Summary: Clone Wars-era op with the Bad Batch. Jedi reader + Quinlan Vos bestie assisting the op.
⸻
If Tech had known he’d be spending the mission with two unorthodox Jedi, he might have requested recalibration for his brain implant.
Vos was already a variable he’d accounted for—reckless, talented, infuriatingly good, unpredictable. But you?
You were something else entirely.
You strolled off the gunship like the war was a camping trip, a lightsaber strapped to your hip and a ridiculous grin on your face as you greeted Wrecker with a high five mid-jump.
“Miss me, big guy?”
Wrecker beamed. “You always make it more fun!”
Vos followed close behind, flipping a thermal detonator in one hand like it was a toy. “They let you off Coruscant without me? I’m hurt.”
You glanced over your shoulder. “Please. You’d just get jealous when I steal all the glory.”
Vos grinned. “You wish.”
Tech stared. “I fail to see how this level of casualness is appropriate for a battlefield.”
You turned to him with a slow smile. “Ah, you must be Tech.”
He straightened instinctively. “Yes. You are correct.”
You offered a hand—not stiff or formal, but open, easy. There was mischief in your eyes. “I’ve read your file. You’re the one with the brains and the dry commentary.”
He hesitated before taking your hand. “That is… not inaccurate.”
You leaned in, voice low. “I like brains.”
He blinked. “As do most species. It is vital for survival.”
Vos coughed loudly behind you—possibly to hide a laugh.
Wrecker elbowed Hunter. “I like this Jedi.”
Tech ignored them, adjusting his goggles. “We are operating on a strict schedule. I’d prefer we keep distractions—”
“Lighten up, Tech,” you teased, falling into step beside him. “If you smiled any less, we’d have to start checking for signs of carbon freezing.”
“I assure you, I am functioning within optimal emotional parameters.”
You hummed thoughtfully. “Sounds lonely.”
He shot you a side glance, but your tone was playful, not unkind.
“I don’t understand you,” he muttered.
You grinned. “Most don’t. That’s half the fun.”
⸻
Later, during recon, Vos and Wrecker were off chasing a “weird energy reading,” Crosshair was perched up somewhere, and Hunter had gone ahead to secure the route. That left you and Tech crouched behind cover, scanning a Separatist outpost through the macrobinoculars.
“Y’know,” you said casually, “if you ever wanted to break all your rules and do something reckless, I’m very available.”
Tech frowned. “I don’t require your availability. This mission is already well underway.”
You stifled a laugh. “Not what I meant.”
He blinked, confused. “Was it a code? I didn’t detect one.”
You turned to him, resting your chin on your hand. “You’re cute when you’re confused.”
His ears turned slightly pink.
“I’m not confused,” he replied quickly. “Merely… recalibrating.”
You laughed again, soft and warm. “You’re fun, Tech. Even if you don’t know it.”
He didn’t reply. Just stared out at the outpost, glasses slightly fogged. Processing. Buffering.
You winked as you stood. “Come on, Brain Boy. Let’s go break some droids.”
And behind you, Tech mumbled—
“…I don’t understand you.”
But oh, he wanted to.
⸻
“Move your pretty brain, Tech!”
Your shout cut through the blaster fire as you Force-shoved a B1 battle droid clean off the ridge. The droid hit the canyon wall with a clang before falling into a satisfying silence.
Tech barely managed to duck behind the rock as two more shots ricocheted past his goggles.
“I’m attempting to calculate the terrain advantages, not—”
You dropped beside him, lightsaber humming with heat. “Flirt later, calculate less. We’re getting spicy out here.”
“I am not flirting—”
“You will be,” you said sweetly, spinning to deflect a bolt. “Just haven’t hit the right button yet.”
“Force help me,” Crosshair muttered over comms. “I’m in hell.”
Vos cackled somewhere on the ridge. “This is why I bring her on ops.”
You winked in Tech’s direction. “Besides, I like it when smart boys get flustered.”
“I am not—” he started, only to cut himself off when you leapt over the boulder and ran directly into blaster fire.
“Wait—don’t—!”
But you were already slicing through droids, movements chaotic and fluid. A little wild, a little beautiful. Vos followed behind you with a war cry and a detonator.
“Stop being reckless in combat!” Tech snapped, ducking as sparks flew overhead.
Wrecker hollered from behind cover. “She’s so cool, right?!”
Tech was still reeling from how your braid moved like a whip when you spun, when a Super Battle Droid on the ridge zeroed in on his location.
He didn’t see it. But you did.
“Tech!”
You moved fast—a leap, a slide down the gravel slope, and then a blinding crack of energy as you shoved him to the ground and blocked the bolt meant for his chest with your saber.
The shockwave sent you both tumbling behind a ledge.
For a second, there was only the buzz of his ears and the hum of your saber still hot in the air.
You looked down at him—arms braced on either side of his shoulders, breathing hard, body pressed against his.
His goggles were crooked. His heart was absolutely not functioning in optimal parameters.
“You good?” you asked, voice low.
“I…” Tech swallowed. “Yes. Thanks to you.”
You leaned a little closer. “That’s two times I’ve saved your life this week. You might owe me.”
“I… suppose I do.”
You smiled. “We’ll figure out the payment plan later.”
Vos dropped beside you, covered in soot and grinning. “I saw that. That was hot. I’d kiss you for that save.”
“Why are they like this,” the sniper muttered and then glanced over to Tech. “Can’t believe I’m third-wheeling a courtship in the middle of a kriffing warzone.”
“Fourth-wheeling,” Vos corrected. “I’m emotionally invested.”
You grinned as you helped Tech up. “Don’t worry, brain boy. They’re only teasing”
You patted his chest, then turned back toward the canyon, saber blazing back to life.
“We’ll talk later. Right now? Droids first. Feelings… maybe after explosives.”
And then you were off again, a whirlwind of Force and fire.
Tech stood frozen, fingers twitching at his belt.
Vos clapped him on the back. “Welcome to the mess, genius.”
⸻
You were sitting cross-legged on the Marauder’s ramp, tossing pebbles at Wrecker’s helmet while he tried to balance a crate on one hand.
Vos was beside you, chewing on dried fruit like it was the best thing he’d ever tasted. He elbowed you after a particularly impressive throw.
“You ever gonna tell Tech you’re into him?” Vos asked, mouth half-full.
You smirked. “And ruin the comedy of him trying to math his way through courtship? No thanks.”
Wrecker laughed. “He is actin’ weird lately. Said I was being ‘emotionally invasive’ for askin’ if he liked you!”
Vos grinned. “He’s got it bad.”
“And I am loving it,” you replied, spinning a pebble in your fingers. “Every time I flirt, he acts like I just challenged his understanding of gravity.”
Right on cue, Tech walked down the ramp, datapad clutched in hand, goggles slightly askew. He stopped in front of you, cleared his throat.
“I… performed a series of diagnostics regarding interpersonal compatibility,” he said, utterly serious. “According to twenty-seven factors—including personality, adaptability, combat style, and dietary preferences—we are a statistically promising match.”
Vos dropped his fruit.
You blinked. “Did you just… scientifically determine that we should date?”
“I—well—yes,” Tech said. “But only if you’re interested. Which—based on your heart rate and verbal cues—I suspect you might be.”
Vos exploded into laughter, falling back on the ramp.
“Oh my Maker,” he wheezed. “You absolute nerd.”
You grinned at Tech. “That might be the most romantic math I’ve ever heard.”
Tech pushed his glasses up. “I thought you’d appreciate the data.”
“I do,” you said, standing and brushing your hands off. “But next time, try leading with something like: ‘I think you’re beautiful and I’d like to kiss you.’”
Tech turned crimson. “I—yes. Noted.”
“Relax,” you teased, stepping closer. “I’m not gonna kiss you.”
His expression fell a little.
“Yet,” you added.
From behind the crates, Crosshair exhaled loudly. “Maker, just kiss already or go back to sexually tense banter. This is painful.”
You turned. “Aw, Cross. You jealous you’re not the one I’m throwing pebbles at?”
He scowled. “I’d rather be shot.”
Vos stood and slung an arm around your shoulders. “Honestly, same.”
You nudged him. “You’re just mad you’re not the prettiest Jedi in the room anymore.”
Vos gasped dramatically. “Rude. And false.”
Tech, meanwhile, was still buffering.
“I may need to recalibrate my approach,” he murmured, mostly to himself.
“Or,” you said, tapping his datapad, “you could just ask me to spend time with you. No variables required.”
He paused, then looked up at you, eyes suddenly very soft.
“…Would you like to accompany me on a walk through the canyon ridge at 1900 hours? Statistically, it would be—”
You leaned in, smirking. “Careful, Tech. That almost sounded like a date.”
He adjusted his goggles. “I was… hoping it would be.”
Vos made a gagging noise. Crosshair muttered something that sounded suspiciously like, “nerds.”
And you?
You just smiled.
⸻
1900 hours hit, and you were waiting by the canyon overlook, robes loose and windswept, arms crossed like you hadn’t just spent twenty minutes trying to decide if you looked “dateable.”
You sensed him before you saw him—Tech’s unique mental frequency, all angles and tension and humming data flow. He approached precisely on time, goggles slightly askew, holding… a field scanner?
“Is that for scanning terrain,” you asked, grinning, “or just a really dramatic way to say you’re nervous?”
“I—” Tech adjusted his grip. “It is a tool for environmental analysis and—possibly—also distraction.”
You snorted. “So yes.”
The two of you walked along the ridge trail, the orange twilight casting soft shadows on the canyon walls. Silence settled, not uncomfortable, just… charged. Like the pause before a storm—or a kiss.
“So,” you said finally, “have you been practicing your flirting?”
Tech looked over, hesitant. “I did… research.”
“Oh no.”
He cleared his throat. “Your presence activates all of my… neurological functions.”
You blinked. “That… was almost sexy.”
“Almost?”
“You lost me at neurological.”
Tech looked disappointed. You reached over, brushing your fingers over his arm. “Don’t worry, I like the weird.”
“I am attempting,” he said, more softly this time, “to understand how to… express what I feel.”
You tilted your head. “And what do you feel?”
He turned toward you fully now. “I feel that your presence both stabilizes and disorients me. That your actions on the battlefield—reckless though they are—captivate me. That your voice lingers in my thoughts long after transmission ends. And that when you saved my life… I was afraid, not of death, but of losing the chance to tell you any of this.”
Your breath caught.
“…Tech,” you said, gently.
“I am aware,” he rushed to add, “that emotions are complex, and Jedi traditionally—”
You stepped forward and kissed him.
It wasn’t long or intense, just a warm press of lips. Steady. Sure.
When you pulled back, his goggles were fogged.
“Shutting up works too,” you whispered.
From somewhere nearby, a stick snapped.
You both turned just in time to hear Vos swear and fall directly out of a bush.
“I WASN’T SPYING,” he yelled.
“Maker above—” Tech muttered.
Crosshair’s voice crackled over the comm: “I told him you’d hear his dumbass breathing.”
Wrecker’s voice came next: “I think it’s sweet! Tech’s got a girlfriend!”
Vos was on his feet, brushing himself off. “Sorry—carry on. Proud of you, Tech. Didn’t think you had it in you.”
You groaned. “I am going to murder all of you.”
Tech looked dazed.
“Can we… do that again?” he asked quietly.
You smiled, tugging him close. “Yeah. This time with less audience.”
⸻
“Why’d you bring me flowers?” you asked, squinting up at Wrecker from the cot in your makeshift corner of the Marauder. You’d twisted your ankle on the last mission—nothing dramatic, just stupid—and now he’d shown up with a bouquet of local wildflowers. Half of them were wilted. One had a bug.
He scratched the back of his head, sheepish grin spreading wide. “’Cause you got hurt. And you like pretty things.”
“You carried me bridal-style over your shoulder,” you reminded him, raising a brow. “Pretty sure that’s enough.”
Wrecker snorted. “You weigh nothin’. I carry crates heavier than you.”
“Gee, thanks.”
He chuckled and plopped down beside you, taking up half the damn space as usual. Your thigh touched his and neither of you moved away. You hadn’t for weeks. Months, maybe. The casual touches had crept in like sunlight through cracked blinds—innocent, warm, and unavoidable.
You’d always loved Wrecker’s energy. Loud, wild, reckless. But lately, you were noticing things you hadn’t before. The way he’d glance at you when he thought you weren’t looking. The way his laugh softened when you were the one making him smile. The way his hand would linger a little longer when helping you up.
You weren’t stupid. You knew what it was.
But… you didn’t know what he wanted.
“You okay?” he asked suddenly, voice gentler than you expected.
You blinked. “Yeah. Why?”
“You got that thinky look. The one you get when you’re worried I’ll jump off something too high again.”
You laughed. “That’s a fair worry.”
He leaned closer. “You sure you’re okay? ‘Cause, uh… I’ve been meanin’ to ask you somethin’.”
Your heart stuttered. “Shoot.”
