#Jaba the Hutt
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thehauntedrocket · 7 months ago
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Slave Leia
Art by Celal Koc
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gonker99 · 2 years ago
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omg guys Jaba the Hutt in the new Ahsoka trailer!
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thestarwarslesbian · 1 year ago
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Whenever you need sombody (1)
Time for some Hurt!Obi-wan people!
Tagging @starrrgazingbunny as Scar is in the second part but you need to read this one to get some context.
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The war was still dragging on. Anakin had spoken with the chancellor about the estimated time till the end of the war. According to Palpatine it was the Jedi council who were delaying the war and causing the rest of the Jedi to fight. Anakin stormed into the middle of a council meeting. 
 It didn’t look like a council meeting.  
Mace Windu sat on the floor arm around his old padawan. Next to him on the chair was Plo Koon who was plating the hair of the Jedi master sat on the floor in front of him. With closer inspection Anakin realised it was Obi-wan. It was hard to recognise him with longer hair after months apart. “What do you want so bad you had to barge in here Skywalker?” Asked Mace 
“I want you guys to tell me the truth.” Said Anakin. He was going to get to the bottom of the corruption within the council. The members looked like they were contemplating on whether to answer. 
 “Obi-wan is the only qualified Jedi that is a general,” Spoke Mace. “He is a recognised General on Melida/Daan. Which means he is the only Jedi to be recognised, formally by legitimate armies, as a General.” They were really telling him the truth. Maybe, they weren’t running the war after all. He had heard that his old master hated talking about his past before Anakin. Maybe it was because he was a child general.  
“Retired, meant to be, I am.” This shocked Anakin. Master Yoda retired. He stared at Yoda on his place on Obi-wan’s lap. If it was meant to be now, then the Council definitely wouldn’t have planned for the war to go on that much longer. Next Kit Fisto “I have slept with everyone on the council bar Yoda, Plo, Mace and Obi-wan.” Okay. It wasn’t a surprise to Anakin that Kit had slept with majority of the council what had shocked him was that he hadn’t slept with Obi-wan. He was sure Kit would have tried to sleep with him first. Next Plo Koon spoke, “I’m married to Mace.” Okay, thought Anakin, Fork in a kitchen. It was to be expected, the two did biker like an old married couple. 
“I am banging my general.” Shaak Ti spoke up from the seat she sat on. In her lap was a baby Yoda? Did Yoda have a child or was it the same species. The rest of the council went around sharing secrets. All of which made Anakin confused. Why would they just tell him their secrets. Obi-wan’s voice broke him out of his thoughts. 
“I was sold by Qui-gon at 14 to the hutts” “WHAT” Okay so maybe not everyone on the council knows all secrets. “I was kept as a pleasure slave until I was 24 because of my biology.” Obi-wan the next part quieter than the rest.  
“Hold on.” Anakin said breaking the shocked silence in the council chamber “You were a slave?” Had his master really been like him? A slave? But to be kept as a pleasure slave was something much worse. “Yeah, I still have the slave chip as I was kept by Jaba the Hut. That’s why I never went back to Tatooine or planets in hutt space because I was well recognised amongst the Hutts and slave owners.” 
“OMG!” Anakin final knew where he knew Obi-wan’s face from. “That was you!” 
“Please, don’t talk about it when I’m around. Please Anakin.” 
“Leave, like would you. Obi-wan?” Obi-wan nodded as he stood up after lifting Yoda of his lap. “Here.” Shaak said passing the baby Yoda to him. “Grogu wants to stay with you.” Obi-wan took ba- Grogu, into his arms looking on the edge of tears before leaving the room. “Care to elaborate?” Mace asked once the council members had sat in their seats. 
Anakin took a deep breath. 
“When I was young and still living on Tatooine. Jaba the Hutt used to parade around the streets. No one really payed that much attention. Once a year there was a day when everyone on Tatooine gathered and watched the high up people offer something or someone to Jaba. The tradition also extends to visitors on the planet. When I was 1 it was the first time I went, I remember it very vividly, a Jedi turned up dragging a boy with him, no older then 14. The kid was begging him not to. He had a slave collar. This bit is a bit fuzzy, but my mum told me when I was older. The Jedi said he offered this boy as a force sensitive, Stewjon pleasure slave on his lap. You never saw the slaves face. Jaba had never been so excited over a gift, mum took me to a different room, but I could still here Jaba ‘breaking in’ his slave. The slave was Java’s favourite toy. He was used everywhere possible. A year before Qui-gon found me, the slave escaped and their where pictures of him placed all over, I always knew I recognised his face, I had seen it constantly for over a year.” 
“Then why was Obi-wan’s braid so long?” Mace enquired. “Qui-him said that Obi-wan was protecting the Duchess of Mandalore.” 
“Honestly, I wouldn’t know.” 
“I can’t believe none of us knew.” Plo whispered from where he sat on Maces lap, at some point in the story he had gotten up and moved seat. “Told, I was.” Yoda said. “Obi-wan, by. Secrecy, sworn to, I was.” 
“Should we talk about it with Obi-wan?” Depa asked.  
“That will be up for Obi-wan to decide,” Shaak said. “But the question remains why did you want us to tell you the truth, Skywalker?”  
“I was talking with the chancellor, and he said that it was the council that was making the war drag on like you wanted it to. What I saw wasn’t much help in what he said too.” 
“Talk about later, we shall,” Yoda spoke. “For now, find Obi-wan we must. In the temple he is not. In the force, feel it, I do.” 
