Hi! I hope this ok but I was wondering if you could do a spicy fic with Tech, maybe he gets flustered whenever she’s near and his brothers try to help by getting you do stuff and help him.
Hope you have a great weekend!
Tech x Reader
Tech was a genius—analytical, composed, articulate.
Until you walked into a room.
You’d joined the Bad Batch on a temporary mission as a communications specialist. The job should have been straightforward. Decode enemy transmissions, secure Republic relays, leave. What you hadn’t planned for was the quiet, bespectacled clone who dropped his hydrospanner every time you got too close.
You leaned over the console, fingers flying across the keypad as you rerouted the relay node Tech had said was “performing with suboptimal efficiency.” You were deep into the override sequence when a clatter behind you made you jump.
Clank.
Tech’s hydrospanner had hit the floor. Again.
You turned, brows raised. “You okay there, Tech?”
He cleared his throat, pushing his goggles up the bridge of his nose as he bent down awkwardly to retrieve the tool. “Yes. Quite. Merely dropped it due to… a temporary lapse in grip strength.”
Hunter’s voice echoed from the cockpit. “More like a temporary lapse in brain function. That’s the fourth time today.”
You smirked and returned to the console. Tech didn’t reply.
⸻
You sat beside Omega, poking at your rations. Tech was on the far end of the table, clearly trying not to look your way while also tracking your every move like a nervous datapad with legs.
“You know,” Omega said loudly, “Tech said he wants help cleaning the data arrays in the cockpit. He said you’re the only one who knows how to handle them.”
Your brow arched. “He did?”
At the other end of the table, Tech choked on his food.
Echo smirked. “Pretty sure that’s not what he said, Omega.”
“It is,” she insisted with wide, innocent eyes. “I asked him who he’d want help from, and he said her name first.”
Wrecker grinned. “And then he blushed!”
“I did not,” Tech muttered, voice strangled.
You bit back a grin. “Well, I am good with arrays…”
Hunter looked at Tech, then at you, then back at his food like it was the most fascinating thing in the galaxy.
⸻
You found Tech alone at the terminal, his fingers flying over the keys. You stepped up beside him, arms brushing.
He froze mid-keystroke.
“I figured I’d help with the arrays,” you said, voice low, letting your hand rest against the console a little closer than necessary. “Since you said I was the best candidate.”
His ears turned red. “That was… an extrapolated hypothetical. I did not anticipate you would take Omega’s report so… literally.”
You leaned in, letting your shoulder press against his. “Is that going to be a problem?”
He inhaled sharply. “I—no. Not at all.”
You brushed your fingers along the edge of the screen, pretending to study the data. “Because I don’t mind helping you, Tech. I actually like working close to you. You’re… brilliant. Kind of cute when you’re flustered, too.”
He blinked behind his goggles. “I—um—I do not often receive comments of that nature—cute, I mean. That is to say—thank you.”
His fingers twitched nervously. You reached over to rest your hand over his.
“You’re welcome. And if you ever want to drop your hydrospanner again to get my attention, Tech, just say something next time.”
“…I’ll keep that in mind.”
⸻
Wrecker, Omega, and Echo crouched behind a supply crate, straining to hear.
“Did she touch his hand?” Omega whispered excitedly.
“Pretty sure she did more than that,” Echo muttered.
Wrecker pumped a fist in the air. “I told you! Get her close enough and boom—Tech-meltdown!”
They high-fived, right before the door to the cockpit opened and you walked out.
You stopped.
They froze.
“…Were you all spying?”
“Uh,” Omega said.
Echo cleared his throat. “More like… observing.”
“Scientific purposes,” Wrecker added. “Real important stuff.”
You rolled your eyes and walked away—but you didn’t miss the grin Echo gave Tech as he slipped inside the cockpit next.
“You owe me ten credits.”
Tech pushed his goggles up. “Worth every credit.”
Warnings: Death
⸻
The moonlight over Sundari always looked colder than it should.
Steel towers pierced the clouds like spears. And though the city gleamed with the grace of pacifism, you could feel it cracking beneath your boots.
You stood just behind Duchess Satine in the high chambers, your presence a silent sentinel as she addressed her council.
Another shipment hijacked.
Another uprising quelled—barely.
Another rumor whispered: Death Watch grows bolder.
When she dismissed the ministers, Satine stayed behind, standing at the window. You didn’t speak. Not at first.
“I feel them watching me,” she finally said, voice quiet. “The people. As though they’re waiting for me to break.”
You took a slow step forward. “You haven’t broken.”
“But I might,” she admitted.
You remained still, letting the quiet settle.
“You disapprove,” she said, glancing over her shoulder. “I can see it in your eyes.”
“I disapprove of what’s coming,” you said. “And what we’re not doing about it.”
Satine turned fully. “You think I’m weak.”
“No.” Your voice was firm. “I think you’re idealistic. That’s not weakness. But it can be dangerous.”
“You sound like my enemies.”
You stepped closer, voice low. “Your enemies want you dead. I want you prepared.”
Her jaw tensed. “We don’t need weapons to prepare. We need resolve.”
“We need warriors,” you snapped, the edge of your heritage flaring. “We need eyes on the streets, ears in the shadows. Satine, you can’t ignore the storm just because your balcony faces the sun.”
For a moment, you saw it in her eyes—that mix of fear and pride. Then she softened.
“I didn’t bring you here to fight my wars.”
“No,” you said. “You brought me here to keep you alive.”
A long silence. Then, in a whisper:
“Will you protect me even if I’m wrong?”
You reached forward, resting a gloved hand on her shoulder.
“I will protect you even if the planet burns. But I won’t lie to you about the smoke.”
She nodded, barely. Then turned back to the window.
You left her there.
⸻
The cracks ran deep beneath the capital. Whispers of Death Watch had grown louder, but so too had something darker. Outsiders spotted. Ships with no flags docking at midnight. Faces half-shadowed by stolen Mandalorian helms.
You walked the alleys in silence, cloak drawn, watching the people. They looked thinner. More afraid.
They felt like you did in your youth—when the True Mandalorians fell, and pacifists took the throne.
It was happening again.
Only this time, you stood beside the throne.
⸻
Sundari had never been louder.
Crowds surged below the palace walls. Explosions had bloomed like flowers of fire across the city. The Death Watch had returned—not as shadows now, but as an army, and you knew in your blood this wasn’t the cause you once believed in.
You stormed into the war room with your cloak soaked in ash.
Bo-Katan stood tense, arms crossed, her helmet tucked under one arm, jaw tight.
“Is this your idea of taking back Mandalore?” you growled. “Terrorizing civilians and letting offworlders roam our streets?”
Bo snapped, “It’s Pre’s idea. I just follow orders.”
“You’re smart enough to know better.”
She met your eyes. “And you’re too blind to see it’s already too late. This planet doesn’t belong to either of us anymore.”
Before you could reply, Vizsla strode in, flanked by his guards, armed and smug.
“Careful, old friend,” he said to you. “You’re starting to sound like the Duchess.”
You turned to face him fully. “She at least had a vision. You? You brought the devils of the outer rim to our door.”
“You think I trust Maul?” Vizsla scoffed. “He’s a tool. A borrowed blade. Nothing more.”
“You’ve never been able to hold a blade you didn’t break,” you said, stepping closer, voice low and dangerous. “And you dare call yourself Mand’alor.”
That was the final push.
Vizsla signaled for the guards to stand down. He drew the Darksaber—its hum filled the chamber like a heartbeat of fate.
“You want to test my claim?” he snarled.
You drew your beskad blade from your back, steel whispering against your armor.
“I don’t want the throne,” you said. “But I won’t let you stain the Creed.”
The battle was swift and brutal. Sparks lit the floor as steel met obsidian light. Vizsla fought with fury but lacked precision—he was stronger than he had been, but still undisciplined. You moved like water, like memory, like the old days on the moon—fluid, sharp, unstoppable.
He faltered.
And then—they stepped out of the shadows.
Maul and Savage Opress, watching from the high walkway above the throne room. Silent. Observing.
When Vizsla saw them, he struck harder, desperate to prove something. That’s when you disarmed him—sent the Darksaber flying from his hand, the weapon hissing as it skidded across the floor.
Vizsla landed hard. He panted, looking up—humiliated, bested.
You turned away.
But it wasn’t over.
Chains clamped around your wrists before you even reached the stairs. Death Watch soldiers—those loyal to Maul—grabbed you without warning. You struggled, but too many held you down.
Maul descended the steps of the throne, black robes fluttering, yellow eyes glowing like dying suns.
He walked past you.
“To be bested in front of your own… how disappointing,” Maul said coldly to Vizsla.
Vizsla staggered to his feet. “You’re nothing. A freak. You’ll never lead Mandalore.”
Maul ignited his saber.
He and Vizsla fought in a blur of red and black and desperate defiance. But Maul was faster. Stronger. Born in a storm of hate and violence.
You could only watch, forced to your knees, wrists bound, as Maul plunged the blade through Vizsla’s chest.
The Death Watch leader crumpled.
The Darksaber now belonged to the Sith.
Gasps rippled through the chamber.
Some kneeled. Others hesitated.
Then Bo-Katan raised her blaster.
“This is not our way!” she shouted. “He is not Mandalorian!”
Several warriors rallied to her cry. They turned. Fired. Chaos erupted. Bo and her loyalists broke away, escaping into the halls.
You remained.
You didn’t run.
Maul approached you slowly, the Darksaber glowing dim in his hand.
He crouched, speaking softly, dangerously.
“I see strength in you,” he said. “Not like the weaklings who fled. You could live. Serve something greater. The galaxy will fall into chaos… and only the strong will survive.”
He tilted his head.
“Tell me, warrior—will you live?”
Or…
“Will you die with your honor?”
“Kill me”
Maul hesitated for a moment, before ordering you to be taken to a cell.
The cell was dark.
Damp stone and the smell of old blood clung to the air. You sat in silence, bruised and bound, staring at the flicker of light outside the bars. A sound shifted behind you—soft, delicate, out of place.
Satine. Still regal, even in ruin. Her dress torn, her golden hair tangled, but her spine as straight as ever.
“You’re still alive,” she said softly, voice hoarse from hours of silence.
You looked over, slowly.
“For now.”
There was a pause between you, heavy with everything you’d both lost.
“You should’ve left Mandalore when you had the chance,” she murmured.
You shook your head. “I made a promise, Duchess. And I keep my word.”
Satine gave a humorless smile. “Even after all our disagreements?”
You smiled too. “Especially after those.”
She lowered her head. “They’re going to kill me, aren’t they?”
You looked her in the eye.
“Not if I can stop it.”
⸻
They dragged you both from your cell.
Through the palace you once helped defend. Through the halls still stained with Vizsla’s blood. The Death Watch stood at attention, masks blank and cold as ever. Maul waited in the throne room like a spider in his web.
And then he arrived.
Kenobi.
Disguised, desperate, but unmistakable. The moment Satine saw him, her composure nearly cracked.
You were forced to kneel beside her, chains cutting into your wrists.
The confrontation played out as in the holos.
Maul relished every second.
Kenobi’s face was a war in motion—grief, fury, helplessness. You watched Maul drag him forward, speak of revenge, of his loss, of the cycle of suffering.
And then—like a blade through your own chest—
Maul killed her.
Satine fell forward into Obi-Wan’s arms.
You lunged, screaming through your teeth, but the guards held you fast.
“Don’t let it be for nothing!” you shouted at Kenobi. “GO!”
He escaped—barely.
And in the chaos, you broke free too, a riot in your heart. Blasters lit up the corridors as you vanished into the undercity, cutting through alleys and shadows like a ghost of war.
⸻
The city was choking under red skies.
Mandalore burned beneath Maul’s grip, its soul flickering in the ash of the fallen. You stood in the undercity alone, battered, bleeding, and unbroken. The taste of failure stung your tongue—Satine was dead. Your boys were scattered in war. You’d given everything. And it hadn’t been enough.
You dropped to one knee in the shadows, inputting a code you swore never to use again. A transmission pinged back almost instantly.
A hooded figure appeared on your holopad.
Darth Sidious.
His face was half-shrouded, but the chill of his presence was unmistakable.
“You’ve finally come to me,” he said, almost amused. “Has your compassion failed you?”
You clenched your jaw. “Maul has taken Mandalore. He murdered Satine. He threatens the balance we prepared for.”
Sidious tilted his head, folding his hands beneath his robes.
“I warned you sentiment would weaken you.”
“And I was wrong,” you growled. “I want him dead. I want them both dead.”