He rubbed his palms against his thighs. “We been friends a long time, yeah? And it’s been real good. I like you. A lot. Like, a lot a lot. More than just the regular ‘I’d body slam a bounty hunter for you’ kinda like.”
You stared at him.
“I think I like you best when you’re just with me and no one else.”
“You, uh…” he swallowed. “You ever think about us? Bein’ more?”
You looked at Wrecker—your best friend. Your chaos. Your safety.
“I do,” you said softly. “I think about it. All the time.”
His eyes lit up like a sunrise. “Yeah?!”
You laughed, heart fluttering. “Yeah.”
“Well, kriff,” he grinned, scooping you into a hug so strong it knocked the air out of your lungs, “you should’ve said something sooner!”
“I didn’t know if you felt the same!” you wheezed, still laughing as your ankle throbbed in protest.
He looked at you with a soft kind of wonder. “You’re my favorite person, y’know that?”
You touched his cheek, grinning. “Wrecker?”
“Yeah?”
“You’re mine too.”
⸻
Warnings: injuries, suggestive content,l
⸻
The jungle was thick with steam and smoke, the scent of burning metal and charred flesh choking the air. Delta Squad’s evac had been shot down. You were the only survivor from your recon team. Boss had taken command of the op—naturally.
“Stick close,” he ordered, his voice rasping through the modulator, sharp like durasteel dragged across stone.
You rolled your eyes, already moving. “I didn’t survive a crashing gunship to get babysat by a buckethead.”
He turned just enough to look at you, that T-shaped visor catching the fading light. “I don’t babysit. I lead.”
“And I slice,” you shot back, shouldering your pack. “Let me do my job.”
“We already have a slicer” he respond, before he turned forward again. But you could feel him watching you—tracking your movements with that eerie commando focus. It had been two days of this now: evading patrols, patching up your leg, sleeping back-to-back under foliage so thick you couldn’t see the stars.
Tonight, it rained. Not the cooling kind—this rain was warm, heavy, pressing the jungle into silence. You sat in a hollowed-out tree, tuning your equipment while Boss kept watch. When he finally returned to your makeshift camp, you didn’t look up.
“How bad’s your leg?”
“Fine.”
“You’re limping harder than yesterday.”
“You’re observant. I’m touched.”
“Stop being stubborn,” he muttered, kneeling in front of you. His gauntlet brushed your knee as he examined the torn fabric and swelling underneath. “You need rest.”
“You need to stop looking at me like that,” you whispered.
Silence stretched. You met his gaze, even if you couldn’t see his eyes behind the visor. Something heavy passed between you. Maybe it was the danger. Maybe it was the exhaustion. Or maybe it was the way he’d hauled you out of that wreckage, swearing he’d get you home.
“You shouldn’t be here,” he said finally, voice lower. “You’re not one of us.”
“No. I’m not. But I’m here now.” You leaned closer, your voice daring. “And so are you.”
His breath caught, almost imperceptible beneath the rain. Then—he reached up and disengaged the seal on his helmet. The hiss of depressurization was drowned out by your heartbeat.
And when he took it off, you saw him—finally. Tanned skin streaked with grime and blood. Jaw tight. Eyes locked on yours like they were burning through you.
“Tell me to stop,” he said.
You didn’t. You leaned in.
He kissed you hard—like everything he’d been holding back had snapped. His gloves were rough on your skin, tugging you closer, anchoring you to him like he was afraid you’d disappear. You curled your fingers into the collar of his armor and pulled until you could feel the heat of his body beneath the plastoid.
“I’ve got one night,” he murmured against your throat. “One night before I’m a soldier again.”
“Then make it count,” you whispered.
And he did.
⸻
The war would keep going. The Republic would keep taking. But in a jungle no one would remember, under a rain no one would care about, Boss let himself be something other than a number—and you let yourself fall for a soldier who wasn’t supposed to love.
⸻
The camp was quiet now. The chaos had died down into murmurs, tired footsteps, the clatter of armor being stripped off and stacked beside sleeping mats. She wandered through it like a ghost, feeling out of place but… not unwelcome. Not entirely.
She spotted him near the supply crates, still in his blacks, helmet off, hair mussed from the fight. Rex looked up as she approached, his posture straightening slightly like muscle memory kicked in before the rest of him caught up.
“Hey,” she said.
He didn’t smile, but his expression softened—just enough.
“Didn’t expect you to come find me,” Rex said. “Figured you’d be off the minute your boots cooled.”
“Yeah, well…” she kicked a rock with the toe of her boot. “Running hasn’t exactly worked out great for me lately.”
Rex folded his arms, waiting.
“I wanted to check on you,” she added. “See how you were holding up. After today.”
“After everything, you mean?”
She met his eyes. “Yeah.”
There was a long pause, not uncomfortable, just… heavy. She leaned against a crate beside him and crossed her arms to match his posture, head tilted up to the stars.
“You still got that scar?” she asked casually. “The one on your jaw. From the skirmish on Felucia?”
He gave her a look. “You remember that?”
“I remember a lot of things about you, Captain.”
She offered him a crooked smirk, the kind she used to wear like armor. Playful. A little bold. A spark in the rubble.
Rex didn’t return the smile—but the way he looked at her made her throat tighten.
“You think flirting with me is going to fix this?” he asked quietly.
She lost her grin.
“No,” she said. “It’s just… easier. Than everything else.”
His shoulders dropped a little, some tension leaving his frame even if the rest stayed knotted. He didn’t look angry. Just… tired.
“I missed you,” she admitted, more earnest than she meant to be. “Even when I was running. Especially then.”
Rex looked down at her—really looked—and she saw the conflict written across his face like ink on skin.
“I didn’t know where you were,” he said, voice rough. “Didn’t know if you were alive. If you were working for the Chancellor still, if you were working for anyone. It’s hard to miss someone when you don’t know if they’re already gone.”
That one hit. She nodded, eyes flicking away for a moment.
“I was scared,” she said. “Of what I was doing. Who I was becoming. Of what you’d see if you looked at me too long.”
“I saw someone who gave a damn,” Rex said. “Still do.”
She looked at him then, and for a moment, everything else—Palpatine, the Council, Cody, the kid—blurred out into silence.
He stepped closer, just slightly. She didn’t move away.
“I’m not saying it’s fixed,” he said lowly. “But I’m still here.”
She reached out, fingertips brushing his hand, testing the water like she was scared it would burn her. He let her.
“I missed you too,” she whispered.
They stood there for a while, in that silence. The tension still coiled, still unresolved—but different now. Softer.
The kind that might, with time, unravel into something real.
⸻
The shuttle touched down on Coruscant with a low hum, metallic feet clunking into the hangar platform. The ramp hissed open, revealing the cold blue glow of the Senate District skyline in the distance. She breathed it in—familiar and suffocating all at once.
Rex had disappeared into a sea of 501st troopers. Anakin and Ahsoka had gone to debrief. The kid—the kid—was somewhere out there now, no longer hers to protect, though the phantom weight of responsibility still clung to her shoulders like wet armor.
And Cody…
Cody had been quiet the whole way back. Not cold, not rude—just restrained. Professional. Distant.
She knew that look. It was the same one she wore when she was hurt but too proud to bleed out in public.
So she went looking for him.
The GAR barracks were quiet this time of day, most men off-duty or in mess. She spotted Cody’s armor first, piled neat outside a side room, the door half-cracked. She knocked once—light—and pushed the door further open.
Cody was sitting on the edge of his bunk, bare-chested, arms braced on his knees, deep in thought. He looked up, startled at first, and then his mouth pulled into something that wasn’t quite a smile.
“You look like you’re about to deliver bad news,” he said, voice low and wry.
“I’m not,” she said. “I just wanted to talk.”
He nodded, gestured to the spot beside him on the bunk.
They sat in silence for a beat. The air between them tense but not hostile.
“I don’t want things to be weird,” she said. “Between us.”
“Kind of hard for them not to be,” Cody replied, tone not sharp, just… tired.
“I know,” she said, rubbing the back of her neck. “But I’m trying. I’m done running. I just—I want to fix things. Or at least make it so we can be in the same room without all the oxygen leaving it.”
Cody huffed a small breath. “You don’t need to fix things. Just stop acting like you can flirt your way out of every mess you cause.”
That one stung, but she accepted it.
“I know,” she said softly. “I know.”
He turned to her. His eyes didn’t hold anger. They held ache. And something else—something deeper. Something he wasn’t saying.
She opened her mouth to say more—
—and the door slammed open.
“There you are!” Quinlan Vos strode in like a tide, full of unfiltered charisma and absolutely no awareness of personal boundaries.
Obi-Wan followed, much slower, brow furrowed with concern. “Apologies for the intrusion, but we’ve been looking for you.”
Cody stood, arms folding tightly across his chest, clearly not thrilled.
She didn’t move from the bed. “I’m a little busy.”
“So it seems,” Obi-Wan remarked mildly, eyes flicking between her and Cody.
Quinlan plopped down on Cody’s empty chair like he owned the place. “The Council wants to talk. They’ve got questions. About Palpatine. About the kid. About you and your… pattern of disappearing.”
She rolled her eyes. “Why do I feel like I’m constantly on trial.”
“Because you kind of are,” Quinlan said with a grin.
Obi-Wan sighed. “We’re not your enemies. But we do need to understand why you made the choices you did.”
She stood up now, shoulders stiff. “And I’m trying to explain those choices—to the people who matter to me. But you keep showing up like two banthas at a tea party.”
Cody, behind her, almost smiled.
“Can it wait?” she asked Obi-Wan directly.
He hesitated.
“…Fine,” he said at last. “But not long.”
He and Quinlan left with far more noise than they entered.
She sighed and turned back to Cody.
“…See what I mean? Never a quiet moment.”
Cody studied her, his expression unreadable. “You don’t owe them your soul.”
“No,” she said. “But maybe I owe them a piece of the truth. Just… not before I say what I need to say to you.”
Cody gave her a slow nod. “Then say it.”
She looked at him, suddenly overwhelmed by the words that clawed to the surface.
But for once—maybe for the first time—she let them stay unspoken. Let them sit there in the space between them, heavy and real and understood.
The door had long since shut behind Obi-Wan and Quinlan, the echo of their presence still lingering. But now, it was quiet again. Just her and Cody. And the weight of what she hadn’t said.
She looked up at him, heart hammering harder than it had in any firefight.
“Cody,” she began, voice low, almost unsure. “I need to say something. And it’s not fair, but it’s honest.”
He raised a brow, still standing a few feet away. Guarded, but listening.
“I love you.”
That stopped him. His arms slowly uncrossed.
“But—” she continued before he could react, “I love Rex too.”
Cody’s face didn’t shift. Didn’t wince. Didn’t soften. Just—stilled.
She took a step closer. “And I don’t know what that says about me, or what it means, but I’m tired of pretending I only feel one thing at a time. I tried to choose. I did. But every time I think I have, I see the other one and it just—breaks something in me.”
He let out a long, quiet breath.
“I’m not asking you to be okay with it,” she added quickly. “I’m not even asking you for anything. I just needed to say it. To stop lying about how I feel and hoping it’ll get easier if I just shove it down hard enough.”
A long silence passed.
Then Cody finally spoke. “You’re right. It’s not fair.”
She nodded. “I know.”
“But it’s real.” His voice had softened, barely above a whisper. “And I’d rather have your truth than someone else’s lie.”
Tears burned her eyes, sudden and hot. She didn’t cry. Not for years. But this—this kind of vulnerability? This was harder than bleeding out in the field.
Cody stepped forward, gently touching her cheek with a calloused hand. “You deserve a love that doesn’t make you choose.”
She leaned into his touch, even as guilt twisted inside her.
“Rex deserves to hear it too,” Cody added after a beat. “But for now—just… thank you. For being honest.”
⸻
The Jedi Council chamber was quiet in the way only heavy judgment could make it.
Sunlight filtered through the high windows, casting long shadows across the room where the Masters sat in their semi-circle. Windu, Yoda, Plo Koon, Ki-Adi-Mundi, Luminara, Kit Fisto, and Obi-Wan.
She stood in the center, still dressed in half of her mission gear, the other half forgotten in the chaos of being summoned straight off the landing pad.
Mace Windu leaned forward first. “We appreciate your cooperation, though your presence here is long overdue.”
“I didn’t think I was a priority,” she said dryly.
“You’ve been a priority since the moment you vanished with a Force-sensitive child under mysterious circumstances,” Ki-Adi-Mundi snapped.
She raised her chin. “I didn’t kidnap him. I saved him.”
“From whom?” Luminara pressed. “From the Chancellor himself?”
“No,” she lied smoothly. “From a bounty. Someone—anonymous—put a price on the kid’s head. I took the job, found the kid, couldn’t go through with it. So I ran.”
Windu’s gaze was steel. “You expect us to believe a bounty hunter with personal access to the Chancellor just happened to take that contract?”
