sunflowers always reminded obi-wan of someone he had lost
i have no time. i am a stressed junior in college who also works and wants to have some free time so my mental health doesn’t explode. i have fifteen textbook chapters to read a week and stats homework on top of that. i have no time.
oops, what’s is this? an entire AU based off of Cody leaving the Empire and starting a clone rebellion? oh well, guess i have to write this now. it’s fine, Cody commands my entire brain at this point
Inspired by the lyrics of the song “Every day is exactly the same”, by Nine Inch Nails.
Ship or not, I think they deserve to be domestic and talk shit.
This idea came to when talking with @deathwatchnightowl over another WIP and one little detail that was mentioned blossomed into this fluffy, yearning fic with Commander Cody
Pairing: Commander Cody X Reader
Warning: Teen (I think?)
Summary: You and Commander Cody get yourselves stranded on an Icemoon and are unable to send a signal for help until a violent storm decides to let up. Not one to enjoy the cold, Commander Cody takes it upon himself to help keep you warm.
Warning: So much fluff everyone, all the yearning, suggestive themes(?) Cody is frustratingly good at keeping his control, Characters sleeping together to stay warm
Reader is AFAB
One simple mission, one simple delivery mission and it couldn’t even go smoothly. Obi-Wan had sent you and Commander Cody to delivery some emergency equipment and the route was meant to be secure but thanks to you luck you were ambushed by enemy ships and in your small
Freighter was not equipped to deal with them.
You had made what you thought was a smart decision to try to evade them by hiding on one of the moons nearby, failing to realize that it was an ice moon and you flew right into a storm. Due to stress and panic, which a padawan of Obi-Wan should not have, you crash landed into an ice bank and due to the violent storm outside, you two were not able to go outside to drive to dig yourself out.
"The storm is jamming our signal, it won't get through until it clears," Cody explained as he attempted one last time.
"I can't believe that we can travel to planets and galaxies but our equipment can't send a kriffin signal in bad weather," you huffed running your hands through your hair.
The wind battered your cruiser, the ice pellets clanked against the tough metal and glass. This ship had been through worse so you weren't too concerned minus the whole ship being covered in snow.
“Well at least we aren’t being followed,” Cody grinned.
“Har har,” you sighed sitting in the pilot’s chair, “One simple delivery mission and I can’t even do that correctly,” you were busy analyzing the current stats of the ship, you realized in order to conserve the main power, you would have to switch to emergency mode which would only insure that the ship would be able to start the moment you could.
“You are acting like you are the only one to ever have an issue on a mission,” Cody teased.
You stared at him,arms crossed pouting, “Has any of them messed up on a simple delivery run?” you turned back and looked at the ship status
“I hope you like the cold, Commander, to ensure the ship is even able to take off once this is over we are going to have to turn off the heaters and most of the electrical.”
“I will go see what we have, General, I think I saw some things in the back.”
You started to turn off the unnecessary systems, as you braced yourself for the cold.
Cody had returned with one of the warm emergency jackets that was in storage and handed it to you as he found his own. It smelt musty and was stiff from not being used in a while but you weren’t one to complain.
You put it on, your body drowning in it. Cody smirked, “I feel like I could push you over and you wouldn’t be able to get up.”
You scowled, “Don’t you dare.”
Of course the jacket Cody found, fit him well, it gave him the necessary movement needed and showed off his fit frame.
“Well settle down, General, it is going to be a while.”
A few hours had passed and you both mostly sat in silence, mostly because Cody had decided to take a small nap. You pulled your legs close to you as the cold had started to creep through. It didn’t help that you also did not like the cold to begin with. This was going to be a long night.
Cody woke up to your shuddered breath, “Cold already, princess?” he teased, sitting up, rolling his shoulder.
You had your legs pressed up against your chest and your arms around, “What gave it away?” you shivered, smiling.
Cody got up and pulled out to blanket rolls, shoving one into each other, “I would prefer not to bring you back with a cold, I have an idea, an old survivors trick,”
You looked at him, as he firstly removed his helmet, he looked a little tired than usual but he still had that strong handsome face that most of the clones carried.
You got up and walked over to Cody, as you removed your belt with your lightsaber, placing it on top of the jacket near the rolls.
Cody had removed his armour and had stripped down only to his blacks.
"Erm, it is better if you have as little as possible," he stated awkwardly, his hand running the back of his head.
"Cody, is this how you get all your women into your bed. Showing off your 'survival techniques'?
Cody immediately flustered, "N-no that's not it ma'am uhh Sir…I mean,"
You burst out laughing, placing a reassuring hand on his arm.
Cody had to pause for a moment, were you always this beautiful when you laughed? The way you partially covered your face when he couldn't stop laughing. Also why did your touch feel so warm despite that you were literally a human icicle.
"I am bugging you," you breathed, wiping away a stray tear. You shimmied off your outer robe, standing in only your tunic and leggings. Your teeth were chattering at this point as you wrapped your arms around you self
"How are you not cold?"
"Advanced genetic modification," Cody bragged.
You rolled your eyes "And let me guess you don't sweat either, you absorb the sunlight for nutrients."
He poked your side, "I am not a robot or a plant,” He took note of your blue lips and your chattering teeth, though you had remained composed you weren’t fooling anyone. He lifted the side of the makeshift bed, the rolls were unzipped, one stuffed into the other.
“Get in, you are almost making me feel sorry for you,” he joked as you knelt down and shimmied into the roll, pressing yourself to the folded bit as close as possible. You heard Cody shuffle in behind you. You gasped slightly when you felt his warm frame against you.
“How are you so warm?” you asked, turning your head, “I can’t even keep my feet warm on warmer planets, feel.”
You pressed your socked feet against his legs, you giggled when you felt him move away, “Maker, how have your feet not fallen off, at this point?” he asked as he started to run his hand over your shoulders and arms.
Cody’s touch was gentle and attentive, something that didn’t surprise you given how meticulous and cautious he always was. Your arms felt less numb, as he carefully ran his hands over your legs, you hissed when you felt the warmth coming back. You imagined your skin was rubbed raw from the cold and the heat returning was sending pins and needles down your legs and to your feet.
“Is this helping?” he asked, you felt a small burst of warmth in your chest when you noticed the tone of concern in his voice.
“Yeah,” you responded snuggling more into the blankets, “This was a smart idea. Good work Commander,” you teased, “What about you?”
“I am fine, as I said I was warm before, but now it is a little better,” he had removed his hands from you and placed them awkwardly at his side. You bit your lower lip, you kind of wished he had kept going, you missed his warm touch . You tried to lay perfectly still, resisting the urge to move closer to him.
You two laid there in awkward silence, the only noise was the low pitch hum of the generator keeping the necessary equipment warm and the violent storm outside. Cody hadn’t been this close to someone in a while, all of his hookups were quick and they never stayed. He took in the warmth of your smaller frame as your shoulders rose and fell with each shallow breath you took.
You tried to focus your mind elsewhere, this was the closest you had ever been with anybody. You knew the Jedi code in regards to attachments and relationships, and you and Commander Cody had worked alongside together for months. The cold must be affecting your cognitive thinking, you closed your eyes and took a deep breath trying to feel the energy around you. You tried to find calmness within the force. The storm had not let up, and the energy was turbulent. There was nothing around for miles, your sense finally guided you to a calmness in the force...Cody.
The energy you felt around him was different from he was usually with you and Master Kenobi, he was always a calm soldier even in the toughest of battles and he never faltered even when having to deliver awful news of numerous casualties and failed missions. This energy you felt was raw and vulnerable. Trying to focus more you also felt something new, it was warm, like you were floating in a warm bath. You felt your body flush with the feeling, you couldn’t pinpoint what it was exactly but you wanted to explore him more
You broke your thought instead as you felt a little guilty for looking into Cody like that. Taking in a deep breath to calm your nerves, you spoke, “C-Cody,” of course your voice was going to crack, “I am still cold, can you come a little closer?”
“Of course!” Cody internally cringed, he responded too quickly and probably sounded too eager. He shifted closer, his arms were awkwardly by his side, taking the plunge and wrapping his arms around your waist, pulling you closer. ‘I am just keeping her warm, this General would kill me if anything happened to her,’
You squeaked when you felt his arms around you, his large hands at your waist as he pulled you closer to him. You were cocooned in his warmth, his frame encircled yours as you felt totally and utterly safe. You tried to not pay attention to his warm breath whispering at the top of your head, just how warm his hands were, just how perfect it all felt. It took all control to not allow your mind to wander where else his hands could warm you up.
'No,' you mentally yelled at yourself, 'He is just doing his duty, keeping me safe, this means nothing to him, it is just another mission for him.'
You jolted when you heard the wind pick up and the banging increased.
"Everything alright?" Cody asked, a hint of amusement in his voice.
"Yes, sorry. I don't deal with storms very well," you admitted embarrassingly
"You would definitely hate Kamino then,"
"Yeah, I've seen enough holovids. I am good"
You groaned when something like a giant ice boulder hit the side of the ship.
Cody couldn't help but laugh.
"It isn't funny, also you tell anyone there will be consequences," you pouted, "Serious consequences."
Cody unconsciously ran his hands to the curve of your hip and torso as he inched a little closer,
"I've seen how Echo was nearly in tears when he was just teasing you about your luck with sabacc, you can be scary when you want to."
You settled back into the rolls, trying to ignore the noise outside. Shutting your eyes trying to focus on your breathing. Cody ran a reassuring hand over your arm. This surprisingly calmed you quickly, as you melted into his touch.
"Don't worry cyar'ika, I am here. I've got you." His nose gently brushed up against the top of your head. If you had been focusing on anything else, you wouldn't have noticed
"Sleep," he whispered, the low tone rumbled his chest, vibrating against you, "I'll be on guard."
"But you need sleep too," you mumbled the excitement of today and of the situation finally catching up with you.
"I'll just stand watch for a few hours," he assured you, squeezing you ever so slightly. You closed your eyes as you bathed in his warmth and drifted off into a somber sleep.
A few hours later, Cody was lightly dozing as he felt you shift, he immediately opened his eyes as you turned over, mumbling something as you rested against his chest, your legs intertwining with his, as you placed your hands on his chest.
Cody remained motionless, he could not tell if you were awake or if you shifted in your sleep. He would be lying if he wasn't enjoying the new position, your legs had finally warmed up as one of his legs was positioned between your warm thighs.
Your leggings and tunic did very little to hide the outline of your body to begin with but now being pressed up against him, he was able to map out every curve.
Reluctantly he shook your shoulder gently, "Hey, General," when you didn't respond he shook you again calling you by your name.
"It's okay Cody," you murmured, nuzzling into his chest, "I promise I can keep this a secret between us two."
Cody listened, you clearly were asleep, he had an awful idea that he knew he wouldn't be able to act on later.
"What secret, little one?" He purred into your hair, near your ear.
"Mmph, secret...you and me...together….please,"you whimpered, your grip on his blacks bunching the fabric a little.
"And what about your Master, cyar'ika?" He kept his hands on your back, resisting all desire to roam all over your body.
"Sshh, secret," you whispered as you quieted down, your breathing deep and slow once again.
Cody took in a deep breath, inhaling your scent of soap and something floral, closing his eyes preserving the memory, he exhaled, keeping you close.
"You're going to get me into a world of trouble," he muttered, as he closed his eyes, also drifting into a light sleep.
***
You brought your face closer to Cody, “This is nice,” you smile at him as he strokes your hair, mapping your face, watching your reaction.
“You know we can’t stay like this forever?” he pulled the blankets over both of you, keeping the heat in.
“But what if we could,it could be our little secret,”you ran your hand through his well kept hair.
Cody smirked, gripping your chin, pulling you into a gentle kiss. You whimpered when his soft lips touched yours. His kiss was warm, filling with passion with every deeper kiss.
“And what would Master Kenobi say to this?”
You placed a finger on his lips, “Sssh, it’ll be our little secret,” you responded as you pulled him into a deeper kiss.
***
You woke up with a start, your heart fluttering and a slight ache that wasn't the stiffness from sleeping on the floor. You took a moment to remember where you were, your mind still hazy sleep.
Your body was entangled in something firm and warm as your cheek was resting on something soft. You stiffened a little when you realized you were practically on top of Cody, legs interwoven with his, your hand bunching his blacks, your head resting in the crook of his neck. This isn't how you fell asleep.
You didn't want to move in fear of waking him up plus this felt nice. You felt the rise and fall of his chest as your hand was over where his heart was, slowly counting the rhythmic thuds. You kept your eyes closed as you took in his scent, the scent of sweat and soap and the slight sharpness of cologne. You pretend to stay asleep, eyes closed as you nuzzled into his neck, your breath fanning over his skin.
Cody woke up the moment he felt you stir, knowing that you were also now awake. He kept his chin on your head and his hands on the small of your back. He was trying to hang on to this moment, despite their current predicament he didn't want this moment to end.
He felt your legs shift, 'Marker, just a little longer little one,' he begged to himself.
You noticed the change in Cody's breathing and you figured he had also unfortunately woken up. You took in one more deep breath before opening your eyes, removing yourself from his neck and propping against his chest to look up at him. You gasped slightly as you were greeted with dark brown eyes with light sprinkles of hazelnut staring back at you. Your mouth suddenly felt dry as you gripped his shirt again to stop yourself from moving forward.
The air around you was electrifying as memories of your dream flashed before you. Cody slowly snaked hand over your back as he ran it gently across your cheek. Closing your eyes to savor the feeling he gently cupped your cheek. Your eyes fixed on his lips as you licked your own.
Cody took in your features, the messy bed hair, your eyes were glossed over from sleep and he took notice of the gentle pink blush that formed at your checks. He hesitated for only a second before drawing you closer.
"Commander Cody. Come in Commander Cody!"
Cody sighed in frustration reaching over to grab his com, his other hand still on your cheek.
"Commander Cody here."
"About time we found you," it was Fives, "We located your freighter, it is going to take a bit to get you out, looked like it was a nasty one last night. Are you and the General keeping warm?"
You felt your face turn scarlet, as your eyes remained on Cody.
"The General is fine, Fives. We will prepare for your arrival" he then tossed the com back onto the floor.
You started to untangle yourself from Cody's limbs, keeping quiet. Before you pulled yourself out of the roll, he grabbed your hand. You paused as you looked at him, your eyes both trying to express your feelings, your desires that you couldn't explore. One silently apologizing to the other for things that couldn't be. It was like the force was playing a mean trick on both of you. Your spirits calm but pained with heartache as well.
Still looking at you he gently kissed your hand, his lips burning into your skin, with one last squeeze,he let you go.
You both got ready in silence as you heard the troopers outside digging you out. Eventually you were able to open the back hatch and were greeted by Obi Wan and Fives.
"You look like a giant marshmallow," he laughed when he saw you in the oversized jacket. You smile warmly at him, feeling yourself calm down as you were finally near him again
"I am sorry about the mission Master…"
"Being ambushed by a separatist raid on your route wasn't part of your mission. I am just glad you are alright," he looked over at Cody who was fully armored up,"She wasn't too difficult was she Commander?"
You felt your heart involuntarily drop into your stomach.
"Not at all, Sir. It is always a pleasure traveling with the General,” you couldn’t see his eyes through the helmet but you could still feel them on you, as you kept your head down, unable to look at him without giving yourself away.
“I would be an icicle without him, Master.” You responded, adjusting your jacket.
“Well, I am glad, I think you should go give yourself a rest young padawan,” Obi felt a shift in you, it was for only a brief moment but he was able to catch it and knew that feeling all too well.
“Thank you, Master,” as you started to walk to the other ship. Cody started to follow behind you.
“Commander Cody, I am sorry I know you must be tired but I have a few things that I need to brief on you,” Obi wan spoke up.
You stopped and turned to look at Cody.
He looked at you and just nodded, “Sleep well, General.”
“I will Commander,” you nodded back at him, resisting the urge to beg him to join you later, but you knew it would never be possible, “Thank you for everything. I’ll meet up with you later.”
“I look forward to it, little one.”
Tags: @ahoeformando @tibbietibbs @tacticalsparkles @mysticalgalaxysalad @fuckyeahbeskar @hyperspace-spicedreams @deewithani @deathwatchnightowl @darthmama1618 @book-hoardingdragon @bvcketfvcker
Just a thought:
It's not Cody or Kote, it's Koté (kōt-æ).
...
No one ever said that the Mando'a to Basic pronunciations/spellings we have are exact, it's not a far fetch if when writing his name Koté, a Mando'a word, in Aurebesh liberties are taken on account of Aurebesh not having accent marks.
As to everyone calling him Cody, most Jedi and everyday citizens wouldn't know Mando'a, it would be like how English speakers used to (and still do to an extent) change names for easier pronunciation. Miguel = Michael, Yeshua = Joshua, Pièrre = Peter. It's not that far of a stretch.
*None of this has any connection to canon like at all.
So, I'm rewatching The Clone Wars and.....it is much more depressing the second time around.
"You showed me something today. You're exactly the kind if men I need in the 501st." - Rex ("Rookies")
when you spend too much time fighting clankers
*on the Negotiator*
Obi-Wan : Cody, meet me at 1300 hours we need to to discuss the next campaign
Cody, distracted, working on flimsiwork : Roger roger
Obi -Wan : What?
Cody : What?
More Codywan for you feral fuckers. I got to try some new brushes and techniques that really spiced up my art and didn’t make it look so cluttered like my other Codywan piece. <3
some amazing fight scenes give me them lightsaber whooshes
obi wan being sarcastic
obi wan being done with everyone’s shit
some cool obi wan fight scene
Anakin being somewhat happy and pure must protect
the comeback of snips and skyguy
everyone getting hugs
Ahsoka being badass
stupid banter between the clones
stupid banter between the Jedi
stupid banter between the Jedi and their respective clones
501st, 212th and the wolffe pack going on a mission together
more plo koon and kit fisto I love them pls give them an episode
plo koon and ahsoka reuniting I love them so much
rex being done with Anakin’s shit but going along with it anyway
rex and Cody going on adventures together
no more sadness for my clone children pls they’ve already gone through so much
the Jedi council not doing shit
yoda
asajj ventress
pirates
more padme and Anakin scenes
no solo jar jar or c3po episodes pls
space battles
Anakin flying pls it’s my weakness
obi wan, anakin and ahsoka kicking ass together like the good old days
CLONES
some closure pls and thank you
My darling I've said this before but you deserve so many more likes, every time i read one of your fics im genuinely expecting it to have thousands of likes on it and it usually has like 20? If i could like every single one of your works 100 times i would :)
Okay but imagine Rex's reactions to the reader wearing his helmet. Like, he walks in and the readers like 🧍♀️ and he's like 🧍♀️. And then everyone around them is confused bc why is this even happening in the first place (maybe its a prank? Idk 👉👈)
Also i know i said Rex but if you want to include any others please do lol i would love to see your interpretation of this with others
<3
Ahhh you’re the absolute sweetest—thank you so much for the kind words, seriously!! I couldn’t resist this prompt , so I went ahead and did the whole command batch’s reactions too.
⸻
CAPTAIN REX
He’d just finished a debrief. He was tired, armor scuffed, and brain fogged from a long string of missions. All he wanted was to collect his helmet and find a quiet place to decompress.
Instead, he opened the door to the barracks and found you standing in the middle of the room.
Wearing his helmet.
You weren’t doing anything. Just standing there, arms at your sides, posture too stiff, visor pointed directly at the door like you’d been caught red-handed.
Rex froze mid-step. His eyes flicked to your body, then to the helmet, then back again. The room was dead silent.
You didn’t speak. Neither did he.
It felt like some kind of unspoken standoff.
When he finally found his voice, it came out neutral but clipped. “Is there a reason you’re wearing my helmet?”
You reached up and lifted it just slightly off your head, enough to reveal your eyes. “I was trying to understand what it’s like… carrying all this responsibility. All the weight. I figured the helmet was part of it.”
Rex blinked.
He should have been annoyed. His helmet was an extension of his identity, not something he usually let anyone touch, let alone wear. But something in your voice—sincere, tinged with dry humor—softened the moment.
He exhaled through his nose. “It’s heavier than it looks.”
You slid the helmet off entirely and held it to your chest. “Yeah. I didn’t expect that.”
Rex crossed the room and took it from your hands, eyes lingering on your face a moment longer than necessary. “You can ask next time. I might still say no, but… you can ask.”
You gave him a faint smile. “Noted, Captain.”
Later, Rex would sit on the edge of his bunk, polishing the helmet with extra care, thinking about the way you’d stood there. How serious you’d looked. And how much more complicated everything felt now.
⸻
COMMANDER CODY
Cody wasn’t used to surprises. He didn’t like them.
So when he walked into the clone officer quarters and found you perched on his bunk—wearing his helmet and staring at the floor like some kind of haunted statue—his brain stalled for a moment.
You didn’t look up.
You didn’t say a word.
Cody stood in the doorway, arms folded, expression unreadable. It was impossible to tell what he was thinking—likely the same thing you were: how did this situation even come to exist?
Eventually, he cleared his throat. “Am I interrupting something?”
You slowly lifted your head. “No. I just… wanted to know what it was like. To be you.”
He arched an eyebrow. “By wearing my helmet?”
You lifted it off, your hair a little mussed from the fit. “It felt… commanding. Intimidating. Also slightly claustrophobic.”
Cody crossed the room, took the helmet from your hands, and inspected it like you might’ve done something to compromise its integrity. “That’s about accurate.”
You stood. “Did I at least look cool?”
Cody gave a short, quiet laugh, the kind that rarely made it past his lips. “You looked like you were trying very hard to be me. But points for effort.”
He turned to go, helmet under one arm. As he walked out, he muttered, “Don’t tell Kenobi.”
You smirked. “Wouldn’t dream of it.”
⸻
COMMANDER FOX
Fox was already in a foul mood. The Senate hearings had run late. A group of Senators had argued about appropriations for nearly three hours. The bureaucrats hadn’t approved the funding he needed, and to make things worse, someone had tried to hand him a fruit basket on the way out.
He just wanted to grab his datapad and leave.
Instead, he stepped into his office and stopped cold.
You were behind his desk, arms folded. His helmet was on your head, slightly crooked from the weight.
Fox did not say anything.
You didn’t, either.
You watched each other like two predators in a silent, high-stakes standoff.
Finally, he broke the silence. “Is this a joke?”
“No.”
He narrowed his eyes. “Then explain.”
You pulled the helmet off and set it gently on the desk. “I wanted to see if it felt as heavy as it looks. Thought maybe I’d understand what it’s like… to be you.”
Fox blinked. His voice dropped lower. “That helmet’s been in more battles than most Senators have meetings.”
You met his gaze, dead serious. “Exactly. That’s why I put it on.”
He walked over and took the helmet in both hands. For a moment, he didn’t speak. Just stood there, the edge of the desk between you, his gloved fingers tracing a scratch across the paint.
“You look good in red,” he said at last, so quietly you barely caught it.
Then he was gone.
You stood alone, trying not to think too hard about the heat blooming in your chest.
⸻
COMMANDER WOLFFE
You’d made the mistake of trying it out in the open—when Wolffe was still around.
You thought he was in a meeting. He wasn’t.
The moment he stepped into the hallway and saw you marching in a slow circle, wearing his helmet and muttering, “I don’t trust anyone. Not even my own shadow. Jedi are the worst,” it was already too late to escape.
You froze mid-step when you noticed him watching you.
Wolffe didn’t say a word.
You pivoted awkwardly. “I was… doing a character study.”
“You were mocking me.”
“Not entirely.”
He crossed his arms, expression hard, but his voice was lighter than you expected. “You’re lucky I like you.”
You pulled the helmet off. “It’s a compliment. You’ve got presence.”
Wolffe walked forward, took the helmet, and gave you a look somewhere between amused and exasperated. “You forgot the part where I sigh and glare at everything in sight.”
You nodded, solemn. “Next time, I’ll prepare better.”
He rolled his eyes, turned to leave, and muttered over his shoulder, “Next time, do it where I can’t see you.”
But he was smiling.
⸻
COMMANDER BLY
You were crouched on the floor of the gunship hangar when Bly found you.
You hadn’t meant for him to catch you. It was supposed to be a private moment—a little playful impersonation you were going to spring on him later.
But there you were, wearing his helmet, whispering dramatically into the echoing space of the hangar, “General Secura, I would die for you. I would let the whole world burn if you asked.”
You turned and saw him standing behind you.
There was no saving this.
“Hi,” you said, voice muffled behind the helmet.
Bly stared. “What… exactly are you doing?”
You straightened, taking off the helmet. “I was… immersing myself in your worldview. For empathy purposes.”
He squinted. “You were crawling around whispering to yourself in my voice.”
You nodded. “It’s called method acting.”
Bly took the helmet from you like it was fragile. “Next time, try asking.”
“Would you have let me?”
He paused. “…Probably not.”
“Then I regret nothing.”
Bly looked at the helmet, then at you. His expression was unreadable—but his voice was warmer when he said, “Try not to let General Secura catch you doing that. Or she will ask questions.”
⸻
COMMANDER THORN
You were caught mid-spin, dramatically turning to aim Thorn’s DC-17 blaster at an imaginary threat.
His helmet covered your face, tilted slightly sideways from the weight. You didn’t realize he’d walked into the room until you heard the low, unimpressed voice behind you.
“Unless you’re planning to fight off an uprising by yourself, I’d recommend not touching my gear.”
You froze.
Lowered the blaster.
Removed the helmet slowly.
“…Hi.”
Thorn’s arms were crossed, and though his tone was flat, his eyes glittered with amusement. “You could’ve just asked.”
“I figured you’d say no.”
“I would’ve. But at least I wouldn’t have walked in on… whatever that was.”
You held up the helmet like an offering. “Do I at least get points for form?”
Thorn stepped forward, plucked the helmet from your hands, and gave you a once-over that lingered slightly too long. “You’re lucky I like chaos.”
And then he walked off, still shaking his head, muttering, “Force help me, they’re getting bolder.”
