â
âI think,â (Y/n) interrupted, her voice eerily calm, âthat youâre wasting my time. And I donât like when people waste my time.â
She stepped forward slowly, her boots clicking softly against the metal floor. Hux remained just behind her, a silent force of support, eyes sharp and watching.
Her mother sneered. âYouâre going to try to frighten me, is that it? You forget that I raised you. You were always too soft to do what needed to be done.â
(Y/n) stopped directly beside her.
âI was,â she admitted. âBut Iâm not her anymore.â
Then her eyes darkened. The golden glow in her irises sharpened, deepening into something ancient, something primal. She let her hand rest on the edge of the interrogation table, not threatening, but suggestive. The air changed, subtle and slow, like the pressure before a storm.
Her motherâs composure wavered just slightly.
âYou may be working with ex-Covenants who simply studied Umbral technique,â (Y/n) said quietly. âBut Iâm the Umbral. While your little faction can barely attempt to reach our frequencies, I can reach nerves you werenât even aware that you had. And unlike them,â she nodded toward the security panel, âI wonât need a droid to do it.â
Hux said nothing, merely backed away to allow her space as he sensed an urge of bloodlust in her tone. His silence was approval, his gaze intense as he watched the scene unfold.
Her mother scoffed, but it was weaker this time. âYouâre bluffing.â
(Y/n) smirked sadistically.
She extended her hand with slow, deliberate precision, brushing her fingertips near the side of her motherâs neck, just close enough for her mother to feel the tips of the preternatural sharpness of her nails, the way her presence seemed to sink into the skin.
Her mother stiffened.
Still, (Y/n) didnât touch her besides the tickling sensation. Not yet. She let the words work their way under her motherâs skin.
âYou can talk,â she said softly. âOr I can peel the truth out of you. Slowly .â
It wasnât a threat. It was a promise.
Her motherâs jaw tensed. Her eyes betrayed her as she tried to maintain her pride. Her hands tugged slightly against the restraints.
âYou wouldnât -â she began.
(Y/n) interrupted, her voice hollow and cold. âYou gave me nothing. You lied to me. Disowned me. I have no remorse for your pain.â
That, more than anything, made her mother flinch.
And for the first time since entering the chamber, the womanâs eyes shifted. Not with defiance, but with recognition.
A crack.
Hux observed it all silently, his hands still folded neatly behind his back. But there was a look in his eyes now. Measured pride, and something else deeper, more personal. Watching (Y/n) become who she needed to be. Commanding. Ruthless. Unshaken.
But he could see the strain beneath the resolve, beneath the fury, the remnants of a daughter still buried under years of betrayal.
Her mother finally exhaled. But no information followed.
(Y/n) leaned in closer, nails beginning to press into her neck with trained precision. Even with barely any pressure, her motherâs eyes widened enough to reveal the amount of pain she was experiencing.
âI would rethink your analysis of what you think Iâm capable of. This isnât just loyalty to the Covenant or the First Order.â Her nails pressed further and the older womanâs mouth gaped, veins beginning to swell on her skull from strain. âThis is the wrath of a daughter long forgotten.â
Suddenly, her nails pierced through her skin and dug through directly to her nerves.Â
Varo stood just outside the reinforced blast doors, arms folded, leaning against the wall like he was waiting for a caf refill instead of an interrogation to end. For a while, it was quiet.
Then -
A muffled scream erupted from within the interrogation chamber. Sharp. Definitely pained.
One of the stormtroopers stiffened. The other glanced nervously at Varo.
Varo didnât even flinch. He just raised a brow, cocked his head towards the door with a smirk, and muttered, âThere it is.â
The Duskborns didnât so much as blink.
âAbout time,â Varo added. âThought (L/n) might actually try diplomacy for a second there⌠A brief, terrifying second.â
The stormtroopers exchanged an awkward glance.
âIs that standard?â one of them asked, as another muffled cry echoed from behind the doors.
Varo shrugged. âDepends on your definition of standard. Sheâs doing the thing where she doesnât blink, right?â He looked to the Duskborn on the left who held a datapad with surveillance of the interrogation. They gave a subtle nod.
âYeah,â Varo continued. âThatâs her âIâm gonna extract your soul through your teethâ face. Totally fine.â
Another scream. One that sounded like it came with tears.
One of the troopers cleared his throat. âShould we, uh, alert medical, sir?â
Varo snorted. âTo have them walk into that room and spontaneously combust? No thanks. Anyways, if it gets too quiet in there, then you should worry.â
The Duskborn beside him let out a low, approving hum. Close to a laugh.
Varo grinned. âBest seat in the house, boys. Youâre witnessing a master at work. And by âwitnessingâ I mean âlistening to a war crime in real time.ââ
He glanced back toward the chamber doors, tone softening slightly beneath the bravado.
âSheâll be alright,â he added quietly, more to himself than anyone else.
Then another muffled scream rang out - panicked this time - and Varo clapped his hands together once.
âWelp. Thatâs the sound of truth. Sounds like we got what we need.â
After a few minutes of silence, the door hissed open with a hydraulic groan, leaving behind only a faint echo of the storm it had followed.
General Hux stepped out first, composed as ever, though his jaw was tight and his gloves slightly askew. Subtle signs that heâd been more involved than he liked to appear. Behind him, (Y/n) emerged in silence.
Her posture was upright, but her steps were heavy. Her eyes, dark and unreadable, bore none of their usual sharp focus an afterglow of restraint barely kept in check.
Varo stood straighter as they appeared, arms unfolding from where theyâd been crossed.
âAh,â he said with a short nod. âSo⌠good news or do I prep another cell?â
(Y/n) didnât answer. She brushed past him like a shadow, her expression carved from stone. For a second, it looked like she might keep walking. But then she paused.
Without turning, she said lowly, âShe broke.â
Varo raised his brows. âNo kidding?â
âShe gave us a name,â Hux confirmed, stepping to stand beside (Y/n). âAnd a destination. Weâll be debriefing shortly.â
The two Duskborns exchanged glances, subtle but meaningful. The troopers remained silent, uncertain whether to feel relieved or unnerved.
Varo leaned in slightly, his voice pitched just for (Y/n). âYou alright?â
âIâm fine,â she replied, her tone clipped and automatic.
Hux watched her carefully, noting the stiff line of her shoulders and the way her fingers flexed slightly. Telltale signs of unrest.
âShe did quite well, I must say,â Hux added evenly, still watching her. âAdmirably.â
(Y/n) didnât thank him. She just gave a short nod and said, âExcuse me,â before striding off down the hall.
Varo let out a breath and looked over at Hux. âYou sure sheâs alright?â
âNo,â Hux replied without missing a beat. âBut she will be.â
Varo gave a short chuckle. âYou always say that like itâs a fact.â
Hux adjusted his gloves slowly. âBecause with her, it is.â
Chapter 6
Pairing - General Armitage Hux x Reader
*Set prior to The Force Awakens*
Summary -
Forged in blood. Bound by duty. Broken by desire.
(Y/n) (L/n) is a deadly Umbral of the Covenant - an elite order of vampires sworn to the First Order. Her assignment: serve as General Hux's personal guard. But as buried secrets surface and a rogue vampire faction rises, (Y/n) is forced to confront a past she can't outrun - and feelings she was never meant to have.
In a war of blood, betrayal, and duty, the deadliest threat may be the one that lies still in her chest.
Series contains - Blood, violence, battles/war, betrayal/angst, eventual smut, slow burn
The air was cool in the generalâs office. It was later in the afternoon, the soft glow of artificial light bathing the room in sterile illumination.
General Hux stood at his desk, sorting through a series of final mission details before the teamâs departure. His usual precision was evident, and his focus was absolute, but the silence in the room was not one of ease. It felt like the calm before the storm. A storm he was about to launch, and one that would, inevitably, affect those around him.
(Y/n) stood at the side of his office, leaning against the wall, but her fingers were tapping lightly against the fabric of her uniform, a subtle movement that betrayed her usual composure. Her eyes were fixed on the floor, unfocused. There was a nervous energy to her now, a tension that lingered in the air between them.
Hux glanced over at her, sharp eyes catching the fidgeting, the clenched jaw, the way she tried to appear still but couldnât quite hide the anxiety beneath. For a brief moment, he was caught off guard. (Y/n) was rarely anything other than perfectly controlled, an elite soldier.Â
Seeing her this way, on edge and uncertain, was unsettling to say the least.
âWhatâs on your mind?â he asked, his voice a touch more probing than usual. The words held the more relaxed tone they had begun to grow accustomed to with each other, but there was also an undercurrent of something resembling care.
She stiffened at the sound of his voice, but only for a moment. It was as if she was trying to reset herself, to shove the anxiety back into the dark recesses of her mind, but it refused to stay there.
âIâm⌠fine, sir,â she replied, the words coming out a little too quickly, too tightly.
Hux raised an eyebrow, not fooled by the performance. He walked over to where she stood, stopping just a pace away from her. He wasnât physically imposing. There was no need for it. But his proximity was enough to make the air between them feel charged.
âYouâre not fine,â he observed quietly, his tone steady but unyielding.