“I was close to Palpatine,” she admitted. “He trusted me. I never asked why. But I’m not loyal to him—not anymore. I saw enough to know I was a pawn. I just didn’t know what kind of game.”
“And the child?” Yoda asked softly.
“I gave him up. To the Republic. He’s safer now than he ever was with me. But I won’t apologize for keeping him alive.”
Kit Fisto watched her with new eyes. Quieter than before. Maybe… less suspicious. Maybe not.
“You told me once you feared the Chancellor,” Windu said, looking at her directly. “Do you still?”
“I fear what he’s capable of,” she said. “But I fear myself more. I made too many decisions in his shadow. I want to start making my own.”
The room was silent for a long moment.
Then Yoda turned to the others. “Much darkness clouds the future, but truth… glimpses of it, I sense in her words.”
Windu nodded. “We will deliberate. In the meantime, you are not to leave the planet. Is that understood?”
“Crystal,” she said, and turned to walk out, her heart thudding.
She had told some truth, enough to avoid chains—but not enough to put the game to rest. Not yet.
⸻
The summons came before sunrise.
No official escort this time. Just a short, encrypted message on her private channel—a voice she knew too well, cold and commanding:
“Come. Now.”
She hadn’t slept anyway. After the Council interrogation, after saying too much to Cody—and not enough to Rex—her nerves were frayed like wires sparking against metal.
The Senate building was quiet when she arrived, its corridors dim and eerie. Palpatine’s chambers were even darker—lit only by the soft red of Coruscanti dawn bleeding through heavy curtains and the low hum of security panels locking behind her.
He was waiting, seated in his throne-like chair, hands folded, hood drawn low over his brow.
“You lied to the Council,” he said without preamble. His tone held no accusation—only satisfaction.
She didn’t respond.
“You said nothing of my involvement. Not a single hint. You protected me.” A faint smile curled at the edges of his mouth. “That kind of loyalty is… rare.”
She shifted her weight, unsettled. “I didn’t do it for you.”
“But you did it well.” He stood slowly, walking toward her with quiet, measured steps. “The Jedi are grasping at shadows. And now they trust you just enough to leave their guard down. Perfect positioning, wouldn’t you say?”
“I didn’t come here to be your spy.”
He chuckled. “No. You came here to survive. And you’ve done that—exceptionally.”
She said nothing, jaw tight.
Palpatine clasped his hands behind his back. “The child you so kindly spared… he will serve a greater purpose than you could ever imagine. The Force hums in him—volatile, angry, raw. He will be an excellent assassin one day.”
Her throat went dry. “He’s not a weapon.”
“He’s an asset,” he corrected coolly.
“He has a name,” she snapped, louder than she meant to. “Kes. His name is Kes.”
Palpatine paused. Then, slowly, he turned to face her fully. “Names,” he said, voice lower now, more dangerous. “Names are tools. Just like loyalty. Just like you.”
Her hands curled into fists.
“I spared him,” she said, steadying her voice. “I hid him. I protected him. That doesn’t make me loyal to you.”
“No,” he said, almost fondly. “But it proves you can be used. Even against your will.”
She flinched. Because it was true.
Palpatine leaned closer, his presence overwhelming. “The boy will be trained. Molded. And when the time comes, he will take a life with his own hands. You will see.”
She met his gaze. “Over my dead body.”
The Sith Lord only smiled. “If necessary.”
⸻
She didn’t remember much of the walk back from the Senate building. The city buzzed around her, speeder traffic whipping by overhead, durasteel walkways trembling with the movement of life, but she moved through it all like a ghost.
Palpatine’s words still burned behind her eyes.
He will take a life with his own hands. You will see.
No. No, not if she could help it.
She barely registered her fists slamming against the barracks door until it opened. Rex stood there, still half-dressed in blacks and greys, fresh from training. His expression shifted from surprise to something more serious the moment he saw her face.
“I need to talk to you,” she said, pushing past him into the room.
He closed the door slowly behind her. “I figured.”
She paced the floor, hands on her hips. “I told Cody I loved him.”
Rex blinked, stiffening slightly. “Okay…”
She turned toward him, eyes sharp, voice louder now—heated. “And I love you, too. I love you, Rex. Not in some vague, flirty way. I mean it. I feel it in my chest like a damn explosion.”
He stared at her, caught off guard. “You’re angry.”
“I am angry,” she said, voice cracking. “But not at you.”
He stepped closer, expression softening as he tried to piece her together. “What’s wrong with you?”
Her mouth opened. Closed. The breath that came out after was shaky, jagged. “It’s the kid. It’s Kes. I don’t trust he’s safe.”
“I thought—he’s with the Republic now, right?”
She gave a bitter laugh. “Safe? From him?” Her voice dropped. “He wants to train him. Turn him into some twisted weapon. He called him an asset, Rex.”
Rex’s brows furrowed. “Who?”
“He’s not a tool. He’s a child. And I think… I might be the only person who can actually keep him safe.”
Rex looked at her for a long time, something unreadable in his eyes. “You still working for the Chancellor?”
“No,” she said quietly. “Not in the way I used to. But I can’t just walk away from this, not now. I know too much. And I know what he’s planning.”
Rex reached out, gently taking her arm. “Then what are you going to do?”
She looked at his hand, then into his eyes.
“I don’t know,” she whispered. “But whatever it is… I don’t think I’m coming back from it.”
⸻
The barracks were still, the artificial lights dimmed to simulate night. Most of the 501st were out or asleep, and for once, no one was shouting over a game of sabacc or sparring in the hall.
Rex sat on the edge of his bunk, elbows on his knees, her words echoing in his skull like distant artillery.
I love you, Rex.
He scrubbed a hand over his face, jaw tight. There were thousands of things he wanted to feel about it—pride, warmth, something like victory. But it came with a storm he didn’t know how to name.
She’d told Cody the same thing. She didn’t want just one of them.
He could’ve handled that. Maybe. They were soldiers—brothers—used to sharing everything. But this wasn’t a blaster or a battlefield.
This was her.
What kept him anchored to the floor, instead of pacing the room or sending a message to Cody to yell at him for no good reason, was the other thing she said. The thing that mattered more than love or jealousy or pride.
He called him an asset. I think I’m the only one who can keep him safe.
Kes. The kid. The Force-sensitive child she’d stolen, protected, run with, lied for.
And now she was talking like she’d disappear again. Like she had to.
Rex leaned back, exhaling slowly, head resting against the cool durasteel wall. He stared at the ceiling, mind ticking over the gaps. She hadn’t just been a pawn. Not really. She’d been close to Palpatine. Trusted. Useful. And now she was unraveling from the inside out, spiraling between duty, guilt, and love.
He didn’t blame her for loving Cody.
Didn’t even blame her for loving him, if he was being honest.
But what was killing him was the way she looked when she said she might not come back. Like it was already decided.
Rex sat forward again, elbows digging into his thighs. He could still smell her on his skin—warmth and dust and a hint of whatever Corellian brandy she’d drowned herself in last night.
He didn’t know what scared him more.
That she’d leave again.
Or that she wouldn’t.
And when she finally did make her move—when she ran headfirst into whatever hell she was walking toward—he wasn’t sure if he’d chase after her, or let her go.
But he was sure of one thing.
She didn’t have to face it alone.
Not if he had anything to say about it.
⸻
Cody stood in the shadow of the veranda outside the Jedi Temple. It was late. Not quite night, not quite morning—the sky caught in that soft, silver pre-dawn hue. And Coruscant, the city that never truly slept, hummed below like it didn’t care about anyone’s heartbreak.
He hadn’t gone back to his quarters. Couldn’t. Not after what she’d said.
I love you.
And then—I love Rex too.
He leaned forward, arms braced on the railing, the wind tugging at the edges of his armour.
The words weren’t what haunted him. Not really. He knew her. Knew how fiercely she loved—how wildly her loyalty curved into everything she touched. Of course she’d fall for Rex too. Of course it wouldn’t be clean, or easy, or fair.
He didn’t even blame her for it.
But it stung, deeper than blaster fire. Not because she loved them both—but because even now, after everything, she still looked like she was halfway out the door. Like her mind had already started packing bags she didn’t plan to unpack again.
Kes.
Cody’s fingers flexed on the railing.
The boy’s name hadn’t been spoken when she’d told her lie to the Council—but he’d heard the truth in her voice, beneath every beat of it. She’d kept him alive. Protected him. Cared for him in a way no bounty hunter had any right to.
Palpatine’s orders or not, she’d chosen the kid. Chosen to lie, run, risk everything.
That terrified him.
Because if she was willing to walk away from him for the kid… she’d do it again. In a heartbeat.
And he didn’t know if he could survive her leaving twice.
He exhaled slowly, the wind catching the breath like smoke. He could see himself from the outside—Commander Cody, poised, sharp, unreadable. A model soldier.
But inside? He was chaos.
He wanted to go to her room. Say something—anything. Ask her to choose him. Or don’t. Or promise to come back. Or stay.
But he wouldn’t beg.
She had enough people trying to pull her in opposite directions. She didn’t need another weight on her shoulders.
Still… he couldn’t help but wonder if she was thinking about him now. If she was lying in bed, staring at the ceiling, just as lost.
Don’t run again, he thought. Not from this. Not from me.
And if she did?
He’d find her.
And bring her home himself.
⸻
The air in her apartment was heavy.
It was always quiet before a storm. Before chaos. Before death.
She moved like a shadow, deliberate and silent, pulling her gear piece by piece from beneath the floorboards. Her knives. Her blaster. Her comm jammer. Her datapad with every possible layout of the facility burned into its memory.
She was going in alone.
There was no other way.
Kes was being held somewhere deep within the restricted levels of the Republic Intelligence Annex—a place so far off the grid it didn’t technically exist. He hadn’t shown up on any of the usual rosters. No holos. No files. Just whispers. Rumors.
She didn’t trust anyone else to get him out.
And the Chancellor… Palpatine.
She didn’t care if it was madness. She didn’t care if it meant her own death. The moment he’d looked at Kes like he was a tool, a weapon, an asset, something in her broke.
She wasn’t a Jedi. She didn’t have to play by their rules.
She’d already made up her mind.
The door panel chirped, breaking the silence.
She froze.
One hand gripped the vibroblade still resting on the kitchen bench. Her heart pounded hard, but her face remained unreadable.
Another chime. This time more insistent.
She took a breath. Stepped toward the door.
It slid open.
And there they were.
Cody. Rex.
She should’ve known.
Both of them stood just outside, dressed like they hadn’t had time to change out of their armor. Faces hard, eyes flicking past her to the gear stacked on the counter behind her.
Cody spoke first. “You’re leaving.”
She didn’t answer. Not with words. She turned her back on them both, walking toward her gear like she hadn’t just been caught mid-plan.
“I don’t have time to explain,” she said as she fastened her utility belt.
“We figured,” Rex said. “So explain on the way.”
“No.” Her voice was sharp, steel underneath. “You don’t get to follow me this time.”
Cody stepped inside. “We didn’t follow you. We found you. Big difference.”
She spun, eyes locking onto Cody. “You don’t get to be the voice of reason right now, Cody. Not when I’m going to kill your Chancellor.”
The silence hit like a thermal detonator.
Rex looked at her like he hadn’t expected to hear her say it aloud.
Cody didn’t flinch.
“I’m going to get Kes out,” she said, quieter now. “And then I’m going to end this. Before it starts.”
“You think assassinating the Chancellor is going to stop what’s coming?” Rex’s voice was tight. “Do you even know what that’ll unleash?”
“I don’t care,” she snapped. “He’s using that kid. He’s manipulating all of us. And the longer I wait, the worse it gets.”
Cody took a single step closer. Not threatening—just there. Solid. Like he always was.
“You’ll die,” he said. “You know that, right?”
She nodded. “I made peace with that a long time ago.”
Rex stepped forward now, voice low, fierce. “Then let us help. Let us at least stand with you.”
She stared at them both. Her throat tightened.
She wanted to say yes. Stars, she wanted to say yes so badly.
But—
“If either of you die because of me,” she said, “I’ll never forgive myself.”
“We’re soldiers,” Cody said. “We’ve already made peace with dying.”
“But not with you dying alone,” Rex added.
The silence stretched long. Her eyes burned.
She turned away, back to her weapons. She was shaking, just slightly.
And then… she spoke.
“No.”
They both stilled.
She faced them now, eyes sharper than either had ever seen. “I can’t let either of you come with me.”
“Why?” Rex asked. “Because it’s dangerous? We live in danger. That’s not an excuse.”
“It’s not about danger,” she said. Her voice cracked, just slightly. “It’s about you. About him. About both of you. I love you—both of you—and I will not be the reason your stories end in a hallway you were never meant to be in.”
Cody stepped closer. “That’s not your choice to make.”
“It is this time,” she said. “Because if I lose either of you, I don’t just lose a soldier. I lose the only damn thing I’ve got left in this kriffed-up galaxy.”
Neither of them spoke.
And then, gently, she picked up her blaster, slid it into its holster, and looked at them for what might’ve been the last time.
