“how did you get into writing” girl nobody gets into writing. writing shows up one day at your door and gets into you
I had a crazy thought today: What if Echo wasn't the only part of the Algorithm? What if the Techno Union had another person (Reader) hooked up at a separate location? They would have both Echo and Reader work together to solve complex strategic problems. What kind of relationship would form between the two, and what would happen after Echo was rescued?
Echo x Reader
The first time you heard his voice, it was distorted—filtered through wires, machinery, and pain.
“Who are you?”
You blinked through the sluggish haze of chemical sedation. The light above you flickered, casting your enclosure in sickly green. For a moment, you thought it was another hallucination. The Techno Union’s experimental sedatives had a way of blending reality with memory.
But the voice came again, clearer this time.
“You’re… not one of them.”
“No,” you rasped, throat raw. “And you?”
He paused. Then, quietly, like a truth long buried:
“CT-1409. Echo.”
That name—Echo—stirred something in the recesses of your mind. A ghost of a clone you’d heard rumored to be dead. Lost on the Citadel. But if he was here… then you weren’t alone in this twisted hell.
They Called It the Algorithm.
The Techno Union had no use for your body—just your mind. Your military experience, your understanding of Jedi tactics, your intuition. You’d been captured during a failed mission on Raxus, and while you expected torture or death, you hadn’t expected this: to be strung up like some living datastream, brain siphoned and cross-linked to an interface you didn’t understand.
They called it a miracle of modern war-efficiency. You called it a cage.
And Echo… he was the other half of it.
You weren’t in the same room—your pods were separated—but your minds were connected via the neural interface. Whenever they activated the system, your consciousness merged with his, just enough to collaborate on what they called “Strategic Simulations.” War games. Problem solving. Target prioritization.
You both knew the truth: they were using your combined intellect to predict Republic troop movements. Every algorithm you helped solve, every solution you helped generate, killed people you once called comrades.
“I hate this,” you whispered one day, during a low-activity cycle when the painkillers dulled your tongue. “I hate being part of this.”
A pause. Then his voice—steady but soft.
“So do I. But I think better when you’re here.”
You blinked. “…Thanks?”
“No, I mean it.” There was an awkward silence. “When I thought I was the only one… I was slipping. Couldn’t hold onto myself. But then you came. You reminded me who I am. Even in here.”
You swallowed, chest aching at the vulnerability in his voice.
“You’re not just a number, Echo,” you said. “You’re a person. And I see you.”
He didn’t answer right away.
“I see you too.”
⸻
Over Time, a Bond Formed.
There were days the interface ran endlessly—your minds linked for hours, pressed together in shared thought. You knew when he was angry, when he was calm, when he wanted to scream. You learned the rhythm of his reasoning, the cadence of his sarcasm, the echo of grief.
You shared stories in the dead zones. When the machines weren’t listening.
He told you about the 501st. About Fives. About Rex.
You told him about the Temple, your Master, your reckless flying.
Sometimes, you joked about escaping together. About finding a beach somewhere.
“Too many clones for me to trust the ocean,” he’d mutter. “One tide shift and half of them are trying to build a battalion out of sand.”
You’d laughed, a rusty sound. It felt foreign in your throat.
But that laughter became a kind of resistance. So did your connection.
The Techno Union noticed.
They began separating your sessions. Isolating your minds. Severing the link.
The day they cut the neural tether entirely, Echo’s voice disappeared from your thoughts like a light going out. You screamed against the restraints, powerless.
He was gone.
Days Passed. Then Weeks.
You started talking to yourself. Pretending he could still hear. Whispering plans you’d never execute, memories you weren’t sure were yours anymore.
Your mind began to unravel.
Until one day, the alarm blared.
You jerked awake as the facility shook. Outside your pod, Skakoans ran like ants. The machinery sparked. Your interface glitched.
And in the flicker of emergency lights—
A face.
Metal and flesh. Scarred and beautiful.
“Echo?” Your voice broke.
His eyes widened. “You—”
And then the moment was gone. Soldiers stormed in behind him. A trooper in matte black and red—Clone Force 99, you recognized them in a flash—pulled him back.
“They have another one,” Echo shouted. “She’s hooked into the system—she’s part of it!”
The taller clone, Hunter, paused. “Where?”
“There!” Echo pointed. “Don’t leave her!”