—/—/—/—/—/—/—/—/—/—/—/—/—/—
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ssweetart42 · 1 year ago
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renposter · 2 years ago
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vampishdyke · 2 years ago
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your first gay crush was kim possible mine? was princess leia. we are different people
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filmnoirsbian · 2 years ago
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watching the starwars movies as a kid and having my sexual awakening over leia in the golden bikini but also being too afraid to have feelings like that over a woman so I convinced myself it had to be something else. ended up with a sexual fascination over jaba the hutt (that lasted for years) since a girl liking woman is bad but a girl liking an abusive slug monster is perfectly okay obviously. I'm not even a girl anymore I don't even like women I didn't have to do all that
Not gay panicking your way into crushing on jabba the hutt...
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banben · 28 days ago
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ジャバ・ザ・ハットも出ました。最初のラフとファイナルの描きやすくなったデザインです。
Jaba le Hutt était aussi de la partie. La remière version rough et la version finale simplifiée.
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cree-n-jewish-thoughts · 24 days ago
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I hate Douglas Ford more than Tumblr
🥲
He's similar to Jaba the hutt
In every way
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jangofctts · 2 years ago
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Bloodsport (Din Darin x fem!reader)
Rated: Mature 
Word Count: 6k
Warnings: nothin much. no smut. canon typical violence, explicit language, blood, Mando being Mando. im posting this bc im petty and because I feel bad that I never posted it in the first place. also this is over a year old so I apologize it’s not great 
Never, in the entirety of your life did you think you’d return to Tatooine. Tatooine for fuck’s sake. A literal sandbox that upholds no feasible joy unless you count the annual womp rat raid or the pod races in Mos Espa. Even then—yikes.
Didn’t think a kid nicknamed Wormie would be the one to blow up the Death Star either. Or yknow, dethrone Jaba the Hutt with some fancy laser sword. Or was it a chain? Ah, whatever—good riddance to that slimy pile of sentient boogers. 
Anyway—
You should have followed Wormie’s example and steered clear of this place—taken up that permanent post as Red Leader for the Alliance and live out your days in a cushy position on Naboo or something. But, you never did enjoy taking the path of least resistance, you’re a pilot after all. Live and die for all that risky shit—the thrill of a fight and near brushes with death. You’d rather stake out your own journey in life—forge out a path so bright that other’s cant help but envy.
Growing up on Tatooine, there weren’t many kids your age—you were always the youngest by nearly four years (not that it ever stopped you from nipping at the older kids’s heels). To this day you can still recall every face, every dumb nickname and inside joke you all created—all the dares and stupid challenges like licking a womp rat’s tail or eating a handful of sand (you always won). Wild and free like a pack of yipping dogs—smiling, dirt stained faces and scuffed up boots worn down to the sole each month. Scrapes and bruises were flaunted as trophies, a chipped tooth like a shiny metal pinned upon the chest. Trouble wasn’t in the vocabulary of your mouth’s—back then it was just fun.   
But time has a way of twisting and mangling the glimmer of childhood. Everyone grew up—more responsibility and less time to play on the dunes. School instead of riling up a nest of whatever doomed creature you could find. Petty arguments that turn into venomous resentment, culminating rifts in friendships and the battle of loyalties between friend groups. 
You’re not sure when the bitterness of living on Tatooine settled in. Sometime between your first schoolyard fight over who would get the desk near the window and the gossip of your upbringing that followed you around like an ugly second head. Or maybe it the way everyone assumed you’d morph into the collective—a moisture farmer or maybe a mechanic like your aunt. One thing always stayed the same. You never outgrew the snarling beast that festered in your chest, it only grew with you over time.         
Call it the age difference or the simple fact you were more feral creature than child, the two people who stuck around for the long haul were the neighbors’ kids. You chased off everyone else—decided that being alone was better than falling in step with mediocracy and someone else’s footsteps. If anyone would leave Tatooine first, it was going to be you. 
Then Biggs left. 
The Skywalker’s farm burnt down, the entire family too, shortly after Biggs’ departure. Everyone assumed Luke died along with them—you believed it as well. Scoured the farm and the corpses with blurry eyes and the hurt, worse than ripping off fingernails with tweezers, bloomed in the cavity of your heart. The worst part of it all was no one cared. No one gave a shit about the culprits or impeding war that was always glossed over on the local radio—they were all fine with sitting and becoming complacent.       
A year passed—and the night of your sixteenth birthday you jumped ship the second the opportunity presented itself. Living in a space port had it’s perks—someone was always going somewhere. You snuck on board of a clunky freighter headed towards Takodana and that was it. Fueled by spite and the need to be part of something bigger. 
The rest happened in a blur. You joined the Alliance—you found Biggs and Luke, alive and well, only to be ripped apart by different destinies another time over. You became a pilot—Red Leader in fact, and damn good at it. Helped blow up the Death Star (the second one that is) and that was that. 
No one tells you that returning home is the scariest part of it all. But—it’s Tatooine for Kriff’s sake. Hardly anything had been touched, the people all the same and uninterested in the outside world. A relieved hug from Peli had been expected—no anger at your unapproved departure—just a resentful frown at the stitched up laceration over your brow and part of your cheek. She didn’t yell about how worried sick she’d been or the lame and infrequent, encrypted holovids you sent to assure that you were still alive and not blown to bits. You told her you didn’t expect to stay long…funny how it’s been five years since then.  
Look at you know, you think with a bemused scoff. Washed out and living in your aunts hangar in the prime of your youth. Guess your glory days had come to a lazy, halting stop.  
The life of a mechanic in Mos Eisley is never overwhelmingly busy—a day or two off every now and then if you so choose. Only thing you frequently find yourself doing is participating in a long standing rivalry between you, a broom, and and the congregation of overly curious Jawas. One night—one kriffing night you left a rusty speeder and a couple power converters out and now they think it’s easy pickings—  
Whatever.
