hello! this is my first time sending any sort of request so i hope this is the right place! i absolutely love your writing and was wondering if you could write Hunter x a plus sized f reader (more specifically a reader struggling with loving her body). maybe sfw with a hint of suggestiveness? thank you!! <3
⸻
You stared at your reflection in the mirror of the Marauder’s fresher, scowling as you tugged at your shirt. It clung to the softest parts of you. The waistband of your pants had folded over—again—and if you stood a certain way, your stomach looked—
“Like a whole moon orbiting around me,” you muttered under your breath, smirking bitterly. “Galactic gravitational pull and all.”
It was your thing, after all. Make the joke before anyone else could. Keep it light. Pretend you didn’t care. Pretend you didn’t hurt.
You didn’t hear Hunter step in.
“You always talk about yourself like that when you think no one’s listening?”
Your heart skipped, stomach sinking faster than gravity.
You turned. “Well, yeah. Someone’s gotta say it. Might as well be me before someone beats me to the punchline.”
He didn’t laugh. Not even a twitch of a smirk.
“Don’t do that,” he said, voice low and steady.
You raised an eyebrow, trying to brush past him. “It’s just a joke, Sarge.”
His hand came up, gentle but firm, stopping you before you could flee.
“It’s not funny,” he said. “Not to me.”
You tried to shrug it off, even as your throat tightened. “Relax. I’m not fishing for compliments. I’m just realistic, you know? Built like a bantha in body armor. It’s fine.”
He blinked slowly. Once.
Then, “Don’t say that about my girl.”
Your breath caught. “I’m not—”
“You are,” he interrupted. “I haven’t said it yet, but you are.”
Your protest fizzled somewhere in your chest.
He stepped closer, and now his hand was on your waist—your soft waist, the one you avoided letting anyone touch—like it belonged there.
“Do you know how hard it is for me to keep my hands off you when you wear that shirt?”
You blinked. “You mean the shirt that makes me look like a wrapped ration pack?”
“I mean the shirt that hugs you in all the right places,” he murmured, sliding his hand along the curve of your hip like it was art. “The one that reminds me exactly how good you’d feel in my arms. Or on my lap. Or under me.”
Your cheeks burned. “Hunter…”
“I love how you look,” he said. “But more than that, I love you. All the parts you try to cover. All the jokes you use to hide the things you’re still learning to live with.”
His tone was quiet. Serious.
“You don’t need to pretend with me.”
Your throat ached. Your hands twitched at your sides like they didn’t know whether to cover your face or grab his.
“I don’t know how to believe you,” you admitted softly.
“That’s okay,” he said. “Let me believe it for both of us until you can.”
You stared at him, all your words gone, and he kissed you—slow, reverent, grounding.
And for the first time in a long time, you didn’t feel like something to fix.
You felt like someone wanted.
⸻
Later that night, you made another joke about needing “extra rations to fuel all this real estate,” and he didn’t hesitate.
He pulled you flush against him, kissed your neck, and growled in your ear:
“I hope you’ve got extra, sweetheart. I plan to spend all night exploring every damn inch of you.”
⸻
A/N - kind self inserted here, I’m a bigger girl and tend to make the jokes before anyone else can, not that most do
rain season
Commander Fox x Reader X Commander Thorn
The transmission hit her desk with all the weight of a blaster bolt.
Her planet. Under threat.
The Separatists were making moves—fleet signatures near the outer perimeter of her system, whispers of droid deployment, unrest stoked in territories that hadn’t seen true peace in years. She knew the signs. She’d lived through them once.
And she was not going to watch her world burn again.
She stood before the Senate with a voice louder than it had ever been.
The Senate chambers were suffocating. The cries of war, politics, and pleas for support blurred into white noise as the senator stood at the center, resolute and burning with purpose.
“My planet is under threat,” she said, voice clear, powerful. “We have no fleet, no shield generator, no standing army worth more than a gesture. We were promised protection when we joined this Republic. Will you now let us burn for being forgotten?”
A pause followed. Murmurs stirred. Eyes averted.
“Request denied,” one senator muttered.
“You owe us this!” she shouted, her words echoing through the chambers. “I gave everything I had to stabilize my planet. My people know what war costs. They know what it takes to survive it. But they shouldn’t have to do it alone.”
Some senators looked away. Others whispered. A few nodded, expressions grim with understanding or guilt.
Chancellor Palpatine raised a single hand, silencing the room.
“You will have one battalion,” he said at last, voice velvet and dangerous. “We do not have more to spare.”
Her gut twisted, but she bowed her head. “Thank you, Chancellor.”
No one looked at her when she nodded in silence, but the steel in her spine was unmistakable.
The descent back to her homeworld was cold, unceremonious.
Commander Neyo stood at the head of the troop transport, motionless, arms behind his back, helmet fixed forward. Every movement of his men was calculated, seamless. The 91st Reconnaissance Corps was surgical in nature—swift, efficient, detached.
Master Stass Allie stood nearby, hands folded in front of her. She radiated composed strength, yet there was a gentleness to her that seemed at odds with Neyo’s blunt precision.
“I advise you not to disembark with the vanguard,” Stass said evenly. “Let the initial scan and sweep conclude before you step into an active zone.”
“This is my home,” the senator replied, eyes fixed on the viewport. “And I won’t return to it behind a wall of armor.”
Neyo turned slightly. “Then stay out of our way. We’re not here to make emotional reunions.”
The senator didn’t flinch.
“I didn’t ask you to be.”
The ship pierced the cloud cover, revealing the battered surface below. Her capital city—once a war zone, now partially rebuilt—spread like a scar across red earth. Familiar buildings stood among ruins and reconstruction. It hadn’t healed. Not fully. Not yet.
The shuttle landed. Dust curled around the hull as the ramp lowered.
Neyo’s troops deployed immediately, securing the perimeter with wordless discipline. The senator stepped down, her boots hitting home soil for the first time since she had sworn herself to diplomacy instead of command.
She took a breath.
The air still held the tang of iron, of scorched ground and old blood. Her eyes burned, not from wind.
She walked out ahead of the Jedi, ahead of the soldiers. Alone.
The wind carried voices—hushed, reverent, fearful. Civilians and civil guards had gathered to watch from a distance. Her return wasn’t met with cheers. Only silence. Recognition.
And wariness.
“She’s back,” someone murmured.
Another whispered, “After everything she did?”
Master Stass Allie watched carefully. “You knew this wouldn’t be easy.”
“I didn’t come back for easy,” the senator said, her voice firm. “I came back because I have to. Because I won’t let this place fall again.”
Commander Neyo gave no comment. His orders were simple: defend the system, follow the Jedi, and keep the senator from becoming a casualty or a liability.
As they moved out to establish the command post, the senator stood atop a ridge just beyond the city. She looked out over the familiar lands—the riverbed turned battleground, the hills where she buried her dead, the skyline marked with the skeletons of buildings still bearing her war scars.
For a moment, she didn’t feel like a senator.
She felt like a commander again.
Only this time, she wasn’t sure which version of her was more dangerous.
⸻
The makeshift command tent was pitched atop a fortified overlook, giving the 91st a wide tactical view of the lowland valley just outside the capital city. Dust clung to every surface, and holomaps flickered under the dim lights as Stass Allie, Commander Neyo, and the senator gathered around the central table.
Stass was calm as ever, a quiet storm of wisdom and strategy. Neyo stood rigid beside her, visor lowered, hands clasped behind his back.
The senator, though wearing no armor, held a presence that could bend the room.
“We’re expecting a heavy push through the mountain pass. Based on Seppie patterns, they’ll aim to box in the capital and strangle supply lines. We need to flank before they dig in,” Stass said, pointing to the high ridges on the eastern approach.
“The ridge is tactically sound,” Neyo added. “Minimal resistance, optimal vantage. If we come down from the temple heights here—” he gestured, tapping the map with precision, “—we’ll break their formation before they reach the capital walls.”
“No.”
The word cut sharp through the low hum of the command tent.
Neyo’s head tilted. “Pardon?”
The senator leaned in, steady but resolute. “That approach takes us through Virean Plateau.”
“Yes,” Neyo said flatly. “It’s elevated, provides cover, and we can route artillery through the lower trails.”
