happy Monday friend! Can I request some angst and fluff with wrecker that ends in cuddles please? I could use a giant hug today! Thank you so much for being awesome
You didn’t mean to snap at him.
It wasn’t Wrecker’s fault. It wasn’t anyone’s fault, really. The day had just been too much—the mission gone sideways, another evac too close to the edge, too many people screaming, not enough time. You’d gotten separated. Lost track of him. Thought—just for a moment—you’d lost him for good.
And when he came back, grinning like he always did, banged up but fine…
You’d yelled.
“Don’t do that to me again!”
His smile faded instantly, eyes wide like a kicked tooka.
“I—I didn’t mean to—”
“I thought you were dead, Wrecker!”
Silence followed your words like a stormcloud.
You didn’t wait for him to respond. Just turned on your heel and left the ship’s ramp, sitting down hard on a nearby crate, hands shaking, throat tight. You weren’t even mad at him. You were scared. You were so damn scared.
And then you heard the heavy footsteps.
Slow. Hesitant.
You didn’t look up, but you felt the weight of him settle next to you. Big. Warm. Safe.
“…M’sorry,” Wrecker said quietly.
You blinked. Looked up.
He was staring at the ground, fingers picking at his gloves, like he thought you might still snap. Like he was afraid you wouldn’t want him close.
That hurt more than anything else.
“No,” you whispered, voice cracking. “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have yelled. I just… you scared me, Wrecker.”
His brow furrowed. “I didn’t mean to. I was just trying to hold the line ‘til Hunter pulled you out. Wasn’t gonna let ‘em get near you.”
“I know,” you said, throat tight. “That’s the problem.”
He looked at you then—really looked. And whatever he saw on your face must’ve broken something in him, because the next second you were swept into the warmest, strongest hug you’d ever known.
“I’m right here,” he said into your hair. “I’m big enough to hold anything you’re feeling, alright? Scared, sad, mad—don’t matter. Just don’t shut me out.”
You clung to him. Just melted into that broad chest, buried your face in his neck and breathed. He smelled like metal and burn marks and something warm and safe. Like home.
“I don’t want to lose you,” you said, voice muffled.
“You won’t,” he promised. “Not if I got anything to say about it.”
He shifted, adjusting you easily in his lap until you were curled into him like a child, his arms wrapped around you like a fortress. He rocked you gently—just a little—and hummed something soft under his breath. You didn’t know the tune. You didn’t need to.
Time passed. Neither of you moved.
Eventually, he whispered, “You good now?”
You nodded against his chest. “Better now.”
“Good,” he said, pressing a kiss to your forehead. “’Cause I ain’t lettin’ go for a while.”
And he didn’t.
The rocking slowed, and his hand settled at the back of your head, big fingers threading through your hair with slow, careful strokes. Your breathing evened out against his chest, your fingers still curled in his shirt like you were afraid he’d disappear if you let go.
He noticed.
He always noticed.
Wrecker didn’t say anything—just held you tighter, chin resting on your head like it belonged there. Like you belonged there.
“You sleepin’?” he murmured after a while, voice hushed and tender.
No answer.
A soft smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. He shifted his grip, effortlessly lifting you into his arms like you weighed nothing, like you were precious. Your cheek rested against his shoulder, breath warm against his skin.
The others were quiet in their bunks. Tech was reading. Echo nodded in greeting. Hunter glanced over but didn’t say a word—he just smiled, soft and knowing, and went back to sharpening his knife.
Wrecker nudged the door to your shared space open with his boot and brought you inside.
The lights were low. The sheets were turned down.
He set you down on the bed with all the care in the galaxy, brushing a hand over your hair, tucking the blanket around you. You stirred slightly—just enough to mumble his name in a sleep-heavy voice.
“Wreck…”
“I’m here,” he said, instantly, quietly. “I’m right here, sweetheart.”
You reached for him blindly. “Don’t go.”
His heart cracked in two. “Not goin’ anywhere.”
He climbed into bed beside you, the mattress dipping beneath his size, and pulled you into him like a gravity well. One arm beneath your head, the other wrapped securely around your waist, your head nestled beneath his chin.
Your body relaxed completely—safe, warm, wrapped in the scent and strength of him.
You were already asleep again.
But he didn’t sleep for a while. He just lay there, holding you, watching your chest rise and fall with every breath. A gentle giant wrapped around the most important person in his world.
And when he did sleep, it was with a soft smile, because for once he knew you were safe.
And you knew you were loved.
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.
⸻
stop talking about the USA. I have heard enough about that wretched place
me rereading a scene: omg why is she acting like that who wrote this? i wrote this.
Hi, I saw request are open so I hope sending this is okay:). I had an idea that been lingering and I’d like to see if you could write it, possibly? Imagine a reader getting jealous about the friendship between Tech and Phee. I guess in this scenario reader and tech are an established couple? It honestly could go anyway you’d like it to:) My thoughts on this aren’t fully fleshed out so feel free to go crazy with this!:) I just love jealous tropes.
Tech x Jealous Reader
You didn’t mean to watch them.
It just… kept happening.
You were sitting at the workbench, fiddling with a half-stripped blaster that didn’t need fixing. From the corner of your eye, you could see them—Phee perched on a crate, animated, leaning closer to Tech as he adjusted something on his datapad.
She laughed again, this carefree, almost flirty kind of laugh that curled around your spine like a hook.
“That’s incredible,” she said, bumping her shoulder lightly into his. “You know more about lost hyperspace lanes than some of the old-timers back on Skara Nal.”
Tech pushed his goggles up, his voice as even as always. “Well, yes. I’ve extensively studied astro-cartography from several civilizations. Your planet’s archival inconsistencies, however, are particularly fascinating—”
“Oh, I know. That’s why I like talking to you.” Phee grinned, her hand brushing against his arm.
You clenched your jaw.
She didn’t mean anything by it, right? She was just… being Phee. Loud, curious, magnetic.
But still.
It didn’t sit right. The way she touched him. The way Tech didn’t even flinch or notice. You knew he wasn’t wired like other people—emotions weren’t instinctive for him. He didn’t register subtle cues, or the way someone’s gaze lingered just a moment too long. And he sure as hell didn’t understand flirting, not unless it came with a schematic.
But that didn’t make it hurt any less.
Later that night, after Phee had left for wherever she stored herself when not draped across your crew’s day-to-day, you found Tech alone in the cockpit, typing furiously into his datapad.
You stood there for a moment, arms folded, watching him.
He didn’t look up. “I am currently cataloging several of Phee’s findings regarding Nabooan artifacts. Some of the data is poorly organized, but she has a surprising eye for—”
“You two seem close,” you interrupted, trying to sound neutral. The words landed heavy.
Tech finally looked up.
“Who?” he asked.
“Phee.”
He blinked. “Ah. I suppose. We have engaged in mutual information exchange on several occasions. Her questions, though often imprecise, are not unintelligent.”
You sat beside him, slowly. “You don’t… think she’s being a little too friendly?”
He tilted his head, confused. “Friendly?”
You sighed. “Touchy. Flirty. You don’t notice the way she leans into you? Or calls you ‘Brown eyes’?”
Tech frowned slightly, processing. “She is expressive. That is her personality.”
“Yeah, well, it’s starting to feel like she’s trying to rewrite your personality while she’s at it.”
There was silence. You hated how small your voice had gotten.
“I just… I don’t like the way she looks at you.”
Tech regarded you with quiet intensity, the kind he reserved for situations he didn’t quite know how to calculate. “Are you implying you feel… threatened?”
You stared at your hands. “I don’t know. Maybe. She’s got this charm, this thing that draws people in. And I… I know I’m not always easy. I’m not flirty or magnetic. I just— I love you. A lot. And I guess I just… worry that it’s not enough to keep someone’s attention.”
His brow furrowed, and then he reached out, gently brushing your hand with his. “You are not somebody, cyare. You are my person. I do not compare you to others. There is no calculation in that. No contest. You… are the constant.”
You looked up, heart catching.
“Then why don’t you ever push her away?” you asked quietly. “Even just a little?”
Tech took a moment. “Because it never occurred to me that she might need to be pushed away. But if it makes you uncomfortable—”
“It does.”
“—then I will create distance. Immediately.”
You blinked. “Really?”
“Of course,” he said, as if it were the most obvious thing in the galaxy. “Your comfort is more important than her enthusiasm.”
You let out a breath you didn’t know you were holding. He squeezed your hand. “Next time, just tell me. I know I miss things. But I will always listen to you.”
Just then, as if summoned, Phee’s voice rang out down the hall: “Hey Brown Eyes, you got a minute?”
You tensed instinctively, but Tech didn’t even glance at the door. His gaze stayed on you, steady and unshakable.
“I’m currently engaged,” he called back. “Perhaps later.”
There was a pause. Then a short, “Huh. Alright.”
You could almost hear the smile behind it.
When the silence settled again, Tech leaned in and said softly, “May I continue cataloging your facial expressions now? I find them far more interesting.”
You rolled your eyes and kissed him, right on the mouth.
“Only if you add ‘jealous’ to the data bank,” you teased.
He kissed you again. “Already done.”
omega
Captain Rex x Reader X Commander Bacara
Christophis shimmered beneath a cold midday sun. The siege held steady for now, but you knew what the silence meant—another droid push was coming.