⸻
COMMANDER NEYO
You weren’t even doing anything dramatic this time. Just sitting on a crate in the hangar bay, wearing Commander Neyo’s helmet with a calmness that probably made it weirder.
He entered mid-conversation with a deck officer and paused mid-sentence when he saw you.
Neyo’s reputation was infamous—no-nonsense, silent, rarely seen without his helmet. So when you tried it on just to see what the fuss was about, you didn’t expect him to walk in.
Now he was staring at you.
Expressionless.
Silent.
Unmoving.
You slowly lifted the helmet off. “Commander.”
“Where did you find it?”
“…In your locker.”
He blinked once. “You broke into my locker?”
“…Hypothetically.”
The deck officer excused himself quickly.
Neyo walked over, took the helmet without saying a word, and stared down at you for a long moment. Then, just as you were starting to sweat—
“I hope you didn’t try the voice modulator. It’s calibrated to my pitch.”
You blinked. “…So you’re not mad?”
“I didn’t say that.”
Then he walked away.
You didn’t know if you were about to get reported or flirted with. And somehow, that was very Neyo.
⸻
COMMANDER GREE
You’d barely slipped the helmet on when Gree stepped into the staging area, datapad in hand, ready to give a mission briefing.
He stopped. His gaze snapped up.
You, standing in the center of the room in his jungle-green helmet, stared back at him like a guilty cadet.
There was a long pause.
“Is that… my helmet?” he asked, like he needed verbal confirmation of what his eyes were clearly seeing.
You nodded slowly. “It’s surprisingly comfortable.”
He tilted his head. “You know it’s loaded with recon tech calibrated to my ocular patterns?”
“…No.”
“Technically, that means it could backfire and scramble your brain if you activated it.”
“…I didn’t touch any buttons.”
Gree blinked, then grinned. “Good. I’d hate to scrape you off the floor. Again.”
You took the helmet off and passed it back. “That’s… oddly sweet.”
Gree shrugged. “Only because it’s you.”
The next day, he left a field helmet—not his own—on your bunk with a sticky note: “Test this one. Lower risk of neural frying.”
⸻
COMMANDER BACARA
You’d always known Bacara was a little intense.
So maybe wearing his helmet was a bad idea.
You didn’t expect him to walk into the armory while you were trying it on. You especially didn’t expect him to freeze mid-stride and go completely still—like a wolf spotting prey.
“Take it off,” he said, voice sharp.
You complied immediately.
“I wasn’t trying to be disrespectful,” you added quickly, holding it out with both hands. “Just curious.”
He took it from you in silence. His expression didn’t change. But his hands moved carefully, almost reverently.
“That helmet’s been through Geonosis,” he said quietly. “Through mud and fire. My brothers died wearing helmets just like it.”
You swallowed. “I’m sorry.”
He looked up. “I know. Just… don’t try it again. Not without asking.”
You gave a small nod. “I won’t.”
As he turned to leave, he paused. “You did look decent in it, though.”
He left before you could respond.
⸻
COMMANDER DOOM
You’d slipped Doom’s helmet on while helping reorganize the command tent. He wasn’t around—or so you thought.
You were mid-sentence in a very bad impression of his voice when you heard someone behind you.
“Is that how I sound to you?”
You turned, startled, and found Doom leaning against the tent flap with one brow raised.
You straightened awkwardly. “I was, uh, trying to get into your mindset.”
He snorted. “My mindset?”
“You know. Calm. Steady. Smiling in the face of doom—ironically.”
He walked over, arms folded, and tilted his head as you pulled the helmet off. “Did it work?”
“I think I’ve achieved inner peace.”
He chuckled. “Keep the helmet. It suits you.”
You stared.
“I’m joking,” he added, already walking away.
You weren’t so sure.
⸻
|❤️ = Romantic | 🌶️= smut or smut implied |🏡= platonic |
Commander Cody
- x Twi’lek Reader❤️
- x Queen Reader❤️
- x Jedi reader “meet me in the woods”❤️
- x Jedi Reader “Cold Wind”❤️
- x Bounty Hunter Reader “Crossfire” multiple chapter❤️
- x GN Mandalorian Reader “One Too Many” ❤️
- “Diplomacy & Detonations” ❤️
- “I Think They Call This Love”
Waxer
- x Twi’lek Reader “painted in dust”❤️
Overall Material List
Commander Cody x Village Leader Reader
Their ship barely had time to land before blaster rifles were pointed at them.
“I told you I didn’t want help,” came a voice from the treeline—sharp, challenging, full of attitude.
Commander Cody raised a hand to signal the 212th to hold. From behind him, Obi-Wan calmly stepped forward.
“We’re not here to interfere, only to support your defense—”
“You are interference,” the voice snapped.
Then you stepped into view.
A whirlwind of belts, loose straps, feathers, and leather. Goggles shoved to your forehead, hands on hips, expression full of contempt. You looked at the fully armored, clean-cut clones like they were an invasive species.
Obi-Wan bowed slightly. “You must be the village leader—”
You held up a hand. “No, no, don’t butter me up with that Jedi etiquette crap. You’re uninvited.”
“I think you’ll want to hear what we have to say,” Cody said, stepping forward.
You blinked at him. Then walked slowly around him, circling like a predator.
“Mm. Square jaw. Soldier posture. Serious as a stun baton to the ribs. You’re the commander?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Unfortunate.” You gave a nasty grin. “I was hoping for someone I could beat in an argument.”
He didn’t flinch. “You’re welcome to try.”
You smirked.
Just as you squared your shoulders, ready to argue—maybe throw a punch—a group of kids came tumbling out from the trees. A little one tugged your coat.
“Boss! Are we really getting Republic soldiers? That means laser tanks, right? And hot rations?”
You didn’t even turn. “Not now, shitheads, I’m busy beating up strangers.”
Cody blinked. Waxer coughed to hide his laughter. Ahsoka’s eyes went wide. Anakin mumbled, “Oh, Force.”
Later, around a crackling fire in your chaotic half-open planning tent (made of repurposed sailcloth and wire), Obi-Wan laid it out clearly.
“The Separatists are planning a full invasion. Three battalions of B1 units, two AATs, and an orbiting cruiser for support.”
You sipped from a cup of what smelled like fermented jungle fruit and blinked slowly. “So… what you’re saying is… there’s gonna be a fight?”
“Yes.”
“And it’ll be… big?”
“Yes.”
You sat up straighter. Your grin turned hungry.
“Fine. I accept your help.”
Cody raised a brow. “That fast?”
You threw your arms out dramatically. “You brought me violence! You should’ve led with that!”
Boil leaned over to Waxer. “She’s gonna get us all killed, isn’t she?”
Waxer whispered back, “Yeah. But it’ll be fun.”
⸻
Two days later, you were mid-dismantle of a thermal sensor when Cody approached.
“You shouldn’t be in the blast zone. This isn’t standard military procedure.”
You blew a strand of hair from your face and smirked. “I’m not a standard anything, Commander.”
Cody exhaled. “You’re reckless.”
You held up a small grenade. “I call it chaotic innovation.”
“It’s dangerous.”
You grinned. “So are your cheekbones, but I don’t hear anyone complaining.”
He blinked. “…What?”
You tossed the grenade to him. He caught it reflexively.
“Good hands,” you said. “I like that.”
He stared down at the live grenade in his palm.
“Is this—armed?”
You winked. “Might wanna disarm before you end up splattered on that wall.”
⸻
When the droids finally attacked, you were thriving.
You rode into battle standing on a makeshift hover-skiff, brandishing a long spear with fireworks tied to it, cackling like a banshee.
Cody shouted into the comm: “Can someone please get her out of the crossfire?”
Waxer replied: “We tried. She bit Boil.”
Boil yelled: “She did NOT! I just tripped—!”
“You tripped because she kicked you!”
⸻
Later that night, after the battle, the village lay safe. The droids were in pieces. And you sat on a fallen log with your knees tucked up, staring at the jungle.
Cody approached, helmet off.
“You did well today.”
You sighed. “Don’t ruin it with compliments.”
He smirked. “I’m trying to be civil.”
You eyed him. “Why? Planning to ask me to dinner?”
A pause.
“…Would you go?”
You stared.
Then laughed. “Commander. If you take me to dinner, I’ll probably start a bar fight and make you pay the tab.”
“Noted.”
You tilted your head. “You’d really take me?”
Cody shrugged, voice quiet. “You fight for your people. You’re unpredictable, reckless… and you’ve got guts. I respect that.”
You squinted. “That’s either the sweetest thing anyone’s said to me… or the scariest.”
He held out a hand.
You took it, grinning wide. “Alright, Tensejaw. Maybe I’ll let you stick around.”
Hello! I saw that you do song fics and I had the idea for a Cody X Reader with the song “I think they call this love” by Elliot James. Been obsessed over this song for awhile and I think it would be really cute! Xxx (and if it’s possible to add a few of the others clones teasing Cody even obi wan?)
Commander Cody x Reader
Coruscant at night was too loud for someone trying not to fall in love.
Cody wasn’t even sure when it started. It might’ve been the day you were transferred to his unit. Might’ve been the first time you fixed the aim on a malfunctioning turret like it was nothing. Or maybe—just maybe—it was the first time he heard you hum.
You always did that—murmured little melodies under your breath when you thought no one was paying attention. You’d tap your fingers along your belt or your mug, shoulders swaying lightly to some old Core World tune. It was never full-on singing—just enough to hook in Cody’s brain like a memory.
And tonight? You were humming that one again.
“I think they call this love… I think they call this love…”
You were dancing with Waxer near the bar at 79’s, laughing so hard your drink almost spilled, one hand gripping his vambrace as he attempted to twirl you—poorly. Boil leaned against the counter, snickering into his glass.
“I swear, she’s gonna break your neck,” Boil said. “And then Cody’s gonna have to fill out the paperwork.”
Cody sat a few stools down, arms crossed, pretending very hard that he wasn’t staring.
“You know,” Boil added loudly, “if Cody glared any harder, he’d melt the floor.”
“Shut up,” Cody muttered.
“Yeah, sure. Real subtle, Commander,” Waxer called over, catching your hand before you nearly toppled him over. “You’ve been watching her like she’s a walking war crime.”
Wolffe chuckled beside Cody, taking a long sip of his drink. “He gets like this every time. We’ve placed bets. So far, Obi-Wan’s winning.”
Cody turned slowly. “Obi-Wan’s betting on me?”
As if summoned by sass, Obi-Wan appeared behind them, raising a glass like he’d been lurking all night. “Only because I believe in you, Cody. Also because I know how utterly incapable you are at expressing your feelings.”
“Fantastic.”
“Don’t worry,” Rex added dryly. “You’ve got time. She only flirts with you every time she breathes.”
Cody groaned and looked back toward the dancefloor—and you were already walking his way.
Boots light, smile glowing, music catching the end of your latest hum as you slid into the stool beside him. You didn’t look at the others. Just him.
“You okay there, Commander?” you asked, head tilted. “Or should I get you a medic for whatever emotional crisis you’re currently going through?”
Cody blinked. “I—what?”
You leaned closer, voice lower now. “They’re not exactly subtle,” you said with a smile. “And neither are you.”
“I wasn’t staring.”
“You were,” Boil chimed in behind you.
Waxer raised his hand. “Respectfully, he’s been staring for about four months.”
You laughed under your breath and turned fully to Cody, your knees brushing his. “You gonna keep letting them talk for you?”
Cody exhaled slowly. You were so close. Your eyes searched his, not playfully now—but curiously. Hopefully. The hum of the bar faded as your presence filled his whole damn world.
“I think…” he started, voice a little hoarse. “I think I’m in love with you.”
A pause.
Then you grinned. Not surprised. Not mocking. Just relieved.
“That’s funny,” you said softly. “Because I’ve been waiting for you to figure that out.”
And then—you kissed him.
Quick, warm, but everything changed in that second. His hand slid to your waist before he could stop it, and you smiled against his lips like it was the most natural thing in the galaxy.
Behind you, cheers erupted.
“Finally!” Waxer crowed.
“You owe me twenty credits!” Rex shouted at Wolffe.
Boil let out a low whistle. “Hope you’re ready to be the only thing Cody stares at now.”
Obi-Wan raised his glass and added, “It’s about time our fearless Commander admitted he had a heart.”
You didn’t even look back. You just pressed your forehead to Cody’s and whispered, “Don’t let go of me, okay?”
He didn’t.
Not now.
Not ever.
The music swelled again behind you, and for once, Cody let himself listen.
“If this is what they call love…”
He smiled.
Then he wanted all of it—with you.
Happy May 4th! Hope you’re having a great weekend!
I was thinking a Bad Batch or 501st, or even 212th x Reader where they’ve been in a relationship (can be platonic) but after some time it’s gone stagnant.
Like how in relationships it takes romance and quality time to keep a relationship alive and in my experience it’s always the guys who forget they have to do more and not just get completely complacent. And the boys need to fight to get her back and keep her. Maybe slip in some jealousy?
Love your writing! 💕
The jungle was quiet tonight.
For once, the rain held off. Just the hum of night creatures and distant comm chatter whispered through the dark, while you sat alone beside the supply crates, helmet at your feet and dirt caking your boots.
Cody hadn’t come looking for you.
Again.
He was always somewhere—needed, summoned, occupied—and you understood that. You always had. But lately, it felt like you were something he’d already won. Like he didn’t have to try anymore.
The warmth between you had cooled. No more late-night brushes of fingers or small grins in the mess tent. The distance had grown, and Cody hadn’t fought it. Hadn’t fought for you.
Bly had noticed.
The 327th commander had been respectful, sure—but his gaze lingered longer than it used to. He complimented your marksmanship. Laughed at your dry humor. Today, as you stood beside him surveying troop formations, he’d murmured, “Hard to believe Cody lets you drift so far. If you were mine, I wouldn’t take my eyes off you.”
It was bold. But his tone had been soft, almost regretful. And your smile… well, that had been real.
You hadn’t smiled in days.
Which was exactly when Cody saw.
And said nothing.
Until now.
“There you are.”
His voice rolled low from the shadows. You looked up and found him leaning against a crate, arms crossed, helmet under one arm, jaw tight.
“Yeah?” you said flatly. “If you’re looking for Bly, I think he’s still on comms.”
Cody’s eyes narrowed. “I’m not looking for him.”
“No?” you drawled, standing. “Funny. Seemed like you were staring straight at him when he spoke to me.”
“Because he was staring straight at you.”
You crossed your arms, biting back the bitterness. “Someone had to.”
Cody stepped forward, just enough that the firelight caught the tension in his face. “You think I don’t see you?”
“I think you forgot how to,” you snapped. “I think somewhere along the line, I became part of your routine. Not your choice. Not your fight.”
His brow furrowed. “This is all a fight.”
“Exactly. And you stopped fighting for me.”
He flinched like you’d struck him.
Silence stretched between you—tense, aching, taut as a live wire.
Then, softly, “He doesn’t care about you.”
Your eyes burned. “No. But he noticed me. And I haven’t felt noticed by you in weeks.”
Cody swallowed hard, stepping closer. “I never stopped. I just…” he looked down, then back up with something shattered in his gaze, “I thought I already had you. I didn’t realize I had to keep earning it.”
You were close now—closer than you’d been in days. Your breath hitched as his hand brushed yours.
“I’m not a campaign, Cody. I’m not some territory you claim and forget.”
His touch firmed at your waist, eyes stormy with something between guilt and want. “I didn’t forget. I just—got lost. I’m sorry.”
The kiss came hard—pent-up frustration, regret, longing. You clutched at his armor, grounding yourself in the heat of it. In him.
When you broke apart, gasping against each other in the humid night, you whispered, “Don’t make me feel like I need to be someone else’s, just to remember I’m still worth wanting.”
Cody pressed his forehead to yours. “You’ve always been worth fighting for. I just forgot I needed to keep fighting, even when I thought I’d already won.”
From the tree line, unseen, Bly watched for a moment longer, unreadable behind his visor—before turning away.
Tomorrow, it would rain again. The jungle would close in. The war would keep raging.
But tonight, Cody remembered.
Hi! I was thinking a Rex or Cody x Gen!Reader(maybe they’re a bounty hunter or just a Mandalorian) where they’re working together and they get accidentally married in mandoa and don’t find out right away? 💕
This is probably not what you requested but hope you like it either way.
Commander Cody x GN!Mandalorian Reader
The campaign on Desix had been long, bloody, and miserable. So when word came that the Separatist holdouts had finally surrendered, Obi-Wan Kenobi declared the night a rare “official respite.”
The planet was a dustball at the edge of nowhere — the kind of place smugglers, bounty hunters, and desperate soldiers all stumbled through sooner or later.
You were there for work. Quick job, quick pay, quick drink.
You hadn’t expected to find half the Grand Army of the Republic crowded into the cantina. You especially hadn’t expected to find him — broad-shouldered, scarred, handsome in a way that was dangerous when someone was three shots deep.
Cody.
You didn’t know his name at first. Just another trooper, you thought — until you saw the way the others deferred to him. Until you saw the way he held himself, even off-duty.
Like a man carrying an entire war on his back.
You liked him immediately.
You were reckless like that.
The 212th’s celebration had started simple: a little victory, a little breathing room, a little dust-choked cantina at the edge of nowhere.
Then the liquor came out.
One drink turned into three. Three turned into seven.
You barely remembered how it started — one minute you were slumped over the bar next to a broad-shouldered, grim-faced trooper who was nursing a drink like it was going to run away, and the next you were both howling drunk, arms thrown around each other, laughing at something Waxer said about when Cody bought you a drink.
Mando’a started slipping from your mouth when you got drunk — curses, jokes, old wedding songs you half-remembered from your clan.
Boil dared Cody to kiss you.
You dared Cody to marry you.
And for some kriffing reason, Waxer got it into their heads that you should actually do it.
There was a chapel down the street.
A real one.
Old Outer Rim-style — rustic, rickety, still covered in someone’s half-hearted attempt at decorations from a wedding months ago.
“You won’t,” Boil slurred, clinging to Waxer.
“I kriffing will,” Cody said, jabbing a finger at you.
You were grinning so hard your face hurt. “You won’t.”
He grabbed your wrist and started marching, half-dragging you through the dusty street. Waxer and Boil stumbled after you, cackling like a pair of devils.
Behind you, Master Kenobi — General Kenobi, The Negotiator, Jedi Master, paragon of wisdom and serenity — trailed along with a wine bottle in one hand, sipping casually like he was watching a street performance.
“Should we… stop them?” Waxer hiccupped.
Kenobi just raised an eyebrow. “Why? It’s quite entertaining.”
Inside the chapel, some sleepy old droid still programmed for ceremonies blinked itself awake when you all stumbled through the door.
“Are you here to be joined in union?” it asked mechanically.
“Yeah!” Cody barked, waving his hand. “Get on with it!”
You were laughing so hard you couldn’t breathe. Waxer was sobbing into Boil’s shoulder from laughter. Boil was recording it on his datapad.
You were pretty sure you threatened to punch Cody halfway through the vows, and he threatened to throw you over his shoulder and “get this over with,” and Waxer tried to officiate at one point but got distracted by the ceiling lights.
The droid somehow got the basic requirements out of you: names, yes, consent, yes, promise to stick together, sure why not, insert your clan name here, slurred into nothing.
“By the rites of union under the local customs of Desix,” the droid droned, “you are now spouses.”
There was a long, stunned pause.
Cody blinked at you, bleary and still holding your wrist.
You blinked at him, grinning like an idiot.
Waxer whooped.
Boil flung rice he stole from the droid’s ceremonial basket.
Obi-Wan gave a golf clap, smiling into his wine bottle.
Cody tugged you in by the front of your shirt and kissed you square on the mouth.
It was clumsy and a little sloppy and completely perfect.
When he pulled back, he rested his forehead against yours, chuckling low in his chest.
“Remind me to actually take you on a date next time,” he muttered.
You snorted, dizzy and stupidly happy.
“You’re such a cheap date,” you teased.
“You’re the one who married a clone after six drinks,” he shot back.
Obi-Wan’s voice floated lazily from somewhere behind you.
“This isn’t the first Mandalorian shotgun wedding I’ve attended.”
You flipped Kenobi off over Cody’s shoulder without looking.
⸻
Your head was killing you.
It was the kind of hangover that felt like someone had stuffed a live thermal detonator into your skull and set it to “gently simmer.”
You woke up sprawled across the pilot’s chair of your battered little freighter, helmet on the floor, boots still on, jacket half-off.
You groaned, clutching your head, trying to piece together what the kriff happened last night.
You remembered… the cantina.
Maybe some clones?
Drinks?
A lot of drinks.
And then — nothing. A void.
Total blackout.
You muttered a curse under your breath, shaking off the cobwebs.
“Not my problem anymore,” you said hoarsely, slamming the hatch controls.
The ship lifted off with a coughing rumble, engines flaring as you tore away from that cursed dustball of a planet without a single look back.
Freedom.
Peace.
Hangover and all, at least you—
—CLANG.
You jumped, hand flying to your blaster as something banged inside the ship.
You spun around, heart hammering, expecting a bounty hunter or a drunken mistake you forgot to ditch.
Instead, a half-dressed clone trooper stumbled out of your refresher.
You stared.
He stared.
Both of you looked equally horrified.
“What the kriff are you doing on my ship?!” you barked, blaster half-raised.
The clone — broad, buzzcut, golden armor pieces still strapped to one shoulder — squinted blearily at you.
“…Am I still drunk?” he mumbled, rubbing his face. “Or are you yelling?”
You pressed the blaster harder into your hand to resist the urge to shoot the ceiling out of pure frustration.
“Who the hell are you?” you demanded.
“Uh.” He looked down at himself, like maybe his armor would have answers. “Waxer.”
“Waxer,” you repeated flatly.
There was an awkward beat.
He looked around, frowning harder. “This… this isn’t the barracks.”
“No shit, genius,” you snapped. “It’s my ship.”
Waxer scratched the back of his neck, looking sheepish.
“I… think I followed you.”
“Why?”
He shrugged helplessly. “I dunno, vod. You seemed… fun?”
You pinched the bridge of your nose so hard you saw stars.
This was a nightmare.
You had to focus. Okay. One problem at a time.
“Do you remember anything about last night?” you ground out.
Waxer leaned heavily against the wall, thinking so hard it looked painful.
“Uh… bar… drinks… Boil dared Cody to…” He trailed off, brow furrowing. “Somethin’ about a chapel?”
You stared at him, ice sinking into your stomach.
“…A chapel?”
“Yeah,” Waxer said, rubbing his temple. “Pretty sure there was a wedding? Someone got married?”
You nearly dropped your blaster.
“No, no, no,” you muttered, pacing in a tight circle. “Not me. Not a chance.”
Waxer gave you a once-over, squinting.
“You do look like you got married,” he said, way too cheerfully for a man half-hungover in your ship’s corridor. “You got that, uh, post-wedding… glow.”
You shot him a look so poisonous he actually flinched.
“You’re lucky you’re not spaced already,” you growled. “Sit down, stay quiet. I need to figure out what the hell happened.”
You turned back toward the cockpit.
Waxer called weakly after you:
“Hey, uh… if you find out if I got married, let me know too, yeah?”
You groaned so loud it shook the bulkheads.
⸻
Cody woke up face-down on a crate in a supply room.
His mouth tasted like regret and sawdust.
His armor was half-missing.
His head felt like it had been used for target practice.
He groaned, dragging himself upright, squinting around.
Where the kriff—?
The door slid open with a hiss, and Boil stumbled in, looking just as rough.
“Commander,” Boil rasped, voice like gravel, “we’re…uh…we’re shipping out soon.”
Cody pressed his fingers to his temples.
“Where’s Waxer?” he croaked.
Boil blinked. Looked around like maybe Waxer would appear out of thin air.
“…I thought he was with you?”
Cody cursed under his breath. “We leave in an hour. Find him.”
Boil nodded, clutching the wall for balance, and staggered out.
Cody scrubbed a hand down his face.
Bits of last night floated in his brain — flashes of a bar, too many drinks, laughing until his ribs hurt — and then… nothing.
Total blackout.
He remembered someone — warm hands, a sharp smile — but it was blurry. Faded like a dream.
Before he could piece anything together, General Kenobi appeared, hands tucked casually behind his back, sipping calmly from a steaming cup of tea.
“Cody,” Kenobi greeted pleasantly. “Sleep well?”
Cody groaned. “Respectfully, sir, I feel like I’ve been run over by a LAAT.”
Kenobi smiled, maddeningly unbothered.
“Well, that’s what happens when you elope with Mandalorians,” the Jedi said casually, taking a sip.
Cody froze.
“…Sir?”
Kenobi gave him a sideways glance, the barest twitch of amusement on his mouth.
“Marrying someone you just met. Very uncharacteristic of you,” he mused aloud. “But then again, everyone needs a little excitement now and then.”
Cody’s mouth opened.
Closed.
Opened again.
“I… I what?” he managed.
Kenobi smiled wider.
“As your commanding officer and friend, let me be the first to congratulate you on your marriage.”
Cody stared at him, stomach dropping through the floor.
Kenobi clapped him on the shoulder once, almost kindly, and strolled off down the corridor, humming to himself.
Cody just stood there.
Brain utterly blank.
Marriage!?
Bits of the night started stitching themselves together in his pounding skull — the cantina, the drinks, the bet, the chapel,— a Mandalorian — a ring of laughter and shouting — a kiss that tasted like liquor and adrenaline—
His hands flew to his body, patting himself down.
There, on a thin chain tucked under his blacks, was a cheap metal band — hastily engraved, scuffed to hell — but there.
He was married.
To someone.
He didn’t even know their name.
“Kriff!” he swore, yanking the band out to stare at it.
Boil popped his head back around the corner.
“Commander, uh, bad news — Waxer’s missing.”
Cody’s eye twitched.
“Find him,” he growled. “Now.”
Because if anyone knew where the kriffing Mandalorian was — the Mandalorian he apparently married last night — it would be Waxer.
And Cody was going to kill them both.
⸻
Cody was stalking through the camp like a man possessed.
Clones scrambled out of his way — even Boil looked like he was about to duck and cover — but Cody barely noticed.
