Summary: Reader and Commander Doom form a quiet bond during the Clone Wars. After a successful mission, they share a brief but meaningful connection amidst the chaos of war.
Smoke curled through the broken remains of the building as you crouched beside Commander Doom. The twin Jedi Masters and the rest of the squad were a few blocks ahead, sweeping the south sector. You and Doom had been tasked with clearing out this sector—a quieter street, bombed out and ghostly silent.
"You always this calm before a fight?" you asked, watching him out of the corner of your eye.
Doom didn't turn to look at you. His blaster stayed aimed at the alley ahead, but his voice carried that easy drawl of someone unshaken by chaos.
"Calm's better than nervous. Panic gets you shot. Calm gets you home."
Then, with a crooked smirk you *couldn't* see under his helmet, "Besides, I've got a Jedi watching my back. I'd be stupid *not* to feel calm."
You smiled despite yourself, adjusting your grip on your lightsaber. "And here I thought clones were trained not to trust emotion."
"We are," Doom said, slowly rising to his feet, his tone light but his stance shifting into readiness. "Doesn't mean we don't *feel* it. And trust me—if I didn't trust you, I wouldn't have let you take point."
You blinked. "You let me take point?"
He gave a low chuckle, finally glancing at you. "Don't tell General Tiplar I said that."
The air changed. That subtle, pressing *something* that always whispered right before an ambush.
You both felt it.
No words were needed—Doom raised his fist, signaling a halt. You stepped back to back, instinct and training melding into one fluid motion.
Then came the blaster fire.
Four droids dropped from the rooftop above. Doom was already firing, smooth and precise. You ignited your saber, spinning low and cutting through two before they hit the ground.
The brief firefight was over in seconds. Doom kicked aside a still-sparking arm and looked over at you. "Nice form."
You shrugged. "You're not so bad yourself."
He stepped a little closer, his voice low now, more intimate beneath the helmet modulator. "Not often I get a mission like this. Usually, it's orders, droids, chaos. But right now, it's just you and me. Kind of... peaceful. You know?"
You met his gaze—well, the visor of his helmet—and tilted your head. "You finding peace in the middle of a battlefield, Commander?"
"Maybe," Doom said. "Maybe I just like the company."
Your chest fluttered before you could stop it.
The comm crackled: Tiplar calling for a regroup. The moment passed.
Doom rolled his shoulders, relaxed as ever. "Duty calls, General."
You nodded, but as you turned, he added, quietly, "Let's not wait for another mission to get a moment like that."
And Force help you, you kind of hoped the same.
---
The group reconvened outside a crumbling warehouse, the air thick with heat and the sharp scent of blaster residue. Doom gave you a short nod as you joined up with the others, slipping seamlessly back into his role as calm, capable commander. You did the same—lightsaber clipped to your belt, posture controlled, gaze forward.
But the warmth of that moment lingered like a fingerprint on your skin.
Tiplar stood ahead, arms crossed, her sharp eyes watching the regroup. Tiplee was further off, coordinating with a pair of troopers over comms. The twin Masters had always been in sync, but Tiplar—calculated and observant—noticed *everything*.
She stepped closer as you approached, her gaze flicking between you and Doom.
"You two took longer than expected," she said coolly, eyes narrowing just a little.
"Cleared the sector, no resistance after the ambush," Doom replied smoothly, not missing a beat. "Had to be thorough."
"Hm," Tiplar hummed, then turned to you, tilting her head.
"Strange. For someone so thorough, you were walking awfully close."
Your breath caught for a second—not enough for anyone but a Jedi Master to notice.
"I go where the danger is," you replied, lifting your chin slightly. "That's my job."
Tiplar didn't smile. "Danger comes in many forms."
There was a pause. Doom glanced your way, unreadable behind the visor. You could almost *feel* the amused tension in him. Like he knew exactly what Tiplar was implying—and liked it.
But Tiplar wasn't done.
"You may think you're being subtle," she said, quiet now, only for your ears. "But attachment has a way of showing itself in battle. Don't mistake chemistry for connection."
You wanted to defend yourself. To say it was nothing. But you didn't. Because a small, traitorous part of you *wanted* there to be something there. Something real. Something worth hiding.
She stepped back, expression unreadable.
"Let's move. War waits for no one."
As the squad moved out, Doom fell in beside you again, keeping a careful distance this time.
"She said something, didn't she?" he murmured under his breath, voice pitched low.
You exhaled through your nose. "Just Jedi things."
A beat. Then his voice, dry and quietly amused:
"So... should I stop walking so close, or is that part of the Jedi code you're willing to bend?"
You didn't look at him. But your lips curved into a small, dangerous smile.
"Careful, Commander. You keep talking like that, I *will* start walking closer."
He chuckled. "Noted, General."
And with that, you disappeared into the haze of war once more—together, but not quite allowed to be.
---
The mission was a success. Mostly.
The city had been secured, the Separatist hold broken. Casualties were minimal—by war standards. Commander Doom's squadron had fought with unshakable precision, and you... you had done your duty.
Still, something in the air had shifted. Not in the battlefield, but between you and the Jedi Generals.
They called you to a private meeting the evening before departure, just after sundown. The makeshift command center was quiet, walls humming softly with power, light from the twin moons spilling through the cracks in the tarp-covered window.
Tiplar stood with her arms folded, stern, unreadable. Tiplee offered a small nod in greeting, but her expression was tinged with something softer. Regret, maybe.
"You know why you're here," Tiplar began without preamble.
You said nothing. There was no point pretending. You straightened, hands behind your back like a soldier awaiting reprimand.
"Your connection with Commander Doom," Tiplar said, "has not gone unnoticed. Nor has it gone unspoken."
Your throat tightened, but still, you remained silent.
"We are not unfeeling," Tiplee said gently, stepping closer. "We know the bond between comrades in war. But what we saw—what we *felt*—was something more."
"She's right," Tiplar cut in. "We saw it. And so did your squad. It's not just a bond forged in battle. It's attachment. Emotional compromise. And it's a direct violation of the Jedi Code."
You swallowed hard. "Nothing happened."
"It doesn't need to," Tiplar said. "You should know better. The potential alone is enough. You cannot serve two masters—your duty and your heart."
Tiplee stepped in again, her voice softer. "We believe in your strength. In your discipline. This doesn't make you weak, but it does make your path... complicated."
Silence fell between the three of you. Heavy. Inevitable.
Tiplar spoke last.
"This will be the last and only time you reinforce Doom Squadron under our command. You'll return to your assigned sector tomorrow. No formal reprimand will be filed. But this ends here."
You nodded once, jaw tight. "Understood, Master."
As you turned to leave, Tiplee reached out, gently touching your arm.
"You care for him," she said, not as an accusation, but as truth. "And he cares for you. I hope, in another life—one without war, without codes—you both find peace."
You didn't trust your voice, so you nodded.
---
You found Doom later, standing watch at the edge of the encampment. Moonlight painted his armor silver, his helmet tucked under one arm.
"They talked to you," he said. Not a question.
You looked at him, memorizing every line of his face in the dim light. "Yeah."
He nodded, jaw ticking. "I figured. The way Tiplar looked at me during debrief? I've seen droids with more warmth."
You gave a breath of laughter. But it didn't reach your eyes.
"This is the last time," you said. "I won't be reassigned to your missions again."
He was quiet for a long moment. "Orders?"
You nodded. "The Code."
Doom sighed, running a gloved hand over his buzzed hair. "Can't say I'm surprised. Can't say I like it either."
You stepped closer, not touching, but close enough to feel the warmth of him.
"I meant what I said," he murmured. "Back when it was just us. I liked the company."
Your voice was barely a whisper. "So did I."
For a moment, the war vanished. The Code. The ranks. The weight.
It was just two souls caught in the space between duty and desire.
And then you stepped back.
No kiss. No promise. Just understanding.
"Goodbye, Commander."
He gave you a crooked, sad smile—the same one he wore before a mission that might go south.
"Until the next war, General."
You didn't look back.
Because if you did, you might not leave.
And the Jedi weren't allowed to stay where their heart was.
---
*Post - Order 66*
The Outer Rim had gone silent.
Not just from war, but from *everything*.
The Jedi were gone. Hunted. Betrayed. Burned out of history by the very men who once followed them into battle.
But not all of them.
And not *him*.
Commander Doom stood alone in the shade of a half-collapsed homestead, a blaster slung low at his hip, no armor, just worn fatigues and a heavy coat that flapped in the wind. The land was dry and dead, forgotten by the Empire. Which made it perfect for hiding someone who used to be a Jedi.
He'd been waiting for hours, unsure if the coordinates he'd been given were real, or a ghost. Maybe that was all that was left of you now—an echo.
But then, across the cracked dirt, you appeared.
Your robes were shredded, your face gaunt and bruised, a long scar cutting across your cheek and jaw. You limped. You looked... wrecked. Like survival had cost you more than life itself.
But your eyes were still yours.
Doom stared for a long time. Then, slowly, he stepped forward.
"I didn't follow it," he said softly. "The chip. I tore it out before the purge. I—felt something. Something was wrong. I didn't shoot. I *couldn't*."
You blinked, like you were still seeing a dream.
"They all turned on us," you said, your voice hollow. "I watched them kill. Everyone. My friends. My old master. My Padawan..."
Doom's throat worked. He reached out, slow, careful. "I didn't know. I didn't know you had a Padawan."
"I didn't, for long." You looked down. "They never had a chance."
A pause.
"I should've stayed away from you," you added bitterly. "Maybe then... maybe I would've kept the Code. Maybe I wouldn't feel so *ruined*."
Doom stepped closer until he was right in front of you. His voice was low, rough. "The Code didn't save you."
You looked up, finally meeting his eyes.
"The Jedi Code is dead," he continued. "So are the Generals. The Republic. The Order. But we're not. You're not."
You looked like you wanted to believe him.
"I've got land," he said. "Not much. But it's quiet. Safe. I've been building. A place that doesn't need war, or orders, or Codes. Just... life. Peace."
He paused, his voice thick. "It's yours too, if you want it."
You stared at him. For a long time. Then longer still.
And then your shoulders crumpled—like years of weight finally gave way. Doom caught you as you stumbled forward, arms wrapping around you without hesitation.
You didn't speak. You didn't cry. You just *breathed*—his scent, his warmth, the impossible relief of *not being alone*.
And that was enough.o
---
Later, he brought you tea in mismatched mugs. You sat together on the porch of a half-built home, watching the wind move through the dead trees. You didn't speak of the war. Or the dead. Or what came next.
You just sat beside each other, two broken things daring to imagine healing.
---
Commander Fox x Reader X Commander Thorn
The transmission hit her desk with all the weight of a blaster bolt.
Her planet. Under threat.
The Separatists were making moves—fleet signatures near the outer perimeter of her system, whispers of droid deployment, unrest stoked in territories that hadn’t seen true peace in years. She knew the signs. She’d lived through them once.
And she was not going to watch her world burn again.
She stood before the Senate with a voice louder than it had ever been.
The Senate chambers were suffocating. The cries of war, politics, and pleas for support blurred into white noise as the senator stood at the center, resolute and burning with purpose.
“My planet is under threat,” she said, voice clear, powerful. “We have no fleet, no shield generator, no standing army worth more than a gesture. We were promised protection when we joined this Republic. Will you now let us burn for being forgotten?”
A pause followed. Murmurs stirred. Eyes averted.
“Request denied,” one senator muttered.
“You owe us this!” she shouted, her words echoing through the chambers. “I gave everything I had to stabilize my planet. My people know what war costs. They know what it takes to survive it. But they shouldn’t have to do it alone.”