You tried to scream, but the interface surged, flooding your mind with static. Your body spasmed. Everything went white.
⸻
You Woke Up in a Medical Bay.
For a terrifying second, you thought it was still the Techno Union—until you saw the blue stripes on the armor around you.
The 501st.
And standing beside your cot, his Scomp link resting awkwardly against his side, was Echo.
Alive.
Free.
He looked thinner than you remembered. Hollow-eyed. As if he still didn’t quite believe it was real.
Neither did you.
“Hey,” you whispered, tears stinging.
He swallowed. “Hey.”
He crossed to you, hands trembling slightly as he reached for yours.
“I told them not to leave you,” he said. “I—I made them go back.”
“I knew you would.”
He laughed—a shaky, broken sound—and sat beside you.
“I thought I lost you,” he admitted. “When they cut the tether, I thought—”
“I know,” you murmured. “I felt it too.”
For a long moment, neither of you spoke. There was no need. You’d already shared your minds. Now all that remained was your hearts.
But Freedom Wasn’t Simple.
You were debriefed for days. The Jedi Council wanted answers. The Republic wanted data. Rex and Anakin debriefed Echo constantly, praising his resilience while ignoring the toll.
The 501st welcomed you cautiously. You weren’t a clone, not a general, just… someone in between. A survivor like Echo. A curiosity. A symbol.
The worst part? The silence between you and Echo.
Not intentional. Not cruel.
Just… fragile.
He was different now. Wary. Reserved.
You tried to reach him. But he kept walls up.
He still spoke to Rex and Jesse and the occasional whisper to Fives’ ghost, but you could tell—something had changed. Like being out of the system had broken something inside him.
One night, after lights-out in the barracks, you found him alone in the hangar.
“I miss the link,” you said.
He turned, surprised. “What?”
“I miss knowing what you felt. What you were thinking. Now… I don’t know how to reach you.”
His face twisted—pain, guilt, grief.
“I don’t want you to see what I am now,” he said. “I’m not the man you met in there. I’m more machine than—”
“Don’t say that.”
He looked at you, exhausted. “You don’t understand.”
“I do,” you said, stepping closer. “I was there. They took everything from both of us. But that connection we had? That wasn’t because of wires or data streams. That was real. And it still is.”
He stared at you like a drowning man seeing shore.
And then—finally—he let you hold him.
He didn’t kiss you. Not yet. The pain was still too fresh.
But when you curled into him that night, metal against flesh, scars against scars, you both knew: the war wasn’t over.
But you weren’t alone anymore.
It had been twenty-nine days since she went missing.
Sev knew the exact count, though he never said it aloud. He didn’t like counting things unless they were kills. Death was predictable. Comfortable. But her? She was something else.
They lost contact with her squad during an op on Felucia. Dense jungle. Hostile locals. Separatist interference. Command called it. KIA, presumed.
Sev didn’t believe it. Not because of some Jedi faith, but because she was the one thing in his life that didn’t shatter under pressure.
She annoyed the hell out of him. Bubbly, bright, constantly chirping about “hope” and “trust in the Force.” It should have driven him up the walls. But somehow, it worked. She worked.
And now she was gone.
So when the door to the debriefing room slid open and he saw her silhouette—filthy robes, a torn sleeve, a limp in her step—his mind blanked.
She paused in the doorway. Her hair was caked in mud and ash, but her smile still hit like a thermal detonator.
“Miss me?”
There was a beat.
Then another.
Sev crossed his arms and exhaled through his nose, slow and sharp. “I had wondered where my headache went.”
She laughed—light and unexpected, like rain in a war zone—and limped closer. “Is that how you greet everyone who comes back from the dead?”
“I’ve only seen you do it. Once.” He eyed her up and down. “You look like hell.”
“Hell’s got better lighting.”
Sev reached out, pulled her closer by the belt of her torn robe. “Where the kriff were you?”
“Trapped. Separatist scout patrol hit us hard. I got out, the others didn’t. I’ve been trekking across half the jungle, dodging droids and eating… well, I think it was fruit. Could’ve been eggs.”
“Should’ve been you that got eaten.”
She leaned her forehead against his chest plate. “Aw. You did miss me.”
Sev went still.
Her warmth, her voice, even the scent of jungle rot clinging to her—none of it should’ve made his heart stutter like that. And yet.
“I didn’t miss you,” he said, voice lower. “I just got used to the quiet.”