“It’s sacred ground.”
Stass glanced at the senator, then back to the map. “Sacred or not, the Separatists won’t hesitate to use it.”
“I know,” the senator replied. “But I also know what happens when that soil is soaked with blood. I made that mistake once. I won’t make it again.”
Neyo didn’t react immediately. The silence hung for a moment too long.
“So we disregard the optimal path because of sentiment?” he asked, voice devoid of tone.
“It’s not sentiment,” she answered. “It’s consequence. Virean Plateau is more than earth—it’s memory. It’s where we buried our dead after the first uprising. My own people nearly turned on me for allowing it to become a battlefield. If we desecrate it again, there may be no peace left to return to.”
Stass Allie offered a glance of measured approval.
“Alternative?” she asked.
The senator reached across the table, tapping a narrow canyon west of the capital. “We pull them in here—tight quarters, limited maneuvering. Use a bottleneck tactic with mines set along the walls. They’ll have no choice but to cluster. When they do, we collapse the ridgeline.”
“A canyon ambush is high-risk,” Neyo said. “We’ll lose men.”
“We’ll lose more if we trample sacred ground and spark another civil uprising in the middle of a war. You don’t win with the cleanest plan. You win with the one that leaves something behind to rebuild.”
Stass nodded slowly. “She’s right.”
Neyo didn’t argue. He only leaned back, helmet fixed on the senator.
“I’ll adjust the approach. But don’t expect the enemy to respect your boundaries.”
“I don’t,” she replied. “That’s why we’ll strike first.”
Stass looked between them—soldier, Jedi, and the politician who once ruled like a warlord. There was no denying it.
The senator wasn’t a commander anymore.
But the commander was still very much alive.
⸻
The canyon was harsh and narrow, carved by centuries of wind and fury. Now it would become the place they’d make their stand.
The senator walked the length of the rocky pass beside Neyo and a few of his officers, outlining trap points with the kind of confidence most senators never possessed. Her voice was sure. Her boots didn’t falter. Her fingers grazed the canyon wall as she surveyed the terrain—like she was greeting an old friend rather than scouting a battleground.
Neyo had seen Jedi generals hesitate more than she did.
“We’ll place remote charges here,” she said, stopping near a brittle overhang. “If the droids push too fast, we bring the rocks down and funnel them into kill zones here—” she pointed again, “—and here. Then your men pick them off with sniper fire from the high spines.”
“Clever,” said one of the clones, glancing at Neyo.
“Risky,” Neyo replied, but his tone wasn’t cold. Just observant.
She turned to face him fully. “Victory demands risk. I thought you understood that better than anyone.”
Neyo’s visor met her eyes. There was silence, then: “You speak like a soldier.”
“I was one,” she said. “The galaxy just prefers to forget that part.”
Over the next few hours, she moved among the men—kneeling beside them, helping place mines, checking line of sight through scopes, confirming relay ranges with engineers. Stass Allie watched with a calm kind of pride, saying nothing. Neyo observed with calculated interest.
She laughed once—soft, almost involuntary—when a younger clone dropped a charge too early and scrambled after it. She helped him reset it. She got her hands dirty.
She didn’t give orders from a chair. She stood with them in the dust.
Neyo found himself watching more than he should. Not because he didn’t trust her—but because something had shifted. Slightly. Quietly. In a way he didn’t welcome.
Respect.
It crept in slowly. Earned with sweat and grit. She didn’t demand it. She claimed it.
And somewhere beneath that iron discipline of his, Neyo began to wonder—
If she looked at him the way she did Thorn or Fox… would he really be so different from them?
It disturbed him.
He didn’t want to admire her. Not like that.
But when she stood atop the ridge that night, wind catching her hair, the stars reflecting in her eyes as she looked over the battlefield they were shaping together, Neyo didn’t see a senator.
He saw a force.
He saw someone worth following.
And he suddenly understood just a little more about Fox—and hated that understanding with every part of himself.
The trap was set.
From the top of the canyon ridges, the 91st Reconnaissance Corps lay in wait, eyes sharp behind visors, rifles trained on the winding path below. Beside them, one hundred of the senator’s own planetary guard stood tall, armor painted in the deep ochre and black of her homeland, their spears and blasters at the ready. The senator stood at the head of her people, clad in their ancestral war armor—obsidian plates trimmed with silver and red, a high-collared cape catching the canyon wind like a banner.
She was a vision of history reborn.
General Stass Allie stood with Neyo above, watching the enemy approach—a column of Separatist tanks and droid squads snaking into the narrow death trap.
“All units,” Neyo’s voice crackled over comms. “Hold position.”
The canyon trembled with the metallic march of the droids.
Then—detonation.
Explosions thundered down the cliffside as rock and fire collapsed over the lead tanks, just as planned. Droids scattered, confused, rerouting, pushing forward into the choke point—and then the 91st opened fire.
Sniper bolts rained from above.
The senator’s people surged from behind the outcroppings with war cries, cutting into the confused line of droids. She led them—blade drawn, cloak flowing behind her—fierce and unrelenting. For a moment, the tide was perfect.
And then it broke.
A spider droid crested an unscouted rise from the rear—missed in recon. It fired before anyone could react.
The blast hit near the senator.
She was thrown through the air, landing hard against a rock with a crack that echoed over the battlefield.
“SENATOR!” one of her guards screamed, his voice raw and desperate as he ran toward her, but she was already pushing herself up on shaking arms, blood running from her temple.
“ADVANCE, GOD DAMMIT!” she shouted, hoarse and furious. “They’re right there! Don’t you dare stop now!”
Her people faltered only for a moment.
Then they roared as one and charged again, stepping over her, past her, and into the storm of fire and metal.
From above, Neyo watched, jaw clenched beneath his helmet. Stass Allie placed a hand on his shoulder as if to calm him—but it wasn’t his rage she was tempering.
It was something else.
The senator stood—bloodied, staggering—but unbroken. She took up her sword again and limped forward, refusing to let anyone see her fall.
And the canyon echoed with the sound of war and loyalty—and the scream of a woman who would not be made small by pain.
Her leg burned. Her side screamed with every breath. But the senator forced herself upright, gripping her sword tight enough for her knuckles to pale beneath her gloves. The dust stung her eyes. Blaster fire carved bright streaks through the canyon air. Her guard surged ahead of her—but she refused to let them lead alone.
Not here. Not again.
She limped forward, blade dragging against the stone until the blood from her brow soaked into her collar. The pain grounded her, reminded her she was alive—reminded her that she had to be.
A Separatist droid rounded the corner—a commando unit. It raised its blaster.
Too slow.
She lunged forward with a cry and cleaved the droid clean through the chestplate, sparks flying as it collapsed.
“Fall back to the rally point!” one of the clones called, but she didn’t. She moved forward instead, shoulder to shoulder with the men and women of her world, guiding them through the chaos, calling orders, ducking fire.
From the ridge, Neyo watched. “Is she insane?”
“She’s winning,” Stass Allie replied, eyes narrowed beneath her hood. “Don’t pretend you’re not impressed.”
He said nothing.
Below, a final wave of droids tried to regroup—but it was too late. The choke point had collapsed behind them in rubble, and the senator’s forces flanked them from both sides.
Trapped.
The 91st swept down from the cliffs like silent ghosts—precise, efficient, ruthless. The senator’s guard hit from the ground, coordinated, focused, fighting like people with something to prove.
With something to protect.
She reached the center just in time to plunge her blade into the last B2 battle droid before it could fire. It slumped, dead weight and scorched metal, collapsing at her feet.
Then—silence.
The canyon held its breath.
The last of the droids fell, and the only sound was the crackle of smoking wreckage and the harsh breaths of soldiers.
They’d won.
The senator stood among the wreckage, blood trickling down her face, her people all around her—some wounded, some helping others to their feet. She breathed heavily, sword lowered, shoulders sagging.
Neyo descended from the cliffs with a small team, Stass Allie close behind. His armor was immaculate, untouched by battle. Hers was battered, scorched, soaked.
And yet she looked stronger than ever.
Their eyes met across the dust and ruin.
He gave a short, tight nod.
“You disobeyed every strategic rule in the book,” he said, voice flat.
“And I saved my people,” she replied, barely above a rasp.