Some senators looked away. Others whispered. A few nodded, expressions grim with understanding or guilt.
Chancellor Palpatine raised a single hand, silencing the room.
“You will have one battalion,” he said at last, voice velvet and dangerous. “We do not have more to spare.”
Her gut twisted, but she bowed her head. “Thank you, Chancellor.”
No one looked at her when she nodded in silence, but the steel in her spine was unmistakable.
The descent back to her homeworld was cold, unceremonious.
Commander Neyo stood at the head of the troop transport, motionless, arms behind his back, helmet fixed forward. Every movement of his men was calculated, seamless. The 91st Reconnaissance Corps was surgical in nature—swift, efficient, detached.
Master Stass Allie stood nearby, hands folded in front of her. She radiated composed strength, yet there was a gentleness to her that seemed at odds with Neyo’s blunt precision.
“I advise you not to disembark with the vanguard,” Stass said evenly. “Let the initial scan and sweep conclude before you step into an active zone.”
“This is my home,” the senator replied, eyes fixed on the viewport. “And I won’t return to it behind a wall of armor.”
Neyo turned slightly. “Then stay out of our way. We’re not here to make emotional reunions.”
The senator didn’t flinch.
“I didn’t ask you to be.”
The ship pierced the cloud cover, revealing the battered surface below. Her capital city—once a war zone, now partially rebuilt—spread like a scar across red earth. Familiar buildings stood among ruins and reconstruction. It hadn’t healed. Not fully. Not yet.
The shuttle landed. Dust curled around the hull as the ramp lowered.
Neyo’s troops deployed immediately, securing the perimeter with wordless discipline. The senator stepped down, her boots hitting home soil for the first time since she had sworn herself to diplomacy instead of command.
She took a breath.
The air still held the tang of iron, of scorched ground and old blood. Her eyes burned, not from wind.
She walked out ahead of the Jedi, ahead of the soldiers. Alone.
The wind carried voices—hushed, reverent, fearful. Civilians and civil guards had gathered to watch from a distance. Her return wasn’t met with cheers. Only silence. Recognition.
And wariness.
“She’s back,” someone murmured.
Another whispered, “After everything she did?”
Master Stass Allie watched carefully. “You knew this wouldn’t be easy.”
“I didn’t come back for easy,” the senator said, her voice firm. “I came back because I have to. Because I won’t let this place fall again.”
Commander Neyo gave no comment. His orders were simple: defend the system, follow the Jedi, and keep the senator from becoming a casualty or a liability.
As they moved out to establish the command post, the senator stood atop a ridge just beyond the city. She looked out over the familiar lands—the riverbed turned battleground, the hills where she buried her dead, the skyline marked with the skeletons of buildings still bearing her war scars.
For a moment, she didn’t feel like a senator.
She felt like a commander again.
Only this time, she wasn’t sure which version of her was more dangerous.
⸻
The makeshift command tent was pitched atop a fortified overlook, giving the 91st a wide tactical view of the lowland valley just outside the capital city. Dust clung to every surface, and holomaps flickered under the dim lights as Stass Allie, Commander Neyo, and the senator gathered around the central table.
Stass was calm as ever, a quiet storm of wisdom and strategy. Neyo stood rigid beside her, visor lowered, hands clasped behind his back.
The senator, though wearing no armor, held a presence that could bend the room.
“We’re expecting a heavy push through the mountain pass. Based on Seppie patterns, they’ll aim to box in the capital and strangle supply lines. We need to flank before they dig in,” Stass said, pointing to the high ridges on the eastern approach.
“The ridge is tactically sound,” Neyo added. “Minimal resistance, optimal vantage. If we come down from the temple heights here—” he gestured, tapping the map with precision, “—we’ll break their formation before they reach the capital walls.”
“No.”
The word cut sharp through the low hum of the command tent.
Neyo’s head tilted. “Pardon?”
The senator leaned in, steady but resolute. “That approach takes us through Virean Plateau.”
“Yes,” Neyo said flatly. “It’s elevated, provides cover, and we can route artillery through the lower trails.”
“It’s sacred ground.”
Stass glanced at the senator, then back to the map. “Sacred or not, the Separatists won’t hesitate to use it.”
“I know,” the senator replied. “But I also know what happens when that soil is soaked with blood. I made that mistake once. I won’t make it again.”
Neyo didn’t react immediately. The silence hung for a moment too long.
“So we disregard the optimal path because of sentiment?” he asked, voice devoid of tone.
“It’s not sentiment,” she answered. “It’s consequence. Virean Plateau is more than earth—it’s memory. It’s where we buried our dead after the first uprising. My own people nearly turned on me for allowing it to become a battlefield. If we desecrate it again, there may be no peace left to return to.”
Stass Allie offered a glance of measured approval.
“Alternative?” she asked.
The senator reached across the table, tapping a narrow canyon west of the capital. “We pull them in here—tight quarters, limited maneuvering. Use a bottleneck tactic with mines set along the walls. They’ll have no choice but to cluster. When they do, we collapse the ridgeline.”
“A canyon ambush is high-risk,” Neyo said. “We’ll lose men.”
“We’ll lose more if we trample sacred ground and spark another civil uprising in the middle of a war. You don’t win with the cleanest plan. You win with the one that leaves something behind to rebuild.”
Stass nodded slowly. “She’s right.”
Neyo didn’t argue. He only leaned back, helmet fixed on the senator.
“I’ll adjust the approach. But don’t expect the enemy to respect your boundaries.”
“I don’t,” she replied. “That’s why we’ll strike first.”
Stass looked between them—soldier, Jedi, and the politician who once ruled like a warlord. There was no denying it.
The senator wasn’t a commander anymore.
But the commander was still very much alive.
⸻
The canyon was harsh and narrow, carved by centuries of wind and fury. Now it would become the place they’d make their stand.
The senator walked the length of the rocky pass beside Neyo and a few of his officers, outlining trap points with the kind of confidence most senators never possessed. Her voice was sure. Her boots didn’t falter. Her fingers grazed the canyon wall as she surveyed the terrain—like she was greeting an old friend rather than scouting a battleground.
Neyo had seen Jedi generals hesitate more than she did.
“We’ll place remote charges here,” she said, stopping near a brittle overhang. “If the droids push too fast, we bring the rocks down and funnel them into kill zones here—” she pointed again, “—and here. Then your men pick them off with sniper fire from the high spines.”
“Clever,” said one of the clones, glancing at Neyo.
“Risky,” Neyo replied, but his tone wasn’t cold. Just observant.
She turned to face him fully. “Victory demands risk. I thought you understood that better than anyone.”
Neyo’s visor met her eyes. There was silence, then: “You speak like a soldier.”
“I was one,” she said. “The galaxy just prefers to forget that part.”
Over the next few hours, she moved among the men—kneeling beside them, helping place mines, checking line of sight through scopes, confirming relay ranges with engineers. Stass Allie watched with a calm kind of pride, saying nothing. Neyo observed with calculated interest.
She laughed once—soft, almost involuntary—when a younger clone dropped a charge too early and scrambled after it. She helped him reset it. She got her hands dirty.
She didn’t give orders from a chair. She stood with them in the dust.
Neyo found himself watching more than he should. Not because he didn’t trust her—but because something had shifted. Slightly. Quietly. In a way he didn’t welcome.
Respect.
It crept in slowly. Earned with sweat and grit. She didn’t demand it. She claimed it.
And somewhere beneath that iron discipline of his, Neyo began to wonder—
If she looked at him the way she did Thorn or Fox… would he really be so different from them?
It disturbed him.
He didn’t want to admire her. Not like that.
But when she stood atop the ridge that night, wind catching her hair, the stars reflecting in her eyes as she looked over the battlefield they were shaping together, Neyo didn’t see a senator.
He saw a force.
He saw someone worth following.
And he suddenly understood just a little more about Fox—and hated that understanding with every part of himself.
The trap was set.
From the top of the canyon ridges, the 91st Reconnaissance Corps lay in wait, eyes sharp behind visors, rifles trained on the winding path below. Beside them, one hundred of the senator’s own planetary guard stood tall, armor painted in the deep ochre and black of her homeland, their spears and blasters at the ready. The senator stood at the head of her people, clad in their ancestral war armor—obsidian plates trimmed with silver and red, a high-collared cape catching the canyon wind like a banner.
She was a vision of history reborn.
General Stass Allie stood with Neyo above, watching the enemy approach—a column of Separatist tanks and droid squads snaking into the narrow death trap.
“All units,” Neyo’s voice crackled over comms. “Hold position.”
The canyon trembled with the metallic march of the droids.
Then—detonation.
Explosions thundered down the cliffside as rock and fire collapsed over the lead tanks, just as planned. Droids scattered, confused, rerouting, pushing forward into the choke point—and then the 91st opened fire.
Sniper bolts rained from above.
The senator’s people surged from behind the outcroppings with war cries, cutting into the confused line of droids. She led them—blade drawn, cloak flowing behind her—fierce and unrelenting. For a moment, the tide was perfect.
And then it broke.
A spider droid crested an unscouted rise from the rear—missed in recon. It fired before anyone could react.
The blast hit near the senator.
She was thrown through the air, landing hard against a rock with a crack that echoed over the battlefield.
“SENATOR!” one of her guards screamed, his voice raw and desperate as he ran toward her, but she was already pushing herself up on shaking arms, blood running from her temple.
“ADVANCE, GOD DAMMIT!” she shouted, hoarse and furious. “They’re right there! Don’t you dare stop now!”
Her people faltered only for a moment.
Then they roared as one and charged again, stepping over her, past her, and into the storm of fire and metal.
From above, Neyo watched, jaw clenched beneath his helmet. Stass Allie placed a hand on his shoulder as if to calm him—but it wasn’t his rage she was tempering.
It was something else.
The senator stood—bloodied, staggering—but unbroken. She took up her sword again and limped forward, refusing to let anyone see her fall.
And the canyon echoed with the sound of war and loyalty—and the scream of a woman who would not be made small by pain.
Her leg burned. Her side screamed with every breath. But the senator forced herself upright, gripping her sword tight enough for her knuckles to pale beneath her gloves. The dust stung her eyes. Blaster fire carved bright streaks through the canyon air. Her guard surged ahead of her—but she refused to let them lead alone.
Not here. Not again.
She limped forward, blade dragging against the stone until the blood from her brow soaked into her collar. The pain grounded her, reminded her she was alive—reminded her that she had to be.
A Separatist droid rounded the corner—a commando unit. It raised its blaster.
Too slow.
She lunged forward with a cry and cleaved the droid clean through the chestplate, sparks flying as it collapsed.
“Fall back to the rally point!” one of the clones called, but she didn’t. She moved forward instead, shoulder to shoulder with the men and women of her world, guiding them through the chaos, calling orders, ducking fire.
From the ridge, Neyo watched. “Is she insane?”
“She’s winning,” Stass Allie replied, eyes narrowed beneath her hood. “Don’t pretend you’re not impressed.”
He said nothing.
Below, a final wave of droids tried to regroup—but it was too late. The choke point had collapsed behind them in rubble, and the senator’s forces flanked them from both sides.
Trapped.
The 91st swept down from the cliffs like silent ghosts—precise, efficient, ruthless. The senator’s guard hit from the ground, coordinated, focused, fighting like people with something to prove.
With something to protect.
She reached the center just in time to plunge her blade into the last B2 battle droid before it could fire. It slumped, dead weight and scorched metal, collapsing at her feet.
Then—silence.