She looked up, eyes glittering like starlight. “Liar.”
And he was.
Because for twenty-nine days, he hadn’t slept right. The jokes didn’t land. The blood didn’t thrill. He kept expecting her voice in his comm, her humming in the medbay, her absolutely infuriating habit of giving everyone in Delta Squad an encouraging nickname.
Now she was back. Cracked and bruised—but still sunshine, somehow.
“You’re gonna die smiling one day,” he muttered. “And I’ll be the one dragging your corpse back just so I can punch it.”
She smiled, softer this time. “Then I guess I’ll die knowing you cared.”
Sev sighed and pulled her fully into his arms. “Next time you disappear, I’m tying a tracking beacon to your ankle.”
“Promise?”
“Don’t tempt me.”
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
Some lad from some TV show
Anons: please stop drawing Tech without a shirt
Me: *whispers* I’ll never stop
me when the plot won't plot like it should
I love how you write Tech! Could I request something with him and a super clumsy and oblivious reader please? Thank you!
Thank you! Sometimes I feel like I write him too robotic like ahaha
⸻
Tech x Reader
⸻
Tech had calculated—twice, actually—that if he complimented you at least three times a day, you might eventually understand he was flirting. The odds weren’t stellar (34.7%, to be exact), but he was determined to try.
“Your ocular symmetry is… exceptionally pleasing,” he said one afternoon, eyes never leaving his datapad.
You blinked up at him, mid-attempt to carry a large crate that was clearly too heavy for you. “Uh… thanks? Are you saying my eyeballs match?”
“Precisely.”
You smiled, almost tripping over your own feet as you finally got the crate to the other side of the Marauder. “Cool. I like symmetry. Good for… art. And, like… walking straight.”
Tech stared after you, baffled. That had been his best one yet. He even rehearsed it.
⸻
Later, you were in the cockpit, absolutely tangled in the cords you were trying to organize. Wrecker had asked you to help. He did not, however, explain how not to fall into a mess of wires like some kind of malfunctioning protocol droid.
“You seem to find yourself in precarious entanglements at an impressively consistent rate,” Tech noted, crouching beside you with a slight smirk.
You groaned dramatically. “It’s a talent. Maybe I should join a circus.”
“I find it… endearing,” he muttered.
You were too busy trying to untangle your foot from a power cable to hear him.
⸻
It got worse.
He started trying “casual” physical contact. A light touch on the shoulder here, a hand on your back when guiding you through the hull. Subtle. Calculated. Measured. He was certain you’d notice.
You? You thought he was just awkward and accidentally touchy.
Once, he brushed your hand while passing you a tool. You jolted, dropped the hydrospanner on your foot, then thanked him for it.
“You—you thanked me?” Tech asked later, clearly flustered. “I caused minor bodily harm!”
“Yeah, but it kinda woke me up. I was zoning out hard.”
He turned away, muttering something about “social cues being an imprecise science.”
⸻
Hunter noticed first. “You gonna tell her you like her or keep complimenting her neural pathways until she dies of old age?”
“I am trying to initiate courtship gradually,” Tech replied, defensive. “She is just… uniquely unresponsive to conventional—or unconventional—methods.”
“She’s got no idea,” Echo chimed in, amused. “You could tell her she was beautiful in binary and she’d thank you for a firmware update.”
⸻
Eventually, Tech snapped.
“Your clumsiness is statistically improbable and yet, inexplicably, I find myself drawn to it. To you. In a—romantic sense.”
You blinked at him from the floor, where you’d just slipped on your own jacket.
“Oh,” you said. “Wait. You’re… flirting with me?”
“I have been flirting with you.”
“For how long?”
“Seventeen days, four hours, and—”
“Tech. You should’ve just said something.”
“I did! Your neural symmetry, the entanglement commentary, the guiding hand—”
“Okay, yeah, that’s on me,” you admitted, grinning sheepishly. “I’m a bit slow.”
“Not slow,” he corrected. “Just… delightfully oblivious.”
“…Was that another flirt?”
“Affirmative.”
You laughed. “Okay, I’m catching on now.”
“Statistically overdue,” he muttered.
But you leaned over, kissed his cheek, and said, “Worth the wait?”
His ears turned red. “Yes. Highly.”
⸻
Summary: Pre-Attack of the Clones leading up to the first battle of Geonosis. inspired by “Cat’s in the Cradle” by Harry Chapin as I feel this song is very Jango and Boba coded.