You stood outside the Republic command center as the wind curled through the crystal-laced streets, arms crossed over your chest as General Kenobi stepped beside you.
“You’re tense,” Obi-Wan said mildly, hands clasped behind his back.
“I’m Jedi,” you replied. “Tense is the brand.”
He chuckled softly. “You sound more like your former Master every day.”
You side-eyed him. “Don’t insult me.”
Kenobi smiled, and the two of you shared a brief, familiar quiet. He was warmth where Mace was fire. Less demanding, more wry. But you never doubted his strength.
He gestured for you to follow him back inside. “Cody and Rex have uncovered something troubling.”
⸻
Inside the war room, the holomap flickered with overlapping reports of enemy troop movements—ones the Separatists shouldn’t have been able to predict.
Cody looked up. “We’ve been compromised.”
You frowned, stepping beside Rex. “Hacked?”
“Worse,” Rex muttered, jaw tight. “Someone inside fed the droids our plans.”
Kenobi’s brow furrowed. “You’re certain?”
“We checked the comms logs, troop assignments. It had to be someone in the barracks,” Cody said.
You exchanged a glance with Rex.
“This wasn’t a droid slicing into our systems,” you said. “This was betrayal.”
Obi-Wan and Anakin headed out shortly after—to track down Ventress, whom they suspected had made direct contact with the traitor. You watched them vanish over the ridge, then turned back toward the barracks.
Cody nodded to Rex. “We do this quiet.”
You, Rex, and Cody questioned each of the troopers in the unit, keeping it routine. Nothing tipped you off—until Rex noticed something Slick had said.
Cody turned to you, “General,” he said, furious, “he knew the layout. Accessed the codes. Blasted his own squad’s quarters to cover his tracks.”
The rest came fast—tracking him to the weapons depot, where he’d set explosives to destroy Republic munitions.
Slick ranted as Cody and Rex finally brought him down. You stood at the edge, watching the aftermath, pulse still hammering.
“I was freeing myself!” Slick yelled. “We’re slaves—bred for war, thrown into battles without choice. You’re all too blind to see it!”
“You betrayed brothers,” Rex bit out. “Not just orders. Us.”
You didn’t speak. You couldn’t—not right then. You looked to Cody, who was already organizing a sweep of remaining supply caches.
“Reinforce the northern sector,” you told Rex, your voice steady. “We can’t let them think this rattled us.”
“Yes, General.”
He started to move, but paused. “Do you think he was right?”
You looked at him, really looked.
“No,” you said quietly. “You aren’t slaves. You’re soldiers. But that doesn’t mean the Republic treats you right.”
A small flicker passed over his face—something like surprise. And something else beneath it.
Respect.
You didn’t linger. You turned back to the ruined depot and the traitor being dragged away.
But the next time Rex looked at you, it was different.
⸻
The air over Christophis was charged with static and tension—thick enough to choke on. The Separatists had dug in deeper, the front line stretching like a fraying wire. Crystal shards and smoldering wreckage dotted the skyline.
You stood atop the forward command platform beside Rex and Anakin, squinting through macrobinoculars as waves of droids advanced, relentless.
“Cody’s holding the right flank,” Rex reported. “But not for long.”
Anakin shifted beside you. “Then we take the pressure off.”
You lowered the binocs, nodding. “We push up the main thoroughfare. Hard and fast. Break their rhythm.”
Rex gave a short nod. “I’ll get the men ready.”
As he turned, Anakin glanced sideways at you. “Not bad, General. Starting to think you’re enjoying our messes.”
“I was trained by Windu. Messes are my baseline,” you said, arching a brow.
Anakin grinned. “You ever get tired of being reassigned?”
You opened your mouth to answer—but the sudden thrum of a descending transport drew your attention skyward. A Jedi cruiser broke the cloudline, dropping a low-altitude shuttle near your position.
A moment later, the boarding ramp hissed open—and out strode a young Togruta girl with fire in her stride and determination on her face.
“Jedi reinforcements?” Rex asked, squinting.
You stepped forward as she approached. “She’s just a kid…”
“I’m not ‘just a kid,’” the girl interrupted, planting herself in front of you and Anakin. “I’m Ahsoka Tano. Jedi Padawan. Assigned by Master Yoda.”
Anakin blinked. “Assigned to who?”
“To you,” Ahsoka replied, chin lifted proudly. “Master Skywalker.”
You looked between them, watching the shock play across Anakin’s face, and bit back a smile.
“Well,” you said quietly, “have fun with that.”
But Ahsoka wasn’t done. She turned to you next, eyes bright with news.
“And you, General,” she added. “I have orders for your redeployment. The Council needs you on Jabiim.”
Your heart skipped.
Jabiim.
The mud planet. The fractured native clans. The ghosts.
“I served there as a Padawan,” you said. “Years ago.”
Ahsoka nodded. “The Council said your connection with the local resistance could help rebuild diplomacy. They’re trying to avoid civilian casualties. You will be aiding Master Mundi and his men”
You didn’t answer right away. The weight of it pressed into your chest—not just another mission. Not just more fighting.
But Bacara.
And Mundi.
Anakin folded his arms, expression darkening. “You just got here. They’re moving you again?”
You glanced at him. “It’s war, Skywalker.”
He shook his head. “It’s bad planning.”
Rex was quiet beside you, unreadable behind his helmet.
You finally turned to him. “You’ve got good people, Captain. You’ll win this without me.”
He hesitated for the briefest beat before nodding. “Safe travels, General.”
You turned back toward the shuttle, Ahsoka falling into step beside you. “They’re expecting you to land by nightfall.”
“And I expect to be muddy by morning,” you muttered.
You didn’t look back.
But you felt it—that unmistakable flicker of attachment. The way a battlefront had started to feel like home. The way one quiet, steady clone had started to make you hesitate before stepping onto a ship.
You swallowed it.
And walked away.
⸻
The rain on Jabiim hadn’t changed.
It greeted you like an old foe—relentless, icy, and soaking through every layer of your robes before you even stepped off the gunship. The scent of wet metal and rot filled your lungs, the familiar churn of mud underfoot as clone boots squelched around you.
You blinked against the downpour, lifting your hood as a group of Jabiimi locals approached. Dressed in patchwork armor and soaked tunics, they looked rougher than you remembered—but their leader, a grizzled woman with salt-and-pepper braids, smiled the moment she saw you.
“Jedi!” she called out. “I didn’t believe it when they said it was you.”
You moved forward and clasped her arm, shoulder to shoulder in the Jabiimi way. “Reya. Still not dead?”
“Disappointed?” she asked with a sharp grin.
“Honestly, yeah. I was sure you’d be the one to get pancaked by an AT-TE trying to punch it.”
She barked a laugh, and a few of her men chuckled behind her. The rain ran down your face, but you didn’t care—not here.
“Still the same sharp tongue,” Reya said. “But older. Heavier.”
You looked toward the ridgelines beyond the base, where smoke curled from recent skirmishes.
“We all are.”
⸻
The command tent was warm in comparison, though the heat came mostly from tension.
Master Ki-Adi-Mundi was hunched over a holomap, his long fingers tapping as he scrolled through topography. Bacara stood at his side, arms folded, helmet tucked beneath one arm. He glanced up as you entered—and then promptly looked away.
“General,” Mundi greeted without looking up. “Your arrival was later than expected.”
You raised a brow. “Nice to see you too, Master Mundi. The diplomatic welcome from the Jabiimi slowed us down.”
“They do have a flair for unnecessary tradition,” he replied, dry as bone.
You stifled a sigh and stepped closer. “They trust me. That’ll matter when this turns ugly.”
Mundi didn’t argue—but didn’t agree either.
Instead, he gestured toward the glowing red marks on the map. “Separatist forces have split across the valley. We’ll need a two-pronged advance.”
You exchanged a brief glance with Bacara. “I assume I’m taking one side?”
“Yes,” Mundi said. “And Commander Bacara will accompany you.”
You didn’t miss the subtle way Bacara’s jaw shifted.
Later, outside the command tent, the rain had lightened to a misty drizzle. You and Bacara walked in silence through the makeshift perimeter. Troopers moved past, saluting. The mud clung to everything.
“You’re quiet,” you finally said, side-eyeing him. “More than usual.”
“I prefer action to small talk,” he replied, eyes scanning the treeline.
You folded your arms, then smirked. “Well. I’d try to get you to like me, but it’s clear you already hate Master Mundi more.”
For the first time since you’d arrived, Bacara blinked—and something flickered across his face. A twitch of the mouth. Maybe even a grin. You weren’t sure. But it was enough.
“He’s… not ideal,” Bacara said at last.
You raised a brow. “That was practically gossip. Careful, Commander.”
He didn’t respond, but the tension between you had eased. Slightly.
You stepped up beside him. “You don’t have to like me. But we fight better when we understand each other.”
“I understand you fine, General,” Bacara said, looking forward. “You don’t like being told what to do. You take risks. You talk too much.”
You hummed. “And yet, somehow, you haven’t shot me.”
“There’s still time.”
The ghost of a smirk tugged at your lips as you looked out across the field. Rain still fell. The mud still swallowed boots whole. But something was shifting. Just a little.
You’d crack his armor eventually.
One way or another.