He jabbed at his comm unit again, teeth grinding.
“Come on, Waxer, where the hell are you—”
The comm crackled — and finally, mercifully, connected.
Except… it wasn’t Waxer’s voice that answered.
It was a dry, raspy groan, like someone dying a slow death.
“…Who the kriff is this?” a voice slurred over the line.
Cody stiffened.
That voice—
Mandalorian accent. Rough from a hangover.
Unmistakable.
“This is Commander Cody of the Grand Army of the Republic,” he snapped. “Where’s Waxer?”
A heavy sigh crackled through the speaker.
Then some muffled shuffling.
Finally, a different voice — Waxer’s — came on the line, painfully sheepish.
“Uh… hey, Commander.”
“Waxer,” Cody growled, “you have two minutes to explain why you’re not on the ground getting ready for departure.”
“Okay, so, uh…” Waxer sounded like he was desperately trying to piece his dignity back together. “Funny story, sir…”
“Waxer.”
“I’m on a ship. Not, uh, our ship. The Mandalorian’s ship.”
Cody’s eye twitched violently.
“You’re with them?” he hissed.
Waxer coughed, clearly embarrassed.
“Yeah. Turns out, I kinda… passed out in their refresher.”
In the background, you — the Mandalorian — muttered “Stop telling people that,” which Cody was definitely going to circle back to later.
Waxer hurried on. “They could drop me off at Nal Hutta — You know, least disruption, stay outta the battalion’s way…”
“Nal Hutta is a three-day detour,” Cody barked.
“Yeah, I said that too,” Waxer admitted. “They’re heading to Coruscant next, but it’s gonna take a few days.”
Cody paced like a caged rancor, running a hand through his hair.
“You’re telling me I have to leave you in the hands of a hungover Mandalorian,” he said through gritted teeth, “who I may or may not have married last night, and just hope you both make it to Coruscant alive?”
“…I mean, if you put it like that, sir,” Waxer said carefully, “it sounds worse than it is.”
There was a long pause.
Cody closed his eyes.
He could feel Kenobi’s amused stare from across the camp.
The General was lounging under a shade tarp, nursing another drink like he was personally invested in Cody’s suffering.
Cody opened his eyes.
Fine.
No choice.
“Copy that,” he ground out. “Transmit your vector when you make planetfall. We’ll regroup on Coruscant.”
“Yes, sir,” Waxer said, voice obviously relieved.
The comm clicked off.
Cody lowered the device slowly, breathing through his nose.
“Married,” he muttered to himself, in utter disbelief. “Married to a Mandalorian I don’t even remember meeting.”
Kenobi drifted casually closer, hands clasped behind his back, wearing the smuggest expression Cody had ever seen on his otherwise dignified face.
“Don’t worry, Cody,” the Jedi said lightly, voice positively dripping with humor. “Statistically speaking, most impulsive marriages have a fifty percent survival rate.”
Cody stared at him, hollow-eyed.
“That’s not comforting, sir.”
Kenobi took a sip of his drink, beaming. “It wasn’t meant to be.”
⸻
The ship’s hyperdrive thrummed softly as it hurtled through deep space.
You slouched in the pilot’s chair, wearing the hangover like a full set of armor.
Every noise was too loud.
Every light was too bright.
From behind you, Waxer was perched awkwardly on a crate, looking like he had a lot of questions he desperately wanted to ask — and not enough survival instincts to stop himself.
You groaned, slumping forward to rest your forehead against the control panel.
“Don’t say it,” you warned him, voice hoarse.
Waxer scratched the back of his neck, grinning sheepishly.
“…Sooo,” he drawled, dragging the word out, “you and my commander, huh?”
You made a wounded sound into the console.
“I’m never drinking with clones again,” you mumbled.
Waxer chuckled under his breath, clearly finding way too much joy in your suffering.
“Hey, could be worse,” he said lightly. “At least it’s Cody. Solid guy. Good rank. Stable.”
You turned your head just enough to glare at him, one eye peeking out from under your hair.
“I don’t even remember meeting him,” you hissed. “I woke up in my ship, there was a half-dead clone in my refresher, and now apparently I’m married to your kriffing commander.”
Waxer winced sympathetically, but he was absolutely biting back a laugh.
“Details, details,” he said. “You seemed real happy about it last night.”
“I was drunk!” you snapped.
Waxer shrugged, grinning. “Still. Smiled a lot.”
You buried your face back into your arms.
Maker.
You tried to scrape together anything useful from last night — but it was all a messy blur of shouting, music, the burning taste of spotchka, and — somewhere — a deep, rumbling laugh you could almost remember.
You groaned again.
Waxer leaned back against the wall, settling in comfortably like he was ready to spill all the juicy gossip.
“So…what’s the plan?” he asked, way too casually.
You lifted your head just enough to glare again.
“Plan?”
“Yeah, you know. Marriage stuff. Matching armor. Co-signing a ship mortgage.”
You pointed a finger at him.
“You’re lucky I don’t space you,” you muttered.
Waxer just smiled wider.
“Look, could be worse,” he said again, like he was helping. “General Kenobi didn’t even seem mad. He was kinda proud, honestly.”
You groaned and flopped back into your chair, draping an arm over your face.
“You clones are a menace.”
Waxer chuckled.
“Yeah, but you married one, so what’s that make you?”
You made a strangled sound.
The ship sailed on through the stars — heading straight for Coruscant and the world’s most awkward conversation with Commander Cody.
You didn’t know how that conversation was going to go.
But you were pretty sure you were going to need a drink for it.
⸻
The ship touched down at the GAR base on Coruscant with a smooth hiss of repulsors.
You barely waited for the ramp to finish lowering before you were all but shoving Waxer out.
“Go,” you said, practically herding him down the ramp. “Fly, be free.”
Waxer grinned, shouldering his kit bag.
“Thanks for the lift, mesh’la. Good luck with the husband.”
You shot him a murderous glare as he disappeared into the bustling crowds of clones and officers.
And then — standing at the base of the ramp — was him.
Commander Cody.
Still in full armor, helmet tucked under one arm, looking… somehow even more handsome sober.
His hair was tousled, his dark eyes sharp but… cautious.
You felt the smallest flicker of Oh no he’s hot panic spark in your gut.
Cody stepped forward, clearing his throat.
You squared your shoulders, already bracing for it.
“So,” he said, voice carefully neutral. “About… the marriage.”
You gave him a flat look.
“What marriage?” you said, a little too brightly. “I don’t remember a marriage.”
Cody cracked the faintest, tired smile.
“Right. Well. I’m sure there’s a way to… annul it. Or nullify it. Whatever the proper term is.”
You cocked your head, pretending to think.
“Could just say it wasn’t consummated,” you said casually. “Makes it non-binding in some traditions.”
For a half-second, Cody actually looked relieved.
You smirked.
Right up until a very distinct voice behind you both cleared his throat politely.
Both you and Cody turned at the same time.
There stood General Kenobi, sipping from a flask he definitely wasn’t supposed to have on base, looking immensely entertained.
“I’m afraid,” Kenobi said, with that Jedi-trying-to-sound-diplomatic tone, “that would not be accurate.”
You and Cody blinked at him.
Kenobi smiled a little wider, like he was delivering a death sentence.
“From what I recall — and from what half the battalion will never be able to forget — the marriage was…” He paused delicately. “…enthusiastically consummated. On multiple occasions. That night.”
Silence.
Absolute, crippling silence.
You felt your soul leave your body.
Cody’s face turned a shade of red you hadn’t thought possible for a battle-hardened clone.
You slowly turned your head back toward Cody, your expression completely numb.
He opened his mouth.
Closed it.
Opened it again.
“Right,” he said finally, voice strangled. “Good to know.”
You choked on a sound that was half a laugh, half a groan.
Kenobi clapped Cody lightly on the shoulder as he strolled past.
“Congratulations again, by the way,” he added over his shoulder, absolutely relishing your suffering.
You and Cody just stood there on the landing pad, mutual trauma radiating off you in waves.
Finally, you blew out a breath.
“So,” you said hoarsely, “drinks?”
Cody stared at you.
Then — in the most defeated, exhausted voice you had ever heard — he muttered
“Please.”
Commander Fox x Senator Reader
They brought her out at dusk.
The sky above the capital bled violet and gold, and the light made her look almost ethereal as she was marched up the execution platform. Chained. Stoic. Dignified even in ruin.
Crowds were forced to gather—citizens herded into the central square at blaster-point. Droids lined the rooftops. Separatist banners hung in place of the planet’s colors, waving like a threat in the wind.
She climbed the steps herself. Unassisted.
And when she reached the top, she paused—not for fear. But to look at them. Her People.
Their eyes were wide with despair, faces hollow from weeks of fear. Some wept. Others stood still. Waiting. Hoping. A broadcast droid hovered beside the stage, recording every breath. Streaming it across the planet.
A voice crackled through the speakers: “The prisoner has been granted final words.”
And that’s when she stepped forward.
Back straight. Chin raised. Wrists still bound in front of her.
The wind caught her hair as she spoke.
Clear. Commanding. Unshaken.
“To those watching—this is not the end. Not of me, and not of our world.”
“The Separatists think that by putting me to death, they are ending our resistance. But they have forgotten something: power taken by force is fragile. It fears truth. It fears unity. It fears voices like mine, and hearts like yours.”
“They want me to kneel. They want me to beg. But I will not.”
“I will not validate tyranny with silence.”
“You are not alone. You are not broken. And this planet—my home—is not theirs to take.”
“Let my death be the last one they claim. Let it mark the moment we stop fearing them.”
“Let it mark the beginning.”
The droids shifted.
The crowd held its breath.
She smiled, just a little—chin still raised, defiant.
“Now do what you came to do.”
⸻
Inside the lead gunship, the air was thick with silence—not calm. No one dared speak.
General Kenobi stood near the holoprojector at the center of the cabin, his arms crossed, lips pressed into a grim line. The flickering holo-feed of the senator’s execution streamed in front of him, unstable from planetary interference—but still very real.
Commander Cody stood beside him, helmet in the crook of his arm, eyes fixed.
The Senator stood tall at the execution stage, her final words still ringing through the feed like a siren in every clone’s chest.
Then—movement.
A droid officer stepped forward. The executioner. Mechanical. Cold. Lifting the electro-guillotine’s lever with clinical efficiency.
A hush fell over the crowd in the square. And the gunship. Cody’s hand curled tight around his helmet.
Kenobi’s voice was low, nearly a whisper “Punch it. Full speed. No stealth.”
“Sir, we’re still—”
“I said punch it.”
The gunship lurched forward, engines screaming. Through the cockpit, the capital city loomed on the horizon—flames and smoke rising in dark plumes, Separatist cruisers blotting the sky.
The other ships of the 212th fell into formation behind them.
Then— Back on the holo, the droid’s hand reached for the trigger.
Cody spoke, rough and urgent:
“ETA?!”
“Forty-five seconds!”
“That’s too long!” Cody snapped, slamming his helmet on.
Kenobi looked at him.
And Cody looked back, voice hard and cracking.
“We’re not losing her. Not today.”
The droid’s arm lifted. The crowd gasped—some screamed. The Senator did not flinch.
And then— A shriek cut through the sky.
Not from the crowd. But from the air above.
Gunships.
The sky erupted in sound and fire. The first blaster bolts rained down on the droid ranks from above—precision strikes that sent sparks and scrap flying. Clones rappelled from hatches, dropping in formation onto the stage and into the square, weapons drawn.
The executioner droid turned its head toward the noise—too slow.
Cody landed hard, blaster raised, shot clean through its neck.
“Move!” he barked, before even touching ground fully.
He was at her side in seconds, cutting her binders off with a vibroblade, catching her by the elbow as explosions tore through the square.
She stared at him, breathless—confused, stunned.
“Told a friend I’d bring you home,” he said, already pulling her toward the evac point.
She could barely hear over the thunder of battle, but—
“Fox?” she managed to ask.
Cody gave her a sharp look.
“He’s waiting.”
The capital was a storm.
The skies above roared with the thunder of Republic gunships, a flurry of blaster fire lighting up the heavens. Clones dropped from the ships like falling stars, armor gleaming through the smoke. The ground was a mess of war cries and destruction. Explosions lit up the streets as they tore through the Separatist droids, reclaiming what had once been the heart of a peaceful planet.
Commander Cody led the charge through the square, his blaster spitting rapid fire as he moved with precision. The 212th behind him was a wall of determined soldiers, every step driven by the need to push back the invaders.
The Senator was not far behind, protected now by Cody and a handful of soldiers. She had been silent after their initial exchange, still catching up to the fact that she had not just been freed, but had escaped. That moment, the seconds between life and death, still played in her mind. But now, her survival was in her hands—her people were counting on her to lead.
Cody’s voice cut through the chaos.
“Keep moving! We retake the streets, now!”
He fired again, taking down a B1 battle droid that had been lining up to fire on them. The clatter of its parts hitting the ground was quickly drowned out by the next round of blaster fire.
The droids were falling fast—at first, it had been a gamble, a sudden drop on the city with the 212th spearheading the attack. The Separatists had been too scattered, too slow to adapt.
Kenobi’s gunship circled low, dodging enemy fire, as the General looked toward the street where Cody had just led a successful push.
“Cody, report,” Kenobi called over comms, his voice calm but laced with urgency.
“We’re advancing into the city center, General,” Cody’s voice crackled through the comm.
“The Separatists are holding strong, but we’re pushing through. We have Senator [Y/N] with us.”
Kenobi paused, a hint of something like relief crossing his face.
“Understood. We’ll clear the way from here. Hold your position.”
The Senator was breathless but unwavering as they moved. She could feel her pulse pounding in her chest as they cut through alleyways and streets, the sounds of blaster fire and explosions echoing around them.
“We’re close,” Cody said, glancing over his shoulder. He had a protective edge in his eyes now, the intensity in his posture evident. “We’ll get you to safety, but you need to stay down.”
She nodded, moving faster, more instinctive than ever. She had always been a symbol of hope, but now, in the face of overwhelming danger, her defiance turned into raw strength.
Her eyes flashed as she scanned the buildings ahead of them.
“We must take back the government building. We need to signal the people of this planet.”
Cody didn’t argue. There was no time for it. They continued their advance, cutting through Separatist forces as they went.
As they neared the government building, they were met with resistance.
A small battalion of droids stood guard, the tallest among them a heavily armored AAT. The droid commander barked orders as blaster fire erupted in every direction.
“Cover fire!” Cody yelled.
The squad spread out, with Thire, Stone, and the others taking positions to cover the senator. The sound of blaster fire echoed back and forth, the crash of explosions reverberating in the streets.
Cody moved first, leaping into the fray with blaster raised, cutting through the advancing droids. His men followed suit, the ground littered with the bodies of fallen droids and debris.
And then, from above—the unmistakable roar of an incoming Republic ship.
The 212th’s gunship descended rapidly, flanking the droids from the rear and creating chaos in their ranks.
Kenobi’s voice rang out over comms, firm and commanding.
“Cody, the building is clear. Move the senator there. We’ll handle the remaining forces.”
Without hesitation, Cody gestured to the senator.
“This way, Senator,” he said, his tone softer now.
She nodded, allowing herself to be guided into the government building’s entrance. The sounds of the battle faded for a moment as they crossed the threshold.
The Republic forces held their ground.
Minutes later, the Separatists began to retreat, their lines weakening under the relentless pressure from Kenobi and his men.
As the last of the droids fell and the gunships circled overhead, the city slowly began to settle. The fires still burned, the sky still blackened with smoke—but for the first time in weeks, there was something that felt like hope.
Cody took a moment, his blaster still at the ready, scanning the surroundings for any remaining threats. The senator stood tall beside him, her eyes locked on the city outside the window.
“We’ve done it,” she murmured, though her voice lacked the triumph one might expect.
“Not yet,” Cody said, his gaze steady. “But we will.”
⸻
Previous Chapter | Next Chapter
Command Squad x Reader
The new training was brutal.
You made good on your warning.
Every morning started with live-fire simulations — no safeties. No shortcuts. Hand-to-hand drills until they couldn’t lift their arms. Obstacle courses under pelting rain and wind so strong it knocked them off balance. You pushed them until they bled, and then made them do it again.
And they got better.
Fox stopped hesitating.
Bacara stopped grinning.
Wolffe started thinking before acting.
Cody led with silence and strength.
Rex? Rex was starting to look like a leader.
You saw it in the way the others followed him when things got hard.
But even as your cadets got sharper, meaner, closer — something shifted outside your control.
Kamino got crowded.
You noticed it in the hangars first. Rough-looking men and women in mismatched armor, chewing on ration sticks and watching the cadets like predators sizing up meat.
Bounty hunters.
The Kaminoans had started bringing them in — not for your cadets, but for the rank-and-file troopers.
Cheap, nasty freelancers. People who'd kill for credits and leak secrets for less.
You weren’t the only one who noticed.
You slammed your tray down in the mess beside Jango, Kal Skirata, and Walon Vau.
Skirata didn’t even look up from sharpening his blade. “So. You see them too.”
“They stink like trouble,” you muttered.
Jango grunted. “Kaminoans don’t care. They want results. Faster, cheaper.”
“They’re not Mandalorian,” Vau said coldly. “No honor. No code. Just teeth.”
You leaned back in your seat, arms crossed. “They’re whispering to the clones. Getting too friendly.”
“Probably scoping them out,” Kal muttered. “Seeing who’s soft. Who’ll break first.”
Jango’s voice was low and lethal. “If one of them talks — if any of them breathes a word to the Separatists—”
“We're done,” you finished for him.
Silence settled over the table like a weight.
You glanced around the mess. One of the hunters was laughing with a group of standard cadets, tossing them pieces of gear like candy. Testing their limits. Grooming.
Your blood boiled.
“They’re not going near my boys,” you said quietly.
Kal looked over, sharp-eyed. “You planning something?”
“I’m planning to watch,” you replied. “And if they so much as look at my cadets sideways—”
“You’ll gut them,” Vau said. “Good.”
That night, as the storm beat against the training dome, you walked past the dorms. The lights were dim, but you could hear muffled voices inside.
“—you really think we’re ready?”
“Doesn’t matter. Buir thinks we are.”
“Yeah but… what if those bounty hunters—”
You stopped outside the door. Knocked once.
The room went dead quiet.
You stepped in.
The cadets snapped to attention.
You gave them a look. “You worried about the new visitors?”
They didn’t answer.
Rex stepped forward. “We don’t trust them.”
“Good,” you said. “Neither do I.”
They relaxed — just slightly.
“You,” you added, “have one advantage those other clones don’t.”
“What’s that?” Bacara asked.
You looked each of them in the eye.
“You know who you are. You know who you trust. You know what you’re fighting for.”
Fox swallowed. “And the others?”
“They’ll learn,” you said. “Or they’ll fall.”
A long silence followed.
Then Cody said quietly, “We won’t let them touch the brothers.”
You gave a small, proud nod. “That’s what makes you more than soldiers.”
You looked to each of them in turn.
“You’re protectors.”
———
The first hit came during evening drills.
You weren’t there. You’d been pulled into a debrief with Jango and the Kaminoan Prime. That’s why it happened. Because you weren’t watching.
Because they were.
The bounty hunters had been circling the younger cadets all week. The ones just starting to taste their own strength — just old enough to be cocky, not old enough to know when to shut up.
The hunters pushed them harder than protocol allowed. Made them spar past exhaustion. Made them fight dirty. Gave them real knives instead of training ones.
Neyo ended up with a dislocated shoulder.
Gree broke two ribs.
Bly passed out from dehydration.
And the worst?
Thorn.
One of the bounty hunters slammed him face-first into the training deck.
Hard enough to split his forehead open and leave him unconscious for thirty terrifying seconds.
By the time you arrived, Thorn was being carried out by two med droids, blood streaking down his temple, barely coherent.
The bounty hunter just stood there, arms folded, like nothing had happened.
You didn’t say a word.
You decked him.
One punch — a sharp right hook to the jaw. Dropped him cold.
Kal held you back before you could go in for another.
“You’re done,” you snarled at the Kaminoans who came running. “Get these kriffing animals off my training floor.”
“We were merely increasing the resilience of the standard units,” one of the white-robed scientists said coolly.
You stepped toward her.
“You try to touch any of mine,” you growled, “and you’ll see just how resilient I am.”
———
Later that night, the cadets met in the shadows of the observation deck. Not just your five — all of them.
Cody. Rex. Bacara. Fox. Wolffe.
Neyo. Keeli. Gree. Thorn. Stone. Bly.
Monk. Doom. Appo. Ponds.
Even a few of the younger ones — still waiting to earn names.
They were tense. Quiet. Watching the door. Waiting.
Keeli spoke first. “They’ll come back.”
Fox crossed his arms. “Then we hit them first.”
“Without Buir?” Rex asked, wary.
“She can’t be everywhere,” Wolffe muttered.
Monk frowned. “This isn’t a sim. These guys aren’t playing.”
Neyo leaned against the wall. “Neither are we.”
They sat in silence for a moment. Rain drummed against the glass overhead.
Finally, Gree spoke. “We don’t have to fight them.”
They all turned.
“We just have to outsmart them.”
They waited for their moment.
It came two days later. A late-night combat session with three of the bounty hunters, deep in one of the isolated auxiliary domes. No cams. No observers. Just a handful of cadets, and three heavily armed mercs ready to “teach them a lesson.”
They never saw it coming.
Rex faked an injury — stumbled, cried out, fell to one knee.
Bly drew the hunter in close, under the guise of helping him.
Gree triggered the power outage.
Fox, Neyo, and Bacara moved in from the shadows like ghosts.
Monk and Doom stole their gear.
Keeli hit them with a stun baton he “borrowed” from the supply closet.
By the time the lights came back on, the bounty hunters were zip-tied to the floor, unconscious or groaning, surrounded by sixteen bruised, grinning cadets.
They didn’t tell the Kaminoans what happened.
Neither did the hunters.
The next day, those bounty trainers were gone.
You knew something had happened. Jango did too.
You pulled Rex aside, arms crossed. “We didn’t do anything.”
“I didn’t ask,” you said.
He stood a little straighter. “Then I won’t tell.”
You smiled.
For a second, you almost said it.
Almost.
But not yet.
Instead, you gave him a nod.
“Well done, kid.”
———
Tipoca City was never supposed to feel like a warzone.
But that night — under blacked-out skies and howling wind — the storm broke inside the walls.
It started with Jango leaving.
He met you, Kal Skirata, and Walon Vau on the upper platform, rain hammering down in waves, cloak rippling behind him.
“Got called offworld,” he said without preamble. “Client I can’t ignore.”
You frowned. “Problem?”
He glanced at the Kaminoan tower, where sterile lights still glowed behind long windows.
“Yeah. Ten of those kriffing bounty scum are still here. Kaminoans won’t remove them.”
Kal spat on the ground. “Let me take care of it.”
“You, Vau, and her,” Jango said, nodding to you. “Handle it before I get back.”
He walked off without waiting for a reply.
The next few hours passed too quietly.
You and Kal did recon.
Vau slipped through maintenance corridors.
Then — the lights flickered.
The main comms cut out.
And every blast door in Tipoca City slammed shut.
———
In the Mess hall Neyo was mid-bite into a ration bar when it happened.
The lights dimmed. The far wall sparked. The room went deathly silent.
There were thirty cadets inside — the full command unit. And five Republic Commando cadets, seated near the back. All in training blacks, all unarmed.
Then the doors slid open.
Ten bounty hunters walked in.
Wearing full armor. Fully armed.
The first one tossed a stun grenade across the room.
The cadets scrambled — diving behind tables, flipping trays, shielding younger brothers.
A loud, metallic slam.
The doors locked again.
But this time, from outside.
A voice crackled over the mess intercom.
“Don’t worry, boys,” you said, voice steady, cold. “We’re here.”
One by one, the lights above the bounty hunters started popping.
Out of the shadows stepped you, Kal Skirata, and Walon Vau.
Three Mandalorians. Blasters drawn. Knives sheathed. No fear.
“Let’s clean up our mess,” Vau muttered.
The fight wasn’t clean.
It was fast. Ugly. Vicious.
You moved first — disarmed the closest hunter with a twist of your wrist and drove your elbow into his throat.
Kal went for the one reaching toward the Commando cadets, snapped his knee and disarmed him with a headbutt.
Vau took two down in five seconds. Bone-snapping, brutal.
The cadets rallied. Neyo and Bacara flanked the room, herding the younger ones behind upended tables. Rex shoved Keeli out of harm’s way and grabbed a downed shock baton.
Thorn cracked a chair over a hunter’s back.
Bly and Gree tag-teamed one into unconsciousness with nothing but boots and fists.
But then—
One of them grabbed Cody.
Knife to his throat.
Your blood ran cold.
“No one move,” the hunter snarled, voice wild. “Open the door. Now.”
You stepped forward slowly, hands up, helmet off.
“Let him go,” you said, voice low.
“Back off!” he yelled. “I’ll do it!”
Then — he started cutting.
Cody didn’t scream. Didn’t cry out.
Just clenched his jaw as blood ran down his brow and over his eye.
You saw red.
You lunged.
One shot — straight through the hunter’s shoulder — and he dropped the blade.
Before he hit the ground, you were there, catching Cody as he fell.
He blinked up at you, blood running down his face, trembling.
You cupped the back of his head gently, voice soft but steady. “It’s alright. I’ve got you.”
Kal secured the last hunter. Vau stood guard at the door. The mess was a wreck of overturned tables, scorch marks, and groaning mercenaries.
You looked down at Cody.
The top of his brow and temple was sliced deep. Ugly.
He winced as you cleaned it.
“That’s going to scar,” you said quietly.
Cody met your gaze — steady now, strong, even through the pain.
“I don’t care.”
You smiled faintly.
“Good. You earned it.”
The mess hall had long since fallen silent.
The medics came and went. The unconscious bounty hunters had been dragged off to confinement cells. The lights flickered gently above, casting a soft blue hue over the now-empty space.
The only ones left were you and your cadets.