“You don’t have to understand it,” she said. “Just… let me do this. Alone.”
She didn’t wait for an answer. She didn’t want to hear them fight her on it.
She just stepped out the back door, into the night.
And left them both behind.
⸻
She didn’t go to the facility alone.
Not exactly.
She had a contact.
Someone who didn’t care for the Republic, the Jedi, or much of anything beyond credits and personal satisfaction.
Cad Bane.
She hated him.
He’d say the feeling was mutual.
But she also knew he’d show up if the job was dirty enough, personal enough—and promised to make things just complicated enough to be interesting.
So, when she stood in the shadows near the Coruscant underworld comm relay, keyed in the frequency and said nothing but “I’m cashing it in”, there was a beat of silence, followed by his dry, smug voice.
“Took you long enough. Where’s the target?”
She sent him the encrypted drop zone coordinates, along with a note:
If I’m not there by this time tomorrow, I’m dead. Take the kid somewhere safe.
He didn’t respond. That meant he understood.
She climbed the side of the Republic Intelligence Annex like she had done it a thousand times before.
Because she had.
Not this exact building, no. But enough like it. Enough to know how their sensor blind spots layered. Enough to know the door panels ran off an old auxiliary power line she could override with a reprogrammed comlink. Enough to slip past the outer perimeter before anyone ever saw her coming.
The inside was colder. Cleaner. Sharp-edged metal and flickering overhead lights. It wasn’t meant to feel human. It was meant to strip identity. The place was surgical in its cruelty.
She moved like smoke. Swift. Silent. Lethal.
Floor by floor, she moved through the corridors.
Until she saw it.
The hallway. The black-glass door with the lock system coded to bioscans. The child’s name wasn’t on any sign, but she knew he was behind it.
She cracked her knuckles, pulled a thumb-sized detonator from her belt, and slipped it into the seam of the scanner.
A flicker. A soft click. And then—
Boom.
The door gave.
She sprinted in through smoke and static.
There he was.
Kes.
Slumped on the floor, eyes wide, body curled up like he was used to expecting violence. His force signature was alive—but dimmed. Buried.
She dropped to her knees and pulled him into her arms.
He looked up at her. “You came.”
“Of course I did.”
“I thought you were dead.”
“Not yet.”
She took out a stimpak and injected it into his arm. “We have to move. Can you walk?”
He nodded. She didn’t wait. She pulled him to his feet and wrapped his small arm around her neck.
The sirens started.
Of course they did.
Guards stormed the lower halls.
Blaster fire lit up behind them, but she didn’t stop. She ran, dragging the kid through maintenance shafts, down an auxiliary lift, bursting into the speeder bay just in time to hijack a transport and shoot out into the traffic lanes above the city.
She weaved and twisted through Coruscant’s sky, sirens behind her, and a fragile hope burning in her chest.
Kes was safe.
For now.
They landed in a scrap yard on the edge of the underworld district, just near the slums. The air was thick with fuel and metal and smoke. She tucked Kes behind a decaying repulsor rig and handed him a stolen ration bar.
“If I don’t come back by tomorrow,” she said, crouching beside him, “Cad Bane will find you. He has the coordinates. You run. You survive. You hear me?”
“You’re not gonna die,” Kes whispered.
She smirked faintly. “Kid, I’ve been trying to die for years. But you… you’re different. You’ve got a future.”
She squeezed his shoulder, then vanished into the shadows.
She had one more stop to make.
And Palpatine wouldn’t see it coming.
⸻
She didn’t knock.
She didn’t need to.
The side entrance to the Chancellor’s private chambers peeled open after her third override attempt, a hiss of smoke and whirring gears inviting her into the lion’s den. Every step she took echoed like thunder through the polished marbled halls, golden-red light casting long, terrible shadows over everything.
It felt wrong.
He wasn’t supposed to be alone.
He never was.
But the throne sat empty in the center of the chamber—its occupant standing by the wide viewport, hands clasped behind his back, city lights dancing across his reflection.
“You’re late,” Palpatine said without turning.
She drew her blaster.
Didn’t speak.
Didn’t hesitate.
She fired.
The bolt twisted in midair—curved—like the space between her and him had turned to oil. It splashed against the wall, leaving a crater, and Palpatine finally turned to face her, slow and measured.
He was smiling.
“Predictable,” he whispered.
Lightning surged from his fingers before she could blink.
It hit her like a wrecking ball.
She hit the ground screaming, bones screaming with her. Her blaster flew out of reach. Her limbs convulsed—vision swimming. The pain was like drowning in fire.
“You think yourself above your role? A pawn with a little sentiment?” Palpatine hissed, walking toward her, cloak dragging behind him like smoke.
He leaned down.
“I gave you purpose. I gave you everything.”
Her hand slipped to her boot. Blade.
“You gave me rot,” she spat, and slashed.
The blade caught his cheek.
He didn’t even flinch.
But he bled.
That was enough.
He threw her across the room with a flick of his wrist. She shattered a statue. She couldn’t breathe.
The alarms began to blare.
Corrie Guard. Jedi. Everyone was coming.
“You won’t get far,” he said, voice like thunder, like prophecy. “Run, girl. Run until the stars burn out. They’ll all be hunting you now.”
She didn’t answer.
She crawled, dragged herself to her feet, one hand clutching her ribs. She didn’t even remember how she escaped—smoke bombs, a hidden exit route, a chase through skylanes with every siren screaming her name. The Guard was relentless. She saw Cody. She saw Fox. She even saw Kit—his face torn between duty and disbelief.
She didn’t have time to process it.
She just ran.
By the time she reached the rendezvous point—blood in her mouth, cloak torn, and the weight of failure dragging behind her like a corpse—Cad Bane was already there. So was Kes.
“You look like hell,” Bane drawled.
“Bite me,” she rasped, grabbing Kes’s hand. “We’re leaving.”
Bane handed her coordinates to a small craft already programmed and pre-fueled. She didn’t say thank you. He didn’t expect it.
They jumped into hyperspace an hour later.
⸻
The stars faded into the dusty pink of dawn as they crested over the hill that led to the farm.
It hadn’t changed.
Still crooked fences. Still half-dead crops. Still peace in its imperfection.
Kes looked up at her, his big eyes shadowed with exhaustion.
“Why the farm?” he asked softly.
She breathed in the air, cracked and burned and hers.
“We have our Loth cat to find,” she said.
Kes blinked. “That’s… that’s it?”
She half-smiled. “It’s as good a reason as any.”
The war had followed her.
Death had nearly claimed her.
But for now, in this quiet stretch of forgotten land, with the boy she’d risked everything for beside her, she finally let herself breathe.
Just once.
Before the storm returned.
⸻
The silence in the Jedi High Council chamber was so dense it felt like suffocation.
The doors had shut behind Master Windu with a hiss. He remained standing for a moment before stepping into the center, his brow tight with what could only be called restrained fury. Around him, the Masters sat in their usual solemn arrangement—Yoda, Obi-Wan, Plo Koon, Ki-Adi-Mundi, Shaak Ti, Kit Fisto, and the rest. The air was thick with tension, laced with the sharp edges of disbelief and bitter revelation.
“She tried to kill the Chancellor,” Ki-Adi-Mundi said first. Cold. Certain. “This is beyond treason. It’s an act of war.”
“She also escaped,” Master Shaak Ti added, her voice quieter, more contemplative. “From a secure facility. With a child Palpatine has repeatedly refused to explain.”
“The same child she risked her life to hide for months,” Kit said calmly, though his gaze flickered toward Yoda, seeking his temperature on this. “She did not kill him. She ran. Hid. Protected him.”
“She lied to this Council,” Mundi snapped. “On multiple occasions.”
“As do many who fear the truth will be used against them,” Kit countered.
Windu raised a hand. Silence reclaimed the room.
Obi-Wan leaned forward then, voice calm but lined with suspicion. “What was she doing in the Chancellor’s private tower in the first place? Without clearance. Without authorization.”
“She was summoned,” Windu answered.
That landed like a blow.
Even Yoda stirred at that, tapping his gimer stick once against the floor. “Truth, this is?”
Windu nodded once. “The Chancellor requested her presence. Privately. No report filed. No witnesses. Just hours before the attempt.”
A heavy silence followed.
“She did not go there to kill him,” Kit said. “Not originally.”
“She still tried,” Plo Koon said softly. “But perhaps not without cause.”
Yoda closed his eyes. For a moment, the ancient Jedi looked every bit as old as the war.
“Seen much, we have. But seen enough, we have not.”
“Agreed,” Windu said. “The fact that she is still alive… it complicates this. If she had truly wanted him dead, if she had planned this with precision—she wouldn’t have failed.”
“She wasn’t aiming to succeed,” Obi-Wan murmured. “She was desperate.”
“And she escaped with the child,” Shaak Ti added. “Which the Chancellor has referred to, multiple times, as an asset. Not a person.”
Yoda’s eyes opened.
“Uncover the truth, we must. Speak to the Chancellor… again, we shall.”
Mundi stood, disbelief etched across his face. “You cannot be suggesting that he is the problem.”
Yoda met his gaze.
“The Force suggests… many things.”
⸻
The barracks were quiet for once. No drills, no blaster fire, no shouting across bunks. Just the buzz of overhead lights and the low hum of Coruscant’s cityscape outside the narrow windows.
Cody sat on the edge of a durasteel bench, still in partial armor, helmet discarded at his feet. He hadn’t spoken in what felt like an hour.
Rex stood nearby, leaning against the wall, arms crossed tightly. There was a long, bitter silence between them—one that came after too many emotions had been left unsaid for far too long.
“She almost died,” Rex said finally, voice low.
“She should be dead,” Cody answered without looking at him. “Attempting to assassinate the Chancellor? Alone? That’s suicide.”
“She’s alive,” Rex replied, softer now. “But she ran. Again.”
Cody let out a tired exhale, dragging a hand through his short hair. “She always runs.”
There was no malice in his voice. Just grief.
They were quiet again before Cody finally broke it.
“You loved her.”
Rex didn’t flinch. “Yeah. You did too.”
Cody nodded once, jaw tight. “I kept telling myself it was duty. Obsession. That I could let her go. But I never really wanted to.”
Rex stared at the floor. “She told me she loved me. Right before she disappeared.”
“She told me the same.” Cody gave a humorless laugh. “Then said she wanted both of us.”
Rex looked up. Their eyes met, and for the first time, neither of them looked away.
“And if things were different?” Rex asked.
Cody shook his head. “If things were different, we wouldn’t be in this war. We wouldn’t be soldiers. She wouldn’t be a target. That kid wouldn’t be hunted.”
Silence again.
“She was trying to do the right thing,” Rex said. “Even when it meant becoming the villain in everyone’s eyes.”
“Even ours,” Cody added quietly. “And now she’s out there. Hunted. Alone. Again.”
Rex stepped forward, tension rolling off him like a crashing tide. “I want to go after her.”
“So do I,” Cody said, standing.
The two commanders stared at one another—two halves of the same loyalty.
But they both knew the truth: chasing her meant turning against everything they’d been raised to serve.
The Republic. The Jedi. The Chancellor.
Everything.
“She’s worth it,” Rex said eventually.
Cody didn’t answer right away.
But the look in his eyes said everything.
⸻
The Chancellor’s office was dimmed, blinds drawn. Only Coruscant’s dull, flickering lights spilled shadows against the walls, mixing with the warm glow of red and gold decor.
Palpatine sat with folded hands, the lines in his face calm, unreadable.
Mace Windu stood at the center of the room, flanked by Yoda and Ki-Adi-Mundi. Plo Koon lingered near the window. Kit Fisto remained closer to the rear, saying nothing, watching everything.
“She nearly assassinated you,” Windu said. “And yet you still refuse to pursue her with the full force of the Republic?”
Palpatine offered a diplomatic smile. “She was misguided. Broken. This was the action of a lost, frightened woman.”
“Frightened women don’t break into highly classified facilities with bounty hunters and walk out with a Force-sensitive child,” Ki-Adi-Mundi cut in.
“Nor do they try to kill the Supreme Chancellor,” Windu added.
“Attempt to,” Palpatine corrected softly.
The silence that followed was sharp.
“Tell us, Chancellor,” Yoda finally spoke, his voice calm but piercing. “This woman. Long known to you, she is. Trusted her, you have. But trust her still, do you?”
Palpatine’s eyes narrowed slightly. “She was once loyal. Brave. Unafraid to do what others would not. I used her, yes. But perhaps I was mistaken in believing she could survive the strain of such secrets.”
“Secrets you still refuse to share,” Kit spoke for the first time. “You gave her access to military intel. Brought her into council-level missions. And yet she was never a Jedi, never Republic command, never even vetted. Why?”
Palpatine’s expression darkened, just for a moment. “Because she was effective. Because she could go where others could not. Because she understood what was at stake.”
“And now?” Windu asked.
“She’s dangerous,” Palpatine answered flatly. “And broken. Likely unstable. If she comes for the child again, she will be dealt with accordingly.”