There was a silence. A grin crept onto his face, snake-like and slow.
“You’ve been… most loyal, child of Mandalore. As Jango was before you. Very well. I shall assist you. Maul’s ambitions risk unraveling everything.”
⸻
Maul sat the throne, the Darksaber in hand. Savage stood at his side, beastlike and snarling. The walls still smelled of Satine’s blood.
Then the shadows twisted. Power warped the air like fire on oil.
Sidious stepped from the dark like a phantom of death, with you behind him—armor blackened, eyes sharp with grief and rage.
Maul stood, stunned. “Master…?”
Sidious said nothing.
Then he struck.
The throne room erupted in chaos.
Lightsabers screamed.
Maul’s blades clashed against red lightning, his rage no match for Sidious’s precision. Savage lunged for you, raw and powerful—but you were already moving.
You remembered your old training.
You remembered the cadets.
You remembered Satine’s blood on your hands.
You met Savage head-on—vibroblade against brute force. You danced past his swings, striking deep into his shoulder, his gut. He roared, grabbed your throat—but you twisted free and drove your blade through his heart.
He died wide-eyed and silent, falling to the stone like a shattered statue.
⸻
Maul screamed in anguish. Sidious struck him down, sparing his life but breaking his spirit.
You approached, blood and ash streaking your armor.
“Let me kill him,” you said, voice shaking. “Let me avenge Satine. Let me finish this.”
Sidious turned to you, eyes glowing yellow in the flickering light.
“No.”
You stepped forward. “He’ll come back.”
“He may,” Sidious said calmly. “But his place in the grand design has shifted. I need him alive.”
You trembled, fists clenched.
“I warned you before,” Sidious said, stepping close. “Do not mistake your usefulness for control. You are a warrior. A weapon. And like all weapons—you are only as valuable as your discipline.”
You swallowed the rage. The grief. The fire in your soul.
And you stepped back.
“I did this for Mandalore.”
He nodded. “Then Mandalore has been… corrected.”
⸻
Later, as Maul was dragged away in chains and the throne room lay in ruin, you stood alone in the silence, helmet tucked under your arm.
You looked out at Sundari. And you whispered the lullaby.
For your cadets.
For Satine.
For the part of you that had died in that room, with Savage’s last breath.
You had survived again.
But the woman who stood now was no mother, no protector.
She was vengeance.
And she had only just begun.
⸻
You tried to vanish.
From Sundari to the Outer Rim, from the blood-slicked throne room to backwater spaceports, you moved like a ghost. You changed armor, changed names, stayed away from the war, from politics, from everything. Just a whisper of your lullaby and the memory of your boys kept you alive.
But you knew it wouldn’t last.
⸻
The transmission came days later. Cold. Commanding.
Sidious.
“You vanished,” his voice echoed in your dim quarters. “You forget your place, warrior.”
You said nothing.
“I gave you your vengeance. I spared your life. And now, I call upon you. There is work to be done.”
You turned off the holoprojector.
Another message followed. And another. Then…
A warning.
“If you will not obey, perhaps I should ensure your clones—your precious sons—remain obedient. I wonder how… stable they are. I wonder if the Kaminoans would let me tweak the ones they call ‘defective.’”
That was it. The breaking point.
⸻
The stars blurred past as you sat still in the pilot’s seat, armor old and scuffed, but freshly polished—prepared. You hadn’t flown under your own name in years, but the navicomp still recognized your imprint.
No transmission. No warning. Just the coordinates punched in. Republic Senate District.
Your hands were steady. Your pulse was not.
In the dark of the cockpit, you pressed a gloved hand to your chest where the small, battered chip lay tucked beneath the plates—an old holotrack, no longer played. The Altamaha-Ha. The lullaby. You never listened to it anymore.
Not after he threatened them.
He had the power. The access. The means. And the intent.
“Your precious clones will be the key to everything.”
“Compliant. Obedient. Disposable.”
You couldn’t wait for justice. Couldn’t pray for it. You had to become it.
Your fighter came in beneath the main traffic lanes, through a stormfront—lightning illuminating the hull in flashes. Republic patrol ships buzzed overhead, but you kept low, slipping through security nets with old codes Jango had left you years ago. Codes not even the Jedi knew he had.
You landed on Platform Cresh-17, a forgotten maintenance deck halfway up the Senate Tower. No guards. No scanners. Just a locked door, a ventilation tunnel, and a war path.
Your beskad was strapped to your back, disguised under a loose, civilian cloak. Blaster at your hip. Hidden vibrodaggers in your boots.
You knew the schedule. You had it memorized. You’d been preparing.
Chancellor Palpatine would be meeting with Jedi Masters for a closed briefing in the eastern chamber.
You wouldn’t get another shot.
The halls were quieter than expected. Clones patrolled in pairs—Coruscant Guard, all in red. You knew their formations. You trained the ones who trained them.
You didn’t want to kill them. But if they stood in your way—
A guard turned the corner ahead. You froze behind a pillar.
Fox.
You saw him first. He didn’t see you. You waited, breath caught in your throat. His armor gleamed beneath the Senate lights, Marshal stripe proud on his pauldron. Your boy. You almost stepped out then. Almost…
But then you remembered the threat. All of them were at risk.
You pressed on.
You breached the service corridor—wrenched the security lock off with brute strength and shoved your way in.
The Chancellor was already there.
He stood at the center of the domed office, hands folded, gaze distant.
He turned as you entered, as if he’d been expecting you.
“Ah,” he said softly. “I was wondering when you’d break.”
Your blaster was already raised. “They’re not yours,” you hissed. “They’re not machines. Not things. You don’t get to play god with their lives.”
He smiled.
“I gave them purpose. I gave them legacy. What have you given them?”
Your finger squeezed the trigger.
But then—
Ignited sabers.
The Jedi were already there. Three of them.
Master Plo Koon, Shaak Ti, and Kenobi.
They had sensed your intent.
You turned, striking first—deflecting, dodging, pushing through. Not to escape, not to run. You fought to get to him. To finish what you came to do.
But the Jedi were too skilled. Too fast.
Obi-Wan knocked the beskad from your hand. Plo Koon hit you with a stun bolt. You went down hard, your head cracking against the marble floor.
As you lost consciousness, the Chancellor knelt beside you.
He leaned in close.
“Next time,” he whispered, “I won’t be so merciful. If you threaten my plans again… your precious clones will be the first to suffer.”
⸻
Your eyes snapped open to the sound of durasteel doors hissing shut.
Your arms were shackled. Your weapons gone.
Fox stepped into the room, helmet under one arm.
He stared at you a long time.
“You tried to assassinate the Chancellor.”
You didn’t speak.
He pulled the chair across from you and sat down. He looked tired. Conflicted. But not angry.
“…Why?”
You met his gaze, finally. No fear. No hesitation.
“Because he’s a danger to you. To all of you.”
Fox narrowed his eyes. “That’s not an answer.”
“Yes, it is.”
“You nearly killed Republic guards. You attacked Jedi.”
“I was trying to protect my sons,” you said, voice trembling. “I can’t explain it. You won’t believe me. But I know what’s coming. And I won’t let him use you—not like this.”
Fox looked down.
For a long moment, the room was silent.
Then quietly, almost brokenly:
“…You shouldn’t have come here.”
You gave a sad smile. “I never should’ve left Kamino.”
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5
me rereading a scene: omg why is she acting like that who wrote this? i wrote this.
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.
⸻
The entire compound thrummed like it was alive—humming with power, vibrating from the deep core generators buried beneath layers of basalt and durasteel. Down in the holding blocks, beneath blinking red lights and exposed pipes slick with condensation, CT-4023 stared at the wall like he could burn through it by will alone.
The cell next to his remained quiet. Too quiet.
Until the silence was broken by a sharp clink.
Sha’rali Jurok’s cuffs hit the floor with a faint echo. She stretched her arms with an almost feline roll of her shoulders, the subtle pop of her joints barely audible beneath the whine of atmospheric recycling. A thin-bladed shiv spun between her fingers, dull with age but deadly in the right hands.
“You’re free,” the clone muttered, voice low and raw.
“Wasn’t a matter of if,” she replied. “Just when.”
She crouched beside the droid access panel in her cell. A few quick taps of her knuckles in a pattern—metal meeting metal. Then a pause.
Nothing.
And then: chirp, chirp-BANG—a furious electronic growl echoed through the vents above.
“Oh,” she said with a smirk, “someone’s mad I left them topside.”
⸻
“Moving into Position,” whispered Boss, voice clipped through Delta Squad’s secure comms.
Fixer tapped the side of his helmet and rerouted a power feed from the junction box, cutting lights to the southeast wing. Darkness spread like ink down the corridor.
“Visual disruption active. Main grid’s destabilized. You’ve got ten minutes before they trace the splice.”
“Plenty,” said Scorch as he patted a charge onto the support column. “Place is built like a house of cards. We could sneeze and bring it down.”
“Let’s not,” Fixer said.
Sev swept ahead, motion sensor in one hand, DC-17m rifle in the other. His voice rasped over the comms. “Life signs in Block Seven. Two confirmed. One’s the target. The other—guess.”
Boss adjusted his grip. “Target retrieval is priority. If the bounty hunter gets in the way, neutralize her.”
“Copy,” they said as one.
⸻
Outside the main cell doors, the purple-and-gold astromech screeched out of a maintenance chute, its claw arm extended and sparking with aggressive glee. Its dome spun as it hurled a jolt of electricity into the chest of a nearby B2 super battle droid. The droid shorted mid-turn, collapsed in a heap of sparking limbs.
Two more B1s turned in confusion.
“What was that?”
The astromech beeped once, menacingly. Then its flamethrower activated.
Both droids went up screaming.
Inside the cell, Sha’rali stood in the doorway, blaster looted from a droid already in hand. Her lekku twitched with anticipation.
CT-4023 pushed himself upright. “You called that thing?”
She smirked. “He doesn’t like being left behind.”
As if on cue, the droid spat a plasma bolt into the ceiling, blowing open the ventilation shaft. A second later, the rose-gold killer butler droid dropped from the dark, landing like a predator.
Its smooth, modulated voice dripped civility. “Madam Jurok. I took the liberty of terminating a half-dozen combat units on the way in. You’ll find the perimeter slightly… more navigable.”
“Lovely,” she purred. “How about a path out?”
“Working on it. Resistance is heavy aboveground, and… we have company.”
⸻
Delta Squad flanked the corridor with lethal precision. Sev watched the corner, his rifle trained on the shadows.
“Reading increased EM activity near the holding cells,” Fixer said. “Something’s scrambling systems.”
“Droid interference,” Scorch said. “Probably that damn astromech.”
“Doesn’t matter,” Boss replied. “We push through.”
They breached the door.
Inside stood the ARC and the bounty hunter—armed, alert, mid-exit.
“Step away from the clone,” Boss ordered, weapon raised.
The ARC took one half-step back… then pivoted toward Sha’rali.
“Please,” he said. “Don’t let them take me.”
Everyone froze.
Sha’rali stared at him.
He didn’t blink. His eyes, storm-grey and haunted, were fixed on her like she was the last solid ground in a storm.
“You don’t understand—if I go back, I won’t leave again. They’ll strip my mind, my name. They’ll take everything. I’ll disappear and no one will care.”
Sha’rali’s fingers tightened on her blaster.
“Sounds familiar,” she muttered.
Boss stepped forward. “Last warning, hunter. Stand down. He’s coming with us.”
The ARC moved closer to her. “Better to run,” he whispered. “You know that. Please.”
A long pause. Delta Squad’s weapons never dropped.
Sha’rali closed her eyes for a heartbeat.
Then she raised her blaster—and fired at the lights.
Darkness swallowed the corridor.
Scorch and Sev ducked behind a crate as a plasma grenade went off near their position. Sha’rali, sprinting with the ARC trooper beside her, vaulted a collapsing support strut just ahead of the flame.
“Where the hell are they going?” Scorch yelled.
“Doesn’t matter,” Boss snapped. “Cut them off—Force knows what’s in that clone’s head.”
The rose-gold droid rounded on Fixer with blinding speed, throwing him off balance. It bowed before smashing a blast door open with one elegant, terrifying strike.
CT-4023 clutched his side—he’d taken a grazing hit to the ribs.
“You still good?” she shouted.
“Not dead,” he growled. “Yet.”
“Then move, soldier.”
Lights flared red as klaxons erupted across the base. B2 droids activated in droves, spider droids marched into hangar bays, and turrets powered up in high alert.