As long as they don’t start physically manifesting inside the spaceport it’s fine. Totally cool. 
Besides swatting the little creatures away with your trusty broom each morning to clear a path, there’s not much to do on Tatooine—not unless you fancy throwing in on a Sabaac tourney or brushing elbows with none too desirable folk. You stick to the landing dock and work. Busy hands keep the mind occupied after all.
But it’s Tatooine—
Dust storms that’ll scrape up the insides of you nostrils and make your nose bleed or leave you blind, Imperial sympathizers, smugglers, you name it. You never make a habit of familiarizing yourself with whoever lands in your hangers—bad for business and honestly? You’d rather not get kidnapped and sold off to the Spice mines on Kessel for opening your big fat mouth. 
So, naturally your only option for a cheap drink and the affirmation that, yes, you can in fact still leave Tatooine whenever you’d like, is to go off-world.  
Bakura is a hop away—far enough you never run into anyone twice and close enough that the charter fare is dirt cheap. It’s always the same cantina, same back left corner that provides an excellent view of the exit and the neighboring lavatories that boasts amusing in-house drunken brawls. What’s better than this? Guys being dudes—petty squabbles over fragile masculinity and an urge to prove something dumb.       
Tonight is slow—regulars night you suppose. Or is it a weekday? Maker you don’t even know what day it is. 
Sighing, your eyes lazily crawl over the drab decor in the cantina, sipping on a neon blue drink that tastes like those little blue candies. Y’know—the ones that grandmas always have stashed away in delicate glass bowls and insist you take a handful even though the candies are the same age, if not older than grandma. 
You pinch the little black straw between your fingertips and take another sip. Too sweet for your liking, but a damn good chaser for the Corellian fire whiskeys you’ve amassed. In fact, just as you’re putting the rim of the shot glass to your lips, the liquor already bright and hot against your bottom lip—you see him.     
There, in the opposing corner of the dingy cantina, you spot the familiar sheen of tempered beskar.  Neon lights from the nearby exit reflect off his cuirass, hyperspace blue that switches to fuchsia pink then back again like a dizzying light show. His helmet is tilted in the direction of the bar, analyzing the couple lingering near the last two stools. You know the little lime green Twi’lek—not by name—but because she’s always somehow wrist deep in her target’s pocket while they all but drool over the deep cut of her cleavage. None the wiser as they’re robbed blind. The poor bastard currently playing into her finely spun web is no different.  
Good for her—
You flick your eyes back over to the Mandalorian and force down a surprised cough as the full weight of his attention settles on you. The likelihood of him being here on matters concerning you are high, but Stars, you weren’t expecting him. How’d he even get inside without you noticing anyway?
The guy is a walking armory donning beskar that sparkles brighter than kriffing diamonds and worth more than than the entirety of Tatooine you’d bet—he’s not an easy thing to miss. Mando is broad—even more so with the added bulk of armor, and in theory that much metal should make some sort of sound.
You scratch your brow with your thumb and sigh. Fuck. You must be loosing your edge or you’re drunker than you thought. 
Well, no use just sitting here and having an awkward staring contest you certainly won’t win—might as well invite him over. You raise your hand in a begrudging wave and pull your face into a mask of an indifference. Mando places his hands on the table and pushes off to stand, tattered cloak scraping along the sticky floor as he covers the short distance between you. 
Gesturing to the open seat on your right, Mando takes up the offer and sits with a muted grunt—guess that armor is heavy. 
“Funny seeing you here,” you sigh, kicking back a shot of another fire whiskey. The glass clinks against the sticky table and joins the growing array of crystalline tumblers. One of those nights where the pain of the past stings worse than alcohol splashed into an open wound. “Did Peli send you? I left a note, y’know.”
“I’m not here for you,” he assures, a smooth rasp even with the static distortion of the vocoder. He turns his head and sweeps the room with poised nonchalance—your heart jumps as the darkened visor returns to you with a weight heavier than the catch and pull of a black hole. “You got a habit of running off?”
Your bottom lip tastes bitter as your tongue passes over it. “Depends on who you ask.” 
“Hm.” Mando’s pensive hum tapers off into stagnant silence. 
This is why, you think with a miserable frown, you always drink on your own. Too many awkward pauses like this and the embarrassment of being tipsy in front of a sober person—you’re off your guard. Plus—you’re not even sure why he’s here— 
You clear your throat and beckon over the bartender with a wave of your hand—Ekah is working tonight. A Mirialan around your age—skin the color of fresh honey and pale green eyes to compliment. Ekah taps two fingers to his temple in acknowledgment and finishes scrubbing down a tumbler with a rag that’s seen better days. He steps around the bar and wanders to your table, his right brow quirking in curiosity at the sight of the Mandalorian.    
“Finally making friends, Skitter?” The hexagonal tattoos inked into the sharp slopes of his cheeks crinkle as he smiles. “And here I was, thinking I was special.”
“Fuck off, Ekah.“ You scowl. “Neither of you are my friend.” 
Ekah gasps and places a hand over his heart in mock offense. “So cruel for such a sweet face.”
Your eyes narrow. “Ekah—“
He sighs, roll his eyes and waves his hand in a shooing motion. “Alright, alright—what is it you want?”
“Closing tab—“ you spare a glance at Mando. He cocks his head to the side. “—uh, unless—do you want…anything?”       
Stars that was awkward. 
Mando lifts his palm off the table and shakes his head in a no. You figured, because of the helmet and all…Worth a shot. 
“Great—“ You nod, shifting onto your weight to fish out the credits in your pocket as Ekah announces your total.