The canyon held its breath.
The last of the droids fell, and the only sound was the crackle of smoking wreckage and the harsh breaths of soldiers.
They’d won.
The senator stood among the wreckage, blood trickling down her face, her people all around her—some wounded, some helping others to their feet. She breathed heavily, sword lowered, shoulders sagging.
Neyo descended from the cliffs with a small team, Stass Allie close behind. His armor was immaculate, untouched by battle. Hers was battered, scorched, soaked.
And yet she looked stronger than ever.
Their eyes met across the dust and ruin.
He gave a short, tight nod.
“You disobeyed every strategic rule in the book,” he said, voice flat.
“And I saved my people,” she replied, barely above a rasp.
Another pause.
Then, quiet—barely perceptible—Neyo muttered, “…Noted.”
⸻
The city beyond the canyon lit up in firelight and song.
Victory drums echoed off the walls of the ancient stone hall as the people of her planet celebrated the blood they shed—and the blood they did not. Bonfires lined the streets. Horns blared. Men and women danced barefoot in the dust, tankards raised high. Her world had survived another war. And like always, they honored it with noise and joy and wine.
The clones of the 91st were invited—expected—to join. They looked stunned at first, caught off guard by the raw emotion and warmth thrown at them. But it didn’t take long before some of them loosened up, helmets off, cups in hand. A few were pulled into dances. One poor trooper got kissed on the mouth by a war widow three times his age.
Commander Neyo remained on the outskirts. Always watching. Always apart.
The senator—dressed down in soft, flowing local fabrics now stained with wine and dust, her war paint only half faded—was plastered. Laughing one moment, arguing with an elder the next, trying to teach a clone how to chant over the firepit after that.
Eventually, she broke from the crowd. She spotted Neyo standing at the edge of the firelight, arms folded, as if even now he couldn’t relax.
She staggered up to him, hair wild, eyes sharp even beneath the drunken haze.
“Neyo,” she said, slurring just slightly, “why are you always standing so still? Don’t you ever feel anything?”
“I feel plenty,” he replied. “I just don’t need to dance about it.”
She narrowed her eyes and jabbed a finger at him. “You’re a cold bastard.”
“Correct.”
She stepped closer, closer than she normally would. “You made Fox apologise.”
He didn’t answer.
Her gaze flicked over his helmet. “He wouldn’t have done that. Not without something—big. What did you say to him?”
A pause.
“He was out of line,” Neyo finally said. “I reminded him what his rank means.”
“That’s not all,” she pushed. “What did you really say?”
He looked at her then, just barely, as if debating whether to speak at all. Finally:
“I told him that if he was going to act like a lovesick cadet, then he should resign his commission and go write poetry. Otherwise, he needed to remember he’s a marshal commander. And act like it.”
She blinked. “That’s exactly what you said?”
“No,” Neyo said, dryly. “What I actually said would’ve made your generals back during the war flinch.”
She snorted. “I like you more when you’re drunk.”
“I don’t get drunk.”
She leaned in, bold with wine. “Maybe if you did, you’d understand why I’m not angry with him.”
He stared at her, unreadable.
“I’m not angry,” she repeated. “But he didn’t tell me how he felt. You scared him into making amends, but you can’t make him say it.” She tilted her head. “And now you’ve got him cornered. And you’re mad at him for it.”
“You don’t know anything about me,” Neyo said quietly.
“No,” she said, “but you keep looking at me like you wish I didn’t belong to someone else.”
The silence hung for a moment.
Then Neyo stepped back. “Enjoy your celebration, Senator.”
He turned and walked away.
She stood there for a long moment—then swayed on her feet, laughing softly to herself, and staggered back toward the fire.
⸻
Her head throbbed like war drums.
The sun was too bright. The sheets were too scratchy. Her mouth tasted like smoke and fermented fruit. And worst of all—
“—and furthermore, Senator, I must note that your behavior last night was entirely unbecoming of your station—”
“GH-9,” she croaked from the bed, voice raw, “if you say one more word, I will bury your smug golden head in the canyon and file it as a tragic mining accident.”
The protocol droid paused. “I was merely expressing concern, Senator—”
The beeping started next.
Sharp, furious chirps in a tone that could only be described as personally offended.
“Don’t you start,” she groaned, flopping a pillow over her head. “R7, I don’t have time for your attitude. I left you here because I value my life.”
The astromech bleeped something that sounded like a slur.
GH-9 tilted its shiny head. “I believe he just suggested you value nothing and have the moral fiber of a womp rat.”
“Tell him he’s not wrong.”
R7 gave a triumphant whistle and spun in a little angry circle.
She dragged herself out of bed like a corpse rising from the grave. Her hair was a disaster. Her ceremonial paint from the night before had smeared into a mess of black streaks and gold glitter. Her armor lay in a forgotten pile across the room, boots kicked halfway under the dresser.
“You two weren’t supposed to come back with me,” she mumbled as she washed her face with cold water. “That’s why I left you. GH, you talk too much, and R7, you nearly tasered Senator Ask Aak the last time we were in session.”
The astromech beeped proudly.
“I told you he wasn’t a Separatist.”
R7’s dome swiveled in defiance.
GH-9 cleared its vocabulator. “Might I remind you, Senator, that both of us are programmed for loyal service, and your reckless abandon in leaving us behind—”
She flicked water at it.
“Don’t test me,” she muttered, pulling on her fresh tunic.
The shuttle was due to depart in two hours. Neyo and his battalion had already begun packing. The war drums had long gone quiet, and now, only the dull hush of cleanup remained outside her window.
She looked around the modest bedroom—her old bedroom. It hadn’t changed. Neither had the ache in her chest when she looked at it. Not grief. Not nostalgia. Something heavier. Something unnamed.
Behind her, GH-9 stood stiffly, arms behind his back like a tutor waiting for his student to fail.
R7, on the other hand, rolled up beside her and nudged her leg.
She sighed and rested a hand on his dome.
“Fine,” she muttered. “You can both come. Just promise me one of you won’t mouth off in front of the Chancellor, and the other won’t stab anyone.”
R7 whirred.
“That wasn’t a no.”
⸻
The landing platform gleamed in the pale Coruscanti sun, all cold durasteel and blinding reflection. The moment the ramp descended, she could already see the unmistakable figures of Fox and Thorn standing at the base—arms crossed, boots braced, both of them looking equal parts tense and eager.
Her stomach flipped. The droids rolled down behind her.
Fox got to her first, posture rigid, helmet tucked under his arm. “Senator.”
His voice was that low, professional gravel—too careful. Like he wasn’t sure how to greet her now. Like the war, the chaos, and everything unsaid was standing between them.
Thorn was right behind him. He looked less cautious, his gaze dragging over her face, her still-healing arm. “You look like hell,” he said with a small grin.
“Still better than you with your shirt off,” she muttered, smirking up at him.
Thorn’s grin widened. “That’s not what you said on—”
BANG.
A harsh metallic clang interrupted whatever comeback he had lined up. The three of them turned just in time to see her astromech, R7, ramming into Thorn’s shin with a furious burst of mechanical outrage.
“R7!” she barked, storming over. “What did I say about assaulting people?”
The droid chirped angrily and spun his dome toward her, then toward Fox, then let out a long series of beeps that sounded vaguely like profanity. Thorn took a step back, wincing and muttering something about “murder buckets.”
“I think he’s upset no one moved out of his way,” GH-9 said unhelpfully from behind her, arms folded in disdain. “I did warn him to wait, but he believes officers should respect seniority.”
“He’s a droid,” Thorn snapped, rubbing his leg. “A violent one.”
Fox was eyeing R7 with both brows raised. “You didn’t mention you were traveling with an explosive.”
“Fox,” she said, pinching the bridge of her nose. “Don’t provoke him. He’s got a fuse shorter than a thermal detonator and a kill count I don’t want to know.”
“Probably a higher one than mine,” Thorn muttered.
The astromech let out a smug beep.
Fox gave a subtle nod to GH-9. “And what’s his problem?”
“I talk too much,” GH-9 supplied proudly.
“You do,” the Senator stated.
The senator gave up, dragging a hand down her face. “Can we just go? Please? Before he tases someone and it becomes a diplomatic incident?”
Fox stepped aside. Thorn limped with exaggerated pain. R7 spun in satisfaction and zipped ahead like a victorious little gremlin.
She exhaled and muttered under her breath, “I should’ve left them again.”
⸻
Previous Part | Next Part
⸻
There were moments—even in war—that felt still.
In the jungle shadows of Saleucami, as the sun threatened to rise, the camp was a blur of hushed voices and clicking equipment. But for you, standing at the edge of it all, it felt like the world had paused. Just long enough to breathe. Just long enough to feel the weight of your purpose settling heavy on your shoulders again.
You always stood alone when you could. Not out of pride. Not out of habit. But because solitude had always made more sense than letting others carry the burden with you.
You’d never been one to chase recognition. The battles you fought were never about victory. You fought because others couldn’t. You carried pain so others didn’t have to.
And still, the loneliness crept in—like frost under your skin. You were a Jedi. A general. A friend. A weapon.
But never just… you.
⸻
“You’ve got that look again,” Aayla said, stepping beside you in the fading moonlight. Her blue skin shimmered under the pale light, her voice teasing but knowing.
“What look?” you murmured, not looking away from the horizon.
“That one where you pretend you’re not breaking apart inside,” she said softly. “I know it better than you think.”
You let out a breath, slow and careful. “If we break, who picks up the pieces for everyone else?”
“Who picks up your pieces?” she asked.
You didn’t answer.
She turned fully to you, voice stronger now. “You’re not alone. Not really. I see the way Bly looks at you.”
That earned her a glance, half amused, half exhausted. “Bly is… complicated.”
Aayla smiled faintly. “So are you.”
⸻
Commander Bly had always been disciplined, precise, and steady—a wall in a storm. You respected that about him. Needed it, even. In your world of sacrifice and selflessness, he was one of the few constants who didn’t ask anything of you… except that you live.
He watched you the way soldiers watch for landmines—carefully, constantly, with the knowledge that one misstep could end it all.
He wasn’t vocal with his concern. He didn’t have to be. It was in the way he stood between you and danger, just a fraction closer to the line of fire. The way he followed your orders, but his eyes always scanned you first after every blast. The way he touched your shoulder when you didn’t realize you were trembling.
It was in the moments between missions—when your hands brushed in passing, when his armor was at your back as you meditated in silence, when he stayed up longer than necessary just to match your exhaustion.
You both carried the same truth: you couldn’t afford selfishness.
But love? Love didn’t wait for permission.
⸻
The ambush came fast.
You didn’t think. You never thought when lives were at stake.
The supply convoy hit the mines. Fire erupted. Screams followed. Troopers scattered.
You threw yourself into the blaze. Your saber lit the way. You pulled one soldier from the wreckage, then another. Smoke filled your lungs, but you kept moving.
Bly was shouting behind you. He didn’t wait either. He followed you into the flames, gunning down droids with lethal precision, cursing under his breath as you took a hit to the arm shielding a clone from shrapnel.
“That’s enough!” he growled, catching you as your legs faltered.
“I’m not done,” you rasped.
“You are to me,” he snapped. “You’re enough. You’re alive. That’s all I care about right now.”
But you couldn’t stop. You never stopped. Your life wasn’t yours to guard. Not when theirs hung in the balance.
⸻
Later, when the battlefield went still again, you sat by the med tent, arm wrapped in bacta gauze, head heavy with more than just exhaustion.
Bly knelt beside you, helmet off, eyes burning with frustration and something deeper.