(Y/n) bit down on her lower lip, her shoulders tensing further. She wasnât looking at him, still staring at the floor, though the distant edge in her gaze seemed to suggest she wasnât fully present.
He could feel the shift in the room, the subtle but noticeable change in her energy. (Y/n), the formidable warrior who had so often seemed untouchable, was standing here in front of him, not hiding her vulnerability.Â
It was strange to someone like him. No one on the ship would ever open up to him in such a way, and yet the fiercest warrior he had ever met was cracking right before his very eyes.
âWhy are you worried about him?â Hux asked, his voice softer now. It was rare for him to show any degree of gentleness, but there was something in (Y/n)âs uncharacteristic behavior that pulled at him.Â
(Y/n) was usually the one others depended on, the one who gave strength to others when they needed it most. She was the protector, the shield.
But now? She was the one who needed protection. And, for the first time, Hux saw it clearly. He saw her as more than just the cold, calculating soldier everyone else saw. He saw the person beneath.
Her breath hitched slightly, and she stiffened even more, as if bracing herself for something she didnât want to face. He couldnât help but notice how much the uncertainty of the mission, of the risk to Varo, was affecting her.
He began, his voice lower now, with an unexpected softness that she couldnât ignore. âHeâs trained. Theyâre all trained. If anyone can handle themselves in that situation, itâs him.â
But she shook her head, biting back whatever she wanted to say. âHeâs not just a close comrade. HeâsâŚâ She faltered, as if the words didnât quite fit together. âHeâs the only person I have left who saw me before all of this. Before the Covenant. Before I became what I am now.â
There it was again. The rare slip. The cracks in her armor. She wasnât just a soldier to be viewed from the outside. She was a person who had lived through something, who had experienced loss, betrayal, and isolation in ways few would ever understand.
Hux studied her, his gaze sharp but not unkind. âI know,â he said simply. âI know what itâs like to have your future determined by others. To be bound to something you never chose. And I know what itâs like to lose people. It doesnât get easier, but you learn how to live with it. You have to if you want to survive.â
(Y/n) lifted her gaze, her eyes meeting his for the first time in what felt like hours. She didnât say anything in response, no words of thanks or gratitude. But Hux saw something akin to understanding pass between them.
âGet some rest,â he said, turning away. âYouâll need it. The mission launches in just a few hours.â
She nodded absently, her mind still caught on the thoughts she couldnât shake. As she started to leave the room, she paused for just a second.
âThank you,â she said quietly, as if the words were hard-earned.
Hux gave a brief nod, holding her gaze before she finally turned and left.
And as she walked out of his office, her footsteps quieter than usual, Hux stayed behind for a moment longer, staring at the empty space where she had been standing, a strange feeling settling into his chest. As much as he tried to shake the thought, it lingered.Â
Hours later, after tossing and turning and not getting any sleep, (Y/n) found herself heading to the hangar to see the squad off.
The hum of the hangar was deafening as they geared up. The noise of loading crates, preparing fighters, and the steady thrumming of engines filled the space, but it was the quiet bubble of tension around (Y/n) and Varo that made the moment feel charged. (Y/n) stood near the side of the bay, watching the First Order soldiers make sure their gear was locked in place before the operation began.
Her eyes were focused on Varo, who was making his final adjustments to his gear, ensuring everything was in place. His usual easy going demeanor seemed absent, replaced by the quiet intensity of someone about to step into the unknown. She was well aware of the weight he carried. Not just the weight of the mission, but the weight of the friendship they shared. The only friend she had left, and now he was going off into danger without her for the first time.
âReady to go?â (Y/n)âs voice broke the silence, though it wasnât without hesitation.
Varo glanced up from his harness he was adjusting and gave her a faint, lopsided grin. âYou know me. Always ready.â He continued adjusting his equipment, but there was a slight tremor in his movements, a rare moment of vulnerability that (Y/n) noticed.
For a long moment, she just stared at him. Her gaze softened, and her hand instinctively reached out to adjust one of his straps, smoothing it down to avoid any discomfort on the mission. It was an automatic gesture, something they both knew well. Small moments of familiarity between soldiers who had fought together for years.
âI wish I could go in your place.â she said quietly, her tone softer than usual. She tried to hide the worry in her voice, but it was there, clear as day.
Varo stopped what he was doing, raising an eyebrow and looking down at her. âYou know Iâm not letting you off the hook that easily. Besides, youâre needed here with Hux. Heâd be lost without you.â
Her brow furrowed at the mention of the general, and she quickly brushed it aside, focusing on the task at hand. âI donât like you being out there alone. The squad can handle it, but I⌠I just donât like it.â
Varo smiled, that familiar spark returning to his eyes, though it didnât fully reach the corners of his mouth. âYou always were the protective one.â He nudged her lightly with his elbow, a teasing move that was meant to lighten the moment. âIâll be fine. You know me, Iâve been through worse than this.â
(Y/n)âs gaze lingered on him for a second longer before she nodded, but it was clear that she wasnât convinced. Her next words came with a sigh, a mix of frustration and unease. âI hate how I canât always control everything, Varo. What if something happens? What if -â
âNothing is going to happen,â Varo interrupted, his voice firm but comforting. He stepped closer to her, placing a hand on her shoulder in a rare show of support. âWeâve been trained by possibly the best academy in the galaxy. I know how to stay alive. And Iâll come back. I always do.â
For a moment, they stood there, the bustling hangar a distant hum in the background. It was just the two of them, the unspoken bond between them hanging heavy in the air.
She swallowed the lump in her throat. âYou better. Donât make me come rescue you.â
Varo chuckled softly, the sound a brief relief in the tension-filled atmosphere. âIf you insist. But youâll have to catch me first.â
She shot him a sharp look, a brief flash of her usual intensity crossing her face. âIâm fast enough.â
Varoâs grin widened, and he clapped her on the back. âThatâs the (Y/n) I know. â
(Y/n)âs lips twitched upwards slightly, the barest hint of a smile breaking through her otherwise stoic demeanor. âJust donât get yourself killed.â
âI wonât,â Varo replied, his tone turning more serious. He took a step back, nodding towards the squad waiting by the ship. âAlright, I better go. Stay safe here, alright?â
(Y/n) nodded, watching him for a moment as he started to walk towards the shuttle, his footsteps echoing in the hangar. She stood there, still. Her eyes followed his retreating figure and something inside her twisted. It was always so much easier when they were together.
âVaro,â she called out before he could get too far.
He paused and looked back at her, raising an eyebrow.
âBe careful,â she added softly, her voice uncharacteristically quiet.
He gave her a smile, the one sheâd seen hundreds of times before, the one that told her everything would be okay. âAlways am.â
And with that, he disappeared into the shuttle, leaving (Y/n) standing alone in the hangar. Her heart was heavy with unspoken words and the quiet hope that everything would, indeed, be okay.
For now, she could only wait.
Once they left, she stood in the hangar for a moment before striding back towards the bridge where the general would be waiting.Â
It was quieter than usual, as if the very walls of the ship were holding their breath. Lights blinked rhythmically across consoles, officers working silently, their glances occasionally flicking towards the command platform where General Hux and (Y/n) stood.
They werenât speaking. Not yet.
Hux stood with his hands clasped neatly behind his back, staring out at the stars through the viewport. There was a sharpness to his expression, his usual composure tinged with a trace of unease.
(Y/n) stood beside him, not in her usual rigid stance, but more reserved, arms folded, her eyes flicking across the terminals. Her gaze was distant, but focused. Waiting, calculating. Her heightened senses kept her attuned to every shift of movement, every new blip on the screen.
Still, no update.
âTheyâre late checking in,â she said at last, her voice quiet.
Hux didnât move. âA few minutes behind schedule is not unusual for a stealth insertion. You know that.â
(Y/n)âs jaw tightened, but she gave a short nod. âDoesnât make it any easier.â
He glanced toward her, just for a moment. âWorried?â
She didnât deny it. âYes.â
A pause hung between them. The bridge crew pretended not to notice their exchange, though a few subtle glances were exchanged among them. No one had ever seen the general speaking this calmly with anyone, especially not one of the Covenant.
âIâm not fond of silence before battle either,â Hux admitted quietly, returning his eyes to the viewport. âWaiting for someone else to move first is always the worst part.â
She looked at him. âYouâve waited on plenty of battlefields, Iâm sure.â
âYes.â A faint, sardonic smile touched his lips. âBut I prefer the part where Iâm giving orders and watching the results. The part where things are in my control.â
(Y/n) let out a soft exhale that was nearly a laugh. âSo you donât like silence either.â
âNo,â he replied, tone flat. âI despise it.â
Their shared stillness resumed, but it wasnât uncomfortable this time. Just suspended.
Until a sudden chime broke through the quiet. An officer at a lower console straightened sharply.
âGeneral,â he called, voice clear, âwe have a transmission from the advance team. The squad landed and is moving into position now. No contact with hostiles yet, but visibility is low.â
Both Hux and (Y/n) turned at once, stepping down from the command platform towards the console.
âPut it on the central display,â Hux ordered.
The large screen at the center of the bridge flickered to life, showing grainy feed from the squadâs body cams. Thermal vision, silent hand signals, movement through low-light terrain.
