#The legend of a burning star
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i think siffrin and volo are very similar and would get along well so i drew them sharing a cigarette
#doctor's orders#my art i guess#volo#siffrin#in stars and time#pokemon legends arceus#smoking tw#huge wish motifs. wishes cost them Everything. forgotten home. incredibly mentally unwell. i don't deserve a bedframe.#acts whimsical and silly but OH GOD! IT BURNS! OW! complicated relationship with god* also. tried to blow up the universe instead of coping
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Dynamic that Iâd love to explore:
Steddie, but youâre dating Eddie first. You two are a Unit. Youâre so deep in love with each other that literally EVERYONE can tell. Itâs like you walk around with this invisible string wrapped around you two, binding you together. You love Eddie, he is your person. Your perceived one and only.
Eddie feels the same, he tells you every day. Shows it even more. But Eddie, is not a subtle man. Especially not to you. So, you clock his crush on Steve the second they hang out together. You knew heâs liked the man before you started dating, so it wasnât surprising.
What is surprising, is just how okay you are with it. This was prime jealousy territory, but as you watch the two flirt with each other, you just feel..okay. Amused even. You tease Eddie subtly at first, just an acknowledgment whenever he gets all moon eyed over the former jock.
Eddie feels terrible about it, initially. He loves you, thereâs no doubt about that. Youâre the person he wants to marry one day. The person he wants to spend his life with. But Steve, Steve with his stupid pretty hair, and kind eyes, and deep understanding of what happened in the Upside DownâŚHe just canât shake the crush. The urge to have him closer.
You finally breach the topic with him one night, emboldened with weed and being curled up in his arms. âYâ know, if you ever wanted toâŚgo after Steve, I wonât mind.â Itâs silent for a full moment before Eddie responds. âWhat?â
âSteve. If you wanted to date the both of us, I wonât have a problem with it. Trust me, he likes you a lot. I can tell.â Youâd laugh at the look on Eddieâs face if you werenât trying to convince him you were serious. âAnd..I want you to be happy, you know? So..you should go for it.â It prompts a deep conversation between the two of you, where Eddieâs not quite sure about it, but decides to try.
As a surprise to no one, Steve is more then happy to date Eddie. After being assured that you were perfectly fine with it, the two start dating. You spend time with Eddie the first half of the week, Steve gets the second. You switch every other week, or for special occasions. Itâs nice, and you canât help but feel pleased with the happy look on Eddieâs face.
Thereâs just one thing though, a problem you werenât expecting. Steveâs interest in you. About a month into your new arrangement, Steve takes steps to hang out with you more. He asks about you, and even flirts occasionally. Usually with Eddie present, which you chalk up to him just being in the moment. It starts changing though, when Eddie has to bail on a date with Steve. Youâre both used to his scattered mind, so itâs not a big deal. Still, Steve has tickets to the local fair and he doesnât even hesitate to extend one to you.
Before all of this, you liked Steve well enough, but it didnât go beyond friendly. You had always planned on dating Eddie without dating Steve, Simply wanting your other half to be happy. All thisâŚbudding up with Steve wasnât in the plan, but you couldnât say you hated it. Steve was nice, funny, and admittedly very handsome. (You couldnât blame Eddie in the slightest for his crush.) He was a natural flirt, often getting you and Eddie flustered whenever you three hung out. Every kind thing he does for Eddie makes your heart swell. Every kind thing he does for you makes your heart skip a beat. Your conversations start out kinda stilted at first, but with time they flow with ease. First strictly being about Eddie until you find yourself telling him about you. Your life, your dreams. Steve does the same, and itâs not long before you really understand Eddieâs crush on the man.
The Fair is fun. You go in rides, Steve wins you one massive plushie, and another massive plushie for Eddie to surprise him with later. You end up winning Steve a plush as well, insisting that he deserved something too. The soft look he gives you is stunning, and you have to smother his face in the plush before the butterflies threaten to eat you alive. âIâm glad you said yes to coming with me.â He admits over some pizza, the fair lights dancing in his eyes and hair. âIâve been wanting to hang out one on one for a while. Trust me, I wanted Eddie here with us too, but..yeah.â
Three seconds, it takes three seconds before it dawns on you. Steve wasnât just wooing Eddie, but you too, and itâs working.
#thebunspeaks#fluffybunnycorner#steddie x reader#steve x reader x eddie#eddie munson x steve harrington#steve harrington#eddie munson#steve x reader#eddie x reader#steve harrington x reader#eddie munson x reader#I just love this idea ngl#Steve just shooting for the stars and seducing a couple?#absolute legend#Plus I love the contrast of being a fast burn and a slow burn all in one#you and Eddie are solid#Steve is an unexpected but wonderful surprise and he ends up fitting perfectly with you guys
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Refuge Chapter Eight
It's finally time for your first mission with Delta Squad.
Continued slow-burn Delta Squad x fem!reader
Word Count: 4,300
Warnings: Anxiety, feelings of alienation, social awkwardness, teasing, minor verbal bullying, brief physical bullying, and general references to weapons and warfare
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You would never get used to traveling this way.Â
You had watched as the ship left from the hangar bay, directed by a GAR tower as you slowly rose through masses of Coruscanti traffic. Fixer had asked you to step out of the cockpit during takeoff. Well, it had actually sounded far closer to an order, but you apparently made him nervous with the intense way you watched everything.
Still, you had found another transparisteel pane to watch from as the planet fell away beneath you. You were in the air. That had always been something for other people to experience, people on distant planets. Voubosians had nowhere to go and the concept of space flight was more theoretical than something that average people expected to experience someday.Â
And if your palm rose to press against the inside of the windowpane as Fixer put the ship into hyperdrive, who could blame you? Not a single person. Especially since the rest of Delta Squad were all crowded into the cockpit.Â
You were going to Isiring, a small planet in the Outer Rim and very close to Separatist space. The planet was considering joining the Republic, and that consideration had put them under occupation by the Separatist Army. The GAR had driven off most of the droid army, but the Isiring people were in desperate need of supplies. The Wolfpack had brought a shipment of supplies, but there had been more refugees than expected.Â
Delta Squad had brought additional supplies, enough to last until another battalion could get through the Separatist remnants with a full resupply. Additionally, Delta would help build and reinforce the refugee camp that the 104th was building.Â
And, somehow, you were considered capable enough to be part of Delta Squadâs mission. You had your own doubts about that, but you had agreed to take on this assignment and you were determined to see it through.Â
That didnât stop you from jolting when someone spoke behind you.Â
âItâll be a while before we get there, even using the hyperspace lanes along the way.â
When you had recovered - trying to play off your surprise as a temporary loss of balance, you turned to nod at Sev. âThank you for letting me know. How long do you think the journey will take?â
Sev was frowning, though. "Did you just get scared?"Â
"I thought everyone was still in the cockpit," you explained, chuckling at yourself. Sev didn't laugh at all. On Toporik, a harmless fright was considered humorous, good for a shared laugh among friends. Sev didn't seem even slightly amused and you conceded internally that it could be a cultural thing.Â
"You didn't hear me?"Â
"No," you admitted, feeling fully awkward by that point. âI didnât know I was supposed to be listening for you.â
Sev shook his head and returned to the cockpit, leaving you waiting uncomfortably alone in the transport's small seating area.