⸻
The dawn on Jabiim was little more than a pale bruise behind stormclouds.
Visibility was poor. The mist clung to the ground like a second skin. The entire platoon moved like wraiths over the muddy terrain, their white armor dulled with grime. Bacara led the charge, as always, silent and swift. You followed at his flank, your saber unlit for now, your mind scanning for movement through the Force.
This mission was simple: flush out a Separatist munitions outpost built into the cliffs east of the valley before reinforcements arrived. Quiet, fast, sharp. That was Bacara’s way.
And there had been no room for questioning it.
He hadn’t assigned you anything. He’d informed you. “You’ll be on overwatch. Do not break formation unless ordered,” he’d said back at camp, his voice clipped and precise. “This is not a Jedi operation. This is military execution.”
You weren’t used to being spoken to like a cadet.
As you crested the final ridge, you crouched next to Bacara. He was scanning the outpost below, HUD flickering, speaking quietly into his comm to his men.
“Squad A—flank left. Squad B, take high ground on that outcrop. We breach in five.”
You watched him for a beat, then leaned close.
“Got a plan for the anti-armor cannons on the eastern side?”
He didn’t look at you. “They’ll be dealt with.”
“Your definition of ‘dealt with’ usually involves body bags.”
Bacara finally turned, visor gleaming. “My definition of ‘dealt with’ ends with mission success. You’re on overwatch, remember?”
You exhaled slowly, not wanting to escalate. “I’m trying to work with you, Commander. If you’d communicate—”
“Trust is earned, not given,” he said sharply. “And so far, all I’ve seen is impulsiveness, disobedience, and sentimentality.”
You stared at him, something sharp catching behind your ribs.
“I save lives,” you said. “You bury them.”
Bacara’s tone went cold. “And yet, you’re here. Assigned to my unit. That should tell you something.”
He turned without another word, barking orders to his troops as they began moving into position.
⸻
The assault was brutal.
Explosives lit up the fog, and Separatist fire screamed through the air. Bacara’s unit moved with terrifying coordination—drilled to perfection, ruthless in their advance. You provided support, covering fire, strategic pushes—but nothing too visible. Bacara didn’t want theatrics. He wanted precision.
It worked.
By the time you moved into the outpost interior, only a few scattered droids remained. You slashed through them with clean sweeps, the hiss of your saber illuminating the narrow halls.
But something still sat sour in your gut.
Back at camp, you wiped grime from your face and walked straight into the makeshift command tent where Bacara was debriefing.
“You reassigned Trooper Kixan.”
Bacara didn’t look up from his datapad. “Yes.”
“He saved three men today,” you said, stepping in. “Took a blaster bolt to the shoulder and kept moving. He’s loyal. Smart. Brave.”
“And slow. His reaction time compromised the left flank. He will be reassigned to support detail under a different unit.”
You stared at him. “You can’t treat them like parts, Bacara.”
“I don’t, General,” he replied, eyes finally lifting to meet yours. “I treat them like soldiers. And I do not have room for anything less than excellence.”
Something cold lodged in your throat. “You’re going to push them until they break.”
“They were bred for this,” he said flatly. “If they break, they weren’t made for war.”
You hated how calm he sounded. You hated how efficient he was. You hated how much it reminded you of everything Mace warned you about when Jedi strayed too far into command and left their compassion behind.
You turned to leave, stopping just at the tent flap.
“I thought Mundi was the hardest man in this battalion to like,” you said, not looking back. “But congratulations. You’re winning.”
⸻
The storm had broken sometime after midnight. Rain battered the tents with rhythmic violence, and the air carried that sharp, post-battle scent: metal, ozone, blood.
You couldn’t sleep.
Your boots sank into the sludge outside your tent as you paced, the glow of the communicator clenched in your hand like it could anchor you.
You stood still beneath the overhang of a comms tower and keyed in the encryption sequence. The signal buzzed—delayed, flickering—and for a heartbeat, you thought it wouldn’t connect.
Then, Master Windu’s image shimmered to life, projected in pale blue above your comm.
“[Y/N],” he said, voice like gravel smoothed by a river. His expression was unreadable, but his shoulders relaxed the slightest bit. “You’re up late. I assume this isn’t a scheduled update.”
You scoffed. “No. This is a tactical emergency.”
Mace didn’t react. “You’re bleeding?”
“Emotionally,” you said, dryly. “From the brain. And the soul.”
He stared. “Explain.”
You leaned in like you were about to spill secrets forbidden by the Code. “Master, I swear, if I spend one more minute on this cold, miserable rock with Commander Iceblock and High Council Saint Arrogance, I’m going to lose my mind.”
Mace blinked slowly. “I take it you’re referring to Bacara and Master Mundi.”
“Who else would I be referring to?! One of them speaks like he’s permanently inhaled a blaster cartridge and the other talks to me like I’m still a youngling who can’t lift a cup without supervision!”
Mace’s brow twitched slightly. “You are still young.”
You pointed a stern finger at the holocomm. “Don’t do that. Don’t Jedi me. This is a venting call, Master.”
“I gathered.”
You slumped back in the chair, groaning. “Bacara reassigns clones like they’re sabacc cards. He told me I was ‘failing to meet operational discipline standards.’ What does that mean?! I beat his training droid record last month!”
“You are… not a standard Jedi.”
“I’m not even sure he likes Jedi. And Mundi just nods at everything he does like they’re some cold, creepy war hive mind! At least you used to tell me when I was being annoying. They just silently judge me like two frostbitten gargoyles!”
There was a long pause. You half expected Mace to give you a lecture. Instead, his voice was low. “You’re frustrated. That’s not wrong. What do you want from them?”
You sighed, all the energy draining out of you. “I don’t know. Respect? Trust? Maybe a little acknowledgment that I know what I’m doing?”
Mace’s eyes softened ever so slightly. “You want them to see you the way I do.”
You didn’t answer right away. But yeah—maybe.
“I can’t make them see it,” Mace continued. “But I can remind you that you’ve earned everything that put you where you are. Don’t twist yourself into someone else to win their approval.”
You smiled faintly. “Not even for peace and quiet?”
“Especially not for that. You’ve never been quiet.”
You laughed, resting your chin in your hand. “I miss Coruscant.”
“I miss not having to take comm calls at two in the morning.”
You beamed. “But you still answered.”
His mouth twitched. “Always.”
You grinned, wide and unapologetic.
“Get some sleep,” he said, his tone softening. “You’ll outlast them both.”
“I’ll try. Thanks, Master.”
The transmission ended, and for the first time in days, you felt like your balance had returned.
⸻
The frost crunched beneath your boots, thin white cracking like old bone as you followed the squad through the craggy ravine. The sky above was overcast—grey, as always—and your breath fogged with every exhale.
It was the first coordinated mission with just you, Bacara, and the squad. No Ki-Adi-Mundi. No diplomacy. Just a recon op on the edge of hostile territory. Quiet. Tense. Frozen.
You liked the clones. Most of them, anyway. Kixan—freshly reassigned—offered you a small nod as you passed. You gave him one back.
Bacara hadn’t spoken to you directly since the debrief.
You didn’t know why it irked you so much. He was never exactly chatty—but there was something pointed about his silence now. And it was beginning to wear on your nerves.
You kept pace beside him anyway, trudging over uneven rock as the squad spread out behind you.
“Terrain levels off another two klicks ahead,” you said. “If we angle the scan here, we can avoid the ridge entirely and still get clean readings.”
He said nothing.
You blinked. “That wasn’t a suggestion. That was a tactical note.”
“I heard you,” he muttered, gruff and unreadable.
You narrowed your eyes. “Did I do something to upset you, Commander?”
There was a beat. He didn’t look at you. “No.”
Liar.
You frowned, your hand brushing the hilt of your saber. “Okay. So it’s just me. Got it.”
“Don’t start something mid-mission,” he snapped. Not loud—but sharp enough to cut.
Your nostrils flared. “You’re not my master, Bacara.”
“No. But I am your commander on this op. And your opinion of me has been made… abundantly clear.”
You froze mid-step. “What?”
“Don’t worry. I didn’t hear all of your conversation with Master Windu,” he said, voice low. “Just enough.”
Oh no.
Your mouth opened—and closed. You felt your stomach twist.
“How much is ‘enough’?”
“‘Emotionally bleeding from the soul,’” he quoted flatly.
Maker.
You looked away, feeling the heat rise to your cheeks despite the cold. “You were spying.”
“I was passing the comm tent.”
You made a sound that was somewhere between a groan and a swear. “Fine. Look—maybe I vented. A little. But you were being impossible.”
You made a sound that was somewhere between a groan and a swear. “Fine. Look—maybe I vented. A little. But you were being impossible.”
“I was doing my job.”
“At what cost?”
Bacara stopped. You nearly walked into him.
He turned to you fully, expression unreadable behind the harsh lines of his helmet. “I don’t have the luxury of trial and error, General. I don’t get to make emotional calls and hope they work out.”
You swallowed. “You think I do?”
He didn’t answer.
You took a step forward, eyes locked on him. “I feel things. That’s not a weakness. And maybe I complain. Maybe I rant. But I’ve never abandoned the mission. I’m here. I’m fighting. Same as you.”
There was a moment—a flicker of something in his stance. Tension. Conflict. Maybe even a touch of guilt.