In the central command tower, a tactical droid snapped to attention. “Unknown explosion in Block Seven. Security forces mobilizing. All personnel to defense positions.”
⸻
Kit Fisto and Eeth Koth stood back-to-back as the first wave of droids descended from the ridge.
The Nautolan smiled faintly. “Well. Someone’s thrown a party.”
“We are not guests,” Eeth Koth said, igniting his green blade. “We are the storm.”
The clash of lightsabers against durasteel echoed across the canyon.
⸻
A Separatist gunship descended ahead of them, doors opening with a shriek of hydraulic fury.
Turrets turned toward them.
“Not that way!” the ARC barked.
Sha’rali spun to cover him—but then Delta Squad broke through the other side of the hangar.
Behind them—two glowing lightsabers.
They were surrounded.
And every faction wanted something different.
“Any ideas?” he asked.
She activated the detonator she’d planted on their way through.
The walls exploded behind them.
“Run,” she said.
Smoke surged from the blown-out wall like a living thing—hot, thick, curling with black soot and the scent of burning circuitry. Sha’rali didn’t wait to see who was alive behind it. She grabbed the ARC’s arm, half-dragged, half-shoved him through the gap, boots crunching over debris as they hit the sloping edge of the canyon beyond.
A volley of red blaster bolts screamed past their heads. The ARC stumbled, nearly going down before the bounty hunter caught him with one arm.
“Keep going!” she barked, eyes darting back toward the chaos.
Delta Squad had scattered in the explosion, but they were regrouping fast. Boss was already shouting orders through his helmet. Above them, Kit Fisto and Eeth Koth were engaged mid-leap, deflecting fire from a full squad of B2s. The sky was alive with movement—buzz droids, vulture droids, Separatist reinforcements. Too many pieces moving at once.
And K4 was gone.
Sha’rali’s eyes narrowed, lekku twitching behind her.
He’d vanished right before they breached the inner hangar.
Typical.
“Where are we going?” the ARC gasped, clutching his side. He was bleeding again—his undersuit damp with red.
“Down,” Sha’rali said. “Until they can’t follow.”
She vaulted down a broken ravine edge, boots sliding through gravel and mossy dust. The sunlight barely filtered through the overgrowth here. Saleucami’s dense fungal canopies loomed overhead, vines hanging like nooses from the cliffs.
Behind them, a thermal detonator went off—too close.
“They’re gaining,” he warned.
Sha’rali fired blindly behind her and kept moving.
“You’re going to get us both killed!”
“That’s the idea,” she snapped.
The ARC trooper finally collapsed at the edge of a flooded trench, gasping. Sha’rali dropped beside him, ducking beneath a cluster of fungal overgrowth.
“We can’t outrun them.”
“No,” she agreed. “But we can hide.”
“We won’t last long. Not with that tracker they tagged me with.”
She turned sharply to him. “Tracker?”
He nodded, grimacing. “Buried in my spine. I’ve tried digging it out—no luck. That’s how they always find me.”
Sha’rali reached to her belt and pulled out a vibroblade. “Then I’ll dig harder.”
“Are you insane?!”
“I torture people for a living. Don’t tempt me.”
⸻
K4 moved like a shadow between droid patrols. No clanking. No noise. Just an eerily smooth stride, long coat trailing, posture perfectly relaxed.
He came upon the back line of the landing field where a row of light transports had been left in minimal standby. Maintenance droids chittered. A Geonosian officer barked in a clipped tone.
K4 stepped into the clearing.
“Excuse me,” he said, bowing politely.
The Geonosian turned—just in time for the droid’s hand to rip through his thorax. Blood sprayed.
Before the others could react, K4 had one droid’s head in his palm and crushed it like fruit. A third raised its weapon—
K4 shot it between the eyes with the Geonosian’s pistol.
He paused. Smiled faintly.
“Securing vehicle,” he muttered, and opened the cockpit of the nearest transport.
⸻
Sha’rali finished cauterizing the incision with her blade. The ARC bit down on his glove to keep from screaming, muscles trembling.
“Tracker’s out,” she said. “They’ll still be on our last ping, but that gives us a few minutes.”
R9 chirped in disgust.
“Where’s your other psycho droid?”
She looked up.
Then, like a phantom, K4’s voice crackled to life in her commlink.
“Madam. I have acquired a ship. If you’d be so kind as to meet me at the coordinates I’ve transmitted, I will delay pursuit.”
“You took your time,” she replied.
“A gentleman never rushes murder.”
They left the atmosphere moments later, their stolen vessel avoiding pursuit thanks to K4’s expert programming and a few decoy beacons.
Sha’rali finally leaned back against the wall of the cabin, exhaling slowly.
The ARC looked at her with bloodshot eyes.
“So what now?”
She met his gaze, steady and unreadable.
“Now,” she said, “we get my ship from Felucia.”
⸻
They touched down just as the sun began to rise, painting the fungal canopy in blues and violets. Towering mushroom-like growths loomed over the clearing, and somewhere distant, a herd of guttural beasts bellowed in the mist.
Sha’rali stepped off the ramp first, blaster in hand, sweeping the clearing.
Still secure.
She had left her original ship parked here days ago, camouflaged beneath an active cloaking net and a decoy transponder field. The Republic had been too busy running drills with their battalion on the other side of the continent. The Separatists had been too fixated on their research complex.
No one had found it.
K4 descended behind her, adjusting the cuffs of his coat.
“I must say, I didn’t anticipate returning to this jungle rot,” he said dryly.
“You weren’t supposed to,” Sha’rali muttered.
Behind them, the ARC trooper limped down the ramp of the stolen Separatist vessel. He looked worse than before—bloodied, bruised, dried dirt caking the seams of his blacks. He hadn’t said a word since orbit.
Sha’rali jerked a thumb toward the old ship. Sleeker. Compact. Smuggler-built.
“Home sweet kriffing home.”
The interior was warm with dim light and the gentle hum of systems reactivating after stasis. K4 moved with graceful familiarity, bringing systems online, checking sensors, recharging the astromech. The purple and gold droid spun its dome grumpily and beeped a string of curses at the Separatist vessel they’d left behind.
“We’re not keeping it,” Sha’rali called.
The astromech swore again—louder.
The ARC trooper sat stiffly on the medbay slab as Sha’rali began the scan. A focused beam traced his body slowly, displaying internal data over a pale blue holomap beside the table.
She crossed her arms.
“You’ve got metal buried in you like a cache of war crime confessions.”
“I’m aware,” he muttered.
She toggled through the scan layers—skeletal, muscular, neural—until the image blinked red.
His right forearm lit up with embedded code, just below the bone.
Sha’rali leaned closer, watching the scan hone in.
“There,” she said. “Looks like an identity chip—your CT number and a destination marker.”
He flinched.
“Remove it,” he said quietly. “Erase it first.”
K4 was already stepping forward, fingers unfolding into tools with surgical precision. He paused beside the table, expression unreadable behind his pristine etiquette.
“Are you certain, sir?” K4 asked, voice almost soft. “Identity is one of the last things they leave you with.”
The clone looked at him—raw, hollow-eyed.
“I don’t want it anymore. Any of it.”
K4 gave a slight nod and got to work.
Sha’rali watched the data scroll as the chip decrypted under K4’s tools. Coordinates—somewhere near Raxus. And the CT number.
No name. Just that.
The droid wiped the chip clean. Then, deftly, he cut it out and sealed the wound with a medpatch and bacta stim.
He was quieter after that. Still and exhausted, but awake.
Sha’rali returned after reviewing perimeter scans, carrying a fresh stim and a handheld scanner.
“We’re not done,” she said.
He grunted. “What now?”
“Something in your head.”
His back went straight.
“You said you didn’t want to be controlled,” she said. “So I checked for the chip.”
His lips parted, but no words came.
She tapped the side of her own temple. “Inhibitor. It’s buried deep, but it’s there.”
Silence.
He looked away.
“How bad is it?” he asked.
She sat beside him and held up the scan—it showed the glimmer of a tiny device near his brain.
“Delicate. But not impossible.”
He didn’t answer.
“Do it,” he said at last. “Rip it out.”
Sha’rali sterilized the tools. K4 assisted without comment, hands clean, silent, methodical. Even the astromech—normally impossible to shut up—stayed quiet this time, as if sensing the weight of what was about to happen.
She worked carefully.
Slowly.
Muscle, nerve, brain tissue—this wasn’t a bounty job or some half-drunk limb stitch in a backalley hangar. This was personal.
When she finally pulled the chip free, it was slick with blood and neural tissue, still twitching faintly in her forceps.
She dropped it into a tray of acid and watched it dissolve.
The ARC didn’t speak for a long time.
He sat on the floor now, wrapped in a thermal blanket, sipping nutrient broth like a ghost.
Sha’rali crouched across from him.
“You got a name?”
He shook his head.
“Everyone who knew it’s dead.”
She tilted her head. “Then make a new one.”
“No point.”
“You’ve got no chip. No tag. You’re untraceable now. Fresh start.”
He looked up at her, eyes strange and open in a way they hadn’t been before.
“I just want to be nobody.”
Sha’rali smirked faintly.
“Then you’re in the right line of work.”
The ship hummed around them, alive again. Outside, the Felucian jungle moved and breathed and churned in the light of a fading sun.
Above them, in the growing dark of space, the Republic and the Separatists would still be searching.
But here?
In this stolen moment?
They were nobody.
The broth had long gone cold, but he still held the cup, fingers curled around the heatless metal like it offered an answer.
Sha’rali sat cross-legged across from him, picking at a stim patch on her gauntlet. She wasn’t watching him, not really. Her gaze was distant—calculating, patient, giving him time.
That unnerved him more than torture ever had.
He lifted his head finally, voice low, uncertain but with that familiar soldier’s steel buried underneath.
“You said I’m in the right line of work.”
Sha’rali didn’t respond.
He looked at her directly now, shadows clinging to his jaw, a thin scar catching the medbay lights beneath his cheekbone.
“What makes you think I’ll stay with you?”
Her brow rose. “I don’t.”
He blinked.
She tossed aside the stim wrap and leaned back against the crate behind her, arms draped lazily over her bent knees. “I don’t expect loyalty. Least of all from a clone who’s just had his leash cut.”
“…Right.”
“Why would you?” she added. “You’ve been doing what others wanted your whole life. If you want to vanish, you’re free to walk. I won’t stop you.”
The quiet between them stretched.
Then he spoke again, a little more bitterly now, like the question had been chewing its way through his gut for hours.
“Why would I become a bounty hunter?”
Sha’rali’s head tilted slightly, eyes narrowing in the half-light.
“I don’t know. Why not?” she replied evenly. “What else are you going to do?”
He had no answer.
She leaned forward, elbows on her knees. “You think the Republic wants you back? They sent an entire squad of elite commandos and two Jedi just to clean up the mess your brain might’ve made. They didn’t come to rescue you. They came to recover an asset.”
His jaw clenched.
“It’s very rare I show kindness,” she said flatly. “You got lucky. And you being a clone? It’s unlikely anyone else in this galaxy will ever give you that again.”
Her words struck like blaster bolts. Not cruel—just true.
“You were made to be expendable. Designed for war. Trained to be disposable.” Her voice turned rougher, sharper now. “But this line of work? It might just make you somebody. Someone with a price. Someone who decides their own worth.”
He swallowed.
Sha’rali stood, brushing dust from her armor.
“You can piss it all away and disappear if you want. That’s your right now.” She nodded toward the cockpit corridor. “But I’m heading to Ord Mantell. Got a job waiting. You’re welcome to come. Or not.”
As she turned to leave, a smooth mechanical voice floated in:
“My lady.”
K4 entered the room carrying a tray with two mugs of steaming tea. The contrast between his butler-esque grace and his deadly gleaming servos was still unsettling.
“I’ve prepared something mild, given your poor nutritional intake,” he told the trooper, placing the mug beside him. “Sha’rali’s blend, of course. You’ll hate it.”
The trooper looked at him in mild disbelief. “You made tea?”
“I boiled water and poured it into a cup with dried leaves. Do try to keep up,” K4 said dryly, adjusting the tray with prim care.
R9 wheeled in behind him with a long string of indignant binary chatter. Its dome was already scorched from the Felucia jungle, and its welding torch was still extended in what could only be described as a challenge to K4’s civility.
K4 didn’t even glance at the astromech. “No, R9, you may not install missile pods in the cargo bay again. We discussed this.”
R9 beeped angrily and spun in a circle before storming back toward the hallway, thumping into the wall for emphasis.
K4 turned back to the trooper. “We’ll be heading to Ord Mantell shortly. One of Sha’rali’s contacts has a request, and—regrettably—it pays well.”