And you stayed alone for far too long. You couldn't hear any conversation among Delta Squad in the cockpit, but there were closed comlink channels in their HUDs. In all likelihood, they were talking about you.Â
It wasnât necessarily bad. They could be discussing how to fit you into the mission without risking themselves or you due to your inexperience. Though you knew they had already considered that, and probably had been doing so since they were first assigned to assist on Isiring. In that case, the conversation might be bad.Â
You decided to convince yourself that they were all crowded in the cockpit, surrounded by pure silence.Â
When everyone other than Scorch filed out of the cockpit, you were staring out of the viewport and toying with the material of your body glove. The shine of the transparisteelâs interior meant that you could watch Deltaâs faces as they came into the shipâs main cabin.Â
Sev glanced at you for a moment before he continued on to the back of the ship. Boss didnât even look at you. Fixer watched you stretch and release the fabric of the garmentâs shoulder a few times before he shook his head. Surprisingly, he reached out to still your fingers with his own. For all that he hadnât seemed very easy with touch, the movement seemed utterly natural for him.Â
âDonât you remember how hard we had to work to get that glove for you?â he asked. The question could have been stern or harsh, but his tone sounded softer, almost gentle. âTry not to tear it on your first mission out, yeah?âÂ
âYeah,â you echoed, releasing the fabric immediately. It snapped back into place with a sting that made you wince. You were still facing the window and thought your expressions were private, but when your gaze focused, you could see that Fixer was looking at the window as well. He was using the opposite vantage point to watch you in the reflection. When he saw that you had seen him, he offered a nod and pulled his hand away from yours.Â
That touch - simple, but freely offered - sparked something in you. Suddenly, you realized how horribly, deeply lonely you were. Perhaps it was inevitable; this was the first time youâd had alone with your thoughts in some time. Without the stress of running for your life or the distraction of Jedi training, you could process it.Â
Sitting still, staring out of the viewport at stars passing by too quickly to be anything other than streams of light, you were spiraling. You had no community, no place. Delta Squad had offered you a spot among them, but now that you were there, they seemed concerned about your presence. No, not concerned⌠inconvenienced.Â
Had this all been a mistake? You were honor-bound to see things through, especially since this had been a choice, one you had made gladly. If you died, you couldnât see that as a terrible tragedy, but what if one of the others ended up hurt or killed trying to protect you because you couldnât protect yourself?Â
âHey.âÂ
You turned quickly at the greeting, desperately clinging to the interruption of your frantic thoughts. Sev was standing there with a box in his hands.Â
When you didnât say anything, he frowned. It seemed to be a common expression for him. Or maybe you just brought it out in himâŚ
âYou good?â Sev asked. âYour breathing has picked up.â
âJust⌠trying to meditate.â
It was an incredibly weak lie, one that hung in the air for an uncomfortably long time. Sev gave you a few seconds of incredulous silence to fess up, but you stayed quiet.Â
âYeah,â he said eventually, clearly still skeptical. He lifted the box slightly. âBrought you some food.âÂ
âYou brought me dinner?â you asked, unreasonably touched by that. Your emotions were erratic - not a good sign before your first mission.Â
Sev scowled. âI guess. You get some before Scorch gets his. Weâll be going lights-out in about an hour, so consider this your warning.âÂ
âThank you,â you said, accepting the box from him. Then a thought struck you and you felt more than a little silly for not having considered it before. âUm⌠where am I sleeping? There are only four bunks and I donât want to take anyoneâs spot-âÂ
âSomeone has to fly the ship,â Fixer pointed out. âWeâll rotate bunks - the new person takes the empty one. Everyoneâs clean and in top health, so you donât have to worry about hygiene.âÂ
âAs long as Scorch remembers to wash the liquid tibanna off this time,â Sev muttered.Â
âHey!â Scorch objected from the cockpit. You jumped again. You hadnât known he could hear the conversation outside. âThat only happened once!âÂ
âYeah, but Iâm the one who ended up with gas burns on his-â Sevâs dark eyes slid toward you before he turned briskly away. âAnyway, I wouldnât recommend sleeping in a bunk after Scorch has had it.âÂ
âAt least my hair isnât greasy!â Scorch called.Â
That made you laugh despite yourself. Sevâs hair was shorn so close to his scalp that you didnât know if you could grab one without the use of tweezers. The idea of grease being able to cling to his nearly bare head was so unlikely as to be truly entertaining.Â
âStow it, men,â Boss ordered, sitting across from you with his own box of rations. âEveryone other than Scorch needs to finish up and get some sleep.â
âI would love to, Boss, but dearest Oh-Seven hasnât brought me my meal yet.â
Sev rolled his eyes toward the cockpit. âI donât feel like helping you out today. Get your own food.â
Scorch said, âIf you insist.â You could clearly hear the sound of a restraint being unbuckled, followed by a few footsteps. The ship gave an alarming dip, spilling some of your food and pulling an alarmed gasp from you.Â
Boss was on his feet before the food had landed on the table. âScorch, sit your shebs down before I figure out a way to keep them there permanently. Sev, get Six-Twoâs food before he kills us all. Fixer, get a new ration pack for her.âÂ
âThatâs not necessary-â you protested.Â
Fixer was already speaking over you. âWhat should I do with this one?âÂ
âGive it to Scorch,â Boss ordered. âShe can have the fresh one.âÂ
âAw, BossâŚâ Scorchâs complaining tone was clear even from the cockpit. âYou know flying makes me hungry.âÂ
You wanted to melt through the seat. The last thing you wanted to do was start off your first mission by getting one of your squadmates in trouble. âItâs fine, Sergeant, really. Only a little bit spilled.âÂ
âOkay,â Boss said with a nod. âDid you hear that, Scorch? Only a little bit spilled. Sounds like youâll survive the rest of the flight without starving to death.â
As you continued to insist that everything was fine, Fixer whisked the ration pack away from you and delivered it to Scorch. You bit your lip, dread weighing heavy on your stomach. It spiked sharply when you heard a soft exclamation from Scorch.Â
âOya! You only spilled the greens, civvie. Thatâs the worst part. Think you did me a favorâŚâ
Your murmured reply was unintelligible, even to you.Â
The situation was uncomfortable. And it was made worse by knowing that everyone knew about it. Sev and Scorch had been there when you admitted that you may not know if you were manipulating them. Even if you didnât mean to.Â
And then you had told Boss about what had happened. He had seemed sympathetic, but he had probably mentioned it to Fixer, even if the other two hadnât. That had to be the cause of the awkwardness among the group, you were certain of it. Conversations had been stilted and laughter was nonexistent in any of the men.
Sev slid a fresh ration pack in front of you, but you only managed a few bites before you pushed it away. âI think Iâm going to get some sleep.â
âYouâre not going to eat any more than that?â Sev asked, eyeing your barely-touched tray.Â
âNo, I justâŚâ You trailed off, uncertain of what to say. Eventually, you decided to keep to simple sentences. âNo, Iâm done.âÂ
âYou should probably get a little more down,â Fixer said skeptically. âYou never know when youâre going to eat on a mission. Skipping meals before you get there means youâre going to be distracted, weak-â
âGo to bed,â Boss ordered. Dimly, you recognized that he had been watching you closely throughout the short conversation, his gaze searching. Whatever he found there seemed to make him take pity on you. He nodded at the other Deltas before he returned to cleaning and reassembling his blaster. âGet some sleep.â
You were too grateful to do anything more than nod back before you scurried toward the small bunk section at the back of the ship. If the conversation shifted after you had left, you didnât hear it. You made a point of not hearing it.Â
But, to your eternal frustration, sleep wouldnât come.
One by one, Delta followed you to the bunks - with the obvious exception of Scorch. Each one seemed to settle easily into slumber, but it eluded you.Â
Eventually, you opted to slip out of the bunk entirely. Instead of lying there helplessly, you wanted to sit in the main cabin of the ship and reread the field manual the GAR had scrounged up for you.Â
It seemed like a safe bet - Scorch was flying the ship while the other three were asleep, but you had barely started reading before Boss appeared.Â
His sudden and silent approach made you jump, pressing a hand to your chest in an effort to calm your racing heart. When you could breathe without feeling like you were going to vomit, you asked, "What are you doing?"Â
"Funny," he said, leaning against the doorway between the bunks and the main cabin. "Pretty sure I'm supposed to ask that."
"I'm reading," you offered, lifting the datapad as if to prove it.
"What you're doing is disobeying an order," Boss countered. "I told you to get some rest."
You froze, staring at him with wide eyes. He had said that, of course, but you had assumed it wasn't a real order. He had also said that a single disobeyed order would result in him kicking you out of Delta SquadâŚ
"Relax," he told you, pushing away from the doorway to settle in a nearby seat instead. "That was a test. For future reference, I only issue official orders in war zones. Everything else is just a⌠strongly worded suggestion."