“I don’t dislike you,” he said finally.
You blinked. “You’ve got a strange way of showing it.”
A silence stretched between you.
He added, quietly, “I dislike Mundi more.”
You snorted before you could help it. “Well, now you’re just trying to flatter me.”
“No,” he said dryly. “That’s not what that was.”
And just like that, a crack formed in the durasteel.
Not enough to change everything.
But enough to start.
⸻
The wind came down from the northern slopes in sharp, whispering currents, cutting through every seam of your robes. The battle might have been quiet today, but the land was still loud—with frost, with silence, with the kind of stillness that meant something was always waiting.
You sat cross-legged near the squad’s makeshift fire, arms wrapped around your knees, watching embers dance. The clones had begun to relax, little by little. Helmets off. Gloves loosened. There was even the soft clink of a thermal flask being passed around.
Bacara hadn’t joined them yet. He stood off a few meters, half-silhouetted in the dark, arms folded, visor turned toward the stars—or the silence. You couldn’t tell.
You didn’t press him.
Instead, you looked at the men.
Gunner was talking with Varn, low-voiced but animated. Kixan nodded along, his smile tired but real. Even Tekk, the quietest of them, had cracked a dry comment earlier that got a snort from the group. You liked seeing them like this. Human.
You passed your own ration tin to Kixan and leaned back, letting the heat of the fire work on your frozen spine.
And then Master Mundi joined the circle.
He sat down with the composure of a politician, robes perfectly arranged despite the mud at the hem. He gave a slight nod to the men, then turned his attention to you.
“General,” he said. “It is good to see you integrating with the unit.”
You arched a brow. “They’re good men. Not hard to like.”
He gave one of his tight, unreadable smiles. “Affection must never cloud judgment. Familiarity breeds attachment. Attachment clouds the Force.”
There it was.
You smiled, tight-lipped. “I’m aware of the Code, Master.”
“I’m sure you are,” he said mildly, but it still grated. Like you were a student again. Like the weight of your lightsaber and the stripes on your armor didn’t mean anything.
The silence that followed was awkward—until Gunner coughed and redirected with a story about a wild nexu they’d seen in a jungle op once. The others followed his lead.
You joined in too—offering a few memories from a chaotic campaign with the 501st that involved a collapsed bridge, a flock of angry bird-lizards, and Anakin Skywalker daring a clone to drink glowing fruit juice.
That got real laughs.
Even Tekk chuckled, and Varn snorted loud enough to attract Bacara’s attention. The commander lingered, glanced at the fire, then slowly made his way over.
You noticed. So did the men.
He didn’t sit, but he stayed. Close enough to hear. Close enough to be seen.
That was something.
And then, quietly, Gunner passed him the flask.
Bacara hesitated—just for a moment—then took it. No words. Just a nod. But the men noticed. So did you.
The conversation rolled on. Light. Easy. Full of battle scars and ridiculous injuries and even a poor attempt at singing a Republic marching song. The cold wasn’t gone—but it felt distant now. Dull.
You met Bacara’s eyes briefly through his helmet, and offered a small, genuine smile.
He didn’t return it.
But he didn’t look away, either.
And somehow, that was enough.
⸻
The war was never really over—not on Coruscant, and certainly not in your head. But the campaign was.
The treaty was signed, the separatist stronghold had been dismantled, and the native leadership, thanks to your careful negotiations, had agreed to provide intelligence and safe passage for the Republic.
It was a hard-won, smoke-stained victory. You’d survived. So had the squad. Even Bacara.
Back on Coruscant, the base was bustling with returning battalions. Steel corridors echoed with familiar voices and heavy boots, but everything felt strangely muffled to you. It always did after a long campaign. Like you were half out of your body, trailing somewhere between systems and decisions you couldn’t take back.
You were exiting the debriefing chambers when you heard the voice—steady, familiar, a little softer than usual.
“General.”
You turned—too fast.
Rex stood there in casual gear, one hand loosely on his belt, the other behind his back. He wasn’t wearing his helmet, which meant you got the full impact of that steady, level gaze and the faint smile that didn’t quite reach his eyes.
Standing just behind him was Ahsoka Tano, arms crossed, an amused but knowing expression on her face.
“Well, look who made it back in one piece,” you said, heart lurching before you could stop it.
Rex nodded. “Didn’t doubt you would, General.”
You walked toward them, easing into the reunion like slipping into an old coat. Comfortable. Familiar. Too comfortable?
Ahsoka stepped forward first. “You smell like three weeks of burned jungle and bad rations.”
You snorted. “It was three weeks of bad rations, but certainly wasn’t burned jungles.”
She grinned, then leaned in to give you a quick hug. “Welcome back.”
You were about to respond when you felt it—eyes. On your back.
You turned, just slightly, and saw Bacara in the distance, halfway across the hangar bay. Still in full armor, helmet under his arm, face unreadable.
He didn’t approach. Just… watched.
You blinked, heart thudding a little too loud in your chest, then turned back to Rex—and that’s when you saw it.
A tiny shift. A twitch of his jaw. The faintest flicker in his expression.
You weren’t sure what it meant.
But Ahsoka did.
She looked between the two of you, her brow furrowing slightly as she took a half-step back and crossed her arms again. Observing.
“Commander Bacara?” Rex asked, casual in tone, but not in his eyes.
“Yeah,” you said. “We worked… closely this campaign.”
Rex gave a small nod, then glanced over your shoulder briefly. “He doesn’t look thrilled.”
You didn’t answer right away.
Ahsoka did, though. “Neither do you.”
The silence that followed was tight.
You tried to lighten it. “You’re both just mad I didn’t die out there.”
Rex gave a thin smile. “Not mad, General. Just surprised.”
That one stung. Not because it was harsh—because it wasn’t. It was honest. And distant. And something you couldn’t quite read.
Before you could say anything else, a summons crackled over your comlink—Council debriefing.
“Guess I’m wanted,” you said, already backing away.
You turned and started walking. You didn’t look back.
But you could feel two sets of eyes watching you go.
One like a shadow. The other like a tether you weren’t sure you could still follow.
⸻
Previous Part | Next Part
(A/N, I had to make up a few clone ocs as I could not find one clone name for the Galactic Marines)
Salve! I was wondering if you could do a 501st x Fem!Reader where she can comfort the boys after they have nightmares. Cuddly and fluffy fic? Love your work! 💙🇳🇴
501st x Fem!Reader
⸻
The war was quiet tonight, at least on this side of the stars.
Your bunk was tucked into the corner of the 501st’s temporary barracks, a little pocket of calm in a galaxy always set to burn. The lights were dim, the hum of the base a low lull, and most of the troopers were supposed to be asleep.
But you’d learned that sleep didn’t come easy to men who’d seen too much.
That’s why you stayed awake—your blankets soft and open, arms ready, heart steady.
The first to appear was Hardcase—because of course it was. Loud in everything he did except when he was hurting. You heard his footsteps even before you saw him.
“Hey,” he said sheepishly, scratching the back of his neck. “Couldn’t shut my brain off. Kept hearing the gunfire… y’know. Just noise. Dumb.”
You patted the spot beside you. “It’s not dumb.”
Hardcase flopped down like a kicked puppy, curling into your side with his head pressed against your chest. “You smell better than blaster fire,” he mumbled.
You chuckled, brushing a hand through his wild hair. “High praise.”
A few minutes later, Echo slipped in like a ghost, eyes hollow.
“Wasn’t even my nightmare,” he whispered. “It was Fives’. I heard him in his sleep.”
“Then bring him too.”
Echo looked back over his shoulder. Sure enough, Fives emerged from the shadows, rubbing his eyes.
“You’re like a kriffing magnet,” Fives grumbled, but he smiled when he saw you and Hardcase.
“Only for broken things,” you teased softly.
“You say that like it’s a bad thing,” Fives replied, nestling in beside Echo, his back brushing yours. You reached back and grabbed his hand, grounding him.
The bunk was growing crowded—but there was always room.
Kix came next, grumbling about how it wasn’t “medically advisable” for this many people to share a bunk, but you knew better.
“You’re not here for medical advice, are you?” you asked.
“…No,” he muttered, surrendering as he slid under the blanket at your feet, resting his head near your knees.
Then Appo arrived, quiet and unsure, his helmet still on.
“You can take it off,” you said gently. “You don’t have to wear the war in here.”
He hesitated… then removed it.
The look in his eyes told you everything: too many losses. Too much weight.
You pulled him down beside you. “Just for tonight, let it go.”
Jesse and Dogma came together—one cracked jokes, the other said nothing. But both of them settled close, drawn by the comfort you offered without needing to ask.
Eventually, even Rex came.
He stood at the edge of the pile like a soldier standing watch. Not ready to be vulnerable. Not yet.
“Captain?” you said softly.
His eyes flicked to yours.
You didn’t pressure him. Just opened your arm, just a little, just enough.
Rex hesitated… then stepped forward and sank to the floor beside your bunk, resting his head against your thigh. You ran your fingers through his hair, slow and steady.
No one spoke for a while. The room was warm with breath and body heat, filled with the soft sound of steady inhales.
For just a few hours, there was no war. No armor. No titles. Just tired men wrapped around someone who loved them.