Another pause.
Then, quiet—barely perceptible—Neyo muttered, “…Noted.”
⸻
The city beyond the canyon lit up in firelight and song.
Victory drums echoed off the walls of the ancient stone hall as the people of her planet celebrated the blood they shed—and the blood they did not. Bonfires lined the streets. Horns blared. Men and women danced barefoot in the dust, tankards raised high. Her world had survived another war. And like always, they honored it with noise and joy and wine.
The clones of the 91st were invited—expected—to join. They looked stunned at first, caught off guard by the raw emotion and warmth thrown at them. But it didn’t take long before some of them loosened up, helmets off, cups in hand. A few were pulled into dances. One poor trooper got kissed on the mouth by a war widow three times his age.
Commander Neyo remained on the outskirts. Always watching. Always apart.
The senator—dressed down in soft, flowing local fabrics now stained with wine and dust, her war paint only half faded—was plastered. Laughing one moment, arguing with an elder the next, trying to teach a clone how to chant over the firepit after that.
Eventually, she broke from the crowd. She spotted Neyo standing at the edge of the firelight, arms folded, as if even now he couldn’t relax.
She staggered up to him, hair wild, eyes sharp even beneath the drunken haze.
“Neyo,” she said, slurring just slightly, “why are you always standing so still? Don’t you ever feel anything?”
“I feel plenty,” he replied. “I just don’t need to dance about it.”
She narrowed her eyes and jabbed a finger at him. “You’re a cold bastard.”
“Correct.”
She stepped closer, closer than she normally would. “You made Fox apologise.”
He didn’t answer.
Her gaze flicked over his helmet. “He wouldn’t have done that. Not without something—big. What did you say to him?”
A pause.
“He was out of line,” Neyo finally said. “I reminded him what his rank means.”
“That’s not all,” she pushed. “What did you really say?”
He looked at her then, just barely, as if debating whether to speak at all. Finally:
“I told him that if he was going to act like a lovesick cadet, then he should resign his commission and go write poetry. Otherwise, he needed to remember he’s a marshal commander. And act like it.”
She blinked. “That’s exactly what you said?”
“No,” Neyo said, dryly. “What I actually said would’ve made your generals back during the war flinch.”
She snorted. “I like you more when you’re drunk.”
“I don’t get drunk.”
She leaned in, bold with wine. “Maybe if you did, you’d understand why I’m not angry with him.”
He stared at her, unreadable.
“I’m not angry,” she repeated. “But he didn’t tell me how he felt. You scared him into making amends, but you can’t make him say it.” She tilted her head. “And now you’ve got him cornered. And you’re mad at him for it.”
“You don’t know anything about me,” Neyo said quietly.
“No,” she said, “but you keep looking at me like you wish I didn’t belong to someone else.”
The silence hung for a moment.
Then Neyo stepped back. “Enjoy your celebration, Senator.”
He turned and walked away.
She stood there for a long moment—then swayed on her feet, laughing softly to herself, and staggered back toward the fire.
⸻
Her head throbbed like war drums.
The sun was too bright. The sheets were too scratchy. Her mouth tasted like smoke and fermented fruit. And worst of all—
“—and furthermore, Senator, I must note that your behavior last night was entirely unbecoming of your station—”
“GH-9,” she croaked from the bed, voice raw, “if you say one more word, I will bury your smug golden head in the canyon and file it as a tragic mining accident.”
The protocol droid paused. “I was merely expressing concern, Senator—”
The beeping started next.
Sharp, furious chirps in a tone that could only be described as personally offended.
“Don’t you start,” she groaned, flopping a pillow over her head. “R7, I don’t have time for your attitude. I left you here because I value my life.”
The astromech bleeped something that sounded like a slur.
GH-9 tilted its shiny head. “I believe he just suggested you value nothing and have the moral fiber of a womp rat.”
“Tell him he’s not wrong.”
R7 gave a triumphant whistle and spun in a little angry circle.
She dragged herself out of bed like a corpse rising from the grave. Her hair was a disaster. Her ceremonial paint from the night before had smeared into a mess of black streaks and gold glitter. Her armor lay in a forgotten pile across the room, boots kicked halfway under the dresser.
“You two weren’t supposed to come back with me,” she mumbled as she washed her face with cold water. “That’s why I left you. GH, you talk too much, and R7, you nearly tasered Senator Ask Aak the last time we were in session.”
The astromech beeped proudly.
“I told you he wasn’t a Separatist.”
R7’s dome swiveled in defiance.
GH-9 cleared its vocabulator. “Might I remind you, Senator, that both of us are programmed for loyal service, and your reckless abandon in leaving us behind—”
She flicked water at it.
“Don’t test me,” she muttered, pulling on her fresh tunic.
The shuttle was due to depart in two hours. Neyo and his battalion had already begun packing. The war drums had long gone quiet, and now, only the dull hush of cleanup remained outside her window.
She looked around the modest bedroom—her old bedroom. It hadn’t changed. Neither had the ache in her chest when she looked at it. Not grief. Not nostalgia. Something heavier. Something unnamed.
Behind her, GH-9 stood stiffly, arms behind his back like a tutor waiting for his student to fail.
R7, on the other hand, rolled up beside her and nudged her leg.
She sighed and rested a hand on his dome.
“Fine,” she muttered. “You can both come. Just promise me one of you won’t mouth off in front of the Chancellor, and the other won’t stab anyone.”
R7 whirred.
“That wasn’t a no.”
⸻
The landing platform gleamed in the pale Coruscanti sun, all cold durasteel and blinding reflection. The moment the ramp descended, she could already see the unmistakable figures of Fox and Thorn standing at the base—arms crossed, boots braced, both of them looking equal parts tense and eager.
Her stomach flipped. The droids rolled down behind her.
Fox got to her first, posture rigid, helmet tucked under his arm. “Senator.”
His voice was that low, professional gravel—too careful. Like he wasn’t sure how to greet her now. Like the war, the chaos, and everything unsaid was standing between them.
Thorn was right behind him. He looked less cautious, his gaze dragging over her face, her still-healing arm. “You look like hell,” he said with a small grin.
“Still better than you with your shirt off,” she muttered, smirking up at him.
Thorn’s grin widened. “That’s not what you said on—”
BANG.
A harsh metallic clang interrupted whatever comeback he had lined up. The three of them turned just in time to see her astromech, R7, ramming into Thorn’s shin with a furious burst of mechanical outrage.
“R7!” she barked, storming over. “What did I say about assaulting people?”
The droid chirped angrily and spun his dome toward her, then toward Fox, then let out a long series of beeps that sounded vaguely like profanity. Thorn took a step back, wincing and muttering something about “murder buckets.”
“I think he’s upset no one moved out of his way,” GH-9 said unhelpfully from behind her, arms folded in disdain. “I did warn him to wait, but he believes officers should respect seniority.”
“He’s a droid,” Thorn snapped, rubbing his leg. “A violent one.”
Fox was eyeing R7 with both brows raised. “You didn’t mention you were traveling with an explosive.”
“Fox,” she said, pinching the bridge of her nose. “Don’t provoke him. He’s got a fuse shorter than a thermal detonator and a kill count I don’t want to know.”
“Probably a higher one than mine,” Thorn muttered.
The astromech let out a smug beep.
Fox gave a subtle nod to GH-9. “And what’s his problem?”
“I talk too much,” GH-9 supplied proudly.
“You do,” the Senator stated.
The senator gave up, dragging a hand down her face. “Can we just go? Please? Before he tases someone and it becomes a diplomatic incident?”
Fox stepped aside. Thorn limped with exaggerated pain. R7 spun in satisfaction and zipped ahead like a victorious little gremlin.
She exhaled and muttered under her breath, “I should’ve left them again.”
⸻
Previous Part | Next Part
bring back tumblr ask culture let me. bother you with questions and statements
Timeline: Post-Order 66
⸻
You loved Rex.
That was the problem.
Loving someone like Rex—someone who bled loyalty, who carried honor like a burden on his back—it meant every lie had weight. Every omission chipped a little deeper.
And you’d made a lot of omissions.
Like the fact that the long supply runs and offworld errands you took were less “freelance logistics” and more “tracking people with credits on their heads.”