“You think you have to carry the whole damn galaxy,” he said. “But I need you to hear this—you matter too. Not just your sacrifice. Not just your service. You.”
You swallowed hard, guilt rising like a tide. “I can’t stand by and do nothing. I won’t. If I can save them—”
“You saved me,” he said, quiet and fierce. “Every day, you make this war mean something. But if it costs you your life—then what am I even fighting for?”
You looked at him then, and for the first time, let him see it—the cold, lonely part of you that had grown too familiar. The part that wondered if you’d ever be more than just a shield for others.
“I’m tired, Bly,” you whispered. “I’m so tired of being the one who runs into the fire.”
“Then let someone run into it for you.” He reached for your hand, gloved fingers curling gently around yours. “You don’t have to be alone in this.”
A tear slipped down your cheek. You hadn’t meant to let it.
But Bly just wiped it away, his touch reverent. “You’ve already given enough. Let someone fight for you.”
⸻
The next morning, the wind shifted again, colder than before.
But when you stood at the front of the battalion, Bly was beside you.
And for once, you didn’t stand alone.
"it's all in your head" correct! unfortunately I am also in there
happy cody day!!!!!!
strong desire for Echo to take a nice relaxing bath but also concerned about him electrocuting himself
Commander Fox x Senator Reader
Three weeks later.
The map table was flickering again, a small glitch from overuse. Red dots pulsed across the countryside—each one marking a loss. Small towns. Villages. Agricultural hubs. All hit hard and fast by Separatist forces. Civilians displaced. Some never accounted for.
The capital was still untouched. For now.
But it felt like waiting for the axe to fall.
You stood at the balcony of the palace’s war room, overlooking the city streets far below. From here, everything looked calm—citizens moving about their day, guards stationed at checkpoints, air traffic kept low and tight. But the mood had shifted.
The fear was no longer quiet.
It was loud now. Angry. Restless.
“I hear them,” you murmured, mostly to yourself. “They want blood. Answers. Safety. And I don’t know how much longer I can promise any of it.”
“You’re not the only one they’re looking to.”
Fox’s voice was low as he approached from behind. You didn’t turn around, but the sound of his boots—heavy, deliberate—was familiar now. Comforting in a way you’d never admit aloud.
“You’ve been visible,” he continued, standing just beside you, close enough that your arm almost brushed his. “At food drops. Patrols. Hospitals. You’ve given them hope.”
You laughed under your breath, bitter. “Hope doesn’t stop blasters.”
“Neither does silence.”
You finally turned your head toward him. His helmet was clipped to his belt, his expression stony but sharp. Exhausted. He hadn’t slept much lately. Neither had you.
“Fox…” you hesitated. “How long do we have?”
He didn’t sugarcoat it.
“They’ve started moving artillery through the passes. Droids are massing just outside the western hills. A few days, maybe. A week if we’re lucky.”
You swallowed hard, throat dry. “And the Senate?”
“No word.”
You nodded stiffly, the weight of it all crashing again onto your chest. The silence that followed was too heavy. Too full of what you couldn’t say.
“Can I ask you something?” you said softly.
Fox didn’t respond, but you felt his attention shift to you completely.
“If I die here… does that make me foolish? Or brave?”
He looked at you for a long moment, eyes unreadable.
“Both.”
You stared back at him. The shadows under his eyes. The scar just beneath his jaw. The faint tremor in his hand before he clenched it into a fist.
You wanted to reach for him. You didn’t.
He turned his head back to the city below. “I won’t let that happen.”
You believed him.
And for a moment, that was enough.
⸻
The command centre was dimly lit, the only illumination coming from the flickering holoprojector and the red glow of the city’s early warning system now running constant cycles.
You stood at the far end of the war room, watching the tactical updates scroll—one after another. Probes spotted at the city’s outer rim. Civilian clusters evacuating from rural holdouts. Streets quieter than they’d ever been.
Everyone knew.
The siege was hours away. Maybe less.
Fox was across the room, standing still with his hands clasped behind his back as a secure holo-comm crackled to life. Thire, Stone, and Hound were all there too—helmeted, silent, braced.
“Transmission confirmed,” the clone technician said. “Republic command, direct line.”
Fox’s lips pressed into a thin line as the Chancellor’s insignia bloomed across the console.
And then, the voice. Cold. Controlled.
“Commander Fox.”
He straightened. “Chancellor Palpatine, sir.”
“I’ve been monitoring the situation. I regret to inform you that the Senate cannot afford to lose one of Coruscant’s most vital protection divisions in a conflict that, regrettably, has not yet reached high-priority status.”
Fox’s jaw tensed. “With respect, sir—the capital will fall without additional defense. Civilians will die.”
“I understand your concern, Commander,” the Chancellor said, his tone maddeningly calm. “But this assignment was temporary. A symbol of good faith. It was never intended to put the Coruscant Guard in direct engagement.”
Fox didn’t reply, but his silence was heavy.
“You will return to Coruscant immediately,” Palpatine continued. “This is not a request. That planet will not survive your deaths. And Coruscant cannot afford to lose you. Do you understand?”
Fox looked down, his voice tightly controlled.
“…Understood, sir.”
The transmission ended in a cold flicker.
The silence that followed was thunderous.
You approached the group, confusion written across your face. “What was that?”
Fox turned toward you, his expression unreadable. “Orders. We’re being recalled.”
You stared at him, stunned. “What?”
Thire shifted uneasily. Stone looked away.
You shook your head, a storm rising behind your eyes. “You can’t leave. We’re hours from a siege, Fox. The entire reason you were here was to protect the capital—”
“And we did,” he said quietly. “We bought you time. We held the line as long as they’d allow.”
“No,” you snapped. “Don’t you dare throw that excuse at me like it’s enough. You stood in front of my people. You promised—you promised me—”
He flinched. The others turned away, giving you both a sliver of privacy that barely mattered now.
“I didn’t want this,” he said, voice rough. “But my duty is to Coruscant. I don’t get to choose where I’m sent. You know that.”
You stared at him, the weight of three weeks—the fights, the hope, the unspoken words—crushing all at once. “Then you should’ve never come at all.”
Fox looked like you’d shot him.
You turned away before he could see your eyes burn. Before he could see the betrayal written so clearly across your face. “Go, then. Follow your duty. I hope it keeps you warm when this place burns.”
He didn’t stop you when you walked away.
But you didn’t see the way his hand twitched at his side, like he was reaching for you without permission. Or the pain etched deep into his face—one he’d never show anyone else.
Not even you.
⸻
The landing pad on Coruscant was too clean.
Too quiet.
Too sterile, after weeks of war-scarred dirt and the sound of air raid sirens pulsing in the background like a heartbeat.
Fox disembarked first, helmet in hand, his armor dusted with soot and ash that felt wrong here—wrong against the smooth marble of the Senate platforms. Behind him, Thire, Stone, and Hound followed, silent at first.
Until the doors of the hangar slid closed and that silence exploded.
“What the hell was that?” Stone barked, ripping off his helmet and throwing it to the ground. “We abandoned them.”
“We followed orders,” Fox snapped back.
“Screw the orders,” Hound growled. “You saw what was coming. That planet was going to fall within the week.”
“And we were told we’re too valuable to risk,” Thire added, bitter. “So we just… left.”
Fox’s teeth ground together. “We are not generals. We don’t decide where we go—we enforce.”
“Yeah?” Stone stepped forward, chest tight with frustration. “Then why do you look like someone ripped your heart out, Fox?”
That shut him up.
For a moment.
He turned on his heel, walking out before he said something he’d regret, the echo of his boots trailing behind him like guilt.
Fox didn’t knock. He just walked straight into Commander Thorn’s office, where the younger clone was still suited up and tinkering with the power cell on his blaster.
Thorn looked up and didn’t miss a beat. “Well, well. If it isn’t the Chancellor’s golden leash.”
Fox closed the door behind him. “I need five minutes without sarcasm.”
Thorn shrugged. “Tough. You came to me.”
Fox exhaled, leaning against the far wall, arms folded tight. “I left a city to burn.”
Thorn paused, finally looking up.
“Wanna run that by me again?”
Fox’s jaw clenched. “I got pulled off a world about to be sieged. The Senator begged for help. The Chancellor ordered us back before the shooting even started.”
Thorn set his blaster down slowly.
“You obeyed, didn’t you?”
“What else could I do?”
“I don’t know,” Thorn said, voice low. “Maybe not leave a planet full of civilians to die?”
Fox glared. “You think I had a choice?”
“No,” Thorn said bluntly. “But I think you wanted one. And that’s the difference.”
Fox looked away. “She—she trusted me. And I—”
“You failed her,” Thorn finished for him. “Yeah. You did.”
The air between them thickened.
But then Thorn leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees.
“You know what makes you a good commander, Fox? You actually give a damn. But you bury it so deep under regs and orders and rules that you forget you’re a person too. You feel this because you should. And because, maybe for once, you met someone who made you wish you could choose.”
Fox didn’t answer.
Didn’t need to.
“You’re not wrong for caring,” Thorn continued. “But don’t pretend like you didn’t want to stay. Don’t pretend like she didn’t get under your skin. And don’t stand here looking for absolution. You left. And now you have to decide what the hell you’re gonna do about it.”
Fox stood in the quiet for a long time, every breath in his lungs feeling heavier than the last.
Finally, he turned toward the door.
“…Thanks.”
“Don’t thank me,” Thorn said. “Just don’t come crying when you decide to fight for something and it breaks your damn heart.”
⸻
The sky was the color of copper—burning, cracked, smothered in the black breath of war.
From the high balcony of Parliament House, you stood alone.
Below you, the capital city was crumbling. Buildings gutted. Smoke spiraling into the sky like dying prayers. The sounds of explosions echoed from every district—shelling, droid fire, the crackling whine of buildings collapsing into themselves. Your people screamed. And still, you stood.
You could’ve run.
The secret passage beneath the archives still functioned—your aides had begged you to use it. But you refused.
You would not crawl underground while your planet fell above.
When the droids stormed the Parliament, you were still there. You stood at the center of the marble chamber, hands behind your back, your senate robes torn from smoke and grime, your face fierce and unyielding.
The lead tactical droid analyzed you with a flick of its sensor.
“Senator. You are now under the protection of the Confederacy of Independent Systems.”
You didn’t move. “Protection?”
“Your system has been liberated. You will broadcast a message of cooperation to your people. Effective immediately.”
The words felt like venom in your ears.
Two commando droids grabbed your arms, steering you toward the chamber’s grand podium, where your world had once debated laws and trade, justice and reform.
Now it was a prison.
The cameras were already activated. A live broadcast.
You felt the script shoved into your hand—hollow lines written by cowards and liars.
The lights came on.
You stepped up.
Paused.
And dropped the script to the floor.
The droids moved slightly, weapons shifting, but the lead tactical droid gestured for them to wait. Curious. Watching.
You faced the camera.
And then you spoke.
“To the people of this world, hear me now. I stand before you not in surrender, but in defiance. The Separatists believe they have conquered us. That they can break our spirits with fear, and claim our loyalty with fire. But I am still standing.”
You stepped forward, voice rising, the smoke of your burning city curling in the background.
“We did not ask for this war. We did not invite their tyranny. And yet, they came. They scorched our homes. They threatened our children. And now they want us to kneel.”
You stared directly into the lens.
“I will not kneel.”
The tactical droid twitched. Several battle droids raised their blasters—but still, the broadcast continued.
“I may wear chains. I may stand here in a city torn apart. But I will never speak lies to you. I will never call this invasion a liberation. I will never call these machines saviors. The Separatists have not freed us. They have invaded us.”
