The night air was still, too quiet for Coruscant. As if the city itself held its breath. The reader sat on the stone edge of a koi pond in the Jedi Temple gardens, picking at the frayed edge of her sleeve.
She hadn’t come here to pray. Or meditate. She came because she couldn’t breathe in her apartment anymore.
Kit Fisto approached silently, boots barely making a sound against the stones. She didn’t flinch when he spoke.
“You found the quietest corner of the Temple.”
“I didn’t think Jedi gardens were known for wild parties.”
He chuckled, easing down beside her, his presence—warm, calm, steady. It was infuriating how grounded he always was.
“You look better than this morning,” he said.
“I look like someone who kissed two men, woke up next to a Jedi Master, and has no idea what the hell she’s doing with her life.”
Kit’s smile widened. “I wasn’t going to say it.”
She rolled her eyes. “Thanks for getting me home.”
“I didn’t do it for thanks.”
They sat in silence, the pond rippling as a fish darted beneath the surface.
She sighed. “Do I seem like a monster to you?”
“No.”
“Even after everything?”
“I think you’ve been carrying too many secrets for too long. That doesn’t make you a monster. It makes you tired.”
She looked at him. “Do you tell that to all the girls who stumble into your arms drunk off their head?”
“No,” he said. “Only the ones who cry about clone commanders in their sleep.”
Her throat tightened. “Of course I did.”
“You said you love them both.”
She dropped her head into her hands. “Stars, I’m a mess.”
“That’s not news.”
They both laughed, but it faded quickly.
Kit’s voice turned more serious. “You trust the Chancellor. But you fear him.”
“I do,” she whispered. “More than anything.”
Before Kit could respond, another voice echoed softly from behind.
“You’re not the only one.”
She turned sharply to see Mace Windu standing a few steps away, arms crossed, his gaze steady but not unkind.
“Didn’t realize this was going to be a group therapy session,” she muttered.
Windu stepped forward. “Kit told me what you said last night. About your fear. Your confusion. Your… feelings for the clones.”
“Wonderful,” she muttered.
“I’m not here to scold you,” Windu said. “But I need to understand. Why do you keep aligning yourself with the Chancellor if you don’t trust him?”
“Because I don’t know what happens if I don’t,” she admitted. “He knows everything about me. He saved me once—or at least made me think he did. I’ve done things for him I can’t take back. And I’m scared if I stop playing the part, he’ll destroy me.”
Kit’s hand rested gently on her back. Windu’s expression softened—not pity, but something close.
“You’re not alone anymore,” Windu said. “We may not know what you are to him, but you’re not just his anymore. You’re part of something else now. The clones trust you. Some of the Jedi trust you. Don’t waste that.”
She met his eyes. “I don’t know how to be anything but what I’ve been.”
“Then start small,” Kit said. “Be honest.”
“That’s terrifying.”
“Most truths are.”
Windu gave a slight nod, then turned to leave.
Before he did, he added, “You’ve still got a choice. Don’t wait until it’s taken from you.”
She sat there for a while after he left, Kit still beside her.
“Truth hurts,” she murmured.
Kit gave a small smile. “So does love.”
⸻
She didn’t take the main lift. Didn’t want to run into anyone. After her talk with Kit and Windu, she was raw—peeling open layers she’d kept tightly shut for years. Now, every footstep echoed like a secret she hadn’t meant to tell.
She was halfway through the lower halls when a voice pulled her to a stop.
“You always run off when things get real?”
She froze.
Rex.
He stepped out of the shadows near the archway, arms crossed, helmet in hand, dressed down in fatigues. No armor. No rank. Just him. And that was the problem.
“I wasn’t running,” she said quietly.
“You never are,” he replied. “You disappear. You lie. You kiss me, then you kiss Cody, then you run again and act like none of it ever happened.”
She turned toward him, lips parted in protest—but he wasn’t done.
“I don’t care about what happened at 79’s,” he said. “Not like that. I care that I don’t know where I stand with you. And I don’t think you know either.”
“That’s not fair—”
“No. What’s not fair is you looking at me like you want to stay, then leaving before I can ask you to.”
She looked away. “I didn’t ask for any of this.”
“I know,” Rex said, stepping closer. “But you’ve got it. All of it. You have me. And Cody. And the damn Jedi Council watching your every move. And that kid you saved, even if he’s gone now. You’ve got hearts in your hands, and you’re squeezing them like you don’t realize they’re breakable.”
She flinched.
“You don’t get to keep pushing us away and pulling us close when it suits you,” he added, softer this time. “Pick something. Anyone. Or don’t. Just stop pretending it doesn’t mean something.”
The silence settled between them, heavy and sharp.
“I’m trying,” she finally whispered. “I’m not used to being wanted. Not like this. I don’t know what to do with it.”
Rex stepped closer. Close enough she could feel the heat from him, the frustration in the way he held his jaw so tight.
“Start by not lying,” he said. “To me. To Cody. To yourself.”
She met his eyes. “If I tell you I’m scared of what happens if I choose one of you…?”
“I’d say you’re human.”
“What if I choose wrong?”
“You won’t.”
“How do you know?”
“Because you already know who it is,” he said, and for once, he didn’t say anything more. Didn’t push. Just looked at her like he was waiting for her to catch up.
She blinked, her mouth opening to speak—but footsteps echoed behind them.
Cody.
He stepped into the corridor, freezing at the sight of them. His eyes flicked between them, jaw tightening just a fraction.
Rex didn’t move.
Neither did she.
“You two done?” Cody asked coolly.
“Not even close,” Rex said.
Cody’s gaze locked with hers. “Then maybe it’s time I had a turn.”
The hallway felt too small for the weight in the air.
She looked between them—Rex, steady and wounded, and Cody, cold and unreadable, his arms crossed like a shield.
Cody broke the silence first.
“So,” he said, voice low. “What’s your excuse this time?”
“Cody—” she started.
“No, really. I want to know. You ran off, again. Lied to the Jedi Council. Lied to us. And you show back up at 79’s like nothing happened.” His tone was calm, but there was something brittle underneath. “So what is it this time?”
She exhaled, stepping forward. “I didn’t know what else to do. I had to protect that kid. And if I told anyone—even you—it would’ve put him in more danger.”
“You think I wouldn’t have protected him?” Cody asked, hurt flashing behind his eyes. “You think we wouldn’t have helped you?”
“I couldn’t risk it.”
“You didn’t trust us.”
“I didn’t trust anyone.”
That landed heavier than she expected.
Rex shifted, jaw clenched. “She didn’t even answer my comms, Cody. Not once.”
“I know.”
The silence swelled again—until she took a step closer to both of them.
“I’m sorry.”
The words were small, but real. Fragile, like they might shatter if she tried to backtrack.
Cody’s posture eased, just slightly. “We’re not looking for perfect,” he said quietly. “We’re just tired of being temporary.”
Her heart cracked open—again.
And then—
“Well isn’t this cozy.”
Quinlan Vos strolled around the corner like he was walking into a lounge instead of an emotional standoff.
“Oh great,” Cody muttered under his breath.
Right behind Quinlan came Kenobi, hands folded in front of him like he hadn’t just walked in on the messiest love triangle in the Temple.
“I sensed tension,” Kenobi said lightly. “But I wasn’t expecting it to be this personal.”
“Obi-Wan,” she said with a groan, pinching the bridge of her nose. “This really isn’t your kind of conversation.”
“And yet here I am,” he replied smoothly.
Quinlan leaned against the wall, eyes dancing with mischief. “So who’s it gonna be? Helmet One or Helmet Two?”
Rex looked like he was about to start throwing punches.
Cody sighed. “I will actually kill you, Vos.”
Vos raised his hands. “Hey, no need for violence. Unless it’s a duel for affection. In which case, I’ve got credits on the shiny one.”
“I swear to the stars—” she started.
Kenobi held up a hand, stepping between them. “Enough. We’re not here for… whatever this is. The Council requested an update on the three of you. We came to ensure you’re not tearing each other apart.”
Quinlan smirked. “Looks like she’s doing the emotional tearing, Obi.”
“Quinlan.”
“Alright, alright,” Vos said, grinning as he backed away. “But if someone gets stabbed over this? I better be invited.”
“Out,” she said, pointing. “Both of you.”
Kenobi gave a soft chuckle and turned to leave, but not before glancing over his shoulder.
“For what it’s worth,” he said, tone more serious now, “sometimes the hardest thing isn’t choosing between two people—it’s choosing yourself. Just don’t take too long. Wars don’t wait for hearts to decide.”
And with that, he disappeared down the corridor, dragging Quinlan along with him like an annoying older brother babysitting a younger one hopped up on spice.
The hallway fell quiet again.
Cody looked at her.
Rex didn’t move.
She let out a shaky breath.
“I don’t know how to choose.”
“You don’t have to right now,” Cody said, stepping closer. “But stop pretending we don’t matter to you.”
“You do,” she whispered. “You both do.”
Rex finally spoke. “Then stop running.”
⸻
The air in her apartment was too still.
It felt wrong, being somewhere safe. Somewhere silent. Somewhere without the constant hum of danger or the weight of another lie slung over her shoulders like armor.
She sat on the floor, knees pulled to her chest, the lights dimmed.
A glass of something strong sat untouched on the nearby table.
Her thoughts weren’t on Rex. Or Cody. Not really. Not even on the awkward, lingering heat of Kit Fisto’s presence that still clung to the corners of her memory like steam on glass.
They kept drifting—to the kid.
To the boy with the too-serious eyes and the hands that fidgeted when he thought she wasn’t looking. Who had followed her across half the galaxy, trusting her with a kind of blind faith she didn’t think she deserved.
To the one she couldn’t kill.
To the one she’d almost raised.
She could still hear his voice, the way he’d called her “boss” like it was a title and a joke all in one. The way he looked when they’d watched the suns set over Kashyyyk, his feet dangling off a root bridge too high for a child to be comfortable on.
“Why do people kill people like me?” he’d asked once.
She didn’t answer then.
She didn’t have an answer now.
She rubbed her temples, feeling the weight of every choice she’d made—every body she’d stepped over, every path she’d walked blindly, every whispered promise to herself that she could control this, steer it, fix it.
And now the boy was back in Republic custody.
Safer, maybe.
But she didn’t believe that—not really.
Palpatine had plans again. She could feel it. The shadows were curling inward, and she knew enough to know his approval was just another kind of leash.
Maybe Windu was right to be wary.
Maybe Kit was a fool for softening.
Maybe she’d always been a weapon. Just one that had gone a little bit rogue.
She stood up, slowly. Restless.
The floor was cold under her feet.
She wandered to the window. Coruscant glowed like a promise she never believed in.
And still… her hand went to her chest, fingers brushing the chain she wore. The one the boy had made her. Twisted wire and beads and a piece of scrap metal etched with a crude smiley face.
He’d given it to her after their first week on the farm.
“For luck,” he’d said.
She should have thrown it away. Burned it.
But she never did.
And as the lights of the city blinked in rhythm with her quiet regret, she found herself whispering into the night.