Or that the blaster you kept in the back of your locker wasn’t for show.
Or that your work boots weren’t scuffed from cargo bays—they were scuffed from being ankle-deep in the Outer Rim’s worst places, chasing scum worse than you.
Rex didn’t know.
And you weren’t ready for him to.
Not because you didn’t trust him, but because you knew him. Knew how he’d look at you if he found out. Not with disgust, but disappointment.
You couldn’t take that. So, you didn’t give him the chance.
He thought you were away for work. You let him believe it.
He let you come home when you could. No questions asked.
And every time he greeted you with that quiet smile, that warm hand at your waist, the trust in his eyes made something in your chest twist sharp and guilty.
⸻
“Target’s down there,” Hunter said, pointing toward the jagged canyon mouth. “Five mercs guarding him. We take them quiet, get in, get out.”
The squad nodded. You crouched beside Rex, hidden behind a crumbling rock wall. Your rifle was primed, your eyes scanning the dust-blown valley below.
From your position, you could see them—mercs, alright. Sloppy formation. No discipline. One of them had their helmet on backwards. You’d seen cleaner work from drunk Rodians.
Wrecker shifted beside you. “Bet I could take ‘em all with just my fists.”
“Only if they die from secondhand embarrassment,” you muttered.
One of the mercs—tall, broad, self-important—stood by the fire and began what could only be described as a speech.
“I’m done being a pawn in someone else’s game!” he bellowed, pacing like he was auditioning for a holodrama. “Time we made our own rules!”
The others grunted. One clapped. Another belched.
You groaned. “Oh, stars. That one again?”
Rex raised a brow. “Again?”
You waved vaguely toward the group. “Every washed-up gun for hire says that eventually. It’s like a rite of passage. They pretend they’re the main character when really, they’re just some rent-a-pawn with delusions of depth.”
Wrecker laughed. “You really don’t like mercs.”
You snorted. “I don’t like hypocrites.”
Rex studied you, something quiet behind his eyes. “You’ve been around this kind of crew before?”
You hesitated just long enough for it to matter. Then: “Yeah. Once or twice. Cargo jobs. Protection gigs. Nothing worth writing home about.”
He nodded, but he didn’t look away right away.
He was starting to ask questions.
Not out loud. Not yet.
But they were there—building behind his eyes, behind every careful glance. You could feel it.
You had to keep it together. Had to keep the story straight.
Because Rex trusted you.
And if he ever found out that while he was building something real with you, you were still out there playing a very different game—hunting, lying, hiding—you didn’t know what that would do.
To him.
To both of you.
⸻
The plan was clean. Simple.
Split the group. Neutralize the mercs. Grab the ex-Imperial and get the hell out.
Of course, it stopped being simple the moment you dropped down from the ridge and landed three meters away from someone who kinda used to know your face.
He was grizzled, thick-skulled, and reeked of old spice and bad choices.
And unfortunately, he was staring right at you.
“Wait a damn second,” he growled, squinting through the dust. “I know you.”
You didn’t flinch, didn’t look away. “You don’t.”
“No—nah, I do. You’re that ghost-runner from—” His eyes lit up. “Lortha 7. The docks. You dropped a guy with a blade to the eye and vanished before the payout even—”
A hard CRACK echoed as the butt of your blaster met the side of his head. He dropped like a sack of nerf shit.
Wrecker whistled. “Kark. Remind me not to piss you off.”
Echo stepped over the merc, nudging his unconscious body. “Well, that was subtle.”
You brushed dust off your jacket like nothing happened. “Guy was clearly hallucinating.”
Rex’s voice cut in low behind you. “Lortha 7?”
You didn’t look at him. “You want to talk geography now?”
“No. I want to talk about why a bottom-tier merc from the Outer Rim thinks he’s worked with you.”
Hunter called out from ahead. “We’ve got the target. Let’s move.”
Bless you, Hunter.
You swept ahead of the group, boots kicking up dirt, but you could feel Rex’s gaze on your back. Curious. Calculating. Not angry—yet—but you knew that look. You’d seen him stare down traitors with softer eyes.
Beside you, Omega jogged to keep up, wide-eyed and beaming. “You were amazing! That guy looked like he was gonna cry before you even hit him!”
You gave her a half-grin. “Good. That means I’m losing my touch. Usually they cry after.”
Omega laughed like it was the best thing she’d heard all week.
Rex—not so much.
⸻
The fire crackled low. Everyone was scattered—Wrecker snoring, Tech nose-deep in a datapad, Howzer half-dozing upright. Hunter was on watch. Omega was curled up beside Gonky.
You were cleaning your blaster.
Rex watched you for a long time before speaking.
“That’s a Relby-K23,” he said. “Not common outside Mandalore or… bounty hunters.”
You didn’t look up. “Got it from a friend.”
“Friend with a bounty license?”
Your fingers paused on the slide. Just for a second.
He caught it.
You kept your voice steady. “What are you getting at, Rex?”
He stepped closer, crouched beside you. His voice was quiet. “You knew how those mercs would move. What they’d say. You called the leader’s bluff before he even opened his mouth.”
“I’ve worked dirty jobs. Doesn’t make me a merc.”
“No,” he agreed. “But then there’s your weapon. The vibroblade in your boot. The way you never flinch at high-value ops. The fact that you never tell me where you’re going when you ‘travel for work’.”
You finally looked at him.
And gods, the way he was looking at you—soft, but betrayed. Like he already knew the truth, but didn’t want to hear it.
You hated that look more than anything.
“I’m not the enemy, Rex.”
“I didn’t say you were.” He nodded slowly. “But I think there’s a part of you I don’t know.”
There it was. No accusation. Just quiet heartbreak.
You exhaled. “I didn’t want to lie. But… I didn’t want to lose what we had either.”
“You still working?” he asked, not harsh, just real.
You didn’t answer.
Which was its own kind of answer.
From the firelight, Omega stirred. “Rex?”
He looked over, gave her a quiet “go back to sleep,” and she did.
When he looked back at you, he was still the man you loved. But there was distance now.
Not anger. Just space.
And you weren’t sure how to cross it yet.
Hello, hope this is an ok ask but I was wondering if you could Omega and Fem!Reader where the reader takes an omega on a mother-daughter outing? And the boys see just how much of having a mother figure in omegas life is beneficial? Maybe omega has some attempts of trying to set you up with one of her brothers so you have a reason to stay? Funny shenanigans ensue as omega tries to push her brothers toward you (and succeeds with one of them, your choice of who)
Hope this makes sense! ♥️
The Bad Batch x Reader
Omega was practically vibrating with excitement as she tugged your hand through the streets of Pabu, her curls bouncing and her voice a mile a minute.
“We’re gonna get snacks, and go to the market, and you have to help me pick a new dress—Hunter says all mine are covered in grease stains but I think they’re just lived in—and maybe we can do something with my hair later! Do you know how to braid? Of course you do, you’re amazing!”
You couldn’t help but laugh, heart full. “I do know how to braid. You want one with beads or ribbons?”
Omega gasped like you’d just offered her the throne of Naboo.
“Beads. Obviously. Ribbons are for formal events. This is casual fabulosity.”
You smiled, following her into the plaza. “Of course. Casual fabulosity. My mistake.”
Hunter squinted as he watched the two of you walk away, Omega’s hand in yours, already talking your ear off.
“…She never talks that much to Tech.”
Wrecker laughed. “That’s ‘cause Tech tried to explain fabrics to her like he was listing battle specs. She just wanted to know if it was twirly.”
Echo leaned against the wall, arms crossed. “She needed this.”
“She’s had us,” Crosshair said simply, though he looked less like he was arguing and more like he was observing.
Echo’s brow lifted. “She’s had four brothers and a droid. That’s not the same thing as having a mother figure.” He glanced at Hunter. “Which I keep telling you. For years.”
“Oh, come on,” Wrecker grinned. “You were basically the mom until she met [Y/N].”
Echo didn’t miss a beat. “And you were the big toddler I was babysitting.”
Hunter snorted. “Can’t argue there.”
⸻
Omega twirled in her new outfit—a bright tunic you’d helped her pick, complete with beads braided into her hair. You’d spent the last hour painting your nails and hers, sipping local fruit teas, and chatting about everything from your favorite foods to who the you thought the cutest clone was.