______
Rain never stopped on Kamino.
It drummed a rhythm on the windows of the training facility—sharp, persistent, lonely. You stood by the glass, arms crossed, eyes scanning the endless gray. Somewhere outside. Another bounty. Another absence. Another silent goodbye.
“Back soon,” he always said, planting a kiss against your temple with a touch too light to anchor anything real. You used to argue—beg him to stay, to train, to raise the boy he brought into the world. But you learned quick: Jango Fett was a man of war, not of roots.
He was strapping on his vambraces when he noticed you watching him.
“Don’t start,” he muttered, not looking up. His voice was gruff, frayed from too many missions and too little sleep.
You didn’t move. “He asked if you were coming to training tomorrow. I didn’t know what to tell him.”
Jango paused, only for a second, before clicking the final strap into place. “Tell him the truth. I’m working.”
You stepped forward. “You could take one day off. Just one. He looks up to you—he waits for you. When you’re not here, he starts acting like you. Staring out windows, keeping things inside. Like father, like son.”
His jaw twitched. “I didn’t bring him here for you to turn into his mother.”
The words hit like a slug round.
You swallowed, trying to keep your voice steady. “I’m not trying to replace anyone, Jango. But you leave him here alone. What do you expect me to do? Pretend I don’t care?”
He finally looked at you. Those eyes, dark and calculating, softened only for seconds at a time. This wasn’t one of them.
“I expect you to train the clones. That’s the job. Not to start playing house.”
“I didn’t fall in love with you for the job,” you said, quieter now. “And I didn’t stay on Kamino because I like watching kids grow up as soldiers. I stayed for you. For him.”
Jango adjusted the strap on his blaster. “He’s not yours.”
“I know.”
You did know. You weren’t trying to be his mother. Not really. You just wanted him to have one—someone who remembered to ask if he’d eaten, who noticed when he had nightmares, who held him when he tried not to cry. Someone who didn’t just see a legacy in him.
Jango stepped close, pressed a kiss to your forehead, too soft for someone always on edge. It almost made you forget everything else.
“I’ll be back soon,” he said.
“You always say that,” you whispered.
But he was already turning away.
Slave I rose through the Kamino rain and vanished into cloud cover.
You didn’t cry. You just went back inside and checked Boba’s room. He was asleep, curled up with one of his father’s old gloves tucked under his pillow like a security blanket.
You didn’t belong in their family. You knew that. But in Jango’s absence, you became something Boba needed. A voice when silence was heavy. A shield when pain crept too close. Not a mother—but a presence.
Even if Jango never wanted you to be.
So you stayed behind. For Boba.
He was quiet, sharp, and already wearing boots two sizes too big—trying to fill his father’s shoes before he even hit puberty. You weren’t his mother, not by blood, not by name, but someone had to care enough to keep him human. To make sure he didn’t disappear behind armor and legacy.
You cooked for him. Taught him hand-to-hand when Jango was gone. Helped him with clone drills, even when he rolled his eyes and said, “I’m not like them.” You tried to make him laugh. He rarely did.
One night, while putting away gear, he asked, “You gonna leave too?”
You paused. “No, Boba. Not unless I have to.”
“Dad says people always leave. That it’s part of the job.”
You crouched beside him, met his eyes. “He’s wrong. Or maybe he’s just scared to stay.”
⸻
Geonosis burned red.
Jango’s signal cut out too fast. Too sudden. You heard Mace Windu’s name in the comms, and something inside you fractured. Still, you led your squad—your clones—into the fight. They needed you. They trusted you. Jango didn’t.
When the battle ended, smoke still rising from the arena, you ran to the landing zone—knew exactly where the Slave I would be.
And there he was.
Boba, small and shaking, helmet too big in his arms. He looked up, eyes glassy but sharp.
“You’re with them,” he hissed, his voice more venom than grief. “You helped them.”
You stepped forward. “I didn’t know he’d—Boba, please. This isn’t what I wanted.”
“You’re a traitor.”
He turned, walking toward the ship, the ramp already lowering.
“You can’t do this alone,” you warned. “The galaxy isn’t kind. It’ll eat you alive.”
“I’ve got his armor. His ship. That’s all I need. I don’t need you anymore”
You reached for him—but he was already walking up the ramp, shoulders square like his father’s, jaw clenched with fury too big for his body.