“I hope they’re being kind to you, kid.”
She wasn’t sure if she was talking to him… or to the ghosts that never stopped following her.
⸻
The transmission came through at dawn. She hadn’t slept.
Palpatine’s voice was calm, syrupy sweet as always. “There’s a matter requiring your unique talents,” he said. “You’ll rendezvous with General Skywalker and his battalion. Details will follow.”
No time to think. No time to refuse.
So she didn’t.
⸻
The hangar was already buzzing when she arrived, helmet under her arm, armor pieced together hastily, mismatched from past missions. The 501st was preparing for deployment, their blue-striped armor shining like blades in the rising sun.
She caught Rex’s gaze across the room. He looked tired. He always did lately.
Anakin stood with a datapad, barking orders. Ahsoka stood near him, arms crossed, lekku twitching with unease the moment the reader approached.
“You’re late,” Skywalker said without looking up.
“I’m here,” she replied coolly.
“Then suit up and get ready. We leave in ten.”
She moved to prep her gear, but Ahsoka intercepted her with a tone too casual to be friendly. “Still working for the Chancellor, huh?”
The reader didn’t answer, just gave her a sideways glance and kept walking.
“I mean,” Ahsoka continued, following, “after everything that’s happened—you being gone, the Jedi Council questioning your motives, Palpatine conveniently keeping you around while trusting no one else. Doesn’t any of that seem off to you?”
The reader paused, slowly turning toward her. Her voice was quiet, but heavy. “You think I don’t ask myself the same questions?”
“Then maybe it’s time you stop pretending you’re above all of this,” Ahsoka snapped. “You play all sides. You lie. You vanish. And now you’re back like nothing happened.”
The reader took a step forward, gaze locked on the younger woman. “You think I want this? You think this is a game to me? You were raised in this war. Trained for it. You have people who believe in you, a name that means something. I was bought. I was used. You want to give me a reality check, kid? I live in it.”
Ahsoka blinked, momentarily stunned.
“You’re lucky,” the reader added. “You still think there’s a clean side to stand on.”
With that, she brushed past Ahsoka and made her way toward the LAAT gunship.
Rex was already inside, waiting.
She sat across from him, eyes closed, palms resting on her knees as if trying to keep her heart from falling out of her chest.
“You alright?” he asked after a while.
“No,” she said honestly.
He nodded like that answer made perfect sense. Like he wasn’t alright either.
The gunship lifted. The world blurred outside.
Another mission. Another role to play.
But this time, the pawn wasn’t so willing. And she was starting to learn how to bite.
⸻
The LAAT rocked hard as it breached atmosphere, the roar of wind and engines loud enough to drown out thoughts, fears—names she couldn’t stop saying in her head. Cody. Rex. The kid.
But beside her, General Skywalker sat unfazed, legs spread, arms braced loosely on his knees, like he was born for turbulence. He glanced at her mid-bounce and smirked.
“Bet you missed this,” he said, loud enough to be heard over the rumble.
She scoffed, tucking a few loose strands of hair under her helmet. “Missed being shot at? Only thing I miss more is spice mines and low-rent bounty gigs.”
Anakin grinned. “See? I knew you were fun.”
And to her own surprise… she laughed.
He didn’t ask where she’d been, didn’t pry about the Chancellor, didn’t even hint at what everyone else couldn’t shut up about. Just treated her like a soldier. Like a comrade.
When they hit the ground—dust choking the air, blaster fire already echoing in the distance—he took point without hesitation. She fell in beside him, blasters drawn, movements fluid, practiced. They didn’t need to speak to understand one another.
Flank, move, clear. He gave hand signals, and she followed instinctively. His saber lit up the smoke like a beacon, cutting through battle droids as easily as breath.
They moved through a warzone like ghosts—an unlikely but effective pair. She covered his blind spots, he powered through hers. The 501st swept behind them like a blue tide, and for the first time in months, she felt something almost like useful again.
At the edge of the battlefield, they ducked behind a crumbling wall to regroup.
Anakin exhaled. “You know, I get it,” he said suddenly.
She looked at him, brow furrowed under her helmet.
“Running. Hiding. Playing a part so big you forget who you actually are underneath it.”
A long pause. She stared out over the smoke-covered field, unsure of how to respond.
“You ever think about leaving it all behind?” he asked. “Just… disappearing?”
She glanced over at him, lips twitching. “I did disappear.”
He chuckled, eyes crinkling. “Yeah. But not the way you wanted to.”
She didn’t respond, but the truth of it burned behind her ribs.
A voice came crackling through comms—Rex, coordinating the rear line. The reader’s pulse skipped without reason. She forced herself to focus.
“Let’s go,” Anakin said, pushing up from cover and drawing his saber again. “Back to the chaos.”
She followed, silently grateful for the moment.
He hadn’t asked about Cody. Or Rex. Or the kid.
He hadn’t made her explain herself.
And for now, that made him the easiest person in the galaxy to be around.
⸻
The adrenaline was still thrumming in her blood as she pulled off her helmet and leaned against a sun-scorched wall. The air smelled like ash and ion discharge, and her armor was coated in dust and dried blood—not all of it hers.
She barely had a second to exhale before Ahsoka appeared like a shadow in the corner of her eye.
“You’re not going to disappear again, are you?” Ahsoka asked flatly.
The reader blinked, slow and tired. “Not planning on it.”
Ahsoka folded her arms, her lekku twitching ever so slightly. “I don’t get it. You show up, cause chaos—emotionally and otherwise—leave, then come back like nothing happened.”
“I don’t owe you an explanation.”
“No,” Ahsoka agreed, “but you owe someone one. Cody? Rex? The Council? The Chancellor? You burned every side of the board and expect to keep playing the game.”
The reader narrowed her eyes, pushing off the wall. “I don’t expect anything.”
“I can’t tell if you’re loyal or just really good at pretending.”
Before she could snap something cutting back, a calm voice intervened behind them.
“That’s enough, Snips.”
Anakin strode into view, hands on his belt, expression unreadable. Ahsoka glanced between the two of them, jaw tight, but ultimately nodded and walked off with a muttered, “Fine. But she’s not off the hook.”
Once she was gone, the reader exhaled through her nose. “She’s got a mean right hook. Bet she’s even worse when she’s got words.”
“She’s protective,” Anakin said with a shrug. “But she’s not wrong. Just… a little blunt.”
They stood in silence for a while, watching the twilight settle in soft purples and oranges across the broken landscape. She looked over at him, surprised to see him still there, just… waiting.
“No lecture?” she asked.
“Nope.”
“No cryptic Jedi wisdom?”
“I’m fresh out,” he said with a smirk. “You want some unsolicited advice instead?”
She gave him a dry look. “Why not. Go for it.”
Anakin leaned against the same wall she had been using as support. “You’re a mess.”
“Thanks.”
“But so is everyone. That’s the secret no one talks about. We’re all running on fumes, bad decisions, and half-formed ideas of what we think is right.”
She let out a breath of a laugh. “And here I thought you Jedi were supposed to be the poster boy of moral certainty.”
He shrugged. “Not me. Never was.”
Silence again. This time, more comfortable.
“I liked fighting with you today,” she admitted, surprising herself more than him.
He smiled. “I like fighting with you too.”
She studied his profile. “You’re not like the others.”
“That’s probably both a compliment and an insult.”
“Take it however you want.”
They both chuckled softly.
“Thanks for not asking about the Chancellor. Or the others. Or—”
“You don’t have to talk about it unless you want to,” Anakin said simply. “Not with me.”
She looked down at her hands, cut up and shaking slightly. “I don’t even know what I’d say.”
“Then don’t say anything yet,” he said. “Just… be here. For once.”
Her chest ached at the simplicity of it. She nodded, almost imperceptibly.
And for a moment, just a moment, she was someone without secrets.
⸻
Prev Chapter | Next Chapter
Summary: Togruta bounty hunter Sha’rali Jurok takes a solo job to retrieve a rogue clone on Felucia. With her two deadly droids—an aggressive astromech and a lethal butler unit—she walks into a Separatist trap and uncovers a mission far more dangerous than advertised.
OC Main Character list:
Sha’rali Jurok – Togruta bounty hunter; cold, calculating, highly skilled.
R9 – Aggressive and foul-tempered Purple and gold plated astromech droid with a flair for destruction and sarcasm.
K4-VN7 – Polished, eloquent, and terrifyingly efficient combat butler droid. Built from scratch to kill with elegance.
CT-4023 – An ARC trooper deserter from Umbara, traumatized and hiding dark secrets.
⸻
No one ever looked up in places like this.
Too many shadows. Too many reasons to keep your head down. The air inside the station’s lower ring was a stew of recycled carbon, rotgut fumes, and quiet desperation. Pipes wept steam like open wounds. Light was an afterthought.
But high above the foot traffic, perched on a rusted catwalk like a vulture watching prey, stood a silhouette draped in black.
Sha’rali Jurok didn’t move.
Six-foot-three of poised muscle and scarred armor, she waited with the stillness of a born predator. The dim lights kissed the edges of her obsidian chestplate, brushed against the bronze trim curling over her pauldrons like war glyphs. Her montrals swept high and long, twin spires framed in shadow. Her coral-pink skin peeked through weathered gaps in her gear, etched with fierce white markings.
She didn’t flinch when the blasterfire echoed from three decks below.
She was waiting.
A sharp series of binary chirps cut through the noise in her helmet feed.
“Target acquired. Location pinging now.”
The message came from a rolling menace of purple and gold—a heavily customized astromech droid barreling down a side corridor at breakneck speed. It screeched in fury as a pair of thugs tried to intercept it, deployed a shock arm, and lit one of them up with a jolt strong enough to drop a Wookiee. The second man turned to run. The droid revved louder, popped out a sawblade, and chased after him with a gleeful wail.
Sha’rali sighed. “Subtlety’s dead, then.”
The third figure, K4-VN7, stepped up beside her like a ghost in polished rose gold. Humanoid in build, tall and slim, the droid moved with the elegant posture of a high-born noble—only he wasn’t meant to serve tea. His chassis was streamlined, his hands too steady, his frame too balanced. Every inch of him suggested killing disguised as courtesy.
“Your astromech appears to be under the impression this is a battlefield,” the rose-gold droid observed in a smooth, accented voice. “Not a scouting operation.”
“R9 thinks everything is a battlefield,” she replied flatly.
“A charming trait,” he said. “If you’re in the habit of raising buildings to the ground.”
Sha’rali glanced sideways. “Remind me which one of you decapitated a Pyke courier because he insulted your coat?”
“I didn’t decapitate him,” the droid said with casual precision. “I surgically separated his head from his spine. And I had asked him nicely.”
She allowed herself half a smirk. It was gone as quickly as it came.
They dropped together into the industrial underlevels. The station below stank of synthspice, oil, and urine. Slave collars glinted from shadowed alleyways. Scum and suffering layered the walls like rust.
Her boots hit the metal with a clang.