“The child is safe now,” Yoda said.
“Is he?” Palpatine asked mildly. “With a mark on his back and half the galaxy looking for him?”
“You put that mark on him,” Windu said. “You sent her after him to begin with.”
For a moment, silence cracked like ice between them.
Palpatine didn’t blink. “That accusation is as reckless as it is unfounded.”
“We’re done playing blind,” Kit said. “You’ve kept her under your protection long enough. Whatever game you were playing, it’s cost lives.”
Palpatine stood. “I have no more information to offer you. If she resurfaces, she will be arrested. Until then, the matter is closed.”
The Jedi exchanged glances.
But no one believed that.
Previous Chapter | Next Chapter
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.
The stars outside the cockpit stretched like silver thread.
K4 stood behind her with arms folded, posture straight as ever, while R9 whirred and beeped irritably at the navicomputer.
CT-4023—no name yet, not really—was in the back compartment, hunched over a collection of scavenged armor plates and paint canisters. The former Death Watch gear had been repainted, reshaped, stripped of its past. Now it gleamed black and silver, and he was adding gold trims by hand.
Thin lines along the gauntlets. A thin gold ring around the helmet’s visor. Lines across the chest plate that traced down to the waist, like some stylized sigil not yet realized.
Sha’rali leaned in the doorway, arms crossed. She tilted her head slightly, examining his work with a curious smirk.
“You’re getting good with that brush,” she said. “You ever consider art school?”
CT-4023 snorted softly, not looking up. “Didn’t really have elective credits in Kamino.”
“You’re making it your own. That’s important.” Her voice turned thoughtful. “But it’s missing something.”
He paused, brush held in mid-air. “What?”
She tapped the side of the helmet. “A sigil.”
“A what?”
“A mark. Something to show people who you are.” She strode in and rapped a knuckle against the chest plate. “This says ‘I’m not Death Watch.’ Good. Now it needs to say you. Your legend. Your kill mark.”
He raised an eyebrow. “That’s a little dramatic.”
“You’re in a dramatic profession.”
K4 entered, setting a tray of caf and protein ration cubes on the workbench like a disapproving butler.
“Don’t encourage her,” the droid said flatly. “She’s referring to ‘kill marks’ again. Last time, she convinced a Rodian to fight a massiff pack for aesthetic purposes.”
“That Rodian survived,” Sha’rali said.
“Barely. Missing two fingers now.”
CT-4023 chuckled, leaning back slightly. “So what are you suggesting? I kill a Nexu or something?”
Sha’rali’s grin widened. “I was thinking bigger.”
R9 gave a loud, gleeful chirp.
K4 straightened. “She means a rancor.”
CT-4023 blinked.
Sha’rali gave an exaggerated shrug. “If you want a real sigil, you’ve got to earn it. Nothing screams ‘I survived’ like carving your crest from the hide of a rancor.”
“That is an excellent way to get him killed,” K4 said without pause.
R9 let out a string of beeps, none of them polite.
“He thinks it’d be entertaining,” K4 translated.
CT-4023 glanced between the two droids, then back to Sha’rali. “You’re not serious.”
“I’m always serious,” she said. “Unless I’m not. Which is almost always.”
He shook his head. “How would you even find a rancor?”
Sha’rali turned, tapping a few keys on the ship’s console. A bounty notice flickered up on the screen, the text in rough Huttese.
BOUNTY NOTICE
Location: Vanqor
Target: Rampaging Rancor (Unauthorized Biological Transport)
Payment: 14,000 credits, alive or dead.
Bonus: Removal of damage caused to Hutt mining facility.
“Lucky day,” she said.
CT-4023 stared at her, incredulous. “You’re joking.”
“Perfect combo. Get paid and get a sigil.”
“Get killed,” K4 corrected. “Get eaten.”
R9 chirped encouragingly and rolled in a little celebratory circle.
The clone leaned back in the seat, rubbing the bridge of his nose.
“I haven’t even picked a name yet, and you want to throw me at a rancor.”
“That’s how legacies are made,” Sha’rali said. “Trial by teeth.”
He gave her a long look, then glanced at the armor he was customizing. The gold, the sleek silver lines. A life being rewritten.
“…If I die,” he muttered, “you better name me something cool.”
Sha’rali grinned like a wolf. “Deal.”
K4 sighed heavily and walked off. “This is going to end in flames and evisceration.”
Behind him, R9 beeped again—gleefully.
⸻
The ship set down hard against a craggy plateau overlooking the remains of the Hutt mining facility—scorched earth, collapsed scaffolds, and deep claw marks in durasteel walls. Sha’rali stepped off the ramp with her helmet tucked under one arm, cloak snapping behind her in the dry wind. CT-4023 followed, fully armored and now gleaming with fresh black, silver, and just enough gold to catch the sun.
R9 trailed behind, scanning the area with his photoreceptor. K4 lingered at the ramp, arms crossed.
“I do not approve of this location,” the droid muttered.
Sha’rali grinned over her shoulder. “You don’t approve of most places.”
“This one smells of feral biology and lawsuits.”
They descended into the ruins, weaving past shattered mine carts and burned-out equipment. Sha’rali crouched near a huge claw mark in a support column, then ran gloved fingers across the torn metal.
“Definitely a rancor,” she muttered. “But…”
“But what?” CT-4023 asked.
She glanced at him, then pointed toward the perimeter fence—what was left of it. Several posts had been knocked flat at an angle far too low for an adult rancor.
“It’s small. Or young.”
“Can a baby rancor really do this much damage?”
“If it’s scared enough,” she said, standing. “But if this is the one that got loose from transport, it’s barely out of its nesting pen. Hardly worth a fight.”
He frowned. “So no sigil?”
Sha’rali’s smirk returned. “You don’t earn your legacy punching toddlers. We’ll find you a real beast.” She tossed him a wink. “For now, let’s bag this one and get paid.”
A low growl interrupted her.
They both turned. From the remains of a collapsed control station emerged the rancor—gray-skinned, covered in soot and oil, no taller than Sha’rali’s shoulder. The creature bellowed a shrill, unsure roar and pawed at the ground with thick, oversized claws.
“…Adorable,” Sha’rali whispered.
“Not the word I’d use,” CT-4023 muttered, raising his blaster.
Before either of them moved, a sound cracked across the ruin—a slow, deliberate clap.
“Now that was real sweet. But I don’t think that beast belongs to either of you.”
Both bounty hunter and clone whirled.
Cad Bane stood atop a rusted crane boom above them, wide-brimmed hat casting long shadows, twin blasters already drawn and idle at his sides.
R9 emitted a rapid stream of hostile beeping.
Sha’rali narrowed her eyes. “Bane.”
“Sha’rali,” he said, voice smooth and mocking. “Still making a mess of the galaxy one body at a time?”
“Still dressing like an antique?”
He chuckled. “You got jokes. Still running with droids and damaged goods, I see.” His glowing red eyes flicked to CT-4023. “Or is this one just for decoration?”
CT-4023 subtly angled his stance. His grip on his blaster tightened, but Sha’rali lifted a hand.
“Easy,” she muttered. “Don’t give him a reason.”
“Oh, he won’t need one,” Bane said, leaping lightly from the crane and landing with a dusty thud. “I’ve got a claim on that rancor. Took the job same as you. Fair game.”
“We saw it first,” Sha’rali said. “We do the work, we take the creds.”
“You ain’t taken anything unless you’re faster than me, darlin’.”
“You remember what happened last time you called me that?”
“I do,” he said, drawing one blaster slowly. “Still got the burn mark.”
The baby rancor let out a pitiful moan, clearly confused by all the shouting and guns.
K4’s voice crackled over comms:
“Permission to vaporize the cowboy?”
“No,” Sha’rali said under her breath. “Yet.”
CT-4023 stepped forward, his voice quiet but direct. “You want a fight, you’ll get one. But if you’re smart, you’ll back off.”
Bane cocked his head. “Oh? Clone with a backbone. That’s new.”
“He’s not a clone anymore,” Sha’rali said. “He’s mine.”
Bane smiled faintly. “That’s cute.”
Then, blasters lifted. The air tensed.
The baby rancor screamed—and bolted.
“Dank ferrik,” Sha’rali muttered, grabbing CT-4023 by the arm. “Move!”
They took off after the fleeing beast, Bane shouting curses as he followed. Blaster fire cracked overhead. The chase had begun.
The baby rancor might have been small, but it was fast.
It barreled through the cracked remains of Vanqor’s refinery sector, sending up sprays of dust and ash with every thundering step. Sha’rali sprinted after it, cloak flying behind her, boots slamming down on twisted metal and scorched duracrete.
Behind her, CT-4023 kept pace easily, blaster ready—but not firing. Too risky. The beast was unpredictable, and so was the Duros hot on their trail.
Cad Bane vaulted down from a higher walkway with his typical fluid grace, twin LL-30s gleaming in the sunlight.
“Back off, Bane!” Sha’rali barked, skidding around a collapsed wall.
“You first,” he called, voice rich with laughter. “Or is this the kind of job where you just chase things and look good?”
CT-4023 fired a warning shot at the ground near Bane’s feet. “You want a reason, you’ll get one.”
The Duros twirled a pistol on one finger and grinned. “There he is. Knew there had to be some spine under all that polish.”
A sudden roar cut through the banter as the rancor skidded into a half-collapsed loading dock. It turned with alarming agility and slammed its bulk into a rusted hauler, flipping the entire vehicle like it was made of paper.
“Definitely not harmless,” CT-4023 muttered.
“Good instincts,” Sha’rali said as she ducked behind a support beam. “Next time, don’t wait so long to shoot.”
“I was assessing the threat.”
“You’re always going to be outgunned, clone. Don’t wait for the threat to assess you.”
The rancor tore through crates of crushed ore, dust clouding the air. Bane fired a pair of stun rounds that went wide, one of them shattering against a crate beside Sha’rali’s head.
“Watch it!” she snapped.
“Your face’ll heal just fine,” Bane called. “Wouldn’t be the first time.”
“You’re still mad about the throat thing, huh?”
CT-4023 blinked. “Throat thing?”
Sha’rali grinned.
He gave her a sharp look, breathing hard as they ducked behind another broken wall. “You seem to know every bounty hunter.”
“Networking. I get around.”
“That’s not comforting.”
Before she could respond, the rancor burst through the wall just ahead of them. It had a piece of durasteel stuck to its horned crest and a smear of blood on one shoulder—but it wasn’t limping. If anything, it was more aggressive now.
It reared back and let out a bellow that rattled the air.
Sha’rali dropped low and rolled to the side, blaster out. CT-4023 lunged forward, landing atop a storage container and drawing the creature’s attention.
“Hey!” he shouted, waving his arms. “Come on, you overgrown tooka!”
The rancor lunged toward him.
As it did, he tossed a flash pellet from his belt. The grenade burst in its face, sending the rancor reeling—temporarily stunned.
“Not bad,” Sha’rali said, running up beside him. “You fight like an ARC again.”
“I was an ARC,” he shot back, vaulting down. “Doesn’t exactly leave you.”
“You sure about that?”
Another blast tore through the haze—Bane was back, boots skidding across rubble. He aimed a net launcher at the beast’s legs, but it jerked sideways, the net missing by a meter.
“Slippery little thing!” Bane snarled. “Almost like it wants to make my life difficult.”
“Must be karma,” Sha’rali muttered, motioning to CT-4023. “Let’s flank it. You take left, I go up.”
He nodded, darting off with precision. She scaled a metal scaffold, bracing herself against the top beam, calculating.
Bane took a shot. It hit.
The stun round finally struck true, seizing the baby rancor’s back leg—and it screeched.
Not in pain. In rage.
It turned, lifted a pile of scrap with one clawed hand, and hurled it like a missile. Sha’rali ducked. Bane wasn’t as fast.
The debris clipped his shoulder and sent him flying into a pile of twisted girders.
“Serves you right,” she muttered, leaping from the scaffolding and landing hard beside CT-4023.
He was already adjusting his blaster’s charge, set to nonlethal.
“Plan?”
“We tire it out,” she said. “Hit and move. No kill shots. It’s the bounty.”
“And if Bane tries again?”
“We shoot him in the leg.”
He cracked a grin.
The two charged again—tandem precision. Sha’rali moved like a shadow; CT-4023, like a ghost of war, deadly and silent. The rancor slammed its fists down in fury, but they were never where it expected.
It was slower now. Panting. Enraged.
They worked as a unit—hunter and reborn soldier—flashing around the beast like twin blades.
Finally, a shot from CT-4023’s blaster hit just right, just under the shoulder. The creature stumbled, blinked, and fell to one side, snorting and curling into itself.
Down.
Still breathing.
Sha’rali stood over it, blaster lowered. Her eyes flicked to CT-4023.
“That… was teamwork.”
He shrugged. “Told you. ARC instincts.”
“Starting to think I should keep you around.”
“You already are.”