Yet before you even have the physical money in your hand, Mando reaches into his supply bag and pulls out the full amount, plus a hefty tip. “I’ve got it.”
Mando hands it over much too quickly for you to protest and Ekah, opportunistic as a bartender is, collects his credits and shoves them into his pocket, never to be seen again. 
“Cheers, metal man,” he grins. He spares Mando a salacious wink and spins on his heel, a couple midnight black strands of his hair falling out of place as he hurries back to the bar. “See ya ‘round, Skitter.”
Your brows furrow as you puff out your lower lip, head swiveling to glare at Mando. “Why’d you do that? I can pay for myself.”  
Mando has the audacity to shrug. “Wanted to. We’re friends aren’t we?”
He knows damn well where he stands. You clench your jaw and jerk your eyes back to the table. It never sits right with you when someone offers to pay—feels like a slimy rock in the pit of your stomach. On Tatooine you learn to fend for yourself at an early age—leaning on the help of others tended to land you in more trouble than you could shake off. Worst case you ended up at Jabba’s Palace as a nice little side dish for the local rancor, best case you payoff the favor working at a moisture farm for a couple days. 
Simply put—no one does a favor simply for free.   
Anyone who offers is cause for suspect. 
But then again—Peli trusts him…
You exhale loudly, irritated by the sudden bout of silence, and shift to move from you chair, but he stops you with a question.  
“Why do you call yourself Skitter?” He says it softly, not meant to offend or demand your compliance. Whatever he picks apart, he does it with precise and patient skill—simultaneously seeking insight on who you are while granting that thin veil of anonymity. Simply wedging his foot into an already cracked door. 
Your eyes slip from the harsh lines of Mando’s helmet to the splotchy grease stains covering your knuckles. No matter how much you scrub or pick at them, the dirty smudges never seem to disappear—permanently ingrained into your skin like a gods awful tattoo. Doesn’t stop you from roughly rubbing the pad of your thumb over your index finger in hopes that it might just work this time. You sigh and curl your fingers into fists—no use. 
Lying to him crosses your mind—spin some absolute bantha shit story about how you won the Boonta Eve Classic and how you earned the name. Or maybe you could tell him you’re a part of a highly covert crime ring and speaking your name aloud will assure you a one way ticket to the grave within the hour. You’re not sure how well that one will fly, but hey—you’ve convinced a couple of morons here and there.    
However—Mando is no moron.  
He wouldn’t pry the truth out of you like a crooked incisor with rusty pliers—no. This is a game of trust. By extension on Peli’s behalf you’re reliable—one of the good guys that offers safe heaven for himself and the little green terror each time he lands that literal pile of scrap metal in hangar four—always hangar number four. 
 It still doesn’t negate the fact that Mando knows jack shit about you. Just a grouchy mechanic with bloody knuckles and a mouth sharper than a bowl of tacks. This is him offering an olive branch of his personal trust. By choosing to lie you would be severing the rare reveal of a kind heart with a vibroblade dipped in venom. You don’t know what he thinks he’ll find or what’s to gain from you revealing a bare thread of yourself but—  
Whether it’s the blend of spiced rum and fire whiskey that helps loosen your tongue into speaking, or just the simple fact that you actually kinda…enjoy Mando’s company—you tell him.  
“Peli—“ You begin, your lips quirking at Mando’s unsurprised huff upon hearing your aunt’s name. “I was, like, a little kid when I went to live with her—four or five maybe?” 
You spare a quick glance at Mando. His vambraces chink against the edge of his cuirass as he leans back in his seat. He laces his fingers together and rests his hands just above where his codpiece should be; and as you draw a breath he tilts his head ever so slightly to the right, exposing more of the metallic earpiece to better hear you. 
He’s being polite—
You blink and drop your eyes back down to the empty glass you fiddle with. You never dwell or find it in your to care about what others think of you—too much energy wasted on perceptions that you’ll never be privy to. Say what you mean and repercussions be damned. So why is it that your heart begins to flutter like a distressed creature in the clumsy palms of a curious toddler? 
A wildfire blush races up your neck and burns hotter than a miniature sun in your cheeks. You swallow and reach up to toy with the loose baby hairs that curl next to your ear. “Y-you ever, um, see a sand skitter before?”
Mando shakes his head.
“They kinda look like slugs,” you say, separating your forefinger and thumb to show Mando a guesstimate of their size. “Fast little fuckers though—they like to hang out around Jabba’s Palace. B-but anyway—“ 
You clear your throat and continue. “Peli always said I looked like them back then—squishy and small. It didn’t help that I ran around around like a wild waste creature either—got into more trouble than you can even imagine.”
Mando’s amused huff crackles out of the vocoder. “I think I can.”
Another blush heats your cheeks. It’s the damn alcohol—it must be. You should tell him to fuck off—take his metal, bucket-head looking ass straight back to Tatooine and leave you alone. What makes him any different from all the other people you’ve batted away? You don’t  know—you don’t know—
Instead of all the things you should say, you wrench off another branch of yourself and gladly put it into his outstretched palm.   
“I..uh—I don’t think I’ve used my name—my actual name in years,” you confess quietly. The admittance is a strange one—makes the back of your throat tighten while plucking at tender heartstrings you didn’t know existed. “Even in the Rebellion I was just…Skitter.”
In the Rebellion everyone has a number, a nickname, a call-sign—no one cared who you were because when they risked doing so they opened themselves up to pain. It’s easier to be nameless—keeps you focused on the task at hand. 
But it’s over now—it’s done.   