R9 zoomed around the corner, screeching wildly, the smoldering remains of something twitching in its wake. The droid rotated its dome toward Sha’rali, deployed a data-spike, and slammed it into a nearby console with the enthusiasm of a child stabbing a fork into cake.
A holomap flickered to life.
Target marked.
“Well,” the K4-VN7 said, brushing invisible dust from his long coat. “Shall we go commit some light murder?”
Sha’rali drew her rifle from her back and cocked the charging pin.
“No,” she said, voice low and edged. “We commit justice. Murder’s just the payment method.”
⸻
The corridor reeked of ammonia and blood.
They moved in silence now—no more banter. Sha’rali’s boots made no sound on the grated floor, her movements honed by years of tracking quarry through worse places than this. Her armor blended with the shadows, matte black plates drinking in the station’s flickering emergency light.
Ahead, a red blinking dot pulsed on her HUD. The target. Traced by R9’s slicing from a local maintenance hub.
The man she was hunting had once been muscle for the Black Sun. Not subtle, not smart—but sadistic. He’d skipped out on a deal with Jabba the Hutt, and when a Hutt calls for blood, you don’t ask questions. You just bring it.
She raised her left hand—a silent signal.
Behind her, the rose-gold butler droid stilled instantly. It tilted its head, listening to the faint echo of movement up ahead. The sound of heavy boots, a muttered curse, a weapon being checked. Then two. Maybe three others with him.
R9, crouched low and dirty beside a leaky pipe, emitted a shrill string of chirps that could only be described as vulgar enthusiasm.
Sha’rali nodded once.
Go.
The astromech shot forward like a hyperspace dart, wheels squealing and shock arms primed. He launched a small probe into the ceiling vent with a clink, and seconds later, every overhead light in the corridor surged, flared—
—and died.
Darkness swallowed the hallway.
Screams echoed before the first shot was even fired.
Sha’rali dropped into a roll, came up with her rifle raised, and shot a Nikto thug clean through the chest. The impact lit up the corridor in a flash of orange and smoke. She advanced without hesitation, slapping a stun grenade onto a bulkhead and spinning off the wall as it blew.
A Klatooinian charged her with a vibro-axe. She ducked under the swing and drove her elbow into his throat, then leveled her blaster and dropped him at point-blank range.
Behind her, K4-VN7 moved like death on a dancefloor.
“Please remain still,” he said, grabbing a screaming Devaronian by the shoulders and driving him into the floor hard enough to dent the plating. The droid flicked a vibro-blade from his wrist and plunged it through the back of the man’s neck. “Thank you for your cooperation.”
R9 let out a triumphant screech and blew a hole in the bulkhead, exposing a rusted hatch beyond. Sparks rained down.
Sha’rali stepped over the corpses, her rifle trained forward. Her lekku shifted behind her as she approached the hatch.
“He’s in there,” she said.
The butler droid dusted blood from his chassis. “Shall I knock?”
Sha’rali didn’t answer.
She kicked the hatch in.
The room beyond was small, low-lit, hot. A half-stripped power core hummed in the corner. The Black Sun lieutenant crouched behind a stack of crates, wide-eyed and sweating, a heavy blaster in his shaking hands.
“Y-you don’t have to do this,” he stammered, as Sha’rali stepped inside, calm and slow. “I can pay. I can outbid Jabba—whatever he’s offering you, I’ll double—triple it.”
She didn’t blink. “He’s not paying me to talk.”
His finger twitched on the trigger.
She shot first.
A single bolt punched through his wrist, sending the blaster spinning. He howled in pain, collapsing backward against the wall, blood running over his fingers.
R9 rolled in and deployed a small, brutal-looking saw. He revved it threateningly, beeping what might’ve been the astromech equivalent of “I dare you to move.”
The Black Sun enforcer whimpered.
Sha’rali crouched in front of him, face calm, voice like a vibroblade sheathed in silk.
“Jabba wanted you alive.” A beat. “But he didn’t say how much.”
She lifted her comlink. “Target secured. Prep the binders. We’re delivering to Tattoine.”
K4-VN7 tilted his head. “Shall I extract a souvenir for Lord Jabba? Perhaps an ear?”
R9 cheered.
Sha’rali stood. “Keep him breathing. For now.”
⸻
The suns were cruel today.
Tatooine’s twin stars hung like molten coins above the dune sea, turning armor into ovens and sweat into salt crust. Even with a heat-absorption cloak draped over her shoulders, Sha’rali could feel her lekku ache from the sunburn beneath.
R9 screeched in protest as its treads kicked up dust. The astromech, slathered in a new layer of carbon scoring and dried blood, had refused to ride in the hold. He rolled beside her like a tiny war-god on wheels, his purple and gold frame gleaming in the sunlight like a dare to the galaxy.
Behind them, K4-VN7 hauled a repulsor-gurney with their prisoner strapped to it—still barely conscious, mouth gagged, one arm missing. It was wrapped, of course. This was still business.
The gates to Jabba’s palace loomed ahead, cracked open just wide enough for her to smell roasted meat and hear the bassline of a Hutt’s indulgent soundtrack: booming drums, offbeat strings, alien instruments that sounded like violence in slow motion.
They didn’t knock.
The guards knew who she was.
Two Weequays parted with wary expressions. One muttered into a wrist comm. Another took one look at R9’s spinning buzzsaw attachment and immediately backed up.
“Nice to be remembered,” she muttered.
Inside the palace the heat didn’t leave. It just changed form—from desert furnace to thick, sour, flesh-heated humidity. The great hall was alive with noise, low-slung thugs, enforcers, offworld dancers, a few droids rigged with restraining bolts and serving trays.
Sha’rali strode through the rot like she belonged.
Because she did.
Then she heard it—a voice that made her jaw clench.
“Well, well. Didn’t think they let ghosts back in here.”
She turned slowly.
Leaning against one of the archways was a woman she’d shot once—in the shoulder, on Ord Mantell.
This was Latts Razzi, wrapped in black silks and armor pieces, her electro-whip coiled lazily at her hip.
“What do you want, Razzi?” Sha’rali asked.
Latts grinned. “Word was you were dead. Or retired. Or retired and dead. But here you are, dragging in meat for the slug.”
“Better than selling spice to backwater Rodians.”
Another voice joined in—deep, accented, amused. Embo.
His wide-brimmed hat cast a shadow over his eyes, but the tilt of his head suggested approval. His pet anooba growled low at R9, who spun his dome in a slow circle of warning.
“Charming crowd,” the rose-gold droid intoned behind her. “Do let me know when I should start breaking limbs.”
Jabba’s booming laugh saved them from escalation. He sat atop his throne now, drool wetting the furs beneath him, jowls rippling with joy as he saw the prisoner wheeled forward.
“Sha’rali Jurok,” the Hutt oozed in Huttese. “My red ghost returns.”
She inclined her head slightly. “I brought what you asked for.”
K4-VN7 gave the prisoner a casual shove, causing the body to slide and thud into the steps of the throne. The guards flinched. Jabba’s tail twitched, delighted.
The Nikto handler stepped up, scanned the target’s biochip, and gave a nod.
Jabba chuckled. “You always deliver. Perhaps next time, I send you after someone worth your skill.”
Sha’rali said nothing.
Latts leaned in again. “You know Jabba’s got a job coming up on Felucia, right? Clone deserter. Former ARC. Very high-value. Heard Bossk wants it.”
Sha’rali arched a brow. “Let Bossk try. I finish what others choke on.”
A low chuckle from Embo. Respect.
“Will there be refreshments?” the rose-gold droid asked politely. “My photoreceptors are fogging.”
Jabba bellowed again, more amused than ever.
“Take what you will. The palace is open tonight…”
Sha’rali turned away from the Hutt’s throne, credits heavy in her pouch, enemies and allies alike at her back. The Clone Wars raged on far beyond these walls, but here in Jabba’s court, loyalty was a negotiation and violence a language everyone spoke.
She felt the next hunt coming.
She always did.
⸻
Bossk had laughed. Loudly. Cruelly.
“You’re taking that Felucia job alone?” he snarled, all fangs and thick claws. “Hah! You’ll end up part of the jungle. Buried in some sarlacc-wannabe’s gullet.”
Sha’rali hadn’t blinked. “I don’t split paychecks.”
“Good way to get killed,” Bossk growled.
Boba Fett, barely Twelve and still wearing armor too big for him, added, “Maybe she likes dying slow. Heard those Felucian beasts like to drag it out.”
She hadn’t dignified that with an answer. Just turned on her heel and left.
Let them scoff.
They weren’t getting paid.
⸻
Felucia stank of wet rot and death.
Every breath of air was thick with spores. Giant fungal towers loomed above the jungle floor, sweating bioluminescence and feeding on the decay below. Vines hung like nooses. The sun filtered in weak and green.
Sha’rali moved like she belonged to the planet—low, quiet, sharp-eyed. Her armor had already taken on a fine film of blue pollen, but she didn’t bother wiping it. It would just come back. The whole world felt alive, like it was watching her from every direction.
Which it was.
She adjusted the satchel on her back and muttered, “Still no signal?”
R9, rolling carefully over a tangle of oversized roots, let out a grumpy bloop and extended a scanner dish. Static. The astromech pulsed red. Interference from deep-energy Separatist tech. Something big was here.
K4 walking a step behind her with perfect posture, scanned the treeline. “I believe something is tracking us,” he said pleasantly. “And I don’t mean the bugs.”
Sha’rali didn’t slow her pace. “Let them. I’m not the one bleeding.”
The clone deserter she was tracking had reportedly gone rogue after an OP on Umbara. CT-4023, vanished into the jungle months ago. Word was, he’d lost his whole squad in one night. No bodycams. No comm logs. Just silence and redacted reports.
That meant trauma. That meant instability. And unstable soldiers were dangerous, especially to people like Jabba who had loose investments in black-market clone tech.
R9 let out a shrill alarm—motion detected, thirty meters ahead.
Sha’rali dropped into cover.
“Scouting droid,” the butler droid confirmed a moment later, eyes glowing faint blue. “Separatist make. Old model, but still deadly if it screams.”
She whispered, “Disable it. Quietly.”
The droid drew a slim, needle-like dart from his sleeve and flicked his wrist. Pssst-thunk.
The droid overhead twitched once—then crashed to the ground in silence.
“Nicely done,” she murmured.
“I do enjoy precision.”
An hour later, they found the outpost.
Half-hidden under a ridge of bioluminescent mushrooms, the Separatist bunker hummed with unnatural energy. Camouflaged tanks sat idle. Patrols of B1 battle droids marched in lazy loops. But there were heavier units too—spindly, gleaming super battle droids and a tactical droid barking orders in binary to something inside.
Sha’rali narrowed her eyes.
The deserter wasn’t just hiding from bounty hunters.
He was protected.
Or… captured.
“Options?” the rose-gold droid asked.
“Go in loud,” R9 offered via a cheery, escalating sequence of beeps, spinning a small grenade launcher from his chassis.