You didn’t follow.
⸻
Years passed.
The Empire rose. You faded into shadows. The clones you once trained died in unfamiliar systems, stripped of names and purpose. You lived quiet, took jobs on the fringe—nothing that put you on anyone’s radar.
Until you crossed paths again.
Carbon scoring lit the walls of an abandoned outpost. A bounty had gone sour. You moved through smoke with the ease of memory—blaster in hand, breath steady. And then he stepped into view.
The armor was repainted, darker, scarred, refined. The stance, identical. The voice, modulated but unmistakable.
“You always did show up where you weren’t wanted,” Boba said.
You stared. He was taller now, broader. His face—Jango’s face, down to the line of his brow.
“I didn’t know it was you,” you murmured.
“Wouldn’t have mattered if you did.”
You lowered your weapon first. “You’re good.”
He gave a single nod. “Learned from the best.”
A beat.
“You look just like him,” you said quietly.
“Yeah. No surprise there”
There was no warmth in his words. Just steel. Just the ghost of a boy you tried to protect.
“Was that what you wanted? To become him?”
Boba stared at you for a long time. Then: “I didn’t have a choice. He left me everything… and nothing.”
You stepped closer, heart tight. “I tried, Boba. I tried to give you more than that.”
“I know,” he said, voice barely above a whisper.
He walked past you. Didn’t look back.
As he disappeared into the dusk, all you could think of is how he turned out just like him. His boy was just like him.
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.”
Boss (RC-1138) x Reader
Theed’s skyline shimmered under the afternoon sun, its golden domes reflecting the light in a display of serene beauty. Yet beneath this tranquil facade, tension simmered. The recent assassination attempts on Queen Jamillia and Senator Padmé Amidala had prompted the Royal Security Forces to request additional protection from the Republic.
You stood at attention in the palace courtyard, your crimson uniform crisp, hand resting on the hilt of your blaster. As a member of the Royal Naboo Guard, your duty was to protect the monarchy and its representatives. Today, that duty extended to welcoming the Republic’s elite clone commando unit: Delta Squad.
The low hum of a Republic gunship grew louder as it descended, kicking up dust and causing your cape to flutter. The ramp lowered, revealing four armored figures stepping out in formation.
Leading them was RC-1138, known as Boss. His orange-striped armor bore the marks of countless battles, and his posture exuded authority.
Behind him, RC-1140, or Fixer, moved with calculated precision. His green-accented armor was immaculate, and his visor scanned the surroundings methodically.
To Fixer’s left was RC-1207, Sev. His armor bore red markings resembling blood splatter, a reflection of his grim sense of humor and reputation as a fierce sniper.
Bringing up the rear was RC-1262, Scorch. His armor was marked with yellow accents, and he carried himself with a relaxed confidence.
As they approached, Boss stepped forward, his helmet concealing his expression.
“Sergeant RC-1138, reporting in,” he stated, his voice modulated through the helmet’s speaker. “Delta Squad is at your service.”
You offered a formal nod. “Welcome to Theed, Sergeant. I’m Lieutenant [Y/N], Royal Naboo Guard. We’ve been briefed on your assignment.”
Boss inclined his head slightly. “Understood. Our primary objective is to ensure the safety of Queen Jamillia and Senator Amidala.”
“Correct,” you affirmed. “We’ll coordinate patrols and share intelligence. Your squad will be integrated into our security protocols.”
Behind Boss, Scorch leaned slightly toward Sev and whispered, “Think they have any good caf here?”
Sev replied dryly, “As long as it doesn’t taste like ration packs, I’ll consider it a luxury.”
Fixer, without looking up from his wrist-mounted datapad, interjected, “Focus, Deltas. We’re here for a mission, not a vacation.”
Boss turned his head slightly. “Maintain discipline. We’re guests here.”
You raised an eyebrow, a hint of amusement tugging at your lips. “Your squad has a unique dynamic.”
Boss’s tone remained neutral. “We operate efficiently.”
⸻
Over the next few days, Delta Squad integrated into the palace’s security framework. Joint patrols were established, and you found yourself frequently paired with Boss. His stoic nature made conversation sparse, but his presence was reassuring.
One evening, during a perimeter check, you decided to break the silence.
“Your squadmates have distinct personalities,” you observed.
Boss glanced at you. “They’re effective.”