Twenty-three young men. Battle-scarred, bloodied, tired.
And very, very proud.
You sat on a table, legs swinging, helmet in your lap. A few bruises blooming on your jaw, a cut on your knuckle — nothing you hadn’t dealt with before. Nothing you wouldn’t do again in a heartbeat for them.
They lingered near you, some sitting, some leaning against overturned chairs, some standing silently — waiting for you to speak.
You looked at each one of them.
Wolffe, arms crossed but still wincing slightly from a bruise on his side.
Rex, perched beside Bly, both quiet but alert.
Fox, pacing a little like he still had adrenaline to burn.
Bacara and Neyo flanking the younger cadets instinctively.
Keeli, Gree, Doom, Thorn, Monk, Appo — all watching you.
Cody, sitting close by, with fresh stitches across his brow. His scar. His mark.
You let the silence hang a little longer, then finally exhaled and said, “You did well.”
They didn’t respond — not right away — but you could see the pride simmering behind their eyes.
You stood and walked slowly in front of them, glancing from face to face.
“You’ve trained hard for months. You’ve pushed yourselves, pushed each other. But today…” You paused. “Today was something different.”
They listened closely, the weight of your words pulling them in.
“You were outnumbered. Unarmed. Surprised.” Your voice softened. “But you didn’t break. You protected each other. You adapted. You fought smart. And you stood your ground.”
Your gaze swept across the room again, and this time, there was no commander in your expression — only pride. And something close to love.
“You showed courage. And resilience. And heart.”
You walked back toward Cody, resting a hand lightly on his shoulder.
“If this is the future of the Republic Army…” you smiled faintly, “then the galaxy’s in better hands than it knows.”
You looked at all of them again.
“I’m proud of you. Every single one of you.”
For a moment, the room was silent again.
Then a quiet voice piped up from behind Rex.
“Does this mean we get to sleep in tomorrow?”
You rolled your eyes. “Not a chance.”
Laughter broke through the tension — real, loud, echoing off the walls.
Fox clapped Rex on the back.
Cody leaned lightly against you and didn’t say a word — he didn’t have to.
You stayed there a while longer, sitting with them, listening to the soft hum of rain against the dome. For now, there was no war. No Kaminoans. No Jedi.
Just your boys. Just your family.
And in the stillness after the storm, it was enough.
—————
*Time Skip*
The storm had been relentless for days — even by Kamino standards.
But today, there was something different in the air. The kind of stillness that only came before things broke apart.
You felt it the second the long corridor doors opened.
You were walking back from the firing range, datapad in one hand, helmet under your arm — drenched from the rain, mud on your boots, blaster at your hip.
And that’s when you saw him.
Tall, cloaked in damp robes, ginger hair swept back, beard trimmed neatly — Obi-Wan Kenobi.
He stood beside the Kaminoan administrator, Taun We, as she gestured down the corridor, her voice echoing in that soft, ethereal way.
You blinked. “Well, well.”
Obi-Wan turned at the sound of your voice, brow arching in surprise.
“Didn’t expect to see you here,” you said, smirking lightly.
“Likewise,” Kenobi said, a faint smile tugging at his mouth. “Though I should’ve known—where there’s chaos, you’re never far behind.”
You walked up to him, nodding politely to Taun We, who dipped her head and continued speaking about clone maturation cycles.
“Nice robes,” you said. “Still playing Jedi or are you finally moonlighting as a diplomat?”
“Depends on the day,” he quipped. “And you? Still collecting foundlings?”
That made you pause.
You glanced at the clone cadets moving through the hall up ahead — your boys. Young, serious, sharp-eyed. Already starting to look like soldiers.
“They’re not foundlings anymore,” you said, quieter now. “They never were.”
Kenobi’s smile faded slightly. “They’re… the clones?”
You nodded. “Each one.”
“And you’ve been… training them?”
You looked back at him. “Raising them.”
That gave him pause.
He walked a few paces in silence before saying, “And what do you think of them?”
You smiled to yourself. “Braver than most warriors I’ve met. Fiercer than any squad I’ve served with. Smarter than they get credit for. Loyal to a fault.”
Obi-Wan’s expression softened. “They’re children.”
“Not anymore,” you said. “They don’t get the chance to be.”
He studied you a long moment. “They trust you.”
“I’d die for them,” you said simply. “They know that.”
He nodded slowly, then leaned in, voice lower. “I need to ask you something.”
You met his eyes.
“A man named Jango Fett,” he said. “He’s been identified as the clone template. The Kaminoans say he was recruited by a Jedi. But no Jedi I know would authorize a clone army in secret.”
You held his gaze. “Jango’s a good man.”
“That’s not what I’ve heard.”
You exhaled. “He’s… complicated. He believes in strength. In legacy. In survival. He was proud to be chosen.”
Kenobi tilted his head. “And now?”
You looked down the corridor, where the rain slashed against the long window.
“Now?” you said. “He’s been taking jobs that… don’t sit right with me. His clients are powerful. Dangerous.”
Obi-Wan folded his arms. “Separatists?”
You didn’t answer.
Instead, you said, “Jango’s alone in what he’s made. But not in the burden. He just won’t let anyone carry it with him.”
Obi-Wan looked at you, long and careful. “And if he’s working for Dooku?”
“Then I’ll stop him,” you said. Quiet. Unshakable. “Even if it breaks everything.”
There was silence between you for a moment. Only the soft hum of the lights and the sound of rain.
Then Kenobi said, “We may all be asked to choose sides soon.”
You gave him a faint smile. “I already did.”
And with that, you turned and walked down the corridor — toward the cadets. Toward your boys. Toward the storm you could feel coming.
————
The hangar was alive with the sound of marching boots and humming gunships. The Kaminoan platforms gleamed under the harsh light of early morning, and the storm above was quieter than usual — almost like Kamino itself was holding its breath.
You stood near the gunships with your helmet tucked under your arm, the rain catching in your hair, your armor polished but worn. This was it.
Your boys — your commanders and captains — were suiting up, double-checking blasters, loading onto transports in units of ten, fifty, a hundred. The moment they’d been bred for was finally here.
And you hated every second of it.
“Buir!”
You turned as Cody jogged up to you, followed quickly by Fox, Rex, Wolffe, Bacara, Bly, Gree, Keeli, Doom, Appo, Thorn, Neyo, Monk, Stone, Ponds — all of them. Every one of them now bearing their names. Every one of them about to step into a galaxy on fire.
“You’re not coming with us?” Rex asked, brow furrowed beneath his helmet.
“No,” you said softly. “Not this time.”
They exchanged looks. Several stepped closer.
“Why?” Wolffe asked.
You smiled faintly. “Because I’ve fulfilled my contract. My time here is done.”
“But we still need you,” Bly said. “You’re our—”
“I’m your buir,” you interrupted, voice firm. “And that means knowing when to let you stand on your own.”
They fell quiet.
You stepped forward and looked at each one of them — your gaze lingering on every face you had once taught to punch, to shoot, to think, to feel. They were men now. Soldiers. Leaders.
And still, in your heart, they were the boys who once snuck into your quarters late at night, scared of their own future.
“You’re ready,” you told them. “I’ve seen it. You’ve trained for this. Bled for this. Earned this. You are commanders and captains of the Grand Army of the Republic. You are the best this galaxy will ever see.”
Cody stepped forward, his voice tight. “Where will you go?”
You looked up at the storm.
“Where I’m needed.”
A beat passed.
“Don’t think for a second I won’t be watching,” you said, flicking your commlink. “I’ll be on a secure line the whole time. Monitoring every channel, every order. I’ll know the second you misbehave.”
That drew a few smiles. Even a quiet chuckle from Thorn.
Fox stepped forward, standing at attention. “Permission to hug the buir?”
You rolled your eyes, but opened your arms anyway.
They came in like a wave.
Armor scraped armor as they all stepped in — clumsy and loud and warm, a heap of brothers trying to act tough but holding on just long enough to not feel like kids again.
You held them all.
And then, like true soldiers, they pulled back — each nodding once before heading to their ships. Helmets on. Rifles in hand.
Cody was the last to go. He looked back at you as the ramp began to rise.
“Stay safe,” he said.
You gave a small nod.
“We’ll make you proud.”
“You already did.”
Then the gunships roared, rising one by one into the sky, and disappeared into the storm.
And you were left on the platform, alone.
But not really.
Because your voice was already tuned into their frequencies, your eyes scanning the holo feeds.
And your heart — your heart went with them.
————
She never returned to Kamino.
The rain still haunted her dreams sometimes, the echo of thunder over steel platforms, the scent of blaster oil and sea salt clinging to her skin. But when she left, she left for good.
The cadets she had raised — the ones who had once looked to her like a sister, a mentor, a buir — were no longer wide-eyed boys in numbered armor.
They were commanders now. Captains. Leaders of men.
And the war made them legends.
From the shadows of Coruscant to the deserts of Ryloth, from Umbara’s twisted jungles to the burning fields of Saleucami — she watched. She listened. She followed every mission report she could intercept, every coded message she wasn’t supposed to hear.
She couldn’t be with them. But she knew where they were. Every. Single. Day.
Bacara led brutal campaigns on Mygeeto.
Fox walked a knife’s edge keeping peace in the heart of chaos on Coruscant.
Cody fought with unwavering precision at Kenobi’s side.
Wolffe’s transmissions grew fewer, rougher. He was changing — harder, colder.
Rex’s loyalty to his General turned to quiet defiance. She recognized it in his voice. She’d taught him to think for himself.
Keeli, Thorn, Gree, Ponds, Neyo, Doom, Bly, Stone, Monk, Appo… all of them. She tracked them, stored every piece of data, every victory, every loss. Not as a commander. Not as a strategist.
As their buir.
She moved from system to system — never settling. Always watching. A ghost in the shadows of the war she helped raise. Never interfering. Just there.
But she knew.
She knew when Rex's tone cracked after Umbara.
She knew when Cody stopped speaking on open comms.
She knew when Pond’s name was pulled from a casualty list, but no one would say what happened.
She knew when Thorn’s file was locked behind High Council access.
And one by one, her boys began to fall silent.
Not dead. Not gone.
Just… lost.
To the war. To the darkness creeping into the cracks.
She sat in silence some nights, the old helmet resting beside her. Their names etched into the inside — 23 in total.
They weren’t clones to her. They were sons. Brothers. The best of the best.
She had given them names.
But the galaxy had given them numbers again.
So she remembered.
She remembered who they were before the armor, before the orders, before the war took their laughter and turned it into steel.
She remembered their first sparring matches. Their mess hall brawls. Their ridiculous, stupid banter.
She remembered Fox making them salute her.
She remembered Wolffe biting her hand like a brat and earning his name.
She remembered all of it.
Because someone had to.
Because one day, when the war ended — if any of them were left — she would find them.
And she would say the names again.
Out loud.
And remind them of who they really were.
——————
Previous Chapter
The fortress was carved straight into the mountainside — dark metal and cold stone, its towers punching through the mist like jagged teeth. Separatist banners snapped in the wind, and scout droids buzzed along the perimeter like angry insects.
You crouched with Obi-Wan behind a ridge just above the valley floor. The cadets were lined up beside you, low and quiet, eyes locked on the compound.
Anakin was, unsurprisingly, nowhere to be seen.
“Alright,” you whispered, tapping your datapad. “I count four main patrol paths. One blind spot. Minimal aerial surveillance.”
Kenobi nodded. “We can use the cliffside tunnel. I’ve seen this kind of layout before — there’s usually an access vent leading into the communications wing.”
You turned to your boys. “No heroics. Stay behind cover, stick to the plan, and no loud noises. Got it?”
They all nodded.
Except for Bacara, who raised a hand like he had a question.
You narrowed your eyes. “If this is about blowing something up—”
“I wasn’t gonna say that.”
“No loud noises.”
“Fine.”
Just as you leaned in to start your descent, a distant buzz and then a crash echoed from the other side of the fortress wall.
Everyone froze.
Obi-Wan sighed deeply. “That wasn’t us, was it?”
You didn’t answer — because right then, Anakin skidded down the slope, cloak half-burnt, covered in dust and grinning like an idiot.
“Hey!” he called, too loud. “Good news! I found a side entrance—”
A siren wailed.
Turrets rotated.
Searchlights snapped to life and started scanning the cliffs.
You turned, face blank. “Did you trigger an alarm?”
Anakin pointed behind him. “Technically? The droid did.”
Rex, next to you, groaned into his gloves. “We’re all gonna die.”
Kenobi was already getting up, lightsaber in hand, perfectly composed as chaos exploded below.
“Plans change,” he muttered. “We improvise.”
“Oh yes,” you said flatly, drawing your blaster. “Let’s all just improvise our way into a heavily armed Separatist base. That’s definitely how I planned to spend my day.”
He gave you a look as you both started moving down the slope.
“You know,” Obi-Wan said over the rising noise, “I never thought I’d see the day you would be the voice of reason.”
You ducked behind a boulder, covering the cadets as they followed in. “Yeah, well, someone has to be the adult while your Padawan’s off starting a land war with a power converter.”
He chuckled under his breath. “You could always take him. Add him to your little army of foundlings.”
You gave him a flat look. “I already have five too many.”
Behind you, Fox tripped over his own boots and nearly bowled into Cody.
Kenobi raised an eyebrow.
You added: “And they bite.”
————
Inside the base, it was colder than the mountain winds outside — all durasteel corridors and flickering lights, the buzz of power conduits echoing through the walls like a warning.
You crouched behind a support pillar as another pair of droid sentries clanked past. The group had slipped in through the broken emergency access hatch Anakin had accidentally discovered — half of it still smoldering from whatever he'd done to override the lock.
You turned to Obi-Wan in a sharp whisper. “Splitting up is a terrible idea.”
“It’s efficient,” he replied calmly, peering around the corner. “You and I retrieve the senator’s daughter. Anakin and your foundlings run a perimeter diversion.”
“They’re kids.”
“It’s efficient,” he replied calmly, peering around the corner. “You and I retrieve the senator’s daughter. Anakin and your cadets run a perimeter diversion.”
“They’re kids.”
“Your kids,” he said smoothly. “And as you’ve reminded me — foundlings are expected to fight.”
You clenched your jaw. “They’re not ready for this.”
He met your eyes. “Neither were we, once.”
That stopped you cold.
He lowered his voice, just a touch. “They need the experience. He needs the responsibility.”
You looked across the corridor — to where Anakin was gesturing wildly with his hands, trying to give the cadets some kind of whispered briefing. Bacara was clearly ignoring him. Wolffe already had a stun grenade in hand.
You exhaled through your nose. “If they die—”
“They won’t.”
You gave him one last glare, then looked back at the boys. “If anything goes wrong, scream.”
Fox raised a hand. “Like—?”
“I will hear you. I will end whoever hurt you. Just scream.”
The cadets nodded, suddenly a lot more serious.
Anakin gave a quick salute. “We’ll meet you back at the east exit.”
Obi-Wan glanced at you. “Shall we?”
You rolled your eyes and moved out, both of you slipping into the shadowed hallway like water down a blade.
———
Your part of the mission was quick and clean. Every step was coordinated — you swept forward through dark halls while Obi-Wan silently disabled security systems, his movements graceful and lethal.
You’d never worked with a Jedi like this before — and you had to admit, it was… oddly satisfying.
No words were wasted. He moved, you moved. You dropped a droid with a blaster shot, he caught its partner’s blaster arm mid-swing and twisted it clean off. The two of you cleared the detention block in under four minutes.
“Cell 14,” Obi-Wan said, checking the datapad he pulled from a guard’s belt.
You were already unlocking the panel.
Inside, the senator’s daughter was scared but unharmed — pale, dressed in rich fabric, bound at the wrists.
“I’ve got her,” you said, pulling her close and cutting the ties.
She stared up at you. “Who are you?”
You gave her a faint smile. “Someone your mother owes a drink.”
———
Elsewhere, it was less smooth.
Anakin’s plan — and you used the word plan very loosely — had apparently included sneaking into the droid depot and causing a “small, contained distraction.”
That turned into blowing up a weapons rack, stealing a tank, and getting stuck in a three-way chase down the hallway with spider droids, sirens, and Wolffe yelling, “I SAID I WASN’T GONNA BLOW ANYTHING UP, BUT THEN HE HANDED ME A DETONATOR—”
“I thought it was a flashlight!” Anakin shouted back.
Rex was clutching the controls of the tank like his life depended on it. Bacara was on top of the thing firing wildly and screaming gleefully. Cody and Fox were halfway hanging out of the hatch, shouting directions and laughing hysterically.
“THIS IS NOT STEALTH!” Fox screamed.
“I’M DISTRACTING THEM!” Bacara grinned. “DISTRACTION MISSION SUCCESSFUL!”
“DEFINITELY not ready,” you muttered, back with Obi-Wan as you made your way to the rendezvous.
You could hear the tank before you even saw them.
Obi-Wan glanced sideways at you with a completely straight face. “Would now be a bad time to say you were right?”
You stared at the smoke trail in the distance. “I hate you.”
———
The escape was… a mess.
They made it out, of course. Somehow.
With a half-destroyed tank rolling in front of the group as cover, explosions at their backs, and Anakin cheering like they’d just won a podrace, the cadets had sprinted across the canyon with blaster bolts chasing their heels.
You’d covered the senator’s daughter with your own body the whole way.
Kenobi had deflected shot after shot, graceful and impassive, the calm center of a storm.
Once they’d finally cleared the base and reconnected with the ship, you spent the first ten minutes pacing the ramp with your helmet tucked under your arm, muttering curses in three different languages.
Then, after a full headcount and emergency takeoff, you finally collapsed into a seat in the main hold.
Everyone was quiet.
Even Anakin.
The cadets sat in a circle, scratched and bruised, letting adrenaline drain from their systems. You watched them from your spot, arms crossed, boots heavy on the floor.
Cody was staring at his hands like they didn’t belong to him.
Fox hadn’t said a word.
Bacara was still grinning, but it was thinner now.
You leaned forward, voice low. “You all did good.”
Five pairs of eyes turned to you.
“Not perfect. Not clean. But good,” you said, and your voice softened, just a touch. “You followed orders. You adapted. You survived.”
Wolffe swallowed, eyes flicking to the floor.
You stood, stepping forward, and placed a hand on the back of Cody’s neck — warm and grounding.
“You saw war today. The real thing. Not just drills. Not just training. And you all made it out.”
There was silence again.
Then Bacara mumbled, “Even if Skywalker tried to kill us all.”
“I heard that,” Anakin called from the cockpit.
“Good.”
You turned toward the boys again. “Rest up. You earned it.”
As they started to settle into sleep wherever they could — curled in corners of the hold, some using their packs as pillows — you moved quietly to the front of the ship.
Kenobi was leaning against the wall, arms crossed, watching the stars pass through the viewports.
“You think they’re alright?” you asked, keeping your voice low.
He glanced at you. “They will be.”
You tilted your head. “So. What happened to your ship, exactly?”
He didn’t blink. “Mysterious failure.”
“Uh huh.”
“Sabotage, maybe.”
“Right.”
“Couldn’t possibly have been someone crash landing our ship.”
You sighed. “You Jedi are the worst.”
“I get that a lot.”
———
You hated the smell of Coruscant. Too clean. Too bright. Like chrome and false smiles.
But the senator’s estate was quiet, at least. High above the clouds, the landing platform was bordered by hanging gardens and silent droids, the building towering like a temple to wealth and secrecy.
You disembarked with the senator’s daughter at your side — safe, whole, and grateful.
The senator met you personally, eyes shining with relief. They pulled you into a tight embrace and whispered, “I owe you everything.”
Then they looked at your five cadets, lined up neatly and looking everywhere but directly at the senator.
“These boys…” the senator said slowly. “Are they—?”
You cut in smoothly. “Foundlings. Mine.”
A pause.
The senator raised an eyebrow. “Fascinating. They’re… sharp. Disciplined.”
“Lucky genes,” you said, smiling coolly.
Behind you, Fox was mouthing don’t say anything at Wolffe, who was visibly biting his tongue.
The senator looked thoughtful. “You know… there may be a place for them in security, when the time is right. We could find funding. Official channels.”
Your blood went cold.
But you smiled anyway.
“I’ll think about it.”
The senator nodded, clearly meaning well — but clearly dangerous.
You filed it away. Another warning.
They were not ready to be seen.
Not yet.
That night, back on the ship, the boys sat on the floor around you again, waiting for your orders.
But you just looked at them — really looked at them.
Wolffe’s bruise under his eye. Rex’s busted knuckles. Bacara’s scraped cheek. Cody’s silence. Fox’s slumped shoulders.
You said nothing at first.
Then, softly: “You did good.”
Five sets of eyes flicked up.
You gave them a small nod. “Get some rest. More training tomorrow.”
“Yes, buir,” they all said at once.
And you didn’t correct them.
Not this time.
————
Kamino had never felt this quiet.
Rain still lashed against the glass corridors. The white lights still hummed. Clones still trained, marched, sparred. But the air carried a tension now — tight and sterile, like the Kaminoans were watching every step.
Because they were.
The cadets noticed it first.
Extra cameras in the mess hall.
Silent observers hovering near the training chambers.
One of the newer units mentioned being taken aside and scanned after sparring.
And then, there was the way the five field cadets were treated.
Rex, Cody, Bacara, Fox, and Wolffe.
They were whispered about now — envied, doubted, even resented.
Rex heard a pair of cadets muttering behind his back in the armory.
“Think they’re better than us.”
“Just ‘cause they left Kamino.”
Bacara caught a shove in the hallway.
Fox started training harder, angrier.
You noticed it — how they stuck close together now. A small, tight unit. Good for war. Bad for brothers.
You were in the middle of correcting Bacara’s form during a sparring drill when you saw Jango watching from the overlook.
He didn’t call out to you. Just tilted his head, a silent signal.
You followed.
He was leaning against the wall in a private corridor, arms crossed.
“They’re pissed,” he said, voice low and steady.
You didn’t need to ask who.
“The Kaminoans?”
He nodded once. “Didn’t like you taking your cadets off-world. Especially not without their approval. You rattled their control.”
You leaned your back against the wall, arms folded. “That was your idea.”
He huffed a short breath of amusement. “They’re already talking about locking down field excursions. Increased isolation protocols.”
Your jaw tensed. “They’re kids. Not droids.”
“They’re property,” he said bitterly. “According to Kamino.”
You looked down at the floor, teeth clenched.
“They’re more than that,” you muttered.
He gave you a look. “Then you better teach them to act like it. Before this place eats them alive.”
————
Later that day, it happened.
Two cadets shoved Fox after a sparring match. Said he thought he was too good for the rest of them now.
Fox didn’t fight back.
But Wolffe did.
Cody pulled him off before it escalated, but not before everyone saw.
The whole training floor went dead silent.
You walked into the middle of it.
And no one said a word.
You turned, looking around at all of them — rows of half-grown clones, armor scuffed, breath caught.
“Line up.”
They did.
All of them. Even the ones still panting from the fight.
You stood in front of them, helmet tucked under your arm, rain streaking down the windows behind you.
“I’ve been too soft on you.”
A murmur rippled through the room.
You raised your voice.
“I wanted you to feel like brothers. I wanted you to find your names. To find yourselves. But that doesn’t mean forgetting what you are.”
You started to pace, slow and sharp.
“You are soldiers. You are Mandalorian-trained. You are disciplined. And above all — you are loyal.”
A pause.
“Not to me. To each other.”
They watched you like they were trying to breathe your words in.
“This?” You pointed at the dried blood on Wolffe’s lip. “This jealousy? This division? It’s not strength. It’s weakness. And weakness gets you killed.”
You stopped walking, facing them head-on.
“I don’t care who went off-world. I don’t care who hasn’t earned a name yet. You are brothers. And from today on, the training gets harder. The drills get longer. The expectations rise.”
A long, steady beat.
“Earn your place. Earn your name. Earn each other.”
No one moved.
No one dared.
You dropped your voice just enough.
“This is your warning. Tomorrow — the real training begins.”
You turned on your heel and walked out.
Behind you, they stood taller.
Silent.
Together.
————
Previous Chapter | Next Chapter
The morning air in the training yard smelled of damp plastoid and ozone — same as always. Rain tapped on the roof of the covered walkway, steady but soft, like the storm hadn’t made up its mind about the day yet.
You stood at the head of the formation, arms behind your back, cloak heavy with humidity.
Twenty-three had become twenty-two.
Not because you'd lost one, but because one of them had stepped forward.
And he'd earned a name.
They stood in perfect formation, shoulder to shoulder. No movement, no talking — but the tension was there, humming like static in the air.
You stood in front of them, helmet tucked under one arm, boots soaked to the ankle.
“Yesterday, one of you showed me something I’ve been waiting to see,” you said calmly. “Not just talent. Not just tactics. But who he is.”
Your eyes landed on the cadet to your right. The one who no longer stood in the line.
CC-1010.
He stood tall, hands clasped behind his back, helmet under his arm. Quiet. Unshaken.
“He faced fear without shame. Not because he wanted a name — but because he needed to be more for his brothers. And that,” you said, voice steady, “is how a name is earned.”
You nodded to him.
“From now on, he is Fox.”
Silence.
But not empty silence. No — this silence was sharp.
Across the line, you saw heads twitch, eyes shift. You felt the ripple move through them.
CC-2224 tilted his head just slightly — like he was re-evaluating something.
CT-7567 didn’t move at all, but his jaw tightened beneath the helmet. You could almost feel him processing it.
CC-5869 crossed his arms, the first to break stance.
“Didn’t know crying in your bunk earned names now,” he muttered.
Fox raised an eyebrow. “Didn’t know tripping over your squadmate during breach drills made you an expert.”
A quiet snort came from CC-1138, who immediately tried to play it off.
You stepped in before it escalated.
“Cut it,” you said. “Jealousy won’t earn you a name. Neither will pissing contests. If anything, Fox getting named means I’m watching even closer now.”
CT-1477 mumbled something to CC-5052. Probably a bet.
CC-2224 and CC-5869 shared a look — not resentment, not yet. Just… hunger. Quiet determination.