“Regrettably?” the clone asked.
“I find credits tedious. But necessary.”
K4 gave him a cool nod. “You’ve got one hour. Either stay or go. But please, decide without bleeding on the furniture.”
He turned and exited, coat fluttering like a nobleman in retreat.
Sha’rali hadn’t looked back during the exchange.
The clone sat in silence for another moment, steam from the tea curling around his fingers.
No name. No rank. No orders.
Just one moment. One choice.
He raised the cup to his lips and took a sip.
It was bitter as hell.
But it was his.
⸻
The stars stretched long and lazy through the cockpit viewport, the hyperspace corridor casting pale light over the controls and illuminating the quiet hum of the ship’s systems. Sha’rali lounged in the pilot’s seat, boots up on the dash, arms behind her head, lekku coiled loosely over her shoulders.
There was a quiet shuffle behind her.
She didn’t turn around. “Took you long enough.”
The clone stepped into the cockpit and sank into the co-pilot’s chair. His armor was gone—cleaned, stashed away. Just a black undersuit now. Comfortable, functional. Unbranded.
No symbol. No name.
Sha’rali glanced sideways, smirking faintly. “So. You’re sticking around.”
He shrugged, noncommittal, eyes trained on the lights streaking past the viewport. “For now.”
She tilted her head, scanning his profile like a puzzle she couldn’t quite solve. “Well, if you’re going to haunt my cockpit, you’ll need a name.”
“I have a name,” he said stiffly.
“CT-something isn’t a name,” she replied, stretching out with a lazy groan. “It’s a batch number.”
He didn’t reply.
She let the silence stretch for all of three seconds before launching into it: “How about Stalker?”
He gave her a deadpan look.
“No? Okay, brooding mystery man. Let’s try Scorch.”
“That’s taken,” he muttered.
“Grim. Ghost. Omen?”
He exhaled hard through his nose. “I’m not a karking dog.”
“You sure bark like one.” Her smirk turned toothy.
He turned back to the stars.
She lowered her boots and leaned forward, elbows resting on her knees. “Look, I get it. You’ve been a number your whole life. But the second you cut ties with the Republic, you stopped being inventory. You need something. Doesn’t have to be permanent. Doesn’t even have to be clever. Just… something to call you.”
He was quiet for a long beat. “I’ll pick one when I’m ready.”
Sha’rali grinned, satisfied. “That’s fair.”
Then the cockpit door whooshed open with a hiss of disdain.
K4 stood in the doorway, perfectly poised in a stiff-legged elegance, arms crossed behind his back like a judge about to sentence someone.
“I see the nameless meatbag has occupied my seat.”
The clone looked at him, unimpressed. “There’s no name on it.”
“There was. I had it engraved, but that aggressive grease-stain of an astromech melted it off during one of its fits.”
Sha’rali stifled a laugh.
K4 stepped forward with the precision of a butler and the threat level of a vibroblade. “Move. Or be moved.”
The clone didn’t budge. “You going to throw me out an airlock too?”
“Tempting,” K4 replied. “But no. I’d prefer to avoid cleaning that much clone out of the upholstery.”
Sha’rali snorted. “Boys, play nice.”
The trooper stood slowly, eyes still locked on K4. “You’re really something.”
“I am many things,” K4 replied with a curt nod, sliding into his seat with a dancer’s grace. “Chief among them: irreplaceable.”
The clone wandered to the back of the cockpit, arms crossed, observing the banter unfold like some outsider at a theater show.
Sha’rali turned toward the nav screen, keying in atmospheric approach data. “We’ll be hitting Ord Mantell space in about ten. R9’s already downloaded the contact’s coordinates—neutral zone, outskirts of Worlport. Small job, fast payout.”
K4 glanced over his shoulder. “Low-risk. Possibly boring. That usually means a trap.”
“Probably,” she said easily. “But traps are where the fun is.”
The clone gave her a sidelong look. “You live like this all the time?”
Sha’rali grinned. “I’d die of boredom otherwise.”
The ship rocked gently as hyperspace dissolved around them. Stars snapped back into singular points of light, and the blue-brown marble of Ord Mantell filled the view.
Sha’rali leaned forward in her seat, eyes narrowing.
“Showtime.”
⸻
Ord Mantell was always dusty.
Sha’rali disembarked the ship, breathing in the warm, arid air as the twin suns of the planet bathed the landscape in pale gold. The outskirts of Worlport were quiet this time of day—only the low drone of speeders in the distance, the occasional scrap droid trundling past, and the wind tugging at tarps strung between rusting shipping crates.
Their meeting point was a wide alley between two abandoned warehouses, shielded from aerial scanners but open enough to see an ambush coming. Or so the coordinates claimed.
K4 scanned the perimeter with narrowed optics. “I already dislike this.”
Sha’rali cracked her neck and adjusted her blaster pistol. “You dislike everything.”
“False,” K4 said flatly. “I enjoy chamomile tea and the distant sounds of R9 screaming.”
R9, presently wheeling ahead to scan the loading bay doors, let out a warbling snort of protest.
“Not now,” the ARC trooper muttered to the astromech as he followed close behind.
R9 spun its dome a half-click, gave him a sharp toot of indignation, then paused when he reached out and gently rested a hand against its dome.
“…Sorry,” the trooper said quietly, brushing some scorch marks with his thumb. “You saved my shebs more than once back there. Guess I should treat you less like equipment.”
R9 warbled something smug.
The clone chuckled softly. “Don’t get cocky.”
R9 nudged against his knee like a small metal rancor demanding affection.
Sha’rali caught the moment out of the corner of her eye but didn’t say a word.
They reached the center of the clearing and waited. The plan was simple: quick trade-off, information packet for credits, with the Trandoshan broker Cid as the middleman. Low stakes. Clean job.
Except Cid wasn’t here.
Instead, a squat Rodian stood in her place, flanked by two humans in patchwork armor and a Nikto with a heavy repeater slung over his shoulder.
Sha’rali’s hand dropped to her sidearm, casual but not lazy.
“You’re not Cid,” she said evenly.
The Rodian blinked. “Cid sends apologies. She got… tied up. Said we’d handle the handoff.”
“That’s not how she works.”
“Changed policy.”
Sha’rali didn’t like this. The Rodian was sweating despite the dry wind, and the Nikto’s finger twitched just a bit too close to the trigger guard.
Behind her, she felt the shift in stance from both her crew and the clone. Silent, poised. Waiting for her call.
“Let me be real clear,” Sha’rali said, stepping forward, eyes cold. “Either Cid walks around that corner in the next twenty seconds, or I start melting kneecaps until someone gives me a better answer.”
The Rodian looked nervous now. One of the humans raised their weapon slightly, and that was all it took.
Sha’rali’s blaster cleared leather in a blink.
The Nikto dropped first, a clean bolt through his shoulder as he staggered back into the crates.
K4 drew his vibroblade with smooth grace, lunging forward and disarming the nearest gunman before slamming him into a wall hard enough to knock the breath from his lungs.
The clone took cover behind a crate and laid down precise suppressive fire, pinning the remaining thug in place.
R9 zipped forward, emitted a piercing shriek, and sent a shock prod up into the Rodian’s ribs. The poor fool convulsed and dropped like a sack of duracrete.
Thirty seconds. It was over.
Sha’rali stepped through the smoke, picking up the small datachip from the Rodian’s belt pouch. She held it up to the light, turning it in her fingers.
“Yeah,” she muttered. “Cid never showed.”
The clone approached, eyes sharp. “Trap?”
“Feels like it.”
K4 nudged one of the groaning mercs with his boot. “Pathetic attempt at one, though.”
Sha’rali gave a quick two-finger whistle. “Let’s move before reinforcements start sniffing around. I don’t like jobs that lie.”
They headed back toward the ship. As the loading ramp closed behind them, and R9 let out another satisfied electronic cackle, the clone glanced at Sha’rali.
“You think Cid’s in trouble?”
Sha’rali’s eyes narrowed.
“I think we’ve just been hired for something a lot bigger than we signed up for.”
The door to Cid’s Parlor groaned open, stale air curling around their boots as Sha’rali stepped through the archway. The cantina looked the same as it always had—low lighting, dirty tables, blaster scarring along the walls like some kind of history book no one wanted to read.
R9 whirred softly beside her, rotating its dome as if scanning for snipers. The clone kept his head low and hooded, shadows veiling most of his face.
Cid was in the back booth, hunched over a datapad with a half-finished glass of Corellian black in one hand and an expression like she’d bitten into something alive.
Sha’rali didn’t wait for permission. She slid into the booth across from her, legs crossed, blaster out and resting on the table—not pointed, but not concealed either. The clone stood behind her, silent, unreadable.
K4 remained by the door. Looming. Glowing optics politely predatory.
Cid didn’t look up.
“Well, this is a surprise. Thought I told you to stay gone.”
“You sent me a job,” Sha’rali said flatly.
“I didn’t send you anything.”
Sha’rali’s eyes narrowed. She slid the decrypted datachip across the table with a light click. “This came with your encryption key. Your coordinates. Your payout tags.”
Cid picked it up, glanced at it, snorted. “You ever consider maybe someone else is using my name?”
“I’ve made enemies,” Sha’rali allowed. “But not the kind who play bookkeeping this clean.”
Cid finally looked at her—and then past her, toward the hooded clone. Her brow lifted, expression changing.
“Well,” she muttered. “Ain’t that something.”
The clone remained motionless.
“You bring me one of them, huh?” Cid leaned forward, voice lowering. “That’s not just any grunt. You got yourself a ghost. They been looking for that one.”
Sha’rali didn’t flinch. “He’s with me.”
“That supposed to mean something?” Cid took a long drink. “After the stunt you pulled last time, you’re lucky I don’t sell your pretty pink ass to the Pykes.”
“You’d try.” Sha’rali leaned closer. “But I don’t think you want to see what my droids do to traitors.”
K4 cleared his throat from the doorway, utterly polite. “She’s correct. It’s… messy.”
Cid rolled her eyes, then looked at the clone again. “What’s your name, buckethead?”
He didn’t answer.
Sha’rali stood. “We’re done here.”
As they walked out, Cid watched them go, her stubby fingers already sliding a new commlink from her pocket.
The line was secure.
:: “Yeah. It’s me.” ::
A pause.
:: “The pink one’s alive. She’s got the clone.” ::
Another pause.
:: “No, he doesn’t have a name. He’s not talking. But it’s him. You’ll want to act fast. She’s in Ord Mantell space, but she won’t stay put for long.” ::
A click. Line dead.
Cid tossed back the last of her drink and let out a long breath.
“She always was too bold for her own good.”
⸻
The sun was lower now, casting long shadows across the grime-stained streets of Worlport. The cantina door slammed behind them with a hiss, and R9 let out a suspicious bleep as it scanned the alleyway, already on edge.
The clone walked beside Sha’rali in silence for a few beats before finally speaking.
“What did you do to the Pykes?”
Sha’rali didn’t look at him, just smirked faintly. “I didn’t. K4 did.”
Behind them, the tall silver droid gave a prim nod. “They insulted my etiquette. I simply reminded them that proper conduct is essential… especially when negotiating ransom with a vibroblade to one’s throat.”
R9 cackled.
The clone side-eyed K4. “You’re not a butler.”
“I am a butler,” K4 replied, mock-offended. “I was built from scratch to kill, politely.”
Sha’rali chuckled. “You’ll get used to them. Or you’ll die. Probably one or the other.”
They turned down a side alley toward the hangar levels. The city never felt safe, but it felt less safe now, like every shadow held someone waiting for a bounty to clear.
“We need to find you new armor,” she said suddenly. “Something that doesn’t scream ‘I’m a clone deserter, please apprehend me for treason and experimentation.’”
He gave her a long look. “You just want me in a helmet.”
“I want you in a helmet no one recognizes,” she shot back. “And yes. Aesthetics are a bonus.”
He huffed out a quiet laugh, then sobered. “You think Cid’ll sell us out?”
Sha’rali’s smile faded. “If I know Cid? She already did. By the time we’re off-planet, someone’ll be gunning for us. Could be the Republic. Could be the Pykes. Could be the damned Crimson Suns for all I know.”
The clone’s jaw flexed.
“We refuel,” she continued, “we grab food, and we’re off this rock. No lingering.”
“Got a destination?”
“No,” she admitted. “But I’ve got contacts. Places that don’t ask questions, and people who like me more than they like war. That’s enough.”