“I’ve noticed,” you replied. “Scorch’s humor, Sev’s intensity, Fixer’s precision. And you—you’re the anchor.”
He paused, considering your words. “Leadership requires stability.”
You nodded. “It’s commendable.”
A brief silence settled before he spoke again. “Your team is well-trained.”
“Thank you,” you said. “We take pride in our duty.”
As the patrol continued, a comfortable silence enveloped you both, the foundation of mutual respect beginning to form.
⸻
The days turned into weeks, and the collaboration between your unit and Delta Squad deepened. Shared meals and joint exercises fostered camaraderie. Scorch’s jokes became a familiar background noise, Sev’s rare smirks were victories, and Fixer’s occasional nods signaled approval.
With Boss, the connection grew subtly. Shared glances during briefings, synchronized movements during drills, and the occasional exchange of dry humor.
One night, after a successful operation thwarting an assassination attempt, you found yourselves alone on a balcony overlooking Theed.
“The city’s peaceful tonight,” you remarked.
Boss nodded. “A welcome change.”
You turned to him. “Do you ever think about life beyond the war?”
He was silent for a moment. “Sometimes. But duty comes first.”
You smiled softly. “Always the soldier.”
He looked at you, his gaze intense. “It’s who I am.”
“And yet,” you said, stepping closer, “there’s more to you.”
He didn’t respond verbally, but the way his hand brushed against yours spoke volumes.
The city lights glittered below like the reflection of a thousand quiet thoughts. The silence between you and Boss wasn’t strained—it was gentle, natural. It had become that way over the last few weeks. You stood shoulder to shoulder, close enough to feel the warmth of his armor radiating softly through the Naboo evening chill.
His helmet was still on, the ever-present barrier between his world and yours. But something in his posture shifted, a subtle drop in his shoulders, a small exhale that sounded more like a sigh than static.
Then—quietly—he said, “It’s strange.”
You turned to look at him. “What is?”
“Peace.” A beat. “This planet. The quiet.” He paused, like he was deciding whether to say more. “I’m used to marching into warzones. Places that smell like carbon and blood. Where the air’s thick with ash and tension. But here… it’s almost too quiet. Makes you feel like… something could go wrong any second.”
You studied him for a moment, surprised he was sharing this. “Maybe it’s not that something will go wrong. Maybe it’s just that you’ve never known anything but chaos.”
There was a pause. Then, slowly, his hands came up to his helmet. You heard the hiss of pressure release before he pulled it off and cradled it against his side.
This was the first time you’d seen his face. You had imagined it—many times—but the reality was softer than you’d expected. Strong features, yes, but tired eyes. Eyes that had seen too much, too fast. He looked younger without the helmet, and older all at once.
He didn’t look at you right away. His gaze stayed fixed on the skyline.
“I don’t usually take it off,” he admitted. “Feels… exposed.”
You smiled gently. “You don’t have to explain. But thank you for trusting me.”
His eyes finally met yours then, sharp and searching, but not cold. “You’re different from the officers I’ve worked with before.”
“Good different?” you teased softly.
He didn’t smile, exactly—but something softened around his mouth. “Real different.”
You leaned against the railing beside him, your fingers brushing his. This time, he didn’t move away. He turned his hand slightly until his gloved pinky hooked around yours.
“I don’t know what happens after this assignment,” you said quietly. “But I know I’ll remember this. You.”
He nodded once. “Same.”
The moment stretched—not romantic in the overly dramatic way holodramas would tell it, but intimate in its honesty. The weight of your fingers against each other. The hush of the Naboo breeze. The flickering of torchlight behind you, and the way his gaze lingered on your face like he was memorizing it.
And then, with the kind of quiet confidence that came from someone who rarely acted on impulse, Boss leaned in slightly—slowly, giving you time to stop him if you wanted. His forehead came to rest gently against yours. It was a simple thing. No kiss, no dramatics. Just contact. Shared breath. A moment stolen from the endless march of duty.
“I can’t afford to be soft,” he murmured, voice barely above a whisper. “But you make me want to be.”
You closed your eyes, forehead still pressed to his. “Then let this be the place where you can.”
His hand, calloused and heavy, rose to cup the side of your neck for a second before falling away. Not because he didn’t want more—but because he wasn’t ready yet. And maybe you weren’t either. But that was okay. It was enough.
Tonight, it was enough.