She laughed once, low and genuine.
Behind them, Bane groaned from the scrap pile.
CT-4023 nodded toward him. “Want me to shoot him in the leg anyway?”
Sha’rali smirked. “Tempting. But let him walk it off.”
R9 rolled up through the debris, trilling something smug and judgmental.
“You missed the fun,” CT-4023 said.
R9 beeped and showed a grainy hologram of Bane getting clobbered.
“I stand corrected,” he muttered.
Sha’rali placed a hand on the clone’s pauldron. “Let’s get this beast secured and get off this rock.”
He looked at her, eyes searching. “Hey… you ever think maybe you’re starting to trust me?”
She paused, then leaned in with a smirk.
“No. But you’re fun to have around.”
⸻
The drop site was a wreck of rusted platforms and storm-pitted walls, tucked in the shadow of a collapsed hangar. Sha’rali crouched beside the groaning frame of the baby rancor, still unconscious, still breathing hard. CT-4023 stood nearby, helmet off, glancing between the beast and their battered surroundings.
“You think your ship’s equipped to hold a rancor?” he asked, voice dry.
Sha’rali stood, brushing grit from her armor. “If it isn’t, K4 will figure it out. He likes problem-solving. Especially when the problem is violent.”
A mechanical growl came through the comms. K4’s voice filtered in over the channel, crisp and irritated:
“If this thing eats my upholstery, I’m turning it into boots.”
CT-4023 snorted. “You’d have to catch it first.”
“I caught you, didn’t I?”
Sha’rali rolled her eyes and tapped the comm off. “Let’s move before someone gets clever.”
As if summoned by bad karma, a long shadow fell over the landing pad behind them.
Cad Bane stepped into view, bruised, covered in soot, and not smiling anymore.
Two of his droids flanked him, both armed. He looked straight at Sha’rali, and then to CT-4023 with slow, calculated disapproval.
“You always did cheat well,” he said. “Still no class.”
“You’re just mad I’m better,” Sha’rali replied, unphased, blaster at her side—but loose, ready.
CT-4023 moved forward instinctively, placing himself half between her and the Duros.
Bane’s eyes didn’t miss it. “Got yourself a new watchdog, huh? Looks Republic. Smells like one, too.”
“Not Republic anymore,” the clone said flatly.
“Oh, right. Deserter.” Bane spat the word like a curse. “You know what they pay for one of your kind these days? Not as much as a Jedi, but enough.”
“I don’t care what you think I’m worth,” CT-4023 replied, voice steady. “You’d still have to take me alive.”
Bane cocked his head. “Who said anything about alive?”
A long silence stretched. Then: the high whine of a charging rifle.
But not from Bane.
From above.
K4 stood atop the ship’s gangway, rifle in hand, optics glowing gold in the dusk.
“Three hostiles locked. Suggest standing down before I redecorate the area with Duros-colored paste.”
CT-4023 stepped forward. “You heard him.”
Sha’rali added, “Walk away, Bane. You lost.”
Bane stared at the three of them—then past them, at the ship. The beast. The clone. The droid overhead. And finally… Sha’rali.
The weight of the loss settled in his posture. And still, he smiled.
“Still reckless. Still lucky.”
She grinned. “And still ahead.”
Bane muttered something in Duros under his breath, holstered his pistols, and turned.
“Next time,” he called over his shoulder, “you won’t have your pet clone or your smart-mouthed droid to save you.”
Sha’rali didn’t answer.
She didn’t have to.
They watched him vanish into the rusted ruins, silent except for the distant clang of droid footsteps fading with him.
CT-4023 finally exhaled. “He doesn’t lose often.”
“No,” Sha’rali agreed, nudging the rancor with her boot. “But when he does… stars, it’s satisfying.”
They dragged the sleeping creature onto a maglift. It groaned but didn’t wake. K4 guided them in from the ramp, already prepping the cargo bay containment field.
“If it moves, I’m putting it in carbonite.”
“Just sedate it again if it twitches,” Sha’rali said.
CT-4023 helped lower the beast onto the containment pad, then paused beside it. For a moment, he simply stared.
“What?” Sha’rali asked, wiping blood from her forehead.
He looked at her, then the ship around them. “You realize I’ve helped you tranquilize a rancor, outmaneuver Cad Bane, and survive a job that should’ve gotten us both killed.”
She grinned and leaned in, voice dry. “So, what you’re saying is…”
He sighed. “I guess I’m sticking around.”
“Says the man who almost painted a target on his chest last week,” K4 muttered from the cockpit.
R9 chirped happily from the corridor, replaying footage of the rancor crushing a speeder.
CT-4023 watched it for a second and shook his head. “Remind me to reprogram that one.”
Sha’rali smirked and clapped a hand to his shoulder. “Welcome to the life, trooper.”
He smirked back, already thinking about the sigil he’d carve next.
⸻
Tatooine’s twin suns scorched down on the durasteel hull of Sha’rali’s ship as it touched down outside Jabba’s palace. The ship’s systems whined in protest at the sand and heat. CT-4023 stood at the airlock, armor dark and gleaming in the harsh light, the sigil on his pauldron not yet painted—blank, unclaimed.
Sha’rali fastened the final restraint on the crate that held the sedated baby rancor, her jaw tense.
“Keep your helmet on,” she warned as she keyed open the hatch.
“Why?”
She turned, voice low. “Jabba had a bounty on your head a few rotations ago. You were Republic property—‘runaway government clone,’ worth a few thousand credits dead. He might not remember, but some of his lackeys will.”
CT-4023 looked at her carefully. “And you think bringing a rancor here is a better idea?”
She flashed him a sharp grin. “He likes rancors. Plus, they’re the ones who posted the bounty on the rancor, remember? If we don’t deliver, someone else will—and worse, we lose our payout.”
The airlock hissed open and the thick heat of Tatooine hit them like a wall. The gates to Jabba’s fortress loomed ahead, half-buried in sunbaked stone. CT-4023 followed behind her as they dragged the heavy sled forward—R9 chirping irritably in the back, and K4 remaining behind to monitor the ship.
As they approached, the gates creaked open, and a Gamorrean guard grunted before stepping aside. They were ushered into the vast, dim throne room by a hissing Twi’lek majordomo. The stink of spice, sweat, and rotting meat hung in the air. Sha’rali walked differently here—shoulders broader, stride slower, swagger more exaggerated. Her eyes were colder, smile sharper.
CT-4023 recognized the change instantly.
This wasn’t the woman he fought beside. This was Sha’rali the hunter. This was who she was before him.
Jabba lounged on his dais, bloated and wheezing, surrounded by sycophants and criminals. Music thumped in the background, too loud and chaotic. The sled with the rancor came to a halt, and the crate groaned as the beast stirred inside.
The Hutt let out a deep chuckle, slurred through slime.
“Sha’rali Jurok… bringing me gifts again, are you?”
She bowed low, but not respectfully—more theatrically. “Not gifts, Your Excellency. Merchandise. A baby rancor, caught on Vanqor. Aggressive, untrained. I believe your people were the ones asking.”
A ripple of intrigue spread through the chamber. Several beings leaned forward.
Jabba’s massive tongue slid across his lips.
“Yes… the bounty was ours.”
CT-4023 scanned the room—twelve guards, some with Hutt Cartel markings. He didn’t like the odds.
Jabba gestured, and a chest of credits was dragged forward, a heavy thud against the stone.
“Payment. Generous. As requested.”
Before they could collect, a tall Trandoshan slithered into view.
Bossk.
He eyed Sha’rali, nostrils flaring, tongue flicking. “Didn’t think you had the guts to show your face here.”
She didn’t smile. “Didn’t think you’d still have yours.”
And then—another shape emerged from the crowd.
A boy. Twelve, maybe thirteen. Battered green Mandalorian armor, a blaster far too large for his frame slung low. Boba Fett.
He eyed CT-4023 with suspicion, then glanced at Sha’rali.
“That armor doesn’t look like yours.”
Sha’rali tilted her head. “Does now.”
CT-4023’s jaw tightened under the helmet. His hand hovered close to his blaster.
Boba looked at the clone longer, gaze calculating, almost… knowing.
Sha’rali held the younger Fett’s gaze. “You planning on collecting, kid?”
Boba shrugged. “Not unless there’s still a bounty.”
She leaned forward slightly. “There’s not.”
Tension pulsed for a long moment.
And then—Jabba let out a rumbling laugh that echoed through the throne room. He slammed a chubby hand on a panel, and droids wheeled the crate away with the young rancor.
“Your business is done, Sha’rali. Go.”
She inclined her head. “Gladly.”
They turned and walked out—slowly, deliberately. CT-4023 followed, his heart pounding beneath his armor. Only once the ship’s doors sealed behind them did he exhale.
On the ramp, he turned to her. “That… was not fun.”
Sha’rali shrugged, not breaking stride. “Palace jobs never are.”
“You’re different in there,” he said. “Cold. Calculated.”
“Necessary.”
He studied her a long moment. “You’ve done a lot to keep me alive.”
Sha’rali gave him a look, sharp and unreadable. “Don’t let it go to your head.”
R9 beeped as it wheeled up the ramp.
⸻
The holotable flickered in the middle of the ship’s lounge, casting green-blue light over the metal floor. CT-4023 sat across from it, arms folded, as CID’s scaly face materialized in grainy hologram. Her voice rasped through the static.
“Sha’rali. Got a job for you. High-value intel, Separatist origin. Interested?”
Sha’rali didn’t respond right away. She stood to the side, arms crossed, one brow raised. She’d never taken a job that directly brushed up against the war—never wanted to. It was one thing to skirt the edges, pick off cartel bounties, or rob a warlord. But a mission involving Separatist intel? That was new ground.
Suspicious ground.
“Where’s this data?” she asked, eyes narrowing.
“Hidden in a vault on Vucora. Some shadow installation the Separatists set up during the early days of the war, went dark two years ago. Word is the place is waking up again—maybe just droids, maybe more. Someone wants eyes on it.”
“What’s the payout?”
“Fifteen thousand. Half up front, half after extraction. I’ll upload the location files and security specs.”
Sha’rali glanced to CT-4023. He’d been quiet, watching the projection with an odd kind of familiarity. When she met his eyes, he just gave a short nod.
“Let’s do it,” he said. “I know what to expect. Their vaults follow certain protocols—recursive redundancies, external relays, droid patrols. I was trained for this kind of thing.”
Sha’rali blinked at him, just once.
“Thought you were trained to blow things up.”
He shrugged. “Only after we broke in.”
A low chuckle rumbled in her throat. “Fine. K4, R9—get the data off Cid and start planning the infiltration.”
R9 chirped and spun toward the holotable. K4 bowed slightly. “As you wish. I’ll begin compiling relevant schematics and countermeasures.”
Sha’rali grabbed her sidearm and slid it into its holster.
“I’ll be back in an hour.”
CT-4023 frowned. “Where are you going?”
“Cid wants to talk face-to-face. Probably wants me to sign my life away. Or threaten me, which she loves more.”
CT-4023 frowned. “Is that a joke?”
“No,” Sha’rali replied flatly. “That’s Cid.”
⸻
The private booth was humid and dim, stinking of grease, cheap liquor, and warm reptile. Cid poured a drink into a chipped glass and slid it across the table as Sha’rali dropped into the seat opposite her.
“Still running around with the clone?” Cid rasped. Her yellow eyes gleamed under the low light.
Sha’rali picked up the drink, gave it a sniff, and downed half in one go. “He’s useful.”
“You don’t usually keep your assets this long.”
Sha’rali leaned back, her expression unreadable. “He hasn’t tried to kill me yet.”
Cid gave a dry chuckle. “You could’ve ditched him after Ord Mantell. Would’ve been smart.”
Sha’rali’s voice lost its humor. “You could’ve not sold us out. But here we are.”
Cid rolled her eyes. “Information’s a commodity, sweetheart. He was intel. Valuable intel.”
“You sold it to the Republic.”
“I sell to whoever pays. You know that.”
Sha’rali set her glass down with a sharp clink.
“You and I have an understanding, Cid. But if you ever sell me out again—if I find out you bring heat down on me—don’t expect me to show up for drinks next time.”
Cid didn’t blink. “Relax. I’m still alive, aren’t I? I do what I need to do to stay that way. And if keeping the Republic happy buys me another year, so be it.”
Sha’rali stared at her, unflinching.
“You’d sell anyone out to save your scaly hide.”
Cid gave a thin smile. “Damn right I would. And don’t act like you’re any different. We do what we have to. We always have.”
Sha’rali finished her drink and stood.
“Send the final access key to my ship.”
Cid raised her glass. “Don’t die, Jurok.”
⸻
Back aboard the ship, K4 was already deep into mapping the infiltration route to the Separatist vault. R9 chirped a steady stream of suggested entry points, and CT-4023 stood over the holotable, adjusting droid patrol routes and slicing protocols from memory.