You nodded, gaze dropping to your twisting fingers as you tried to calm your pulse.Â
Boss gave you a few minutes to settle before he spoke again. âSo, knowing that it isnât an order⌠wanna tell me whatâs going on?âÂ
âCanât sleep,â you admitted with a slight shrug. âI think I just have too many questions.â
âQuestions,â Boss repeated tonelessly.Â
âYes, but I feel like I should already know the answers, so I havenât asked them.â You gave a mirthless laugh. âI donât enjoy wasting your time, you know.âÂ
When you finally snuck a look at Bossâs face, he was frowning slightly. âWhy should you know the answers to questions you havenât asked? And think of it this way: I would rather answer your questions now and know that you have all the information you need than worry about you if things get bloody.â
âI thought blood was guaranteed?âÂ
âThis is a relief mission,â he clarified. âWe might see some action, so we need to be ready for it, but itâs not like weâre dropping into an active war zone. Not this mission, anyway. So what questions do you have?â
âCan you-?â You cleared your throat and started over, wanting to sound more like a specialist gathering information and less like a lost child. âCan you give me some idea of a timeline? For our arrival, at least?âÂ
âSure,â Boss said, nodding. He didnât seem irritated by the questions, which helped ease your nerves enough to actually listen to him. âWe make sure everyone is awake and fully dressed at least two hours before arrival. An hour out, we do final weapons and equipment checks. By the time we hit atmosphere, everyone needs to be prepped for landing.âÂ
âDo we expect it to be a bad landing?â You hadnât experienced too many landings - just the one, actually - but you had seen enough HoloNews footage to know that you didnât want to experience a crash.Â
A new voice made you jump again, and you turned to see Sev leaning against the doorway to the bunks. His voice was even gruffer with sleep, almost hard to understand, but you tried to listen anyway. âLandings can be rough, depending on how much fire we take. Fixer will get us through the worst of it. Even if we land hard, everyone needs to be clear within fifteen seconds.â
âAnd the time between breaching atmosphere and landing?â you asked, struggling to gather all of the vocabulary you had learned in the past few weeks. âDo we⌠wear parachutes or something? Whatâs the protocol?âÂ
âParachutes?â Boss repeated.Â
âWhy would you jump out of a ship in a war zone?â Sev asked, nearly scowling by that point.Â
You frowned a little yourself, but more out of confusion than irritation. âWell, you know⌠if itâs crash-landing or something-â
âDonât jump out of the ship,â Boss advised.Â
A groan drifted from the doorway behind Sev, followed by Fixerâs voice. âWho is jumping out of a ship?âÂ
âThe civvie,â Sev tossed back, moving over slightly so Fixer could stand bleary-eyed in the doorway beside him. âThe jetii must have taught her some strange tactics.â
âShut it, Sev,â Boss ordered, tacking on a glare for good measure. His gaze evened out when he turned back to you. âYouâre always gonna be safer inside the ship, even if itâs going down. Thereâs too much chance of taking a blaster bolt while youâre floating above an active battlefield.â
âAre we having a meeting?â Scorch called from the cockpit.Â
âNo,â Fixer told him. âCivvieâs just asking some questions. Wanted to know if we were going to wear chutes when we break atmosphere.âÂ
âChutes?â Scorch echoed, bewildered. âWhy would we jump out of ship in the middle of a combat zone?âÂ
âOkay, Iâve got it,â you hurried to say, getting to your feet. âUnderstood. Awake and dressed two hours out, checking weapons one hour out. Ready to go when we break atmosphere. When we land, get out of the ship within fifteen seconds. If weâre not dead from being shot down.âÂ
âWe wonât be dead,â Fixer assured you. The confident tilt to his chin made you believe him. âIâve landed bigger ships than this in worse areas.âÂ
âBut everything else is right,â Boss confirmed.Â
Sev shrugged. âPretty much. Though if landing is quiet, you can miss the fifteen second mark by a few seconds without as much risk.â
âSeriously, I can come back there,â Scorch offered.Â
âThatâs okay; weâre done,â you told him. âThank you all. Iâm going to sleep now.âÂ
â
To your great relief, the landing part of the mission had been simple.Â
You had been ready and armored far too early, but Scorch had been too tired to do much more than laugh. Fixer had guided the ship into a smooth landing on Isiring, and the Republicâs forces had secured the area around the relief camp. Boss had advised everyone to wear helmets anyway, and you gladly followed that advice. You were always a fan of overpreparedness, and you found yourself a little shy around the unknown troopers.Â
The peace didnât last long, though. Your first task was to operate the droid lifts, shuttling fully-loaded lifts to deposit their supply crates in the correct areas while dispatching the newly empty ones back to the ship for Delta Squad to restock. It was easy work, and you were grateful for the chance to decompress and brace yourself for anything else you might be assigned to do next.Â
But what you hadnât realized was that your position as the only one outside of the ship left you surrounded by unfamiliar troopers.Â
One such trooper laughed far too loudly behind you, knuckles rapping sharply against the top of your helmet in a way that made the HUD give an irritated beep. âWhat is going on here? I think you could have used a little more time in that growth jar, eh, vod?â
None of that made any sense to you, so you stayed silent, shoulders hunching up toward your ears as you focused on the datapad you were using to direct the droids.Â
âHey, knock it off,â another voice said, and you relaxed slightly at the intervention. âObviously, he hasnât learned to talk yet!âÂ
Uproarious laughter, then you were jostled as someone knocked your arm. It was probably a playful gesture, you knew that. But the interaction had drawn attention, and being surrounded by strangers who were all tall and broad enough to make you feel trapped⌠Well, it wasnât doing wonderful things for your peace of mind.Â
The sound of your name in a crackling call made you startle. âWhatâs wrong? Why is your heart rate so high?â
Your HUD identified the voice as belonging to Fixer. âIâm-â
The explanation, whatever it was going to be, cut off as you were jostled again. This time, it was a hard enough hit to push you forward, and you staggered slightly as you tried to keep hold of the datapad without stepping into the path of droids whirring back and forth.Â
âBack off!â a harsh voice commanded and you noted with more than a little relief that Sev was closer than any of the other Deltas. Clearly, he had left the ship.Â
âOr what?â one trooper called challengingly. âWeâre just having some fun.â
âFunâs over.â You couldnât see Sevâs face, but you knew exactly how it would look - darkness simmering behind a tightly controlled expression.Â
Another trooper scoffed. âYou commandos think youâre so much better than us. This one wonât even talk to us.âÂ
That made you freeze, overcome by a strange mixture of shame and fear. A gauntleted hand entered your frame of vision, wrapping around your wrist and giving a tug. You recognized the jagged lines of red paint and let Sev pull you toward him, stepping free of the group of troopers at the same time.Â
âCâmon, vod,â a trooper jeered. With your new perspective, you could see that none of them were wearing helmets, and there was a look of derision on this manâs face. âYouâd be better off letting us standard troopers into the commando force. That oneâs clearly defective.â
âIf you men donât have anything more important to do than harass my people, Iâll speak to your CO and see what we can figure out,â Boss said firmly, such durasteel in his tone that the troopers straightened, looking uncertain. They didnât walk away, however, and the reason why was apparent only a moment later when an imposing figure approached you.Â
âCommander Wolffe,â Boss greeted with a salute.Â
âSergeant,â the commander returned. Like his men, he wasnât wearing a helmet. His bare face was stern, the harshness of it accentuated by the wicked-looking scar over one eye. The helmet tucked beneath one arm was painted to look like some kind of animal and his posture was precise.Â
Commander Wolffe looked like a man who had little patience, and that impression was only solidified when he asked, âWhy are you giving orders to my men?âÂ
âPermission to speak freely, sir,â Boss requested. With a glance at the men still standing nearby, he added, âAnd privately.â
Wolffe gave a slow nod, eyes traveling to the men behind you. They watched him eagerly and his voice was sharp as he said, âDis-missed.â
You had never seen a group disperse so quickly.
âYour men were harassing a member of my squad,â Boss reported, removing his helmet so the other man could see the disapproval on his face. âWe can all deal with jokes, but I canât stand by and let my people be physically pushed around.âÂ
The commanderâs gaze moved to you, critically assessing you in a way that made you want to shift uncomfortably. âTake your helmet off.âÂ
With your eyes hidden behind plastoid and transparisteel, you had no idea how Boss knew that you had looked at him for confirmation, but you were grateful for his subtle nod anyway. As soon as you had your sergeantâs approval, you broke the seal on your helmet and lifted it free.Â
The air on Isiring was cool at best, far from cold, but it felt frigid on your face after being confined in the helmet for so long. You took a deep breath, straightened your spine, and made eye contact with Commander Wolffe.Â
âThis must be your first mission,â he said cryptically. You had a moment of panic, wondering what you had done so wrong that he knew you were - as Scorch said - a shiny, but a corner of Wolffeâs mouth lifted in a wry smile. âOtherwise, I would have heard about this already.â
You looked helplessly at Boss, searching for a hint about what to do next, but he looked as amused as the commander. Without any further leads, you let your manners take over. You held a hand out toward Commander Wolffe, introducing yourself as he shook it with a firm grip. âIâm a specialist assigned to work with Delta Squad.âÂ
âCommander Wolffe, leader of the 104th battalion,â he offered in return. âWe donât get many females out here, especially not attached to commando squads. If the men get stupid, come find me.âÂ
âI- will,â you stammered. âThank you, sir.âÂ
Wolffe released your hand and nodded at Boss. âSergeant.âÂ
âCommander.âÂ
And then the commander walked away. Your embarrassment, having faded during the semi-normal conversation, flared back to life as you caught sight of the dozen wide-eyed troopers watching you from the edges of the camp. You jammed the helmet back on your head and looked down at the datapad, frantically moving to catch up with the droid workers who were waiting for additional commands.Â
âHey.âÂ
You glanced up, attention caught by the urgency in Bossâs tone. âYes?âÂ
âWe have more work to do on the ship, but weâre on the same HUD loop,â he reminded. âIf you have any more problems, shout âem out. Weâll come take care of it.âÂ
âThank you, Sergeant,â you told him, but you felt yourself slump as he walked away. Half an hour on the ground and youâd already needed a rescue and caused a tense interaction between your commanding officer and the leader of the relief camp. It wasnât an auspicious start.
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Author's Note - I am so sorry, guys. I knew it had been a while since I last updated, but I missed that it's been EIGHT MONTHS. I post a chapter of a fic every week across my accounts (or, at least, I try), but I don't have a firm schedule about which fics get updated when.