“Tempting,” Sha’rali replied. “But I want eyes on him first.”
She drew a pair of electrobinoculars and scoped the inner compound.
There—cellblock nine. A humanoid figure, tall, scarred, seated on the floor with a head in his hands. Tatty clone armor. Partial ARC insignia. No helmet.
Her quarry.
Still alive.
That’s when the sniper droid fired.
The bolt kissed her pauldron—scraping past with a hiss of melted metal. She dove, rolled, fired twice—striking the sniper’s perch and causing a detonation that set a quarter of the jungle ablaze.
The Separatist camp lit up like a kicked hornet’s nest.
Alarms blared.
“Stealth,” the rose-gold droid sighed. “A fleeting dream.”
R9 screamed in binary, launched a wrist-rocket, and blasted a pair of B1s to pieces.
Sha’rali slapped a charge to her rifle and broke into a sprint. “We’re going in loud after all.”
The jungle screamed.
Plasma bolts cracked through the air like lightning in a storm. Trees burst into flame. The blue-green foliage glowed eerily under blaster light, casting jagged shadows across the uneven ground.
Sha’rali moved like water—fast, silent, deadly.
She dropped low behind a bulbous root, ripped a flash-charge from her belt, and lobbed it underhand. It bounced twice, then burst with a thunderclap of white.
The line of B1s went down screeching in scrambled code, sensors fried.
“R9, left!” she barked.
The astromech shrieked in challenge and surged forward, a buzzsaw whirling from one compartment while its flame nozzle hissed out the other. It hit a squad of advancing droids like a demon-possessed cannonball, slicing through one’s leg and immolating another’s head with a casual fwoosh.
The jungle screamed.
Plasma bolts cracked through the air like lightning in a storm. Trees burst into flame. The blue-green foliage glowed eerily under blaster light, casting jagged shadows across the uneven ground.
Sha’rali moved like water—fast, silent, deadly.
She dropped low behind a bulbous root, ripped a flash-charge from her belt, and lobbed it underhand. It bounced twice, then burst with a thunderclap of white.
The line of B1s went down screeching in scrambled code, sensors fried.
“R9, left!” she barked.
The astromech shrieked in challenge and surged forward, a buzzsaw whirling from one compartment while its flame nozzle hissed out the other. It hit a squad of advancing droids like a demon-possessed cannonball, slicing through one’s leg and immolating another’s head with a casual fwoosh.
Behind her, K4-VN7 moved with the grace of a blade dancer.
The droid’s rose-gold frame glinted with controlled menace, fingers twitching as his internal targeting locked onto the super battle droid rounding the ridge.
“Permission to escalate?” K4 asked smoothly.
“Granted,” Sha’rali said.
A micro-rocket fired from his wrist. The impact threw the super battle droid into the fungal wall with such force it split the caps open, oozing bright green pus onto its burning carcass.
Still, they kept coming.
From the ridge above, a tactical droid gave new orders in harsh binary. More fire rained down—precision bolts, cutting through trees and laying suppression zones around the cell block where the deserter was kept.
“CT-4023,” Sha’rali said aloud, ducking low and sliding beneath a crumbling log. “Still alive, still locked up.”
“You intend to extract him mid-firefight?” K4 asked, stepping over her and calmly shattering a B1’s neck with one open palm. “That seems… optimistic.”
“Not extract,” she grunted, firing two shots over her shoulder. “Drag.”
The final push came fast and hard.
K4 ripped open the bunker’s rear access panel. R9 hacked into the door seal with a spray of sparks and shrill swearing in binary. Inside, the cell block was dark, flickering, full of dead power conduits.
And there he was.
CT-4023.
Slumped in the corner of a containment cell, armor half gone, arm in a crude sling made from trooper plating and bloody cloth. Eyes sunken. Jaw bristled with patchy stubble. A long scar curved under one eye, old and raw like a failed surgery.
He looked up at them as the door opened, gaze unfocused. Not afraid. Not confused. Just… tired.
Sha’rali stepped forward, weapon lowered.
“CT-4023. You’re coming with us.”
He didn’t move. Just said, flatly, “You’re not supposed to be here.”
“Neither are you,” she replied.
They didn’t make it far.
It was the seismic charge that did it—one of the new models, the ones that didn’t boom so much as erase. The ground behind them warped with sudden light, the shockwave launching Sha’rali and K4 into a tangle of pulsing vines.
R9 screeched in horror as his dome sparked.
Before she could rise, something heavy struck her temple—metal, hard, fast.
She hit the dirt.
⸻
She woke cuffed in a holding cell aboard a Separatist prison barge. The air smelled like oil and chloroform. Her head throbbed with a low, punishing ache.
R9 was in a stasis lock across from her, magnetized to the floor.
K4 sat beside her, unpowered but intact. For now.
CT-4023 was hunched against the far wall, silent, his eyes closed like he’d already accepted this as fate.
A pair of B2s clanked past the cell’s viewplate.
Overhead, the ship’s engines roared to life—course set, coordinates locked.
They were being taken off-world.
And whatever the original job had been… this had just become something much bigger.
⸻
The hum of the Separatist prison barge was constant and low, like a predator breathing just out of sight.
Sha’rali sat cross-legged in the middle of the cell, arms resting casually on her knees, even though her wrists were still bound with mag-cuffs. She’d already tried dislocating her thumb—twice. The cuffs just re-tightened with every move.
R9 was still magnetized to the wall across from her, only his central eye active, pulsing red like an irritated wound. K4-VN7 sat beside him, rebooting slowly—his internal systems taxed from damage during the firefight.
The only other occupant, slouched in the back corner, hadn’t spoken since the ship lifted off.
CT-4023.
His armor was a battered mix of Phase I and II, scraped and dulled. No insignia. Just a partial ARC tattoo on one bicep and the dull glint of his CT number, etched into the plastoid by hand. His eyes were half-lidded, watching the floor like it might open up and swallow him.
She studied him openly now.
Broad shoulders. Tension in the jaw. A man used to holding the line. But the hollowness in his expression said he’d lost everything that mattered.
“Pretty quiet for someone with a bounty on his head,” she said.
Nothing.
She leaned back slightly. “You gonna tell me why you were holed up on Felucia in a Separatist bunker?”
Still no answer.
She sighed. “Alright, fine. I’ll go first.”
Her voice lowered. “Job came from Jabba. He’s got an interest in clone deserters lately—especially ones with ARC credentials. Seems he thinks there’s something valuable in that pretty little head of yours. Codes. Maps. Maybe just memories he can sell to the highest bidder. Who knows.”
That got a flicker.
CT-4023 raised his gaze, slow and sharp. “You work for the Hutts?”
Sha’rali smiled without humor. “I work for credits. Hutts pay well for ghosts like you.”
“You came alone?”
“Wasn’t planning to share your bounty.”
He gave a soft, bitter laugh. It died in his throat almost instantly.
A long silence passed before she asked, quieter now, “What do I call you?”
He looked away.
“Your name,” she prompted.
“Doesn’t matter.”
Her brow furrowed.
He added, flatly, “Everyone who knew it’s dead now.”
The words landed heavy, like the click of a sealed coffin.
She didn’t respond immediately. Just stared at him. Not in pity—but in understanding. Loss had a shape, and it wore the same tired expression across species, planets, and wars.
“CT-4023, then,” she said. “Not much of a name, but it’ll do.”
He leaned his head back against the wall and closed his eyes again. “Don’t get comfortable with it.”
Sha’rali leaned forward slightly, her voice lower, more curious than confrontational. “You weren’t hiding from the war.”
He didn’t answer.
“You were hiding from your past.”
Still nothing.
She exhaled slowly and leaned her head back against the cold durasteel wall. “Yeah,” she murmured. “Aren’t we all.”
Outside the cell, the lights flickered red.
The intercom crackled in Binary. K4’s eyes reactivated in a flash of sapphire light.
“We’re coming out of hyperspace,” he said calmly, voice newly rebooted. “Judging by the vector… I believe we’re approaching Saleucami.”
Sha’rali blinked.
Saleucami wasn’t a Separatist stronghold.
It was a staging world.
Something was wrong.
CT-4023’s eyes opened again—fully, alert now. His voice dropped to a whisper.
“They’re not taking us to a prison.”
⸻
The air in the Saleucami compound was thick with recycled heat and chemical burn.
A Separatist facility, buried deep beneath the arid surface—off-grid, quiet, designed not for prisoners of war, but for assets. There were no prison cells. Just sterile rooms, surgical lights, and soundproof walls.
CT-4023 was dragged from the transport first.
He didn’t fight. Didn’t flinch.
Only his eyes moved—watching, cataloging, waiting.
They strapped him into a durasteel chair bolted to the floor. Arms pinned wide. Legs secured. Cables snaked down from the ceiling and tapped into the restraint frame, powering the table with an ominous, pulsing hum.
The technician droid’s voice was emotionless. “You are in possession of Republic intelligence. Please verify encryption key.”
The clone didn’t speak.
“CT-4023, verify encryption key.”
Nothing.
The voltage hit his spine in white-hot arcs, burning through his nervous system like wildfire.
He didn’t scream. His jaw clenched tight. Every muscle in his body seized. The smell of scorched skin filled the room.
Still—no words.
Again. And again. The machine changed tactics: neural pulses. Flash-cranial scans. Biofeedback loop interrogation.
He didn’t give them a name. Not a number. Not a lie. Nothing.
By the fourth hour, he was bleeding from the mouth, both eyes bloodshot, breathing shallow. But still alive. Still silent.
When they pulled him out, the technicians were muttering.
“He wants to die.”
Sha’rali watched him slump to the floor of the holding chamber.
She was already cuffed to the interrogation slab, reclining like it was a lounge chair instead of a torture frame. Her expression didn’t flinch.
“Take notes,” she said flatly. “He’s not gonna break. He’s past that.”
A B1 clanked forward. “State your mission. Why did you extract CT-4023 from the bunker?”
She raised one brow lazily. “You think that’s extraction?”
“Answer the question.”
Sha’rali yawned.
A taller, insectoid Neimoidian stepped in now—robed in black, clearly the one in charge. His voice was rasping, with oily menace. “You work for the Republic?”
She laughed. “Oh stars, no.”
“Then for whom?”
“Someone who values what’s in his head,” she replied. “A client with… flexible morals and deep pockets.”
The Neimoidian frowned. “What intelligence does CT-4023 possess?”
Sha’rali smirked. “You tried four hours and a spinal voltage rack to find out. I’m just the delivery service, remember?”
A pause. Then the interrogator leaned closer. “You will tell us your employer. And your mission.”
She studied him for a beat, then tilted her head—expression cool, unreadable.
“Let me tell you something about torture,” she began, voice eerily calm. “It’s not about the truth. It never is. It’s about control. Dominance. Breaking people until they’ll say anything just to make it stop.”
The B1 made a confused beep. She ignored it.
“You want answers, but you’re using the wrong method. Torture’s messy. Inconsistent. You think you’re getting gold but most of the time it’s just blood-soaked garbage. Want to know how I know?”