He lets the silence settle and you know what he’s going to ask. You see it in the way his armored shoulders raise to take a breath and the crackling curiosity that practically sparks off the metal. Nonetheless, it’s still like getting shot pointblank in the chest the second he asks.   
“Will you tell me?” 
Such a simple question shouldn’t scare you. Pure and simple fear that better belongs on a feral fyrnock backed into a corner with only it’s sharp teeth to protect itself. Joining the Rebellion should have scared you—hoisting yourself into that worn cockpit every day with the promise of death and gut wrenching adrenaline should have terrified you. The crash on Endor that left a scar over your left brow and broke seven ribs is far more daunting than someone asking you for your name.           
“I’m willing to trade.”
You’re clever enough to realize that this is his way of assuring you that trust is a two way street. He knows the importance of a name better than anyone else—how these sorts of things aren’t meant to be traded—but both of you are making exceptions tonight, even if it’s dangerous. 
You’re both playing with matchsticks around a barrel of coaxium, one slip of a finger and you’d both go up into volatile flames that will rattle the very seams of the galaxy. Mando is showing you how willing he is to offer a piece of himself at your feet—so long as you do the same. 
You sigh and close your eyes. “O-ok…yeah—yeah.”     
As you lean to the side he folds at the waist to meet you. You take another inhale—the last breath before plunging into an ice cold sea—and maybe…maybe it’s not as scary as you once thought. 
The chapped swell of your lips brush along the frigid beskar as the syllables of your name bubble past your teeth. It tastes foreign and odd in your mouth, like cotton or the creaky hinges on a rotting window pane. 
You like it better when he says it.  
The slow drawl of your name repeated back to you is the first breath of spring in the unending winter within your chest. There’s always been a slowness, a stillness in the delicate redwood needles of your bones that glitter with a thick layer of frost. No clever fox or brightly plumed bird resides here—no whispering, pushing wind that dances with the slow creak of ancient tree trunks. Here there’s only overgrown, dark rooted trees and bone white snow—something mistaken for being alive.
Skitter is the name of a girl who drowns in the acrid smoke that bellows from her lungs and disastrous flames that spill from the gaps in her ribcage. It outmatches nebular implosions, leaving behind entrails of embers that burst and flake off from her skin like brittle wood thrown into a funeral pyre. Even the sharp curve of a rabid smile shows something of that all-consuming hunger—something never meant to survive for long. No life has ever made its way into her bones, but the flames that transform blood into ash and anger shine in her eyes.
Your name—the one that sun speckled light touches and spreads inside of your lungs, urging Mando to whisper in quiet tones meant only for your ears. It promises that this is only the beginning—that there is gentle starlight instead of war smoke and here there is something beautiful waiting for you. Someday the heavy snow that buries your body under its weight will melt and give way to the delicate bloom of ferns and creeping lichen. Hope crackles in your blistered palms, transforming into the wings of a sparrow and the very same warmth that you dream of holding.   
Goosebumps rush down your spine and every inch of skin as Mando repeats your name a third time—speaking it as if it’s a prayer to some long lost deity wearing a circlet of stars and a mouth made of rose petals. But it’s only you. You who sits in the back corner of a shitty cantina, dressed in neon light while you and a Mandalorian whisper secrets that are long since forgotten to the world into each other’s ears.   
But the slow grace of become gentle is a long one, and there’s much to learn. “You call me that in public and I’ll strap your tongue to a belt sander and set it on high.”
Mando chuckles at your empty threat and leans more of the broadness of his shoulders into your space. “My turn.”
The icy cold beskar touches parts of your ear and jaw, his even breathing amplified by the static crackle of vocoder. This close, you can feel the helmet buzz over your skin. 
“Din.”    
It suits him—sweet and simple. 
And like he knows you’re itching to shy away from the chilling unfamiliarity of bearing your heart, Din leans closer. You’re not trapped, but he’s forcing your hand to either flee like you’ve always done or confront him. 
You stay.      
He moves his hand glacially slow so as not to startle you, granting you an opportunity to slip free, but you hold steady. The padded leather covering his thumb touches the side of your chin, and out of habit you flinch. The weight of his thumb immediately retracts, but with a mumbled apology and a weak smile of encouragement, he returns. 
Mando—Din—cradles your chin between his forefinger and thumb and traces a light back and forth pattern, the worn leather soft against your skin. Desire bubbles in your chest like heartburn, and all you know right in that second is you need more of him—hungry for any scrap he offers. You lift your hand and curl your fingers over the top of his knuckles and with a little tug, you coax Din’s open palm over your cheek.
Staring into that endless black visor, your eyes flutter shut as you lean into his hand. Vulnerability tastes strange on the tongue—still have to wrestle back the urge to snap and chase him away. You’d be content staying like this all night but… 
Tonight is not the night for it apparently—
Fuck—
All those drinks hit you with a gut wrenching wave of dizziness worse than clipping a short corner in the Diablo Cut—same kinda feeling you get after pigging out on starcherry pies and then taking a high-stakes joyride on your dad’s spiffed out speeder. 
You squeeze your eyes until you see little bursts of light and suck in a deep breath, beating back the nausea with sheer willpower and the very present dread of puking all over Mando’s chest plate. What a fucking spectacle that would be.  
You cringe and slump from his palm and into the dark fabric of his cowl, the sharp smell of ozone and something woodsy a pleasant surprise to your senses. Maker—you could stay here all night, breathing him in. You’re lucky he’s wearing his helmet—you fucking stink.You’ve been marinating in the acrid stench of cheap spirits and cigarette smoke for hours and you know it’ll take days to scrub it off your skin and clothes like shitty perfume or spilled jet fuel.  
“Are you taking a nap?” Mando accuses—the lip of his helmet knocking against your ear as he tries to confirm his suspicion.