Thank you all for your patience, assuming that anyone is still interested in this story. I can't promise that I'll start posting it super often, but I'm sure I can do better than once a year!
#refuge#refuge fic#star wars#star wars republic commando#star wars legends#star wars the clone wars#star wars fanfiction#delta squad#reader insert#reader insert fic#delta squad x fem!reader#delta squad x you#slow burn#boss#sergeant boss#fixer#scorch#sev#ink's fics#clone troopers deserve better#more to come
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Refuge Chapter Seven
You have a little time to kill before your first mission. Delta Squad has very different ideas of how you should spend it.
Continued slow burn Delta Squad x fem!reader
Word Count: 6,600
Warnings: feelings of alienation, mentions of lack of money, misunderstandings, light discussion of weapons and battle tactics, slight embarrassment.
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When Scorch had mentioned finding a fun way to spend time planetside, he had apparently meant it literally. He and Sev walked you to the front entrance to the Temple and unceremoniously led the way outside.Â
Scorch had already started walking away, chattering about places he enjoyed, when you stepped through the towering doors. You paused when you were out, taking a moment to adjust to the differences between what you were used to and what you actually found on Coruscant.
To be fair, those differences were hardly surprising. Coruscant was densely populated and heavily polluted. The outside air wouldnât feel fresh, cool and faintly scented with pine needles like you were accustomed to on Voubos. But you were never ready for the hot, semi-stagnant waft tinged with the exhaust of innumerable speeders flying overhead.
More than the disappointing atmosphere, Coruscant was overwhelming, so bright your eyes stung to look around. Voubos could be noisy and had its fair share of sunshine, but there were no trees to shelter you from it here. The street outside the Jedi Temple was one of the few that hadnât been choked by buildings, and it left the sun beating down on the duracrete expanse where you stood. The vicious light was blocked only by the occasional shadow of a speeder passing overhead, like a less-pleasant version of the clouds that performed the same function back home.Â
And none of it was silent. The speeder engines were noisy, the people were noisy. Everything was undercut by the rumble of far-off machinery and the drone of hovering screens broadcasting the most recent Senate debate. It was loud enough that you almost didnât register the sound of someone speaking directly to you.Â
âWhatâs wrong?âÂ
Sevâs harsh voice managed to cut through the stimuli surrounding you. You shook your head. âIâm still getting used to all of this..â
âYou came here from the GAR headquarters,â he countered, frowning. âAnd you tailed us from there again today.â
âCommander Gree brought us in a transport the first time and I was too scared to see anything more than a blur,â you explained, still transfixed by the chaos surrounding you. âWhen I found you earlier, I was focused. I had something to get done. And nowâŚâ
âNow, you donât have a mission to concentrate on,â Sev summarized.Â
You grimaced. âExactly. Iâm sorry, I know I must seem⌠Iâm sorry.â
Sev shook his head. âRemind me later and Iâll tell you about my first time on a planet other than Kamino.â
âWhy not now?â you asked.Â
âFirst, I donât want to scare you,â he said ominously. Then he nodded behind you. âSecond, weâre about to have company.â
Before you could wonder about the second part of that, Scorch came jogging up to the two of you. âWhatâs going on? I thought you were following me.â
âJust taking a minute to look around,â Sev told him.Â
âWeâve all been here before, Sev,â Scorch reminded, exasperation in his face and voice. âNo need to play tour guide.â
Sev - standing slightly behind you - must have made some kind of face at Scorch, who abruptly changed his stance. âOr, I suppose there might be a little need to play tour guide. But Iâm the much better choice for it.â
He beckoned you closer and you obligingly followed him to the edge of one of the regular gaps that provided entrance to the lower levels. Scorch gestured toward it, though it was partially hidden behind the utilitarian fences that kept passers-by from getting too close. âDo you know whatâs down there?â
With a smile at his hushed, conspiratorial tone, you nodded. âItâs another level. I understand there are five thousand of them.â
âOh,â Scorch said, seeming to deflate slightly.Â
Sev laughed at his brother, joining you in staring toward the fence-flanked space. âFive thousand plus a few, but yeah. I take it you did some research about the planet?â
You nodded. âBut there are a few things I still donât really understand.âÂ
âLike what?â Sev asked.Â
âHow do they make sure the levels are tall enough?â you asked, feeling utterly ridiculous. But the question had been bothering you, and this was a good opportunity to get some answers. âDo they just base the height of the ceilings on the tallest known species and go from there? Or are different levels different heights?â
Sev was staring at you blankly, which made you more nervous, but Scorch tipped his head back with a look of understanding. âAhh, I get it. Youâre thinking too small, nattie. Levels arenât just for beings to walk around on. Each one is big enough to have buildings and speeder lanes and stuff. Thereâs no need to base them on specific heights.â
âTheyâre that big?â you asked, feeling suddenly queasy with vertigo. It was strange, fearing heights with your feet planted firmly on the ground, but you were also cognizant of the fact that you were far, far from the surface of the planet itself.
Scorch nodded sagely. âYep. And each one has more species than you can count calling it home.â
âYou good?â Sev asked, fingertips grazing your elbow lightly.Â
You were gaping, you knew it. When you spoke, your voice was hushed and a little unsteady. âHow are there any people left to live on other planets?â
âThere are plenty more people in the galaxy,â Sev told you, amusement filling his deep voice. âTrust me, weâre fighting about half of âem.â
âYouâre just not used to seeing this many life-forms,â Scorch informed you. âThis is the most heavily populated planet in the galaxy. Your planet wasnât anything compared to this.â
You hadnât thought about Voubos very often since you had started training with the Jedi. Still, it was jarring to hear someone mention it, especially so casually. It made you feel like your life was a statistic, an incidental casualty almost too small to be counted. Not even - your life hadnât been lost or taken, simply changed. You werenât even significant enough to be a statistic.
Suddenly, you felt dizzy again, overwhelmed by something so much larger than yourself. But this time, instead of the planetâs population, the feeling had been brought on by the staggering largeness of the war.Â
The only thing that brought you out of it was an unexpected noise. The sound could only be described as the sound of a plastoid-covered hand striking a plastoid-covered chest. It was followed shortly by a growl from Sev. âShut up, diâkut.âÂ
âSorry,â Scorch muttered. âI forgot natties are sentimental about that kind of thing.â
âItâs okay.â They both looked skeptical about your reassurance, but you smiled and changed the subject before they could add anything else. âSo, what are we going to do? Did you have a plan for what you want to see today?â
âWhatever you wanna see,â Scorch told you with a shrug. âExplore as much as you want.â
Sev nodded. âWeâre only here to make sure you arenât attacked. Or fall off a building.â
That low opinion of your survival skills aside, you were warmed by the thoughtfulness and started off in a direction you decided looked promising.Â
The time you spent on Coruscant took on a strange quality. Everything you saw was wonderful, every experience unlike any other you had ever had before. But, looking back, you could hardly catch more than a blur.Â
You saw shops filled with goods both familiar and utterly mystifying. The streets were packed to bursting with beings, many of them belonging to species you had never seen before. Street performers playing strange instruments tried to entice passers-by to dance while stern, armored troopers ordered them to keep moving.Â
You couldn't help sneaking a glance at the red and white helmet as you walked past. Both the Republic and the Separatist Alliance had distributed propaganda on Voubos, so they weren't unfamiliar to you. But you hadn't realized how imposing they would be with their blankly watching visors and the blasters strapped to their thigh plates.
With your focus so close on one trooper, you completely missed another standing on the opposite side of the path. Unfortunately, your lack of attention meant that you bumped into him, swiping him with your shoulder.Â
He didnât move in the slightest except to look down at you. In contrast, the slight collision had sent you staggering and you offered apologies even as you tried to recover your balance.Â
âWatch yourself, civilian,â the trooper ordered. You couldnât see his expression, but his tone managed to be disdainful even through the small speakers of his helmet.Â
âDidnât you hear her say âsorryâ?â Sev asked, his deep voice lashing out from behind you.Â
âAnd thatâs more than you deserve, diâkut,â Scorch told him dismissively. âAnyone could see it was an accident.â
The trooper bristled, taking an aggressive half-step forward. âHey, just because youâre-â
âDrop it,â the other trooper advised through the crowd. âNot worth the paperwork.â
The closer trooper looked Scorch and Sev up and down. He didnât bother including you in that. Seemingly to himself, he muttered, âCommandos.â
âWhat was that?â Sev asked.Â
If Sev took things any further, it was going to get physical. If it got physical, Scorch would join in. If Scorch joined in, it would be a brawl. Would you be pulled off of working with Delta Squad if half of them started a brawl with the Coruscant Guard? Instinct told you yes, but the Republic was short-staffed⌠But you werenât taking any chances.