(Y/n)âs sharp eyes scanned the footage instantly. âTheyâre moving well. Clean formation. But this terrain⌠itâs too open.â
âTheyâll adapt,â Hux replied, though he watched the feed just as intently.
She nodded. âDrenn will keep them sharp.â
The atmosphere on the bridge was tense. The buzz of activity faded into the background as (Y/n) and Hux stood side by side, their attention locked on the holographic displays before them.
It was a quiet, methodical operation.Â
(Y/n) stood just beside Hux, her eyes tracking every detail on the feed. Her mind was elsewhere, despite the seemingly calm exterior she projected. She felt the gnawing anxiety she hadnât quite shaken off when Varo left, the unease creeping into her chest. She trusted Varoâs skills, but there was still the lingering thought of the unknown.Â
âAny changes in the feed?â The general asked after too many moments of silence. Huxâs voice was low, but precise, cutting through her thoughts.
(Y/n) blinked, focusing on the screen. âNo, nothing yet. Itâs still the same. Theyâre just watching the outer perimeter for now. No signs of the faction yet.â
âGood,â Hux responded, eyes narrowing as he observed the footage. âKeep me updated if you see anything that changes.â
(Y/n) gave a sharp nod, though it was clear from the tension in her posture that she was already on edge. Her gaze flitted between the feeds, watching Varo and the squad move through the landscape, their movements fluid and practiced. Every corner they turned, every shadow they passed, felt like an eternity to her. She could feel the weight of the unknown pressing down, her thoughts drifting back to the moment before the mission when she had wished she could go instead.
âHow long until we can make contact if something goes wrong?â (Y/n) asked, her voice laced with quiet concern.
âHalf an hour,â Hux answered, his voice still calm, though (Y/n) noticed the faintest crease in his brow. He, too, was tense. âWeâll keep monitoring. We canât risk alerting them if theyâre aware of our presence.â
(Y/n) didnât respond at first, her eyes narrowing as she watched Varo and the team continue their sweep. The slow, deliberate pace they kept felt agonizing, but it was necessary. Every inch of the mission was calculated, but even the smallest mistake could jeopardize everything.
She felt a strange, familiar tightness in her chest as she saw Varoâs team approach a set of crumbling buildings, their silhouettes casting long shadows in the dim light.
âEverythingâs moving according to plan,â (Y/n) said, though her voice lacked conviction. âI just wish -â
Hux turned to her, his gaze steady but piercing. âYou were out there with them,â he finished for her.
(Y/n) hesitated before nodding once. She hadnât realized how much sheâd let the feeling show.
Hux was silent for a long moment, his eyes flicking back to the screen. âDrennâs capable,â he said, as though trying to reassure her, though there was something oddly personal about the way he said it, as though he understood her worry more than heâd let on.
She didnât reply immediately, choosing instead to focus back on the screen. âI know. I just⌠I know how dangerous this could be.â She glanced at him, the briefest flash of vulnerability crossing her face.
Huxâs eyes lingered on her for a second longer than usual. âYouâve been through worse to get to where you are now. Heâll be fine.â
Her gaze returned to the screen, the words not quite enough to quiet her inner fears, but she appreciated the effort. As the minutes dragged on, she leaned in closer, her posture tightening with each new frame on the display. She didnât want to admit how much she was starting to rely on the quiet support Hux was offering at that moment. How much it was beginning to matter that he was there.
The hour passed slowly, but as the operation continued, the tension in the room began to build.Â
Then, a sudden shift in the feed caught her attention.Â
The movement was erratic, flashes of motion in the distance, too quick to be natural. The squad had stumbled onto something.
âWait,â (Y/n) murmured, stepping forward. She turned to the console and her fingers moved over the controls, zooming in on the image before walking back over. âTheyâve spotted something.â
Hux stood straighter, his gaze sharpening as he too focused on the newly updated feed. âWhat are we looking at?â
(Y/n)âs eyes narrowed. âItâs not just a few stragglersâŚâ She held her breath, eyes widening as realization kicked in. âTheyâre surrounded - this isnât right.â
The screen displayed the incoming movement. Too many figures, too fast to track. The squad was moving into a choke point.
âGet me a full analysis of the surrounding area,â Hux ordered a nearby officer sharply, his voice cold and commanding. âWe need to know if thereâs a larger force there, and if theyâre closing in.â
The officer didnât hesitate, their fingers moving swiftly to initiate the commands.
Huxâs eyes flicked over to (Y/n) once again, the coolness in his expression momentarily fading. He didnât say anything, but something in his posture softened, just enough for her to notice.
The situation on the feed escalated, and (Y/n) could feel the gravity of it. With the team out there, in the line of fire, she couldnât help but feel a growing unease that she couldnât shake.
âHold on, Varo,â she whispered to herself.
The tension on the bridge intensified as the analysis the officer ran illuminated more troubling details. The surrounding area, once thought to be clear, was now crowded with figures, movement that didnât match the squadâs advance.Â
For a moment, (Y/n)âs mind raced with the possibilities after the officer reported.Â
Had they been ambushed? Was this a setup?Â
Her eyes darted between the surveillance screens and the data feeds she was receiving.
âDamn it,â (Y/n) muttered, her fingers flying over the console, zooming in on the feed more to get a better look at the incoming forces. âWhoever they are, thereâs more of them. Weâve got a larger group. Not just the squad anymore.â
Huxâs gaze sharpened as he leaned over her shoulder just behind her, his attention now fully locked onto the feed. âAre we looking at enemy combatants?â
(Y/n) shook her head quickly. âNot entirely. There are more⌠but they donât look like the rogues. These are⌠Well, theyâre just as coordinated, but donât follow the same pattern.â
The figures in the background were moving with the precision of seasoned soldiers, but their tactics were far too refined to be random insurgents. And then, as if on cue, the officerâs analysis returned an unexpected match.
âGeneral, theyâre Covenant,â they said, voice tinged with surprise.Â
âCovenant?â (Y/n) questioned as she shot the officer a look before turning to the general. âDid we call Covenant reinforcements?â He shook his head, just as stunned.Â
A silence fell over the bridge for a moment, as the officers took in her words. Hux remained stone-faced, but there was a flicker of something in his eyes, something that might have been disbelief, or perhaps curiosity.
âWhy would the Covenant be aiding the squad?â Hux asked, his voice low and deliberate, though his mind was clearly whirring, processing this new development.Â
âThis doesnât seem like a coincidence.â (Y/n)âs voice was firm, though the concern was evident. She watched as the small group of Covenant soldiers moved swiftly, expertly clearing the area around the squad without hesitation. Their skill and methodical execution suggested they were there to protect the squad, not target them. âItâs a controlled assault. Theyâre securing the perimeter.â
(Y/n)âs hand hovered over the console as the squad pressed forward, their formation tight and coordinated with the Covenantâs. âThey could have been on a recon mission and ran into them.â She hesitated.Â
Huxâs lips pressed into a thin line as he considered the implications.Â
The feed revealed flashes of movement, but the squadâs communication remained solid, confirming that the Covenant was not only aiding them, they were taking command of the area with Varoâs order, clearing the perimeter with precise strikes. Within moments, the area was secured.Â
Huxâs voice cut through the tense silence on the bridge. âHas the situation stabilized?â
(Y/n) watched intently as the rogue faction retreated into a corner, pinned down by the Covenant and squad. âItâs under control,â she confirmed, though there was a trace of disbelief in her voice. âTheyâve secured the perimeter. The rogues are cornered.âÂ
Suddenly, (Y/n) honed in on one of the squadâs feeds showing the captured rogues as they were being detained. Hux watched as she stepped closer to the video of one woman, a familiar face she hadnât seen since before joining the Covenant.Â
âUmbral?â The general asked carefully as her lips parted in disbelief, face reflecting contained rage and pain. She took a staggered step away from the feed, swallowing before she quickly schooled her expression. But her eyes couldnât lie.Â
âMay I step away for a moment, sir?â She asked in a trembling tone without even glancing in his direction. The general hesitated before approving.
âYou may.â His eyes followed her as she immediately stormed out of the bridge.
The door to Huxâs office hissed shut behind (Y/n), sealing her in silence.
She didnât make it far. Just a few steps in before the weight of what sheâd seen crashed down over her like a collapsing hull. Her hands clenched into fists at her sides as her breathing quickened, shallow and sharp.
(Y/n) stood at the edge of the main living space, her posture tense but composed. Her dark clothing was simple, travel-ready. A small satchel was slung across her back. Her mother sat stiffly on the couch, a glass of crimson liquid in her hand. Her father stood behind her with arms folded.Â
âYou canât possibly be serious.â Her father quipped.
âI am. Varo and I are leaving by morning.â
âYouâve been spending far too much time with that fanatic.â Her mother spat.
The image was still burned into her mind. Sitting among the detained rogues, restrained, eyes hollow. The woman hadnât changed much. At least not in the way that mattered. That cold stare, the one that had once looked down on (Y/n) with bitter disappointment, was still there.
(Y/n) answered, growing louder. âHe showed me the truth. The ruins. The archives. The names of our people they tried to erase.â
âStories, (Y/n)! Lies, ghosts! Youâre choosing to chase vengeance over reason!â Her father yelled, patience as thin as silk.