She leaned forward against her restraints, her voice dropping into something darker.
“Because I do it for fun.”
The interrogator stiffened.
“I’ve peeled lies out of the toughest mercs on Nar Shaddaa. Pried secrets out of smugglers, spies, even Jedi. You know what most people confess to under duress?” Her eyes narrowed. “That they believe the moon’s made of cheese. That they’re married to droids. That they can hear worms sing.”
Silence.
“Torture’s not reliable,” she finished coolly. “But it is entertaining.”
The room went cold.
The Neimoidian slowly stepped back.
Sha’rali sat back, smiling with something halfway between pride and threat.
“Go on then. Shock me. Burn me. Cut me open. I’ll tell you the same thing your droid could’ve: I’m here for the credits. No flag, no cause. Just the thrill of the hunt.”
The lights dimmed. The hum of the room paused.
The interrogator turned and gestured to the droids. “Return her to holding. Increase surveillance. She’s not bluffing.”
⸻
Back in the holding room, CT-4023 hadn’t moved.
Sha’rali was thrown in with a hiss of hydraulics. She rolled onto her knees, sore but intact.
They sat in silence for a while. The hum of distant machinery echoed like a heartbeat.
“You didn’t break,” she said eventually.
He didn’t look at her. “Didn’t need to.”
“You want to die?”
His jaw twitched. Still no answer.
She leaned her head back against the wall again, voice lower now. Less sharp. “You think whatever’s in your head isn’t worth protecting. But someone else thinks it is.”
Finally, finally, he looked at her.
His voice was hoarse. “Why’d you talk like that in there?”
She smiled faintly. “To waste their time.”
A pause.
“…thanks,” he muttered, almost too quiet to hear.
Sha’rali tilted her head toward him. “Don’t get comfortable with it.”
⸻
Coruscant. Jedi Temple.
Rain slid down the outer transparisteel panes of the High Council chamber, streaking the glass like tears. The mood inside was colder.
Master Plo Koon leaned forward, his voice gravel-soft. “The confirmation comes directly from our intelligence outpost on Felucia. CT-4023 has been taken alive by Separatist forces.”
Across from him, Mace Windu folded his hands. “That clone was listed as KIA on Umbara.”
“Apparently,” Ki-Adi-Mundi said, “he survived. Went dark.”
“And the bounty hunter?” asked Master Saesee Tiin.
Plo’s voice dropped. “Identified as a Togruta named Sha’rali Jurok. Wanted in five systems. Independent. Dangerous. Not affiliated with the Republic or Separatists, but… she retrieved CT-4023 before they were both captured in the firefight.”
“A complication,” Mace muttered.
“She’s irrelevant,” said Master Windu. “CT-4023 is the priority. An ARC with classified field data, possibly firsthand intel from Umbara’s black ops campaign? If that information is extracted, the Separatists could exploit it system-wide.”
Yoda nodded slowly, fingers laced. “Retrieve him… we must.”
“And what of the bounty hunter?” Obi-Wan’s voice was softer, curious rather than concerned.
“She’s not our problem,” Mace replied. “If she gets in the way—Delta Squad will handle it.”
⸻
The lights dimmed as a hologram of Saleucami rotated slowly above the table. Delta Squad stood at attention—Scorch cracking his knuckles, Sev adjusting his rifle strap, Fixer dead silent, and Boss straight-backed with his helmet under one arm.
“Mission is simple,” said the admiral at the head of the table. “CT-4023 is alive and being held underground at a Separatist facility. Deep scan picked up irregular ion shielding—it’s well-hidden, but not impenetrable.”
“Target status?” asked Boss.
“Unknown physical condition, but signs of recent neural interference suggest they’re attempting to extract intel. You are to enter, retrieve the clone, and exfil. Silent if possible. Loud if necessary.”
“What about the bounty hunter?” Fixer asked dryly.
“Non-priority. You are authorized to eliminate if she poses a threat to recovery.”
“Copy that,” said Boss.
The admiral continued. “Delta, you will not be alone. Jedi support is being deployed to reinforce your extraction window—but do not rely on them for the initial op.”
“Who are the Jedi?” Sev asked.
The doors behind them hissed open.
Two Jedi entered. The first, a tall, lean Zabrak with a rigid posture and calculating gaze—Master Eeth Koth. The other, a calm, composed Nautolan with piercing blue eyes and lightsaber scars along his arms—Kit Fisto.
“We’ll intercept any reinforcements from orbit or planetary staging areas,” Kit said warmly, but with weight behind the smile. “If they’re moving the prisoner off-world, we’ll stop it.”
“We’re not here to babysit,” Eeth Koth added. “Delta leads the infiltration. We’ll clean up what follows.”
Boss gave a tight nod. “Copy that.”
The admiral gestured to the map again. “You insert at 0200. Stealth first. If that fails… don’t leave any survivors. Not with what’s in that clone’s head.”
⸻
In the dim light of the cell, CT-4023 leaned back against the wall, wrists bruised, jaw clenched, his eyes locked on nothing.
Sha’rali Jurok sat cross-legged on the floor, idly carving something into the wall with a chipped scrap of durasteel.
“They’re not done with us,” she said idly.
“I know,” CT-4023 muttered.
“You think someone’s coming for you?”
He didn’t respond right away. A long silence. Then, “Maybe.”
She scoffed. “Guess you’re lucky. They don’t come for people like me.”
More silence.
Outside the holding cell, a B2 battle droid stomped into position. A red light blinked above the cell door.
Something was shifting.
High above the planet, far beyond the clouds and smog, a stealth transport emerged from hyperspace—black against the stars.
Delta Squad was coming.
And only one of them mattered to the Republic.
⸻
Next Part
The twin suns of Tatooine dipped below the horizon, casting a soft, fiery glow across the sand dunes. The planet’s desolation had an eerie beauty to it—one that had become a quiet refuge for the reader and the child. For months now, they’d kept to the edges of this forgotten world, far from the eyes of the Republic and Separatists alike.
The loth cat, whom they’d found scrabbling through the dust on the outskirts of their makeshift farm, had become an unlikely companion. Its sleek, blue-grey fur had started to grow back, its eyes glinting with a sharpness that matched the desert itself. It was, without a doubt, a symbol of something still clinging to life in the emptiness of their exile. And, despite the grueling hardships they’d faced before this, there was a strange comfort in its presence.
The mechanic shop was a far cry from the quiet isolation of a farm. The reader had quickly adapted to the new environment—fixing speeders, engines, and droids. It was more familiar to her than the tedious cycle of planting crops and praying for a harvest. Tatooine had no shortage of broken-down machines, and the demand for repairs was constant. It kept them busy.
The small, makeshift shop was wedged between a cantina and a market stall. Despite its modest size, it was functional. She’d painted a faded sign with crude lettering—Repair & Salvage. Inside, the shop was a cluttered paradise of parts and tools. The air always smelled faintly of oil, rust, and the heat of the desert sun that relentlessly beat down on everything.
The child, now quietly watching her work with his small hands, had started to pick up bits of the trade. He was clever, inquisitive—his Force sensitivity seemed to lend itself to the work, too. But there was still that feeling of unease lingering in the air, something unspoken between them. Despite their time together, she hadn’t fully explained why she’d saved him, why she’d taken him in. And in return, he hadn’t pressed her for answers. Perhaps he didn’t need them.
“Fixing things feels easier than farming,” she muttered one evening, wiping oil from her hands as she glanced over at the boy.
He didn’t respond immediately, focused on cleaning a small tool he’d just finished using. He’d been learning quickly.
“Yeah, I guess so,” he finally said, his voice a mix of curiosity and the wariness he’d developed over time. “But, do you miss… I mean, we could’ve been anywhere, right?”
She paused. The sound of the desert wind whistled faintly through the cracks in the shop walls, but she didn’t answer immediately. There was a silence in the room as the loth cat padded over and jumped onto a nearby crate, curling up into a ball. The child’s question hung in the air.
“Do you miss it? Being with them?” he repeated, voice quieter this time.
It took her a moment before she spoke. She stood and leaned against the workbench, looking out toward the open door. The desert stretched endlessly beyond, quiet except for the distant hum of a passing speeder.
“Sometimes,” she admitted. “But we’re safer here. And it’s… simpler.” Her voice faltered for a moment, her gaze lingering on the horizon before it shifted back to him. “We can keep you safe here. That’s what matters.”
The child nodded slowly, but she could see the wheels turning in his head, the lingering doubt. He was old enough to understand that safety wasn’t always as simple as finding a new place to hide.
But she couldn’t bring herself to tell him that hiding was only temporary, that the world would eventually catch up to them. She wouldn’t let that happen, not if she could help it. And she wasn’t sure if that made her a fool, but it was the only thing she could do to atone for what she’d dragged him into.
Their quiet life in the desert was their only solace. She’d gotten used to the sound of the loth cat’s purring in the corner, to the child’s shy attempts to fix things beside her, and even to the heat of the desert sun that felt like it never stopped beating down on the sand.
But as days bled into months, the feeling of being watched—of being hunted—never quite left. She couldn’t shake the sensation that someone, somewhere, knew where they were. Even on this barren world, she couldn’t escape what had been set into motion. The ghost of the Republic, of the Jedi, of Palpatine and his web of lies, was still out there, waiting for her to slip.
One day, while she was working on a speeder engine, a familiar sound—a crackle through the comm—broke the stillness of the shop. Her hand froze, mid-repair. Her eyes shot to the communicator on the counter.
“Don’t even think about it,” she muttered under her breath, hoping it wasn’t what she feared.
The transmission crackled again, louder this time. She wiped her greasy hands on a rag and sighed, reluctantly walking over to the comm. Her fingers hovered over the switch. She hesitated. The child’s curious gaze fixed on her, but he didn’t say anything.
With a deep breath, she pressed the button.
“Yes?”
It was Rex’s voice. Strong. Familiar.
“Hey,” he said, his tone almost tentative. “Where are you?”
She glanced back at the child, who was now fidgeting with a broken droid part. He didn’t look up, but the tension in the room was palpable. She bit her lip.
“Somewhere safe,” she replied, her voice cold. “Not where you want to be.”
There was a pause on the other end, Rex’s voice quiet for a moment, like he was weighing his next words. “We’ve been looking for you. You’ve been gone a while. The Jedi are still—”
“I’m not interested in the Jedi,” she interrupted sharply. “I told you, I’m done with that. You should be, too.”
Another silence, heavy, before he responded again, quieter now. “Look, I don’t care where you are. I don’t care about the Jedi or the Separatists. I care about you.”
She exhaled sharply. She could hear the weight in his words, feel it pull at the corners of her heart. But she had to stay strong.
“I’m not the same person you knew, Rex,” she said, her voice softening but still firm. “I can’t—”
“We’re coming for you,” Rex cut in, a promise hidden beneath his words. “Wherever you are. We’ll find you.”
The line went silent again, but this time, she didn’t reach for the comm to hang up. She stood still, her eyes drifting to the child, who had now stopped fidgeting and was staring at her intently. For a moment, she wasn’t sure what to say next.