“So…” Omega said slowly, squinting up at you with faux innocence. “Do you like anyone?”
You blinked. “What?”
“You know. Like like.” She leaned in conspiratorially. “Because I think one of my brothers likes you.”
You choked on your tea. “I’m sorry—what?”
“Well, it’s obvious. Everyone likes you. But I think Echo likes you. Or maybe Hunter.” She tapped her chin. “Definitely not Crosshair. He’s weird. He called feelings ‘tactical liabilities.’”
You laughed despite yourself. “That sounds about right.”
“But you could be the mom! Then you’d have to stay! I’ve decided.”
You raised a brow. “That why you’ve been dragging me by the hand all day like a trophy?”
“Yes,” she said proudly.
⸻
You returned to the Batch’s quarters just in time to find the guys lounging around post-dinner. Omega skipped ahead of you, proudly showing off her outfit and beads.
“Look what we did! She’s so good at braiding, and she picked this out, and—oh!” She turned, sly grin in place. “You know, she really likes men who are good with kids.”
Hunter arched a brow.
Echo narrowed his eyes.
Crosshair rolled his.
Wrecker leaned forward excitedly. “Ooooh. Is this one of those matchmaking things again?”
“Again?!” you hissed, turning to Omega.
Omega threw her hands up. “I’m just trying to help! She’s amazing, and you all need help with social cues.”
Echo blinked slowly. “I’m going to get blamed for this, aren’t I?”
Hunter sighed, rubbing his temple. “Omega—”
“I mean,” Omega went on innocently, “she is pretty, and Echo’s the responsible one, but maybe a bit too serious. Hunter, you’re too emotionally constipated—”
“Hey!”
“Crosshair’s a walking red flag—”
“Not inaccurate,” Echo muttered.
“—and Wrecker’s a brother to everyone. Which means Echo is the best option. Or maybe Hunter if he could manage one emotional conversation without running off into the jungle.”
Hunter looked like he was reconsidering all his life choices. “Omega, you’re grounded.”
“You can’t ground me. I have diplomatic immunity,” she beamed.
Wrecker burst out laughing.
You were crying with laughter now, face flushed. “I can’t believe you just called Crosshair a red flag.”
“She’s not wrong,” Crosshair said, leaning back with an almost-smile.
Echo, still composed, finally looked your way. “You’re really good with her.”
You smiled. “She’s easy to love.”
He paused. “Yeah. She is.”
Your eyes met. The moment hung—just long enough for Omega to wiggle her eyebrows dramatically in the background like a gremlin.
Echo sighed. “Omega, if you don’t stop matchmaking, I’m going to let Crosshair do your next math lesson.”
Her horror was immediate. “You wouldn’t!”
“Oh, I would.”
Crosshair smiled slowly. “I’ll make flashcards.”
⸻
Later that night, you were helping Omega with her beads and hair.
“Did I mess it up?” she asked suddenly. “Trying to push things?”
You looked at her in the mirror and smiled softly.
“No. You just reminded me how lucky I am to be here.”
She smiled back, cheeks a little pink. “You’re not gonna leave, right?”
You pressed a kiss to her forehead.
“Not unless Crosshair actually makes those flashcards.”
“Please don’t leave,” she said dramatically, “I’m not ready for that.”
Neither were you.
And honestly?
You weren’t going anywhere.
⸻
The next morning, you found Omega hunched over the small dining table with a data pad, scraps of paper, crayons, and a very serious expression. Wrecker walked by, glanced at the mess, and raised a brow.
“Whatcha doin’, kid?”
“Mission planning,” Omega said without looking up.
“For what, exactly?”
She tapped the screen with finality. “Operation Wedding Bells.”
Wrecker blinked. “Oh no.”
“Oh yes.”
By midday, Hunter had found out.
Because Omega had tried to get his measurements.
“For the suit, obviously,” she said.
Hunter rubbed his temples like he had a migraine. “What suit?”
“For the wedding. Between Echo and [Y/N].”
You nearly dropped the tray of food you were carrying. “Omega.”
She held up the data pad and pointed to a crude drawing of a beach, some flowers, and what you assumed was Echo in some sort of tuxedo with his armor still on. “Do you want a sunset wedding or a moonlight one? I can make either happen. I’ve already got Crosshair assigned to security. And I told Tech that he could officiate.”
Echo stared at her blankly. “Why Tech?”
“He’s got that ‘wise old man’ vibe now.”
“I’m no older then the rest.”
“Yeah, but you’ve got the vibe.”
Hunter sighed. “You’re grounded.”
“You can’t ground me,” Omega said, standing up and striking a dramatic pose. “I’m planning a wedding.”
⸻
The sun was setting, warm orange light spilling over the ocean, casting long shadows across the sand.
You were sitting quietly, sipping a cool drink and letting the breeze brush across your skin, when Echo stepped out and joined you. He had something in his hands—a small, folded piece of paper, clearly drawn by Omega.
“She gave this to me,” he said, handing it to you.
You opened it.
It was another “wedding plan.” The two of you were stick figures holding hands, surrounded by a bunch of questionably drawn flowers, and what looked like Wrecker as a ring bearer. At the bottom, in bold handwriting, Omega had written:
“You’re already a family. This just makes it official.”
Your heart squeezed.
“She really wants you to stay,” Echo said softly, sitting beside you. “We all do.”
You glanced at him. “You too?”
He met your eyes, and there was something vulnerable there—an honesty he didn’t often allow himself to show.
“I think I’ve wanted that since the moment you helped her with that first braid. You made her feel… safe. And seen. That means everything to me.”
You smiled, heart thudding. “You know she called you the responsible one, right? Said you were the best option.”
A ghost of a smile pulled at his lips. “Guess I’ve got her endorsement.”
You nudged his arm lightly. “I’d take it seriously. She’s planning outfits now.”
Echo chuckled, quiet and warm. “Of course she is.”
The silence between you stretched into something comfortable, like warmth curling around your chest.
“She’s not wrong though,” you said softly.
Echo turned to you, brows lifting just slightly. “About what?”
You looked at him then, really looked. At the man who had lost so much, given so much, and still stood tall—quiet, steadfast, kind.
“That you’re the best option.”
There was a beat. Then another.
He reached out, hesitating only for a second before his gloved fingers brushed yours.
“I’d like to prove her right.”
You didn’t need any more words than that.
Your fingers laced with his as the sun slipped below the horizon.
Back inside, Omega leaned over the data pad and added a final touch to the sketch.
A heart.
Right over where your stick figures stood, holding hands.
She beamed.
“Mission success.”
⸻
You are SO TALENTED!!!! I love reading your fics so much. There is something so comforting and perfect about how you write. I can’t put my finger on how to explain what I mean other than I really love your style and how you describe things and write the characters. You always start the fics off in a unique way and I love how to interpret people’s ideas into your style!! Would it be okay if I make a tech request please? I was thinking about something kind of idiots to lovers where they are both obviously interested in each other but haven’t made that step yet and everyone is relaxing on the beach (because they deserve it) and reader can’t stop staring at tech and is super obvious and helpless about it. Maybe he gets all flustered and shy about it and the others are teasing them and pushing them together? If you want of course only if you feel inspired! Thank you 💗💗💗 so much love for you and your fics!
That means so much—thank you! Seriously, I’m really honored by your words, truly means a lot 🤍
Tech x Reader
The beach wasn’t part of the mission.
It was just…there. Unoccupied. Warm. Irresistible.
Clone Force 99 had been rerouted after a failed rendezvous with Cid’s contact, and with no immediate threats or intel to chase down, Hunter declared something miraculous:
“Stand down for the day. You’ve earned it.”
And that’s how you found yourself on a quiet, sun-drenched coast with the sound of waves in your ears, sand between your toes, and a distinct inability to stop staring at Tech.
You told yourself you were being subtle. Sitting beside him while he recalibrated his datapad, watching him tap at the screen with focused precision, eyes half-hidden behind his signature goggles. You probably looked like you were zoning out—beachy daydreaming, normal and relaxed.
But inside? Inside you were on fire.
It was embarrassing, really, the way your stomach flipped every time he pushed his glasses up or muttered to himself. The man could be describing planetary topography and you’d nod along like he was whispering sweet nothings.