âSorry again,â you called loudly, cutting off whatever else anyone might say. Your push against Scorchâs shoulder wasnât gentle, but it was effective. Sev was more of a challenge, and you ended up bracing both hands between his shoulder blades and shoving. It wasnât at all effective, but he let you move him. âWeâll just be on our way!â
The moment you had gotten through the press of the small crowd, Sev let out a string of blistering curses in an unfamiliar language. You watched in something like awe while Scorch gave you an amused look. When Sev had finished, Scorch asked, âFeeling any better?â
âNo,â Sev grumbled. âI should have hit him.â
âI donât think any of us are interested in seeing the inside of a Corrie Guard holding cell,â Scorch said lightly. âWhatâs next?â
As the second part of that had been directed at you, you glanced around. âIâm not sure. Are either of you getting hungry?â
Sev gave you a look you couldnât quite figure out until Scorch added, âAlways.â
You were, as well. âWell, something smells fantastic! I think itâs coming from over hereâŚâ
A nearby stand was offering street food, roasted meat and hunks of bread paired with a variety of sauces for dipping either into. The worker standing there belonged to a species you couldnât name, though you had seen some of them around. They had a humanoid build with green, leathery skin. Their face had folds and curves that made you think their bone structure was slightly different than that of humans, but similar enough to know that they were offering a polite smile.
âLooking for something in particular?â The low tone and roughness of the workerâs voice made you think they were male, but there was no way to know for sure without asking, and that would have been inexcusably rude.
âIt all looks incredible,â you told them, flashing a smile between staring at the array of foods spread out on the standâs preparation surface.
âOnly the best at Kiabaâs.â It was always risky trying to interpret the facial expressions of humanoid species, but from the clear pride that shone from their bearing, you assumed that you were speaking with the very Kiaba who owned the stand.Â
You wanted to get a closer look at the food, but before you could take more than a step, Scorch had caught at your elbow. He leaned close, and for a wild moment, you thought he was going to kiss your cheek.Â
He didnât, of course. His lips ended up a scant distance from your ear instead, keeping Kiaba from overhearing. âWe donât have any credits, and this side of the city isnât too willing to give their goods away.â
âEspecially Klatoonians,â Sev added, half-turning away from Kiaba, who was watching you curiously from behind the standâs main counter. âThe culture believes in the value of hard work, but they take it to extremes. They consider any charity to be stealing someoneâs chance to earn something the right way.â
You sent Kiaba a regretful smile. âIâm sorry, Iâve just been informed that we donât have any credits.â
The professional half-smile that had stretched Kiabaâs lips disappeared in an instant as they scowled. âNo handouts.â
âOf course not,â Scorch muttered, definitely loud enough for Kiaba to hear. Their scowl deepened and they leaned forward as if they were half-thinking about jumping over the workstation to beat some sense into an upstart customer.
So you cut in, avoiding Sev's attempt to stop you. "Sorry about the confusion! While we're talking, though, can you tell me what that dish is. The one right⌠there?"Â
You gestured to something that looked like a pocket of dough, crimped at the edges, with hints of a warm orange seeping through in certain spots. It looked like a normal piece of dough, other than the spots, but it smelled of deep spices and roasted vegetables.Â
Kiaba shook their head. "I can't take time outta my day to explain my menu to people who aren't even gonna buy something. I have paying customers."
"Where?" Scorch challenged. "We're the closest thing you have to customers within a five-klick radius!"
To Scorchâs credit, that was true. The area in front of Kiabaâs stand wasnât empty - the size of the city made that nearly impossible - but no one seemed compelled to look at the food, much less stop.Â
âOf course you donât have to talk with us if youâre busy,â you assured. âI just want to understand it to see if I can find something similar in the future when I do have some credits.â
âYouâd never find anything like my tisuh,â Kiaba told you, their tone a mixture of irritation and pride. âThere are others who make it, but no one who does it as well as I do.â
You nodded, offering an encouraging smile. Kiaba watched you suspiciously before heaving a loud sigh. They beckoned you closer, dishing up one of the dough pockets so you could examine it more closely against the light brown of a simple disposable plate.Â
âTisuh is found many places in the galaxy,â they explained. âIt is dough wrapped around a filling. There are as many kinds of tisuh as there are people who make it. Everyone has their own recipes, but the best one is found on Klatooine, where Iâm from. My forebears have been making this dish for thousands of years, for millions of people. Wherever I amâŚâ Kiaba took a bite of the pale round, showing you the orange-sauced filling inside as they chewed and gave a blissful tilt of their head, âit always reminds me of home.â
The watering of your mouth halted as you wondered what would remind you of Voubos. Everything, you expected, but you still managed a nod for Kiaba. âThatâs lovely. Iâm happy you have such a strong tie to things that bring you joy.â
âWhereâs home for you?â they asked, taking another bite of food.Â
âNowhere, not anymore,â you admitted softly. âIâm looking for a new one.â
The green-skinned being finished chewing and watched you silently. You held their gaze, waiting to hear more about their tie to the tisuh or be told to leave, but Kiaba sighed again. They set their half-eaten food aside, deposited two more tisuh onto a new plate, and held it out to you. âYou might as well have a full stomach while you look.â
The smile that spread across your face was instant and - you could feel it - delighted. It was nice to be reminded that there were kind and generous beings in the galaxy, no matter how rare they seemed. âThank you, Kiaba. I appreciate it.â
From behind you, there came the sound of a throat being pointedly cleared. Kiaba rolled their dark eyes. âI guess I can spare a few for your friends.â
âI appreciate that, too,â you told them with a slow nod to show your gratitude. âAs do my friends.â
It took a stern look from you to prompt Scorch and Sev into thanks, which were muttered without an ounce of sincerity. Kiaba seemed unconvinced, but the astonishment you felt when you took your first bite of tisuh brought something almost prideful to their expression.
The dough was tender and delicate, falling away to reveal a filling that seemed to be made up of mostly vegetables. They were tender, with just enough variation in texture for you to recognize that the filling had several different kinds of vegetables in it. All of them had been stewed in a thick sauce that was toward the upper limit of your spice tolerance, but the heat was dampened slightly by the coolness of the bready dough that had surrounded the filling.
âThisâŚâ you started, pausing for a moment while your brain tried to choose between speech and shoving more food into your mouth. âKiaba, this is incredible!âÂ
âI know,â Kiaba told you with the closest thing you had seen to a smile on their face.Â
You returned to inhaling your tisuh. Sev and Scorch were silent, but you could tell that they also liked the food by the speed they were eating. Even so, your plate was the first one empty and you disposed of it in a nearby waste receptacle.Â
âMy apologies for my friends,â you told Kiaba, earning a glare from Scorch. Sev ignored you entirely. âI can see why you were worried about a sudden flood of customers. Iâm not sure how you have any tisuh that hasnât been purchased already, but I thank you for sharing the excess with us. Your kindness is most appreciated.â
Kiaba waved you away. âBeen kinda slow today, actually. Lucky for you all.â
Scorch appeared over your shoulder, peering down toward your hands. âDo you have any youâre not going to-? Oh, youâre already finished. You know, most females wouldnât have been able to eat all of that.â
âWell, most females donât have Kiabaâs excellent tisuh to motivate them,â you countered. âI think thatâs the best thing Iâve ever eaten!â
A dozen or so passersby glanced over at you curiously at the fervent praise. Some came to look at Kiabaâs selection of foods, and you were amused to see that a small line formed as you watched.Â
Kiaba glanced from the line to you, their dark eyes traveling to Sev next. They pointed a stubby green finger at Scorch and Sev. âYou two keep this to yourselves. Iâm not running a clone charity. This was a one-time thing. I donât want to see clones coming around here asking for handouts.â
âYeah, yeah,â Sev muttered while Scorch made a rude gesture behind him. Fortunately, Kiaba was too busy tending to the line to pay much attention to their antics, and you managed to pull the commandos away before they could say anything else.Â
The three of you walked in silence for a while, but it started to grow uncomfortable. You rubbed your stomach and let out a contented sigh. âThat was great.â
Sev nodded. âBetter than the usual stuff.â
That made you remember to ask what you should have asked earlier. âSo you guys donât have any credits at all? How do you eat when youâre on Coruscant?â
âGAR mess hall,â Sev told you. âOr thereâs a civvie place nearby that gives clones food occasionally. Some sympathizer. Feels bad for us.â
âOh.â There seemed to be very few responses to that, but you ventured, âNice?â
âYeah, but it can get a little old,â Scorch said. âWe donât mind eating the same food over and over - ration barsâll train you right up for that - but itâs nice to have something different now and then.â
You nodded understandingly. Anyone would get tired of the same food over and over again. âThatâs valid. Even if itâs charity, that doesnât mean you need to want it all the time.â
When Sev spoke, it was so sudden that he interrupted whatever Scorch had intended to say. âHow much of that was Jedi osik?â
Scorchâs protests cut off and you felt the weight of their scrutiny on your face. All you could offer was the truth. âIâm not really sure.â
âI thought you learned to control it,â Scorch said.Â
âI am, itâs- itâs a long process,â you reminded them both. âItâs hard to know when Iâm using the Force, because Iâve spent my whole life thinking it was just part of who I am and how I relate to people.â
The silence was deafening - which was a trick, considering the sheer number of people surrounding you as you walked through the city streets - until it was broken by Scorch. He sounded unusually serious, enough so that you actually looked over at him. âNever use that on us. Just⌠donât.â
âI wonât,â you assured him instantly, stung by the insinuation that you would try to make them do something by force rather than conversation or negotiation.Â
âYou might not know, though, right?â Sev pointed out.Â
â...Right,â you agreed, voice quiet. You hated to admit it, but you refused to lie to them. There was every chance you wouldnât be able to recognize when you were influencing their will.Â
The silence that fell between the three of you was tense. When Scorch suggested that you go back to the GARâs barracks, you didnât argue.Â
When you arrived at the barracks, Boss and Fixer were waiting for you.Â
âAbout time,â Fixer grumbled. âI knew Six-Two couldnât read a chronometer, but I thought better of you, Oh-Seven.â
âShove it, Fixer,â Scorch retorted. âWeâre not on a mission. And fifteen extra minutes is nothing in civvie time.â
âCâmon, we have places to be,â Boss ordered, offering only a brief nod to Scorch and Sev. He gestured for you to follow him as he walked away.Â
You glanced at the others. Sevâs expression was blank while Scorchâs was an amused mask. Fixer started walking in the direction Boss had gone, tilting his head for you to come along.