But the choice had already been made. She couldn’t let the past come for them—not now.
“Stay where you are, Rex,” she said, her voice low. “This life… it’s the only one we can have now.”
The transmission ended abruptly, and as the static faded, she felt the weight of her decision sink deep into her chest. She couldn’t outrun her past forever, but she had to try. For the kid’s sake. For hers.
The comm clicked off, and the desert wind whistled through the cracks in the walls once more.
⸻
*After order 66*
The heat of Tatooine never relented, always oppressive, always relentless. The twin suns glared down, but in the small mechanic shop, the air was thick with the hum of droids and the scent of oil. The faint noise of the desert outside was a constant, but it had become part of her rhythm now. The shop was her sanctuary, her space of peace—and for a while, it had felt like the world had forgotten her.
She had heard the whispers, of course—the rumors of Rex’s death, of Cody’s desertion from the Empire. The news had spread in quiet circles, murmured over cantina tables and in back-alley conversations. But she hadn’t believed them—not fully. She couldn’t. She’d mourned them, both of them. And with that mourning, something cold had settled in her heart. The truth she couldn’t face, the possibility that both men, once so important to her, were lost to her forever, had nearly shattered her.
But now, in the stillness of her shop, as she wiped grease from her hands, she heard the sound of footsteps outside the door—two sets, both heavy with purpose. A faint chill ran down her spine, her senses on alert, even after all this time.
She wiped her hands again, her mind racing. It had been months—years, even—since she’d had a real visitor, someone who wasn’t just passing through the dusty town, looking for a quick fix. Her first instinct was to ignore it, to retreat into the silence of her world. But she couldn’t. Not this time.
She turned her back to the door, taking a deep breath, unsure whether to brace herself or pretend nothing was coming. But then the door creaked open, the soft jingle of the bell above signaling an arrival.
“Morning, ma’am,” a voice said.
She froze.
It wasn’t just the familiarity in the voice—it was the tone, the cadence, the weight of it. A voice she hadn’t heard in what felt like a lifetime.
Her heart stopped, her breath caught in her throat. Slowly, she turned, her eyes locking onto two figures standing in the doorway. Two familiar figures—no, too familiar. One was tall, his hair a bit longer than she remembered but still as worn as ever. His posture was stiff, but there was that same quiet intensity in his eyes. The other was just as imposing, broad-shouldered, his face still marked with the same stoic expression, though his gaze now held something darker. Something more… raw.
“Rex?” she whispered, unable to believe what she was seeing. She looked at Cody, and her throat tightened as recognition flooded her.
They stood there, like ghosts come to life, wearing the familiar gear of the Republic clones, but now twisted, aged, and worn by time. They were still wearing the armor, but it was scratched, weathered, and battered, not the pristine white she had once known.
“Not the best welcome we’ve had, huh?” Rex said, his voice laced with a dry humor she remembered too well, though there was something hesitant in his tone.
Her knees nearly buckled as she stared at him, her heart thumping in her chest. “How—how are you here? How are you both here?” she stammered, stepping back slightly, unsure of what to make of it all.
“We heard a lot of things,” Cody replied, his voice deep and serious. “About the kid. About the Empire. We couldn’t… we couldn’t stay away any longer.”
“Is it really you?” she asked, her voice barely above a whisper. She didn’t want to believe it. Part of her didn’t want to face the possibility that this was real—that they were truly standing there in front of her.
Cody stepped forward, his hand reaching out as if to steady her, but she backed away instinctively.
“I swear, it’s us,” Rex said quietly, watching her carefully. “We’re still alive, still standing. After all this time… we couldn’t let you stay alone. Not anymore.”
She swallowed hard, feeling something warm and painful flood her chest. She opened her mouth to say something, anything, but her words caught in her throat.
“How? What happened?” she asked, finally finding her voice again, but even her tone was filled with disbelief.
Rex and Cody exchanged a look, their expressions heavy. There were so many things they both needed to explain—too many things. But neither of them was sure where to start.
“We’re deserters now,” Cody said flatly. “The Empire doesn’t want us anymore. After what happened… after Order 66…” He trailed off, his words thick with the weight of their shared past. “We couldn’t stay loyal to them. Not after all they did. Not after we saw the truth.”
“We couldn’t stand by and let them control us,” Rex added, his voice quieter, filled with regret and guilt. “The Republic turned into something else. And we both walked away. We couldn’t just pretend it didn’t happen. We tried to move on, but… we couldn’t forget you. Or the kid.”
“Why didn’t you come sooner?” she asked, her voice barely above a whisper. “I thought you were… I thought you were dead. I mourned both of you. I believed the rumors.”
Cody’s jaw tightened, and Rex’s eyes softened with something like sorrow. “We had to keep our distance,” Rex said. “We didn’t want to lead anyone to you, especially after what happened. We thought… we thought if we stayed hidden long enough, it might be safer for you. But we didn’t want to lose you, either.”
She nodded slowly, as if processing everything at once. The shock, the disbelief, the pain. It had been so long. Too long.
“Why come here now?” she asked, her voice steadying as she wiped the back of her hand across her forehead. “What’s the point of all this?”
Rex stepped closer, his gaze intense. “We just want to be with you. Help. If you’ll let us. We can’t go back to what we were. But maybe we can move forward, together. The three of us.”
The child, who had been quietly watching from the corner, suddenly walked over, looking up at them with wide eyes. “Are they… the ones from before?”
She looked down at the boy and then back at Rex and Cody, a soft, bittersweet smile tugging at her lips. “Yes,” she said, her voice quiet but firm. “They’re the ones.”
Cody gave a small nod in return, his face unreadable but soft. “And we’ll do what we can to keep you both safe. If you’ll have us.”
The words hung in the air, heavy with the weight of their shared past, and the unspoken understanding that nothing was ever going to be the same as it was before. Yet, despite everything, here they were—alive, standing together once again.
Her heart, which had been a tangled mess for so long, slowly began to settle, and with it, the promise of something new. Something that, despite all the pain and the losses, felt like it could be worth fighting for.
“Then stay,” she said, her voice steady. “Stay with me. Stay with us.”
The sun had set on Tatooine, the twin moons casting long shadows across the desert. The familiar, yet bittersweet weight of the night settled over the small mechanic shop, but something was different. There was an unspoken tension, a fragile peace woven through the air.
Inside the shop, the hum of tools and machines was the only sound, the soft whirring of droids as they worked on various repairs. The child, now safely nestled in the corner with a toy in his hands, had grown accustomed to the rhythm of life here, as had she. But tonight was different. Tonight, there was a quiet anticipation—one that stirred within her chest, making her feel both hopeful and uncertain.
Rex and Cody were here, standing by her side in a way they hadn’t been before. The space they shared wasn’t just that of comrades or soldiers—it was the space of something far more complex, fragile, and yet, somehow, stronger than anything she had known before.
They hadn’t talked much about the past, not yet. Not everything. The war, the betrayal, the chaos—they still lived in their memories like ghosts. But there was time for that later. Tonight wasn’t about the past. It was about rebuilding, about forging something new.
Cody stood by the door, his posture relaxed, though his eyes still carried the weight of everything they’d all been through. Rex was sitting at the table, his gaze drifting between her and the child, a hint of a smile on his lips. The same quiet intensity lingered in his eyes, but tonight, it felt less like a burden and more like a promise.
She looked at them, her heart catching in her throat. For so long, she had feared she was alone, that the world had moved on without her. She had convinced herself that the bonds they once shared were lost to time, erased by the chaos of the galaxy. But here they were, standing before her—not as clones, not as soldiers—but as something more. Something that might just survive.
“You know,” she said, her voice quiet, but firm. “I thought I was done fighting. Done running. I thought the past would always catch up to me.”
Cody tilted his head, his gaze softening. “We all thought we were done fighting.”
Rex nodded, his expression serious but warm. “But sometimes, the fight isn’t over. Sometimes, we get a chance to do things differently. And we’re here, for whatever comes next.”
She took a deep breath, letting the words sink in. Her heart ached with the weight of everything—everything they had lost, everything they had fought for. But as she looked at Rex and Cody, something settled in her chest. She realized that while the war might have shaped them, it didn’t define them. They were more than just soldiers, more than just their pasts. They were a part of something new.
The child looked up at her, his bright eyes filled with hope. “Are you going to stay with them now?”
Her heart fluttered, and she nodded, a small smile pulling at her lips. “Yes,” she said softly. “I’m going to stay. We’re all going to stay.”
She turned back to Rex and Cody, her gaze lingering between them. For a moment, the weight of everything they had gone through felt like it was fading. It was still there, lingering in the background, but it no longer defined them. Not anymore. They had a future, one they would build together, in this quiet corner of the galaxy.
The quiet hum of the shop filled the space around them, a steady rhythm that was somehow comforting. They had been through war, through loss, through pain—but here, in this small mechanic shop on a distant desert world, they had found something else. Peace. Hope. And maybe, just maybe, a chance to heal.
As the night stretched on, they sat together, the world outside growing darker and quieter. But inside, there was a warmth that none of them had felt in a long time.
And for the first time in years, she let herself believe that maybe, just maybe, things could be different.
They had survived. Together. And they would continue to, one step at a time.
The future was uncertain, but for once, it didn’t matter. What mattered was that they were together. And that was enough.
Previous Chapter
A/N
I absolutely hate how I ended this, but tbh I also absolutely suck at endings so this makes sense.
peep boost and sinker from the background of what i'm working on because i need motivation to get through rendering it all 😭
Hi! I was wondering if you could do a Bad Batch x Fem!Reader where they haven’t realized how much they like her and having her apart of the team because they didn’t want to get attached but then they see her with other clones having fun and being tactical and huggy with them. I’m a sucker for jealous tropes and the “she’s ours” stuff! Thank you! Xx
Featuring: Commander Wolffe, Boost, Sinker (104th)
⸻
The Bad Batch didn’t realize how much they liked having you around—until you weren’t just around them anymore.
You’d been reassigned temporarily to assist the 104th Battalion for a joint operation, something about terrain recon and hostile base infiltration. The job was meant to be routine. Easy. Quick. But it had stretched to three weeks, and that was three weeks too long for Clone Force 99.
“She’s fine,” Tech said for the third time that day, eyes on his datapad but noticeably less focused than usual.
“Of course she’s fine,” Crosshair muttered. “She’s annoying. Won’t shut up. Talks too much. Laughs at stupid jokes.”
“She does make the barracks less quiet,” Echo added, but his words sounded more like a confession than a complaint.
Hunter remained quiet, brooding in the corner, arms crossed. Wrecker finally broke the silence.
“I miss her.”
No one argued.
⸻
When they finally returned to Anaxes to regroup, they weren’t expecting to find you on the tarmac—leaning against a gunship, laughing with Commander Wolffe and his men.
