Porch - Transitional Porch Mid-sized transitional stone side porch idea with a roof extension
Beach Style Landscape in San Diego Inspiration for a medium-sized, full-sun, drought-tolerant concrete paver retaining wall front yard landscape.
In anticipation of N7 Day tomorrow, I wanted to share this minimal fanart title card I created last year. After the teaser trailer that confirmed it would continue the story post-Shepard, I was thinking about possible storylines, about rebuilding in the aftermath of ME3⌠and the tagline âReclaim the Pastâ kinda stuck in my head. Which is where this sorta overgrown stone title text came fromâthe need to rebuild, but also the idea of nature reclaiming broken worlds.
(I was feeling nostalgic for the old font on âEFFECTâ so I used that instead of the newer, more squared-off version.)
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Canât wait to see what they do with the next entry in the series! (And I have a new title card I created for this year that Iâll be sharing tomorrow!)
Commander Fox x Senator Reader
Your voice echoed in the Senate chamber, sharp and laced with desperation.
âThey are massing on our borders. Do you understand what that means? My people are not soldiers. If the Separatists come, we wonât stand a chance.â
Bail Organa looked at you with soft regret. PadmĂŠ Amidala gave you a sympathetic nod. Even Mon Mothma lowered her eyes.
But sympathy didnât stop invasions.
Mas Amedda cleared his throat, voice cold. âSenator, the Grand Armyâs resources are stretched thin. Reinforcements are already dispatched to Felucia and Mygeeto. We cannot spare more.â
You felt like youâd been struck.
âSo we are to be sacrificed?â you snapped, voice rising. âLeft to be slaughtered while this chamber debates logistics?â
Whispers erupted. Chancellor Palpatine raised a hand, calm and unbothered. âWe understand your concern, Senator. But this is war. Sacrifices must be made.â
You wanted to scream.
Instead, you bowed stiffly and left the chamber before your fury bled into something less diplomatic.
⸝
You didnât notice him at firstâtoo blinded by anger, by heartbreak, by the fear that your people were going to die for nothing.
But as you stormed through the marble corridors of the Senate building, your shoulder collided with armor.
Red.
Hard.
You looked upâinto the steady, unreadable face of Commander Fox.
He barely moved. His arm reached out instinctively, steadying you. âSenator.â
You blinked. You hadnât realized you were trembling.
âCommander,â you said, voice sharper than you meant.
Fox tilted his head slightly. âRough session?â
You laughed bitterly. âOnly if you consider being told to watch your world burn while they debate budgets rough.â
He said nothing. Not at first. Just watched you, eyes tracking every twitch of emotion on your face.
âIâm sorry,â you muttered, shaking your head. âYou donât need to hear that. Youâve got your own war to fight.â
âI listen better than most senators,â he said quietly.
You blinked.
Foxâs voice was never warm. It was always firm, controlled. Professional.
But thisâthis was different.
You leaned against the wall, fighting the tears building behind your eyes. âIâm a senator and Iâm still powerless.â
âYou care,â Fox said, after a beat. âThat already makes you different.â
You looked at him. âDo you ever get used to it?â
He was silent. His jaw tensed.
âNo,â he said. âBut you learn to live with it. Or you break.â
You didnât realize your hand had drifted close to his until your fingers brushed the back of his glove. A mistake. Or maybe not.
He looked down at your hand, then back at you.
The air between you was taut. Too intimate for a Senate hallway. Too dangerous for two people on opposite sides of a professional line.
And yetâŚ
âIf thereâs anything I can do,â Fox said, voice low, âfor your people⌠or for youâŚâ
You looked up at him, studying the man beneath the red armor. The one with the tired eyes and careful words. The one who could have kept walking but didnât.
âYou already have,â you whispered.
And then you were goneâleaving Fox standing there, staring at the spot where youâd been.
Fingers still tingling.
⸝
The shuttleâs engines hummed low, a mechanical purr echoing through the Senate docks. The air was thick with fuel, heat, and tension. Your transport was nearly readyâsmall, lightly defended, and insufficient for what lay ahead, but it would take you home.
You stared out across the city skyline, heart pounding.
They said you were making a mistake. They said returning to your home world was suicide.
But it was your world.
And if it was going to fall, it wouldnât do so without you standing beside it.
You heard the footsteps before you saw themâmeasured, purposeful.
Then: the unmistakable voice of Chancellor Palpatine, oiled and theatrical.
âAh, Senator. So determined.â He approached, flanked by crimson-robed guards and the sharper silhouettes of red Coruscant Guard armor.