Gradually, the signage told you that you were approaching the armory. Every door you passed was just like every other, a gray door set in a gray wall. They were double the width of a standard door, leaving no hint about what lay behind or what typically was transported in or out. When you finally stopped, Boss had to enter a code into a control panel set into the wall and scan a spot on his arm before the door would open. From the noise it made while it slid, it was heavier than normal - most likely armored to withstand any attempts to break in. Even then, you entered into a narrow, shallow hallway that led directly to another door with the same control panel and scanner. Boss opened that armored door as well and you entered the room.
When you stepped through, you were taken aback by the sheer size of the armory. Just ahead of you was a waiting area, complete with hard durasteel benches set into the walls for people to sit while they awaited their chance to speak with the clerk. The clerkâs desk was set behind another wall - though this one did not reach the towering ceiling. It was guarded by a transparisteel barrier that looked resistant to blaster fire, though there was a speaker set into it so people could speak to the clerk.Â
Behind the clerkâs chair, you could see rows of doorways holding different types of weapons. Each entrance was covered by a ray shield. There were shelves in the middle of the space that held the additional necessities - everything from kamas to harnesses that would support heavy weapons for the wearer - and at the back of the room, you could see a practice range. There was more around the edges of the space, you were sure, but it was hidden by the half-wall and the clerk was beckoning you forward.Â
You took a nervous step toward the human male - definitely not a clone, you noted, but a GAR employee - but Boss approached with more confidence. âI need to outfit a new member of my squad.â
âOkay, that doesnât help me much,â the clerk told him. âWhat is your designation? What is your squadâs designation? What is the new trooperâs designation?â
âRC-1138, Delta Squad, and she doesnât have a designation.â
The clerk blinked at the resolution of Bossâs answers. âShe? You have a non-clone addition to a commando squad?âÂ
âYes, we do,â Fixer said, ushering you forward. âApproved by the Jedi Council. Generals Yoda, Windu, and Unduli in particular.â
The clerk still looked a little stunned, even when he was looking directly at you, so you helpfully supplied your name. He shook his head in resignation. âYouâre going to have to wait while I get this cleared.â
âFine,â Boss agreed, stopping you when you started toward one of the benches in the empty waiting area.Â
âYouâll probably be more comfortable over there,â the clerk said.Â
âWeâll just wait here,â Fixer countered, leaning slightly against the counter and watching the clerk steadily.Â
There was no way to know for certain how quickly the clerk would have moved without being stared at by two no-nonsense commandos and one mildly confused Force-sensitive woman, but he was able to contact someone in moments. After a short conversation with a superior who sounded decidedly grumpy to be asked for clearance, the clerk motioned you over to a door set into the wall that divided the waiting area from the rest of the armory.Â
When it opened, Boss led the way in and Fixer followed you. The clerk gave all three of you a skeptical look. âThe droids will help you from here. I assume you know where everything is?â
âYes,â Boss said shortly.Â
âThank you!â you chirped, unable to fight the urge to be polite.Â
Boss glanced back at you with a slight lift of his eyebrows, but didnât say anything as he led the way toward a specific part of the room.
âDonât thank him,â Fixer told you. He didnât lower his voice in the slightest and you cringed at the idea of the clerk overhearing him, but the man had gone back to his desk and was now scrolling through a datapad. âHe did nothing but slow us down.â
âHe let us in the door,â you argued.Â
âSlowly,â Fixer snorted. âI could have sliced in faster than it took him to open it.â
"When you two are finished," Boss started, his even tone holding an edge of impatience, "I'd like to get this done."
With that said, he turned and tapped a droid that began to power up.Â
You had gotten more familiar with the variety of droids that helped everyday life run more smoothly in the Republic, but you certainly didn't know all of them. You leaned closer to Fixer. "What kind of droid is it?"Â
"An RMR, second generation," he told you. "They're pretty rare. The GAR is the only legal user in the galaxy."
As soon as the droid was fully upright, Boss shoved his arm in front of its sensors. "I need armor for my new squad member."Â
The droid scanned Boss's arm with a flickering reddish light, then trained its sensors on his face. "The records indicate that the new attachment to Delta Squad, led by RC-1138, is a human female. The approval was issued by the Jedi Council. Do you need armor for a Jedi?"Â
"Yes," Boss decided. As the RMR droid whirred toward one of the shelves, he gave a wordless shrug over one shoulder, offering that by way of an explanation to you and Fixer.Â
The droid came back, holding a small stack of plates in its metallic arms. Boss accepted them with noticeable disgust. "What is this?"Â
"Armor for a Jedi," RMR explained. "Most Jedi choose to wear small amounts of armor to facilitate easier movement around the battlefield. The blaster-resistant undertunics are provided by the Jedi Temple, but I could check to see what we have in stockâŚ"Â
âAbsolutely not,â Boss refused. The droid, having already started to move away, turned just in time to catch the plates it had just handed Boss. The sergeant was shaking his head with thinly veiled irritation. âNo Jedi of ours is going to walk around unarmored. I want a full set for her, tailored to her specs.â
You tried to keep a straight face, but you were unreasonably warmed by the casual sense of belonging that Boss had offered. You werenât even a Jedi, really, but Delta Squad had offered you a place in the galaxy where you could fit in. And you would apparently fit in there for a long time, if Boss had anything to say about it.
âSergeant, a full set of armor is heavy,â RMR objected. âWearing it may decrease her ability to maneuver around a battlefield. That is the reasoning behind most Jedi wearing sparser armor-â
âAnd thatâs their choice,â Boss agreed. âBut I wonât have someone on my squad who would be taken out by ricochet blaster fire. Let us worry about her maneuverability.â
RMR droids clearly had not been designed to sigh, but if it had the ability, you would bet that RMR would have done so. Instead, it settled for a heavy silence before replacing the plates Boss had handed back.Â
âBoss,â you started quietly, trying to disguise the emotion in your voice. You didnât know exactly how you were going to thank him for looking out for you, but you needed to tell him. Especially in the wake of Scorch and Sevâs subtle step back after your earlier meal. âI-â
âNo complaints,â he told you harshly. The surprise of it kept you from protesting aloud, but he seemed to take your silence for offense, because he gave a small sigh. You watched his shoulders move with it before he angled his head to see you in his peripheral vision. âI know it seems like too much, but-â
âThank you,â you interrupted.Â
You could only see Bossâs face in profile, but you watched the eyebrow you could see shoot upward in surprise. Before he could answer, the RMR droid returned. This time, it was carrying a much larger stack of plastoid plates.Â
The feeling you got at the sight was a surprise to you. Those were yours - or, they would be once they had been sized properly. It would be your way to start repaying the debt you owed these men. Delta Squad had saved your life, and this pile of plastoid would protect that life while you worked to help them.Â
RMR was apparently not happy with any of you, and it dumped the armor into Bossâs arms. Boss caught most of it, but Fixer had to snag a few pieces out of the air. Then RMR handed you a piece of slinky black material.Â
âWhat is this?â you asked, holding it up and puzzling at the shapeless fall of fabric.
There was a beat of uncomfortable silence, broken only by a mutter from Fixer. âBody glove.â
Ah.Â
The next hour was among the most embarrassing of your life. Republic technology was at least good enough to keep the fabric from becoming sheer as it stretched over certain places, but there were no secrets in the body glove. Every bump and curve and swell of your figure was blatantly visible.