(Y/n) responded with the same volume. âIâm choosing to stop hiding! To not let the Resistance erase what they did to us! The history of our people that youâre so casually tossing aside all because youâll get a little more money in your pocket!â
âAnd you think the Covenant is the answer? The First Order?â Her mother asked sternly, choosing to ignore her last comment. âWhat youâve done is a disgrace to our family,â the older woman said coldly, her voice calm, but only on the surface. Beneath it was fear, trembling and bitter.Â
âYou left me no choice.â She bit back.
(Y/n) stumbled forward and pressed her hands against the edge of the generalâs desk, her head bowed. Her nails scraped against the cold metal, leaving faint indentations as she shook her head over and over again.
No. Itâs not her. It canât be.
But it was.
âI didnât ask for this,â (Y/n) choked as her eyes began to brim with tears.Â
A cracked sound escaped her throat. Half snarl, half sob. She pushed away from the desk, pacing like a caged animal. Her boots thudded against the floor as she moved, erratic and unmoored.
Her hands shook as she pressed them to her temples, trying to force the memories away.Â
(Y/n) gritted her teeth as her fangs finally extended, the sound of her crying out combined with a monstrous hiss-like roar. She couldnât think like this. Couldnât feel like this. Not now. Not again.
Silence stretched across the room, heavy with tension. Her mother set down her glass and stood, golden eyes narrowing.
âIf you walk out that door, (Y/n)⌠You are no daughter of ours.â
(Y/n)âs throat tightened, a few tears finally escaping silently. There was no outburst, no scream. Just a slow, internal breaking. She squared her shoulders.
âYou already made that choice when you decided fortune was more important than our people.â
She turned, walking towards the door. Her hand lingered on the panel for just a second.
Without turning back to look at them, she finalized her decision. âGoodbye.â
She collapsed onto the floor on her knees, hunched over as she hugged herself. Her breathing slowed, but the tension clung to her shoulders like armor she couldnât shed.
There was no comfort. No absolution.
Only the low hum of the Finalizer around her, and the knowledge that her past had come roaring back into the present with a face she had never wanted to see again.
And now, she would have to face her.
Not as a daughter.
But as an affiliate of the First Order. And a child of the Covenant.
Chapter 5
Pairing - General Armitage Hux x Reader
*Set prior to The Force Awakens*
Summary -
Forged in blood. Bound by duty. Broken by desire.
(Y/n) (L/n) is a deadly Umbral of the Covenant - an elite order of vampires sworn to the First Order. Her assignment: serve as General Hux's personal guard. But as buried secrets surface and a rogue vampire faction rises, (Y/n) is forced to confront a past she can't outrun - and feelings she was never meant to have.
In a war of blood, betrayal, and duty, the deadliest threat may be the one that lies still in her chest.
Series contains - Blood, violence, battles/war, betrayal/angst, eventual smut, slow burn
The two remained in the War Room as Varo and Phasma joined them soon after. A large tactical display hovered between them, showcasing the sectors suspected to harbor the rogue threat.
General Hux stood at the head of the table again, hands behind his back. To his right stood (Y/n), and on the opposite end of the table stood Phasma and Varo, their expressions focused, but the tension in the room was palpable.
âWe have authorization to act. Now we need to figure out a way to track them down and find them.â The general began.
Phasma followed. âTheyâre ghosts,â she said flatly. âNot a single trace left behind. No footprints. No blood. Just bodies.â
âThatâs the Covenant for you,â Varo muttered grimly. âThey know how to vanish. And theyâre using it.â
âNot just vanish.â (Y/n) added. âEach strike weâve reviewed⌠theyâre not looking to make a statement. Theyâre gathering something.â
Phasma tilted her head in question. âIntel?â
âOr resources.â She replied. âTheyâre choosing their targets too precisely. They know our protocols. Our rotations. What we have and where. Every time they attack, they raid the location.â
âThen we bait them.â Hux suggested. He stepped forward and gestured toward a flickering system on the map. âThese three supply stations are within striking distance of the last known rogue activity. We plant the idea that one of them is carrying classified tech and leak the information through a Resistance channel we know theyâve intercepted in the past.â
Phasma hummed in thought. âRisky. But controlled. I can reroute stormtroopers for concealed perimeter placements.â
âI donât want any engagement.â Hux ordered. âObservation only. Identify, record, and pull back. The moment we can confirm their identities, we strike with the Covenantâs backing.â
âWeâll need more than scouts, sir.â Varo warned. âThese arenât just any rogues. We engage with standard units, we lose more good soldiers.â
The general nodded in agreement. âWhich is why you -â He looked at Varo. â- will be embedded in the region as a liaison. Youâll move freely between units and help direct operations. No one else has the experience to recognize them for what they are.â
(Y/n) shifted and offered a warning to Varo. âIf they smell you, theyâll come out. If any of them knew you before they defectedâŚâ
Her gaze sharpened.
âThey might want to carry out unfinished business.â
Varoâs expression was unreadable, but something cold flickered in his eyes.
âThen let them try.â He threatened indirectly. âIâm very persuasive when it comes to traitors.â
âTrust me, Iâm aware.â (Y/n) replied simply.
Hux tapped the console, confirming the initial troop deployment orders.
âBegin rotating squads to the target sectors under routine drills. Make it look mundane.â
âTheyâll never know weâre watching.â Phasma consoled him.
âGood. Then itâs settled.â
âDead rogues or silence,â Varo started. âEither way, weâll bring order back to the Covenant.âÂ
Later on, as the night cycle began, the corridors with higher command personnel quarters were dimly lit, lights cycling to mimic planetary night. Most of the officers had retreated by this time. A hush blanketed the area, the kind of silence that only came during these artificial nights in the belly of a warship.
(Y/n) sat alone at a secluded alcove in the corridor, an architectural oddity tucked near the viewport wall. The viewport stretched tall and wide, revealing the swirling stars and the velvet void beyond. A built-in bench sat along one side of the wall next to the window, lit only by the glow of passing starlight.
She sat with one leg curled up beneath her, still dressed in her uniform but with the zipper of the bodysuit around her neck slightly undone for breathing room. A small blood pack, half-drained, rested beside her hip. Her datapad was forgotten in her lap, the screen dimmed. Her gaze was fixed on the stars, lost in quiet thought.
Her ears then honed in as she heard a set of footsteps further down the corridor. Measured. Familiar.
(Y/n) didnât turn to look. She already knew who it was.
âI didnât expect anyone to be awake in this sector.â The general commented in a quieter tone.
âNeither did I.â
There was a pause. Hux stood there, considering her. Not just the strange placement of her presence, but the rare image of her relaxed posture and unguarded expression.
âThis isnât regulation seating.â He pointed out. (Y/n) glanced over at him in a playful deadpan.
âAre you here to enforce it, General?â
He let out the faintest sound, almost a scoff. Then, unexpectedly, he stepped closer and took a seat beside her on the bench, maintaining a respectful space between them.
After a moment, the general began to speak again.
âThis part of the ship was designed to house long-term High Command. They included comfort features⌠but few of us make time to use them.â
âItâs the only place Iâve found that doesnât feel like war.â (Y/n) said in a more hushed tone.
A long silence fell between them. Outside the viewport, stars drifted past slowly, distant and indifferent.
The general hummed. âI find comfort in order.â (Y/n) tossed him a pointed look - as if to say âno, really?â - and he clicked his tongue in minor annoyance. âIt makes things⌠predictable. Safe.â
He paused.
(Y/n) turned her head slightly to look at him. âWhy do you think itâs safe?â
He looked at her now, his expression more open than sheâd ever seen. âI think predictability can keep a person alive. But it doesnât protect you from harsh realities in life.â
The words hung between them for a moment too long.
âNo⌠it doesnât.â (Y/n) agreed softly.
She looked away again, fingers absently brushing her datapad.
âI thought I knew my people. What we stood for. What we bled for. But now Iâm not so sure.â
âYouâre referring to the rogues.â
âIâm referring to those I once trusted. Those who chose to spit on everything that kept us alive. After what the Resistance did to our kind⌠I canât understand how they could turn their backs on the Covenant or First Order.â
Hux thought for a moment before he answered. âPain doesnât forge loyalty. Not for everyone. For some, it just festers⌠until all they want is to be the one holding the knife. And they wonât care whoâs at the end of the blade.â
(Y/n) watched him closely now, seeing the way his jaw tensed as he said it. âYou speak like someone who knows.â
âI do.â He answered flatly.
Silence again. But this time, it wasnât cold. It was shared. Weighted, but equal.
After a beat, (Y/n) leaned back slightly against the wall, letting her head rest there as she stared up.
âI donât regret joining the Covenant or becoming an Umbral. But some nights⌠I wonder who I wouldâve been if I didnât.âÂ
âYouâd still be dangerous.â Hux quipped.
A ghost of a smile crossed her lips. Just a flicker. âAnd youâd still be impossible.â
âThat almost counts as a compliment.â His lips twitched in a smirk.