CC-1138 nodded once to himself.
You let them have the moment — that weight of realization that the bar had been raised.
You turned on your heel, voice sharp again.
“Sim room. City block scenario. Squad-on-squad. You want a name?”
You gestured to the exit with your helmet.
“Earn it.”
They moved faster than usual.
The sim was rougher than usual.
Squads pushed harder, moved sharper, communicated with fewer mistakes. CT-7567 ran point on his squad and executed a textbook breach — one you hadn’t even taught yet. CC-2224 called a flawless redirect mid-scenario when the objective shifted. CC-5052 and CC-5869 still bickered, but their cover-fire patterns were getting tighter.
They were trying.
You could see it.
But only one of them had a name.
And they all knew it.
———
That night, the rain had returned in full — harder now, pelting the side of the instructor wing like blasterfire on durasteel.
You leaned against a support pillar outside the rec hall, caf in hand, gear still half-on. The ache in your shoulders hadn’t left since morning.
Footsteps approached — a limp in one.
Kal Skirata.
“You look like osik,” he said by way of greeting.
“Same to you,” you replied, sipping your caf.
He grinned and leaned beside you, stretching out the stiffness in his back. “One of my cadets set off a training charge in the wrong direction today. Took out the wrong team.”
You smirked. “Friendly fire?”
“Not so friendly when I was the one watching from behind.”
Another set of steps approached — slower, more deliberate.
Walon Vau. Cloaked in quiet as always.
“I warned RC-1262 about overcommitting,” he said. “He overcommitted.”
You glanced at him. “He live?”
“He learned.”
Kal chuckled. “Same thing.”
The three of you stood in silence for a moment, listening to the rain.
“I named one,” you said finally.
They both turned toward you.
“CC-1010,” you added. “He’s Fox now.”
Kal nodded slowly. “Good lad. Level-headed. Thinks with more than just his training.”
“Steady,” Vau agreed. “He’ll survive.”
You watched the rain streak down the glass window across from you, arms folded. “The others are watching him differently now.”
“Of course they are,” Kal muttered. “They know now. It’s real.”
“They’re chasing it,” you said. “All of them. Not for ego — not yet. But… they want to be seen.”
“That’s what names do,” Kal said. “Turn numbers into souls.”
Vau’s gaze was unreadable as always, but his voice was low. “And once they believe they’re real, they start fearing what happens when that gets taken away.”
You didn’t say anything at first. Just nodded. Slowly. Thoughtfully.
“I keep thinking…” you said. “We’re making them better than us. Smarter. Sharper. Kinder, even.”
“And sending them to die,” Kal finished for you.
None of you flinched.
You just stood there, shoulder to shoulder, three Mandalorians staring down a storm, holding onto something quiet and sacred — a little hope that maybe, just maybe, these boys would be remembered as more than numbers.
———
The hand-to-hand training deck smelled like sweat, scuffed plastoid, and the faint charge of electroshock stun mats. You stood at the center of the ring, barefoot, sleeves rolled up, ready.
The cadets ringed the mat in a tight circle, helmets off, eyes sharp.
It was their first advanced combat session — and they were nervous.
You weren’t.
You cracked your knuckles and addressed them plainly.
“You won’t always have a blaster. Or your brothers. Sometimes, it’s just you and an enemy with a blade, or fists, or nothing at all. So today we find out what you can do with your body and your rage.”
Your gaze swept across them.
“Who’ll be my first opponent.”
CC-3636 stepped forward without hesitation.
“I’ll go.”
You raised a brow. He’d always been intense. Focused. A little too rigid in structure. Like he was trying to will himself into leadership before his body was even finished growing.
“Alright,” you said, nodding. “Into the ring.”
He moved like a soldier. Precision in every step. But there was something else today — a glint of desperation.
He wanted something.
No — needed it.
You squared off, feet planted, hands loose at your sides.
“You sure about this?” you asked lowly.
“Yes, Instructor.”
You gave him the first move.
He came in strong — good footwork, disciplined strikes. You let him test you, blocked and redirected, watched his form fall apart when you slipped past his guard and tapped his ribs.
He reset fast — eyes narrowing.
Second round, he came harder. Less measured. Frustrated now.
He lunged — you sidestepped — swept his leg — he hit the mat.
He snarled.
You backed off. “Keep your stance balanced. You’re leading too much with your shoulder.”
“I know!” he snapped, climbing to his feet.
That desperation — it was leaking out now.
He charged.
You moved to disarm — caught his arm, twisted — and then—
Pain.
You flinched, just for a second.
He’d bitten your hand.
Not playfully. Not out of reflex.
Desperately.
Hard enough to draw blood.
The room went dead silent.
You stared down at him, jaw tight, hand bleeding. He stared back, chest heaving, eyes wild like a cornered animal.
The look in his eyes wasn’t arrogance.
It was fear.
Please let this be enough.
You didn’t hit him. Didn’t yell.
You stepped back. Flexed your fingers. Blood dripped to the mat.
“You’re reckless,” you said quietly. “You lost your temper. You disrespected your opponent.”
He opened his mouth to speak—an apology, maybe—but you cut him off.
“But you didn’t quit.”
His expression shifted. Confused. Hopeful. Scared to be either.
You stepped forward again, standing close enough for your voice to drop.
“You’d rather be hated than forgotten. You’d rather bleed than fail. And even when you’re outmatched, you refuse to let go of the fight.”
You met his eyes.
“That’s why your name is Wolffe.”
Around the ring, cadets exhaled — some in disbelief, some in understanding.
CC-2224 blinked, quiet. CC-5052 shifted his stance, just slightly. CT-7567 looked away.
Fox, standing behind them all, gave a small, proud nod.
Wolffe looked like he couldn’t breathe. “I—Instructor, I didn’t mean—”
“I know,” you said simply.
You held out your other hand.
He took it.
You helped him to his feet.
“You’re not done yet. But you’ve started something that’ll never be taken from you.”
He nodded, slow. Steady.
The wolf had been born in blood and instinct. And he’d wear that name like a scar.
Later, after the medics patched your hand and the cadets had been dismissed, you stood in the corridor, staring out at the storm-churned ocean through the long viewing panels.
You didn’t hear Fox approach, but you felt him beside you.
“He deserved it,” he said quietly.
You nodded.
“He did.”
Fox folded his arms.
“Do you think we’ll all have to bleed to earn ours?”
You glanced at him.
“No,” you said. “But I think the ones who don’t will wish they had.”
He thought about that for a long time.
And didn’t disagree.
———
The days began to blur together.
Training turned into instinct. Wounds turned into scars. The boys — your boys — grew sharper. Stronger. Quieter when it counted. Louder when it didn’t.
And one by one, they earned their names.
Not all at once. Never in a rush.
Each name was a moment.
Each name was *earned.*
***
**CC-1139** was next.
It happened during a silent extraction drill. He lost his comm halfway through and didn’t say a word — just adapted, took point, and pulled his whole squad through three klicks of hostile terrain using only hand signals and trust. He didn’t ask to be recognized. But the second they hit the exfil marker, he dropped to one knee — not from fatigue, but to check his brother’s sprained ankle.
You named him Bacara right there in the mud.
CC-2224 followed.
The sim had collapsed. A storm cut power to the whole compound mid-exercise. No lights. No alarms. Nothing but chaos. But 2224 kept moving. He rallied the others without hesitation, without fear. He *led* — not by yelling, but by being the kind of soldier others would follow into darkness.
You named him Cody at sunrise.
He didn’t say anything — but you saw the way he stood straighter after.
CT-7567 earned his during a full-force melee sim. Another cadet went down hard — knocked out cold. 7567 could’ve finished the drill. Could’ve taken the win. Instead, he stopped, picked up his brother, and carried him through the finish.
Later that night, he knocked on your door.
“I didn’t do it to earn a name.”
You smiled and said, “That’s why you did.”
*Rex.*
He nodded once and left, proud but quiet — same as always.
CC-8826 didn’t want a name. Said he didn’t need one.
But when a flash-flood hit during an outdoor recon sim, he was the first one to drag three younger cadets out of a current strong enough to tear armor. He lost his helmet in the process. Nearly drowned.
You found him on the bank, coughing water, already checking the others’ vitals before his own.
“You’ve got more heart than half the GAR already,” you said, dropping to your knees beside him. “Your name is Neyo.”
He didn't argue. Just nodded once.
CC-4477 never liked attention. But he moved like fire when things got real. Explosive sim — half the field in disarray — and 4477 kept it together like a warhound. Fast, deadly, and focused.
You named him Thorn.
He smirked. Said, “About time.”
CC-6454 was a stubborn one. Constantly pushing limits. But when a real med evac team came in for a demo, one of the medics dropped from heatstroke. 6454 took over triage without being told. Knew the protocols better than the demo officer.
“Didn’t think you had the patience,” you said.
“I didn’t,” he admitted. “But I watched. Like you said.”
You smiled.
“Ponds.”
CC-5804 earned his during a live-fire run. One of his brothers panicked — froze up mid-field. 5804 didn’t yell, didn’t shame him. Just moved in front, took two rounds to the armor, and got him out safe.
You named him Keeli. He wore it like armor after that.
CC-5869 was a mouthy one. Constantly bickering. Constantly poking.
But during a sim gone sideways, when a blast shorted your training console and dropped half the safety measures, he jumped into the fire zone to pull a brother out. Burned his arm. Didn’t stop until the sim shut down.
When you sat by his cot that night, he looked up and asked, “Still think I’m just talk?”
“No,” you said. “Your name is Stone.”
CC-1004 shone brightest when things were barely holding together. During a malfunctioning terrain sim, when the floor caved and chaos reigned, he kept calm, coordinated, and improvised a bridge to extract half the squad.
“Doom,” you said afterward. “Because you walked through it and didn’t blink.”
CC-5767 liked to move alone. Observant, quiet, leaned into recon drills more than most. But when his squad got pinned by a faulty sim turret, he flanked it by himself, took it down, and dragged three brothers out of the smoke.
“Monk,” you said after. “Because you wait, and then strike.”
He gave a small, thoughtful nod. Said nothing.
CC-1003 was relentless in recon exercises. Fast. Tactical. And weirdly curious — always scanning, always asking questions others didn’t think to. He figured out how to reroute a failed evac sim by hacking the system — without permission.
You made him do five laps. Then you named him Gree.
He said, “Worth it.”
CC-1119 didn’t stand out for a long time — until a night drill went off-script and real fire suppression was needed. He coordinated the younger cadets, risked getting himself locked out of the hangar doors, and stayed behind to make sure no one was missed.
“Appo,” you said quietly that night.
He looked like it meant everything.
CC-5052 earned his name last.
He’d spent weeks in the shadow of the others. Quieter than most. Never the fastest, or strongest, or boldest. But he was always there.
Always steady.
Always watching.
And when one of the younger cadets broke during endurance trials, it was 5052 who stayed up all night walking him through drills until dawn. Not for praise. Not to be seen.
Just because he refused to let a brother fall behind.
“Bly,” you said, the next morning during roll.
He blinked. Looked up. “Why?”
You smiled. “Because loyalty isn’t loud.”
And then, one day… they were all named.
All twenty-three.
No more numbers.
No more designations.
Just men.
You stood before them one morning, same rain overhead, same wind off the ocean.
Only now — the line standing before you wasn’t a batch of identical cadets.
They were Rex. Cody. Fox. Wolffe. Bly. Thorn. Ponds. Neyo. Stone. Bacara. Keeli.
And so many others.
Your boys.
Your soldiers.
Your brothers.
Your family.
---
The message came in just after dawn.
You were still groggy, still pulling on your boots when the alert pinged on your private comm. Priority channel. Encrypted. Not Kaminoan. Not Republic military.
Senate clearance.
You keyed it open.
A flickering blue hologram shimmered to life above your desk — a familiar face. Older than the last time you’d seen her, sharp-edged with worry. One of the few Senators you still had any respect for.
High-ranking. Untouchable. A name that carried weight in every corner of the galaxy.
“She’s gone,” the senator said, voice tight and low. “They took her. Bounty hunters — well-organized, professional. They broke into our Koryan estate and vanished without a trace. Local security's useless. The Senate can’t intervene… not officially.”
You frowned, blood already running cold. “How long ago?”
“Thirty-six hours. Please. I know you’re not in that life anymore — but I need you. You were the best I ever knew.”
You didn’t say anything.
You didn’t need to.
You were already grabbing your gear.
You were halfway through prepping your field pack — weapons checked, armor strapped, boots laced — when you heard the door hiss open behind you.
“You’re going somewhere,” Jango said.
You didn’t look up. “Got a message. A senator’s daughter was taken. Bounty hunters — Separatist-connected. I’m going after them.”
“Alone?”
You slung your rifle over your shoulder. “Works better that way.”
“No,” he said plainly.
You looked over at him. “What?”
“You’re not going alone.”
“I’m not dragging anyone else into this.”
“You are,” he said. “You’re taking some of your cadets.”
You blinked at him like he’d grown another head. “This isn’t a training sim, Jango. It’s a live recovery op — probably hostile.”
“Exactly. It’s time they get a taste of the real thing.”
“They’re cadets.”
“They’re soldiers,” he shot back. “Ones you’ve trained. This isn’t about checking boxes for the Kaminoans. This is about seeing if they’re ready. If you’ve made them ready.”
You stepped forward, voice low and hard. “This is a kidnapping. A bounty op. There will be blasterfire. Blood. Civilians in play. If I take them out there and they break—”
“They won’t,” he said, eyes steady. “You wouldn’t have gotten them this far if they would.”
You stared at him. But you knew it.
Just like always, his word was final.
You blew out a breath. “Fine.”
“Five. No more.”
You muttered under your breath, “Babysitting soldiers while hunting kidnappers. This is going to be a nightmare.”
But you were already thinking.
Already choosing.
Who could handle this? Who should see this?
You knew exactly who.
Not because they were perfect.
But because they were ready.
You didn’t say their names. Not yet.
But in your gut, you already knew who was coming with you.
And you knew this was going to change everything.
The training yard buzzed with movement — cadets running drills, instructors shouting commands, rain streaking off armor and plastoid like it always did on Kamino.
You stood at the edge of the yard, arms folded, helmet clipped to your belt. You scanned the field — and with a sharp whistle, you cut through the chaos.
“Everyone, on me!”
The clones snapped to it immediately, forming up in front of you with military precision. Twenty-three pairs of eyes locked forward.
You could see it already — the way they stood straighter now. The way they moved more like commanders than trainees.
You let the silence settle, just for a second.
Then you said it.
“I need five volunteers.”
That got their attention.
Some shifted subtly, glancing at one another. A few eyebrows raised. Wolffe crossed his arms like he was already halfway into the mission, whatever it was.
You kept going.
“This isn’t a training sim. This isn’t target practice. This is a real mission. Outside Kamino.”
Now they were focused. No shifting. No glancing. Just twenty-three frozen faces, locked on your words.
“You won’t be going as clones,” you continued. “You’ll be civilians. Mercenaries, bounty hunters, whatever you need to pass for. But you cannot let anyone know what you are — not that you’re clones, and definitely not that you’re part of a Republic army.”
The rain kept falling.
“This mission is classified at the highest level,” you said. “Even the Kaminoans aren’t cleared for the details. If you’re caught, I can’t guarantee the Republic will come for you. That’s how deep this runs.”
You scanned the line, locking eyes with the ones you trusted most.
“You’ll be entering a system with active Separatist surveillance. We’re tracking a high-value target. There will be civilians. Possibly bounty hunters. Possibly worse. If you’re picked, you follow my lead — and you don’t make any moves unless I say so.”
More silence.
Then, a voice.
Fox stepped forward. “I volunteer.”
No hesitation.
You nodded.
Wolffe stepped up next, already wearing that cocky half-smirk. “Wouldn’t let him have all the fun.”
Cody followed. “We’re ready.”
Then Rex. “Count me in.”
Bacara didn’t even say anything. Just stepped forward, helmet under his arm.
You looked over the five of them — standing tall, serious, already different from the others still in line.
These weren’t just cadets anymore.
They were something else now.
You gave a sharp nod. “Good. Gear up. Plainclothes armor. Non-standard issue. We move in one hour.”
They turned without a word, heading for the barracks.
Behind you, the others stood silent, watching — half with envy, half with pride.
You knew this mission was going to change everything.
And you had a feeling…
So did they.
————
The ship landed just outside the village — a quiet, fog-drenched place carved into the cliffs. Wooden structures, half-covered in moss and time, leaned over narrow paths where old traders and quiet-eyed farmers moved without urgency.
You led the boys in — disguised, geared in light armor that wouldn’t raise suspicion. Helmets off. Faces exposed. They stayed close but casual, spread just enough to keep eyes on every angle.
Fox and Cody scanned the streets in near-sync. Rex fell into step beside you, glancing now and then toward the distant mountains rising beyond the village, half-shrouded in cloud.
You asked questions.
You kept it light, polite — an old friend in search of a missing child.
No one said much at first. But eventually, a hunched old woman at the fish stall whispered something about seeing off-worlders — rough-looking ones — headed toward the mountain pass.
“Talk to the bridgekeeper,” she added. “They say no one’s crossed in days. Not since the dragon came back.”
You frowned. “Dragon?”
She only nodded.
The kind of nod that said don’t ask questions you don’t want answers to.
It took an hour to reach the bridge.
The river roared below it — wide and dark, cutting through the canyon like a scar. The bridge itself was old stone, slick with moss, barely holding itself together in the storm-drenched wind.
But that wasn’t what made you stop.
An old man — half-cloaked, leaning on a gnarled staff — stood at the entrance to the bridge.
“You don’t want to cross,” he rasped, his voice as weathered as the cliffside. “Not now. The Separatists disturbed the river. The dragon’s awake.”
You raised a brow. “The what now?”
“The river dragon,” he said. “A storm-born serpent. It guards the crossing. Won’t let anything through since the droids came.”
You waved a dismissive hand. “Right. Thanks, old man.”
He pointed behind you. “Then explain that.”
You turned.
The river exploded.
A massive shape surged up from the depths — sleek and serpentine, covered in gleaming, wet-black scales. It arched high above the bridge, water cascading off its body in sheets. Its eyes crackled with violet light.
Then, with a sound like the sky breaking, it let loose a blast of lightning, straight into the air.
Every one of the boys dropped instinctively, weapons half-drawn.
Wolffe: “That’s a kriffing dragon.”
Rex: “It shoots lightning.”
Bacara: “We’re gonna die.”
You stayed perfectly still — even as your heart thundered in your ribs.
The boys turned to you, wide-eyed.
Fox spoke first. “...So, uh. What’s the plan, boss?”
You swallowed. Your palms were sweating.
You forced a slow breath through your nose and set your jaw.
“The plan,” you said, “is that you all stay back…”
You unclipped your cloak.
“...and I go talk to the damn dragon.”
Cody blinked. “You’re not serious.”
“I’m always serious,” you muttered, stalking toward the bridge. “Stupid kids. Stupid bridge. Stupid lightning dragon.”
“Pretty sure this violates field protocol,” Rex called out nervously.
You didn’t look back. “I am field protocol.”
But your stomach turned the closer you got.
The dragon watched you.
Unmoving. Silent.
Like a storm waiting to happen.
You were halfway across the stone path when a familiar voice echoed from the far end of the bridge.
“Well. That’s certainly not a face I expected to see out here.”
You froze.
That voice.
You turned toward it.
There — standing with his arms crossed, robes soaked with rain, a lightsaber on his hip and that signature, wry half-smile on his face — stood Obi-Wan Kenobi.
He looked older than the last time you saw him.
A little more tired. A little more burdened.
But still — him.
“Kenobi,” you breathed, relief and disbelief mingling in your chest.
He nodded once. “It’s been a long time.”
You walked toward him, dragon temporarily forgotten. “Didn’t expect to run into a Jedi on the edge of nowhere.”
“I could say the same for you.”
You slowed. Your voice softened. “...I heard about Qui-Gon. I’m sorry, Obi-Wan.”
For a moment, the smirk faded.
His eyes dropped, and he nodded, quiet. “Thank you.”
Silence stretched between you for a breath.
Then the dragon growled again — lightning crackling up its spine like a warning.
You sighed. “So. Uh. Any chance your Jedi calm-animal nonsense works on that thing?”
Obi-Wan raised a brow. “Careful. You’ll hurt its feelings.”
You looked at him.
He looked at the dragon.
And the two of you, almost at the same time, muttered:
“This is going to suck.”
The dragon hadn’t moved again.
Neither had you.
The two of you stood on opposite sides of the bridge now — the water below roaring, lightning curling lazily through the air above like warning smoke.
Obi-Wan let out a long, exhausted breath.
“I’m too old for this.”
You smirked. “You’re like thirty-five.”
“And that’s still too old for giant lightning-breathing reptiles.”
You chuckled under your breath. “Still the same sarcastic Jedi I remember.”
He glanced at you. “Still the same reckless Mandalorian who nearly blew up half a speeder depot on Kalevala.”
“That was a bad day,” you admitted. “Didn’t help that you were the one who knocked over the detonator.”
He gave a faint grin. “I deny everything.”
The dragon shifted slightly — scales glowing faintly with electricity. You both tensed, but it didn’t move to strike.
“So,” you said casually, “you here on Jedi business?”
“Actually,” Obi-Wan said, “I’m here for the same reason you are. A certain senator sent word. Missing daughter. Possible Separatist involvement.”
You blinked. “Let me guess. She called you right after calling me.”
“Probably,” he said. “Though I don’t usually work missing person cases. Not alone.”
Your brow lifted. “Not alone?”
Obi-Wan nodded. “I brought my Padawan.”
You stared at him. “You? A Padawan?”
“He’s fifteen,” Obi-Wan said. “Still a handful. Always running off. I left him in the village to gather intel, and—”
A roar of thunder cut him off.
And then, chaos.
A blur of motion streaked across the cliffside — gold and brown and fury — and in the next instant, a boy launched himself off the edge of a building, flipping clean over the river and landing hard on the bridge in a spray of sparks.
Lightsaber ignited.
Blue.
The dragon screeched, rearing back, lightning flashing across its body.
Obi-Wan’s head fell back slightly. “Force, not again.”
“That’s him?” you asked, already unholstering your sidearm.
“Yes,” Obi-Wan sighed. “That’s Anakin.”
You didn’t wait.
You sprinted.
So did he.
The two of you launched onto the bridge just as Anakin’s blade crashed against the dragon’s lightning-charged hide, sending sparks and static flying. The creature lashed out, tail whipping through stone — you ducked low and rolled, blaster up, firing carefully placed shots near the joints in its armor-thick scales.
Obi-Wan surged forward, saber slicing through a strike meant for Anakin.
“Padawan!” he barked. “You were supposed to observe!”
“It was charging up!” Anakin yelled. “You were talking!”
“I was stalling!”
“Same thing!”
You slid beneath the dragon’s legs, grabbing a fallen cable from the wreckage and looping it quickly around one of the creature’s hind limbs. “Less yelling, more wrangling!”
From the cliffs, the five cadets watched in awe.
Cody was the first to speak. “Is that… is that what Jedi do all the time?”
“Apparently,” Rex muttered, eyes wide. “That kid’s fifteen.”
Wolffe let out a low whistle. “He fights like he was born with that saber in his hand.”
Fox didn’t say anything — but you could see the way his fists were clenched tight with excitement.
Bacara crossed his arms. “I need to fight alongside someone like that someday.”
Rex nodded slowly. “We will.”
They all looked at him.
And none of them disagreed.
Back on the bridge, the dragon reared up for one final strike — but Obi-Wan raised his hand, and with a focused pulse of the Force, blasted the creature back just enough for Anakin to leap high and carve a clean, non-lethal slash across its side.
The beast shrieked, arcing lightning into the sky — and then with a final, furious hiss, it dived back into the river and vanished beneath the surface.
Silence fell.
All three of you stood there, breathing hard, half-covered in dust and water and ash.
Then Obi-Wan turned to you.
“Are you ever not in the middle of something insane?”
You wiped blood off your lip. “Nope.”
He glanced at the five cadets watching from the cliff. “And those?”
You hesitated.
Then, with a straight face “Foundlings. Mine.”
He gave you a long look. “You expect me to believe that?”
“You don’t think I’m a mother figure?”
His expression didn’t change. “...Right. Foundlings it is.”
You both turned to look at Anakin — already poking the smoldering scorch marks on the bridge with the tip of his saber.
“Your Padawan’s intense,” you said.
Obi-Wan exhaled slowly. “You have no idea.”
————
The air grew thinner as they climbed, the path winding upward through rocky slopes and moss-covered ledges. The thunderclouds had drifted off toward the horizon, but the scent of rain still clung to the earth, rich and cold.
The dragon hadn’t returned.
But the tension never quite left.
Obi-Wan walked ahead, silent, robes shifting in the mountain wind. Anakin wasn’t far behind, bounding between rocks like he had more energy than sense.
You brought up the rear, your five cadets close behind — feet steady, eyes sharp, but quiet in a way they never usually were.
When the path widened out near an outcropping, you tapped Rex on the shoulder. “Hold up.”
They stopped, forming a loose semicircle around you as the Jedi moved out of earshot.
You glanced after them once, then turned back to your boys.
“This is important,” you said, low and firm. “I know you're excited. I know this is your first time in the field. But listen to me.”
They straightened without thinking.
“I am your buir now,” you said. “For this mission — and from here on.”
There was a pause.
Then Cody’s voice broke it, soft but certain: “We already think of you that way.”
You smiled — tight and small, but real.
“Good,” you said. “Then this will make sense.”
Your voice hardened just a little, instinctively Mandalorian now — the part of you that Jango saw when he chose you for this job.
“I am your buir. You are my foundlings. We are clan. Until the Jedi know what we are — until the Republic knows — we stay as that. Nothing more.”
They all nodded slowly.
Even Wolffe didn’t crack a joke this time.
“You don’t speak about Kamino. You don’t mention the GAR. You don’t talk about your designations. We are nothing but mercs with a shared name and a found-family story.”
Fox narrowed his eyes. “What if they ask?”