You had your arm slung around Sinker’s shoulder, mid-sparring banter, sweat-slicked and flushed from training. Boost was tossing a ration bar at you like it was a long-running inside joke, and Wolffe—stoic, grumpy Wolffe—was standing beside you with the faintest upward tug at the corner of his mouth.
You laughed and said something that made the entire squad snort.
Wrecker stopped dead in his tracks. “Wait—are they hugging her?”
Crosshair’s scowl darkened. “Why the hell is she touching Sinker?”
“She’s laughing,” Echo muttered. “At his joke.”
Hunter’s jaw ticked. “Let’s go.”
⸻
You saw them before they could storm up and cause a scene—which, let’s be real, was already inevitable.
“Hey!” you called out cheerfully, waving them over. “Look who finally decided to show up. I was beginning to think you all forgot about me.”
“We didn’t,” Hunter said. The rest of them were staring daggers past you at the Wolfpack.
Wolffe raised a brow and drawled, “We took real good care of her. Didn’t we, boys?”
“Too good,” Sinker smirked. “She’s basically one of us now.”
“She is one of us,” Boost added, throwing his arm around your shoulders with obnoxious ease. “Got the bite to match.”
You didn’t see it, but every member of the Bad Batch visibly twitched.
“She’s not a stray,” Crosshair hissed, stepping forward.
“Could’ve fooled us,” Wolffe shot back, “considering how quick you were to let her slip away.”
“Wasn’t our choice,” Tech said stiffly.
“You sure?” Sinker smirked. “Didn’t seem like you were fighting too hard to keep her.”
You raised your eyebrows. “Okay, woah, no testosterone fights on the landing pad, please.”
Wrecker pointed dramatically. “You hugged him!”
You blinked. “You’ve hugged me!”
“Yeah but that’s different!” he whined.
“Why?” you challenged.
Silence.
Hunter stepped forward, voice lower now. “Because you’re ours.”
Your breath caught.
Wolffe’s grin turned downright wolfish. “Took ‘em long enough.”
You looked between both squads, caught between amusement and surprise. “So let me get this straight… the 104th is adopting me, the Bad Batch is reclaiming me, and I didn’t even get a say?”
“You always get a say,” Hunter said, quieter now. “But we want you to know how we feel.”
“And how’s that?”
Wrecker was first. “I missed you.”
“I hated not having you around,” Echo added.
“Everything was quiet,” Tech admitted.
“You’re mine,” Crosshair said, almost growled. “Ours.”
Your eyes flicked to Wolffe and his boys.
Wolffe shrugged. “Guess we’ll let you go this time.”
Sinker grinned. “But if they mess up, you know where to find us.”
You snorted. “What is this, the clone version of a custody battle?”
Boost winked. “Only if it means you come back for visitation rights.”
You laughed. “Alright, alright. I’ll go home. But I am visiting the 104th again. You guys are a riot.”
Hunter stepped closer, head tilting. “As long as you come back to us.”
You smiled, softening. “Always.”
The air between you and the Batch shifted—less tension, more heat, more home. Hunter didn’t touch you, not yet, but his presence lingered close, electric.
You turned back toward Wolffe and the others, grinning. “Thanks for everything, boys.”
Sinker gave you a two-finger salute. “Don’t be a stranger.”
“Yeah,” Boost chimed in, winking. “Just remember which pack took you in first.”
You rolled your eyes, walking backward toward your original squad. “You’re all insufferable.”
“And you love it,” Wolffe called after you.
echoed behind you.
Then, low—too low for most ears, but not for Hunter’s enhanced senses—Wolffe muttered to his boys, voice almost casual:
“She’s still got a bit of wolf in her now. Let’s hope they can keep up.”
Hunter stopped walking.
His head tilted just enough to catch the last of the words. Not angry. Not threatened. Just… cold.
Possessive.
His jaw flexed.
Crosshair noticed first. “Problem?”
Hunter didn’t answer right away. His gaze flicked to your back—laughing with Wrecker about something stupid—and then back to the 104th retreating into the barracks.
“No,” he said finally. “No problem.”
But when he looked forward again, his voice was steel-wrapped velvet.
“They can howl all they want.”
He caught up to you in two strides.
“We’re the ones she’s running with.”
Star Wars: These are the clones. They're soldiers, warriors, they're bred for war and absolute dangerous killing machines. They're tough and loyal and hard to beat. Theyre-
Fandom: Baby boys? 🥺 Little Babys who need love and care 🥺 ? Brothers with parental instincts that I will protect with my life and soul 🥺 ? Sweet pure innocent boys-
We've gathered here today in celebration of men with pretty brown eyes
501st x Reader
The overhead lumens slam on like artillery. Groans ripple through the barracks, but you roll out of your bunk already gathering your contraband caddy—a slim duraplast kit labeled “Mk‑III MedPatch”
Fives, half‑dressed and wholly curious, nods at the kit. “Alright, mystery box—you packing bacta or blasters in there?”
You flick the latch. Bottles, tubes, and sachets unfold like a miniature armory—just shinier and pastel‑colored.
“Moisturizer,” you say, dotting cream onto your cheeks. “SPF 50. Sun in space still finds a way.”
Fives blinks. “You’re lotion‑plating your face before breakfast?”
You smile. “Armor for the skin.”
As you pat the sunscreen in, Fives watches, fascinated. “How long does all that take? We get, like, sixty seconds to hit the refresher.”
“Practice,” you reply, capping the tube. “And a bit of multitasking.”
Across the aisle, Jesse mutters, “She’s waxing her cheeks?”—which earns him a smack from Kix.
The medic tilts his head, curious. “Actually, hydrating the epidermis reduces micro‑tears that form when helmets chafe. Fewer micro‑tears, fewer infections.”
Fives groans. “Kix, not you too!”
Tup perks up. “Will it stop my forehead from peeling on desert drops?”
“Only if you commit,” you reply, tossing him a travel‑size tube.
Tup bobbles it. “Commit to… face goop?”
“Commit to self‑care, shiny,” Jesse teases, but he secretly dabs a fingertip of cream on the scar running over his temple when he thinks no one’s watching.
Hardcase flips down from the top bunk, dangling upside‑down. “What about night routine? Can we weaponize it?”
You laugh. “Weaponize hydration?”
You begin to rattle off the list for your routines while shoving items back into the caddy.
Jesse whistles. “That’s more steps than disassembling a DC‑17.”
“It’s upkeep,” you say, snapping the kit shut. “Blasters, armor, skin. Treat them right and they won’t fail mid‑mission.”
Kix, ever the medic, hums thoughtfully. “Prevention over cure—sound protocol.”
Rex marches past the doorway, barking for PT. He notices the cluster around your bunk, eyes the lotions, then decides he’s not paid enough to investigate at 0500. “Five minutes to muster. Whatever you’re doing—do it faster.”
The squad scrambles. You close your caddy with a click, satisfied. Step one: curiosity planted.
As you pass Fives he murmurs, “Armor for the skin, huh?”
“Exactly, vod,” you grin, tapping his chest plate. “And just like yours—it’s personal issue.”
He barks a laugh, then jogs after the others—already plotting how to requisition micellar water under “optical clarity supplies.”
Curiosity piqued, routine revealed. Now the real fun begins.
⸻
An hour later, after PT and standard mess rations, the 501st files toward the strategy room. You’re meant to present local intel, but you duck into the refresher first to rinse sweat and slap on a leave‑in hair mask.
Inside, Tup stares at his reflection, damp curls drooping. “How tight is the towel supposed to be?”
“Snug, not suffocating.” You demonstrate the twist‑and‑tuck, shaping his towel into a tidy turban. He looks like a spa holo‑ad—if spa ads featured wide‑eyed clone troopers in duty blacks.
Rex storms in mid‑lesson. The captain’s expression cycles through confusion, exasperation, acceptance in under a second. “Explain.”
“Deep‑conditioning,” you answer. “Helmet hair’s a war crime.”
Dogma, arms folded behind Rex, scowls. “Regulation headgear only.”
You pat the towel. “Technically, still a head covering.”
Hardcase bursts from a stall, face covered in neon‑green clay. “I CAN’T MOVE MY MOUTH! THIS STUFF SETS LIKE DURASTEEL!”
Kix swoops in with a damp cloth. “That’s the detox mask, vod. Rinse at four minutes, not forty.”
Fives leans in the doorway, filming everything. “Historical documentation, Rex. Posterity.”
Rex pinches the bridge of his nose. “You have two minutes to look like soldiers before General Skywalker arrives.”
Tup whispers, “Uh… do I rinse or…?”
You yank the towel free with a flourish; his curls bounce, glossy. “Ready for battle,” you declare.
Rex sighs. “One minute forty‑five.”
⸻
The 501st rolls in after an endless maintenance drill, expecting lights‑out. Instead, you’ve transformed the common room into a makeshift spa: footlockers draped in clean towels, maintenance lamps angled like vanity lights, and rows of mysterious packets labeled hydrating, brightening, volcanic detox…
Rex stops dead in the doorway, helmet under his arm.
“Vod, why does it smell like a med‑bay and a flower‑shop had a firefight?”
You beam. “Team‑building. Captain’s orders.”
Rex narrows his eyes—he definitely did not give those orders—but one look at the exhausted squad convinces him to play along. You pass out microfiber headbands—Tup’s bun peeks through adorably—then cue soft lo‑fi on a datapad.
⸻
The 501st rolls in after an endless maintenance drill, expecting lights‑out. Instead, you’ve transformed the common room into a makeshift spa: footlockers draped in clean towels, maintenance lamps angled like vanity lights, and rows of mysterious packets labeled hydrating, brightening, volcanic detox…
Rex stops dead in the doorway, helmet under his arm.
“Vod, why does it smell like a med‑bay and a flower‑shop had a firefight?”
You beam. “Team‑building. Captain’s orders.”
Rex narrows his eyes—he definitely did not give those orders—but one look at the exhausted squad convinces him to play along.
You pass out microfiber headbands—Tup’s bun peeks through adorably—then cue soft lo‑fi on a datapad.
Fives foams cleanser like he’s icing a ration cake, flicks bubbles at Jesse.
Hardcase grabs an industrial solvent bottle. You snatch it away. “Wrong kind of chemical peel, blaster‑brain.”
Kix demonstrates gentle circular motions; the squad copies, mumbling mock mantras.
Faces disappear beneath colors and cartoons.
Fives foams cleanser like he’s icing a ration cake, flicks bubbles at Jesse.
Hardcase grabs an industrial solvent bottle. You snatch it away. “Wrong kind of chemical peel, blaster‑brain.”
Kix demonstrates gentle circular motions; the squad copies, mumbling mock mantras.
Faces disappear beneath colors and cartoons.
Jesse paints Dogma’s clay mask into perfect camo stripes; Dogma tries to protest, fails, secretly loves it.
Rex sighs as you smooth the sheet onto his face. “If this vid leaks, I’m demoting everyone.”
Tup giggles when the nerf‑printed mask squeaks. Fives records the sound bite for future memes.
Everyone reclines on mesh webbing strung between crates.
The timer pings. Masks come off—revealing eight glowing, ridiculously refreshed faces.