Another moment of quiet.Â
(Y/n)âs gaze was fixed on the stars outside, but her awareness was sharp. She could feel the generalâs presence beside her as if it were its own gravitational field. And he, for all his rigid posture and measured breathing, had not moved since sitting down.
The silence lingered, no longer heavy with unspoken thoughts, but⌠tentative. Curious.
âYou seem more yourself.â Hux suddenly pointed out.
âI thought I was always myself.â She replied curiously.
âYes, but⌠youâre more calm. Not as stiff. Itâs refreshing⌠and it suits you.â
She glanced over at him, a single brow lifting. âWell, I do expect myself to know how to separate professionalism from personal matters, if thatâs what you mean. Iâm just careful with who sees what side.â She then turned to face him slightly. âHow would you know what suits me?â
âI pay attention. Youâre not the only observant one here.â
Her lips parted slightly as they stared at one another, but whatever retort she was about to make was lost when her knee brushed lightly against his.
She stilled immediately. So did he.
The touch had been accidental. Casual contact in the narrow space of the bench, but it sparked like static, subtle and unmistakable.
Neither of them moved away.
(Y/n) shifted her gaze back to the window, face unreadable save for the faint shift in her posture. Hux pretended to return to his datapad, his grip on it just a little too firm, his jaw set with a precision that was almost⌠performative.
âApologies.â (Y/n) muttered.
âUnnecessary.â
She looked down at her hands. He tapped once on the datapad, but didnât really read whatever was on the screen.
The silence returned. Not awkward, but charged. It buzzed faintly beneath their skin.
(Y/n), sensing the tension still in his posture, allowed herself a rare act of rebellion against her instincts. She shifted just a bit closer. Not enough to touch again. Just enough to make it noticeable.
And Hux noticed. But what he noticed even more was how she became even more tranquil after she had done so.
She didnât look at him, and if it were possible, her cheeks wouldâve been tinted. The corner of her mouth twitched faintly. Barely.
âItâs strange.â She spoke.
âWhat is?â
âSitting still. Doing nothing. And yet⌠it doesnât feel like a waste of time.â
He studied her carefully now. âIt isnât.â
Another moment passed. A pause not meant to be filled.
And then Hux stood, smooth and precise as usual. But the movement was slower. He tucked his datapad under one arm, glancing down at her with something unreadable in his gaze.
âItâs late.â
âSo is everything on this ship.â She jested.
He allowed the corner of his mouth to lift, just a ghost of a smile, and then turned.
But just before he stepped away, he hesitated.
âIâll expect you in my office at 0600.â
âOf course.â
âBring tea.â
She blinked.
(Y/n), feigning seriousness, replied. âBlood or sugar?â
He glanced at her, a faint glint in his eye. Amused. Surprised.
âSurprise me.â
And with that, he disappeared down the corridor, boots silent on the floor.
Left alone again, (Y/n) stared out at the stars.
Her body still remembered the brief brush of contact. And her expression softened with something akin to warmth.
The next morning, General Hux was already at his desk, filtering through whatever came in while he was asleep. He didnât look up immediately when the door slid open with a soft hiss.
(Y/n) stepped in, punctual to the second. In one hand she carried a thermal cup. In the other, a sealed blood pack.
She approached the desk and placed the cup neatly within his reach.
âSurprise.â She greeted flatly.
Hux raised his eyes. His gaze flicked between the items. Then his brow lifted, barely.
âYou brought both.â
âI like to cover contingencies⌠that and Iâm starving.â She added as she twisted the cap and began to drink from it, the cool liquid easing down her throat.
He regarded her for a long moment, then reached for the cup. Steam rose from it as he took a measured sip.
âSugar.â He hummed. âYou didnât risk the blood. Wise.â
âI need my commanding officer awake, not disgusted.â
He smirked faintly at that, a rare expression, short-lived but genuine. (Y/n) caught it but didnât comment.
For the first time since sheâd been there, she moved to the small seat across from his desk without his direction, posture straight with her legs crossed. Despite the cold formality of the room, the air between them was⌠different. Not quite relaxed, but no longer so distant.
He reviewed a few lines on the datapad before speaking again.
âI assume your quarters are adequate? I donât believe Iâve ever asked.â
(Y/n) replied with a faint tilt of her head.
âFunctional and familiar.â
âThatâs what passes for comfort around here.â
âI donât require comfort.â She teased before taking another sip.
âNo. But everyone benefits from a moment to breathe in an acceptable environment.â
She blinked at that, ever so slightly surprised.
âIs that what last night was?â She smirked.Â
He looked up at her then, the full weight of his focus falling on her face. âPossibly.â
Something passed between them again. Unspoken. Subtle.Â
Then, like the snap of a soldier returning to attention, he set the datapad down and stood, brushing a hand down the front of his coat.
âCome. Weâre expected on the bridge. I need to have updates on Resistance activity by 0700.â
She stood smoothly, falling into step beside him after tossing the now empty blood pack.
As they moved towards the door, (Y/n) offered an afterthought.Â
âNext time, I think Iâll bring both in a thermal. Tea for you, blood for me. Havenât had it warm in a while.â
Hux glanced sideways at her. âEfficient.â
A beat.
âThoughtful.â He added, though quieter.
The door hissed open and they stepped into the corridor in perfect contrast, moving in precise sync.
The bridge of the Finalizer was quiet in its efficiency, cloaked in the bluish-gray tones of early cycle operations. Terminals glowed softly, crew members moved with practiced rhythm, and the stars beyond the viewport were distant and still.
General Hux stood at the front, hands clasped behind his back as he analyzed data from one of the terminals. (Y/n) stood beside him, arms crossed as her eyes scanned the bridge with deliberate calmness. She was close enough to intervene if needed, yet never encroaching on his command space.
A lieutenant approached first, offering a crisp nod before handing Hux a tablet. âGeneral, update from outpost Delta-Four. Last contact was at 0300. No response since then and no distress call was sent.â
Hux read it with a furrowed brow. âSimilar to Sector Eight last week.â
âYes, sir. Final transmission mentioned movement along the outer edge of a debris cluster. Then silence.â
âNo signs of conflict?â
âNone. Itâs clean.â
Huxâs eyes narrowed. âTheyâre getting bolder.â He handed the tablet back to the lieutenant and turned back towards the terminal to key in a command. Facing the bridge again, a map of the outer sectors materialized in a wash of pale blue light. Red indicators blinked in a triangular pattern.
âHave long-range scans pulled from the Starbreaker Array. Cross-reference radiation trails, shield fluctuations. Any anomalies, no matter how faint.â
The officer gave a quick nod. âYes, General.â
(Y/n)âs gaze flicked briefly to the glowing display, then back towards the junior officers bustling quietly.Â
Another officer approached. A younger systems technician with smudged gloves and a nervous gait. âGeneral⌠we detected an attempted intercept on last nightâs dispatch to Command. It failed, but whoever it was, it wasnât Resistance-grade slicing.â
Huxâs hands tightened behind him. âI want the source tracked, triangulated, and dissected. Every data spike, every digital pulse logged. Understood?â
âYes, sir.â
The technician nearly tripped backing away. (Y/n) didnât react, though her eyes flicked to Hux subtly, noting the flare of tension in his expression.
He exhaled slowly before the doors to the bridge slid open with a sharp hiss.
Captain Phasma entered first, tall and commanding in her chrome armor. Her pace was deliberate, each step punctuated by the soft thud of metal boots on deck plating. Varo followed at her side, his usual grin exchanged for a more focused expression. When he spotted (Y/n) already at Huxâs side, his brow lifted in silent greeting.
Hux turned as they approached âPhasma. Drenn,â he greeted. His eyes flicked to (Y/n), then back to the others. âYouâre just in time. We have a developing situation.â
(Y/n) gave a small nod in response to Varoâs glance.Â
Hux stepped back slightly and gestured towards the holomap still displayed. âWe may be looking at a coordinated infiltration effort. Unknown parties. Skilled and precise. Possibly something more than the Resistance. This may be one of our only chances to intercept and identify them.â The general nodded his head in the direction of the doors to the bridge and walked, the group following him.
The doors to the bridge hissed open, then sealed shut again as General Hux led them down the corridor. (Y/n) walked beside him as while Varo and Phasma flanked from behind.
No words were exchanged on the walk. The tension from the short briefing still lingered in the air like static. Tightly wound, waiting for direction.
Once inside Huxâs office, the door sealed behind them with a low thrum. Hux moved to behind his desk, bringing up the latest holomap which crackled to life in front of them.
âThis is where theyâre projected to hit next,â Hux said without preamble, pointing to a small, seemingly insignificant relay station nestled between two inactive mining sectors. âItâs remote. Understaffed. A low-profile target. Perfect for remaining unseen.â
âAnd exactly what weâd expect them to go for if theyâre testing our blind spots.â Phasma chimed in.