You looked him straight on. “You lie.”
The wind blew over the ledge.
You touched your fist to your chest — Mando’ade.
They mirrored it without hesitation.
Your voice lowered.
“Good.”
Further ahead, Anakin was skipping rocks into the canyon and trying to start a conversation.
“So…” he said, drawing out the word as he slowed his pace until he matched theirs. “You guys are like a squad or something?”
No answer.
He smiled anyway. “That was pretty impressive, the way you kept formation on the ridge. The short one with the scar — you’ve definitely had training. Who’s your trainer?”
Still nothing.
Bacara, walking closest to him, finally turned just a little and said, bluntly:
“Our buir said not to speak to you.”
Anakin blinked. “...Wait, what?”
“You’re Jedi. Not part of the clan,” Bacara replied.
An awkward silence followed.
Cody looked straight ahead. Rex frowned slightly. Wolffe cleared his throat. Fox just rolled his eyes.
Anakin’s face fell a little, and for a moment he looked… kind of like the teenager he actually was.
He hung back, falling behind the group, eyes flicking between them and Obi-Wan up ahead.
You, still watching from behind, caught the whole thing.
And sighed quietly to yourself.
You’d explain to them later.
That the galaxy wasn’t always so black and white.
That sometimes Jedi could be family, too.
But for now?
They were foundlings.
And foundlings followed the clan.
No matter what.
————
Previous Chapter | Next Chapter
Command Squad x reader
The Kaminoan rain never stopped. It pounded endlessly against the sleek platform outside Tipoca City, a cold and hollow sound that seemed to echo the clinical detachment of the place. Even standing in full beskar, the chill somehow crept in — not through the armor, but somewhere deeper.
You stood on the edge of the landing pad, arms crossed, helmet clipped to your belt, dark hair damp with saltwater mist. This place felt wrong. Too sterile. Too… quiet. Even the air smelled like antiseptic and damp steel. But you'd come because he had asked.
Footsteps. Precise. Heavy. You didn’t need to turn around to know who it was.
“Su cuy’gar,” Jango Fett said in that gravel-deep voice, stopping beside you. He didn’t smile. He rarely did. But something in his eyes told you he was glad to see you.
You gave a nod. “Didn’t think you’d come calling, Fett. Figured you liked working alone.”
“I do.” He glanced out at the sea, then back at you. “But this… this isn’t something I can do alone.”
You raised a brow. “Clones?”
He nodded once. “Ten thousand strong already. All of them made from me.”
You let out a slow breath. “You never struck me as the paternal type.”
“I’m not,” he said. “But they’ll need more than Kaminoan routines and simulations. They need real training. Real people. Mandalorians.”
You studied him for a moment. “And you want me to babysit them?”
His lips twitched — almost a smirk. “No. I want you to help forge commanders. The Kaminoans have preselected cadets they think show leadership potential. I want them to have someone who can teach them more than drills. Someone they’ll listen to. Someone they’ll respect.”
“And that someone is me?”
“They’re kids,” he said quietly. “They’ll be soldiers in a few years. But right now, they need a guide. A warrior. And someone who remembers what it means to be Mandalorian.”
You looked at him, thoughtful. “What about Skirata? Or Vau?”
“They’re here. Kal’s working with Nulls. Vau’s got his own batch. But I need you to take this one. They’re special, and they’re watching everything. The others are rougher around the edges. You’ve got… a way.”
You exhaled slowly, eyes scanning the grey horizon. He wasn’t wrong. You’d trained younglings before. Fostered war orphans on Concord Dawn, taught them how to survive, how to fight. This was different, but maybe not by much.
Finally, you looked back at him. “Alright. I’ll do it.”
He nodded again, and for a moment — just a moment — you saw gratitude flicker in his expression.
---
The hallways inside Tipoca were too white. Too clean. Too... wrong. Like they were afraid dirt might somehow corrupt the clones.
Jango led you through the corridors toward the training barracks. “They’re all designated cadets, but these ones are pre-coded for advanced training. Commanders and captains, if the Kaminoans have it their way.”
He stopped before a wide blast door. “You’ll be living in the barracks. You eat with them. Train with them. Earn their respect.”
You raised an eyebrow. “I’m not that much older than them.”
“No,” he said. “But they’ll see you as a superior anyway. That’ll matter.”
With a hiss, the door opened.
Inside were about two dozen boys, aged around nine or ten, all with identical faces — his face. But their expressions varied. Curious. Alert. Some stiff, trying to look tough. Others hiding behind wide eyes.
They straightened the moment they saw Jango. You stepped in behind him, hands on your hips, a smirk tugging at your lips.
“Cadets,” Jango said, his voice sharp and commanding. “This is your new instructor. She’s Mandalorian. She’s been in more fights than you’ve had meals. She’s here to make sure you don’t get yourselves killed before the war even starts.”
The boys’ eyes widened slightly at that.
You stepped forward, giving them a once-over. “Name’s [Y/N]. You don’t need to salute me, and I’m not here to yell at you every time you mess up. But I will push you. Hard. Because I’m not interested in making you follow orders. I’m interested in making you leaders.”
There was a long pause. Then, one of them — a little shorter than the rest — raised his hand.
“Yes?” you said.
“Are you going to teach us Mando’a?”
You grinned. “First lesson starts tomorrow. Right after we run the perimeter course. In full gear.”
A few groaned. Some grinned. One boy, standing just a little taller, gave a silent nod of approval.
You had a feeling that one would be your troublemaker. The kind who’d grow up to wear yellow.
“Get some sleep,” you said. “You’re mine now.”
As the lights dimmed and the boys returned to their bunks, murmuring quietly among themselves, Jango watched you with that unreadable expression of his.
“You think they’ll listen?” he asked quietly.
You nodded. “They already are.”
And in that moment, surrounded by the future soldiers of a galaxy-wide war, you didn’t feel like a babysitter. You felt like something else.
A guide to warriors yet forged.
And maybe — just maybe — the one thing standing between them and the emptiness that awaited.
---
The Kamino rain pounded on the durasteel above, a dull rhythmic hammer that never seemed to end. It echoed through the open training yard, where the clone cadets stood at attention, armor damp, expressions locked into disciplined stillness.
They were still young. Barely ten. Not quite boys, not quite soldiers — something in between. Something manufactured, yet undeniably alive.
You stood in front of them, arms crossed, cloak shifting with the wind.
These were the Kaminoans’ selections. Future commanders. Leaders. Advanced training candidates, chosen by behavior patterns, genetic nuance, projected loyalty metrics — whatever sterile system the aiwha-huggers had cooked up in their labs.
But you weren’t interested in the science. You were interested in them.
You stepped forward, slow and deliberate.
“You’ve been trained,” you began. “You know your formations. Your tactics. How to handle a blaster and break down a droid line. You’re sharp. Efficient. You’ve passed every metric the Kaminoans put in front of you.”
They stayed still.
“But I’m not them,” you said. “I don’t care about their spreadsheets and projections. I care about who you are when everything breaks down. When orders aren’t clear. When it’s your call.”
A few eyes flicked to you. Subtle. Curious.
You stopped in front of the tallest in the line. Sharp jaw. Controlled stance. Commanding presence already starting to form.
“You. Designation?”
“CC-2224, Instructor.”
You moved to the next one. The one with the fast eyes — always scanning, always calculating.
“CT-7567.”
Another.
“CC-1010.”
“CC-5052.”
“CC-5869.”
“CC-4477.”
It was like listening to a datapad reading off serial codes. Precise. Identical. Empty.
You looked down the line again — at all of them. All these boys with the same face, but not the same fire behind their eyes. Not if you knew how to look.
And you did.
You let the silence stretch.
“I know that’s what they call you,” you said quietly. “Your CCs and CTs. Your numbers. But let me tell you something. Numbers are easy. You lose a number, you assign a new one. But a name? That’s earned. That’s kept.”
A shift in the air. Barely noticeable, but it was there.
They were listening now. Not because they had to. Because they *wanted* to understand what you meant.
You didn’t say more. Not yet. You weren’t ready to name them. They weren’t ready to carry it.
But you were watching.
You glanced at CC-2224 again — precise, sharp, already holding himself like a commander. He’d be the first. Eventually. But not yet.
CT-7567 — the quiet focus, the twitch of awareness every time someone moved. Tactician in the making. You could feel it.
CC-1010 — the shield. No emotion on the surface, but his squad respected him, followed him without hesitation. That meant something.
And the smaller ones — the ones who tried harder to stand out, to be something more than the face next to them. They would rise too. Some through grit. Some through pain. Some through sheer, unrelenting heart.
You stepped back, letting your gaze sweep across the line.
“One day,” you said, voice calm but clear, “you’ll have names. Not because I give them to you, but because you’ll earn them. Through blood. Through choice. Through fire. And when you do… they’ll mean something.”
The wind howled between you all, tugging at your cloak, flapping against the plastoid armor of twenty-three boys trying to be men.
“Until then — on the field. Four perimeter laps. In full gear. Then squad sim rotations. Move.”
They ran hard.
Harder than they needed to.
Because for the first time, you hadn’t seen twenty-three clones.
You’d seen twenty-three stories waiting to be told.
---
The rain was still coming down in sheets, but no one noticed anymore. The training sim was running full tilt inside Tipoca’s open-air field chamber — a perfect recreation of a small ruined city block. Crumbling walls, wrecked speeders, low visibility.
Perfect chaos.
You stood above the sim on the observation platform, arms crossed, helmet tucked under one arm. Down below, your cadets were mid-exercise: split into two squads, one to defend a location, the other to take it. Non-lethal stun rounds, full armor, comms restricted to local chatter only.
They were doing well — mostly.
“CT-7567, you’ve got a flank wide open,” you muttered, watching his marker blip across the holo. “Come on…”
A blur of movement below — one of the smaller clones dove through a gap in the wall, skidding behind cover and popping off two clean stuns. A third clone — one of his own squad — shouted through the comms, “You weren’t supposed to breach yet!”
The smaller one’s voice came through half a second later. “You’re too slow, ner vod!”
You smirked.
Below, the chaos grew. Blasterfire crackled against shields, tactics fell apart, a few cadets started improvising wildly. A few… maybe too wildly.
“CC-5052,” you snapped into the comm. “What are you doing on the roof?”
A pause.
“Recon, Instructor.”
“There’s no recon objective.”
“Thought it’d look cool.”
You closed your eyes, exhaled. “It doesn’t. Now get down!”
Another pause.
“I’ve got good balance.”
You pressed your fingers to your temple.
A second voice cut in — this one from the other team. “He doesn’t have good balance.”
“I do!”
“Last week you fell off a bunk.”
“That was sabotage—”
“Enough!” you barked through the comm, trying to hold off a laugh. “ I swear, if I have to come down there…”
You leaned over the railing, watching as CT-7567 moved into position. He’d adapted quickly — circled his squad around, set up a pincer, and was moments away from breaching the enemy defense. Tactical. Efficient. Sharp.
You watched the moment unfold — the way he made a silent hand signal, the way the squad moved as one, trusting him without a word. They cleared the position in seconds.
And he didn’t celebrate.
He just started checking on the stunned cadets.
You smiled to yourself. Not yet, you thought. But soon.
Later, when the sim ended and they were all dragging themselves out of the chamber — soaked, tired, armor scuffed — you leaned against the bulkhead by the exit, arms crossed.
CC-5052 walked by first, helmet under his arm, smug as ever. “Still think I looked cool.”
You raised a brow. “Keep this up and I’ll name you ‘Clown’.”
A cadet snorted behind him. “Told you.”
5052 flipped him off behind his back — you saw it.
CT-7567 was next. Quiet. Focused. His brow furrowed like he was still playing through the whole thing in his head. You gave him a nod, subtle. He didn’t react much — but the way his shoulders squared said he noticed.
CC-2224 followed, calm and methodical, giving a half-report before you even asked. “Squad cohesion broke down mid-sim. We’ll run fireteam drills tomorrow, break the habits.”
“You’re not wrong,” you said. “But your breach response was solid.”
He gave a nod, firm and confident. “We’re learning.”
“I can see that.”
They filed past, dripping water, bickering quietly. Someone slapped someone’s helmet off. Someone else tried to act innocent. You let it all happen.
Because this — this was the good part. The growing pains. The chaos before clarity. The laughter between brothers.
They weren’t ready for names yet.
But they were getting closer.
And when the day came — when one of them truly showed you who he was — you’d give him the first name.
And it would mean something.
---
Kamino’s storms didn’t rest, but the facility did.
Lights dimmed in the barracks, casting long shadows across the corridor as you walked the cadets back to their bunks. Their chatter had softened into yawns and half-whispered jokes. The chaos of the sim was gone, replaced by the quiet fatigue of young soldiers trying not to admit they were still just boys.
You moved beside them like a silent sentinel, hands tucked behind your back, helmet clipped to your belt. You stopped at their dormitory door, letting them file in — one by one — muttered "Instructor," and "Night, ma’am," as they passed.
“You’re not getting extra stimcaf tomorrow if you stay up talking all night,” you warned as the last few ducked inside.
CC-5052 gave you a tired smirk. “Even if it’s tactical debrief?”
“You say ‘tactical’ like it’ll stop me from making you do perimeter drills in the rain.”
A few chuckles, then a wave of yawns as they climbed into the bunks. Blankets tugged over armor-clad bodies, helmets set neatly at bedsides. The rain beat a gentle rhythm outside.
You lingered at the doorway a moment longer, watching as their movement slowed, heads rested back, breath evened out.
And then you turned.
Your own quarters were spartan — a small room not far from theirs, but far enough to give them space. You sat on your bunk, pulled off your boots, leaned forward with a sigh. It wasn’t exhaustion so much as weight. Of command. Of care. Of responsibility for twenty-three lives that had never known anyone but you who treated them like they were something more.
You didn’t hear the door open at first — it slid open quiet, hesitant. It was the breath that gave him away. Soft. Uneven.
You glanced up, hand instinctively reaching toward the blaster on your bedside.
CC-1010 stood there.
Helmet off. Shoulders stiff. Eyes uncertain in the low light. Not afraid of you — not exactly. Just… afraid.
“Couldn’t sleep?” you asked, voice low.
He nodded, once. His hands were clenched into tight fists at his sides.
“Didn’t want the others to see,” he said finally. “They’d think something’s wrong.”
You stood slowly, motioned him in. “Close the door.”
He obeyed.
You sat back on the edge of the bed, letting the silence settle before you spoke again. “Wanna tell me what’s on your mind?”
He didn’t answer right away.
“What if I mess up?”
You turned slightly to look at him. His brow was furrowed. His jaw clenched hard. “Not in sims. In real combat. What if I give an order and someone dies? What if I don’t see something, or I freeze, and my brothers—”
His voice cracked and stopped.
You stood again — close enough to reach out, but you didn’t touch him. Not yet.
“1010,” you said quietly, “you’re already thinking about how your choices affect others. That alone makes you better than half the commanders I’ve seen.”
“That doesn’t make it easier,” he said. “I’m supposed to protect them. What if I can’t?”
You looked at him — really looked.
Behind the calm, behind the training, behind the cloned perfection, there was a kid terrified of not being enough.
You stepped closer.
“You remember what I said about names?”
He nodded slowly.
“They’re not just earned in battle. They’re earned in who you are. And I’ve watched you since the first day.”
You didn’t hesitate this time — you placed a hand gently on his shoulder.
“You carry more than the others realize. You hold it all in so they don’t have to. You think before you speak. You lead without needing the spotlight. You protect your brothers before yourself. That makes you a shield.”
You looked him in the eyes.
“And you’re strong enough to take the hit.”
A beat of silence. Then another.
“That’s why your name is Fox.”
His breath caught. For a second, he looked like he wasn’t sure if he was allowed to feel something about it. Then his shoulders dropped — not in defeat, but in relief.
“…Fox,” he repeated, testing it. “That’s me?”
You nodded. “That’s you.”
He didn’t cry. He didn’t need to. But he gave you a look you’d never forget — one of raw, unfiltered trust. The kind that meant you weren’t just his instructor.
You were *his person.*
“Get some sleep,” you said softly. “You’ve earned it.”
He turned to go, then hesitated. “Thank you… for seeing me.”
You smiled.
“Always.”
When the door slid shut behind him, you sat back down on the bed and leaned back against the wall. The rain drummed steady outside.
Fox.
The first to earn his name.
One down.
Twenty-two to go.
---
Next Chapter
Hi! I saw you took requests and I was wondering if you could do a Command Squad x Fem!Reader where she’s a general but not because she’s a Jedi but because she actually served in wars before this and they want her respect and flirt with her. And of course any of your flourishes ;)
You’re the best! Xx
Fem!Reader x Command Squad (Cody, Wolffe, Fox, Neyo, Bacara, Gree, Bly, and Ponds)
⸻
You weren’t a Jedi. Never wore the robes, never had the Force. You didn’t need it.
Your command had been earned the hard way—blood, shrapnel, and scars in wars no one even bothered to archive anymore. When the Republic came knocking, you told them you didn’t serve causes—you served soldiers. And somehow, that landed you here.
Not in front of them. With them.
The elite. The best the Republic had to offer.
And from the second you stepped into that war room, every helmet turned your way. And when the helmets came off—yeah, that was a problem. Because they were all infuriatingly hot, and even worse, they knew it.
Cody was the first to speak, his voice calm, neutral, but his eyes sharp. “General. You’ll forgive the question, but… what exactly are your qualifications?”
You just smirked, tossing your old service jacket onto the table with a dull thud. “Two border wars, five urban insurgencies, and a ten-year campaign in the Outer Rim before the Jedi decided the galaxy needed saving. That enough for you, Commander?”
Wolffe snorted, amused. “She’s got more battlefield time than half the Jedi Council.”
“She’s not wrong,” Bacara grunted, arms crossed, voice gravelly. “Seen her file. Most of us got bred for war. She just never left it.”
“I like her,” Bly grinned, leaning on the table with a little too much casual charm. “Can we keep her?”
“Not like that, Bly,” Fox muttered, though he didn’t exactly disagree.
“I didn’t say anything,” Bly said with a wicked grin. “Yet.”
You sighed. “Are you always like this, or is it just when there’s a woman in the room who outranks you?”
Gree chuckled. “You outrank us technically. Not in spirit.”
Neyo hadn’t said a word yet, just stared at you like he was dissecting your tactical potential, or possibly imagining your funeral. Could go either way with Neyo.
Ponds gave you a respectful nod. “We’ve worked under a lot of Jedi. Not all of them know what they’re doing. We’d follow you, General.”
And that—that was what mattered.
⸻
You caught them watching you more often than not. In the field, in the war room, during briefings. It wasn’t just the usual soldier-to-general dynamic. No, it was different. Heat in Cody’s gaze when you gave orders. That glint in Wolffe’s eye when you called him out in front of the others. The way Fox lingered just a bit too long when you handed him back his datapad.
Even Neyo—cold, calculating Neyo—started standing just a little too close.
“You know they’re all trying to impress you, right?” Gree asked one night while you were cleaning your gear, his voice low and amused.
You didn’t even glance up. “Trying and failing.”
Bly leaned against your doorway. “Is that a challenge?”
⸻
After you saved their shebs in a firefight—ripping a blaster from a fallen commando and dropping six droids in twelve seconds flat—you were pretty sure something shifted.
They wanted your respect. You already had theirs.
But they wanted more.
So they fought beside you. Ate with you. Got protective in the field. Made excuses to talk to you after hours. Fought over who got assigned to your team. And every now and then… they flirted like it was a competitive sport.
Cody did subtle praise and brooding glances. Always has your back.
Wolffe. The grumpy softie. Pretends he hates you. Would kill anyone who hurt you.
Fox was stoic, but flirty in a dry, sardonic way. Deep down, he’s soft, but you’d have to earn it.
Neyo protective in a weird way. Doesn’t speak much but always notices when you’re off. Secretly touched you remembered his name.
Bacara extremely blunt, intense. A man of few words—but his loyalty is loud.
Gree slightly flirty and professional. Gives you space but always drops a line like, “You ever need a break, General… I know a place.”
Bly was shameless. Teases you endlessly but respects you deeply. Would absolutely fight anyone who disrespects you.
Ponds was quiet support. Loyal. Observes everything. The first one to ask how you’re doing when no one else notices.
And you?
You don’t fall easily. You’ve seen too much.
But if you were going to fall—
It might just be for one of them.
Or all of them.
⸻
79’s was already loud when you walked in. Music thrumming through your bones, the low hum of clone banter and laughter rising and falling like waves. You hadn’t planned to come here. You’d just wanted one damn drink. One moment not steeped in war, planning, or death.
You ran right into Commander Bly. Well, more like his chest.
“General,” he said, and the smile that bloomed on his face was entirely too pretty. He looked you over, gaze lingering just a little too long. “Didn’t know you came here.”
“I don’t,” you replied, stepping back. “Just needed to breathe.”
“You came to a GAR bar to breathe?” Gree chimed in from behind him, drink in hand and eyebrows raised. “You’re worse at relaxing than Fox.”
Speak of the devil—Fox was at the bar, sharp suit shirt unbuttoned at the collar, sleeves rolled up. He lifted his glass in greeting and turned away to order another round. You could feel his eyes on you though, like a sniper sight you couldn’t shake.
“You here alone?” Bly asked, leaning against the wall like he knew what he was doing.
“I was,” you replied flatly.
“Tragic,” Gree said, stepping closer, voice smoother than it had any right to be. “This place is full of trouble tonight.”
“Is that what you are, Gree? Trouble?”
“You’ll have to find out.”
And just like that, Cody, Wolffe, Bacara, Ponds, and Neyo filtered in from the second level, coming down the steps like they were part of a slow-motion holodrama.
Cody looked you over once, eyes flickering to the drink in your hand. “Didn’t think we’d see you here.”
“I was hoping I wouldn’t see you here,” you replied, teasing, heat behind the words.
Wolffe smirked. “Too bad.”
Ponds gave a low whistle. “She’s gonna kill one of you tonight.”
“I volunteer,” Bly said without hesitation.
Bacara rolled his eyes and took a slow sip of his drink, staring at you over the rim of the glass like he was thinking something entirely inappropriate—and probably correct.
And Neyo—stone-cold, unreadable—just nodded. “You clean up well, General.”
That made a few of them pause. Compliments from Neyo were about as rare as a Tatooine blizzard.
You were suddenly hyper-aware of how your shirt clung to your skin, how the lights in the bar made everything seem lower, warmer, closer.
Fox appeared beside you without a sound, holding out a drink. “On me.”
You hesitated. “You trying to get me drunk, Commander?”
“If I were, I’d start with something stronger,” he said, voice low, his knuckles brushing yours as you took it.
“Careful,” you said, raising an eyebrow. “You might be starting something you can’t finish.”
“I always finish what I start,” Fox replied smoothly, dead serious.
The tension snapped tight like a tripwire.
Cody moved closer behind you, his breath brushing your neck. “You should be careful with us, General.”
Wolffe stepped in next to him, eyes gleaming. “Or don’t. We like dangerous.”
Gree leaned in from the other side. “And we play well together.”
“You all are shameless,” you muttered, taking a sip just to hide your smirk.
“No,” Ponds said with a shrug. “Just very, very interested.”
You looked around—at eight sets of eyes, different in every way except one thing: they wanted you. Wanted to impress you, challenge you, make you forget—if only for one night—that the galaxy was falling apart outside these walls.
You downed the rest of your drink and smiled, slow and dangerous. “Alright, boys. Try and keep up.”
The night was just beginning.
The music had shifted. Slowed. Lower bass, seductive rhythm. Clone troopers were still everywhere, but the spotlight wasn’t on them anymore.
It was on you.
You hadn’t planned to be the center of the room, but when you started moving through the crowd—hips swaying just enough, eyes catching every glance—you had their undivided attention. Especially when Commander Bly snuck up behind you and took your hand.
“Dance with me,” he said, already guiding you onto the floor like he’d waited years for the excuse.
You let him.
Bly danced like he fought—confident, smooth, close. One hand gripped your hip, the other held yours. His gold armor was traded for casual blacks, but the heat rolling off him was all battle-born adrenaline and want.
“You keep looking at me like that,” you murmured in his ear, “and I’ll start thinking you’re falling for me.”
He faltered—actually faltered. Blinked once, then twice.
You leaned in, lips grazing his jaw. “What’s the matter, Bly? Didn’t think I could flirt back?”
He opened his mouth. Nothing came out.
You slipped away with a smirk.
Gree was next—casual, clever, always too smooth for his own good.
“Careful,” you said, nursing a drink beside him at the bar. “You look like you’re planning something.”
“Just wondering how someone like you keeps every commander in the GAR wrapped around your finger.”
You leaned in, gaze dark. “Who says I don’t already have you wrapped around mine?”
He choked on his drink.
You patted his back, sweet as sin. “I’ll be gentle.”
⸻
Fox looked like he was ready for a war crime when you sat beside him.
“I thought you hated attention,” you said, sipping from your glass.
“I do.”
“And yet,” you murmured, brushing your knee against his, “you keep watching me like I’m a damn threat.”
Fox’s eyes flickered. His jaw clenched. “You are.”
You leaned close. “Then do something about it.”
He looked away. Tight. Tense.
Flustered.
⸻
Neyo didn’t flinch when you approached—but his grip on his glass tightened when you laid your hand lightly on his chest.
“You don’t say much,” you whispered, “but I bet you think about me more than you should.”
His eyes were locked on yours. Still silent.
“You going to prove me wrong?”
He looked down, just for a second. Then turned and walked away—only to stop, just out of reach, and glance back like he wanted you to follow.
God, he was dangerous.
Ponds approached and gave you a smile like calm water hiding a riptide.
“Having fun?” he asked.
“I am now.”
You rested a hand on his arm, feeling the strength there. “You ever going to stop being the sweet one?”
His smile dipped just slightly, darker now. “Only if you ask nicely.”
You stepped closer, voice low. “What if I beg?”
He stared at you like you’d kicked him in the chest.
Bacara barely moved when you brushed his hand at the table, except for the twitch in his jaw.