Sha’rali watched him for a moment. It struck her again—he belonged in this kind of environment. Tactical. Efficient. Sharp. Even without his clone designation, without the armor he used to wear, he was still a weapon honed for this kind of work.
That unnerved her more than she’d admit.
“Looks like you’re in your element,” she muttered.
CT-4023 glanced over, his expression unreadable beneath the shadows.
“Let’s just say old habits die hard.”
⸻
The Separatist vault complex jutted from the side of a rocky cliff on Vucora’s dark side, the sky above black and starless. Only the flicker of malfunctioning perimeter lights gave any indication the base was still online. What should’ve been a graveyard of old tech buzzed faintly with shielded power signatures and long-range comm static.
Sha’rali crouched at the edge of a crag overlooking the access route—an old maglift shaft welded shut. Her black and crimson armor blended perfectly into the rock.
K4 hovered behind her, humming softly. R9 was already halfway down the cliff, magnetic locks clinging to rusted piping. CT-4023 stood next to her, helmet on, modified to hide the remnants of its Death Watch origins. The new gold detailing was subdued in the shadows, but it caught a glint of moonlight now and then like a quiet pulse.
He adjusted the voice modulator inside his helmet. “Test. One. Two.”
Sha’rali gave him a quick glance. “Good enough. Don’t talk unless you have to.”
He nodded. “You think we’ll really run into anyone?”
She let out a slow breath, fingers tightening on her carbine. “I picked up a Republic signal on the long-range scanner this morning. I didn’t want to spook you, but… something’s off. K4, what did that encrypted ping resolve as?”
K4 tapped a few keys on his forearm datapad. “Garbled signature, but buried under that noise was a Republic tactical beacon. A very recent one.”
CT-4023 stiffened.
“I thought this was a forgotten base.”
“It was,” Sha’rali said. “Until now.”
R9 beeped twice. A warning.
K4’s tone dropped. “We’ve got six warm bodies approaching the northwest hangar. Five human, one Togruta. Jedi.”
CT-4023 tensed. “Anakin.”
Sha’rali looked over at him sharply. “You know the squad?”
He hesitated. “Skywalker, Tano, Rex. The rest could be anyone.”
Sha’rali’s hand went to her blaster but didn’t draw. “Fantastic. That’s half the Republic’s worst nightmare squad. Just what I wanted.”
“I can handle it,” CT-4023 said.
“You’re going to stay out of their way,” Sha’rali snapped. “Helmet stays on. Modulator on. No nicknames, no slip-ups. We don’t know what Kit Fisto and Eeth Koth told the Republic. They may think you’re dead—or they may think you’re still out there. We can’t risk it.”
He nodded slowly. “Understood.”
“I’m serious,” she said, grabbing his shoulder. “If Rex recognizes you, if Skywalker so much as suspects, we are both karking done.”
He looked away. “I know.”
They slipped into the base through a rusted maintenance conduit on the far side of the cliff, bypassing the active hangar. Lights flickered and droids twitched in long-forgotten alcoves, half-powered and unresponsive.
The vaults were down two levels, buried under what looked like a mining wing that had collapsed in on itself. Sha’rali and K4 moved like ghosts. CT-4023 hung back slightly, his posture alert but purposeful.
K4 piped up softly. “Republic presence is closer than I estimated. A security system just logged a slicing breach near Subsection Twelve.”
“That’s the vault wing,” Sha’rali muttered. “Of course it is.”
They took a side route—old scaffolding, hanging cables, twisted metal. K4 led the way, decrypting each access point as they moved. R9 deployed ahead on a repulsor trail, scouting.
Over comms, faint voices came through.
“Keep your eyes open, Jesse. If these droids are online, there’s a reason.”
“You sure there’s intel here, General?”
“It’s not intel I’m looking for,” came Skywalker’s voice. “It’s movement. Something activated this base. And it wasn’t us.”
CT-4023 froze as Rex’s voice followed. He didn’t breathe.
“You think it’s a trap, sir?”
“Everything’s a trap, Tup,” Fives cut in. “That’s the fun part.”
Sha’rali looked back at 4023. “You good?”
He gave a tight nod. “Fine.”
They pushed deeper, K4 bypassing old turrets and sending fake signals to maintenance drones. The Jedi team was moving in the same direction but from the other side.
Sha’rali opened a secure hatch to a vault junction. “We’ve got ten minutes max before they converge here. We get in, get the files, and we go.”
CT-4023 slid into position beside her. “Or?”
“Or we run into your old family.”
The vault was colder than the rest of the facility—preserved by an emergency power grid designed to keep datacores stable. K4 cracked the encrypted node, R9 plugged in, and data began copying to a secure chip.
Sha’rali stood watch, carbine up.
CT-4023 moved closer to a dusty wall covered in etchings—old campaign markings, Clone War deployments, maps of Separatist offensives.
The Separatist mainframe crackled as R9’s manipulator arm whirred furiously inside the terminal. Green light spilled across the chamber’s walls while Sha’rali crouched beside the droid, blaster drawn, eyes flicking toward the door.
“Anything?” she hissed.
“Encrypted layers,” R9 chirped smugly. “Primitive. But layered like an onion. You ever peeled an onion, meatbag?”
Sha’rali narrowed her eyes. “Peel faster.”
Above them, K4’s calm voice crackled through the comms:
“Security patrols have doubled. The Jedi must have triggered alarms in the south sector. Ten hostiles converging on your location in ninety seconds.”
She muttered a curse.
4023, stationed at the northern corridor with his helmet on and voice modulator active, responded quickly. “I’ll cut off their advance. Hold this point. Don’t move until R9 pulls the data.”
Sha’rali glanced over her shoulder. “Keep your head down. If any of them catch a glimpse—”
“I know,” he interrupted. “Helmet stays on.”
He slinked into the shadows without another word.
The old CT-4023 was gone—this version of him, wearing black and silver repurposed Death Watch armor laced with his own colors, didn’t belong to the Republic anymore. He belonged to no one. But that didn’t mean he wasn’t lethal.
Two droids rounded the corridor corner—4023 stepped from the darkness, quiet and brutal. His vibroblade slid through the first one’s neck joint. The second didn’t even get to fire.
Meanwhile, back in the server room, R9 let out a low, triumphant beep.
“Got it. Data packet acquired. Core command lines copied. No alarms tripped.” A pause. “Well, not from us.”
Sha’rali’s comm buzzed again. “We’ve got trouble,” K4 said smoothly. “Skywalker and his squad are converging. If they find this server cracked, they’ll know someone else is here.”
Sha’rali activated her shoulder mic. “Everyone fall back to exfil point delta.”
4023 was already moving—slipping past motionless droid husks, evading the flicker of blue blades in the hallway. He paused once, just once, as he caught a glimpse through a distant grate.
Fives.
He stood beside Ahsoka, his DC-17s drawn, watching Skywalker argue with Rex about taking the east corridor. The voices stirred ghosts.
Memories of barracks laughter. Of daring missions. Of joking over rations and watching each other’s backs.
Now… he was nothing but a shadow.
“4023,” Sha’rali’s voice cut in urgently. “Move.”
He did.
⸻
The team reassembled at the old mining shaft they’d used for insertion. R9 detached from the mainframe, rolled back under K4’s cover, and together they descended the narrow escape lift. Above them, shouts rang out, boots storming the hall.
Sha’rali dropped beside him last. “We got it. R9 says there’s mention of a movement. Something big. High-level tactical orders. Could be good leverage for Cid.”
“Could be a war crime list too,” 4023 muttered, tapping the encrypted drive into K4’s care.
“We’ll let her worry about that.”
As they disappeared into the shaft and the light above them narrowed, 4023 sat in silence—jaw clenched under the helmet. He hadn’t seen Skywalker’s face, hadn’t dared get that close. But he’d felt the weight of it.
He remembered the war. The camaraderie. The brotherhood.
But he also remembered Umbara.
⸻
Outside, Sha’rali’s ship lifted into the dusk, cloaking engaged. They slipped off-world before GAR command could trace their incursion.
“We need to lay low for a few days,” Sha’rali said as she slumped into the co-pilot’s seat. “Once we deliver this to Cid, we move fast. If the Jedi know we were there…”
“They didn’t see me,” 4023 said flatly. “But I saw them.”
She turned to him, saw the clenched fists in his lap.
“You alright?”
He didn’t answer for a long moment. “They’re still good soldiers.”
“Some of them,” she said.
Then quieter, she added, “But that doesn’t mean they wouldn’t have shot you if they knew who you were.”
He didn’t respond.
K4 returned with R9 behind him, dropping a datapad onto the console. “Analysis underway. Data includes strategic orders, fleet movements, and two encrypted names I don’t recognize.”
Sha’rali exhaled. “That’s the next problem.”
They were ghosts again, slipping through systems and secrets—one step ahead of the war, one step behind its consequences.
⸻
Previous Part | Next Part
Cadet Echo, to Fives: It's okay to be sad, sometimes we need to let our feelings out, just let yourself be sad.
99: Oh that's so lovely, well done. Why is he crying?
Echo: I hit him.
Foxy again 😀 Click for higher quality >.> I'm unsure why it looks blurry on my tablet..
Summary: By day, she’s a chaotic assistant in the Coruscant Guard; by night, a smoky-voiced singer who captivates even the most disciplined clones—especially Commander Fox. But when a botched assignment, a bounty hunter’s warning, she realizes the spotlight might just get her killed.
_ _ _ _
The lights of Coruscant were always loud. Flashing neon signs, sirens echoing through levels, speeders zipping like angry wasps. But nothing ever drowned out the voice of the girl at the mic.
She leaned into it like she was born there, bathed in deep blue and violet lights at 99's bar, voice smoky and honey-sweet. She didn't sing like someone performing—she sang like she was telling secrets. And every clone in the place leaned in to hear them.
Fox never stayed for the full set. Not really. He'd linger just outside the threshold long enough to catch the tail end of her voice wrapping around the words of a love song or a low bluesy rebellion tune before disappearing into the shadows, unreadable as ever.
He knew her name.
He knew too much, if he was honest with himself.
---
By some minor miracle of cosmic misalignment, she showed up to work the next day.
Coruscant Guard HQ was sterile and sharp—exactly the opposite of her. The moment she stepped through the entrance, dragging a caf that was more sugar than stimulant, every other assistant looked up like they were seeing a ghost they didn't like.
"She lives," one of them muttered under their breath.
She gave a mock-curtsy, her usual smirk tugging at her lips. "I aim to disappoint."
Her desk was dusty. Her holopad had messages backed up from a week ago. And Fox's office door was—blessedly—closed.
She plopped into her chair, kicking off her boots and spinning once in her chair before sipping her caf and pretending to care about her job.
Unfortunately, today was not going to let her coast.
One of the other assistants—a tight-bunned brunette with a permanently clenched jaw—strolled over, datapad in hand and an expression that said *we're about to screw you over and enjoy it.*
"You're up," the woman said. "Cad Bane's in holding. He needs to be walked through his rights, legal rep options, the whole thing."
The reader blinked. "You want *me* to go talk to *Cad Bane?* The bounty hunter with the murder-happy fingers and sexy lizard eyes?"
"Commander Fox signed off on it."
*Bullshit,* she thought. But aloud, she said, "Well, at least it won't be boring."
---
Security in the lower levels of Guard HQ was tight, and the guards scanned her badge twice—partly because she never came down here, partly because nobody believed she had clearance.
"Try not to get killed," one said dryly as he buzzed her into the cell block.
"Aw, you do care," she winked.
The room was cold. Lit only by flickering fluorescents, with reinforced transparisteel separating her from the infamous Duros bounty hunter. He sat, cuffs in place, slouched like he owned the room even in chains.
"Well, well," Cad Bane drawled, red eyes narrowing with amusement. "Don't recognize you. They finally lettin' in pretty faces to read us our bedtime stories?"
She ignored the spike of fear in her chest and sat across from him, activating the datapad. "Cad Bane. You are being held by the Coruscant Guard for multiple counts of—well, a lot. I'm supposed to inform you of your legal rights and representation—"
"Save it," he said, voice low. "You're not just an assistant."
Her brow twitched. "Excuse me?"
"You smell like city smoke and spice trails. Not paper. Not politics. I've seen girls like you in cantinas two moons from Coruscant, drinkin' with outlaws and singin' like heartbreak's a language." His smile widened. "And I've seen that face. You got a past. And it's catchin' up."
She stood, blood running colder than the cell. "We're done here."
"Hope the Commander's watchin'," Cad added lazily. "He's got eyes on you. Like you're his favorite secret."
She turned and walked—*fast*.
---
Fox was waiting at the end of the hallway when she emerged, helm on, arms crossed, motionless like a statue.
"Commander," she said, voice trying to stay casual even as adrenaline buzzed in her fingers. "Didn't think I rated high enough for personal escorts."
"Why were you down there alone?" His voice was calm. Too calm.
"You signed off on it."
"I didn't."
Her stomach sank. The air between them thickened, tension clicking into place like a blaster being loaded.