And you weren’t slick. Not even a little.
“Y/N, you’re staring again,” Echo said, not even trying to be discreet as he passed by with a makeshift towel slung around his neck. His prosthetic hand glinted in the sun as he pointed an accusatory thumb your way.
“I’m not,” you mumbled, heat rushing to your face.
“You are,” Wrecker chimed in from where he was wrestling with Omega in the shallows. “Even I noticed. And I was busy winning.”
“You were not!” Omega shouted, shoving at Wrecker’s broad chest as he laughed and face-planted into the surf.
You groaned and covered your face. This was fine. Totally fine. They were just teasing. They always teased.
But Tech?
Oblivious.
He didn’t even look up, still scrolling through data with maddening focus, the sunlight glinting off his goggles. You watched as he adjusted his posture on the towel beneath him, arms flexing under the light linen of his casual shirt—of course he rolled his sleeves. Of course.
“You know,” Crosshair drawled from behind you, “he’s been stealing glances at you all day.”
You jumped.
“What?”
“Mm.” Crosshair didn’t elaborate. He just took a slow sip from the coconut drink Wrecker had found earlier and tilted his head, smirking. “Took you long enough to notice.”
You turned back to Tech quickly, trying not to look like you were checking—but yes. His head was angled just a bit too stiffly toward his datapad, like he’d jerked his gaze away the moment you turned. His fingers weren’t moving. He was paused.
Flustered?
That couldn’t be right. This was Tech. The man had calculated the thermal resistance of Wrecker’s cooking experiments and quoted entire military texts without blinking. Emotion wasn’t his operating system.
…But his ears were a bit pink.
You squinted. No way.
“Hunter,” you hissed toward the Batch’s defacto leader, hoping for confirmation.
He looked up from where he was lounging with a smug expression that had definitely been inherited from Crosshair at some point.
“He likes you. Don’t ask me to interpret how—but yeah. You’re just as obvious as he is.”
You buried your face in your hands again.
This was a mess. A ridiculous, tangled, sun-soaked mess.
And yet—
“Y/N?” Tech’s voice was right beside you. Quiet. Tentative. You startled a little—when had he moved closer?
“I—I didn’t mean to disturb you,” he said, and you watched his throat bob as he swallowed hard. “But I noticed a discrepancy in your hydration levels. You haven’t had water in two hours and thirty-seven minutes.”
You blinked. “You’re…tracking my water intake?”
“Well, I’ve been tracking everyone’s. But yours in particular was… below optimal parameters.”
You stared.
He cleared his throat.
“I made this for you,” he added, holding out a homemade drink container fashioned from a modified canteen and what looked like part of a fruit rind. “It’s rehydration-optimized. With, um… taste. I believe that matters to you?”
Your heart did a completely traitorous little leap. “You made me a beach drink?”
His ears turned very pink. “Yes.”
Crosshair made a gagging sound from somewhere behind you.
You took the drink, fingers brushing Tech’s. He didn’t pull away.
“Thanks,” you said softly. “That’s… really sweet.”
He stared at you for a second, expression flickering behind his goggles.
“Would you—” he blurted, then stopped himself. “Would you… be interested in accompanying me on a walk along the beach? For scientific reasons.”
“Scientific reasons?”
“Yes. I’d like to examine the tidal patterns. But also… I’d like to spend time with you.”
You almost laughed in relief, and it was so him, so endearing and awkward and precise, that you couldn’t say no.
“Yeah,” you said, and smiled. “I’d like that.”
The walk started slow.
He kept his hands behind his back at first, clearly trying to keep things casual, but he couldn’t help rattling off bits of data about the tides and the weather patterns. You nodded, asked just enough to keep him talking—but you were watching him more than anything else.
His brow furrowed when he talked, like every thought had to be carefully handled and shaped before it left his mouth. But he got passionate. Excited. Animated.
He gestured toward a tide pool and nearly tripped over a rock, catching himself with a flustered noise that made you giggle. His cheeks turned pink again.
“This is ridiculous,” he muttered suddenly.
“What is?”
He turned to you, still awkward, but determined. “I’ve run the probabilities. Of outcomes. Of this… situation.”
“This situation being…?”
“You and me,” he said, like it was a confession he’d been holding in for weeks. “Statistically, the indicators are positive. Even when accounting for external variables and potential mission constraints.”
You bit your lip. “Tech—are you saying what I think you’re saying?”
He hesitated. Then: “I like you. Very much. In a not entirely logical way.”
Your breath caught.
“You do?”
“I have for some time,” he admitted. “I didn’t say anything because I assumed the feelings were not… mutual. And I didn’t want to make things awkward among the squad.”
“Oh,” you said, voice breathy. “You absolute idiot.”
He blinked.
“I like you too,” you said, taking a step closer. “In a totally not-logical-at-all way. Everyone else figured it out ages ago.”
Tech looked stunned.
You took his hand—he startled, but didn’t pull away.
“I wanted to tell you,” you said. “But I didn’t want to make you uncomfortable.”
“I am, in fact,” he said slowly, “very comfortable at the moment.”
The silence stretched between you, warm and fizzing with promise.
And then—
“Finally!”
You both turned. Wrecker and Echo were standing waist-deep in the surf, cheering.
“I owe you five credits,” Crosshair muttered to Hunter.
You groaned, but couldn’t stop smiling.
“Let them gloat,” Tech said softly, fingers brushing yours again. “We have better things to do.”
“Like?”
“Another kilometer of beach to explore. And perhaps later… dinner. Just the two of us.”
Your stomach fluttered.
“Sounds perfect.”
⸻
Dinner arrived in pieces.
Wrecker had scavenged half the ingredients from the nearby forest—safe and edible, confirmed by Hunter—and Omega, ever the creative one, had helped wrap them in broad leaves and skewer them over a makeshift spit. Echo insisted on seasoning, mumbling something about dignity, and Crosshair contributed by not poisoning the mood with snark.
But you and Tech?
You barely noticed.
You’d spent the entire afternoon orbiting one another, caught in the gravitational pull of what had finally been said and shared. And when Tech suggested you take your food to the far end of the beach—just the two of you—there was no hesitation.
You walked in silence at first, the smell of salt and roasted fruit mingling with the low roar of the tide. The sand cooled beneath your feet as the sun dipped lower, shadows stretching long and purple-blue across the coast. When you reached a quiet, rocky cove framed by tidepools and a sloping dune, Tech paused.
“This will do,” he said.
You laid out the blanket Omega had packed, and he helped you unpack the food with the same precision he brought to every mission. Only this time, you noticed the small things—the way his fingers brushed yours when handing you a wrapped meal, the quiet way he lingered near your side as if anchoring himself.
You sat cross-legged beside him on the blanket. He adjusted his goggles. Again.
“You can take those off, you know,” you said gently.
“I—well, yes, I could, but…”
“But?”
“I prefer to see you clearly.”
Your breath caught. He wasn’t even trying to be smooth. That was the worst part—it was just honesty, simple and unaffected, and it made your chest feel like it had been sun-warmed from the inside out.
He must’ve noticed your reaction because he fumbled with his fork.
“I apologize. Was that too forward?”
“No,” you said quickly. “Just… unexpected.”
A small smile touched his lips. He nudged his glasses up slightly anyway, so you could see more of his eyes.
“Then I shall try to surprise you more often.”
The meal was delicious—maybe not restaurant quality, but easily one of the best things you’d tasted in weeks. The food was secondary, though. The real warmth came from being beside Tech, talking about nothing and everything. His shoulders relaxed the longer you chatted, especially when you teased him lightly about how long it had taken for him to make a move.
“I calculated risk scenarios,” he said indignantly, mouth twitching at the corners.
“Uh-huh. And how’d that go?”
“Well, clearly, I underestimated you.”
You laughed. “You really did.”
After dinner, the sky deepened into indigo, and stars began to prick through the darkness.
You lay back on the blanket with a contented sigh, staring up at the galaxy above. Beside you, Tech adjusted his posture, lying just close enough for your arms to brush.
“The constellations are different from Kamino’s sector,” he murmured. “See that cluster? That’s the Aurigae Trine. It’s only visible from this hemisphere.”