They turned a corner, stepping into the bustling edge of the bazaar, the scent of charred meats and engine coolant thick in the air.
Sha’rali paused for a moment, watching the crowd. R9 was already zipping toward a food stall with the enthusiasm of a toddler and the manners of a junkyard loth-cat. K4 sighed and followed, weapon at his side but posture casual.
The clone lingered beside her. “You didn’t have to help me, you know.”
Sha’rali tilted her head, lekku twitching with amusement. “I know. Still did.”
“Why?”
She looked up at him, sharp-eyed. “You asked me that already. The galaxy treats clones like tools. I’ve broken tools before—none of them bled. You did. That makes you different.”
He looked away.
Sha’rali bumped his arm with her own. “C’mon, buckethead. Let’s get you a helmet that actually fits your brooding personality.”
⸻
The marketplace on the lower decks of Worlport reeked of oil, unwashed bodies, and desperation. This wasn’t where you bought weapons. This was where you took them.
Sha’rali’s eyes scanned the crowd lazily, arms crossed, lekku twitching in irritation.
“You call this shopping?” the clone asked from behind his hood.
“I call it resourcing,” she said. “I see a weak target with good gear, I make it mine. Simpler than bartering with credits I don’t have.”
“I thought you were looking for armor,” he muttered.
“I am. And I’m picky.”
Her gaze settled on a group near the far end of the alley—a trio of bounty hunters lounging near a food stall. One wore a clunky but reinforced cuirass, too bulky. Another had Twi’lek-style duraplast plating, nothing that would fit. But the third…
She stopped walking. Her eyes narrowed.
The third was a Mandalorian.
Midnight blue beskar with red accents. Sleek. Scarred. Visor shaped like a frown. A stylized kyr’bes on one pauldron. Death Watch.
“That one,” Sha’rali said quietly.
The clone stopped beside her, tense. “He’s Death Watch. You know what they are.”
“Archaic terrorists playing Mandalorian dress-up,” she replied.
“They’re still dangerous. And they’ll know if we kill one of theirs.”
Sha’rali smirked. “Then we make sure no one knows it was us.”
He stepped in front of her, voice low and urgent. “This is different. You can’t just kill a Mando and take his armor like you’re picking out boots.”
She tilted her head. “Why not?”
“Because it means something. It’s not just plating—it’s their identity.”
“Right,” she said flatly. “And you’re a clone of a Mandalorian. So maybe you’re entitled to it.”
He went still.
Sha’rali didn’t wait for him to argue. She was already moving.
They waited until the Mandalorian separated from his group, ducking into a quieter side alley where local fences hawked off-brand spice and stolen kyber.
Sha’rali struck first.
A quick vibroblade slash to the leg, aimed to cripple. The Mando pivoted fast, parried with a gauntlet and drove his knee into her gut. Her armor absorbed most of it—but the man was fast, clearly trained. Death Watch didn’t promote dead weight.
The clone stood back, fists clenched, teeth gritted.
Sha’rali landed a few more hits, but the Mandalorian activated a jet burst from his vambrace, knocking her backward. She hit the durasteel wall hard, her twin blades skittering out of reach.
The Mando stalked toward her, blade in hand, helmet staring expressionless.
Then a blaster bolt caught him in the side of the knee.
He stumbled. Spun. The clone was already charging.
It was fast, brutal. The clone tackled him from behind, fists slamming into the helmet again and again until the beskar cracked at the seam. Then he wrenched the helmet off entirely and drove the butt of his rifle into the man’s skull.
The alley fell silent.
Sha’rali got to her feet slowly, holding her ribs. “You gonna scold me now?”
The clone didn’t answer. He stood over the body, breathing heavily.
“We strip the armor,” she said. “K4’ll scrub it clean, R9 will paint it. No one will know it was Death Watch.”
He didn’t move. “This is wrong.”
“You helped,” she reminded him. “That makes you complicit.”
He stared at her. “I helped because you were dying. That doesn’t mean I agree with you.”
“Not asking you to.”
Back at the ship, K4 took the pieces without question. R9 scanned for blood and grime. They worked in practiced silence while the clone sat by the viewport, holding the scorched helmet in his hands.
“I’m dishonoring their culture,” he muttered.
Sha’rali dropped into the seat beside him. “You’re a clone of a Mandalorian. That gives you as much right as any of them. Maybe more.”
He didn’t answer right away.
“You don’t owe the people who made you,” she said quietly. “You don’t owe the ones who left you behind, either. You get to choose who you are. And right now, you’re mine.”
He glanced at her. “That supposed to be comforting?”
Sha’rali smiled faintly. “I thought it sounded better than property.”
K4 approached, carrying the first repainted chest plate. Sleek black, silver accents, no insignia. Clean.
“No identity,” K4 said as he handed it over. “Just how you like it.”
⸻
The cargo bay was quiet, save for the occasional mechanical chirp from R9 and the click-click of K4’s tools being returned to their compartments. The Mandalorian armor had been fully stripped, sterilized, reconfigured, and freshly painted—black and silver with clean lines, devoid of crests or affiliation. A blank slate.
The clone stood in front of the armor set now, pieces laid out across the table like relics of a man who never existed.
Sha’rali lounged nearby, arms crossed, silently watching him.
“Well?” she said after a beat. “Put it on.”
He hesitated, jaw tightening, and then—without another word—began to strap the pieces onto his body.
Torso first. It felt heavier than it looked.
The shin guards were snug, but flexible. The vambraces clicked into place, perfectly aligned. The helmet—he saved for last.
He stared at it for a long time, then finally pulled it over his head. The hiss of the seal echoed in the cargo bay.
He turned toward Sha’rali, now fully armored.
“Well,” she said, walking a slow circle around him. “You wear it well.”
“I don’t feel like I do,” his voice echoed slightly through the modulator. “Feels like I stole someone else’s soul.”
“That’s because you did,” K4 said flatly, walking up with a tray and setting it aside. “And I just spent four hours repainting it, so kindly conduct yourself with a shred of respect.”
Sha’rali raised a brow. “K4, did you just scold him?”
“If you want an artist’s interpretation of his fragile rebirth, fine,” K4 said, gesturing at the armor. “But I’d prefer my work not be discarded just because the soldier has a sudden attack of conscience.”
The clone removed the helmet and looked at K4 with narrowed eyes. “I was considering repainting it.”
“To what? Blue? Red? Polka dots?” K4 clanked one metal hand on the chest plate. “This neutral palette hides identity. It protects you. It lets you vanish.”
“He’s right,” Sha’rali said. “This isn’t for show—it’s camouflage. You want color, buy a flag.”
The clone looked down at the armor again, flexing one gloved hand.
“It’s not about the paint,” he said quietly. “It’s about what it means. Every time I wore armor before, it was because someone told me to. Now I’m just deciding to… what, play dress-up as something I’m not?”
“No one’s telling you to be something you’re not,” Sha’rali said. “I’m saying you get to choose what you are. And right now, that armor doesn’t say clone. Doesn’t say Republic. Doesn’t even say Mando. It says ghost.”
He nodded slowly, still staring at the chest piece. “A ghost, huh.”
R9 gave a sarcastic warble from the corner. The clone looked up, a faint smile tugging at the corner of his mouth.
“Even the droid thinks I’m dramatic.”
“He also thinks K4 should’ve painted flames on the side,” Sha’rali said.
R9 gave a smug beep.
K4 clicked his metal fingers together. “I will eject that astromech from the airlock.”
Sha’rali smiled faintly. “You ready to be someone?”
He thought about that for a long second.
Then he slipped the helmet back on.
“Let’s find out.”
⸻
Previous Part | Next Part
Song: “Altamaha-Ha” – Olivier Devriviere & Stacey Subero
Setting: Kamino, pre-Clone Wars, training the clone commanders
A/N - I thought I would give the clones some motherly love because they absolutely deserve it.
⸻
Arrival
Kamino was a graveyard floating on water. Not one built from bones or tombstones, but of silence and steel, of sterile white walls and cloned futures.
You arrived at dawn—or what passed for dawn here, beneath an endless, thunderstruck sky. The rain hit your Beskar like a thousand tiny fists, relentless and cold. There was no welcome party. No ceremony. Just a hangar platform soaked in wind and spray, and one familiar silhouette waiting for you like a ghost from your past.
“Didn’t think you’d come,” Jango Fett said, arms crossed, armor dulled by salt and time.
“You asked,” you answered, stepping off the transport. “And Mandalorians don’t abandon their own.”
He gave a small, tired nod. “This place… it’s not what I wanted it to be.”
You followed him through the elevated corridors, your bootfalls echoing alongside his. You passed clone infants in incubation pods—unmoving, unaware—lined up like products, not people. Your throat tightened.
“Kaminoans see them as assets,” he muttered. “Nothing more.”
You scowled. “And you?”
Jango didn’t answer.
You didn’t need him to. That was why you were here.
⸻
Training the Future Commanders
They were just boys.
Tiny, sharp-eyed, disciplined—but boys nonetheless. They saluted when they saw you, confused by your armor, your presence, your refusal to speak in the Kaminoan-approved tone.
“Are you another handler?” one asked—Cody, maybe, even then with that skeptical glare.
“No,” you replied, removing your helmet, letting your war-worn face meet theirs. “I’m a warrior. And I’m here to make you warriors. The kind Kamino can’t mold. The kind no one can break.”
At first, they didn’t trust you. Fox flinched when you corrected his form. Bly mimicked your movements but refused eye contact. Rex tried to impress you too much, like a pup desperate to please.
But over time, that changed.
You didn’t teach them like the Kaminoans did. You taught them like they mattered. Every mistake was a lesson. Every success, a celebration. You learned their quirks—how Wolffe grumbled when he was nervous, how Cody chewed the inside of his cheek when strategizing, how Bly stared too long at the sky, longing for something even he couldn’t name.
They grew under your care. They grew into theirs.
And somewhere along the line, the title changed.
“Buir,” Rex said one day, barely a whisper.
You froze.
“Sorry,” he added quickly, flustered. “I didn’t mean—”
But you crouched and ruffled his hair, voice thick. “No. I like it.”
After that, the name stuck.
⸻
The Way You Loved Them
You taught them how to fight, yes. But also how to think, how to feel. You made them memorize the stars, not just coordinates. You forced them to sit in circles and talk when they lost a training sim—why they failed, what it meant.
“You are not cannon fodder,” you said once, your voice carrying through the sparring hall. “You are sons of Mandalore. You are mine. You will not die for a Republic that won’t mourn you. You will survive. Together.”
They believed you. And because they believed, they began to believe in themselves.
⸻
Singing in the Dark
Late at night, when the Kaminoans powered down the lights and the labs buzzed quiet, you slipped into the barracks. They were small again in those moments—curled under grey blankets, limbs tangled, some still holding training rifles in their sleep.
You never planned to sing. It started one night when Bly woke from a nightmare, gasping for air, tears clinging to his lashes. You held him, like a child—because he was one—and without thinking, you sang.
“Slumber, child, slumber, and dream, dream, dream
Let the river carry you back to me
Dream, my baby, 'cause
Mama will be there in the mornin'”
The melody, foreign and low, drifted over the bunks like a lullaby born from the sea itself. It wasn’t Mandalorian. It was older. From your mother, perhaps, or her mother before her. It didn’t matter.
Soon, the others began to stir at the sound—some sitting up, listening. Some quietly pretending to still be asleep.
You sang to them until the rain outside became less frightening. Until their eyes closed again.
And after that, you kept doing it.
⸻
The Warning
“Don’t get in their way,” Jango warned one night as you stood by the viewing glass, watching your boys spar in the simulator below. “The Kaminoans. They won’t like it.”
“They already don’t,” you muttered. “I’ve seen the way they talk about them. Subjects. Tests. Like they’re things.”
“They are things to them,” he said. “And if you make too much noise, you’ll be the next thing they discard.”
You turned to face him, cold fury in your chest. “Then let them try.”
He didn’t push further. Maybe because he knew—deep down—he couldn’t stop you either.
⸻
Kamino was all rain and repetition. It pounded the platform windows like war drums, never letting up, a constant rhythm that seeped into the bones. But inside the training complex, your boys—your commanders—were becoming weapons. And they were doing it with teeth bared.
You ran them hard. Harder than the Kaminoans would’ve allowed. You forced them to fight one-on-one until they bled, then patch each other up. You made them run drills in full gear until even Fox, the most stubborn of them, nearly passed out. But you also cooked for them when they succeeded. You gave them downtime when they earned it. You let them joke, laugh, fight like brothers.
And they were brothers. Every one of them.