Hardcase flexes. “Feel like I could head‑butt a super tactical droid and leave an imprint.”
Fives snaps a holo of Rex’s newfound radiance. “Captain, you’re shining.”
Rex grumbles, but his skin does glow under the fluorescents. “Get some rack time, troopers. 0600 briefing. And… keep the extra packets. Field supply, understood?”
A chorus of cheerful “Yes, sir!”
You watch them file out, each tucking a sheet‑mask packet into utility belts like contraband. Mission accomplished: the 501st is combat‑ready—and complexion‑ready—for whatever tomorrow throws at them.
⸻
Obi‑Wan strolls through the hangar, robe billowing. He pauses mid‑conversation with Cody, eyes widening at the radiant 501st lined up for deployment.
“My word, gentlemen, you’re positively effulgent.”
Jesse grins—dazzling. “Training and discipline, General.”
Cody side‑eyes Rex. “Whatever you’re doing, send the regimen to the 212th.”
Anakin trots up, spying a stash of leftover masks tucked behind Rex’s pauldron. He plucks one. “Charcoal detox? Padmé swears by these.” He pockets it with a conspiratorial wink.
Rex mutters, “Necessary field supplies, General.”
You walk by, sling a go‑cup of caf into Rex’s free hand. “Don’t forget SPF,” you remind, tapping his helmet.
Rex looked over to Cody, Deadpan “Non‑negotiable, apparently.”
⸻
Blaster fire and powdered sand fill the air. Jesse dives behind a ridge. “Double‑cleanse tonight—this dust is murder on my pores!”
Fives snorts through the comms. “Copy, gorgeous. Bring the aloe.”
Hardcase detonates a bunker, cheers, then yelps, “Mask first, explosions later—got it!”
Rex stands, sand sifting off armor, skin protected under a sheer layer of sunscreen that miraculously survived the firefight. He shakes his head but can’t hide the small smile.
“Alright, 501st,” he calls. “Let’s finish this op—tonight we rehydrate, tomorrow we conquer.”
You chuckle, loading a fresh power‑cell. The war may rage on, but for this legion, victory now comes with a healthy glow.
⸻
A/N
This was a request, however I accidentally deleted the request in my inbox.
what that tongue game like?
weak. same goes for dick.
girl i got that good…that good for nothing
lea me alone
Summary: After the war, you reprogrammed a troop of abandoned B1 battle droids to serve with kindness—not violence. When Clone Force 99 shows up for a supply run, Tech questions your methods, and you challenge his logic.
You found them half-dead in the sand. Twenty B1 battle droids, dumped in a sun-scorched wreck outside the outpost, like bones picked clean by time and war. Most folks would've scavenged the parts, maybe sold off a few limbs if the servos were still functional.
But you? You were a little lonely, a little dangerous, and very, *very* good with code.
Rewiring them took weeks. You erased what the Separatists left behind, built your own parameters from scratch, and gave them something they'd never had before: choice.
You taught them to wave. To carry groceries. To call you "Friend" instead of "Master."
And when people flinched at the sight of battle droids strolling through town, you dipped your brush in paint. Mint green, lavender, sunflower yellow. You gave them smiley faces, heart decals, flower crowns made from leftover wire. You made them soft. Funny. Endearing.
They were still capable of violence—so were you—but they only used it when you gave the order.
Which wasn't often.
---
Clone Force 99 didn't arrive with blasters drawn, but the tension clung to them like dust. The mission was simple: a supply pickup for Cid. In and out. But this planet made Wrecker's nose wrinkle, and Echo kept his blaster low and ready.
Hunter spotted the droid first—lavender chassis, daisies painted across its plating, an old satchel slung over one shoulder as it meandered through the marketplace humming something vaguely cheerful.
"Is that... a B1?" Echo asked, narrowing his eyes.
"It appears to be carrying coolant," Tech said, scanning with his datapad. "And whistling."
Wrecker let out a low chuckle. "Guess the war *really* is over."
"Something's off," Hunter murmured. "Let's follow it."
They kept their distance as the droid turned off the main strip and waddled down a side alley, past a half-crumbling sign that read *THE FIXER'S NEST* in flickering neon.
The shop was a bunker of welded panels and salvaged Separatist tech. Outside, another B1—bright pink with a lopsided sun painted on its chest—was sweeping the doorstep and chatting to a GNK droid.
"Friend says no sand in the workshop," it explained, very seriously. "Sand gets in the gears. Sand *hurts feelings*."
The Bad Batch exchanged a look.
Hunter stepped forward and tapped twice on the doorframe.
You didn't even look up from where you were elbow-deep in a deconstructed astromech.
"You're late," you said, voice calm. "Tell Cid her coolant's in the crate by the wall. So's the power cells, bolts, and the weird candy she likes."
There was a pause.
"We didn't say we were here for Cid," Echo said slowly.
Now you looked up—smirk sharp, eyes sharper.
"Didn't have to. You've got that *'we work for someone mean, grumpy and morally grey'* vibe. Plus, you match the order details she sent me yesterday."
Wrecker moved to the crate and peeked inside. "Yep. All here."
"Of course it is," you muttered. "I run a business, not a guessing game."
Tech, meanwhile, was still staring at the droids—two were dusting the shelves with actual feather dusters, and another had just handed you a datapad while humming.
"These are B1 units," he said, voice laced with something between awe and concern. "Fully functional. Active. Painted."
You stood, wiping your hands on a rag. "I call that one Sprinkles."
"They're dangerous," he said immediately. "You realize they could revert to their original programming at any time—"
"Not mine," you cut in. "I rewrote them myself. Erased every combat subroutine. They're coded to help, protect, and be as non-threatening as a bowl of soup."
Tech stepped forward, clearly bristling. "Their hardware alone makes them capable of violence. You cannot override thousands of lines of military protocol with flower decals and whimsy."
"No," you said coolly, "but I can override them with skill, precision, and an understanding of droid psychology that clearly surpasses yours."
Hunter winced. Echo muttered something under his breath. Wrecker made the universal *oooooh, burn* face.
Tech, however, pushed up his goggles like you'd challenged him to a duel. "I would very much like to inspect your code."
You arched a brow. "What, no dinner first?"
His mouth opened. Closed. Opened again.
You grinned. "Don't worry, Professor. I'll even let you use the comfy chair."
Sprinkles chirped and handed Tech a cup of caf with perfect comedic timing.
"Welcome, new Friend!" it said cheerfully.
Tech took the cup automatically, staring down at it like it might explode.
You leaned on the counter and gave him a slow once-over. "You gonna tell me how unsafe I am again, or are you here to learn something?"
He met your gaze, thoughtful now. Curious. "...Both."
You smiled, victorious.
---
Tech hadn't stopped talking for fifteen minutes straight.
Not that you minded. His cadence was quick, his mind quicker, and his goggles fogged slightly whenever he got excited. Which, it turned out, was often—especially when discussing battle droid memory cores, sub-routine overrides, and how you managed to build a loyalty system based on *empathy* instead of authority.
"You replaced their original fail-safe with a social dependency loop," he said, practically glowing. "That's... innovative. Risky. But brilliant."
"I try," you said, leaning against your workbench. "It helps that they trust me. Most people don't trust anything unless they can control it. Droids aren't any different."
Tech nodded slowly, examining the code you'd opened for him on your terminal. "You used a behavioral reinforcement system. Repetition and reward. This is similar to clone trooper training methodology—except applied to machines."
You gave him a sly look. "Are you comparing yourself to a B1?"
"I am acknowledging structural parallels in behavioral learning patterns," he replied, completely straight-faced.
You grinned. "That's what I said."
Tech paused, frowning slightly. "You are... amused by me."
"Observant, aren't you?" You stepped closer, brushing your shoulder against his as you leaned in to point at a line of code. "This part here—subtle failsafe. If they ever encounter an override attempt from an external signal, it loops them back to me."
He blinked, eyes darting from the screen to your face. "That is... impressively cautious."
"I've been told I'm full of surprises."
He didn't respond—just squinted closer at the screen.
You sighed, lips twitching. "Nothing? Not even a blush? Stars, you *are* all business."
Before he could answer (or continue missing your very obvious flirting), a loud crash echoed from the street outside, followed by the unmistakable hiss of a thermal disruptor and the annoyed squawk of one of your droids.
You were already moving.
Outside, a low-rent bounty hunter—tatty armor, one glowing eye, and an attitude that outpaced his ability—was holding one of your B1s at blaster point.
"Move, scrapheap, or I'll scrap you myself," he snarled.
The droid blinked. "Friend said no yelling. Friend also said no blasters unless you bring candy."
"*Candy?*"
You stepped into the street like a storm cloud in boots.
"Is there a reason you're threatening my droid, or are you just bored and stupid?"
The bounty hunter turned to you, smug. "This thing walked in front of my speeder. I don't care how shiny you paint 'em—B1s are still clanker trash. I'm just doing the galaxy a favor."
You gave a slow whistle.
Three more droids stepped out from alleyways and rooftops, all armed with repurposed but deactivated blasters—they didn't need live ammo to intimidate. One even had a frying pan.
The bounty hunter backed up a step.
You raised a hand.
"Engage," you said simply.
They moved like a synchronized swarm. Two pinned his arms while the others knocked the blaster from his hands and dismantled his boots with surgical precision. The frying pan droid stood back and provided color commentary.
"Friend says don't be mean! Friend says fix your attitude!"
The bounty hunter was on the ground and begging within seconds.
You stepped forward, crouched down, and grabbed him by the collar.
"You threaten one of mine again, and I'll let them finish what they started. You hear me?"
He nodded frantically.
"Good." You turned to your droids. "Escort him to the edge of town. Gently."
They saluted with cartoonish enthusiasm and dragged him off, half-hopping as they went.
You stood, dusted your hands, and turned back to find Tech watching with an unreadable expression.
"Well?" you said, folding your arms.
"That was... efficient," he admitted. "But highly aggressive."
You raised a brow. "They followed my orders exactly. Didn't fire a shot. Didn't kill. Didn't even insult his boots. I programmed them to protect what's mine, not wage war."
"But the capability—"
"*Exists.*" You cut in. "Just like yours does. Just like mine. The question isn't what they *can* do. It's what they *choose* to do. And what I program them to choose."
Tech looked at you then—really looked at you. A flicker of something passed behind his eyes. Understanding. Respect.
Maybe even admiration.
"They're not like the others," he said, finally.
You smirked. "Neither am I."
He hesitated, adjusting his goggles. "Would you... allow me to assist you in refining their motor skills protocols? I have a few ideas."
You leaned on the workbench again, grinning. "You wanna help me teach battle droids ballet?"
Tech blinked. "Not... precisely."
"Come on, Tech," you said, voice low and teasing. "Live a little."
He didn't answer, but he did roll up his sleeves and pull out a datapad, already scribbling new subroutine formulas with a faint smile tugging at his lips.
You might not have cracked the flirtation firewall yet—but the code was definitely compiling.
_-~-_
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