You turned your head to look at him.
“And the one over there?” you asked, pointing.
He followed your gaze, expression thoughtful. “That’s informal. Not officially charted. But some smugglers call it The Serpent’s Tongue.”
“Romantic,” you teased.
“Perhaps not. But…”
He hesitated, then shifted slightly, turning onto his side to face you fully.
“I once thought romance was a variable I would never encounter with clarity,” he said. “It seemed inefficient. Distracting.”
You raised an eyebrow. “And now?”
“Now I find it… illuminating. Like gravitational lensing. Everything bends, but you can see further.”
Your chest tightened with something sweet and aching.
“You always talk like that?” you asked quietly.
He tilted his head. “Do you prefer I don’t?”
“No,” you whispered. “I love it. I love how you see things.”
His gaze softened, and this time, it was his hand that reached for yours.
“I may not always say the right words,” he murmured. “But I will always mean them.”
You laced your fingers with his.
“I know.”
The sky stretched endless above you, starlight threading between the waves and wind. And for once, there was no war. No danger. Just you, and him, and a night that felt like it had waited for years to happen.
⸻
The ocean was too blue. The sky was too clear. The people were too… happy.
It annoyed you.
Not because it was bad—it wasn’t. Pabu was a dream. A sanctuary. A rare piece of untouched paradise in a galaxy still licking its wounds. But after everything you’d seen, done, survived, the cheerfulness of it all hit you like sunburn on old scars.
So when Wrecker waved at you the first morning you arrived—big smile, bigger voice, bouncing down the stone steps like a gundark on caf—you nearly turned around and left.
But you didn’t.
You stayed. You unpacked. You avoided him for two days.
And then?
He showed up outside your door with a grin and a crate of fresh fruit.
“You need help settin’ up?” he asked, already peeking past your shoulder like he owned the place.
You crossed your arms. “You just looking for an excuse to snoop?”
Wrecker blinked, then grinned wider. “Only a little.”
You tried not to smile. You failed. He saw.
“You smiled! I saw it, so no denying it!” he said, delighted, as if he’d won a war.
“That wasn’t a smile. That was… mild amusement. Don’t get cocky.”
“Oh, your smile is so beautiful!” he declared, plopping the crate on your counter like he lived there. “I’d love to see it more often.”
You raised a brow. “Flattery? Really?”
“Not flattery,” he said, serious for a second. “Just the truth.”
And just like that, your walls cracked a little.
⸻
A week passed. Then two. You stopped flinching when he knocked. You started helping him haul supplies. You let him drag you into town gatherings, always with the same grin and the same cheer.
“You’re definitely the only person I would do this for,” you grumbled once, dragging your boots through the sand on the way to a lantern festival.
“I know!” Wrecker beamed, looping a thick arm around your shoulder. “I’m special.”
“You’re loud.”
“I’m charming.”
You snorted. “You’re ridiculous.”
“You smiled again.”
“Damn it.”
⸻
One night, you found yourself sitting beside him on the docks. The moon cast silver streaks across the water, and Wrecker was humming some out-of-tune melody you didn’t recognize.
“You ever stop being cheerful?” you asked quietly.
He shrugged. “Used to. After Crosshair left, and after Echo… yeah. I had some bad days. Real bad. But Omega helped. So did Pabu.”
You nodded slowly.
He looked at you, more thoughtful now. “You got bad days too, huh?”
You didn’t answer right away.
Then, quietly: “Sometimes it feels wrong to enjoy peace. Like I haven’t earned it.”
Wrecker shifted closer. His hand brushed yours, warm and solid. “You don’t gotta earn peace. You just gotta accept it.”
You looked at him, brow tight. “You make it sound easy.”
He grinned. “Nah. It ain’t. But I’m here. Omega’s here. You’re not alone.”
You swallowed the lump in your throat.
“I’ll do it,” you whispered after a long pause, “but only because you asked me to.”
“Do what?”
You finally leaned your head against his shoulder.
“Try. To enjoy it. This place. You.”
Wrecker’s face turned redder than a sunset. “Well, hey, no pressure, but—I really like it when you smile.”
You chuckled.
Then, finally—finally—you smiled again.
i finished playing republic commando last week and just cannot stop thinking ab them
The ship had gone still.
Most of the squad was asleep or at their rotating stations, the buzz of activity finally reduced to soft footsteps and quiet system hums. You couldn’t sleep. Your mind was too full. Of war. Of your people. Of him.
You stepped into the small mess area, wrapped in a light shawl, datapad abandoned for now. The stars shimmered through the viewports—quiet reminders that home was still a jump away.
Fox stood near the corner of the room, arms folded, armor still on, posture straight as a blaster barrel. He didn’t sleep either, apparently.
“Commander,” you said softly.
He looked up. “Senator.”
You crossed over to the small counter, pouring two glasses of the modest liquor you’d brought from home—a deep, rich amber spirit your father once called “liquid courage.” You turned and held out a glass to him.
“A peace offering,” you said. “Or a truce. Or a bribe. I haven’t decided yet.”
His eyes flicked from the drink to your face. “I’m on duty.”
“I figured,” you murmured. “But I thought I’d try anyway.”
He didn’t take it. You didn’t seem surprised.
Instead, you set it beside him and leaned back against the opposite wall, cradling your own drink between your fingers. “Do you ever turn it off?”
Fox was quiet for a moment. “The job?”
You nodded.
“No.” He said it without hesitation. “If I do, people get hurt.”
You watched him carefully. “That’s a heavy way to live.”
He gave a small shrug. “It’s the only way I know how.”
Another beat of silence.
“Why did you do it?” you asked. “Come on this mission. Really.”
Fox’s jaw tightened slightly. “It’s my job.”
You raised an eyebrow. “So you personally assign yourself to every Senator in distress?”
He hesitated. For once, his gaze flicked away.
“I’ve seen how the Senate works,” he said. “Most of them wouldn’t even look at a trooper if we were bleeding out in front of them. But you… you stayed after the session. You fought for people who can’t fight for themselves. You saw us.”
Your throat tightened unexpectedly.
“And I didn’t want you to walk into danger alone.”
You stared at him for a long moment, glass forgotten in your hand. “That doesn’t sound like just your job, Commander.”
His eyes finally met yours again—steadier now. More open. And, stars help you, so full of weight he didn’t know how to express out loud.
“No,” he said finally. “It doesn’t.”
The silence between you changed—no longer empty, but thick with understanding. The kind you didn’t speak of because it was too real.
You stepped forward slowly, picking up the untouched glass you’d offered him earlier.
“Still on duty?” you asked softly, brushing your fingers against his as you took the drink back in your other hand.
Fox didn’t answer.
But he didn’t pull away, either.
You finally excused yourself, your steps quiet as you retreated toward your quarters with a whispered “Goodnight, Commander.”
Fox didn’t respond. Couldn’t.
His gaze lingered where you’d just stood, your scent still in the air—soft, warm, like something grounding amidst all the cold metal and chaos.
The untouched glass in your hands, the brush of your fingers on his glove, the way you looked at him like you saw him—not just the armor, not just the title.
He exhaled sharply through his nose, jaw clenched so hard it ached.
He didn’t do feelings. Not on duty. Not ever.
And yet.
“Thought I smelled something burning.”
Fox didn’t need to look to know it was Hound. Grizzer padded quietly beside him, tongue lolling lazily, clearly amused.
Fox muttered, “Shouldn’t you be asleep?”
“Could say the same about you.” Hound stepped into the light, arms folded over his chest, eyebrow raised. “So. You gonna talk about it?”
“There’s nothing to talk about.”
“Uh-huh.” Hound’s tone was flat, unimpressed. “You stood there like a statue for five minutes after she left. You’re not even blinking. Pretty sure even Grizzer picked up on it.”
The strill let out a low chuff, like it agreed.
Fox turned his face away. “Drop it.”
“I would,” Hound said casually, “but it’s hard to ignore the fact that our famously emotionless commander suddenly cares very much about one specific Senator.”
“She’s… different.”
“Ohhh, so we are talking about it now?” Hound smirked.
Fox didn’t answer.