Commander Fox stood behind him, helm off, unreadable as ever.
You straightened. âChancellor.â
âIâve come to offer you a final word of advice,â Palpatine said smoothly, folding his hands. âReturning to your planet now would be⌠ill-advised. The situation is deteriorating rapidly.â
You lifted your chin. âWhich is why I must be there. My people are scared. They need to see someone hasnât abandoned them.â
Palpatine sighed, as if burdened by your courage. âYes, I suspected as much.â
He turned slightly, gesturing behind him.
âI anticipated you would refuse counsel, so Iâve taken the liberty of organizing a security detail to accompany you.â
Your brows furrowed.
âCommander Fox, accompanied by his menâ he said, voice silk. âAnd a squad of my most loyal Guardsmen. Until the Senate can act, they will serve as your protection detail.â
Your eyes snapped to Fox, stunned. He met your gaze with that same unreadable intensityâbut his stance was different. Less rigid. Like he had volunteered.
âIâŚâ You turned to Palpatine. âThank you, Chancellor.â
He gave you a benign smile. âDonât thank me. Thank Commander Fox. He was the one who insisted your safety be taken seriously.â
Your breath caught.
Palpatine gave a slight bow and turned, robes billowing as he departed with his guards, leaving the dock strangely quiet again.
You looked at Fox.
âYou insisted?â
He stepped forward, stopping just shy of armâs reach. âYouâre not a soldier. You shouldnât have to walk into a war zone alone.â
âNeither should you,â you said softly.
He blinked. âItâs different.â
âIs it?â
You held his gaze for a moment too long.
Fox shifted, jaw tight. âMy orders are to protect you. And I intend to do that.â
There was something in his voice. Something unspoken.
âIâm not helpless, you know,â you said, voice a little gentler. âBut Iâm⌠glad itâs you.â
His eyes flickered.
âYouâll be staying close, then?â you asked, half teasing, half aching to hear the answer.
âYes,â he said. No hesitation. âWherever you are, Iâll be close.â
The words lingered between you. Heavy. Charged.
You nodded slowly, stepping toward the shuttle ramp. âWell then, Commander. Shall we?â
He followed you silently. And when you boarded that shipâuncertain of what awaitedâyou didnât feel so alone anymore.
⸝
The ship was mid-hyperspace, engines humming steadily, the stars stretched thin and white outside the viewport like strands of pulled light.
You sat quietly near the front cabin, reading reports from homeâcivilians evacuating cities, militia forming in panic. Your fingers were white-knuckled around the datapad, but you didnât notice. Not when your ears were quietly tuned to the conversation just beyond the corridor.
Foxâs men werenât exactly quiet.
⸝
âOkay,â Thire muttered, not even trying to keep his voice down. âSo let me get this straight. You volunteered us for this mission?â
âYou hate senators,â Stone chimed in, boots kicked up on a storage crate. âLike⌠passionately.â
âAnd politics,â Hound added, his strill sniffing at a nearby panel before letting out a low growl. âAnd public speaking. And long transport rides. This is literally all your nightmares rolled into one.â
âI didnât volunteer,â Fox said flatly.
âDidnât you, though?â Thire drawled.
âWe were assigned.â
âYou asked to be assigned,â Hound smirked. âBig difference.â
âOrders are orders,â Fox said, clearly trying to end it.
âRight,â Stone said. âAnd the fact that sheâs smart, brave, and has eyes that could melt a blaster coilâtotally unrelated.â
Fox didnât respond.
There was a pause.
âYouâre not denying it,â Hound grinned, teeth flashing.
âYouâre all on report,â Fox muttered darkly.
âOh no,â Thire said with mock horror. âYouâre going to write me up for noticing you have a crush?â
Fox growled.
âCome on, vod,â Stone said, voice a little gentler. âSheâs not like the others. She actually gives a damn. And she looked gutted after the Senate meeting. Anyone could see that.â
âSheâs brave,â Fox admitted, low. âShe shouldnât have to do this alone.â
They all went quiet for a beat.
Then Thire leaned in, grinning. âWeâre just saying. If you start calling her cyarâika, weâll know whatâs up.â
Fox shoved the heel of his hand against his temple and groaned.
You were definitely not supposed to have heard any of that.
And yet⌠here you were, biting back a smile and pretending to be Very Deeply Focused on your datapad, heart fluttering unhelpfully in your chest.
He cared.
He was trying not toâbut he cared.
And for someone like Fox, who lived his life behind armor and discipline, that meant everything.
Next Part
Plane doodles
I fear my mom ate me up with that first one
Turbulence was throwing my ass around in that bathroom