“You don’t talk much either.”
“I talk when there’s something worth saying.”
You tilted your head. “Then say something. Right now.”
Bacara met your gaze for a long, charged moment. Then—
“You’re dangerous.”
You smirked. “Took you that long to figure it out?”
He shifted in his seat, suddenly needing a long drink.
⸻
Wolffe was already grumpy when you got to him, sitting in the corner like he’d rather be anywhere else—but the second you sat on the arm of his chair, his whole body went rigid.
“What?” he grunted.
“Nothing,” you said sweetly, playing with the edge of his collar. “You just always look like you want to throw me against a wall.”
He inhaled sharply. “Don’t test me.”
“Oh, I am.”
And just for fun, you kissed his cheek. Quick. Sharp. Possessive.
Wolffe went absolutely still. “You’re a menace.”
“You like that.”
⸻
Cody found you at the end of the night—when your guard was just a little lowered, your drink half-finished.
“You were playing us all along,” he said, leaning on the bar beside you, eyes burning.
“Not playing,” you replied. “Just reminding you who’s in charge.”
He chuckled, low and slow. “Then dance with me.”
You didn’t resist when he pulled you back onto the floor, slower this time. Closer.
“You like control,” he murmured in your ear.
You turned in his arms, meeting his gaze dead-on. “Only when they’re strong enough to take it from me.”
Cody stared at you like he wanted to drag you out of the bar and ruin you.
And maybe… just maybe… you’d let him.
You hadn’t meant to start a war in 79’s—but then again, you’d never played fair, had you?
The music was sultry, all slow bass and sin. The lights were low. You’d been dancing with Cody for all of three minutes, and you could already feel the eyes on you. His eyes.
Fox had been brooding at the bar, nursing his whiskey, watching you like a hawk all night. You’d shared a moment earlier, sure—a drink, a brush of skin, words that lingered.
But now you were wrapped up in Cody.
Hands at your waist, lips near your ear, warm breath as he murmured, “You’re playing a dangerous game, General.”
You looked up at him, smug. “Only if someone plays back.”
Cody smirked. “Oh, I’m playing.”
He pulled you in tighter, hand trailing down your spine, and that was it—that was the trigger.
You didn’t see Fox at first—you felt him.
Storming across the floor like a man possessed. Controlled, measured fury wrapped in sleek civilian clothes. A few troopers nearby saw him coming and stepped aside like instinct told them don’t be in his way.
You barely had time to blink before—
“Enough.”
His voice cracked like a blaster shot.
Cody’s hand stiffened at your hip. You turned slowly—heart pounding—to find Fox right in front of you.
Eyes dark. Jaw clenched. Dangerous.
“What’s your problem?” Cody asked, tone calm but wary.
Fox didn’t look at him. Not once. His eyes were on you. “This what you came for?” he asked, voice low and bitter. “To play us against each other like it’s all some kind of game?”
You tilted your head, meeting his fury with wicked calm. “Jealousy doesn’t suit you, Commander.”
His hand shot out—not rough, not cruel—but demanding. His fingers wrapped around your wrist and tugged you a step closer. “I’m not jealous.”
“No?” you asked, breath catching slightly.
“I’m done pretending you’re just another officer.” His voice dipped, raw and sharp. “I see you dancing with him like that and I want to put my fist through the wall.”
A slow hush had fallen across the floor.
You stepped into Fox’s space, bodies nearly touching. “So do something about it.”
For a second, he didn’t breathe.
Then—
His hand slid to your waist. Possessive. Hot. “Dance with me,” he ordered. Not asked. Ordered.
You could have said no.
But you didn’t.
You let him lead you back to the center of the floor, every trooper watching now, every step like a declaration. Fox danced like he wanted to erase Cody’s hands from your skin. He kept you close. Too close. The kind of close that whispered mine without ever saying a word.
“Next time,” he growled in your ear, “I won’t be so polite.”
You smirked against his neck. “That was polite?”
He held you tighter. “You haven’t seen me lose control yet.”
And part of you—twisted, wild, aching—wanted him to.
⸻
A/N
No idea where I was going with this tbh, think I went down my own little route and it ended up liked this 🫤
The twin suns of Tatooine dipped below the horizon, casting a soft, fiery glow across the sand dunes. The planet’s desolation had an eerie beauty to it—one that had become a quiet refuge for the reader and the child. For months now, they’d kept to the edges of this forgotten world, far from the eyes of the Republic and Separatists alike.
The loth cat, whom they’d found scrabbling through the dust on the outskirts of their makeshift farm, had become an unlikely companion. Its sleek, blue-grey fur had started to grow back, its eyes glinting with a sharpness that matched the desert itself. It was, without a doubt, a symbol of something still clinging to life in the emptiness of their exile. And, despite the grueling hardships they’d faced before this, there was a strange comfort in its presence.
The mechanic shop was a far cry from the quiet isolation of a farm. The reader had quickly adapted to the new environment—fixing speeders, engines, and droids. It was more familiar to her than the tedious cycle of planting crops and praying for a harvest. Tatooine had no shortage of broken-down machines, and the demand for repairs was constant. It kept them busy.
The small, makeshift shop was wedged between a cantina and a market stall. Despite its modest size, it was functional. She’d painted a faded sign with crude lettering—Repair & Salvage. Inside, the shop was a cluttered paradise of parts and tools. The air always smelled faintly of oil, rust, and the heat of the desert sun that relentlessly beat down on everything.
The child, now quietly watching her work with his small hands, had started to pick up bits of the trade. He was clever, inquisitive—his Force sensitivity seemed to lend itself to the work, too. But there was still that feeling of unease lingering in the air, something unspoken between them. Despite their time together, she hadn’t fully explained why she’d saved him, why she’d taken him in. And in return, he hadn’t pressed her for answers. Perhaps he didn’t need them.
“Fixing things feels easier than farming,” she muttered one evening, wiping oil from her hands as she glanced over at the boy.
He didn’t respond immediately, focused on cleaning a small tool he’d just finished using. He’d been learning quickly.
“Yeah, I guess so,” he finally said, his voice a mix of curiosity and the wariness he’d developed over time. “But, do you miss… I mean, we could’ve been anywhere, right?”
She paused. The sound of the desert wind whistled faintly through the cracks in the shop walls, but she didn’t answer immediately. There was a silence in the room as the loth cat padded over and jumped onto a nearby crate, curling up into a ball. The child’s question hung in the air.
“Do you miss it? Being with them?” he repeated, voice quieter this time.
It took her a moment before she spoke. She stood and leaned against the workbench, looking out toward the open door. The desert stretched endlessly beyond, quiet except for the distant hum of a passing speeder.
“Sometimes,” she admitted. “But we’re safer here. And it’s… simpler.” Her voice faltered for a moment, her gaze lingering on the horizon before it shifted back to him. “We can keep you safe here. That’s what matters.”
The child nodded slowly, but she could see the wheels turning in his head, the lingering doubt. He was old enough to understand that safety wasn’t always as simple as finding a new place to hide.
But she couldn’t bring herself to tell him that hiding was only temporary, that the world would eventually catch up to them. She wouldn’t let that happen, not if she could help it. And she wasn’t sure if that made her a fool, but it was the only thing she could do to atone for what she’d dragged him into.
Their quiet life in the desert was their only solace. She’d gotten used to the sound of the loth cat’s purring in the corner, to the child’s shy attempts to fix things beside her, and even to the heat of the desert sun that felt like it never stopped beating down on the sand.
But as days bled into months, the feeling of being watched—of being hunted—never quite left. She couldn’t shake the sensation that someone, somewhere, knew where they were. Even on this barren world, she couldn’t escape what had been set into motion. The ghost of the Republic, of the Jedi, of Palpatine and his web of lies, was still out there, waiting for her to slip.
One day, while she was working on a speeder engine, a familiar sound—a crackle through the comm—broke the stillness of the shop. Her hand froze, mid-repair. Her eyes shot to the communicator on the counter.
“Don’t even think about it,” she muttered under her breath, hoping it wasn’t what she feared.
The transmission crackled again, louder this time. She wiped her greasy hands on a rag and sighed, reluctantly walking over to the comm. Her fingers hovered over the switch. She hesitated. The child’s curious gaze fixed on her, but he didn’t say anything.
With a deep breath, she pressed the button.
“Yes?”
It was Rex’s voice. Strong. Familiar.
“Hey,” he said, his tone almost tentative. “Where are you?”
She glanced back at the child, who was now fidgeting with a broken droid part. He didn’t look up, but the tension in the room was palpable. She bit her lip.
“Somewhere safe,” she replied, her voice cold. “Not where you want to be.”
There was a pause on the other end, Rex’s voice quiet for a moment, like he was weighing his next words. “We’ve been looking for you. You’ve been gone a while. The Jedi are still—”
“I’m not interested in the Jedi,” she interrupted sharply. “I told you, I’m done with that. You should be, too.”
Another silence, heavy, before he responded again, quieter now. “Look, I don’t care where you are. I don’t care about the Jedi or the Separatists. I care about you.”
She exhaled sharply. She could hear the weight in his words, feel it pull at the corners of her heart. But she had to stay strong.
“I’m not the same person you knew, Rex,” she said, her voice softening but still firm. “I can’t—”
“We’re coming for you,” Rex cut in, a promise hidden beneath his words. “Wherever you are. We’ll find you.”
The line went silent again, but this time, she didn’t reach for the comm to hang up. She stood still, her eyes drifting to the child, who had now stopped fidgeting and was staring at her intently. For a moment, she wasn’t sure what to say next.
But the choice had already been made. She couldn’t let the past come for them—not now.
“Stay where you are, Rex,” she said, her voice low. “This life… it’s the only one we can have now.”
The transmission ended abruptly, and as the static faded, she felt the weight of her decision sink deep into her chest. She couldn’t outrun her past forever, but she had to try. For the kid’s sake. For hers.
The comm clicked off, and the desert wind whistled through the cracks in the walls once more.
⸻
*After order 66*
The heat of Tatooine never relented, always oppressive, always relentless. The twin suns glared down, but in the small mechanic shop, the air was thick with the hum of droids and the scent of oil. The faint noise of the desert outside was a constant, but it had become part of her rhythm now. The shop was her sanctuary, her space of peace—and for a while, it had felt like the world had forgotten her.
She had heard the whispers, of course—the rumors of Rex’s death, of Cody’s desertion from the Empire. The news had spread in quiet circles, murmured over cantina tables and in back-alley conversations. But she hadn’t believed them—not fully. She couldn’t. She’d mourned them, both of them. And with that mourning, something cold had settled in her heart. The truth she couldn’t face, the possibility that both men, once so important to her, were lost to her forever, had nearly shattered her.
But now, in the stillness of her shop, as she wiped grease from her hands, she heard the sound of footsteps outside the door—two sets, both heavy with purpose. A faint chill ran down her spine, her senses on alert, even after all this time.
She wiped her hands again, her mind racing. It had been months—years, even—since she’d had a real visitor, someone who wasn’t just passing through the dusty town, looking for a quick fix. Her first instinct was to ignore it, to retreat into the silence of her world. But she couldn’t. Not this time.
She turned her back to the door, taking a deep breath, unsure whether to brace herself or pretend nothing was coming. But then the door creaked open, the soft jingle of the bell above signaling an arrival.
“Morning, ma’am,” a voice said.
She froze.
It wasn’t just the familiarity in the voice—it was the tone, the cadence, the weight of it. A voice she hadn’t heard in what felt like a lifetime.
Her heart stopped, her breath caught in her throat. Slowly, she turned, her eyes locking onto two figures standing in the doorway. Two familiar figures—no, too familiar. One was tall, his hair a bit longer than she remembered but still as worn as ever. His posture was stiff, but there was that same quiet intensity in his eyes. The other was just as imposing, broad-shouldered, his face still marked with the same stoic expression, though his gaze now held something darker. Something more… raw.
“Rex?” she whispered, unable to believe what she was seeing. She looked at Cody, and her throat tightened as recognition flooded her.
They stood there, like ghosts come to life, wearing the familiar gear of the Republic clones, but now twisted, aged, and worn by time. They were still wearing the armor, but it was scratched, weathered, and battered, not the pristine white she had once known.
“Not the best welcome we’ve had, huh?” Rex said, his voice laced with a dry humor she remembered too well, though there was something hesitant in his tone.
Her knees nearly buckled as she stared at him, her heart thumping in her chest. “How—how are you here? How are you both here?” she stammered, stepping back slightly, unsure of what to make of it all.
“We heard a lot of things,” Cody replied, his voice deep and serious. “About the kid. About the Empire. We couldn’t… we couldn’t stay away any longer.”
“Is it really you?” she asked, her voice barely above a whisper. She didn’t want to believe it. Part of her didn’t want to face the possibility that this was real—that they were truly standing there in front of her.
Cody stepped forward, his hand reaching out as if to steady her, but she backed away instinctively.
“I swear, it’s us,” Rex said quietly, watching her carefully. “We’re still alive, still standing. After all this time… we couldn’t let you stay alone. Not anymore.”
She swallowed hard, feeling something warm and painful flood her chest. She opened her mouth to say something, anything, but her words caught in her throat.
“How? What happened?” she asked, finally finding her voice again, but even her tone was filled with disbelief.
Rex and Cody exchanged a look, their expressions heavy. There were so many things they both needed to explain—too many things. But neither of them was sure where to start.
“We’re deserters now,” Cody said flatly. “The Empire doesn’t want us anymore. After what happened… after Order 66…” He trailed off, his words thick with the weight of their shared past. “We couldn’t stay loyal to them. Not after all they did. Not after we saw the truth.”
“We couldn’t stand by and let them control us,” Rex added, his voice quieter, filled with regret and guilt. “The Republic turned into something else. And we both walked away. We couldn’t just pretend it didn’t happen. We tried to move on, but… we couldn’t forget you. Or the kid.”
“Why didn’t you come sooner?” she asked, her voice barely above a whisper. “I thought you were… I thought you were dead. I mourned both of you. I believed the rumors.”
Cody’s jaw tightened, and Rex’s eyes softened with something like sorrow. “We had to keep our distance,” Rex said. “We didn’t want to lead anyone to you, especially after what happened. We thought… we thought if we stayed hidden long enough, it might be safer for you. But we didn’t want to lose you, either.”
She nodded slowly, as if processing everything at once. The shock, the disbelief, the pain. It had been so long. Too long.
“Why come here now?” she asked, her voice steadying as she wiped the back of her hand across her forehead. “What’s the point of all this?”
Rex stepped closer, his gaze intense. “We just want to be with you. Help. If you’ll let us. We can’t go back to what we were. But maybe we can move forward, together. The three of us.”
The child, who had been quietly watching from the corner, suddenly walked over, looking up at them with wide eyes. “Are they… the ones from before?”
She looked down at the boy and then back at Rex and Cody, a soft, bittersweet smile tugging at her lips. “Yes,” she said, her voice quiet but firm. “They’re the ones.”
Cody gave a small nod in return, his face unreadable but soft. “And we’ll do what we can to keep you both safe. If you’ll have us.”
The words hung in the air, heavy with the weight of their shared past, and the unspoken understanding that nothing was ever going to be the same as it was before. Yet, despite everything, here they were—alive, standing together once again.
Her heart, which had been a tangled mess for so long, slowly began to settle, and with it, the promise of something new. Something that, despite all the pain and the losses, felt like it could be worth fighting for.
“Then stay,” she said, her voice steady. “Stay with me. Stay with us.”
The sun had set on Tatooine, the twin moons casting long shadows across the desert. The familiar, yet bittersweet weight of the night settled over the small mechanic shop, but something was different. There was an unspoken tension, a fragile peace woven through the air.
Inside the shop, the hum of tools and machines was the only sound, the soft whirring of droids as they worked on various repairs. The child, now safely nestled in the corner with a toy in his hands, had grown accustomed to the rhythm of life here, as had she. But tonight was different. Tonight, there was a quiet anticipation—one that stirred within her chest, making her feel both hopeful and uncertain.
Rex and Cody were here, standing by her side in a way they hadn’t been before. The space they shared wasn’t just that of comrades or soldiers—it was the space of something far more complex, fragile, and yet, somehow, stronger than anything she had known before.
They hadn’t talked much about the past, not yet. Not everything. The war, the betrayal, the chaos—they still lived in their memories like ghosts. But there was time for that later. Tonight wasn’t about the past. It was about rebuilding, about forging something new.
Cody stood by the door, his posture relaxed, though his eyes still carried the weight of everything they’d all been through. Rex was sitting at the table, his gaze drifting between her and the child, a hint of a smile on his lips. The same quiet intensity lingered in his eyes, but tonight, it felt less like a burden and more like a promise.
She looked at them, her heart catching in her throat. For so long, she had feared she was alone, that the world had moved on without her. She had convinced herself that the bonds they once shared were lost to time, erased by the chaos of the galaxy. But here they were, standing before her—not as clones, not as soldiers—but as something more. Something that might just survive.
“You know,” she said, her voice quiet, but firm. “I thought I was done fighting. Done running. I thought the past would always catch up to me.”
Cody tilted his head, his gaze softening. “We all thought we were done fighting.”
Rex nodded, his expression serious but warm. “But sometimes, the fight isn’t over. Sometimes, we get a chance to do things differently. And we’re here, for whatever comes next.”
She took a deep breath, letting the words sink in. Her heart ached with the weight of everything—everything they had lost, everything they had fought for. But as she looked at Rex and Cody, something settled in her chest. She realized that while the war might have shaped them, it didn’t define them. They were more than just soldiers, more than just their pasts. They were a part of something new.
The child looked up at her, his bright eyes filled with hope. “Are you going to stay with them now?”
Her heart fluttered, and she nodded, a small smile pulling at her lips. “Yes,” she said softly. “I’m going to stay. We’re all going to stay.”
She turned back to Rex and Cody, her gaze lingering between them. For a moment, the weight of everything they had gone through felt like it was fading. It was still there, lingering in the background, but it no longer defined them. Not anymore. They had a future, one they would build together, in this quiet corner of the galaxy.
The quiet hum of the shop filled the space around them, a steady rhythm that was somehow comforting. They had been through war, through loss, through pain—but here, in this small mechanic shop on a distant desert world, they had found something else. Peace. Hope. And maybe, just maybe, a chance to heal.
As the night stretched on, they sat together, the world outside growing darker and quieter. But inside, there was a warmth that none of them had felt in a long time.
And for the first time in years, she let herself believe that maybe, just maybe, things could be different.
They had survived. Together. And they would continue to, one step at a time.
The future was uncertain, but for once, it didn’t matter. What mattered was that they were together. And that was enough.
Previous Chapter
A/N
I absolutely hate how I ended this, but tbh I also absolutely suck at endings so this makes sense.
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
The night air was still, too quiet for Coruscant. As if the city itself held its breath. The reader sat on the stone edge of a koi pond in the Jedi Temple gardens, picking at the frayed edge of her sleeve.
She hadn’t come here to pray. Or meditate. She came because she couldn’t breathe in her apartment anymore.
Kit Fisto approached silently, boots barely making a sound against the stones. She didn’t flinch when he spoke.
“You found the quietest corner of the Temple.”
“I didn’t think Jedi gardens were known for wild parties.”
He chuckled, easing down beside her, his presence—warm, calm, steady. It was infuriating how grounded he always was.
“You look better than this morning,” he said.
“I look like someone who kissed two men, woke up next to a Jedi Master, and has no idea what the hell she’s doing with her life.”
Kit’s smile widened. “I wasn’t going to say it.”
She rolled her eyes. “Thanks for getting me home.”
“I didn’t do it for thanks.”
They sat in silence, the pond rippling as a fish darted beneath the surface.
She sighed. “Do I seem like a monster to you?”
“No.”
“Even after everything?”
“I think you’ve been carrying too many secrets for too long. That doesn’t make you a monster. It makes you tired.”
She looked at him. “Do you tell that to all the girls who stumble into your arms drunk off their head?”
“No,” he said. “Only the ones who cry about clone commanders in their sleep.”
Her throat tightened. “Of course I did.”
“You said you love them both.”
She dropped her head into her hands. “Stars, I’m a mess.”
“That’s not news.”
They both laughed, but it faded quickly.
Kit’s voice turned more serious. “You trust the Chancellor. But you fear him.”
“I do,” she whispered. “More than anything.”
Before Kit could respond, another voice echoed softly from behind.
“You’re not the only one.”
She turned sharply to see Mace Windu standing a few steps away, arms crossed, his gaze steady but not unkind.
“Didn’t realize this was going to be a group therapy session,” she muttered.
Windu stepped forward. “Kit told me what you said last night. About your fear. Your confusion. Your… feelings for the clones.”
“Wonderful,” she muttered.
“I’m not here to scold you,” Windu said. “But I need to understand. Why do you keep aligning yourself with the Chancellor if you don’t trust him?”
“Because I don’t know what happens if I don’t,” she admitted. “He knows everything about me. He saved me once—or at least made me think he did. I’ve done things for him I can’t take back. And I’m scared if I stop playing the part, he’ll destroy me.”
Kit’s hand rested gently on her back. Windu’s expression softened—not pity, but something close.
“You’re not alone anymore,” Windu said. “We may not know what you are to him, but you’re not just his anymore. You’re part of something else now. The clones trust you. Some of the Jedi trust you. Don’t waste that.”
She met his eyes. “I don’t know how to be anything but what I’ve been.”
“Then start small,” Kit said. “Be honest.”
“That’s terrifying.”
“Most truths are.”
Windu gave a slight nod, then turned to leave.
Before he did, he added, “You’ve still got a choice. Don’t wait until it’s taken from you.”
She sat there for a while after he left, Kit still beside her.
“Truth hurts,” she murmured.
Kit gave a small smile. “So does love.”
⸻
She didn’t take the main lift. Didn’t want to run into anyone. After her talk with Kit and Windu, she was raw—peeling open layers she’d kept tightly shut for years. Now, every footstep echoed like a secret she hadn’t meant to tell.
She was halfway through the lower halls when a voice pulled her to a stop.
“You always run off when things get real?”
She froze.
Rex.
He stepped out of the shadows near the archway, arms crossed, helmet in hand, dressed down in fatigues. No armor. No rank. Just him. And that was the problem.
“I wasn’t running,” she said quietly.
“You never are,” he replied. “You disappear. You lie. You kiss me, then you kiss Cody, then you run again and act like none of it ever happened.”
She turned toward him, lips parted in protest—but he wasn’t done.
“I don’t care about what happened at 79’s,” he said. “Not like that. I care that I don’t know where I stand with you. And I don’t think you know either.”
“That’s not fair—”
“No. What’s not fair is you looking at me like you want to stay, then leaving before I can ask you to.”
She looked away. “I didn’t ask for any of this.”
“I know,” Rex said, stepping closer. “But you’ve got it. All of it. You have me. And Cody. And the damn Jedi Council watching your every move. And that kid you saved, even if he’s gone now. You’ve got hearts in your hands, and you’re squeezing them like you don’t realize they’re breakable.”
She flinched.
“You don’t get to keep pushing us away and pulling us close when it suits you,” he added, softer this time. “Pick something. Anyone. Or don’t. Just stop pretending it doesn’t mean something.”
The silence settled between them, heavy and sharp.
“I’m trying,” she finally whispered. “I’m not used to being wanted. Not like this. I don’t know what to do with it.”
Rex stepped closer. Close enough she could feel the heat from him, the frustration in the way he held his jaw so tight.
“Start by not lying,” he said. “To me. To Cody. To yourself.”
She met his eyes. “If I tell you I’m scared of what happens if I choose one of you…?”
“I’d say you’re human.”
“What if I choose wrong?”
“You won’t.”
“How do you know?”
“Because you already know who it is,” he said, and for once, he didn’t say anything more. Didn’t push. Just looked at her like he was waiting for her to catch up.
She blinked, her mouth opening to speak—but footsteps echoed behind them.
Cody.
He stepped into the corridor, freezing at the sight of them. His eyes flicked between them, jaw tightening just a fraction.
Rex didn’t move.
Neither did she.
“You two done?” Cody asked coolly.
“Not even close,” Rex said.
Cody’s gaze locked with hers. “Then maybe it’s time I had a turn.”
The hallway felt too small for the weight in the air.
She looked between them—Rex, steady and wounded, and Cody, cold and unreadable, his arms crossed like a shield.
Cody broke the silence first.
“So,” he said, voice low. “What’s your excuse this time?”
“Cody—” she started.
“No, really. I want to know. You ran off, again. Lied to the Jedi Council. Lied to us. And you show back up at 79’s like nothing happened.” His tone was calm, but there was something brittle underneath. “So what is it this time?”
She exhaled, stepping forward. “I didn’t know what else to do. I had to protect that kid. And if I told anyone—even you—it would’ve put him in more danger.”
“You think I wouldn’t have protected him?” Cody asked, hurt flashing behind his eyes. “You think we wouldn’t have helped you?”
“I couldn’t risk it.”
“You didn’t trust us.”
“I didn’t trust anyone.”
That landed heavier than she expected.
Rex shifted, jaw clenched. “She didn’t even answer my comms, Cody. Not once.”
“I know.”
The silence swelled again—until she took a step closer to both of them.
“I’m sorry.”
The words were small, but real. Fragile, like they might shatter if she tried to backtrack.
Cody’s posture eased, just slightly. “We’re not looking for perfect,” he said quietly. “We’re just tired of being temporary.”
Her heart cracked open—again.
And then—
“Well isn’t this cozy.”
Quinlan Vos strolled around the corner like he was walking into a lounge instead of an emotional standoff.
“Oh great,” Cody muttered under his breath.
Right behind Quinlan came Kenobi, hands folded in front of him like he hadn’t just walked in on the messiest love triangle in the Temple.
“I sensed tension,” Kenobi said lightly. “But I wasn’t expecting it to be this personal.”
“Obi-Wan,” she said with a groan, pinching the bridge of her nose. “This really isn’t your kind of conversation.”
“And yet here I am,” he replied smoothly.
Quinlan leaned against the wall, eyes dancing with mischief. “So who’s it gonna be? Helmet One or Helmet Two?”