"I'll speak to the others," Fox said, stepping closer. "But next time you walk into a room with someone like Cad Bane, you *tell me* first."
She raised a brow. "Since when do you care what I do?"
"I don't," he said too fast.
But she caught it—*the tiny flicker of something human beneath the armor.*
She tilted her head, smirk tugging at her lips again. "If you're going to keep me alive, Commander, I'm going to need to see you at the next open mic night."
Fox turned away.
"I don't attend bars," he said over his shoulder.
"Good," she called back. "Because I'm not singing for the others."
He paused. Just once. Barely. Then he walked on.
She didn't need to see his face to know he was smiling.
---
She walked back into the offices wearing oversized shades, yesterday's eyeliner, and the confidence of someone who refused to admit she probably shouldn't have tequila before 4 a.m.
The moment she crossed the threshold, tight-bun Trina zeroed in.
"Hope you enjoyed your field trip," Trina said, arms folded, sarcasm sharp enough to cut durasteel.
"I did, actually. Made a new friend. His hobbies include threats and murder. You'd get along great," the reader shot back, grabbing her caf and sipping without breaking eye contact.
Trina sneered. "You weren't supposed to go alone. But I guess you're just reckless enough to survive it."
The reader stepped closer, voice dropping. "You sent me because you thought I'd panic. You wanted a show."
"Well, if Commander Fox cares so much, maybe he should stop playing bodyguard and just transfer you to front-line entertainment," Trina snapped.
"Jealousy isn't a good look on you."
"It's not jealousy. It's resentment. You don't work, you vanish for days, and yet he always clears your screw-ups."
She leaned in. "Maybe he just likes me better."
Trina's jaw clenched, "Since you're suddenly here, again, congratulations—you're finishing the Cad Bane intake. Legal processing. Standard rights. You can handle reading, yeah?"
The reader smiled sweetly. "Absolutely. Hooked on Phonics."
---
Two security scans and a passive-aggressive threat from a sergeant later, she was back in the lower cells, now much more aware of just how many surveillance cams were watching her.
Cad Bane looked even more smug than before.
"Well, ain't this a pleasant surprise," he drawled, shackles clicking as he shifted in his seat. "You just can't stay away from me, huh?"
She dropped into the chair across from him, datapad in hand, face expressionless.
"Cad Bane," she began, voice clipped and professional, "you are currently being held under charges of murder, kidnapping, sabotage, resisting arrest, impersonating a Jedi, and approximately thirty-seven other counts I don't have time to read. I am required by Republic protocol to inform you of the following."
He tilted his head, red eyes watching her like a predator amused by a small animal reading from a script.
"You have the right to remain silent," she continued. "You are entitled to legal representation. If you do not have a representative of your own, the Republic will provide you with one."
Bane snorted. "You mean one of those clean little lawyer droids with sticks up their circuits? Pass."
She didn't blink. "Do you currently have your own legal representation?"
"I'll let you know when I feel like cooperating."
She tapped on the datapad, noting his response.
"Further information about the trial process and detention terms will be provided at your next hearing."
"You're not very warm," he mused.
"I'm not here to be."
"Pity. I liked earliers sass."
She stood up. "Try not to escape before sentencing."
"Tell your Commander I said hello."
That stopped her. Just for a second.
Bane smiled wider. "What? You thought no one noticed?"
She didn't give him the satisfaction of a reply. She left with her heart thudding harder than she wanted to admit.
That night, 79's was packed wall to wall with off-duty clones, local droids trying to dance, and smugglers pretending not to be smugglers. She stood under the lights, voice curling around a jazz-infused battle hymn she'd rewritten to sound like a love song.
And there, in the shadows by the bar, armor glinting like red wine under lights—
Commander Fox.
She didn't falter. Not when her eyes met his. Not when her voice dipped into a sultry bridge, not when he didn't look away once.
After the show, she took the back exit—like always. And like always, she sensed the wrongness first.
A chill up her spine. A presence behind her, too quiet, too deliberate.
She spun. "You're not a fan, are you?"
The woman stepped out of the shadows with a predator's grace.
Aurra Sing.
"You're more interesting than I expected," she said. "Tied to the Guard. Friendly with a Commander. Eyes and ears on all the right rooms."
"I don't know what you're talking about."
Aurra's lip curled. "Doesn't matter. You're on my radar now."
And she vanished.
Back in her apartment, she barely kicked off her boots when there was a knock at the door. She checked the screen.
Fox.
Still in full armor. Still unreadable.
"I saw her," he said before she could speak. "Aurra Sing. She was following you."
"I noticed," she said, trying to sound casual. "What, did you tail me all the way from 79's?"
"I don't trust bounty hunters."
"Not even the ones who sing?"
He didn't answer. Either he didn't get the joke, or he was to concerned to laugh.
"You came to my show," she said softly. "Why?"
"I was off-duty."
"Sure. That's why you were in full armor. Just blending in."
A beat passed. Then he said, "You were good."
"I'm always good."
Another silence stretched between them. Less awkward, more charged.
"You're not safe," Fox said finally. "You shouldn't be alone."
"Yeah? You offering to babysit me?"
He almost smiled. Almost. Then, wordless, he stepped back into the corridor.
The door closed.
But for a moment longer, she stood there, heartbeat loud, his words echoing in her mind.
You're not safe.
And for the first time in a long time, she believed it.
———
Part 2
Warnings: slightly sexually suggestive
⸻
You swore he was doing it on purpose.
That whole “silent and brooding” thing he had going on? Weaponized. His voice, low and gravelly, the way he leaned against walls like they were built just for him, arms crossed and muscles on full display. He moved like he had time to kill and knew exactly how dangerous he looked doing it.
You were not immune. Maker, you were struggling.
It didn’t help that the Hunter Effect seemed to get worse during downtime. No blasterfire, no missions, just a hot planet, a half-broken fan in the corner of the Marauder, and him doing pull-ups in a sweat-soaked tank top like he was in some holodrama made for thirst traps.
You were trying not to stare. Failing miserably.
Hunter dropped from the bar with a soft thud and turned toward you like he’d felt the heat of your gaze. Probably had. Damn enhanced senses.
“You alright over there?” he asked, voice rich with amusement.
“Fine,” you replied, a little too quickly.
He raised a brow as he walked past, close enough to brush your shoulder with his—on purpose, probably. You bit your lip. Hard.
“Y’look a little flushed,” he said, and there was that grin. The knowing one. “Could be the heat. Could be something else.”
“Could be your ego,” you fired back, refusing to look up from your datapad.
He didn’t answer, but you could feel the smirk behind you.
Later that night, the heat stuck around—and so did he. The others were asleep or off doing their own thing, and you ended up side by side with Hunter near the edge of the ship’s loading ramp, sitting in the dark, stars overhead. You were close—closer than you usually allowed yourself to be.
He didn’t say anything at first. Just passed you a flask of something strong and let the silence settle.
Then—
“You know,” he said, voice quiet, “I’ve noticed how you look at me.”
Your breath caught.
“I don’t mind,” he continued, “but I figured I’d give you the chance to stop pretending.”
You turned to face him. He was already looking at you, intense and calm, like he’d been waiting for this moment.
“Pretending?” you asked, trying to play dumb.
He gave a soft chuckle. “You’re not subtle, mesh’la. And I’ve got good instincts.”
Your lips parted, but nothing came out. Because honestly… yeah. He was right. And you were caught.
Hunter shifted closer, gaze dropping to your lips just briefly—enough.
“I’ve been watching you too,” he added, voice low now, like a secret. “Listening to how your heartbeat changes when I get close. I like the way you look at me. Like you’re thinking about what it’d be like.”
Your throat went dry. “To do what?”
He smirked. “To ride.”
You choked on air.
“I meant a speeder,” he said, utterly deadpan.
You shoved his arm. “You’re a menace.”
“You love it.”
You paused.
“Yeah,” you admitted softly. “I really do.”
His smile dropped into something deeper, something real. His hand brushed yours, lingered.
“Then maybe it’s time we stop dancing around it.”
You looked at him—really looked. The man you fought beside, trusted with your life, laughed with, wanted like nothing else.
“Okay,” you said, voice barely above a whisper. “Let’s ride.”
He leaned in, lips ghosting yours.
“Hold on tight, sweetheart.”
⸻
Hiya! I absolutely love your writing and always look forward to your posts
I saw that request about the commanders catching you with their helmets on and I was wondering if you could do that but with the bad batch?
Again, love your writing. I hope you have a great day/night!
Hey! Thank you so much—that means a lot to me! 💖
I actually was planning to include the Bad Batch too but wanted to start with just the commanders first.
⸻
HUNTER
You weren’t expecting to get caught.
You were standing in the cockpit, wearing Hunter’s helmet—not for mischief, really, but because you were genuinely curious how he functioned with his enhanced senses dulled. You wanted to know what it was like to see through his eyes. To feel what he felt.
The helmet was heavy. Too heavy.
He walked in mid-thought, and you froze.
Hunter didn’t speak. He just stood there, half in shadow, his brow furrowing slowly like he was processing an entirely new battlefield situation.
You didn’t say anything either. You just… stood there. Helmet on. Stiff-backed. Guilty.
Finally, he stepped forward.
“…That’s mine.”
You took it off and held it out sheepishly. “I wanted to see what you see. It’s filtered. Muffled. How do you live like this?”
Hunter took the helmet from your hands and gave you a long, unreadable look.
“I don’t. I adapt.”
Then he brushed past you—close, deliberate—and you swore his fingers grazed yours just a little longer than necessary.
⸻
WRECKER
“Whoa!”
You heard the booming voice before you could even turn.
You were in the loading bay, helmet pulled low over your face as you tried to figure out how the heck Wrecker even saw through it with one eye. It was like wearing a bucket with a tunnel vision problem.
He charged over with the biggest grin you’d ever seen.
“Look at you! You’re me!”
You pulled the helmet off, grinning. “I don’t know how you walk around with this thing. It’s like being inside a durasteel trash can.”
“I know, right? But it looks great on you!”
He took the helmet back, turning it in his hands, then gave you a wide-eyed look.
“You wanna try my pauldron next?! Or lift something heavy?!”
You laughed. “Maybe next time, big guy.”
Wrecker beamed. “You’re so getting the full Wrecker experience.”
You weren’t sure what that meant, but you were both strangely okay with it.
⸻
TECH
You had only meant to try it on for a second.
But you made the mistake of reading one of his datapads while wearing it. And once the internal HUD booted up? Well, curiosity took over.
Tech returned from the cockpit to find you hunched over in the corner, still wearing his helmet and scanning system diagnostics.
His voice was clipped. “You’re tampering with active interface systems.”
“I’m learning,” you shot back, not looking up.
He blinked, then stepped closer, fingers twitching in that nervous way he did when he wasn’t sure if he should be impressed or horrified.
“You activated my visual overlay filters.”
“I figured out the encryption pattern.”
Now that caught his attention.
He slowly knelt beside you. “How long have you had it on?”
“…Twenty-three minutes?”
He swallowed. “And you’re not… disoriented?”
“Nope. Just slightly overstimulated.”
There was a pause.
Then, quietly: “You may keep it on. Temporarily.”
You turned. “You trust me with your helmet?”
He cleared his throat. “Don’t make it a habit.”
But he was already adjusting the fit at the sides of your head.
⸻
ECHO
Echo did not find it cute.
He found it concerning.
The helmet wasn’t just gear. It was part of his reconstructed identity—a thing he wore not because he wanted to, but because he had to.
So when he saw you on the edge of his bunk, wearing it—your legs swinging slightly, gaze distant—his chest tightened.
“What are you doing?” he asked, voice rougher than he meant it to be.
You looked up, startled. “I didn’t mean to be disrespectful. I was just… wondering what it’s like. Living with this.”
He stepped forward slowly, kneeling to your eye level. “It’s not something I’d want you to understand.”
You pulled the helmet off, placed it in his hands. “I didn’t think about that.”
He let out a quiet breath, then shook his head. “No. You did. That’s why you’re here thinking about it.”
You gave a soft smile. “I wanted to know you better.”
He swallowed hard. “You already do.”
⸻
CROSSHAIR
You knew exactly what you were doing.
And that was the problem.
You sat in the sniper’s perch in the Marauder, elbow on one knee, head tilted just slightly as you stared down at the deck below—wearing his helmet.
You heard the footstep. The sigh.
“Really?” His voice was lazy, drawled out like he wasn’t fazed, but there was a subtle tension underneath.
You didn’t look at him. “I wanted to see what it was like. Looking down on the rest of the world.”
He chuckled once, dry and sharp. “And? Is it satisfying?”
“No. It’s lonely.”
Crosshair was quiet for a long moment. Then he climbed the ladder halfway, leaned against the edge of the platform.
“Don’t get comfortable in it.”
You turned your head, voice just a little softer. “Why not?”
“Because if you wear it any longer, I might start to like it.”
You handed it back.
But you were both thinking about that line for the rest of the day.