You were trembling, but you didn’t stop.
“If I die for these words, so be it. At least I’ll die with my people. Not above them.”
You turned away from the camera. “Cut the feed.”
The droids surged forward. One struck you across the face with a metal hand and forced you to your knees.
Blood dripped from your mouth as the tactical droid loomed over you.
“That was not the message we authorized.”
You lifted your chin, defiant even through the pain.
“I suppose I never was good at following scripts.”
The broadcast ended in static.
⸻
The Senate Rotunda roared with outrage.
Holograms flickered across the great chamber—smoke-streaked ruins, the burning capital, and her face, bloodied but proud, replaying over and over again on the center display. The audio was muted now, but they didn’t need the words anymore.
They’d all heard them.
“I will not kneel.”
Senators shouted over one another.
Some demanded sanctions. Others accused the Separatists of war crimes. More still wanted a closed-door meeting with the Chancellor. No one could agree on a solution, but all could agree on one thing:
She had become a problem—and a symbol.
And not one easily silenced.
High above the Senate floor, in the polished marble halls outside the observation balconies, Fox stood alone.
Helmet under his arm.
Watching.
He hadn’t moved since the footage aired. His brothers had gathered at first—Thire, Stone, Hound—but one by one, they’d left when the noise of politics drowned out the only voice that had mattered.
Fox hadn’t left.
He couldn’t.
There she was—her image replaying again, defiant and brave, speaking through blood and fire. Unflinching. Unbroken.
The same woman who had pressed a drink into his hand weeks ago and called him loyal like it meant something.
“She didn’t even blink,” a voice murmured from behind him.
Fox turned slightly. Senator Bail Organa now stood beside him, face solemn.
“She knew what they’d do,” Organa continued, quietly. “And she said it anyway. She looked into that camera and chose truth.”
Fox nodded once. “She stood taller than half the Senate ever has.”
Organa’s mouth tightened. “And now she’s their problem.”
“She’s more than that,” Fox said. His voice was rougher than he intended. “She’s… a symbol now. Maybe even a martyr.”
Bail glanced over at him.
“You care for her.”
Fox didn’t answer right away. His jaw worked for a moment before he said, simply, “I failed her.”
“Not yet,” Organa said gently. “But if you let them forget her—then you do.”
Fox’s gaze drifted back to the flickering hologram of her battered face, eyes burning with conviction, voice ringing in his memory:
“I may wear chains… but I will never speak lies to you.”
If she burned for her people, Fox swore to himself then, he’d make sure the whole damn Republic saw the smoke.
⸻
The cell was white.
Too white. Not a single crack in the walls, not a scratch on the durasteel floor. No windows. No noise beyond the hum of distant generators and the quiet, steady pulse of a camera in the corner.
The Separatists called it a holding chamber.
You called it what it was: a cage.
They hadn’t touched you since the broadcast. Not physically. But the rest—they brought in food and left it untouched for days. They pumped the room full of lights that never dimmed. They brought silence and then the cloying pressure of recorded crowds chanting in a language you didn’t understand. Propaganda blasted in short bursts.
Then came the requests.
The offers.
A comfortable suite. Clothing. Protection. Return to your position of influence, they said. All you had to do was cooperate. Just read the lines. Tell your people that you saw the light. That the Republic abandoned them, and the Confederacy was your new salvation.
You said nothing.
Then they sent him in.
A pale, smooth-faced Neimoidian with manicured nails and a reek of expensive spice. He wore a smile that felt like a threat. He sat across from you at a metal table, fingers laced.
“We do not wish for things to escalate,” he said softly. “The Confederacy values your intellect. Your leadership. Your charisma. You could do so much more if you simply stepped into the right light.”
You stared at him. “There is no light in this place.”
He didn’t lose the smile. “Then create it. Say the words, Senator. Bring peace to your people. Your world is lost to the Republic, but it doesn’t have to be lost to you.”
You leaned forward, voice low and sharp. “Peace bought with a muzzle isn’t peace. It’s obedience. And I don’t bend.”
The Neimoidian’s smile faltered.
“You still believe someone’s coming to save you?” he asked.
You didn’t respond.
“Very well.” He stood and adjusted the sleeves of his robe. “Then we will bring peace another way.”
⸻
You were dragged from your cell two days later.
Paraded through the cracked halls of Parliament, bound in chains.
Droids stood at attention along the corridor. Their red photoreceptors blinked in time with the hollow clank of your boots. Outside, you heard the drone of ships overhead and the dull, distant panic of the crowd being herded into the city square.
The Separatists had arranged an audience.
A warning.
They wanted your execution public.
You were led up the stone steps of the Parliament balcony—the same one where you had stood and broadcast your defiance.
Now, a platform had been raised.
A guillotine of shimmering energy.
A podium to record your final words.
The tactical droid turned to you as the crowd began to hush.
“Final opportunity. Comply. Kneel, and you live.”
You lifted your chin. The chains bit into your wrists. “I will never kneel.”
The crowd heard you.
They remembered.
The city remembered.
Even if the Republic forgot you… even if no one came…
You would die standing.
⸻
The war room on Coruscant was filled with fire.
Not literal flame, but political heat—raw and heavy.
Three Jedi stood in the center, flanked by holograms of the burning capital city, the Separatist’s mock trial preparations, and one final, damning image:
The Senator, shackled and unbowed, standing before her people, moments before execution.
Chancellor Palpatine’s fingers steepled beneath his chin, unreadable as ever. But the furrow in his brow deepened with each word.
Mace Windu’s voice cut like a vibroblade. “This is no longer a matter of planetary resources. It’s a moral failure of the Senate—and of this office.”
Luminara Unduli, serene but stern, added, “We allowed this to happen by remaining neutral. The Senator stood for peace. For integrity. And she is being made an example for her courage.”
Obi-Wan Kenobi, arms crossed, took a step forward. “We know where they’re holding her. The capital has not fallen beyond reach. With your authorization, Chancellor, the 212th can retake it. But we must act now.”
Palpatine’s gaze slid to the flickering hologram again. The city in flames. The people in chains. Her.
He sighed, slowly. “I underestimated the impact of her voice. Perhaps… we all did.”
There was silence.
Then, finally, the Chancellor’s voice rose with forced calm.
“You have your clearance, General Kenobi. Regain control of the planet. Retrieve the Senator. Do not allow her execution to proceed.”
Obi-Wan nodded sharply. “We’ll leave within the hour.”
In the shadows near the back of the chamber, Fox stood silent.
Helmet tucked under his arm, armor polished to discipline, but his jaw clenched tightly. His brothers were gone—scattered after their forced withdrawal—but Fox had stayed. Had watched. Had listened. Had waited.
Beside him stood Commander Cody, arms folded, face grim beneath the overhead lights.
Fox didn’t look over when he spoke, just said, low and bitter, “Took them long enough.”
Cody’s voice was just as quiet. “Politics always move slower than war.”
Fox huffed. “She should never have been left alone. Not like that.”
“She wasn’t,” Cody said.
That made Fox turn.
Cody finally looked over, steady and sure. “You stayed. You remembered. And I’ll make sure she comes home.”
Fox’s lips parted, words catching in his throat.
Cody gave him a small, knowing nod.
“I’ll bring her back, vod. You have my word.”
Previous Part | Next Part
Summary: A rogue ARC trooper and a ruthless Togruta bounty hunter form an uneasy alliance, dodging Jedi, Death Watch, and their pasts as war rages across the galaxy.
CT-4023 once had a name. A stupid one, maybe. But not a joke. His brothers gave it to him, and he wore it with pride.
They used to call him “Havoc.”
*Flashback*
The silence that day was like being buried alive. The mist on Umbara curled like claws.
It started with the air—heavy, choked with smoke and the chemical stench of burnt plastoid and cordite. Umbara was a graveyard before the first body hit the dirt.
He stood in the trench, helmet off, sweat streaking through black camo paint. His fingers shook against his DC-15. He didn’t know if it was fear or adrenaline or both. Probably both.
He wasn’t a rookie. Had served since Geonosis. But this? This was something else.
The sky never cleared. The sun never rose. They fought blind in the fog, in the dark, against an enemy they could barely see—until it turned out the enemy was themselves.
He remembered that moment too clearly.
The comm call. The confusion. The order.
Fire. On the approaching battalion.
They’re Umbarans in disguise.
No time to hesitate, trooper.
The first shot was fired. He didn’t know by who. Then it became a massacre.
It wasn’t until they closed the distance that they saw the helmets. The blue stripes. The 501st.
Their brothers.
He’d vomited in his helmet.
Later, when they found out Krell had manipulated them, that he was playing both sides—using them like pawns in a nightmare—it didn’t matter. The bodies didn’t un-die. The screams didn’t fade.
When it was over, they were commended for following orders.
For their loyalty.
For their “success.”
Something inside him broke.
He stayed quiet. Always quiet. But something… detached.
Later, during cleanup, he walked out into the forest and stared at the scorched battlefield. Ash fell like snow.
A sergeant came up beside him.
“We survived.”
“Did we?”
The next day, he volunteered for a deep recon mission off-grid. Just him. A week. He never came back.
They thought he was dead.
He let them think that.
*Flashback Ended*
He stared into the cup of tea that K4 had made earlier, now gone cold. The hum of the ship filled the silence.
Sha’rali watched him from the other side of the table, saying nothing.
“You ever kill someone you weren’t supposed to?” he asked suddenly.
She blinked. “I’m a bounty hunter.”
“I don’t mean for money. I mean by accident. Orders. Fog of war.”
Her silence stretched longer this time.
“I’ve tortured people who didn’t deserve it,” she said at last. “Does that count?”
He gave a humorless huff.
“I was loyal. I believed in it. Every order. Every command.” He looked at her, eyes bleak. “And it turned me into a murderer.”
“You’re not the only one.”
He studied her face, unsure if she meant herself—or every clone who ever wore a number.
“You didn’t desert because you were weak,” Sha’rali said. “You left because you couldn’t live with what they made you do.”
He didn’t answer.
Just looked down at his gloved hands, now black and silver.
“Maybe I don’t deserve a new name,” he said softly. “Maybe I deserve to stay a number.”
Sha’rali leaned forward, her voice low.
“Then pick a number they don’t know.”
CT-4023 sat in the small galley of Sha’rali’s ship, elbows on the durasteel table, his hands still faintly marked with old bloodstains—some visible, most not.
He hadn’t said a word in minutes.
Sha’rali leaned against the bulkhead, arms crossed, eyes narrowed—not in judgment, but consideration. Her long montrals cast shadows over the dim galley light, and her pale facial markings seemed more stark now, like war paint rather than tradition.
“I was wondering when you’d talk,” she said finally, voice low. “You hide it well. But your eyes give you away.”
4023 didn’t look up. “How so?”
“They’re quiet,” she said. “Too quiet. Like someone turned all the noise off inside, and just left you with static.”
He finally lifted his gaze. “You sound like you know the feeling.”
Sha’rali gave a short, bitter laugh. “I do.”
She pushed off the wall and moved to sit across from him. She set a steaming cup of stim down between them—probably from K4’s endless tea service—but didn’t touch it.
“I’m not like most Togruta,” she said. “Not even close.”
He said nothing, so she continued.
“We’re supposed to be communal. Peaceful. Guided by spirit. Our connection to each other and the land is everything. Most of us find calm just by being near one another. But I don’t. I never have.”
Her voice lowered.
“I don’t feel serenity. I feel… disconnected. Like something in me didn’t wire right. Where others found balance, I found blades. Rage. Violence.”