You pressed your lips to the crown of Fives’ head, gave Jesse’s hand a squeeze, and reached down to cup Rex’s cheek.
“You’re safe,” you whispered. “All of you. Tonight, you’re safe.”
And the nightmares stayed away.
You weren’t supposed to be in the clones barracks.
But you rarely went where you were supposed to.
The corridors were quiet, the hum of the ventilation system steady in your ears. Most of the troopers were off-duty or deployed, leaving the barracks feeling like a ghost shell of itself. You moved like you belonged—fluid, confident, precise. The kind of presence that drew attention and made others question their instincts.
Then—
“What the hell are you doing here?”
The voice stopped you mid-step.
Commander Cody stood in the hallway, brow furrowed, arms crossed. His armor was half-off—pauldrons gone, chest plate open, undersuit exposed to the dim light. He looked tired. Suspicious.
And maddeningly attractive.
You offered him your best smile. “Missed the smell of plastoid and repressed emotions.”
Cody didn’t laugh. He didn’t blink. “Answer the question.”
“I came to see a friend.”
“Name.”
You stepped closer, eyes gleaming. “Commander Cody.”
Cody’s jaw twitched, but he didn’t move. “You vanished. No comms. No explanation.”
“And yet here I am,” you whispered, voice lower now. “Alive. Still on the right side… mostly.”
He stared you down. “You don’t belong in this sector.”
“You gonna arrest me?” you asked, chin tilted up, a faint challenge in your tone.
“I should.”
“But you won’t.”
Silence. Charged and heavy.
He looked at you then—really looked. Not as a mission asset or potential threat. Just… you.
You took a step closer, reaching out and brushing your fingers against the edge of his unarmored shoulder. “You gonna keep pretending you don’t like when I do this?”
He didn’t stop you. Didn’t move.
But he didn’t answer either.
And that said more than enough. You pulled your hand away from Cody slowly, leaving a ghost of heat behind.
“Still pretending?” you asked.
He didn’t answer.
But when you turned to leave, his voice stopped you again.
“Don’t make me choose between you and the Republic.”
You paused.
Then, without looking back: “You might have to.”
⸻
Meanwhile – Jedi Temple, Council Chambers
Master Kit Fisto stood in the center of the room, arms folded behind his back, expression solemn. “She’s not just reckless. She’s evasive. Deceptive. She’s manipulating soldiers. Getting close in ways that compromise their judgment.”
Mace Windu’s eyes were cold steel. “I’ve seen the reports. She shouldn’t have been on Teth in the first place. And then she vanishes with a Force-sensitive child?”
Yoda hummed, tapping his cane. “Proof, you lack. The Chancellor’s word, she has.”
Kit pressed forward. “I watched her outside 79’s. The way she moved. The way she spoke to the clones. She’s not interested in loyalty. She’s interested in influence.”
Obi-Wan, leaning forward, tapped the table gently. “I won’t pretend she isn’t… complicated. But she’s fought beside us. Risked her life for the Republic. There’s more to her than subterfuge.”
“She’s dangerous,” Mace said firmly. “And she has access to our inner circles through the Chancellor. That makes her a risk.”
“Or a tool,” Obi-Wan countered. “If used wisely.”
“A tool for who, I wonder,” Kit muttered.
Yoda’s eyes narrowed, deep in thought.
“The Chancellor’s friend, she is,” he murmured. “But in shadows, much hides. Watch her, we must.”
⸻
The smell of caf hung heavy in the air. Trays clattered, boots thudded, and clone chatter rose in a dull, tired murmur. The war never stopped—but moments like this made it feel like it slowed.
Rex sat at the edge of a table, arms crossed, a half-eaten ration bar forgotten on his tray.
Across from him, Kix, Fives, Jesse, and Tup were deep in a low conversation, and even though they weren’t exactly trying to hide it, the minute Kix glanced Rex’s way, the silence tightened.
He noticed.
“What?” Rex asked flatly, his tone already edged.
Kix looked reluctant. Jesse grimaced. Fives looked entirely too pleased with himself.
Tup leaned forward and said it bluntly: “She was here last night. Sector C-9.”
Rex’s spine straightened. “What?”
“Commander Cody’s floor,” Kix clarified, stirring his caf. “No clearance. No escort. Just… strolled in.”
“Unannounced,” Jesse added, a bit more cautiously. “Didn’t cause trouble, but still. It’s odd.”
“She’s got a pattern,” Tup said. “Getting close to officers. Playing coy. Smiling at everyone like she knows a secret.”
Fives grinned. “I’d let her manipulate me.”
“Of course you would,” Kix muttered.
“She’s a distraction,” Tup continued. “And a dangerous one. What’s she even doing here again? She’s not military.”
“She’s useful,” Jesse countered. “She’s worked with us before. She gets results.”
“She disappears without a trace and comes back with clearance from the Chancellor,” Kix said quietly. “No chain of command, no protocol. It’s off.”
Rex didn’t speak for a moment, staring down at his tray like it held answers.
Then, softly: “Where is she now?”
Fives looked up from his drink, smirking. “Why? Planning on asking Cody?”
Rex stood up without another word.
⸻
You were leaning against the rusted edge of a shipping container in the lower levels, checking a concealed blaster’s sight when you heard footsteps behind you.
“Didn’t know I needed a guard dog,” you said without looking. “Let me guess—Cody ratted me out?”
“You were in the barracks,” Rex said.
You turned to face him, expression unreadable. “I was.”
“Why?”
You met his stare. “Why do you care?”
Rex’s jaw clenched. “Because I don’t know what side you’re playing anymore.”
You gave a soft, humorless laugh. “Does it bother you that I was with Cody? Or that you weren’t the one I came to see?”
He didn’t answer.
“That’s what I thought,” you said, stepping closer. “You liked it better when I was gone.”
“I liked it better when I trusted you.”
The space between you was close now. Tense. Alive.
“I never asked for your trust, Captain,” you whispered. “But you gave it. And now you’re scared you’ll have to take it back.”
He stared at you for a long moment, something unreadable in his eyes. Then he stepped back.
“Stay away from my men,” he said, voice low.
You tilted your head. “Or what?”
“You won’t get another warning.”
Then he turned and left.
You watched him go, pulse steady, mask in place—but somewhere beneath it, something twisted just a little tighter.
⸻
Mace Windu stood before a star chart, arms folded, as Kit Fisto entered and closed the door behind him.
“She’s sowing division among the clones,” Kit said without preamble. “I’m hearing it from troopers. Rumors. Questions.”
“Even Skywalker’s men?”
“Especially them.”
Mace nodded grimly. “She’s destabilizing morale.”
“Yoda still thinks she may serve a purpose.”
“He’s wrong,” Mace said. “The Chancellor’s got her in his pocket. She’s not our ally—she’s his spy.”
“And if she’s in the field again?” Kit asked.
Mace’s eyes narrowed.
“We keep watching. And when she slips—we move.”
⸻
The city outside glowed gold with the rising sun, but inside the Chancellor’s office, everything felt cold and deliberate. You stood still as Chancellor Palpatine circled slowly, hands clasped behind his back, voice smooth as silk.
“There’s a mission,” he said. “One only you can be trusted with.”
She didn’t flinch. “Who’s involved?”
“Master Windu. General Kenobi. Their men. You will join them as my personal attache.”
A pause.
“Officially, you’ll be assisting in clearing the last remnants of a Separatist stronghold on Erobus,” he continued. “Unofficially, there are certain… elements beneath the facility I want destroyed without the Jedi ever knowing they existed. Do you understand?”
She nodded once. “And if they suspect me?”
He gave a soft, chilling smile. “Then perhaps it is time they learned to trust my allies. You will prove yourself invaluable.”
She didn’t like it. She rarely did. But she knew better than to argue.
⸻
The dropship roared through Erobus’s dead sky. Wind carried the smoke of a long-dead battlefield. The reader sat apart from the Jedi and the clones, her gaze fixed out the narrow viewport.
General Kenobi was in quiet conversation with Commander Cody. Windu sat in silence, fingers steepled in meditation. The clones around her — the 212th — watched her like she was an animal in a cage. Not openly hostile. Just… unsure.
She didn’t blame them.
“Never thought we’d see you again,” Cody muttered as he walked past her toward the front. “You just have a habit of showing up where things are about to explode?”
She smirked. “And you have a habit of being too pretty for your own good.”
He raised a brow but kept walking.
Windu had acknowledged her presence with a nod. Kenobi had raised a brow, but said nothing. This time, there was no need to pretend. She was here by Palpatine’s orders—but acting as if she belonged among them.
They moved quickly, carving through what little resistance remained. The reader fought without flourish—blasters precise, movement efficient, lethal. She noticed how Windu watched her more than he watched the enemy. Not with distrust. With… calculation.
The mission moved fast. She fought alongside the Jedi and the troopers, not quite one of them, but not an outsider either. Not anymore.
She planted explosives in corridors no one else entered. Disabled systems no one else noticed. And when Windu asked too many questions, she deflected with just enough truth to keep suspicion from blooming.
She was the perfect tool.
When the fighting ended and the skies were silent again, the group began regrouping for departure.
But Windu stayed behind.
She stood at the edge of the rubble, arms crossed, staring at the still-burning wreckage. Windu approached silently, his presence calm and weighted.
“You were too comfortable in there,” Windu said.