“No,” you grumble, “‘m smelling you.”
“What?” Din’s shoulder jump with a unbelieving snort. 
You huff and bury your nose deeper into the swath of fabric. “You smell good. Like—like one of those…those candles.”
You feel his chest rise and fall with a deep sigh. “I think it’s time to go home.”
“So you are here for me,” you scoff, raising your head to shoot him a weak glare. “How’d Peli convince you?”
“Offered to take it out of your pay.” 
“Damn, that shit sucks.” You retort, lifting yourself from the stiff beskar to rub at your tired eyes. “Lemme—lemme guess—“ you hiccup and point an accusing finger. “That piece of junk ship got fuckin’ trashed and—and you expect me to fix it.” 
Din cocks his head to the side, shrugs and moves out of his seat, offering you a hand. You shoo it away with a feeble glare and help yourself up, albeit a bit wobbly.
“You have talented hands.” He purrs next to your ear as you attempt to stomp past him. “I’m sure you can manage.” 
“Yeah—“ You sniff, each step a blurry stumble towards the exit. “You bet I fucking do.”
His soft laugh whispers behind you—
You hate how much you like it. 
Din ushers you onto the very ship you vowed never to take a ride in, solely due to the fact that this thing has been trashed more times than you can count. You cringe just thinking about the innards of the Crest you so begrudgingly fixed—probably all fried to hell and busted up again—     
Surprisingly, the ship flies fine. Suspiciously smooth sailing, enough that you even manage to doze off in your chair. Until you’re so rudely awakened.    
It’s a little tickle on the side of your temple—like a stray hair pushed out of place by a breeze. Half lucid, you grumble and furrow your brows at the sensation, hoping it’ll piss off and leave you be—
The bluntness of calloused fingertips caress over the ridge of your brow, then sweep to the shell of your ear, thumbing at a lock of hair in muted wonder. The same kind of fascination you’d see on someone who’s never felt the texture of another’s hair because of the heavy gloves they wear like a second skin. You crack an eye open, confirming the culprit just as his bare hand dances over your cheek and skins along your jaw. 
Din’s hand freezes, hovering in midair the moment your sleepy eyes catch over his visor. You roll your lip between your teeth, attempting to solely focus on his helmet instead of the brown, sun-kissed hand inches from your face. You’re not sure what’s considered rude or blasphemous in Mando culture, but airing on the side of caution with things like this is best. 
“You snore.”
You blink. “What?”
“I said you snore in your sleep.”  
Din spins on his heel faster than you can process and exits the cockpit. Huh. 
Alrighty then. 
Rubbing the sleep from your eyes, you stand and follow after him. You squint as the loading ramp is lowered, the change in lighting creating a dull ache behind your eyes. Mando hovers at the end of it, patiently waiting for your sleepy self to join him. He’s docked just on the outskirts of town you note—he’s not staying for long. You were just a detour.      
You sigh, face souring as the first rays of sunlight whisper across the glittery yellow smudge of the horizon. Sand scrapes your cheeks and tickles the inside of your nostrils as a gust of torrid air sweeps down from the nearby bluffs, promising another scorching day that’ll make the skin on your nose peel and flake off. Absolutely putrid. “I fucking hate this town.”
Mando makes no comment on his end, just rests his palm over your lower back and guides you forward. This shouldn’t be miserable— 
He isn’t marching you off to your death or anything—just an end of a chapter you didn’t intend on closing so soon.
 Isn’t it funny when you’ve got an entire speech’s worth to say and yet all of it decides to stay stuck on the roof of your mouth? But that’s the problem—you’d have no idea what to say—just an endless turmoil of emotions you aren’t able to pin down and decipher. You’re not even sure if you want to anyway—
All too soon you’re reaching the blast doors that lead into the space port. Din stays outside when you offer to go get his kid from Peli’s care. He’s bundled up in a spare blanket, tucked against Peli’s side—both asleep. Without waking your aunt, you slide him into your arms and make your way back to Mando. The baby whines and cracks his large eyes open. 
“Hello, Creature,” you greet, sweeping a thumb over his large ear. “Dad’s here to pick you up.”
His eyes slide back shut, nuzzling deeper into the swaths of blanket as you hand him back to Din. The Mandalorian happily accepts the little creature and tucks him against his side. Cute.    
“How long are you staying?” You’re cracking open another door for him, letting the soft glow of an imaginary future spill past your fingertips even though you know it’s far fetched. He shuts it with a gentle sigh and a weak shake of the head. 
“We’re leaving today. It’s not safe for us here.” 
Your brows furrow. “You’re being followed?”
The way his shoulders stiffen tell you that it’s a long story. That it runs deeper than just a mere skirmish and bad blood. You don’t like his answer when he tells you the short version of things. Don’t like the way your whole body seizes and doused in a vat of ice water.  
“That’s…no. That’s not—the Empire was destroyed.” Your breaths turn sharp like frayed lungs hacked at the stem and the cold dread of a returned horror. That part of you, the one that fought tooth and nail for the galaxy perished in the flames of war alongside every friend and ally you’ve lost. To say that something you played a part in ripping to shreds for good, is back—it’s digging up ghosts and dusty skeletons you’ve buried long ago. “Din—the Empire is gone."  
“Not all of it. They’re after the kid.” The baby, now awake, squeaks and looks up at Din, his little fingers wrapping around his thumb. “If I stayed any longer I’ll be putting you both at risk.”  
You wrap your arms around yourself and study the tips of your boots. “You’ll be gone for awhile then.”