She looked him dead in the eye.
“There’s a defect in me.”
He blinked slowly. “Maybe it’s not a defect.”
“Oh, don’t romanticize it,” she scoffed. “I kill people for money. I enjoy it sometimes. Not because it’s just—it rarely is—but because it’s easy. Because it makes the noise stop. Even if only for a little while.”
He nodded.
“That… sounds familiar,” he murmured.
They sat in silence. No sympathy, no pity—just recognition.
After a long moment, she leaned back and exhaled.
“I used to think maybe I was Force-touched,” she muttered. “Some genetic thing. An imbalance. But the Jedi came to my village once when I was young. Scanned everyone.”
“They scanned you?”
She nodded. “Said I wasn’t Force-sensitive. But the Knight who tested me looked at me for a long time. Like he saw something he didn’t want to.”
He didn’t ask what she meant. He already knew.
A pause.
Sha’rali looked at him again, more openly now. “Whatever broke you… I think it broke me too. Just in a different shape.”
4023’s lips twitched—almost a smile. Almost.
He nodded again. “We’re good at pretending we’re not the ones who need saving.”
She smirked faintly. “Speak for yourself. I never needed saving. I just needed someone to aim at.”
A pause.
4023 looked at her for a long moment, then finally asked, “And now?”
She held his gaze.
“Now I’m not sure what I need.”
⸻
The Jedi Council room was dimmed with twilight. The room was quiet but tense, evening sun casting long shadows through the high arched windows. Some Masters were seated, others stood, gathered in a semi-circle around the central holoprojector. In the center flickered the grim face of the Trandoshan informant Cid—grainy, but clear enough.
“She’s not here anymore,” Cid rasped. “Was never supposed to be. I didn’t send her a job. Someone used my name. Set her up, maybe. She came asking about it… and she wasn’t alone.”
That was the part the Council had fixated on.
“She had him with her,” Mace Windu said, standing with his arms crossed. “The clone.”
Master Plo Koon tilted his head. “The one from Saleucami?”
“Same body type. Same gait. Same refusal to register. Cid said he didn’t give a name. But the description matches CT-4023.”
“CT-4023…” Obi-Wan leaned forward slightly, expression hardening. “That was the ARC we tried to extract during the intelligence breach. Delta Squad was pulled out under fire. He was taken by a bounty hunter—this same Togruta.”
Shaak Ti nodded gravely from her hologram feed. “We believed he was compromised. Assumed he’d be transferred offworld. Perhaps dissected. And yet—he survived.”
“He didn’t just survive,” Windu said darkly. “He vanished. With her.”
Kit Fisto stood by the edge of the chamber, arms folded behind his back, quiet until now.
“And now he’s resurfaced,” Kit said. “On Ord Mantell. With the bounty hunter. After killing a Death Watch Mandalorian in open combat. Witnesses say she fought him hand-to-hand and took his armor.”
“The clone helped?” Koth asked.
“We don’t know,” Kit replied. “But the report says she nearly lost. Someone intervened. No footage.”
Yoda exhaled a slow breath. “A choice he made. To go with her.”
“Which suggests she didn’t capture him,” Obi-Wan murmured. “She persuaded him.”
“Or worse,” Windu added. “Whatever’s in his head, it was enough for her to extract him from a live Separatist stronghold and disappear. She might not know the value of what she’s carrying… or she might know exactly what he’s worth.”
Master Yoda’s ears tilted downward. “Curious, this bond. Curious, the timing. Dangerous, the silence since Saleucami.”
“There’s more,” Kit said. “Cid has now gone to ground. She said she’d report the sighting to us if we left her alone, but she’s clearly nervous. She saw something she didn’t like.”
Mace nodded once. “Then we move. Kit Fisto. Eeth Koth. Go to Ord Mantell. See if the trail’s still warm. We need to know what the bounty hunter is planning. And if the clone’s still alive.”
Shaak Ti’s gaze lingered on the empty space in the chamber where the clone’s name might have once been honored. “If it is 4023… he was among the last assigned to Umbara.”
That earned a beat of silence.
“A reason to break,” Plo Koon said softly.
“A reason to run,” Windu agreed. “But no reason to stay missing. No reason to hide—unless he’s protecting something.”
“Or someone,” Koth added.
Yoda’s voice cut through like a blade. “A ghost. From a war of ghosts. Find him. Find them both.”
Kit bowed his head. “We’ll leave tonight.”
As the Masters began to turn away and the room dimmed again into shadow, the holoprojector winked off, leaving behind only silence and the faint hum of the Temple’s energy field.
⸻
The sun of Ord Mantell were sinking behind rusted cityscapes as Kit Fisto and Eeth Koth moved quietly through the narrow alleys of the industrial quarter. The air stank of oil, sweat, and molten metal. It was loud—always loud here—and perfect for hiding.
They didn’t wear robes here. Jedi cloaks would be like blood in the water.
Death Watch was already sniffing.
At the end of a cracked alley, a crowd gathered around scorch marks and torn duracrete. Bloodstains were still being cleaned from the wall by a nervous rodian janitor. He worked under the sharp eye of two Mandalorians in blue armor, their visors reflecting the flickering street lights.
“Third time we’ve come by this area,” Koth murmured, low and clipped.
Kit nodded. “No fresh leads. But the smell of fear hasn’t gone anywhere.”
The two Jedi lingered just out of sight, watching as a third Mandalorian approached. His armor was heavier, jetpack hissing slightly as he stepped forward—clearly the one in charge. His voice barked sharp in Mando’a, silencing the chatter from the onlookers.
“That one’s been here since the first report,” Kit whispered, gesturing with his chin toward a thin Zabrak street vendor watching from behind a broken cart.
Koth approached first.
“We have a few questions.”
The Zabrak’s eyes darted toward the Mandalorians.
“I didn’t see nothing. Nothing,” he said quickly. “Look—everyone’s got a blaster down here, yeah? People die every night.”
“Not by Mandalorian hands,” Koth replied coolly. “And not to Mandalorians either. Someone fought one of their elites. And won.”
Kit stepped forward, his smile warm and easy. “We’re not Death Watch. We’re just trying to find someone. A Togruta bounty hunter. Tall, coral pink skin, long montrals. Accompanied by two droids—one purple astromech and a rather impolite butler-type.”
The Zabrak hesitated, then slowly shook his head. “No… don’t know any bounty hunter like that.”
“You do know something,” Kit said gently. “Even if you don’t realize it. Try again.”
After a tense pause, the vendor’s voice dropped to a whisper. “Someone said she fought the Mando. That she took his armor. Left the body in the trash compactor down two levels.”
Koth’s eyes narrowed. “That’s bold. Even for her.”
“But here’s the thing,” the Zabrak continued, leaning closer. “Whoever helped her—no one saw his face. Some say he fought like a Jedi, but used a blaster. One guy swore he heard him shout military code in the fight. Real clean and quiet, like he knew how to move. But when it was over, nothing. No footage, no trace. Gone.”
“No one saw his face?” Kit echoed.
The vendor nodded.
“Then they don’t know,” Koth said under his breath.
Kit looked toward the Mandalorians again. “Death Watch still in the dark.”
“For now.”
They slipped away, vanishing into the crowd like vapor. They passed another alley, where a pair of Death Watch grunts interrogated a pair of street kids who just shook their heads in terrified silence.
Once out of earshot, Koth turned toward his fellow Jedi.
“If they knew it was a clone under that armor, they’d burn this district to the ground. No witnesses is the only reason they haven’t already.”
“We can’t stay much longer,” Kit replied. “She’s already gone. All traces lead cold.”
Koth nodded grimly. “But they’re leaving a trail of ghosts.”
“We’ll find her,” Kit said, eyes narrowed. “We’ll find him too.”
Somewhere above them, unnoticed by either Jedi or Mandalorian, a familiar purple astromech dome blinked once behind a rusted pipe—then quietly rolled back into the shadows.
Kit Fisto’s boots crunched across broken glass in the gutted remains of an old comms relay tower. The metal frame above groaned with wind, swaying gently as shadows flickered beneath the half-moon light. Eeth Koth swept the ruins with his saber hilt gripped tight in one hand, unlit but ready.
“This tower was reactivated three days ago,” Kit murmured, running his fingers over a half-melted panel. “Then shut off again, abruptly. No trace in the central net.”
“Off-grid hardware,” Koth replied. “Could be old slicer work, or could be our bounty hunter. Maybe both.”
Then—click.
Koth turned sharply. “Did you hear that?”
Kit lifted a hand, motioning for silence. From beneath a warped support beam, something shifted, too small for a person—then rolled away with a faint whirr of servos.
“Droid.” Kit’s voice dropped to a whisper, and he moved instantly. With a graceful sweep of his hand, a panel was Force-flung from the floor, revealing the last flicker of a dome disappearing into the ventilation ducts.
“Purple,” Koth muttered. “Fast.”
“That matches the description of her astromech,” Kit confirmed.
⸻
Sha’rali’s lekku twitched as she paced the cockpit, nails tapping rhythmically on her armour plating. K4 stood near the control panel, ever stately, ever calm—until he spoke.
“R9 reports that the Jedi are now actively scanning the upper sector. I estimate they will locate him within seven minutes.”
“I told that little rust-ball to keep its distance,” she hissed, fangs bared in frustration. “I should’ve left him with you.”
“You left him to spy on Death Watch,” K4 replied with maddening evenness. “Not Jedi.”
Her claws clenched into fists.
A sharp beep pulsed in the cockpit—a direct feed from R9.
:: THEY SAW ME. TWO JEDI. BLACK ROBES. ONE HAS TENTACLES. PANICKED LEVEL 4. INITIATING EVASIVE ROLLING. ::
:: DUCT SYSTEM COMPROMISED. ::
Sha’rali swore in Togruti—harsh syllables rarely heard outside her mouth. Then in Huttese. Then something old and violent from a long-forgotten hunting language.
She stopped mid-rant.
“I never wiped his memory,” she said aloud.
K4 inclined his head. “Correct. Nor mine.”
Her eyes snapped to the droid. “You’ve got decades of jobs, contacts, hits—he’s got logs on half the galactic underworld.” Her voice turned ice cold. “And he’s got logs on 4023.”
“You did intend to wipe us several times,” K4 said helpfully. “You just never followed through.”
Sha’rali let out a breath between her fangs. “Because I got sentimental. Because I’m stupid.”
The clone—4023—entered the cockpit, helmet tucked under one arm. “What’s going on?”
She rounded on him. “My droid’s been spotted. The Jedi are sniffing his tracks.”
He stilled. “Do they know it’s yours?”
“Maybe. Doesn’t matter. If they catch him, they’ll tear him apart. Every data string, every encrypted log, every…” She stopped. Her jaw worked.
“You’re going back.” It wasn’t a question.
K4 interjected, “May I remind you both that this is, objectively speaking, moronic.”
“Yeah, well.” Sha’rali growled. “I’m a moron who doesn’t want her brains uploaded to the Jedi archives.”
She began strapping her weapons back into place. Hidden vibroblade in the boot. Double-blaster rig to her hips. Backup vibrodagger at the small of her back. 4023 watched her work, face unreadable.
“You don’t have to do this,” he said finally.
She paused.
“No. I do.”
A sudden silence passed between them. Then her hand tapped the comms panel, locking coordinates.
“Get the ship ready to move the second I’m back.”
“And if you’re not?” the clone asked.
K4 answered for her. “Then we burn the evidence and flee. Standard procedure. Perhaps even play the funeral dirge for her if we’re feeling sentimental.”