She tilted her head. “You say that like it’s a bad thing.”
“You knew where to strike. What to look for.”
“And?”
His gaze sharpened. “And you’ve done this before.”
She hesitated.
Then said, “I’ve done a lot of things.”
He studied her. Then, in a voice low and almost too calm: “Why do you work for him? Palpatine?”
She didn’t blink. “Because I’m too afraid not to.”
That stunned him — not because she said it, but because of how honest it was.
“You hesitated,” he said simply.
She glanced at him, unbothered. “I’m always hesitant when explosives are involved.”
She exhaled, the smoke curling from the wreckage catching in the light. “The clones… they trust blindly. They don’t see the game being played around them. They deserve better.”
Windu’s voice was low. “So why play the game?”
She was quiet for a moment, then: “Because I’m not brave enough not to.”
Windu stepped closer. “The Chancellor—does he own your fear?”
She met his eyes, finally lowering her hood. “He owns everyone’s fear. I just know better than to pretend otherwise.”
Silence hung heavy between them.
Then Windu said, “You care about them. The clones.”
“I care about them,” she added quietly. “The clones. Maybe that’s the problem.”
Windu was silent for a long time. “Then maybe you’re not the threat we thought you were.”
“But I still am a threat,” she said, soft and sharp.
He didn’t argue. “So is everyone these days.”
They stood side by side, the flames crackling around them. For the first time, Windu didn’t look at her like she was a threat. He looked at her like someone caught between survival and sacrifice—like he understood.
Finally, he said, “Let’s get back.”
As they walked toward the ship, the reader didn’t look back. But deep down, a new kind of fear was blooming—because for the first time, someone from the Council believed in her.
And she didn’t know how long she could keep surviving if that belief ever turned to betrayal.
⸻
The storm had passed, but the sky was still dark.
Republic shuttles hummed, crates clanged, clone troopers barked orders as the camp disassembled around her. The reader stood near the edge of the landing pad, helmet in one hand, half-listening to the static on her comm.
“Classified orders from the Chancellor.” That’s what the officer had said. “Immediate departure. Debrief in person.”
She should’ve walked straight to the shuttle. But she lingered. And he found her.
Cody.
He walked up slow, arms crossed, boots crunching gravel beneath him. His armor was dusted in ash and plasma scarring. She glanced at him but didn’t speak first.
“I figured you’d disappear again,” he said.
“Still might.”
He nodded. “You always do.”
There was no anger in his tone. Just… tired honesty.
She looked up at him fully then. “You don’t trust me.”
“I don’t know what to trust,” he replied, voice low. “You fight beside us. Then vanish. You show up under the Chancellor’s banner with Jedi clearance and secrets you don’t share.”
“I’m doing what I was asked to do.”
“By him.”
She stepped closer. “If I was working against you, you’d already be dead, Cody.”
He didn’t flinch. “Maybe. But that doesn’t mean you’re on our side.”
Silence fell between them, heavy as armor.
“I’m not the enemy,” she said finally.
“No,” Cody said, his eyes locked on hers. “But you’re not really one of us either.”
She looked away first. Her jaw clenched, throat dry. “I didn’t come here to explain myself.”
“Didn’t think you did.”
But as she turned to go, his voice followed her — quieter this time, almost uncertain:
“You care about the men. I see that. But whatever it is you’re caught in… don’t let it destroy you.”
She stopped, just for a second. Looked back over her shoulder, the weight of unspoken words between them.
“Too late,” she said.
Then she walked away, boarding the shuttle bound for Coruscant — bound for the Chancellor.
And Cody stood there long after she was gone.
⸻
The doors hissed shut behind her, sealing out the sounds of the city. Inside, the chamber was dim, silent, and airless—more a tomb than an office.
Chancellor Palpatine stood alone by the wide viewport, hands folded behind his back. The galactic skyline stretched endlessly beyond him, golden and glittering, but he never looked at it. His gaze was fixed far beyond, somewhere the reader couldn’t see.
She approached without speaking. She knew better.
After a long pause, he spoke.
“You completed your task on Erobus.”
“Yes.”
“And General Windu now believes you to be… sincere.”
“More or less.”
He turned to face her, that ever-calm expression carved into something unreadable. His voice stayed velvet-smooth.
“And yet I’m hearing troubling things. From the Temple. From officers in the field. About your behavior.”
Her brow lifted. “My behavior?”
“The clones,” he said simply. “Your… fondness for them. Particularly certain commanders.”
A silence settled between them.
He stepped closer.
“They are tools,” he said, tone soft but cold beneath. “Weapons. Instruments of war. Their purpose is clear. Yours is not.”
She straightened slightly. “I care about them.”
His smile didn’t reach his eyes. “A mistake. One that risks unraveling everything I’ve placed you into position to accomplish.”
“I haven’t done anything wrong.”
“You’ve done enough to sow doubt,” he snapped, his voice a sudden blade. “Among the Jedi. Among the troops. You’re being watched. And unless you want to be removed from this game completely, you will stop.”
He let the silence linger, then added with that familiar, venom-wrapped charm:
“No more flirting. No more attachments. No more secrets from me.”
She met his gaze. “You put me in the middle of this war like I’m a pawn.”
“You’re not a pawn,” he said. “You’re a scalpel. Sharp. Precise. And replaceable, if dulled.”
Her jaw clenched. But she said nothing.
He studied her a moment longer, then turned back to the window.
“You’ll be summoned soon. Another operation. One that cannot afford distraction. Stay focused, my dear. Or next time I will send someone else.”
She left without another word, the cold of the chamber clinging to her bones.
⸻
Sunlight filtered through the vast windows, casting long rays across the silent chamber. The Jedi Council had assembled in full, tension clinging to the space like smoke.
Obi-Wan stood near the center, arms tucked into his robes. Kit Fisto paced with measured steps, green tendrils swaying. Luminary Unduli remained seated but rigid, her eyes dark and sharp. Mace Windu watched all of them, silent but alert.
Chancellor Palpatine stood calmly before them, hands folded, robed in deep crimson. The ever-smiling face of the Republic.
“We have reason to believe she’s gone underground,” Kit said at last, stopping mid-step. “Not just off-world—off-grid. She’s not been seen on Coruscant in days.”
Yoda’s ears lifted slightly. “Certain, are you?”
“She hasn’t reported in to her handler. Even the Chancellor can’t locate her,” Obi-Wan added, glancing at Palpatine.
Palpatine smiled thinly. “She works alone. That’s her strength. She’s unpredictable, yes, but not disloyal.”
“With respect, Chancellor,” Ki-Adi-Mundi interjected, “you yourself said her role was to assist the Jedi and the Senate. If she’s acting without instruction, she may no longer be operating in the Republic’s best interest.”
Palpatine’s smile didn’t falter. “She has always completed her missions. Always served the Republic’s cause—even if her methods were… unconventional.”
“She disappears when it suits her,” Luminary said coolly. “We do not know her true allegiance.”
“Nor her past,” Kit added. “Only that she is dangerous. Charming, yes. Tactical. But too close to too many of our clone officers.”
A silence fell again—this time heavier.
“She has gained the respect of some among us,” Mace finally said. “She confided in me. Her concern for the clones felt genuine.”
“And yet,” Kit said, “she manipulates that very concern to gain access and loyalty. I have seen it.”
Palpatine’s expression darkened slightly. “She has been instrumental in your victories. On Teth. On Erobus. She has risked her life for your cause, and for mine.”
“She serves your purpose, Chancellor,” Luminary said carefully. “But does she serve ours?”
Yoda’s voice cut through the room, quiet and calm. “Much we do not see. Dangerous, it is, to distrust allies too easily. But more dangerous still to trust without clarity.”
Palpatine exhaled slowly, placing his hand over his heart. “When she returns—and she will—you’ll see where her loyalties lie. Until then, I advise patience.”
The Council murmured among themselves. Some nodded. Some frowned. Some, like Kit Fisto and Ki-Adi-Mundi, exchanged long, skeptical glances.
The meeting dissolved soon after, but the air remained heavy with unease.
And somewhere far beyond Coruscant’s towers and temples, the reader moved unseen, far from both Jedi and Chancellor.
⸻
The bar was unusually quiet for a Friday night. Clones leaned against the counter, some still half-dressed from field drills, others fresh from debriefs, beer and synth-whiskey in hand. Laughter echoed in pockets. But the air carried something else too—unease.
Rex sat at a table near the back, helmet on the seat beside him. Cody dropped into the chair opposite, his brow drawn tight. They both had the look of men who’d been chasing shadows.
“She’s not answering her comms,” Rex muttered, swirling the drink in his hand. “Not to me, not to anyone.”
“Chancellor doesn’t know where she is either,” Cody said under his breath. “I checked through back channels. Even her client records went dark.”
Rex leaned back. “This isn’t like her.”
Cody didn’t answer right away. He stared at the tabletop for a beat too long. Then:
“Isn’t it?”
That hit Rex like a shot to the ribs. He sat up straighter. “What are you saying?”
“She’s not one of us, Rex. You know that. She comes and goes. Answers to people we don’t even see. And half the time, she’s in our barracks or our war rooms like she belongs there.”
“She helped us.”
“She also got close to a lot of us. Real close.”
Rex scowled. “You jealous?”