It was bad enough when you confronted yourself in the long, narrow mirror in the changing room, but Boss and Fixer clearly noticed the places where the fabric strained to contain you. It became a game of ignorance, everyone aware of it, but no one saying anything.Â
Fortunately, the nature of your task meant that you slowly got more covered up as time passed. Pieces of plastoid armor locked into place, each one held firm against you by a system of electromagnets. You had wondered how the armor worked, and you were thrilled to find that the electromagnetism was activated when the plates touched different sections of a flexible wiring worked into your body glove.
You had to swap several pieces of armor, working closely with RMR as you sized up and down to collect a full set that fit your body. By the time you finished, you were sweating. (You had to wipe it away with your palm, since the back of your hand was protected by a gauntlet.)
âDoing okay?â Fixer asked, approaching with the helmet you had been eying almost as long as you had been trying on armor.Â
âYeah,â you confirmed with a sheepish look. âThis really is heavy. More than I expected.â
Boss nodded. âWeâll do most of your training in it to build your strength. The relief mission weâre about to go on wonât require speed, but wearing it will keep you safe while you get used to it.â
âI canât say Iâm looking forward to it, but I think itâs a good idea.â
As soon as you had agreed, Fixer handed you the helmet. âLast piece.â
You raised the helmet and slid it over your head. The seal at the bottom of the helmet pulled at your scalp, then at the sensitive skin of your face as it lowered further and further before it settled into place. When the helmet seal met the neck of your body glove, the helmetâs HUD flickered to life.Â
Your breath caught at the way information was augmenting everything you could see. You had assumed that the helmet would limit your sight and hearing, but that wasnât the case at all. In fact, the only sense that suffered was smell.Â
The viewport allowed you to see everything around you while the HUD gave you information about everything outside your field of vision, synced to where your eyes traveled. The speakers of the helmet were incredible as well, bringing sounds inside while also allowing your sound of surprise to travel outward.
Fixer grinned and Boss gave a soft chuckle - both of which were presented with perfect clarity by the helmet.Â
âI remember that first time seeing the galaxy through a helmet,â Fixer said, sounding a little wistful.Â
âWeâll probably turn down some of the HUD features until you get used to it,â Boss offered. âAnd then you can sort through it all and choose what you want to keep.â
âCan I keep all of it?â you asked. âItâs incredible!â
âYou wonât want to see everything,â Fixer warned you. âEspecially not when youâre in combat. Youâll want the necessities - nothing more, nothing less.â
âIf all members of your squad are fully armored, I must request that you leave the armory,â RMR informed you all, appearing once more. You werenât surprised, though. The HUD had warned you of an incoming droid even with RMR approaching from behind you.Â
âWeâll be on our way in a minute, droid,â Boss told it. He turned to Fixer. âGo check our ship for tomorrow. Make sure everything is loaded and that systems are set for a smooth mission. You know what to look for.â
Fixer nodded and - with a final glance at you - left the armory. Boss held a hand out in your direction. You glanced at it, then at him, but he couldnât see your confused frown under the cover of protective plastoid.
After a moment, he said, âGive me your helmet. Iâll hold it while you change back into your clothes.â
Ah. At least you hadnât done anything mortifying, like taking his hand. Even so, your face was hot as you removed the helmet and handed it to him. Your retreat to the changing area may have been a little faster than it would have been otherwise, but that could be for any number of reasons.Â
When you reappeared, Boss gave you a medium-sized pack. âTo carry the armor.â
You nodded and knelt to pack the plates of armor. By far the bulkiest piece was the chestplate, but it wasnât impossible to carry. The body glove folded down smaller than you could believe, especially now that you knew there was an electromagnetic system hidden in the fabricâs weave.
You stood and slung the pack over your shoulders. It took a moment to adjust your balance, but the weight didnât seem quite so bad with it supported by your shoulder. Boss handed you the helmet once more. âIâve already signed everything out, so weâre good to go. Just remember that everything is owned by the GAR. They donât care if you customize it, but not in any way that purposely damages it.âÂ
âGot it,â you said with a nod. âAnything else I should know?â
âNo, but thereâs something I should,â Boss countered. âWhatâs wrong?â
You blinked in surprise, walking behind him as you left the armory. âI donât know what youâre talking about. Nothing is wrong.â
Boss sighed through his nose, a sound filled with more disappointment than irritation. âI wouldnât have asked if I didnât want a real answer. What is it?âÂ
You took a moment to think it over, but Boss apparently thought you didnât intend to say anything at all. With a grave look, he said, âIâll make it an order if I have to.â
With that mild threat hanging over you, telling the truth seemed to be your best option. You told him what had happened at Kiabaâs, and the way Scorch and Sev had reacted to you afterward.
âIt makes sense and I understand where theyâre coming from,â you hastened to add. âIâm just worried theyâre never going to trust me. But I know none of us knew everything before we agreed to have me work for you and Iâm not going to be offended if you feel the same way. Itâs hard to-â
âI donât.â
The simple denial made you abruptly cut off your tirade. Despite the trickle of relief running through you, the only question you had was: âWhy?â
Boss shrugged. âThe Force isnât much different from getting an order. You feel like you should follow it, but nothing can completely take over your free will. Not unless youâre a complete diâkut.â
âHow do you know?â you asked. It seemed stupid to question things when they seemed to be going your way, but you couldnât help it.
âSomeone had us made,â Boss pointed out. âIf the Force could make people follow something without question, they wouldnât need a clone army, they would need a rogue Jedi. Besides, Dooku would do that to make an army for the Seppies. Instead, theyâre spending fortunes on their clankers.â
For the life of you, you couldnât think of an answer to that. When you kept walking beside him in open-mouthed silence, Boss caught your look and shrugged again. âItâs a working theory, but I thought it over before I ever agreed to have you join us.â
âYouâre smarter than I could ever dream of being,â you told him, hearing the awe in your own voice.Â
âNah, Iâm just used to thinking around what the jetii do,â he countered. âDonât worry about Sev and Scorch. Theyâll get over it soon enough. Right now, you need to focus on the mission. We meet in the hangar bay at oh-five-hundred hours. Get some sleep before then.â
---
Author's Note - Uh, oh. A little awkwardness with Scorch and Sev! I'm STILL working my way through the Republic Commando book series, and I feel like troopers (especially Delta) would have trouble with the idea of their scraps of free will being taken away by someone, even if they like and trust that person.
This chapter was supposed to be posted a week ago, but Thanksgiving was crazy and internet access was sparse. Sorry for the delay and thank you for your patience. Thank you for reading!
#refuge#refuge fic#star wars#star wars the clone wars#star wars republic commando#delta squad#star wars legends#star wars fanfiction#star wars reader insert#reader insert#delta squad x reader#delta squad x fem!reader#delta squad x you#slow burn#boss#fixer#scorch#sev#ink's fics#clone troopers deserve better#more to come
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The Prime Override - Chapter 59 is up!
Jango - The Afterlife
I'm back! It's been...2 months since my last update, which is the longest break I've taken from this fic ;_;
STILL, eventual update is better than nothing! I hope! It's a decently long chapter, I hope it satisfies!
In many ways, itâs deeply fitting. The discarded clones, living off of the discarded scraps of the GAR. And the individual who had encouraged Jango to find a life outside of huntingâŚtaking in the souls who had been left discarded by his actions. âWelcome to the Afterlife, a way station for the dead,â Trapper drawls, flopping his hand towards the incredible structure, even as he eyes Jango warily, gauging his reaction.
> > Read Ch 59 on AO3
#ThePrimeOverride#YukiPri writes#AO3#Jango Fett#star wars legends#gosh had a rough time getting this out#i really did wonder if i'd burned out and that's all there was gonna be for this fic#but here we are#rocky start but rollin' again?
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Proof these two should never meet
Should they ever, the heat death of the universe would be imminent
#star guardian zoe#sg zoe#zoe league of legends#rio ranger#toto noel#yttd ranger#crossover fanart#idk why I drew this#there was no goal in mind I just wanted to see my two sillies watch the world burn#now I need them to be friends permanently (ignore the title of this post)
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Couldn't fight the urges so I put my interests into a blender and made another AU that I'm probably not gonna touch again so here's admiral autism but as a Twili. I am cringe but I am free
The darker patches on his skin are meant to be shaped like his Grand Admiral's uniform, but for everything else I just kinda drew stuff until something worked. I might make a more fleshed out backstory for him at some point but right now he got exiled from his tribe (for war crimes, of course) and somehow got flung out of the twilight realm but is still weirdly obsessed with helping the other Twili even though they hate him
#drawing Twili is surprisingly hard. Glad this fucker gave me an excuse to burn those complicated ass markings off of his chest#Aroace has a question mark next to it because I don't know if I'll be able to resist adding in homoerotic subtext#legend of zelda#loz Twili#loz au#star wars#star wars rebels#grand admiral thrawn
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đAugust 2024 Book Review (Part 1/4)đ
I had soooo much free time in August! Heatwaves meant every outdoor activities were out of the question. There was nothing to do at work outside of my 2 4-hours shift either. I ended up reading a good 8 to 12 hours a day, hence the 16 books of this months review!