âWeâve tracked fragments of their signal spikes converging here,â Hux continued, zooming in on the relayâs coordinates. âEncrypted communications, faint enough to be overlooked if you werenât already looking for them. But thereâs a pattern.â
Varo squinted at the holomap. âItâs a bait station. Easy to infiltrate, but also easy to ambush from. If someone knew how.â
Huxâs eyes flicked towards him. âWhich is why weâre going to beat them to it.â He turned slightly, addressing all three of them. âWeâll deploy a stealth team, small and silent. We observe first. Identify who they are. Confirm if this is the same force behind the outpost vanishings.â
(Y/n) stepped forward slightly, her voice level. âAnd if it is?â
âThen weâll respond accordingly,â Hux said coldly. âAnd we wonât miss.â
Phasma nodded. âIâll have a squad outfitted for cloaked transport and scout support. The relay can be secured quietly, with minimal presence.â
Hux tapped his fingers against his desk. âNo standard stormtroopers. Itâll be too obvious.â
He turned his gaze to Varo. âI want you in position ahead of the operation. Youâll be our eyes on the ground. Blend in with the relay crew if needed. Keep comms silent unless contact is made.â
Varo gave a sharp nod. âUnderstood.â He folded his arms across his chest. âSo weâre playing shadow games now. I always preferred being the knife in the dark over the hammer at the gate.â
âThen consider this a return to form,â Hux replied dryly, before turning back to the holomap.
A brief silence followed as each of them absorbed the missionâs stakes. Then Hux looked to (Y/n) once more, his gaze thoughtful beneath the commanderâs mask.
âUmbral (L/n) and myself will have visual from here on the bridge while the operation is active. Anyone who is on ground will have a surveillance system so we can track what they are seeing and have more eyes identifying who weâre dealing with should anything happen.â Everyone nodded before the holomap disappeared. âIf weâre going off of their typical patterns, the mission will be set during tomorrowâs night cycle. Phasma and Drenn, I want you to coordinate with intelligence and logistics to formulate a plan. Dismissed.â
Phasma offered a curt nod and exited with precise efficiency. Varo lingered just long enough to exchange a glance with (Y/n), a small, wordless assurance before following.
The door slid shut, leaving only the soft hum of the overhead lights and the distant thrum of the shipâs engines. General Hux remained standing, unmoving as he observed the remaining Umbral.
Her gaze was distant, as if she was looking at something far beyond the walls of the office.
âYouâre quieter than usual,â Hux said without looking up.
(Y/n) blinked, shifting slightly. âApologies, sir. I didnât mean to appear distracted.â
âYou didnât,â he said simply, finally glancing over at her. âYou appear unsettled.â
Her mask didnât crack, not fully. But something in her eyes softened. A hesitation.
âIâm fine,â she said, too quickly.
Huxâs brow lifted ever so slightly. âUmbral?â The formality in her title made her glance at him sharply, until she realized he was watching her not with scrutiny, but something bordering on concern. Her posture eased by a hairâs breadth.
She exhaled quietly through her nose. âItâs Umbral Drenn.â
âAh.â
âHeâs the only person I have left,â she said slowly, as if peeling the words out of herself. âWeâve fought, bled, trained⌠Endured everything together. And now Iâm stuck here. Watching him walk into a threat we still donât fully understand.â
She didnât pace. She didnât fidget. But her stillness was heavy, dense with emotion she rarely permitted to surface.
âIâve lost too much already,â she added softly. âIf I lose him tooâŚâ
She didnât finish. She didnât need to.
Hux studied her for a moment, his expression unreadable, but far from cold. He stepped away and moved towards the viewport behind his desk.
âI understand more than you think,â he said after a pause. âThe burden of command is not just strategy and protocol. Itâs the slow erosion of everyone who made you feel human.â
She looked at him then, some part of her surprised.
He didnât meet her gaze, but his voice was steady.
âYou will remain here,â he continued. âYouâll watch the feed with me. If anything happens to Drenn, youâll know before anyone else does.â
(Y/n) blinked once, unsure how to respond to the weight of his words.
âThank you,â she said finally, quieter than usual.
He turned to her now, his expression still composed, but his eyes⌠there was something else there. Â
Their eyes held for a second too long, just long enough for something to pass between them.
Then Hux turned back to his desk. The Umbral stood for a moment in thought, and for the first time in years, she found herself fidgeting slightly.Â
-
The lights were dimmed in the corridors, the stars outside scattered like frost across a black pane. The two Umbrals stood side by side, simply looking out at the galaxy before them in the same alcove (Y/n) had sat in with Hux.
(Y/n)âs arms were crossed, a subtle tension in her frame. She said nothing for a while, watching the distant shimmer of a nebula bleeding color into the void. Varo stood beside her, his usually relaxed posture tempered by a rare stillness.
âYouâre quiet,â he said finally, his voice lower than usual.
(Y/n) didnât glance his way. âSo are you.â
A small chuckle escaped him. âFair enough.â
They lingered in silence a moment longer.
âDo you ever think about what we signed up for?â (Y/n) asked. Her voice wasnât cold. It carried the weight of something old, something uncertain. âWhat it cost us?â
Varo nodded slowly. âAll the time. Just⌠not usually out loud.â
Now she glanced at him. âTonight feels different.â
âIt does,â he agreed, looking out at the stars again. âWalking into something none of us fully understand. And just⌠watching. Not fighting. It feels wrong.â
She nodded. âI know.â
His gaze flicked over to her, reading the steel behind her voice. But then it softened, and he tilted his head towards her slightly. âYou think we did the right thing, choosing the path we did as Umbrals? All of this?â
She didnât answer immediately. Her silence wasnât uncertain. She was simply searching for truth.
âIt was the only path that gave us purpose,â she said finally. âAnd if this faction turns out to be what we fear, then itâs our duty to stop them. No matter who they were to us.â
Varo was quiet again, but then nudged her shoulder gently. âStill. Iâm glad Iâm not doing this without you.â
(Y/n) looked up at him, a faint trace of a smile pulling at the edge of her mouth. âLikewise.â
For a few moments, they stood in comfortable silence again. Then Varo exhaled, brushing his hand through his hair and casting her a sideways glance.
âYou know,â he added with a small smirk, âif I die tomorrow, I want you to avenge me with dramatic flair. Really make a scene. Rip someoneâs spine out or something.â
She rolled her eyes, smirk deepening. âIâll consider it.â
âSeriously,â he pressed, grinning now. âCry. Wail. Maybe swear vengeance in front of a flaming backdrop.â
âIâll pencil it in,â she said flatly, but there was warmth in her tone.
The weight of the night didnât vanish, but it lessened between them. Whatever tomorrow brought, they wouldnât face it alone. Even if apart.
Chapter 4
Pairing - General Armitage Hux x Reader
*Set prior to The Force Awakens*
Summary -
Forged in blood. Bound by duty. Broken by desire.
(Y/n) (L/n) is a deadly Umbral of the Covenant - an elite order of vampires sworn to the First Order. Her assignment: serve as General Hux's personal guard. But as buried secrets surface and a rogue vampire faction rises, (Y/n) is forced to confront a past she can't outrun - and feelings she was never meant to have.
In a war of blood, betrayal, and duty, the deadliest threat may be the one that lies still in her chest.
Series contains - Blood, violence, battles/war, betrayal/angst, eventual smut, slow burn
The door hissed closed behind her, sealing out the clinical brightness of the corridor. Dim, ambient lighting filled the compact but private space assigned to her. An austere First Order officerâs quarters, modified slightly to accommodate a Covenant elite.
Her boots hit the floor with a dull thud once pulled off, followed by the slow release of her harness. Piece by piece, she shed the image of a soldier, her black Umbral uniform folded neatly over the ottoman at the foot of her bed. Only then did she stretch - shoulders rolling, spine cracking softly - as if the weight of the day had settled deeper into her bones than she let anyone see.
With a huff, she crossed to the small wall-mounted refrigeration unit in the kitchenette and retrieved a sealed blood pack, marked with the Covenantâs insignia. Twisting the cap open, she drank from it without ceremony. The crimson liquid was cool and iron-rich, satiating her hunger with clinical precision, but not without the flicker of ancient instinct.
A small sigh escaped her lips as she leaned back against the counter, eyes fluttering shut for a brief moment as the dayâs events caught up with her.Â
It had been a few days since they first suspected the Resistance was harboring a rogue Covenant faction. Herself and Varo had visited each other that night to discuss the issue and grieve over the betrayal that their own kind committed. After all they had been through, going against their own species was an option they never thought would be on the table.Â
Steam began to cloud from the refresher as she turned on the shower. Her reflection caught in the darkened mirror. Unnaturally pale skin, the shimmering yet pale gold of her eyes, and the ever-present weight behind her gaze. Not tired, not weak. Guarded.
She stepped into the shower. The water was searing hot, meant more to cleanse her mind than her body. The sound drowned out the hum of the ship. For once, she allowed herself to just feel. The rippling heat against her normally cold skin, a foreign feeling to her rhythmless heart. The steam curled through her hair, head tilted back as she let the water run over her face.
When she emerged from the bathroom, wrapped in a towel, she looked strangely younger. Not in appearance, but in silence. The storm behind her eyes had calmed, if only for a moment.
She slipped into a set of issued black sleepwear and sat on the edge of her bed, datapad in hand. Her eyes scanned the text with machine-like precision. Reports, updates, combat performance logs. But as she scrolled, her gaze slowed on one item. A personnel file.
General Hux, Armitage
âArmitage?â She mumbled to herself curiously. Her finger hovered over the file, hesitating.Â
She tapped it open.