“You hit like a Jawa,” Neyo grunted, dodging a blow from Bacara.
“At least I don’t look like one,” Bacara shot back, swinging his training staff with a grunt.
The others laughed from the sidelines. Cody leaned against the wall with his arms crossed, smirking. Rex and Fox were trading bets in whispers.
“Credits on Neyo,” Bly muttered, grinning. “He’s wiry.”
“You’re all idiots,” Wolffe growled. “Bacara’s been waiting to punch him since last week.”
You let them have their moment. You sat on the edge of the platform, helmet off, watching them like a mother bird daring anyone to touch her nest.
The sparring match turned fast. Bacara landed a hit to Neyo’s ribs—but Neyo pivoted and brought his staff down hard across Bacara’s knee. There was a loud crack. Bacara cried out and dropped.
The laughter died.
You were at his side in an instant, shouting for a med droid even as you crouched beside him, checking his leg. His face was twisted in pain, jaw clenched to keep from crying out again.
“It’s just a fracture,” the Kaminoan tech said from above, indifferent. “He’ll heal.”
You glared up at them. “He’s not just a number. He’s a kid.”
“They are not—”
“He is mine,” you snapped, standing between Bacara and the tech. “And if I hear one more word from your sterile little mouth, I will see how fast you bleed.”
The Kaminoan backed away.
You turned back to Bacara, softer now. Your hand brushed the sweat from his brow.
“Deep breaths, cyar’ika. You’re alright.”
He tried to speak, teeth gritted. “I’m—fine.”
“No, you’re not,” you said gently, voice warm but firm. “And you don’t have to pretend for me.”
The other boys were quiet. They had seen broken bones, sure. But not softness like this. Not someone kneeling beside one of them with care in her eyes.
You stayed by Bacara’s side while the medics patched him up. You held his hand when they set the bone, and he let you.
Later, when he was tucked into his bunk with his leg in a brace, you sat beside him and hummed. Just softly. The rain tapping the window, your voice somewhere between a lullaby and a promise.
He didn’t cry. But he did sleep.
⸻
You didn’t just teach them how to fight. You taught them how to live—how to survive.
You made them argue tactical problems around a dinner table. You made them learn each other’s tells—so they could watch each other’s backs on the battlefield. You made them memorize where the Kaminoans kept the override chips, in case something ever went wrong.
You never said why, but they trusted you.
And sometimes, they’d tease one another just to make you laugh.
“You’re so slow, Wolffe,” Bly groaned, flopping onto the floor after a run. “It’s like watching a Star Destroyer try to jog.”
“You want to say that to my face?” Wolffe growled, looming.
“No thanks,” Bly wheezed. “My ribs still remember last week.”
Fox tossed him a ration bar. “Eat up, drama queen.”
Rex smirked. “You’re all mouth, Fox.”
“I will end you, rookie.”
“Boys,” you interrupted, raising a brow. “If you have enough energy to whine, I clearly didn’t run you hard enough.”
Groans. Laughter. Playful swearing.
“Ten more laps,” you added, smiling.
Cries of “Nooo, buir!” echoed down the corridor.
⸻
When You Sang
Sometimes they asked for it. Sometimes they didn’t need to.
The song came when things were too quiet—after a nightmare, after a long day, after they’d lost a spar or a brother.
You’d walk between their bunks, singing low as the rain hit the glass.
“Last night under bright strange stars
We left behind the men that caged you and me
Runnin' toward a promise land
Mama will be there in the mornin'”
They’d pretend not to be listening. But you’d see it—the way Rex’s fists unclenched, how Neyo’s brow relaxed, how Wolffe finally let himself close his eyes.
You knew, deep down, you were raising boys for slaughter.
But you’d be damned if they didn’t feel loved before they went.
⸻
The sterile corridors of Tipoca City echoed beneath your boots. Even when the halls were silent, you could feel the Kaminoans’ eyes—watchful, cold, and calculating. They didn’t like you here. Not anymore.
When you’d first arrived, brought in under Jango’s word and credentials, they’d accepted your presence as a utility—an expert warrior to train the Alpha batch. But lately? You were a complication. You cared too much.
And they didn’t like complications.
⸻
The Meeting
You stood at attention in front of Lama Su and Taun We. The pale lights above made your armor gleam. You didn’t bow. You didn’t smile.
“You were observed interfering with medical protocol,” Lama Su said, his voice devoid of emotion. “This is not within your designated parameters.”
“One of my boys was hurt,” you said flatly.
“He is a clone. Replaceable. As they all are.”
Your fists curled at your sides.
“Do not forget your role,” Lama Su continued. “Your methods are not standard. Excessive independence. Emotional entanglement. Your presence disrupts efficiency.”
You stepped forward, slowly, deliberately. “You want soldiers who’ll die for you. I’m giving you soldiers who’ll choose to fight. There’s a difference. One that matters.”
There was a pause, then:
“You were not created for this program,” Lama Su said with quiet disapproval. “Do not overestimate your position.”
You didn’t respond.
You simply turned and walked out.
⸻
He was waiting for you in the observation room overlooking Training Sector 3. The boys were down there—Cody and Fox were running scenario drills, Rex was lining up shots on a target range, Bly was tossing insults at Neyo while dodging training droids.
They didn’t see you. But watching them moved something fierce and dangerous in your chest.
Jango spoke without looking at you. “They’re getting strong.”
“They’re getting better,” you corrected.
He turned to face you, arms folded, helm clipped to his belt. “You’re making them soft.”
You scoffed. “You don’t believe that.”
A beat. “No,” he admitted. “But the Kaminoans do.”
You shrugged. “Let them.”
“You’re pissing them off.”
You turned your head, met his gaze with something sharp and sad in your eyes. “They treat these kids like hardware. Tools. Like you’re the only one who matters.”
“I am the template,” he said, with a ghost of a smile.
“They’re more than your copies,” you said. “They’re people.”
Jango studied you for a long moment. Then his voice dropped. “They’re going to start pushing back, ner vod. On you. Hard.”
You looked back down at the boys. Bacara was limping slightly—still healing—but still trying to prove himself.
You exhaled slowly, then said, “I’m not leaving.”
“They’ll make you.”
“Not until they’re ready.”
Jango shook his head. “That might never happen.”
You glanced at him. “Then I guess I’m staying forever.”
⸻
That night, you sang again.
You walked through the bunks, slow and steady. The boys were half-asleep—worn out from drills, bandaged, bruised, but safe. Their expressions softened when you passed by. Neyo, usually tense, had his arms thrown over his head in peaceful surrender. Bly was snoring into his pillow. Bacara’s fingers were still wrapped around the edge of his blanket, leg elevated, but his face was calm.
You stood at the center of the dorm, lowered your voice, and sang like the sea itself had whispered the melody to you.
“Trust nothin' and no one in this strange, strange land
Be a mouse and do not use your voice
River tore us apart, but I'm not too far 'cause
Mama will be there in thе mornin'”
Somewhere behind you, a voice murmured, “We’re glad you didn’t leave, buir.”
You didn’t turn to see who said it.
You just kept singing.
⸻
They didn’t even look you in the eye when they handed you the dismissal.
Lama Su’s voice was as flat and clinical as ever. “Your assignment to the training program is concluded, effective immediately. A transport will arrive within the hour.”
No discussion. No room for argument. Just sterile words and sterile reasoning.
“Why?” you asked, though you already knew.
Taun We’s expression didn’t change. “Your attachment to the clones is counterproductive. It encourages instability. Disobedience.”
You laughed bitterly. “Disobedience? They’d die for you, and you don’t even know their names.”
“You’ve served your purpose.”
You stepped forward. “No. I haven’t. They’re not ready.”
“They are sufficient for combat deployment.”
You stared at them, ice in your veins. “Sufficient,” you repeated. “You mean disposable.”
“You are dismissed.”
⸻
You packed slowly.
Your hands were steady, but your heart roared like it used to back on Mandalore, in the heart of battle. That same ache. That same helplessness, standing in front of something too big to fight, and realizing you still had to try.
You left behind your bunk, your wall of messy holos and scraps of training reports scrawled in shorthand. You left behind a half-written lullaby tucked under your cot. But you took your armor.
You always took your armor.
You were nearly done when a voice cut through the door.
“Can I come in?”
It was Cody.
You didn’t turn around. “Door’s open.”
He stepped in quietly, glancing around the room like it was sacred ground. You saw his hands twitch slightly—he never fidgeted. But tonight, he was restless.
“They told us you were leaving,” he said, almost like it wasn’t real until he said it out loud. “Why?”
“Because I care too much,” you said simply.
Cody sat down on your footlocker, elbows on his knees. His eyes were dark, searching.
“What happens to us now?”
You finally looked at him. Really looked. He was trying to hold it together. He always had to—he was the eldest in a way, the natural leader. But underneath it, you saw the boy. The child.
“Are we ready?” he asked.
You walked over and sat beside him, your shoulder brushing his.
“No,” you said. “You’re not.”
That hit him harder than comfort might have.
“But,” you added, “you’re as ready as you can be. You’ve got the training. The instincts. You’ve got each other.”
Cody was quiet for a long time. Then, softly: “I’m scared.”
You nodded. “Good. So was I. Every time I stepped onto a battlefield, I was scared.”
His eyes flicked to you in surprise.
You gave a soft huff of breath. “You think Mandalorians don’t feel fear? We feel it more. We just learn to carry it.”
He looked down. “What was your war like?”
You leaned back slightly, staring at the ceiling.
“I fought on the burning sands of Sundari’s borders, in the mines, the wastelands. I’ve lost friends to blade and blaster, to poison and betrayal. I’ve heard the war drums shake the skies and still gone forward, knowing I’d never see the next sunrise. And when it was over…” You paused, bitter. “The warriors were banished.”
Cody frowned. “Banished?”
You nodded. “The new regime—pacifists. Duchess Satine. She took the throne, and we were cast off. Sent to the moon. All the heroes of Mandalore… left behind like rusted armor.”
“That’s not fair.”
“No,” you agreed. “But that’s war. You don’t always get a homecoming.”
He was silent, digesting it.
Then you said, more gently, “But you do get to decide who you are in it. And after it. If there’s an after.”
Cody’s voice cracked just a little. “You were our home.”
You turned to him, and for the first time, let him see the tears brimming in your eyes. “You still are.”
You pulled him into a hug—tight, armor creaking, like the world might tear you both apart if you let go.
⸻
You walked through the training hall one last time. Your boys were all there, lined up, watching you.
Silent.
Even the Kaminoans didn’t stop you from speaking.
You met each pair of eyes—Wolffe, Fox, Rex, Bacara, Neyo, Bly, Cody.
“My warriors,” you said softly, “you were never mine to keep. But you were mine to love. And you still are.”
You stepped forward, placed your hand on Cody’s shoulder, then moved down the line, touching each one like a prayer.
“Be strong. Be smart. Be good to each other. And remember: no matter what anyone says… you are not property. You are brothers.”
You left without turning back.
Because if you did—you wouldn’t have left at all.
Part 2
Can i request a fox x reader where he's super soft towards them, not like in a ooc way but where he's just nicer and more relaxed with them than anyone else. And maybe the corrie guard overhears him being soft and they burst into the room like "who are you and what have you done with fox?" lmao
Loveyourwritingmydarlingokeybyeeee <3
Commander Fox x Reader
The Commander of the Coruscant Guard was many things: stern, intense, inflexible, direct, and famously immune to nonsense.
Except, apparently, when it came to you.
No one really noticed it at first. Fox wasn’t exactly the hand-holding type. His version of affection was a nod of acknowledgment or the way he’d always check to see if you made it back to your quarters safely after Senate briefings. But lately, the cracks in the durasteel facade were getting harder to ignore.
Like now.
You were perched on the edge of his desk in the command center, arms crossed lazily while he keyed in reports with one hand and let the other rest lightly—casually—on your thigh.
His voice, low and gravelly, was uncharacteristically gentle.
“You didn’t sleep much last night,” he murmured, not looking at you but very much not hiding his concern. “You’ve got that look in your eye again.”
“I’m fine,” you replied, giving a little smirk. “That’s just how my face looks when a certain commander forgets to bring caf.”
Fox exhaled a quiet laugh. A laugh. “That’s mutiny talk. You want to end up in a holding cell?”
“With you? Might be worth it.”
He stopped typing. Finally looked up. “Careful. I might take you up on that.”
You were just about to tease him back when the door burst open so violently that one of the wall panels actually rattled.
Thorn, Hound, Stone, and Thire stood there like they’d just walked in on a crime scene.