You lift your head and study the sharp lines of his helmet and the dark strip of visor. His silence carves out the fragile hope cradled in your chest with a rusty knife—throws it at your feet with bloody uncertainty. He chooses silence over hollow promises—could be years or three weeks the next time you see him. Or never.   
“Take care, Skitter.”
“Yeah…se ya around, Mando.”  
You watch him leave, the beskar glittering in the early morning sun until he disappears from view.   
You should’ve asked him to take you with.
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ladydancing · 10 months ago
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Chapter 4: The Orphan
The Dancing Lady was flying through hyperspace on her latest smuggling run. A few months had passed and Aola, Rania and Tizz had made several runs since their trouble on Bakura. So far they had avoided the Empire and any bounty hunters. Rania was is the cockpit while Aola and Tizz sat talking in the Dancing Lady’s lounge Aola’s feet up on the holo table.
“We’ve been doing pretty good so far.” Aola said to Tizz “My biggest concern is the Dancing Lady. She’s an old YT-1930 and we don’t have anyone to preform maintenance on her. You were a bounty hunter, Rania is a pilot, and I was freedom fighter. None of us knows the first thing about ship maintenance.”
“Why don’t we hire someone or get maintenance done when we land on one of our runs.” Tizz asked
“Maybe you forgot, we’re all wanted. Anyone we hire could betray us and we can’t stay very long anywhere we land for the same reason.” Aola answered.
Just then the Dancing Lady shuddered and dropped out of hyperspace. Aola rushed to the cockpit.
“What’s happening, Rania?” Aola yelled.
“ I don’t know. The ship just dropped out of hyperspace.” Rania said.
Aola looked over the panels “Great! That’s just what I was worried about. There’s something wrong with the hyperdrive.”
“What’s the closest system with a spaceport? Aola asked.
Looking at the computer. Rania turned and responded “Tatooine”
Aola dropped into one of the chairs in cockpit slapping herself in the head. “No, No, No.” she said.
“What’s the matter with Tatooine?” Rania asked.
“Tatooine is where Jaba the Hutt lives.” Tizz said leaning against the entrance to the cockpit. “Jabba, is one of the biggest crime bosses in the Hutt Cartel. Maybe you forgotten I originally tried killing Aola because the Hutts have a bounty on her head.” Tizz turned to Aola, “However, we don’t have much of a choice, do we, Aola.”
“No we don’t.” Turning towards Rania “Set a course for Tatooine” Aola groaned. “We’ll stay for as short a time as possible and do are best to avoid Jaba’s men.”
Rania turned to the controls and set a course for Tatooine. In a short time the Dancing Lady was approaching the twin suns that circled the desert planet of Tatooine. As they got closer, they were given landing instructions from Mos Eisley spaceport to land in bay 93. Aola groaned knowing the danger she was in. Aola sighed again saying “Well here’s goes nothing.”
After landing, the three ladies walked down the main corridor to the boarding ramp. With the push of a button the ramp lowered. They exited the ship to be greeted by an old human man with gray hair. “Hello ladies. I see you have a old YT-1930. How’s she flying.” He asked.
“Not good. We’re having trouble with the hyperdrive.” Aola said then asked. “Can you take a look at her?”
“Sure. If it is the hyperdrive, it will probably take 1 or 2 rotations to get the parts to fix it.” The old man answered.
“Well get to work on it, we’ll be in town getting something to eat.” Tizz said and with Aola groaning once more.
“Don’t worry, I know a small cantina, where Jabba’s men don’t hang out.” whispered Tizz.
Tizz led Aola and Rania down a small alley avoiding the main streets of Mos Eisley to a small cantina where they sat in a dark corner and had their meal. After a while, they left the cantina using the same path heading back towards bay 93 to check on the progress of the Dancing Lady. Half way there, they heard a scream. Rania ran towards the scream with Aola yelling “Rania, No!” But it was too late, Rania had run into the main street. There in the main street, a group of Weequays had a teenage Mikkian girl surrounded and were dragging her down the street. Rania jumped into the fray with her lightsaber slashing away at the Weeguays. “That damn lightsaber” Aola said, Rania must have had it hidden it in the pocket on the other side of her belt, even though Aola had told her to keep it hidden in her cabin onboard the Dancing Lady.
Tizz watched as Rania blocked blaster bolts and slashed the Weequays. In a startled voice Tizz said “She is a Jedi!”
When Tizz had first boarded the Dancing Lady in an attempt to kill Aola she was met by Rania in the main corridor with an ignited lightsaber. Aola had told Tizz the same story as she had been telling the Imperial officer on Bakura, before he was accidentally killed. She had told Tizz that Rania had procured it from a bounty hunter who had killed a Jedi.
Tizz turned on Aola "You lied to me."
Tizz and Aola started to argue back and forth just as Rania walked up with the teenage Mikkian. She had left dead Weequays all over the street. Both Aola and Tizz turning on Rania at the same time and yelled "What the hell were you thinking?"
"Those Weequays were dragging this young girl away. I had to stop them.” Rania said
"Weequays work for Jabba the Hutt, we have to get back to the Dancing Lady and hope that old man has the hyperdrive fixed." Aola said.
Aola, Tizz, Rania started towards bay 93 followed by the young Mikkian.
Aola stopped and turned on the Mikkian, "Where do you think your going?"
Rania responded for her, "I told her she could come with us."
Aola growled at Rania, "The Dancing Lady is not a nursery, Rania"
"Tara, by the way her name is Tara, was a slave of Jabba, the Hutt, that just escaped. If anyone knows what that's like it's you Aola." Rania stated.
Aola groaned "Fine, but we drop her off once we're off planet, if we get off this planet."