Sha’rali offered a dry smile. “You are sentimental. You just hate it.”
As the ramp lowered, she paused and glanced back toward 4023.
“Don’t wait long. If I’m not back in twenty, leave.”
Then she vanished into the misty orange night of Ord Mantell, chasing shadows… and secrets.
⸻
R9 careened down a narrow duct, his purple dome clanging with every turn. The golden trim along his chassis caught sparks from loose wiring overhead. Blasts of hot air whooshed through the maintenance vents as he rolled at breakneck speed, fleeing the two organic Force-users hot on his tail.
:: CURRENT STATUS: SCREWED. ::
He took a sharp left, nearly tipping over.
:: ERROR: ADJUST GYROSCOPIC BALANCE. ::
Behind him, a hiss of lightsabers igniting echoed faintly through the ductwork. The sound prickled his auditory sensors like static.
He rolled out of the vent shaft into the open skeleton of a collapsed warehouse rooftop and immediately initiated a low-power visual dampener. A shimmering flicker of cloaking shimmered over his dome. Temporary. Imperfect.
And just in time.
Kit Fisto dropped from a higher level with the grace of falling water. He landed softly, eyes narrowed.
Eeth Koth followed, his saber active but lowered.
“He’s somewhere here,” Koth said. “I felt him pass through that duct.”
Kit’s eyes swept across the darkness. “He’s hiding. Clever droid.”
They split up, Kit moving in a wide arc around the edge of the roof, Koth stepping forward slowly. R9 barely dared beep. His systems were whirring in overdrive.
:: SITUATION: EXTREMELY SCREWED. ::
But then—footsteps. Not Jedi.
Clanking. Heavier.
Down on the streets below, the sound of three figures moving in perfect paramilitary formation. Black and blue armor. Jagged symbols on the chest plates. Jetpacks. Antennas.
Death Watch.
“Thought I saw something drop,” one muttered.
Another paused and looked upward toward the roof.
“The Jedi are here,” he said. “Kit Fisto. That’s him.”
A third voice, sharper: “You sure?”
The first nodded. “I saw him on once during some riots. That’s a Jedi Council Master.”
The second bounty hunter grunted. “And he’s chasing a droid like his life depends on it. What if that tin can has something we don’t?”
“Or someone.” The leader’s voice turned hungry. “The man who killed our brother.”
They disappeared into the warehouse below, slipping inside like ghosts.
Up on the roof, Kit Fisto froze.
“I felt that,” he whispered. “There’s more down there.”
Koth raised a brow. “Separatists?”
“No… something else. Watching.”
From beneath a crate, R9 watched everything. And as silently as his aging servos would allow, he activated his last-resort subroutine.
:: PRIORITY PING TO UNIT K4 – IMMEDIATE EXTRACTION REQUIRED. INTRUSION MULTIPLIER: +3 ::
Then he started rolling again—fast.
A flicker of movement caught Kit’s eye.
“There!”
He leapt. His green saber flared to life.
R9 took the impact and spun down a cargo chute, bouncing off steel walls and into an open alley. He skidded across duracrete and slammed into a pile of garbage.
Behind him, booted footsteps approached.
A door burst open—but not Kit’s.
Death Watch soldiers stormed the alley, weapons drawn. One knelt where R9 had landed. Another looked toward the rooftop above, scanning.
“Still want to follow the Jedi?” one of them said.
The leader growled. “No. We follow the droid. He’s running from the Jedi too.”
They turned and began tracking his route. Carefully. Coordinated.
Kit Fisto appeared in the alley seconds later, just missing them. He crouched by the scrape marks on the duracrete.
“Someone else is following him,” he said aloud.
Koth looked around, tense. “Death Watch?”
Kit nodded slowly. “Possibly.”
“But why?”
Kit didn’t answer. His gaze turned distant, thoughtful. “We need to report this. Now.”
They took off in the other direction, unaware that down the street, R9 had ducked into a half-buried loading dock, hiding behind a dead speeder. His circuits buzzed.
:: SHA’RALI, IF YOU’RE LISTENING… GET ME OUT OF HERE. ::
⸻
The stars above Ord Mantell burned cold and distant, a velvet ceiling cracked by neon haze and industrial smoke. Sha’rali Jurok perched on the ledge of a rusted scaffolding beam ten stories above the street, her lekku twitching with impatience. The red tint of her coral-pink skin shimmered faintly under the glow of a nearby spotlight, her white facial markings harshly defined in the night.
K4’s voice buzzed in her ear.
“Your plan is recklessness disguised as bravery, Mistress.”
“It’s worked before.”
“Statistically, it’s worked 31.7% of the time. Hardly inspiring odds.”
She adjusted the power cell in her blaster rifle, then scanned the rooftop below. R9’s heat signature blinked weakly in her HUD. Surrounded. Four Death Watch enforcers closing in.
Breathe in.
Sharpen the chaos.
She dropped like a stone.
Landing behind the first Mandalorian, she didn’t bother being quiet—her electrified gauntlet crackled as it slammed into his spine. He spasmed and fell forward, armor clanking. The others whirled just as she dove into them with a roar, blaster firing one-handed, saber dagger in the other.
One shot sizzled off her shoulder pauldron—stunned, not dead, but it pissed her off. Her lekku swayed as she ducked under a wild jetpack swipe and sliced a belt cord—sending the hunter tumbling sideways off the roof.
“R9!” she barked.
The droid squealed in binary, his dome rattling as he zipped toward her. The last two Mandalorians regrouped, advancing with synchronized precision, firing. Too close.
Then—
A blur of green and blue light.
Kit Fisto surged from the shadow like a tide, lightsaber spinning, deflecting bolts in radiant arcs. Eeth Koth followed, hammering one Death Watch fighter into the rooftop with a Force-augmented slam.
Sha’rali blinked, mid-slash.
“…Didn’t expect you two.”
Kit offered a grin even in the chaos. “We didn’t expect to help you.”
The rooftop trembled. More Death Watch approaching—six, maybe eight, from adjacent buildings. A few took flight, closing the distance fast.
“Mistress,” K4 said through comms. “You have approximately twenty seconds before an unpleasant level of Mandalorian reinforcements converge.”
“Bring the ship. Now!”
The rooftop began to burn—one of the fleeing jetpackers had tossed an incendiary before dying, and now the upper decks were crackling with fire.
Sha’rali grabbed R9 under one arm, lunging toward the edge with the Jedi in tow.
Jetpacks buzzed in the air behind them.
Kit flung out a hand—Force-pushing three of them back—but even he looked winded.
A sleek shadow dropped from the clouds with roaring engines and a bark of metallic thrusters.
K4 piloting with refined menace.
“Landing on fire-laden rooftops was not in my original programming.”
The side hatch blew open.
Sha’rali grabbed the nearest Jedi—Koth—and yanked him bodily through the air with a grapple cable. Kit followed with a Force-assisted leap.
She was the last to jump—nearly clipped by a blaster bolt as she hurled herself toward the hatch. Kit caught her by the wrist and yanked her in, just as K4 pulled the ship skyward, engines screaming.
Behind them, the rooftop exploded in sparks and fire.
Inside the ship, silence reigned for one long second.
Sha’rali dropped R9 with a grunt. “That was close.”
Koth glanced between them, tense. “You could’ve left us.”
“Believe me, I thought about it.”
Kit chuckled. “Why didn’t you?”
Sha’rali’s sharp smile didn’t quite reach her eyes. “Guess I’m going soft.”
From the cockpit, K4 chimed:
“Observation confirmed. Mistress has displayed increased emotional indulgence, borderline sentimentality. Recommend immediate psychological review.”
Sha’rali rolled her eyes. “Shut up and plot a course to deep space. No trails, no trackers.”
As she leaned against the wall, arms crossed, the two Jedi looked at her with new eyes—unsure what they’d just been part of, or what game she was really playing.
Even she wasn’t quite sure anymore.
⸻
The hum of The ship’s engines was the only sound for a long moment. The Jedi sat across from their unexpected rescuers in the ship’s dimmed briefing room, if it could even be called that—Sha’rali had refitted the cramped space with mismatched chairs and a jury-rigged holotable now running diagnostics.
Sha’rali sat with her boots up on the table, seemingly unbothered, one lekku lazily coiled over her shoulder. Across from her, the clone—CT-4023—stood with arms crossed, helmet now tucked beneath one arm, black-and-silver Mandalorian armor freshly scorched from their rooftop scuffle. His posture was tense, wary, and silent.
Kit Fisto broke the silence first, voice calm but firm. “We’re not here to detain you. Either of you. We just want the truth.”
“Funny,” Sha’rali said, not smiling. “That’s usually what people say before trying to kill me.”
Eeth Koth leaned forward, hands laced together. “This isn’t an inquisition. We were sent to recover a deserter. That was the mission.”
She gestured toward the clone. “You can’t recover what’s already gone.”
The Jedi turned their attention to him.
He didn’t flinch under their gaze.
Koth narrowed his eyes slightly. “CT-4023… you’re not exactly making this easy.”
“I’m not him anymore,” the clone said at last. His voice was gravel—deep, tired, and burdened. “Whatever version of that number was assigned to Kamino, it died on Umbara.”
Kit regarded him for a long, thoughtful moment. “You were part of the 212th?”
He nodded once. “What’s left of it.”
“Why leave?” Koth asked gently. “Why disappear?”
4023 hesitated. His eyes flicked toward Sha’rali, who gave him a subtle nod.
“You’ve never felt it, have you?” he said quietly. “That… hollow snap in your head when you realize the people giving you orders stopped being right a long time ago? When you start to think that maybe… you’re not meant to survive the war you were made for?”
Kit’s gaze softened. “You chose freedom.”
“No,” 4023 said. “I chose not to die in someone else’s lie.”
Sha’rali stood, walking toward the corner cabinet. She keyed in a command, and a medical scanner flickered to life.
“I assume you’ll want proof,” she muttered. “That he’s not Republic property anymore.”
From a holotray, a full scan of the clone’s body projected in grainy, rotating detail.
“Cloning markers? Burned. Biochips? Removed. CT barcode? Surgically flayed and regenerated.” Her voice was clinical, almost bored. “Even the facial markers have been subtly altered—minor surgical shifts to the cheekbones and jawline. Nothing that would raise flags on facial recognition unless you really knew what you were looking for.”
Kit Fisto examined the scan with mild surprise. “This is… thorough.”
“He wanted out,” she said, shrugging. “He asked. I obliged.”
Eeth Koth stood slowly. “But why keep him with you? What purpose does he serve?”
Sha’rali leaned one hip against the table and gave the Jedi a long, unreadable look.
“I don’t need a purpose to show someone mercy. Rare as it is.”
4023’s voice cut in low. “She could’ve sold me out a dozen times by now. To the Separatists. To Jabba. She didn’t.”
Koth turned his attention to him. “And what do you want?”
He took a breath. “To be nobody.”
There was silence. The kind that filled the space when everyone realized there was no easy solution.
After a beat, Kit Fisto turned off the scan and stepped back. “There’s no traceable connection to the Republic anymore. No chain of command, no markers, no active file. CT-4023… doesn’t exist.”
Sha’rali arched a brow. “So we’re done here?”
Koth hesitated. “The Council won’t be pleased.”
“Good,” she said dryly. “I was beginning to worry.”
Kit Fisto nodded slowly. “We’ll report that the deserter is… unrecoverable.”
“Dead,” she said. “That’s usually easier for them to hear.”
He inclined his head, then turned to the clone. “You chose your path. I hope it brings you peace.”