Rex looked like he was about to start throwing punches.
Cody sighed. “I will actually kill you, Vos.”
Vos raised his hands. “Hey, no need for violence. Unless it’s a duel for affection. In which case, I’ve got credits on the shiny one.”
“I swear to the stars—” she started.
Kenobi held up a hand, stepping between them. “Enough. We’re not here for… whatever this is. The Council requested an update on the three of you. We came to ensure you’re not tearing each other apart.”
Quinlan smirked. “Looks like she’s doing the emotional tearing, Obi.”
“Quinlan.”
“Alright, alright,” Vos said, grinning as he backed away. “But if someone gets stabbed over this? I better be invited.”
“Out,” she said, pointing. “Both of you.”
Kenobi gave a soft chuckle and turned to leave, but not before glancing over his shoulder.
“For what it’s worth,” he said, tone more serious now, “sometimes the hardest thing isn’t choosing between two people—it’s choosing yourself. Just don’t take too long. Wars don’t wait for hearts to decide.”
And with that, he disappeared down the corridor, dragging Quinlan along with him like an annoying older brother babysitting a younger one hopped up on spice.
The hallway fell quiet again.
Cody looked at her.
Rex didn’t move.
She let out a shaky breath.
“I don’t know how to choose.”
“You don’t have to right now,” Cody said, stepping closer. “But stop pretending we don’t matter to you.”
“You do,” she whispered. “You both do.”
Rex finally spoke. “Then stop running.”
⸻
The air in her apartment was too still.
It felt wrong, being somewhere safe. Somewhere silent. Somewhere without the constant hum of danger or the weight of another lie slung over her shoulders like armor.
She sat on the floor, knees pulled to her chest, the lights dimmed.
A glass of something strong sat untouched on the nearby table.
Her thoughts weren’t on Rex. Or Cody. Not really. Not even on the awkward, lingering heat of Kit Fisto’s presence that still clung to the corners of her memory like steam on glass.
They kept drifting—to the kid.
To the boy with the too-serious eyes and the hands that fidgeted when he thought she wasn’t looking. Who had followed her across half the galaxy, trusting her with a kind of blind faith she didn’t think she deserved.
To the one she couldn’t kill.
To the one she’d almost raised.
She could still hear his voice, the way he’d called her “boss” like it was a title and a joke all in one. The way he looked when they’d watched the suns set over Kashyyyk, his feet dangling off a root bridge too high for a child to be comfortable on.
“Why do people kill people like me?” he’d asked once.
She didn’t answer then.
She didn’t have an answer now.
She rubbed her temples, feeling the weight of every choice she’d made—every body she’d stepped over, every path she’d walked blindly, every whispered promise to herself that she could control this, steer it, fix it.
And now the boy was back in Republic custody.
Safer, maybe.
But she didn’t believe that—not really.
Palpatine had plans again. She could feel it. The shadows were curling inward, and she knew enough to know his approval was just another kind of leash.
Maybe Windu was right to be wary.
Maybe Kit was a fool for softening.
Maybe she’d always been a weapon. Just one that had gone a little bit rogue.
She stood up, slowly. Restless.
The floor was cold under her feet.
She wandered to the window. Coruscant glowed like a promise she never believed in.
And still… her hand went to her chest, fingers brushing the chain she wore. The one the boy had made her. Twisted wire and beads and a piece of scrap metal etched with a crude smiley face.
He’d given it to her after their first week on the farm.
“For luck,” he’d said.
She should have thrown it away. Burned it.
But she never did.
And as the lights of the city blinked in rhythm with her quiet regret, she found herself whispering into the night.
“I hope they’re being kind to you, kid.”
She wasn’t sure if she was talking to him… or to the ghosts that never stopped following her.
⸻
The transmission came through at dawn. She hadn’t slept.
Palpatine’s voice was calm, syrupy sweet as always. “There’s a matter requiring your unique talents,” he said. “You’ll rendezvous with General Skywalker and his battalion. Details will follow.”
No time to think. No time to refuse.
So she didn’t.
⸻
The hangar was already buzzing when she arrived, helmet under her arm, armor pieced together hastily, mismatched from past missions. The 501st was preparing for deployment, their blue-striped armor shining like blades in the rising sun.
She caught Rex’s gaze across the room. He looked tired. He always did lately.
Anakin stood with a datapad, barking orders. Ahsoka stood near him, arms crossed, lekku twitching with unease the moment the reader approached.
“You’re late,” Skywalker said without looking up.
“I’m here,” she replied coolly.
“Then suit up and get ready. We leave in ten.”
She moved to prep her gear, but Ahsoka intercepted her with a tone too casual to be friendly. “Still working for the Chancellor, huh?”
The reader didn’t answer, just gave her a sideways glance and kept walking.
“I mean,” Ahsoka continued, following, “after everything that’s happened—you being gone, the Jedi Council questioning your motives, Palpatine conveniently keeping you around while trusting no one else. Doesn’t any of that seem off to you?”
The reader paused, slowly turning toward her. Her voice was quiet, but heavy. “You think I don’t ask myself the same questions?”
“Then maybe it’s time you stop pretending you’re above all of this,” Ahsoka snapped. “You play all sides. You lie. You vanish. And now you’re back like nothing happened.”
The reader took a step forward, gaze locked on the younger woman. “You think I want this? You think this is a game to me? You were raised in this war. Trained for it. You have people who believe in you, a name that means something. I was bought. I was used. You want to give me a reality check, kid? I live in it.”
Ahsoka blinked, momentarily stunned.
“You’re lucky,” the reader added. “You still think there’s a clean side to stand on.”
With that, she brushed past Ahsoka and made her way toward the LAAT gunship.
Rex was already inside, waiting.
She sat across from him, eyes closed, palms resting on her knees as if trying to keep her heart from falling out of her chest.
“You alright?” he asked after a while.
“No,” she said honestly.
He nodded like that answer made perfect sense. Like he wasn’t alright either.
The gunship lifted. The world blurred outside.
Another mission. Another role to play.
But this time, the pawn wasn’t so willing. And she was starting to learn how to bite.
⸻
The LAAT rocked hard as it breached atmosphere, the roar of wind and engines loud enough to drown out thoughts, fears—names she couldn’t stop saying in her head. Cody. Rex. The kid.
But beside her, General Skywalker sat unfazed, legs spread, arms braced loosely on his knees, like he was born for turbulence. He glanced at her mid-bounce and smirked.
“Bet you missed this,” he said, loud enough to be heard over the rumble.
She scoffed, tucking a few loose strands of hair under her helmet. “Missed being shot at? Only thing I miss more is spice mines and low-rent bounty gigs.”
Anakin grinned. “See? I knew you were fun.”
And to her own surprise… she laughed.
He didn’t ask where she’d been, didn’t pry about the Chancellor, didn’t even hint at what everyone else couldn’t shut up about. Just treated her like a soldier. Like a comrade.
When they hit the ground—dust choking the air, blaster fire already echoing in the distance—he took point without hesitation. She fell in beside him, blasters drawn, movements fluid, practiced. They didn’t need to speak to understand one another.
Flank, move, clear. He gave hand signals, and she followed instinctively. His saber lit up the smoke like a beacon, cutting through battle droids as easily as breath.
They moved through a warzone like ghosts—an unlikely but effective pair. She covered his blind spots, he powered through hers. The 501st swept behind them like a blue tide, and for the first time in months, she felt something almost like useful again.
At the edge of the battlefield, they ducked behind a crumbling wall to regroup.
Anakin exhaled. “You know, I get it,” he said suddenly.
She looked at him, brow furrowed under her helmet.
“Running. Hiding. Playing a part so big you forget who you actually are underneath it.”
A long pause. She stared out over the smoke-covered field, unsure of how to respond.
“You ever think about leaving it all behind?” he asked. “Just… disappearing?”
She glanced over at him, lips twitching. “I did disappear.”
He chuckled, eyes crinkling. “Yeah. But not the way you wanted to.”
She didn’t respond, but the truth of it burned behind her ribs.
A voice came crackling through comms—Rex, coordinating the rear line. The reader’s pulse skipped without reason. She forced herself to focus.
“Let’s go,” Anakin said, pushing up from cover and drawing his saber again. “Back to the chaos.”
She followed, silently grateful for the moment.
He hadn’t asked about Cody. Or Rex. Or the kid.
He hadn’t made her explain herself.
And for now, that made him the easiest person in the galaxy to be around.
⸻
The adrenaline was still thrumming in her blood as she pulled off her helmet and leaned against a sun-scorched wall. The air smelled like ash and ion discharge, and her armor was coated in dust and dried blood—not all of it hers.
She barely had a second to exhale before Ahsoka appeared like a shadow in the corner of her eye.
“You’re not going to disappear again, are you?” Ahsoka asked flatly.
The reader blinked, slow and tired. “Not planning on it.”
Ahsoka folded her arms, her lekku twitching ever so slightly. “I don’t get it. You show up, cause chaos—emotionally and otherwise—leave, then come back like nothing happened.”
“I don’t owe you an explanation.”
“No,” Ahsoka agreed, “but you owe someone one. Cody? Rex? The Council? The Chancellor? You burned every side of the board and expect to keep playing the game.”
The reader narrowed her eyes, pushing off the wall. “I don’t expect anything.”
“I can’t tell if you’re loyal or just really good at pretending.”
Before she could snap something cutting back, a calm voice intervened behind them.
“That’s enough, Snips.”
Anakin strode into view, hands on his belt, expression unreadable. Ahsoka glanced between the two of them, jaw tight, but ultimately nodded and walked off with a muttered, “Fine. But she’s not off the hook.”
Once she was gone, the reader exhaled through her nose. “She’s got a mean right hook. Bet she’s even worse when she’s got words.”
“She’s protective,” Anakin said with a shrug. “But she’s not wrong. Just… a little blunt.”
They stood in silence for a while, watching the twilight settle in soft purples and oranges across the broken landscape. She looked over at him, surprised to see him still there, just… waiting.
“No lecture?” she asked.
“Nope.”
“No cryptic Jedi wisdom?”
“I’m fresh out,” he said with a smirk. “You want some unsolicited advice instead?”
She gave him a dry look. “Why not. Go for it.”
Anakin leaned against the same wall she had been using as support. “You’re a mess.”
“Thanks.”
“But so is everyone. That’s the secret no one talks about. We’re all running on fumes, bad decisions, and half-formed ideas of what we think is right.”
She let out a breath of a laugh. “And here I thought you Jedi were supposed to be the poster boy of moral certainty.”
He shrugged. “Not me. Never was.”
Silence again. This time, more comfortable.
“I liked fighting with you today,” she admitted, surprising herself more than him.
He smiled. “I like fighting with you too.”
She studied his profile. “You’re not like the others.”
“That’s probably both a compliment and an insult.”
“Take it however you want.”
They both chuckled softly.
“Thanks for not asking about the Chancellor. Or the others. Or—”
“You don’t have to talk about it unless you want to,” Anakin said simply. “Not with me.”
She looked down at her hands, cut up and shaking slightly. “I don’t even know what I’d say.”
“Then don’t say anything yet,” he said. “Just… be here. For once.”
Her chest ached at the simplicity of it. She nodded, almost imperceptibly.
And for a moment, just a moment, she was someone without secrets.
⸻
Prev Chapter | Next Chapter
The glow of neon signs cut jagged shadows into her face as she pushed open the doors to 79’s. The music hit like a punch to the chest—thick, thrumming, alive. She hadn’t meant to end up here.
But when she’d gotten off the transport, alone and empty-handed, with the kid now a ‘Republic asset’ and Palpatine’s cold praise still ringing in her ears, this was the only place her feet knew how to take her.
The clone bar was alive with movement and noise, filled with off-duty troopers trying to forget the war for a few short hours. They laughed, danced, drank like their lives depended on it.
She just wanted to disappear into it all.
The bartender handed her something neon and stupid. She drank it fast, then another. And another. The buzz settled in her limbs like comfort. Like numbness.
He was just a kid. Force-sensitive, and full of light. And I handed him over to Palpatine.
She tried not to think about it. So she drank more.
And then—they walked in.
She saw them before they saw her. Cody, in civvies but still too clean-cut, golden-brown eyes scanning the room like he couldn’t turn off the commander inside him. And Rex, just a few steps behind, his shoulders broad, jaw tight, wearing the weight of command like a second skin.
She blinked slowly, trying to decide if this was real or just the alcohol playing tricks.
It was real.
They saw her. Stopped short. Eyes locked.
And then they came to her—Cody first, Rex just behind.
“You’re alive,” Cody said, voice low, controlled, but his gaze moved across her face like he was checking for wounds.
They were both staring. They weren’t angry—not really. They were trying to hide the storm of questions behind their eyes. She didn’t owe them anything. But that didn’t stop the guilt from slinking down her spine.
“So…” She lifted her drink lazily. “What brings the Republic’s golden boys here tonight? Hoping to find someone to help you forget how screwed everything is?”
“You were gone for months,” Rex said quietly. “And you didn’t answer a single comm.”
Cody added, “You could’ve told us you were alive.”
She glanced between them. “Why? So you two could fight over who gets to scold me first?”
That stung. She saw it in Cody’s jaw, the twitch in Rex’s brow. She hadn’t meant it. Or maybe she had.
The music shifted to something slower, darker. The kind of song that made people sway too close.
Cody surprised her by offering a hand. “Dance with me.”
She laughed, bitter. “Feeling sentimental, Commander?”
He didn’t smile. Just held out his hand again.
She took it.
On the dance floor, Cody kept one hand steady on her hip, the other barely brushing her back. He was tense—like he didn’t trust himself. She moved closer, body brushing his. Just enough to test him.
“You’re trouble,” he murmured, eyes locked on hers.
“You like trouble,” she shot back.
He kissed her.
It wasn’t rough or desperate. It was slow—cautious. Like he’d waited too long and didn’t want to screw it up. She kissed him back, lips brushing his softly, dangerously, until someone bumped into them and she stumbled, heart suddenly pounding.
She pulled away. “I need air.”
She didn’t look back as she weaved through the crowd and pushed out into the alley.
The night air was damp. She pressed her back against the wall, tilted her head up, breathing hard. The buzz in her chest had turned sharp now. Fractured.
“What was that about?” a voice asked behind her.
She turned.
Rex.
Of course.
He stood in the mouth of the alley, arms crossed, eyes dark.
“Jealous?” she asked, half-laughing, half-daring him to admit it.
He stepped closer. “You shouldn’t play with him.”
Her smirk faded. “I’m not playing.”
“You kissed him. After months of silence, you show up drunk and just—”
“What, you mad I didn’t kiss you first?”
He didn’t flinch. “You’re not okay.”
Something cracked in her.
“I’m trying,” she whispered. “I don’t know how to do any of this. The war, the kid, you. I never signed up for this mess.”
They stared at each other in the quiet.
Then Rex crossed the space in three strides and kissed her.
It wasn’t gentle. It was fire. Frustration. Longing. Everything unsaid between them. She clutched his shirt, fingers tangled in the fabric. When he pulled away, his breath was ragged.
“I’ve been thinking about you every damn day,” he said.
Her heart slammed in her chest. “Then why didn’t you come find me?”
“Because I didn’t want to find you dead.”
The words dropped like lead.
She stepped back, swallowed hard. “I didn’t mean to hurt either of you.”
“You still did.”
She nodded. “I know.”
He left her standing there, alone in the alley, unsure which kiss she regretted more—and which one she wanted again.
⸻
“You kissed her?” Cody’s voice cut the dark like a vibroblade.
Rex didn’t even flinch. “You did too.”
Cody let out a bitter laugh. “Yeah. I did. Because I’ve been worrying about her for months. Because I thought she might be dead. Because when I saw her again, I felt like I could finally breathe.”
“She kissed me back.”
“She kissed me back, too,” Cody snapped. “You think this is some kind of pissing contest?”
Rex stepped forward, voice lower now, rawer. “No. I think it’s too late for either of us to play noble.”
There was a pause—long and quiet. Neither of them looked at the other.
“She doesn’t belong to us,” Cody said, jaw clenched.
“No,” Rex agreed. “But that doesn’t mean I don’t want her to.”
Cody nodded slowly. “Then we’re both idiots.”
“Yeah,” Rex muttered. “But we’re in it now.”
Silence.
They didn’t say anything else. They couldn’t. There was no answer—no right move. Only damage done and more to come.
⸻
Her head was trying to kill her.
It had to be.
The pounding behind her eyes felt like someone had set off a thermal detonator inside her skull, and her mouth was dry enough to make Tatooine jealous. She rolled over, groaning, pulling the blanket over her face.
And then she noticed it.
Breathing.
Not hers.
She froze.
Lifted the blanket.
And there—laying on top of the covers, one arm behind his head, the other holding a data pad, perfectly at ease—was Kit Fisto.
She bolted upright with a groan, clutching her temples. “Please tell me we didn’t…”
Kit set the datapad aside. “No. You were very vocal about not wanting anyone in your bed unless it was Commander Cody or Captain Rex.” He smirked, just slightly. “You said, and I quote, ‘If I can’t have both, I don’t want either. But I do want both.’”
Kit’s lips pulled into a serene grin. “You passed out the first time halfway through crying about your crops.”
She blinked. “What?”
“I found you stumbling through the lower levels, completely smashed,” he said, voice maddeningly calm. “I walked you home. You insisted I stay because the ‘walls were conspiring against you’ and also because you thought I was ‘probably the only Jedi who doesn’t want to vivisect you.’”
“…Sounds about right,” she muttered.
“You also tried to get me to do a dramatic reading of your bounty logs.”
She groaned again. “Kill me.”
“I would’ve, but then you started crying again.”
“Okay!” She threw the blanket off and swung her legs over the bed. “Thank you for your public service, Master Fisto. You may go now.”
Kit rose with Jedi smoothness, unfazed. “You told me you trusted me, last night.”
She paused.
“And you said you didn’t know if you trusted the others anymore. Not even yourself.”
That sat in the room for a beat too long.
She turned to look at him, eyes bloodshot but suddenly sober. “Did I say why?”
He shook his head. “No. You fell asleep on the floor halfway through telling me about a defective hydrospanner.”
She let out a weak laugh.
Kit stepped toward her, not close, but close enough to offer peace.
“I don’t think you’re the enemy,” he said softly. “But I do think you’re lost. And I think you’re trying to keep the war from turning you into something else.”
She stared at him, the noise of last night crashing down like static. Rex. Cody. The kid. Palpatine. The Council.
Kit stood and poured her a glass of water. “You cried. You yelled. You kissed one of the clones on a dance floor and kissed the other in an alley. And then you tried to fight a waitress because she wouldn’t give you more shots.”
Everything was bleeding together.
“Why didn’t you just leave me in the gutter where I belonged?”
“Because, despite my early concerns, I don’t think you belong in a gutter.”
She sipped the water. “I’m sorry.”
He gave her a nod. “I’ll leave you to sleep it off. But… maybe don’t wait too long to talk to the people you care about. This mess? It only gets worse if you let it rot.”
“I should’ve stayed gone,” she whispered.
Kit didn’t argue. He just nodded once and said, “But you didn’t.”
And then he left.
Leaving her alone in the echo of too many choices—and a very, very bad hangover.
⸻
Silence took over the apartment, broken only by the kettle still screaming on the stove. She didn’t move. Just stared at the ceiling. The weight of the night was heavy. The confusion heavier. Every memory came in splinters—Rex’s hand on her waist, Cody’s voice in her ear, the heat of lips, the taste of regret.
A knock at the door pulled her from the spiral.
She froze.
It knocked again. Three times. Familiar.
She crossed to the door and opened it slowly.
Rex stood there, hands in the pockets of his civvies. No armor. No helmet. Just tired eyes and a quiet storm in his chest.
“…Hey,” she rasped, voice still ruined from alcohol and heartbreak.
He gave her a once-over. “You look like hell.”
“Feel worse.” She stepped aside without another word.
He walked in slowly. Glanced around like he was expecting someone else. “You alone?”
“Kit Fisto left an hour ago. He was just being decent.” She watched his jaw twitch. “Nothing happened.”
He didn’t look at her. Just stared at the empty bottle on the counter. “Everyone’s talking.”
“I know.”
He finally turned. “You kissed me.”
She swallowed. “Yeah.”
“Then you kissed Cody.”
“…Yeah.”
He took a breath, like he’d been holding it for too long. “You can’t keep doing this.”
“I didn’t plan to.”
He looked at her then—really looked at her. Like he was searching for something beneath the haze and the jokes and the armor she wore.
“What do you want?” he asked.
She looked down. “I don’t know.”
“You can’t keep hurting us while you figure it out.”
“I’m not trying to,” she whispered.
“Then stop running.”
Silence.
She didn’t know what to say. Not yet.
Rex turned to leave.
But at the door, he paused. “When you figure it out… when you really know—come find me. If it’s not me, I’ll live. But don’t kiss me again unless you’re sure.”
Then he left.
And for the first time in months, she didn’t want to run.
She wanted to stay. And clean the pieces she’d scattered.
⸻
Whispers traveled fast in the Temple.
Faster than transports.
Faster than truth.
By the time Master Kit Fisto stepped into the Council chambers, most of the senior Jedi were already seated—and they were looking at him with measured, expectant expressions.
Even Master Yoda’s ears twitched a little too knowingly.
Mace Windu’s stare was sharp as a lightsaber. “We’ve heard some… interesting accounts of your whereabouts last night.”
Kit didn’t blink. “Then I assume you already know I spent the evening ensuring a very drunk bounty hunter didn’t choke on her own regrets.”
Murmurs among the Masters. Ki-Adi-Mundi’s brow furrowed. “This isn’t the first time she’s been seen involving herself with members of the Republic.”
Luminara’s tone was clipped. “Nor the first time she’s manipulated proximity for influence.”
Obi-Wan folded his arms, but said nothing.
“She didn’t manipulate anything,” Kit said evenly. “She confided in me. The kind of honesty we’ve been demanding from her.”
Mace tilted his head. “And?”
Kit looked at him directly. “She’s in love with both of them—Commander Cody and Captain Rex. But that’s not what concerns her most.”
Now Obi-Wan stirred. “Go on.”
Kit’s voice was low. “She’s terrified of the Chancellor.”
Yoda’s ears perked. “Hmmm. Afraid, she is?”
“She didn’t say it directly. But I could hear it. She’s afraid of what she knows… and what he might do if she doesn’t play along.”
“That doesn’t mean she isn’t dangerous,” Ki-Adi-Mundi warned.
“It means she’s been alone in the middle of a political war, with no clear side to stand on,” Kit replied firmly. “We sent her into the shadows and now condemn her for adapting to them.”
“She took a child from a warzone,” Luminara said. “Lied about how she got him. Hid from the Republic.”
“Because she was ordered to,” Kit said, sharper now. “And when that order changed—to something unthinkable—she defied it. She saved him.”
Silence followed that.
Windu was quiet for a moment, then asked, “Do you believe her loyalty lies with us?”
Kit hesitated. Then nodded. “I believe her loyalty lies with the people she cares about. And right now… that includes two of our most trusted commanders and Captains.”
Obi-Wan finally spoke. “The Chancellor won’t like this.”
“No,” Windu agreed, standing. “But he doesn’t get to dictate how we perceive loyalty. Or love.”
Yoda’s voice, gentle but sure, followed: “The dark side clouds much. But clearer, the truth becomes. Watch her, we will. But trust her, we must begin to consider.”
Kit bowed his head. “Thank you.”
As the Council slowly began to adjourn, Windu approached him quietly.
“You’ve changed your mind about her.”
“I have,” Kit admitted. “Because I stopped looking at her record… and started listening to her heart.”
Windu nodded once. “We’ll see if that heart leads her back to us—or away for good.”
⸻
She had just finished showering off the night—physically, anyway. The emotional fog still clung like smoke in her lungs. Her clothes were clean, the kettle quiet, and the apartment smelled faintly of burned caf.
When the knock came again, softer this time, she already knew who it was.
She opened the door, and there stood Commander Cody. Arms crossed. Still in his armor minus the helmet. His posture was less “soldier on a mission” and more “man at the edge of patience.”
He gave her a once-over. “You look better.”
She gave a tired smile. “You should’ve seen me this morning.”
“I did. In the alley.”
That shut her up.
He stepped inside, letting the door hiss shut behind him. He didn’t bother walking further in—just stood there, facing her like she was on trial. And in a way, she was.
“You kissed me,” he said flatly.
“I did.”
“You kissed Rex.”
She nodded. “I know.”
He exhaled through his nose. “Do you want us to fight over you?”
“No.” Her voice cracked like old glass. “Never.”
Cody tilted his head. “Then what are you doing?”
“I don’t know.”
“Yes, you do.” He stepped forward. His tone was low—not angry, not accusing—just tired and honest. “You know exactly what you’re doing. You run when it gets too real. You lie when someone gets too close. You play both sides of everything so no one ever gets close enough to hurt you.”
She looked away.
“I don’t care who you choose,” he said, voice gentler now. “Rex, me, no one. I care that you keep lying. You keep manipulating people. You keep running. You say you care about us, but you treat us like we’re temporary. Like we’ll disappear the second things get hard.”
She stepped back, eyes welling up. “I’m trying, Cody. I didn’t mean for it to get this complicated.”
“Everything gets complicated with you.” He uncrossed his arms. “And I can handle complicated. But I won’t be your second choice. And neither will Rex.”
Silence.
Her throat was raw. “You’re not a second choice. You’re… you’re Cody.”
“Then stop treating me like a backup plan.”
That cut deeper than she expected.
He moved toward the door, then paused.
“For what it’s worth… I don’t regret kissing you. I’ve wanted to for a long time. But if it’s not real—don’t do it again.”
The door opened.
“Cody.”
He stopped.
“I’m scared.”
“I know,” he said softly, not turning around. “So am I. But we don’t get to use that as an excuse forever.”
Then he was gone.
And she stood there, in her too-clean apartment, surrounded by silence and the scent of burned caf, wishing she could burn away the shame just as easily.
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