It wasnât invasive. Just basic service records. Public to internal ranks. Dates. Promotions. Assignments.Â
At least, thatâs what she told herself.Â
But she lingered longer than necessary. Not for intelligence. Something else.
Her thumb hesitated before swiping the screen away and powering off the datapad.
For a brief moment, she sat in silence, staring at nothing. No orders. No commands. No expectations. Just a woman forged into something sharp. Sitting alone in the dark, still searching for the pieces that made her whole.
The lights dimmed further at her mental prompt.
She lay back on the bed. No armor. No duty. No one watching.
Just (Y/n).Â
The hum of the Finalizerâs systems faded into the background. Lying in the quiet dark, (Y/n)âs eyes finally drifted shut.
The great courtyard of the Covenantâs inner sanctum was bathed in the violet hue of the twin moons. Tall, obsidian spires reached up around the ceremonial space where graduates were gathering, fresh from their final trials.
(Y/n) stood near the edge of the crowd. Lean, composed, her black cloak still streaked with ash from the Gauntlet. Beside her stood her closest friend. They had trained together, bled together, whispered their plans under moonlight while the others slept.
Her friendâs smile was tight. Her golden eyes flickered. Not with pride, but with something hollow. Something new.
âUmbral Academy,â she said, as if the words tasted bitter. âYou and Varo. Chosen.â
(Y/n) furrowed her brow. âYou forgot yourself, Zera. The High Lords -â
âAre finished with their selections for the remainder of the year.â Zeraâs voice cracked, a tremble buried beneath her control. âI wasnât one of them.â
(Y/n) blinked. âWhat? Thatâs⌠No, thatâs a mistake. Weâll appeal -â
âNo. Youâll go. Without me.â Zera stepped back, her jaw clenched, her voice sharp now with jealousy. âYou always had their eyes on you. You and Varo. I was just the shadow in your wake, made to look worse so you could look better.â
âZera, thatâs not true -â (Y/n) moved forward, confused, reaching for her arm.
But Zera recoiled. Her expression was carved from stone now, guarded and venomous. âThey said I lacked the instinct. The control. That I wouldnât survive a night in the academy.â
âI didnât know,â (Y/n) murmured. âI didnât want this without you, weâve talked about this for -â
âFour years!â Zera interrupted, eyes flashing with something darker now. Other Duskborns began to watch the pair of them as it escalated. âFour years, and youâre just leaving like it meant nothing to you! You were the only good thing I ever had, (Y/n)!â
(Y/n) went to speak, but Varo cut in.Â
âItâs not her choice, itâs the Covenantâs.â He defended firmly.Â
âQuiet, Drenn!â She snapped, turning back to (Y/n). âAfter everything we said about not leaving each other. About being there through everything, no matter the cost!â Zera looked between the two of them before she took a step back. âForget it.â She spat with venom before turning to leave.Â
(Y/n) took a step after her, then froze. Something in the air shifted. Too quickly, what they thought was unbreakable, had already been severed.
Varo was silent for a moment. Watching. He met (Y/n)âs eyes and gave a faint shake of his head.
âWe canât help her. She needs to figure this out herself.â he said, wrapping an arm around her shoulders with a solemn expression.Â
And (Y/n) knew, deep down, he was right.
(Y/n) sat bolt upright, the memory like a blade to the ribs. Her breathing was unsteady, but her eyes⌠distant. Haunted.
She didnât weep. She hadnât in years. But that scar, deep and invisible, throbbed like a fresh wound.
Zera.
The name echoed like a whisper in the back of her mind.
Still in the dark, (Y/n) turned to the edge of the bed and wrapped her arms around herself.Â
The sharp rhythm of boots echoed through the corridor. Varo walked at (Y/n)âs side, his stride easy, relaxed despite the rigid order of the Finalizerâs halls. His head tilted slightly towards her.
âYou know, Iâve been thinking,â he said casually, âIâm pretty sure the Wraith Commander gave you the better assignment just because he was afraid of you.â
(Y/n) raised a brow, her voice cool. â Him? Afraid?âÂ
âWell, you did break that instructorâs arm during blade training.â Varo gave a mock shiver.Â
âHe told me to stop holding back.â
âYou shattered his elbow.â He deadpanned.
âHis stance was weak.â
Varo grinned, tilting his head. âRemind me never to spar with you again. I quite like my bones in one piece.â
âTheyâll heal.â (Y/n) didnât smile, but the corner of her mouth twitched, just enough to show she wasnât entirely made of steel.
âWell regardless,â Varo continued, âyou get to shadow the general. Meanwhile, Iâm stuck listening to Phasma bark orders at people half her size.â
âSheâs efficient,â (Y/n) said, with a faintly amused glance. âAnd terrifying.â
âExactly. I admire her⌠From a safe distance.â
They turned a corner, passing by a few stormtroopers who gave a wide berth to the two Umbrals. One even hesitated before saluting, a twitch of nervousness as their cloaks swept past.
Varo dropped his voice slightly, leaning a bit towards (Y/n). âBut admit it. Watching people fumble around Hux while trying to impress him is a little entertaining.â
(Y/n) didnât respond right away. Then, quietly, she murmured, âHe sees through it. Thatâs what makes it worse for them.â She smirked.Â
Varo laughed under his breath. âStars, youâre getting soft. Next thing I know, youâll be complimenting his hair.â
(Y/n) gave him a sideways glance. âItâs always perfectly parted. Not much to critique.â
âMaker help us,â Varo grinned.
(Y/n) shook her head with a faint exhale. âI hope you know that during this conversation Iâve been deciding whether to stab you or ignore you.â
âEither way,â he said with a chuckle, âat least Iâd die knowing I made you smile.â
They reached the final corridor leading to the bridge. Their banter faded slightly, replaced with the calm professionalism both had been trained to resume in operational zones.
(Y/n) and Varo stepped in side by side, their long, dark cloaks catching the sterile light.
Varo leaned slightly towards her one last time. âTry not to glare too hard. Some of the crew still think you drink souls.â
(Y/n) smirked without looking at him. âOnly on weekends.â
He snorted and gave her a casual nod before veering off to the left. âCaptain Phasmaâs waiting. Try not to miss me.â
As Varo disappeared into the far side of the bridge, (Y/n)âs eyes scanned the command walkway and there, just ahead, stood General Hux.
Clad in his sharp uniform, he was facing the forward viewport, the glint of the stars outside casting a cold sheen on his fiery hair. He didnât look up immediately, but he was already aware of her arrival after hearing her familiar voice. A sound he found himself growing more accustomed to, and maybe even favor.
She approached with fluid precision, stopping just beside him.
âGeneral Hux,â she said clearly, but her voice gave off a friendlier introduction than usual.
He glanced up, his expression unreadable but unmistakably aware. His gaze swept her form.Â
âUmbral (L/n),â he acknowledged. âYouâre punctual.â
âI was assigned to your command. Punctuality is expected.â She poked with a knowing look.
A moment passed between them. Not tense, but taut with subtle energy. Unspoken understanding, and the awareness of watchful eyes on the bridge.
Then, as he turned, she fell into step beside him, unobtrusive but unquestionably present.
As they walked, several officers along the command stations subtly glanced their way, some with the flicker of uncertainty in their expressions before Hux stopped at one of the terminals to look over a new report.
(Y/n)âs eyes remained alert, her senses sweeping the room. She could feel the tension. The curiosity. The fear.
Good.
Hux glanced sidelong at her. âTheyâll get used to it. Eventually.â
âIâd prefer it if they didnât,â (Y/n) replied, her voice low enough for only him to hear.
His lips twitched, just barely. âLikewise.â
The quiet buzz of the bridge was momentarily disrupted as Captain Voss entered from the far side, his footsteps deliberate and heavy. He stood a few paces away from (Y/n) and General Hux, pausing for a brief moment before speaking.
âGeneral,â Voss greeted, his voice as sharp and professional as ever, but with a particular emphasis on the word General, as if reminding everyone of their roles. His eyes flicked briefly to (Y/n), who remained standing stoically beside Hux.
Hux didnât immediately respond as he was watching the report flicker across the terminal, his eyes scanning the data. âCaptain.â
Voss stepped closer, his boots echoing with each step, a tablet in his hand. âUpdates from the fleet, sir,â he said, still careful to avoid directly acknowledging (Y/n), but it was impossible to ignore the slight narrowing of his eyes as they briefly met hers. âI trust the Umbral has settled in⌠comfortably by now?â
The words werenât directly insulting, but the bite behind them was unmistakable. (Y/n)âs gaze didnât falter. She simply stared, a perfect mask of professionalism. She wouldnât let him get under her skin. Not here, not now.
However, Varo, who had been standing nearby and quietly observing the exchange, didnât miss the undertone. His brow furrowed slightly as he stepped closer, his eyes narrowing in irritation. The thought of intervening crossed his mind, but before he could open his mouth, Hux spoke first, his voice cutting through the tension like a blade.