Stone was the first to speak, horrified: “WHO ARE YOU AND WHAT HAVE YOU DONE WITH FOX?!”
Fox blinked. “Excuse me?”
Hound squinted suspiciously. “No, no, something’s not right. He laughed. I heard it. He laughed. He touched someone willingly. I’m calling medbay—Fox, are you concussed?”
Thorn pointed an accusing finger. “That was flirtation! You flirted, Fox! In Basic! With smiling! You’re a danger to the chain of command!”
Thire just slowly turned to you, deadpan. “How long has this been going on?”
You lifted your hands, grinning. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
Fox stood, dead calm. “Get out.”
“No,” Hound said flatly, arms crossed. “Not until you admit you’re in love and also apologize for emotionally terrorizing us with your… softness. I mean, stars, Fox. You said she looked tired like you care. That’s romantic horror.”
Thorn leaned against the doorframe like this was the most entertaining thing he’d seen all cycle. “Is this why you actually smiled yesterday when she waved at you across the hall? I thought you were having a stroke.”
“I’m calling a medic anyway,” Stone added. “Just in case.”
You bit your lip to stifle a laugh. Fox just pinched the bridge of his nose.
“I am going to file so many disciplinary reports,” he muttered.
“And we’ll burn them all,” Thire chirped.
Hound grinned. “C’mon, just admit it, vod. You like her.”
“I never denied it,” Fox replied, surprisingly quiet. His eyes met yours. “I just didn’t think it was any of your business.”
The room went dead silent.
Then Thorn wheezed. “He said it. He said it out loud. Commander Fox has feelings.”
You leaned into Fox’s side, bumping your shoulder into his. “You might want to start locking your door if you’re gonna keep being sweet on me like this.”
“I will now,” he muttered, glaring at the four guards still standing there. “Get. Out.”
Stone waved as he backed out, still looking like he’d witnessed a live explosion.
Thire saluted dramatically. “We’ll leave you to your romantic crimes, sir.”
“I’m telling Jet,” Thorn added gleefully.
Fox groaned and sank back into his chair, rubbing a hand over his face.
You leaned down to kiss his temple. “You okay, Commander?”
He grabbed your hand and pressed it to his chest like it grounded him. “Only because you’re still here.”
From the hallway: “SICKENING!”
Fox raised his blaster. “I will shoot them.”
You just smiled and kissed him again.
Hiya! I just wanted to know if you song requests for fics before I asked!
-🤍
Heya! I certainly do x
The battle for Ryloth raged on, the skies above choked with smoke and the echoes of blaster fire. The clones fought valiantly, as they always did, but in the midst of the war, it was the civilians who suffered most. The Twi'leks were caught between the Separatists' relentless assault and the Republic's effort to free them.
Commander Cody, his distinctive armor marked with the colors of the 212th Attack Battalion, was in the thick of it, leading his troops through the war-torn streets. The noise of the battle was deafening, but he focused, always focused, as he barked orders and ensured his men stayed on task.
Then, in the midst of the chaos, he saw her.
A Twi'lek woman, her emerald skin marked with the familiar patterns of her people, stumbled in the open, narrowly avoiding a blaster bolt. Her eyes were wide with fear, and her lekku twitched nervously. She was no soldier—just a civilian, caught in the crossfire.
Without thinking, Cody sprinted toward her, grabbing her arm and pulling her to safety just as another volley of blaster fire whizzed past them. They ducked into the shadow of a nearby building, the sound of the battle muffled by the walls around them.
"Stay down," Cody ordered, his voice calm despite the chaos. His heart was racing, adrenaline flooding his veins, but his instincts were razor-sharp. "I'll make sure you're safe."
She nodded, her wide eyes still full of fear. She was clearly shaken, but her strength was evident. She wanted to run, to fight, but she knew she had no place in this war. "Thank you," she whispered, her voice barely audible over the distant sounds of blaster fire. "I—I don't know what I would've done without you."
Cody looked at her, his brow furrowing slightly. There was something about her, something that tugged at him, but he didn't have time to think about it. There was a war to fight, and civilians needed to be protected.
He turned back toward his men, ensuring the area was clear before giving her a nod. "Stay close. I'll get you out of here."
But just as he stepped toward the street to lead her to safety, a distant explosion rocked the ground beneath them. Cody stumbled, pain shooting up his side as he fell to one knee, his vision swimming. He reached out, steadying himself, but the pain was too much.
"Commander!" she gasped, rushing to his side.
"I'm fine," he gritted through clenched teeth, but his body betrayed him, and he crumpled against the wall. Blood seeped through the cracks in his armor, a clear sign that he had been injured more seriously than he realized.
"No, you're not," she insisted, kneeling beside him. "Let me help you. Please."
Her eyes were full of concern, and something deeper—something warmer—flashed between them. It was a connection neither of them had expected but couldn't ignore. In the middle of the battle, amidst the destruction and death, there was only the two of them in this small corner of the world.
She pulled a medical kit from the pack she had slung over her shoulder, her hands steady as she worked to clean his wounds. Cody winced, but he remained quiet, letting her do what she could.
"You're a medic?" he asked, his voice strained but appreciative.
"No," she replied softly, applying pressure to his side. "Just someone who knows a little bit about surviving. I've had to learn." Her words were matter-of-fact, but there was something raw in her tone that made Cody's heart tighten.
Her hands were gentle, moving with care, as if she could heal not just his body but the war-torn world around them. It was a kindness, a rare gift in a universe filled with conflict, and Cody found himself entranced by the sincerity in her touch.
Once the worst of the bleeding had been stopped, she sat back, wiping the sweat from her brow. Cody caught his breath, the pain dulling but not entirely gone.
"You're a good woman," he said softly, his voice low, a hint of admiration in his words.
She smiled at him, though her eyes were full of uncertainty. "I'm just doing what needs to be done. It's the only way I can survive."
Cody's eyes softened as he gazed at her. He had been trained to fight, to lead, to be the soldier the Republic needed, but in this moment, all he wanted was to stay. To stay here with her, away from the war, even if only for a little while.
But duty called. And as the sounds of battle drew closer, Cody knew he had to go. He stood slowly, wincing at the pain in his side but determined.
"You need to get to safety," he said, his voice resolute. "It's not safe here."
She stood as well, her eyes sad but understanding. "I know. But... what about you? What happens to you?"
Cody gave a half-smile, despite the pain. "I'll be fine. I'll be with my men again soon enough."
She didn't look convinced, but she didn't argue. Instead, she stepped closer, looking up at him with a mixture of gratitude and something else. Something deeper.
Cody hesitated, his heart pounding in his chest. In the midst of the war, in the middle of a planet torn apart by conflict, they were two people, bound by something greater than the galaxy around them.
Without thinking, he reached out and cupped her cheek gently. Her eyes widened, but she didn't pull away. In that brief moment, time seemed to stand still.
And then, without a word, he leaned down, brushing his lips softly against hers. It was a kiss filled with everything they both couldn't say, everything that had built up between them in their short time together. It was tender, lingering, and full of all the things they couldn't share—*but* they did, in that fleeting moment.
When they pulled away, Cody's breath was unsteady, his heart racing, but he forced a smile. "Goodbye," he said, his voice thick with emotion. "And thank you. For everything."
She smiled softly, a sad yet knowing expression crossing her face. "Goodbye, Commander," she replied, her voice steady. "Stay safe out there."
With one last glance, Cody turned and began to walk away, the pull of duty stronger than anything else. But as he disappeared into the distance, he couldn't shake the memory of her—her touch, her kiss, and the warmth in her eyes.
He didn't know what the future held. He didn't know if they would ever meet again. But for a brief moment, amidst the chaos of war, he had found something that felt worth fighting for.
And that was enough.
---
The ADHD urge to not
Captain Rex x Reader x Commander Bacara
The skies of Aleen burned amber with the coming dusk. Ashen winds carried whispers through the forests — voices of a people you’d once sworn to protect. Now you were back again, years older, far more jaded, but somehow still the same.
Your boots pressed into soft moss as you walked alone through the dense forest paths. Lanterns swung overhead, casting warm halos across carved stone shrines and winding wooden bridges. You knew every bend of this land—every whisper between the trees.
It was surreal returning here without a battalion behind you. No clones. No Jedi. No command structure. Just you, your words, and your past with these people.
You passed a familiar tree with painted markings—children had once drawn them when you’d last been stationed here. A flutter of warmth struck you as an elder spotted you.
“Master Jedi,” their leader said with a soft smile.
You bowed your head. “It’s good to see you again.”
Your mission was simple in theory: rekindle an alliance with the people before Separatist influence reached them again. But nothing about this place, or this war, was ever simple.
And as the nights stretched on, you missed… them.
Bacara. Rex. Each so different. One who rarely spoke but always saw. One who listened, even when you didn’t speak. Neither here. Just you—and the echo of everything unspoken.
⸻
Commander Bacara stood at parade rest beside Master Ki-Adi-Mundi as mission projections flickered across the holotable. Opposite them, Rex stood beside Anakin and Ahsoka, arms folded, helmet tucked under one arm.
None of them spoke at first. The map of the outer rim planet hovered between them—a quiet reminder of who wasn’t in the room.
“She’s managing well on her own,” Ahsoka said lightly, breaking the silence. “The locals trust her. That’s half the battle already won.”
Mundi offered a nod, but Bacara’s gaze never shifted from the holo. “It’s dangerous. Alone.”
“She’s not alone,” Rex said, just a little too sharply.
Anakin caught it.
So did Mundi.
A beat passed before Ki-Adi-Mundi turned, eyes narrowing ever so slightly. “Commander Bacara, has General [Y/N] reported any signs of Separatist movement?”
“Negative,” Bacara said without pause. “But she’s a Jedi, not a negotiator. These types of missions require—”
“She’s handled far more volatile diplomacy than this,” Rex interrupted. “And better than some council members.”
Mundi raised a brow. “Careful, Captain.”
Rex’s jaw tightened, but he said nothing more.
Ahsoka looked between the two clones, then stepped forward, trying to ease the tension. “She’ll be fine. She’s got that Windu resilience.”
Bacara’s shoulders barely moved, but Anakin noticed the tick in his jaw. “You don’t agree?” Skywalker asked.
“She’s not indestructible,” Bacara said.
“No,” Anakin replied, coolly. “But she’s not your burden, Commander.”
The room quieted again. Cold. Sharp-edged.
Finally, Mundi spoke. “Personal entanglements have no place in war. This is why Jedi do not form attachments.”
Neither Rex nor Bacara responded.
But Ahsoka’s eyes flicked between them—both still as stone, both burning with something just beneath the surface.
The kind of storm you didn’t see until it was already overhead.
⸻
You hated caves.
You hated the stale air, the way sound echoed wrong, the weight of stone pressing down on your shoulders like a ghost. The Aleena had guided you this deep to show the root of the problem—something poisoning the waters, causing tremors in their cities, and killing their sacred roots.
You knelt beside the cracked fissure, reaching out with the Force. What answered was not nature.
Something foreign slithered beneath. Something droid.
You rose quickly, turning to the elder at your side. “The Separatists are here,” you said. “Or they were.”
The elder clicked his tongue anxiously. “Many of our kind are trapped deeper down. The tremors sealed the path. We can’t reach them. We cannot fight.”
Of course. That was why you were here. No army. No squad. Just you.
You weren’t enough this time.
You stepped away, pulling out your comm and staring down at it for a long moment.
Your gut said Rex. He’d listen. He’d come. He’d believe you.
But this… this wasn’t a clone problem. This wasn’t about blaster fire or tactics.
This was about digging, about seismic shifts and local customs. This was about the Force.
You hated what came next.
You toggled to the channel you never used.
“Master Mundi.”
A pause.
“Yes, General?”
“I need assistance on Aleen.”
A beat passed. Long enough for you to imagine his smug expression. But when he replied, his voice was firm, professional.
“What’s the situation?”
You relayed the details quickly, keeping emotion out of your tone. You didn’t need him judging your fear or frustration.
“I’ll divert reinforcements immediately,” he said. “Commander Bacara is with me. He’ll lead the extraction.”
Of course he would.
“Understood,” you replied. “Coordinates sent. I’ll hold them off as long as I can.”
“You won’t have to for long.”
You hated that he sounded almost… kind.
You ended the call and stood still, listening to the rumble of distant tunnels. Soon, Bacara would be back in your orbit. And despite everything between you, you were more afraid of what you might feel than what you’d face below ground.