4023’s expression barely changed. “It hasn’t yet.”
The Jedi rose and prepared to disembark at the next neutral outpost, neither chasing nor warning. Just… leaving. Because there was nothing else to be done.
As they filed toward the docking bay, Sha’rali remained by the doorway, arms crossed, watching them go.
“You know,” Kit said without turning, “whatever this is you’re doing—it doesn’t seem like you anymore.”
Sha’rali didn’t respond. Just smirked faintly. “Yeah… I get that a lot lately.”
When the Jedi were gone and the ship was sealed, R9 gave a warbled snort and beeped something foul in Binary from the corridor.
K4’s voice echoed from the cockpit:
“So. Shall I ready the guns in case the peacekeepers change their mind?”
Sha’rali exhaled slowly and headed down the corridor. “No. For once… I think they’re really letting go.”
⸻
The GAR war room dimmed as Master Kit Fisto’s hologram flickered into full resolution. Eeth Koth’s projection stood beside him, arms folded, expression somber.
“We searched the surrounding sectors thoroughly,” Eeth said. “But there was… nothing to recover.”
Kit nodded. “The signs were conclusive. If he survived Ord Mantell, he didn’t stay. He’s long gone. No traceable identifiers, no Republic gear. He’s not the man you knew anymore.”
Silence settled like dust across the chamber.
Obi-Wan Kenobi stood at the center of the gathered assembly, a hand to his beard, visibly subdued.
“CT-4023,” he murmured. “He was one of ours. 212th ARC.”
“He fought under me,” Cody added, voice low and deliberate. “Bright kid. Loud. Smartass. Called himself Havoc.”
A quiet ripple of chuckles passed among the clones seated in the rear—muted, nostalgic, strained.
“He was always fidgeting,” Rex added with a rare, soft smile. “Said it helped him shoot straighter.”
“He made every shot count,” Bacara said. “I saw him clear a whole ridge on Mygeeto. Grenade pin in his teeth.”
“Never took cover,” Wolffe muttered. “Cocky little di’kut. But brave.”
Fox crossed his arms, leaning against a marble pillar near the edge of the chamber. “Brave or not, he deserted. All we’re doing now is telling war stories about a traitor.”
Rex turned slowly to look at him. “Were you on Umbara, Commander?”
Fox didn’t answer.
Obi-Wan’s eyes darkened.
“He was last seen after that campaign,” he said quietly. “A lot of good men went home from Umbara different. Some… never did.”
“He didn’t go home,” Cody said flatly. “He walked into the jungle one night after Krell fell. Left his armor behind. All he took was his rifle and a backpack.”
“He left a message, didn’t he?” Rex asked.
Cody nodded. “On the inside of his chest plate. Scratched in with a vibroblade.”
Rex remembered it too. He quoted it aloud. “I won’t die in another man’s war.”
A long silence followed.
Eeth Koth finally broke it. “There is no body to recover. No tags. No serials. Whatever life CT-4023 had, it ended in that jungle—or sometime soon after.”
“Is that your official report?” Obi-Wan asked, tone carefully measured.
Fisto gave a solemn nod. “It is.”
Fox scoffed quietly, turning away. “Coward’s death.”
“You don’t know that,” Howzer replied, voice steely. “You didn’t know him.”
“I knew what he became.”
“No,” Rex said sharply. “You know what he left behind. There’s a difference.”
Fox said nothing.
Obi-Wan exhaled slowly. “He was one of mine. One of many. He earned the ARC designation. Saved my life once. I mourn him now, the same as I would any fallen brother.”
Cody gave a curt nod. “If he’s gone, he’s gone. No shame in death. We all meet it one day.”
“But he didn’t go down fighting,” Bacara stated.
“Maybe he did,” Cody said. “Just not on a battlefield.”
The Council meeting dispersed quietly. Some stayed behind, murmuring. Others left in silence, helmets under their arms.
Rex lingered a little longer, staring out the high Council windows at the speeder traffic beyond.
“He was a brother,” he said quietly. “Even if he’s gone, I hope he found peace out there. Wherever he went.”
Howzer gave a quiet hum. “If anyone deserved it… maybe it was him.”
Wolffe folded his arms. “I don’t agree with the desertion, it’s a cowards way out.”
Fox, for all his bitterness, remained still and quiet for a long moment.
Only Obi-Wan noticed the flicker of conflict in his eyes before he turned and left without another word.
The Jedi were satisfied with the explanation.
The Republic would not search further.
But not everyone believed in ghosts.
Some knew they were still walking among them.
⸻
Previous Part | Next Part
Captain Howzer x Twi’lek Reader
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Freedom was a strange thing.
You could be chained for years—shackled, broken, silenced—and still not feel as free as you did when you sprinted through the jungle with a stolen blaster and your heart racing like it had somewhere to go.
You’d fought to be here.
Fought to exist.
Now you fought for something.
Cham Syndulla had given you a cause. A home. A voice. And you’d die before you let anyone take that away again.
Which made your situation with Captain Howzer… complicated.
You first saw him standing tall in the Ryloth city square, surrounded by clone troopers in gleaming armor. He wasn’t barking orders like the others. He watched. Measured. Thought.
You hated him immediately.
Until you didn’t.
The first time you really spoke, it was because of Hera.
“Put me down!” Hera screamed, dangling from the edge of a roof she wasn’t supposed to be on.
You scrambled to reach her—but Howzer got there first, catching her mid-fall and cradling her against his chest.
“Hera,” he said, calm and soft, “you alright, kid?”
She blinked at him. “Yeah… you have a really strong arm.”
“Perks of the job.”
You expected him to arrest her. Lecture her. Instead, he handed her off to you, nodded once, and said:
“She’s bold. Reminds me of someone.”
It was the first time he looked at you like he saw you—not a rebel, not a threat, but someone.
You didn’t know how to feel about that.
⸻
Weeks passed.
The Empire’s grip tightened. Ryloth tensed. So did you.
But Howzer—he didn’t act like a loyal dog. He asked questions. Protected civilians. Argued with Admiral Rampart in front of everyone.
And when you crossed paths again—this time in secret, near an old Separatist outpost—you confronted him.
“You gonna shoot me now, Captain?” you asked, blaster raised.
He didn’t flinch. “No. I came to talk.”
You laughed bitterly. “Clones don’t talk. They obey.”
“I’m trying not to.”
That stopped you cold.
You lowered your weapon, cautiously.
“I’ve seen what the Empire is doing,” he said, stepping closer. “I don’t agree with it. I think you don’t either.”
“I was a slave,” you spat. “I know what tyranny looks like.”
He didn’t argue.
“I’ve been watching you,” he added. “Fighting. Protecting people. Risking everything for them. You don’t run. You don’t hide. You remind me of why I started wearing this armor in the first place.”
Your breath hitched.
And just like that, the tension between you snapped—not with violence, but something gentler. Warmer.
Something that felt like understanding.
⸻
From then on, you met in secret.
He smuggled you information—troop movements, transport schedules, weak points in the blockade.
You brought Hera to some of the meetings. She liked to sit on a crate, Chopper at her side, giving snarky commentary.
“Are you two in love yet?” she asked one night, kicking her legs.
You choked on your drink. Howzer actually blushed.
“I—I don’t think soldiers are allowed to be in love,” he said awkwardly.
“Then it’s a good thing I’m not a soldier,” you muttered.
Hera just shrugged. “I think you should kiss. You look at her like my dad looks at my mom.”
You and Howzer shared a long, stunned silence. Chopper beeped something crude.
“I’m going to pretend I didn’t hear that,” Howzer muttered.
But later, when the night was quiet and you were alone with him, the firelight dancing off his armor, you finally asked,
“Why are you doing this? Risking everything?”
He looked at you, eyes soft, jaw clenched.
“Because you showed me something real,” he said. “And I want to fight for it—for you—instead of some banner that doesn’t mean anything anymore.”
You leaned in, heart thudding.
And when you kissed him, it wasn’t soft. It was earned.
Fierce. Honest. Full of fire and freedom and all the things you’d both been denied for too long.
You weren’t free of danger.
You weren’t safe.
But you had something better.
You had each other.
And even in the heart of an Empire, that was rebellion enough.
⸻
Salve! I was wondering if you could do a 501st x Fem!Reader where she can comfort the boys after they have nightmares. Cuddly and fluffy fic? Love your work! 💙🇳🇴
501st x Fem!Reader
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The war was quiet tonight, at least on this side of the stars.
Your bunk was tucked into the corner of the 501st’s temporary barracks, a little pocket of calm in a galaxy always set to burn. The lights were dim, the hum of the base a low lull, and most of the troopers were supposed to be asleep.
But you’d learned that sleep didn’t come easy to men who’d seen too much.
That’s why you stayed awake—your blankets soft and open, arms ready, heart steady.
The first to appear was Hardcase—because of course it was. Loud in everything he did except when he was hurting. You heard his footsteps even before you saw him.
“Hey,” he said sheepishly, scratching the back of his neck. “Couldn’t shut my brain off. Kept hearing the gunfire… y’know. Just noise. Dumb.”
You patted the spot beside you. “It’s not dumb.”
Hardcase flopped down like a kicked puppy, curling into your side with his head pressed against your chest. “You smell better than blaster fire,” he mumbled.
You chuckled, brushing a hand through his wild hair. “High praise.”
A few minutes later, Echo slipped in like a ghost, eyes hollow.
“Wasn’t even my nightmare,” he whispered. “It was Fives’. I heard him in his sleep.”
“Then bring him too.”
Echo looked back over his shoulder. Sure enough, Fives emerged from the shadows, rubbing his eyes.
“You’re like a kriffing magnet,” Fives grumbled, but he smiled when he saw you and Hardcase.
“Only for broken things,” you teased softly.
“You say that like it’s a bad thing,” Fives replied, nestling in beside Echo, his back brushing yours. You reached back and grabbed his hand, grounding him.
The bunk was growing crowded—but there was always room.
Kix came next, grumbling about how it wasn’t “medically advisable” for this many people to share a bunk, but you knew better.
“You’re not here for medical advice, are you?” you asked.
“…No,” he muttered, surrendering as he slid under the blanket at your feet, resting his head near your knees.
Then Appo arrived, quiet and unsure, his helmet still on.
“You can take it off,” you said gently. “You don’t have to wear the war in here.”
He hesitated… then removed it.
The look in his eyes told you everything: too many losses. Too much weight.
You pulled him down beside you. “Just for tonight, let it go.”
Jesse and Dogma came together—one cracked jokes, the other said nothing. But both of them settled close, drawn by the comfort you offered without needing to ask.
Eventually, even Rex came.
He stood at the edge of the pile like a soldier standing watch. Not ready to be vulnerable. Not yet.
“Captain?” you said softly.
His eyes flicked to yours.
You didn’t pressure him. Just opened your arm, just a little, just enough.
Rex hesitated… then stepped forward and sank to the floor beside your bunk, resting his head against your thigh. You ran your fingers through his hair, slow and steady.
No one spoke for a while. The room was warm with breath and body heat, filled with the soft sound of steady inhales.
For just a few hours, there was no war. No armor. No titles. Just tired men wrapped around someone who loved them.
You pressed your lips to the crown of Fives’ head, gave Jesse’s hand a squeeze, and reached down to cup Rex’s cheek.
“You’re safe,” you whispered. “All of you. Tonight, you’re safe.”
And the nightmares stayed away.
kind of actually soooo fucking funny that my man jung was like “I’m toast anyway they know what I’m up to” and then the ISB was like “we lost a great man and dedra meero is a rebel spy”