They ran into bay 93, "I don't think the old man fixed the Dancing Lady." Tizz said pointing to a wanted holo of Aola on a crate the old man used as a desk.
"I think were going to have company soon. Tara get on the ship." Aola commanded. Tizz ran onto the ship returning with her sniper rifle and crouching behind a crate. Aola crouched behind a crate on the other side of the bay pulling out her DL-44 blaster. She hoping that she and Tizz would create a cross fire. Rania stood in the center of the bay with her lightsaber ready.
They could hear the sound of lots of boots coming down the street. A second later, Weequays, Rodians, and Niktos burst into the bay. Aola, and Tizz started firing taking out Jabba’s men on either side of the bay. Rania used her lightsaber to reflect laser bolts back at their oncoming attackers, but they kept coming.
All three women knew they were outnumbered, when a soft young female voice came from the Dancing Lady, "If you ladies would like to get out of here and out of the system, I suggest you get onboard." The Dancing Lady's engines had just started up. Aola didn't know what was going on, but yelled "Rania, Tizz get onboard. I'll cover you." Once she saw, both were onboard, Aola ran across the bay heading for the ramp, firing the whole time. Once she was onboard and had the ramp closed, she yelled "Get us out of here."
The Dancing Lady flew up out of the bay into the sky and eventually out of the atmosphere. As Aola was heading for the cockpit, she was thrown back, as the Dancing Lady jumped into hyperspace. Aola entered the cockpit. "What the hell?" she said seeing Tizz and Rania at the controls.
Tizz responded "It turns out Tara is mechanical genius. Although she was a slave of Jabba's, he used her to repair all his machinery."
"You had a radiation leak in your hyperdrive." Tara’s soft voice said walking up behind Aola. "It was an easy fix. I'm surprised none of you could fix it.", she said, while wiping dirt off her hands. "So where do you intend on dropping me off at."
"Tara, It is Tara. Let's have a talk." Aola said as she walked Tara towards the last unused cabin in the Dancing Lady. Rania and Tizz both stared at each other raising their eyebrows and shrugging.
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beechaotic · 2 months ago
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“What do you have to say for yourself?”
Human, grinning: “Eat my ass, Jaba the Hutt looking son of a bitch.”
After a long and bloody war Humanity stands before the galactic senate on trial for committing one of their worst war crimes: Freeing slave worlds.
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thestarwarslesbian · 1 year ago
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TBB Bounty Hunter Au stuff
@starrrgazingbunny I got you some more father Owen content.
*People in the distance trying to fight Jaba the Hutt* Owen: What a bunch of idiots. Owen: *realises it's Obi-wan, Cody, Crosshair and Mayday* Owen: Sith spit. Those are my idiots. *Running towards them* Hey get back here.
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deankinchesterofficial · 2 years ago
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Just searched for Metatron content and saw someone comparing him with Jaba the Hutt from Star Wars. Hm. The fatphobia in this fandom is alive and well I fear.
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the-firebird69 · 2 years ago
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Watch "Hold it Porkchop 😂" on YouTube
So Saturday Frozen I couldn't move finally I moved some things around and it fell forwards and I drove right into the water and I was thinking it's deep here and I heard someone going what the f*** is he going in there for and it was him never heard it before and I'm going oh I see that's stupid. Went on the bottom I got stuck and it's better than water and they pulled it out and yeah it's rude you have to rebuild the motor wasn't worth it so I bought one of yours it wasn't the same track down this River thing that's about half as deep and the river is pretty deep it's a little deeper than what you saw the upper part of it it goes through the upper part what's a boat for some reason goes down the bottom and I gunned it and then blasted right out of it and I've never seen anything like that we've used weird tires and wide ones it just never happens and they're all wheel drive like this one I'm going to have a logs and rocks up the sides of mountains it's shaped different it's a little wider and a little bit longer and the tires are pretty Mambo you saw the tires they look like monster truck tires but there's medium size but I've never seen anything like this weirdness around this guy and engineering he's doing it himself and he's one of them one of the fathers and she is a mother and that's what they're called so it's a lot of talk that happens after that but I love those things those fat fat bears I thought I was thinking a commercial I said what sort of delusion is this is that an African device just get one and do the commercial and make some money as yourself right here the worm or Java I think it's jaba at the hutt. What's the start of company jabba the Hutt people think that I'm in human form.. so got right on it and people started making fun of me I said you watch you s*** head youd buy a piece of poop if you could. So I'm thinking about what I was saying I said last week didn't you buy dodo and they said yeah so say this week you're going to buy Java from jabba the Hutt it's going to have my picture on it
So I'm starting to form the company up I'm doing it myself and I know why and I'm starting to sell it and it's selling and it's ridiculous I don't know why a fat guy has something to do with coffee it's not right what you're saying I get the concept myself you probably do I simply figured out something I'm like a salted a big fat guy who has a brain telling people what to do and I make all these deals when I get stuff so now I want the motorcycle and hear him saying no and I have to have it because it's huge it's huge with us this is another company but it's the same company and that a few revs later and it's true I left and verified and it's fast it's loud they're bigger and meaner and very very inexpensive and your assembly partly and that's one reason why it's cheap and sells tons of them usually so I'm going to set it up I got to do this this is me and I formed a company because he looked at it and started laughing so don't make fun of me because I have a coffee company
Jabba the Hut
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neovenatorgirlteeth · 1 year ago
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All of these animatronics were made by Crawley Creatures, who made some of the model fossils used in Prehistoric Planet as well as all the animatronics and prosthetics used in Impossible Pictures projects from Walking With Dinosaurs to Primaeval, as well as the original Jaba the Hutt rig for Return of the Jedi
I miss the era of prehistoric documentaries having puppets
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