⸻
The gunship kicked up waves of dust and gravel as it touched down on Aleen’s rocky surface. Commander Bacara descended the ramp first, helmet sealed, pauldron stiff against his broad shoulders. Behind him strode Master Ki-Adi-Mundi, robes whipping in the wind, brows drawn tight as he surveyed the landscape.
“Where is she?” Mundi asked, stepping up beside Bacara as clone troopers fanned out to secure the perimeter.
Bacara didn’t answer right away. He was already scanning the data feed on his wrist, synced to the coordinates you had sent. When he finally spoke, it was short and clipped. “She went in alone.”
Mundi’s tone sharpened. “Of course she did.”
The tension between the two men crackled like static in the charged Aleen air. Bacara said nothing more, but the slight shift in his stance suggested something deeper than frustration. He’d read the logs. He’d heard the tail end of your conversation with Windu. He’d heard everything.
“Troopers!” Bacara barked. “Sub-level breach—two klicks east. Move out.”
The team entered the caverns in formation. The air was thick, choked with the scent of burning oil and scorched stone. Laserfire echoed ahead.
Then, they found you.
You stood alone at the center of a collapsed chamber, half your robes burned, saber lit and crackling. At your feet were the remains of a Separatist tunneling droid. Around you, the wounded Aleena were huddled in the shadows, their eyes wide with awe and fear.
Bacara moved first.
He didn’t speak—just stepped forward, rifle raised as another wave of droids charged through a side tunnel. You looked back only briefly, the flicker of recognition passing quickly.
“Finally,” you said, flicking your saber back up. “Miss me?”
Bacara didn’t smile. He didn’t need to.
He opened fire.
Mundi moved next, stepping past you with deliberate purpose. “You disobeyed protocol,” he said, even as he slashed down a droid mid-step.
You parried a blow, spun, and exhaled. “Tell me after we survive this.”
The last droid fell. The smoke lingered.
You sat on a low stone, wiping your bloodied hand with a torn sleeve. Bacara stood nearby, silent as always, his armor dusted with ash and black carbon scoring.
He finally turned to you.
“You should’ve waited.”
You didn’t look at him. “I didn’t have time.”
“You could’ve died.”
You finally met his eyes.
“And you would’ve what? Reassigned me posthumously?”
He stiffened, jaw flexing behind the helmet. Mundi, overhearing, shot you both a look of utter exhaustion.
Bacara didn’t answer your jab. Instead, he just said:
“You held the line. Noted.”
He walked off, leaving you staring after him with a knot in your stomach—and a question in your chest you weren’t ready to ask.
⸻
The camp was quiet under the fractured sky. Fires burned low in shielded pits, and the wounded slept in narrow tents beneath emergency tarps. You sat apart from the clone medics and Jedi tents, nursing a shallow burn on your forearm with a stim salve. The adrenaline had worn off; all that was left now was the ache and the silence.
Heavy footfalls crunched the dirt behind you. You didn’t look. You already knew it was him.
“Commander,” you said softly, eyes still on your bandaged arm.
“General.”
A beat passed. You waited for him to walk away. He didn’t.
You finally turned to see Bacara standing there, helmet off, held against his side. His expression was as unreadable as ever—sharp eyes, tighter lips, a soldier carved from ice and iron.
“You need something?” you asked, voice thinner than you wanted.
He studied you. Not in the way a soldier sized up a threat—but in the way someone searched for a word they weren’t used to saying.
“You did well.”
You raised a brow. “Is that praise?”
“It’s an observation,” he replied.
You didn’t look up. “If you’re here to defend your spying again, don’t. We already did that.”
“No,” Bacara said. His voice was calm. Flat. “I’m not here for that.”
You glanced up at him. “Then what?”
He stood for a beat too long before finally sitting down on the opposite crate, across the fire from you. No one else was nearby. The clones had given you space—not out of fear, but respect. You’d earned that today. Even if Bacara hadn’t said a word about it.
You sighed. “You gonna judge me for my actions like Mundi too?”
“No.”
You finally looked at him properly. He wasn’t glaring. He wasn’t closed off, exactly. Just guarded. Like a soldier on unfamiliar terrain.
“What then?”
“I don’t think he sees what you see,” Bacara said, eyes flicking to the fire. “But you’re right about one thing—he sees potential in you that he’s never been able to define. That’s what makes him so… rigid around you.”
You blinked. “That sounds almost like an apology.”
He met your eyes. “It’s not. Just honesty.”
You let out a quiet, humorless laugh. “You ever think about just saying what you mean without flanking it like an airstrike?”
“Too dangerous.”
You smiled, but only a little. “So what do you mean now?”
“I mean,” he said, voice lower now, “you’re reckless. Frustrating. You talk too much and question everything.”
You rolled your eyes. “Wow. This is going well.”
“But,” he added, and you stilled, “your instincts are good. Better than most Jedi I’ve fought beside.”
A pause. You stared at him.
“And,” he added again, almost like it hurt, “you weren’t wrong to call for help.”
You tilted your head. “You mean from Mundi, or from you?”
He didn’t answer. That was an answer in itself.
You softened a little, let yourself lean forward over the fire. “I was alone. Outnumbered. You would’ve done the same thing.”
“Probably,” Bacara admitted.
“But you’d still call me reckless for doing it.”
“Yes.”
You gave him a long look. “I said worse things about you to Mace, you know.”
His eyes flicked to yours, unreadable. “I know.”
“I didn’t mean all of it,” you said.
“I know that too.”
Another silence.
Then, from him, just barely audible:
“You’re not what I expected.”
You sat back, a flicker of heat rising to your cheeks. “You either, Commander.”
The silence settled between you again, less like tension this time—and more like something trying to become peace.
⸻
Back on Coruscant, The city-world glittered below, a sea of metal and movement. But inside the Temple, it was unusually quiet.
Rex stood just outside the Council Chambers, arms crossed behind his back, helmet off. His posture was military-perfect, but his eyes flicked to the arched window at the far end of the corridor every few seconds.
The last time he’d stood here, you were beside him, teasing him about being too stiff, too formal. He’d barely responded, but the corner of his mouth had twitched.
“Waiting for someone?”
Rex turned. Ahsoka approached, arms folded. She wasn’t smiling—just curious.
“General Skywalker asked me to debrief after the Christophis campaign,” Rex replied. “He’s late.”
Ahsoka stopped beside him and glanced up. “You seem… off.”
Rex gave her a sidelong look. “Do I?”
“You always do that thing with your jaw when you’re annoyed.” She mimicked him poorly, exaggerating the motion. “It’s like you’re chewing invisible rations.”
Rex chuckled, just barely. “That obvious, huh?”
Ahsoka leaned against the wall. “This about the General?”
Rex didn’t answer at first. Then: “Which one?”
Her smile faded. “So her.”
He looked down at his helmet. “Something changed on Aleen. I can’t explain it. But the way she looked when we saw her at the base… something’s different.”
“She looked tired,” Ahsoka said quietly. “And like she was holding something back.”
“Bacara was watching her the entire time,” Rex said, sharper now. “Like he was waiting for something.”
Ahsoka nodded slowly. “And you were doing the same.”
The silence stretched. Rex didn’t deny it.
“I’ve felt something,” Ahsoka said, lowering her voice. “A kind of… ripple in the Force. Like she’s a pebble that hit water and the waves are just now reaching us.”
Rex turned toward her. “You think she’s in danger?”
“I don’t know.” Ahsoka’s brow furrowed. “But something’s pulling at her. Pulling her toward something big. Or breaking.”
Rex stared ahead, jaw tight again. “If she gets reassigned again without warning—”
“She won’t tell you if she does,” Ahsoka said gently. “You know that.”
“I should’ve said something when I had the chance.”
“Maybe.” She hesitated. “But she knows. Trust me—she knows.”
The doors to the Council chamber finally hissed open. Anakin stepped out, waving them both in. His expression was unreadable, but his eyes flicked to Rex for a beat too long.
Even he had noticed.
As they stepped inside, neither of them said it aloud—but something was coming. And she was at the center of it.
⸻
Previous Chapter | Next Chapter
⸻
Pabu Festival Night
The sun dipped below the horizon, casting golden light over the sea as the village of Pabu came alive with lanterns, laughter, and the mouthwatering scent of street food. Strings of glowing paper lights swayed between buildings, and music floated through the air—something old, joyous, and deeply local.
You were elbow-deep in flour and slightly burnt noodles at a stall near the center square, laughing as a group of children tried to help and made an absolute mess of everything. Your hair stuck to your face, there was something sticky on your pants, and your smile had never been wider.
Hunter leaned against a post nearby, arms crossed, eyes locked on you like you were the only person on the planet. His squad hovered beside him, all wearing variations of amused smirks—except Tech, who was deeply invested in analyzing the music’s rhythm pattern with furrowed brows.
“Stars, he’s doing it again,” Echo said, nudging Hunter’s side with his elbow.
“Doing what?” Hunter muttered, not looking away.
“Staring at her like she’s a dessert he’s too afraid to order,” Wrecker said with a laugh. “Come on, Sarge, just tell her she looks pretty with noodles in her hair.”
“She does,” Hunter said under his breath, then quickly shook his head. “Shut up.”
“She’s going to think you’re broken,” Tech added dryly. “Most humans engage in verbal communication when expressing attraction.”
“You’re all insufferable,” Hunter growled.
“Hey, Hunter!” Omega’s voice chirped brightly, cutting through the banter as she skipped over, cheeks pink with excitement. “Did you ask her yet?”
Wrecker snorted. “Maker, Omega, we’ve talked about subtlety.”
“Oh! Right,” Omega grinned, then leaned up conspiratorially, stage-whispering way too loudly, “You should ask her though. She wants you to. I asked.”
Hunter stared at her, stunned. “You what?”
“Matchmaking,” she said proudly. “Crosshair said you’d drag your feet forever so I thought I’d help.”
“Crosshair’s not even here.”
“Exactly. I’m doing his part too.”
Before Hunter could come up with a coherent response, you turned and spotted them. Your smile brightened when your eyes landed on him.
“Hey! You guys just gonna lurk or actually join the party?”
Hunter stood straighter, clearing his throat. “We’re—uh—considering our options.”
“I’m voting for food and dancing!” Omega beamed, grabbing Hunter’s hand and dragging him forward. “Come on, she saved us noodles.”
⸻
Later, By the Dancing Lanterns
You swayed barefoot on the warm stone path, clutching a sweet drink in one hand and laughing as locals pulled strangers into their dancing circles. The music had picked up, and lights flickered off the sea like tiny stars had dropped into the water.
You spotted Hunter hanging at the edge of it all, looking like a soldier at the edge of a battlefield he didn’t quite understand.
You approached him slowly, grinning up at him as you offered your hand. “Dance with me?”
He blinked. “I don’t dance.”
“You’ve got enhanced reflexes and perfect rhythm,” you said, teasing. “You’ll be fine. I’ll even go easy on you.”
A beat passed. His eyes searched yours, and then—to the shock of everyone within fifty feet—he took your hand.
The music wrapped around you like warmth as he followed you into the circle, stiff at first, focused too hard on every step.
“You’re thinking about it too much,” you whispered, drawing closer. “Let go. It’s just you and me.”
His hand slid to your waist, a bit hesitant, a bit bold. “Easier said than done.”
“Well,” you murmured, brushing your fingers along his chest, “if it helps… I’ve wanted to touch you like this for a long time.”
He exhaled sharply, eyes darkening. “You really know how to mess with a guy’s focus.”
“I have excellent timing.”
He finally smiled—small, crooked, but real. “You do.”
You moved together, slower now, drifting into your own little orbit as the circle of dancers spun around you. The music faded into the background, and all that remained was the warmth of his hands, the steadiness of his breath, and the unspoken pull that had been building for months.
⸻
The festival had died down, lanterns bobbing on the sea, distant laughter echoing through the trees. You and Hunter sat by the water, his arm loosely around your shoulders, your head resting against him.
“Didn’t think I’d ever have this,” he said quietly.
You turned toward him. “What?”
“This kind of life. Something soft. Someone like you.”
Your heart twisted. “You deserve this. All of it.”
His fingers brushed against yours, then threaded together slowly. “I used to think needing someone made me weak.”
“And now?”
He looked at you, voice low. “Now I think it makes me human.”
You leaned in, letting your lips brush against his. “Took you long enough.”
From somewhere up the hill, Wrecker’s voice bellowed: “Pay up! I told you they’d kiss before midnight!”
Omega cheered. “You’re welcome!”
Hunter groaned and buried his face in your shoulder. “They’re never letting this go.”
“Good,” you smiled. “Neither am I.”
⸻