Hound stepped closer, lowering his voice—not mocking now, just honest. “Look, vod… We’ve all seen how they treat us. The senators. The brass. Most of them wouldn’t notice if we vanished tomorrow. But she sees you.”
Fox’s jaw flexed again, the ache behind his eyes growing sharper.
“She sees you, Fox,” Hound repeated gently. “And I think that scares the hell out of you.”
A long silence stretched between them.
Then, quietly, Fox murmured, “I can’t afford to feel anything. Not right now. Not while she’s in danger.”
Hound studied him for a moment, then nodded slowly. “Yeah. I get that.” He turned to leave. “But when it’s all over, and you still can’t breathe unless you’re near her? Don’t act surprised.”
Fox didn’t move.
Didn’t respond.
Didn’t deny it.
⸻
The ship touched down just outside the capital’s perimeter, the soft hiss of the landing gear punctuated by the high-pitched whine of distant warning sirens—testing protocols, for now. Not real.
Not yet.
The skies were overcast, a thick grey ceiling hanging low over the city like a held breath. Your home was still standing, still calm, but tension clung to the air like static.
Fox stood at the bottom of the ramp, visor angled outward, scanning the buildings and courtyards that framed the landing pad. Thire, Stone, and Hound fanned out without instruction. The city guard was present—under-trained, under-equipped, but trying.
You stepped off the ramp and immediately straightened your posture as a familiar man approached—Governor Dalen, flanked by two aides and a pale-faced city official clutching a datapad like a lifeline.
“Senator,” Dalen said, his voice tight but relieved. “You came back.”
You offered a small smile, but your eyes were already on the buildings, the people, the quiet way citizens walked just a little too quickly, too aware.
“Of course I came,” you said. “I told you I would.”
“I didn’t think they’d let you,” he admitted.
“They didn’t,” you said plainly. “But I wasn’t asking.”
Fox’s eyes shifted slightly, his stance tensing at the edge of your voice. That edge had returned—sharp, determined, the voice of someone who belonged here, in the dirt with her people.
You took a breath. “We stood before the Senate. I made our case. I begged.”
Dalen didn’t speak.
You shook your head. “But they’re stretched thin. We’re not a priority. They said they’d ‘review the situation’ once the Outer Rim sieges ease.”
Dalen’s face hardened. “So they’ll help us when there’s nothing left to save.”
“That’s the game,” you said bitterly. “Politics.”
Behind you, Fox’s shoulders shifted—just barely—but enough that you knew he heard. Knew he understood.
“But,” you added, lifting your chin, “we’re not alone. Commander Fox and his squad have been assigned to protect the capital until reinforcements can be spared.”
The governor’s gaze flicked past you, eyeing the bright red armor, the silent, imposing soldiers who looked more like war machines than men.
“They’re few in number,” you said, “but I’d trust one of them over a hundred guardsmen.”
Fox stepped forward then, speaking for the first time. “We’ll secure the palace perimeter and establish fallback zones in the city. If the Separatists make a move, we’ll hold them as long as needed.”
You didn’t miss the subtle weight behind his words: We’ll hold them off long enough for you to survive.
And somehow, even in all that steel and stoicism, it made your heart ache.
The governor gave a hesitant nod, but the weariness in his posture didn’t fade. “We’ll do what we can to prepare, but if they attack…”
“We hold,” you said simply.
Fox turned his head slightly, just enough to look at you. “And we protect.”
You gave him a small, fierce smile. “I know you will.”
⸻
The market square was quieter than you remembered.
Stalls were still open, vendors selling fruit and fabric and hot bread, but the usual bustle was muted. People spoke in hushed voices, glancing nervously at the skies every few minutes as if expecting Separatist ships to appear at any second.
You didn’t take a speeder. You walked.
You wanted them to see you—not as some distant official behind Senate walls, but as someone who came home. Someone who stayed.
“Senator,” an older woman called, her hands tight around a child’s shoulders. “Is it true? That the Republic isn’t coming?”
You crouched to the child’s eye level, your expression gentle. “They are coming,” you said carefully. “Just not yet. But we’re not alone. We have soldiers here. Good ones.”
Behind you, Fox lingered in the shadow of a nearby wall, helmet on, arms folded. Watching. Always.
A young man stepped forward, anger shining in his eyes. “We heard rumors. That they think we’re not worth the effort.”
“They’re wrong,” you said, rising to face him. “You are worth the effort. I went to the Senate myself. I fought for this place. And I will keep fighting until we get what we need. But until then… we hold the line.”
Murmurs spread through the crowd. A few people clapped, quietly. Some didn’t. But they listened.
And they saw you.
After several more conversations—reassurances, promises, words you hoped you could keep—you stepped into the alley behind the square for a breath of quiet. The pressure was starting to catch up with you, sharp and cold in your lungs.
Fox was already there, leaning against the wall, helmet off, his expression unreadable.
“You shouldn’t have come out without a perimeter,” he said.
You tilted your head. “You were the perimeter.”
“That’s not the point,” he muttered, stepping closer. “If they attack, the capital will be first. The square could be turned to ash in minutes. You can’t be in the middle of a crowd when it happens.”
“They needed to see me.”
“I need you alive.”
The words came out harsher than he intended—too fast, too sharp—and he immediately looked away like he wished he could take them back.
You stared at him, heart catching in your throat.
His jaw clenched. “Your death won’t inspire anyone.”
Silence.
“You’re worried about me,” you said quietly, stepping forward.
“I’m responsible for you,” he corrected, but there was no strength behind it.
You reached out, fingers brushing the gauntlet on his arm. “You don’t have to lie, Fox. Not to me.”
He looked down at your hand on his armor, at the softness in your voice that disarmed him more than any weapon ever could.
“This is going to get worse before it gets better,” he said. “And if you keep walking into the fire…”
You smiled sadly. “You’ll follow me in?”
He didn’t speak.
He didn’t have to.
Previous Chapter | Next Chapter
⸻
The soft beep of monitors and the sterile scent of antiseptic filled the dimly lit medbay. Most of the beds were empty tonight—except for one, where Hardcase was half-sitting, half-lurking like a bored animal ready to bolt.
You entered with a tablet in hand, already sighing. “If I find you trying to ‘stretch your legs’ one more time, I swear I’ll sedate you.”
Hardcase gave you an innocent grin, all teeth and mischief. “Come on, doc, I was just doing a lap. For circulation. You wouldn’t want my muscles to atrophy, would you?”
You raised an eyebrow. “Hardcase, you have three broken ribs and a hairline fracture in your leg. Sit. Down.”
He threw his hands up in mock surrender and flopped back dramatically onto the cot, letting out an exaggerated groan. “You wound me more than the blaster bolt did.”
“You’re lucky I was there to drag your sorry shebs off the field,” you muttered, scrolling through his vitals. “Next time, maybe don’t charge a tank on foot.”
“I had a plan.”
“You yelled ‘I’ve got this!’ and ran straight at it.”
“…Exactly.”
You looked up, lips twitching. “You’re impossible.”
“And yet, here you are. Checking on me. Again.” He tilted his head, gaze softening. “You always come back, don’t you?”
That gave you pause. The playful tone slipped, just for a second. “That’s the job.”
“Yeah,” he said quietly. “But not everyone does it like you.”
Silence settled between you, not heavy—but charged. Tense in a different way.
You set the tablet down and approached the side of his bed. “You’re a good soldier, Hardcase. But you don’t have to be the loudest in the room to matter. You don’t have to hide behind all that energy.”
He looked at you, blinking. “You see that?”
“I patch up your bones. I hear what your heart’s doing, too.”
He let out a slow breath, the grin slipping into something smaller, more genuine. “You’re kind of amazing, you know that?”
You leaned in, crossing your arms. “And you’re kind of an idiot.”
Suddenly, his arm shot out—gently—and pulled you forward by your wrist, just enough that you stumbled and caught yourself on the edge of his bed.
“If you wanted me in your bed, cyare,” he murmured, voice low and teasing, “you could’ve just asked.”
You glared down at him, breath caught somewhere between a laugh and a curse. “You’re lucky you’re injured, clone.”
He smirked. “What happens when I’m not?”
Your hand lingered on his chest, feeling the steady rhythm beneath it. “Guess we’ll find out.”
His grin faded into something warmer. “I hope we do.”
⸻