âCaptain Voss,â Hux said coolly. âI would appreciate it if you would refrain from insinuating things that are neither relevant nor professional in the presence of my personal guard.â
Varo froze for a split second, surprised by the quickness of the response. He could feel the shift in the air as Huxâs sharp tone pierced through the murmur of the bridge. Voss blinked, momentarily taken aback. âMy apologies, sir. I wasnât aware I was offending,â Voss replied, his tone now more clipped, but his eyes still glinting with that same passive-aggressive edge.
âUmbral (L/n) is not to be the subject of your personal musings, do I make myself clear?â
Varo smirked, standing just behind the captain, sensing the rare moment of discomfort in Voss. Voss stilled, his hand gripping the tablet tighter.
âYes, sir,â he responded stiffly, the forced politeness thick in his voice.
The silence lingered for a moment before Hux finally shifted his attention back to the captain, the brief interruption passing as if it never happened.
âWhat have you found?â Hux asked, gesturing to the tablet in Vossâs hand.
For a second, Voss opened his mouth as if to say something, but then he simply nodded and began to speak about the fleetâs movements. His words lost a bit of their earlier venom, though the flicker of resentment never fully disappeared. It was clear that he was no longer willing to test Huxâs patience at that moment.
(Y/n) didnât react outwardly, her face remained a perfect mask. But inside, she allowed herself a fleeting moment of satisfaction, and dare she say appreciation. Hux had handled the situation with precise authority, making sure to put Voss back in his place.
Varo, however, couldnât resist a small chuckle as he leaned in a bit closer to (Y/n). âDidnât think the General had it in him,â he muttered for only her to hear, his grin amused but still holding a touch of concern.
(Y/n) didnât look at him, but she did respond quietly. âNeither did I.â Her eyes looked over the generalâs face as he spoke with Voss, unaware of how she found herself admiring him. The shadow of his cheek bones, the movement of his eyes and curve of his nose -
âTime and place, (L/n).â Varo teased, breaking her out of her stare and elbowing him sharply in the ribs making him huff with a chuckle.Â
The silence in the room lingered after Captain Vossâs departure. His passive-aggressive remarks had left a slight chill in the air, but the tension began to dissipate as personnel moved back to their stations after eavesdropping, giving the trio a moment of quiet.
(Y/n)âs eyes flicked between Hux, who was absorbed in the tablet given to him, and Varo, who appeared to be in his usual playful mood despite the recent exchange. Varo, never one to leave a tense moment without attempting to lighten it, glanced at (Y/n) and gave her a knowing smirk.
âWell, that went well, donât you think?â
(Y/n)âs lips twitched into a barely perceptible smirk, but she didnât say anything. At least, not until Varo continued.
âI mean, you did have that whole âsilent rageâ thing going on - very intimidating. Iâd be scared to cross you.â
(Y/n) glanced sideways at Varo, her eyebrow raising slightly, but she couldnât hide the hint of amusement in her gaze. âIf you keep making jokes like that, Varo, I might actually consider crossing you .â
Varoâs grin widened, and he threw a quick, playful glance toward Hux, who hadnât looked up from the tablet. With a calculated, dramatic pause, Varo leaned closer to (Y/n), lowering his voice to a whisper.
âIâm just saying, if you did, weâd probably have to drag you away from him before Hux starts thinking you two are too close.â Another jab in his side.Â
The quip made (Y/n)âs eyes narrow, but she held back a quiet chuckle. Hux, who had been focusing intently on the report, suddenly glanced up, a sharp, cutting gaze landing on both of them.
Hux spoke dryly. âIf you two are quite finished, I suggest you save the idle chatter for later.â
Varo, ever the opportunist, turned to Hux with feigned seriousness.
âOf course, General. Just keeping the morale up.â He glanced sideways at (Y/n), his expression turning faux-pensive. âItâs hard, you know? Being the only source of entertainment.â
Hux stared at him for a moment with an unreadable expression on his face before his gaze switched to (Y/n) who had the faintest smirk. Figuring that the Umbrals had slight leeway given their status, the general decided to humor him.
âYouâd be surprised how little your âentertainmentâ is needed, Drenn.â He paused in hesitation. âBut if it helps you two get through the day, I suppose I can allow it on occasion.â
Varo grinned and gave a half-bow, completely unfazed by the generalâs dry retort. (Y/n), watching this back-and-forth, finally allowed herself a brief chuckle, one that she quickly masked with a more stoic expression, but Hux had already caught it and he looked at her longer than necessary in masked amusement. The lightness between the three of them was palpable.
Just as the tension was beginning to ease, the door to the bridge opened and a soft chime echoed through the room, signaling an incoming message.
â General Hux, the Grand Master requires your presence in the War Room immediately. â
The playful atmosphere that Varo had tried to create faded slightly as the business of the day returned, but there was still a slight, lingering warmth to the moment.
âI suppose weâll have to continue this conversation later, Umbral Drenn. You can make your jokes when Iâm not in the middle of a meeting, though Iâm sure Iâd be âthrilledâ by your input.â
Varo shot him a mock, two-fingered salute, a teasing grin still in place.
âIâll try to contain my enthusiasm, General. Wouldnât want to distract you from the really important stuff, right?â He shot (Y/n) a quick, conspiratorial glance, the joke hanging between them.
âKeep it down, will you?â (Y/n) pressed.Â
âThe two of you together are insufferable. Letâs go, (L/n).â Hux urged.Â
With that, the two left the bridge, making their way towards the door to the War Room and entering.Â
The War Room was dimly lit, its walls lined with shifting holo-maps and live feeds from the far reaches of First Order space. A single long table dominated the room, displaying an active projection of disputed sectors and blinking alerts. Hux stood at the head of the table, his posture rigid as always.Â
(Y/n) stood to his right and the general noticed her take a soothing deep breath uncharacteristically.Â
âNervous?â He questioned her. She glanced at him.Â
âThe Grand Master is the Covenantâs equivalent to the Supreme Leader. The highest elder of our kind.â Her head turned to look at Hux. âI would be.â
The air shifted slightly as the holo-communicator pulsed and activated, forming the image of the Grand Master of the Covenant. Draped in ceremonial black and crimson, his eyes were sharp beneath the weight of age and authority. The halo of his mantle flickered faintly, feeding off the shadows like it hungered.
âGeneral Hux. Umbral (L/n).â He nodded in acknowledgement. His tone was unreadable, neither warm nor hostile.
Hux spoke. âGrand Master. Thank you for joining us.â
âThe matter warranted it. You have reports of a Resistance-aligned unit employing techniques unnatural for mortals. I cannot tolerate such rumors under my careful watch for the sake of my kind.â
A pause.
âI assume this is not an exaggeration of your kindâs military incompetence.â
The general didnât flinch. He was used to the Covenantâs thinly veiled disdain.
âYou are correct to assume, Grand Master. These attacks are not the doing of amateurs. Weâve faced Resistance operatives on countless occasions. This is different.â
(Y/n)âs eyes narrowed slightly, lips pressing into a firm line. She stepped forward, speaking for the first time.Â
âThey strike in the dark, Grand Master. With coordination and precision that suggests training. Covenant training with attempted Umbral elements. These are not mere recruits or fledglings.â
The Grand Master tilted his head, his expression sharpening as if considering her worthiness to speak.
âAnd you believe them to be⌠rogues?â
âWith the knowledge of my training and what Iâve assessed, I donât know what else they could be.â
âYou presume treason. A bold accusation. Especially from one so newly graduated.â
Huxâs voice cut in, calm but authoritative.
âWe have firsthand knowledge of Covenant methods from Umbrals (L/n) and Drenn, and my own of the First Order. Weâve reviewed the evidence together. The similarities are unmistakable.â
Another pause. The Grand Masterâs eyes moved from Hux back to (Y/n).Â
âIf what you suggest is true, then this would be an unsanctioned breach of the Blood Accord. The punishment for such betrayal is execution.â
He stepped back slightly in his projection. Behind him, the faint silhouettes of the High Lords flickered into view, standing in silent consensus.
âYou are authorized, Umbral (L/n), to investigate this matter further with the support of the First Order. Should your findings confirm the presence of a rogue Covenant factionâŚâ
A beat.
âYou will have the full authority of the Covenant to eliminate them. All of them.â
A flicker of darkness passed over (Y/n)âs face. Determination, resolve and dread entwined. She gave a silent nod.
âAs you command. Thank you, Grand Master.â She bowed her head with a hand crossed over onto her heart.Â
âYou are not alone in this. I also grant Umbral Drenn operational liberty. I suspect the two of you will perform well, given your history. The Council expects discretion⌠but finality.â
The Grand Masterâs gaze locked once more with (Y/n)âs, this time more direct. It was personal.
âThey took their oath, Umbral. They chose exile. They chose treason. And we will provide no mercy for such actions. Show them the price of turning their fangs on their own. Honor in Loyalty, Umbral.â
âStrength in Silence, Grand Master.â
With a flicker, the projection faded, and the War Room fell into silence.
Hux didnât move for a moment, the two of them digesting the gravity of what had just transpired. Then, without looking at (Y/n), he spoke.Â
âWell. That settles the question of what we do next.â
(Y/n) stood quietly beside him and he finally looked at her with the smallest hint of concern. Her gaze was downcast as she was frozen and he caught a familiar emotion in her gaze.Â
Betrayal.Â