Cody shot him a sharp look. “Don’t be an idiot.”
Jesse dropped into a nearby seat, nursing a bruised jaw and a half-drained bottle. “You two talking about her again?”
“We’re trying to figure out where she is,” Rex said.
“Probably off charming someone new,” Jesse smirked. “Girl like that doesn’t disappear unless she’s got a good reason. Maybe she’s doing something for the Chancellor again.”
“Or for herself,” Cody said darkly.
Fives leaned in from the next table, ever the one to eavesdrop. “I heard she was seen boarding a Separatist freighter.”
“What?” Rex snapped.
“Some civvie transport crew in the outer systems. Said they saw someone matching her description getting on with a kid. Republic IDs, but separatist ship. Weird, right?”
Kix joined them, arms folded. “That’s not all. Some of the 212th are saying she had unrestricted access to classified battle plans. And now she’s vanished. Doesn’t look good.”
“Dangerous woman,” Tup murmured from the side. “Real dangerous. She’s been playing the long game. With us. With the Jedi. Maybe even the Chancellor.”
“She’s not a manipulator,” Rex growled. “She’s not the enemy.”
But his voice wavered for the first time.
Cody looked at him—hard, quiet.
“I want to believe that too, vod. But she didn’t just disappear. She chose to.”
A long silence fell over the table.
In the corner, Fives just smirked. “Hot, though. Definitely hot.”
Everyone groaned.
But beneath the laughter, doubt ran deep.
And in the back of Rex’s mind, a seed had been planted. One he couldn’t shake.
⸻
There was a kind of quiet in hyperspace she never got used to.
It wasn’t silence—ships hummed, wires buzzed, engines thrummed low like a heartbeat. But it was a strange, hollow quiet. The kind that filled the space behind your ribs when you were running from something, but didn’t know what yet.
She leaned back in the pilot’s seat, one leg propped on the console, the other jittering restlessly beneath her. The co-pilot’s chair beside her was tilted back, a blanket bunched across it, and a sleeping kid tucked beneath it—her “asset,” according to the encrypted file the Chancellor had burned into her comms a month ago.
Force-sensitive. About eight. Big eyes. Too quiet.
The kind of quiet that made her nervous.
She hadn’t given him a name. He hadn’t offered one.
He just followed her like a shadow, never crying, never resisting. He watched her like he was trying to memorize her—every twitch of her fingers, every sigh she let slip when she thought he wasn’t listening. Sometimes, she felt like he was the one babysitting her.
It should’ve made her skin crawl. Instead, it just… got under it. Slipped in sideways. Left a permanent chill.
She was supposed to wait for new instructions. No contact. No Republic. Not even the Chancellor wanted her sending outbound transmissions.
“Too risky,” he’d said. “Stay buried. Until I call for you.”
That was fine.
She didn’t want to hear from him. Not after what he’d made her do.
So she flew. Drifted between systems, one jump ahead of suspicion. Took the kid to Felucia—quiet jungles, strange colors. Then to Naboo. Then to Kashyyyk. The Wookiees didn’t talk much, and when they did, they didn’t ask questions. She liked that.
The kid liked it too.
He smiled when the wind hit his face, laughed when the vines swung low enough for him to climb. He meditated with the elders under the great trees, palms flat, eyes closed, lips moving in languages he didn’t know.
She didn’t know what to do with him.
She could fight men twice her size, break into a warship, and disappear from Coruscant’s grid in under five minutes—but kids?
Force-sensitive, fragile, unpredictable kids?
Not her forte.
Still, she bought him warm food when he was hungry. Sat with him when the nights were too loud. Pulled the blanket up over him when he nodded off mid-jump.
And he… trusted her.
Gods help him.
And Then.
The transmission came mid-jump. An old code. Buried deep.
She opened it. Expected orders. Coordinates. Updates.
Instead, she got this:
“Terminate the asset.”
Just that.
No signature. No voice message. Just those three words in bloodless text.
She sat still for a long time, the cockpit lights casting pale gold across her features.
No.
Her hand hovered over the console. She could delete it. Pretend she never saw it.
Or… she could do exactly what he said.
She looked at the boy—still sleeping, thumb tucked near his mouth, his little body curled like a comma in the co-pilot’s seat.
He trusted her. Even after everything. Even knowing nothing.
And she—
She didn’t know how to kill him.
She didn’t want to.
Her fingers slowly lowered.
She encrypted the message. Buried it. Then cut off all outbound comms completely. Even the backup ones Palpatine thought she didn’t know he’d installed.
And for the first time since she agreed to this job, she felt something like resolve settle in her chest.
She wasn’t going to kill the kid.
Not for Palpatine. Not for anyone.
She’d disappear again. Go dark. Real dark.
And figure it out on her own.
⸻
Three months later and the smell of dirt never really left her hands.
Didn’t matter how long she scrubbed them, how hot the water was, how much Wookiee soap she used—the scent was baked in now. Like soot after fire. Like blood under your nails.
The kid was currently chasing a flock of half-feral featherbeasts across the field, shrieking with laughter while they squawked and ran in all directions like headless idiots. He’d tied one of her spare bandanas around his head and called himself “The King of Beaks.” She wasn’t sure if it was a game or a cult.
She squinted up at the twin suns and groaned, wiping sweat from her brow with a dirt-stained sleeve.
“This was a mistake.”
The house—if you could call it that—was lopsided and half-sunken into the earth like it had given up on being vertical. The roof leaked when it rained, which was often. The windows were warped. There was a trapdoor in the pantry she hadn’t opened yet because, frankly, she was afraid of what lived down there.
They’d been here for three months.
Three whole, uninterrupted months of staying hidden, staying off-grid, and pretending to be something other than what they were: a wanted merc with blood on her hands, and a stolen Force-sensitive child the Chancellor wanted dead.
The farm had been unoccupied when they arrived. Or rather, she’d made it unoccupied.
The farmer hadn’t been too keen on visitors, and even less keen on handing over his property to a stranger with a shifty smile and a blaster behind her back. But things got violent, as they do. He tried to gut her with a farming tool. She shot him in the throat. It was a short negotiation.
The kid never asked where the farmer went. He just helped her drag the body into the woods and asked if they could keep the loth-cat that came with the barn.
She said yes. It bit her the next day.
She’d done a lot of things in her life.
Assassinations. Espionage. Slicing into blacksite servers, seducing corrupt senators, starting bar fights, finishing wars.
But nothing had prepared her for running a farm.
Nothing.
The equipment was older than some planets she’d been to. The power converters buzzed at night like they were haunted. One of the water tanks screamed every time you flushed the toilet. The crops didn’t grow right, mostly because she forgot to plant them in any kind of order. She tried eating something she thought was edible last week and spent two hours curled up next to the loth-cat vomiting and hallucinating moisture ghosts.
She was not thriving.
But the kid was.
He’d put on weight. Color came back into his cheeks. He laughed now. Asked her questions about the stars. Sat cross-legged on the porch with his eyes closed, humming softly, moving stones with his mind and smiling like it was the most natural thing in the world.
She watched him from the porch sometimes.
And felt something awful bloom behind her ribs.
Attachment, she thought. Stupid.
Later that night, they sat under the stars on the porch steps, sipping warm synth-milk and watching the night bugs dance in the grass.
“You ever think about going back?” he asked, voice soft.
She didn’t look at him.
“Back where?”
He shrugged. “Where people are.”
She sighed, tilting her head back to look at the sky. The stars looked close tonight. Like she could pick one and climb inside it.
“I’ve never been great with people.”
“You like me.”
“…You’re barely people.”
He giggled, and she smirked. Then, after a pause—
“Do you think they’re still looking for us?” he asked.
The smile faded from her lips.
She didn’t have the heart to tell him yes.
That some of them never stopped.
She reached over and ruffled his hair instead. “We’ll be alright.”
For now.
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4
Warnings: injury
The smell of caf, oil, and clone armor clung to the air as you strolled into the briefing tent, half a pastry in your hand and absolutely no shame in your step. Anakin was already leaning over the holotable with Ahsoka at his side, mid-conversation with Rex about insertion points and droid resistance.
“There she is,” Anakin said, smirking as you bit into your breakfast. “Glad you could make it. We were all really worried you might be doing something important, like sleeping in.”
You gave him an exaggerated bow, crumbs falling from your lips. “The Force told me to take five. Who am I to argue with destiny?”
Ahsoka laughed. “She’s worse than you, Master.”
“I’m standing right here,” Anakin said dryly.
“And I’m complimenting you,” you shot back, tossing the last of your pastry into your mouth. “You’re rubbing off on me, Skywalker. I’m starting to think I’m unfit for Jedi Council politics.”
“That makes two of us,” Anakin muttered.
Rex cleared his throat gently. “Briefing, General?”
“Right,” Anakin said. “Serious faces. Tactical minds. Let’s go.”
You stood beside Ahsoka, arms crossed, watching the blue holographic map flicker into life. The target: a droid manufacturing facility buried beneath a city block on this dusty, nowhere Separatist planet. Classic war story setup—deep insertion, sabotage, get-out-before-the-ceiling-caves-in sort of plan.
Anakin pointed to three key locations. “Ahsoka, you’ll take your Squad through the northern tunnel system. I’ll come in from the west. You,” he glanced at you, “get to lead Torrent Company. Rex is heading point. Kix is your field medic.”
“Excellent,” you said brightly. “If I get blown up, I know exactly whose name to scream out.” And winked at Kix.
Kix, who’d been standing with perfect form behind Rex, blinked and glanced your way.
“Don’t flatter him,” Anakin said, grinning. “It goes to his head.”
“I think he deserves it,” you said with a shrug.
“Force help us,” Ahsoka muttered with a smile.
Kix said nothing, but you knew he heard it. The corner of his mouth twitched. Just a little.
Anakin resumed the plan rundown. “Once we’ve cleared the tunnel entrance, regroup at the main lift shaft, plant the charges, and extract. Simple. Clean. Hopefully fast.”
“Hopefully,” you echoed. “But if it isn’t, I call dibs on the most dramatic death scene.”
“No one’s dying,” Rex said, exasperated.
You leaned toward Ahsoka and whispered, “He’s no fun at all.”
⸻
Things went sideways by hour three.
The drop had gone smoothly. Your team slipped through the tunnel entrance with minimal resistance. You moved like water through the dark—saber humming, the Force buzzing at your fingertips, and Kix never more than a few meters behind.
The issue? Droid reinforcements. Heavier than expected. A trap inside the sublevels. When the floor collapsed under you and half your squad, you barely had time to throw up a Force shield before the shrapnel cut through you like knives.
You hit the ground hard. Your saber skidded away, and a jagged spike of pain tore through your side.
“General!” Kix’s voice came sharp and clear, echoing through the smoke.
You coughed, tried to sit up, and gasped. Your hand came away red.
Kix dropped beside you in seconds, already snapping open his medkit. His gloves were steady. His jaw was clenched. “You’re lucky it missed your vital organs.”
“Define lucky,” you rasped.
“Alive.”
“You’re sweet,” you mumbled, swaying slightly.
“Try not to pass out,” he said, voice tight as he pressed a bacta patch over the worst of the wound. “You need to stay awake.”
“Trying,” you slurred. “But you’re very distracting.”
He blinked down at you. “What?”
“Your eyes. They’re the worst. Too blue. And your voice is soothing. It’s unfair. You should come with a warning label.”
You felt his hands pause for a fraction of a second.
“Considering you can’t see my eyes, and the fact they are brown not blue. You’re delirious,” he muttered, but you could hear the faintest crack of a smile in his voice.
“I am not,” you insisted, blinking up at him. “In the past 3 minutes I’ve thought about kissing you like, five times. Maybe six. Who knows. Jedi don’t count those things.”
Kix worked in silence for a moment, patching you up, checking your pulse, muttering about shock and bacta levels. You didn’t stop talking.
“You always there for them,” you murmured. “Always patient. Always there. And you never say anything. But I can see it. I see you. You’re kind, Kix. Gentle. That’s rare in this war.”
Kix looked at you then. Really looked. And something in his eyes softened—like a thaw he hadn’t allowed himself before.
“I’m not gentle,” he said quietly. “I’m trained to fix people. That’s all.”
“You’ve certainly fixed me,” you whispered.
He didn’t respond to that. He just pulled you close enough to hoist you into his arms, careful not to jostle your wounds.
“Rex, I’ve got the general. She’s stable but needs evac,” he said into the comm, already moving.
You leaned your head against his shoulder, groggy and fading. “You smell like antiseptic and courage.”
“You’re gonna be so embarrassed when you wake up.”
“I’m already embarrassed. I haven’t kissed you yet.”
Kix let out a breath that might’ve been a laugh—or maybe something softer. “Maybe next time, starlight. When you’re not bleeding out.”
⸻
You woke up in the medbay. Groggy. Alive. Sore as hell.
The lights were dimmed, and someone was sitting beside you, back straight, arms crossed. Kix.
“You stayed,” you rasped.
He glanced at you. “I wanted to see if you’d survive.”
“And…?”
His voice was quiet, but firm. “I’m glad you did.”
There was a long pause. Then, with a smirk:
“So, did you mean any of it?” he asked. “The eyes. The courage. The part about kissing me?”
You smiled, exhausted but warm all over.
“Oh yeah. Every word.”
Kix leaned forward slowly, carefully, one hand brushing your cheek.
“Then let’s see if you’re a better kisser than a patient.”
You definitely were.
⸻
You’d barely been discharged from the medbay when Skywalker and Ahsoka appeared at your door like vultures circling a wounded animal.
“Well, well, well,” Anakin drawled, arms crossed and grin far too smug. “Look who decided to flirt her way through a near-death experience.”
Ahsoka stood beside him, trying and failing to look serious. “Rex told us everything. Said you were practically writing a love poem while bleeding out.”
You groaned, covering your face with one hand. “Does no one in this battalion understand the concept of privacy?”
“Not when the drama’s this good,” Ahsoka said, plopping herself at the foot of your bed. “I mean, you told Kix he smells like courage. Who says that?”
“It was the blood loss talking.”
Anakin raised a brow. “You also apparently told him his eyes were ‘too blue.’ That doesn’t even make sense. Too blue? His eyes are brown!”
“Must’ve been the armor” you snapped, gesturing vaguely toward the corridor. “It’s aggravating. Like being judged by a beach.”
They both burst out laughing.
“Stars,” Ahsoka wheezed, wiping her eyes. “You’re lucky Master Yoda wasn’t in the room. You’d be Force-grounded for breaking the code.”
Anakin wiggled his brows. “Technically, I’m not allowed to judge.”
You shot him a look. “Please. You’re the last person who gets to bring up the Jedi Code.”
He didn’t deny it.
“Anyway,” Ahsoka said, sitting up straighter with a sly smile. “What we want to know is: did you get the kiss?”
You gave them both a very satisfied, very smug smile.
“I did.”
Silence.
Anakin blinked. “Wait. What?”
“You kissed Kix?” Ahsoka practically squealed, grabbing your arm. “When?”
“In the medbay. Post-stitches. Very romantic. Smelled like disinfectant and trauma bonding.”
Anakin shook his head in mock disbelief. “Force help us. You’re worse than I am.”
“I know,” you said with a smirk. “And unlike you, I don’t pretend to be subtle.”
Ahsoka howled with laughter.
Outside, you could’ve sworn you heard clone boots squeaking away from the medbay window. Probably Jesse or Fives listening in. Again.
“You’re never gonna live this down,” Anakin said, grinning wide.
You leaned back, smug and satisfied. “I don’t plan to.”
⸻
Fives and Jesse stumbled into the barracks like two kids who’d just found contraband candy in the Temple. Breathless, grinning, eyes wide with glee.
“Kix,” Jesse gasped, skidding to a stop in front of the medic’s bunk. “Tell me it’s true.”
Kix looked up from cleaning his kit, brow raised. “Tell you what’s true?”
“Oh, don’t play innocent,” Fives said, practically vibrating with energy. “We heard it. Straight from her own mouth.”
“She kissed you!” Jesse blurted. “Right in the medbay!”
Kix blinked once. “You were eavesdropping?”
Fives held up a hand. “Strategically positioned for morale updates.”
“You mean you pressed your faces to the window like nosey cadets,” Kix muttered, already regretting every life choice that led him here.
Fives flopped onto a bunk like he’d just been awarded a medal. “Kissing a Jedi… while she was still half-dead. That’s next-level.”
“She called you a ‘war angel in plastoid,’” Jesse said with a grin. “That’s poetry, Kix. Pure poetry.”
Kix groaned, dragging a hand down his face. “I was saving her life.”
“Yeah, and then saving her lips,” Fives added.
Jesse smacked his arm. “That doesn’t even make sense.”
“Doesn’t have to,” Fives said proudly. “It’s romance.”
Kix opened his mouth to fire back—but then the door slid open, and in walked Rex.
“Why are you two shouting like regs on a first patrol—” He paused mid-sentence, eyes narrowing at the scene. Fives smirking. Jesse grinning. Kix looking like he wanted to dissolve into bacta.
Rex raised a brow. “Am I walking into a war crime or a love story?”
Jesse pointed at Kix. “Our boy kissed the General.”
Rex blinked. Once. Then twice.
Then, completely deadpan, he said, “About time.”
Kix’s jaw dropped. “Rex!”
Fives lost it. “I knew you knew! I knew it!”
Rex crossed his arms, smiling just enough to twist the knife. “She’s been making eyes at him the whole campaign. Whole battalion’s been waiting for someone to make a move. Just didn’t expect it to happen during triage.”
Jesse gasped. “You knew and didn’t tell us?!”
Rex shrugged. “Didn’t want to ruin the suspense.”
Fives snorted. “Cold, Rex. Cold.”
Kix looked like he was seriously considering injecting himself with a sedative. “I hate all of you.”
Rex clapped him on the shoulder. “You’ll live, lover boy.”
Jesse wheezed.
“Alright, alright,” Rex said finally, stepping back toward the door. “Joke time’s over. Back to your posts before I have you cleaning carbon scoring with your tongues.”
Fives groaned. “He always ruins the fun.”
Jesse saluted with a grin. “On it, Captain Matchmaker.”
They left laughing, boots thudding down the corridor, and Kix sat in the silence for a moment, staring down at his gloves.
Then, quietly, under his breath:
“…War angel in plastoid?”
He smiled. Just a little.