La Forteresse du Chaudron Noir (Les Aventures du Pyro-barbare et de Billy #1) by Bob Lennon
Billy is a young farmer in a village decimated by disease. After his mother dies he sets out to the city unaware that an ancient evil was on the rise. Now accompanied by a goliath, Billy will have to use his wits and strength to defeat the terrible power hidden within the fortress. YOU are Billy!
When I was a kid I LOVED Choose Your Own Adventure books! They were fun, novelty, and always had a ton of different characters and places to interact with. I liked the "game" aspect of them as much as the "book" aspect. But after some time you explored every available path and getting the "good" ending was more muscle memory than puzzle solving, the replay value of kid CYOA was generally low.
Now enter Bob Lennon! Most of you won't know him but he is one of the biggest french video game youtuber. He's been on the platform since 2011 and has still the same workaholic energy. He created his own character inspired by Skyrim who is a Fire Barbarian named Le Pyrobarbare and his sidekick Billy. He is also a TTRPG fan.
That was a very long introduction to say that he created his own CYOA book series that are inspired by those characters and have a big TTRPG dynamic to them and THEY. ARE. INCREDIBLE.
It all start with a character creation system: you will always play Billy the farmer but you can choose between a collection of objects and whichever you chose decide which type of Billy you are: warlike, rustic, resourceful or cautious. And all of this influences which decisions you can or can't make. And there are A LOT of decision, we're talking about a 400 pages book. That might not be that many but I have never seen a CYOA above 150 pages.
The combat system is fairly easy to use, while being more interesting than "roll two dice the lowest roll loose". It pairs well with different stats of your Billy, which change depending on the class, the equipment, the event that happened in your adventure.
There is an achievement system on the last two pages of the book that also includes the ending so I counted them: there is a DOZEN ending. I discovered there was a dragon I could have fought to get the Warlike Gold Ending and I missed it! I was so mad!
I could keep of gushing about this book (I didn't talk about the characters, about the city and the castle the story takes place in, ir even the Pyrobarbare who is the funniest) but it was really a lot of fun and I hesitate between starting a new run with a different class of Billy or buy the SECOND book if the series (the 3rd one is being crowdfunded and I can't wait!)
Did You Hear About Kitty Karr? by Crystal Smith Paul
Hollywood icon Kitty Karr died, leaving her fortune to the three St John sister, young wealthy Black women. While dealing with Kitty's affairs (and keeping away from journalists) they find a dairy which uncovers secrets in the background of the South and Hollywood during the Segregation.
I would probably never have picked up this book if it wasn't a draw from the book club pile. I like historical fiction but Hollywood and the stars is not something I have any interest in. I went a bit blindly into it, scared that if I research it I'd create bad expectations.
I was surprise: it isn't the drama filled story I was dreading! This is a dive into the segregated USA and in a community I had never really read about: white passing POC. Even when Kitty starts to work in the film industry (as a phone operator at first then climbing the ladder to become a famous actress) the focus is always on social issues, racism, the careful balance of being a black woman in white spaces, the fight for civil rights and the work these woman did for this cause. Atop of all this there is the thread of family legacy and secrets and what ties Kitty and the St Johns together.
It is a very interesting book, nuanced and deep. I don't know how much of it is was researched but it felt fairly accurate from perspective.
The Oleander Sword (The Burning Kingdom #2) by Tasha Suri
Malini and Priya parted ways: the Princess is marching to the capital city, gathering allies to otherthrow her brother; the Priestess is working with her siblings to rebuilt the Temple and restore her city. But when Malini's fight encounter divine resistance she will once again draw from Priya's magic to get her end, with their fragile relationship, and Priya's own goals in the way.
I adored book 1, The Jasmine Throne and I was so excited to read the rest of the story! I loved having my favorite characters back, I loved the politic developing after the events of the previous tome and as usual I loved the angst, the complicated relationship between Malini and Priya, the mysterious happening in Ahiranya,Malini's change as her goal draws closer...
The writing is still gold, perfectly highlighting the feelings and doubts of the characters. I love having so much insight in the characters mind. The switch between multiples point of view is really well handles.
Unfortunately it suffers from Middle Book Syndrome: very little new element introduced and very little resolution of previous elements. That's to be expected, but when the third and final book is not yet available it is really frustrating.
I am still hyped for the last book, The Lotus Empire, it should be releases in November but the TBR is so high, I'm afraid I'll have to keep it for next year
Path of Destruction (Darth Bane Trilogy #1) by Drew Karpyshyn
A thousand year before the events of the first Trilogy, Des is a disillusioned miner in the Outer Rim. He joins the Sith to escape his misery and discover his connection to the Force. Through the training of the Sith Masters he develops his talent and as his power grows so does his ambition. He is now Darth Bane and he will be more powerful than them all!
I had been disappointed by novelisation of series before so I approached this one with caution, even though I heard everywhere that it was one of the best Star Wars novel (if you disagree don't blame me, blame Reddit)
That's a recurring event: I was dead wrong, this book floored me. The writing is good, the plot is even better, characters are incredible and I never thought I would be cheering so hard for a Sith!
I was a bit scared having no previous knowledge of this period of the Star Wars universe would make it impossible to understand the book. Maybe I misses some references but it never was obscur. The Star Wars lingo is also always explicited with context clues. That's really agreable because that's not always a given when you dive into work on the further edge of canon.
The characters are almost exclusively Sith (and some usual brand of assholes) but they are still relatable, even though they are cunning, vicious, calculating. Bane especially has some redeeming circonstances that made him endearing even though he joined the dark side and dives deep into its ways.
A really really good surprise and a really really good book. I'd really like to read the rest of this trilogy, it sparked back my interest for Star Wars when the recenr series and just bored me to death.
#book review#bookblr#books#bob lennon#pyrobarbare#la forteresse du chaudron noir#did you hear about kitty karr#crystal smith paul#the oleander sword#the burning kingdoms#tasha suri#star wars#darth bane#star wars legends#path of destruction#drew karpyshyn
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At length, they arrived, and the familiar elegant lines of the Jadeâs Fire came into Lukeâs view.
He slewed into Mara as she helped him off the speeder and she snorted.
âBit off more than we could chew, didnât we, Skywalker?â she asked dryly, as they made their slow way up the landing ramp.
âGotâŚwhat I came for,â he panted.
âWhereâs the demon droid accomplice?â she asked, easing him to her medbunk. Her ship was much better equipped to treat injuries than his faithful X-Wing and he was grateful.
âWithâŚLeia,â he groaned as Mara pulled out a scanner to run over him. âCouldnâtâŚrisk him goingâŚrogue on this one.â
#whumptober2023#no. 23#shadows#whoâs there#stalking#Star wars#fan fic#star wars original trilogy#star wars legends#luke skywalker#mara jade#hurt/comfort#slow burn#Mara canât believe this family#she finds it compelling though
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TAGS. i didn't like the other ones asjbfjbsdjgb
#âŚâ¸¸ WITHIN THE SHADOWS⸴ WHERE CHAOS WHISPERS⸴ THE WORLD WILL BURN⸴ AND FROM THE ASHES⸴ A NEW DAWN SHALL RISE ⸸⌠(in character)#âŚâ¸¸ SILK WORDS AND STEEL PROMISESâIN THE END⸴ BOTH WILL CUT YOU⸴ BUT ONLY ONE WILL LEAVE YOU BLEEDING ⸸⌠(replies)#âŚâ¸¸ QUESTIONS TURN TO DAGGERS⸴ EACH WORD A WEAPON⸴ FOR TRUTH IS A DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD⸴ SHARP ENOUGH TO CUT DEEPLY ⸸⌠(asks)#âŚâ¸¸ WORDS CAN BE WEAPONS⸴ AND HIS ARE POISON-TIPPED⸴ DRIPPING WITH SWEETNESS THAT HIDES THE DEADLY VENOM BENEATH ⸸⌠(rp memes)#âŚâ¸¸ LAUGHTER CAN MASK A THREAT⸴ JUST AS A SMILE CAN HIDE A SNAREâREAD BETWEEN THE LINES IF YOU DARE ⸸⌠(meme responses)#âŚâ¸¸ EVERY THREAD WEAVES A NEW TALE⸴ WHERE TRUTH AND DECEIT INTERTWINE⸴ AND THE ENDING IS NEVER WHAT IT SEEMS ⸸⌠(thread)#âŚâ¸¸ STORIES UNFOLD LIKE SPIDER WEBS⸴ THREADS OF FATE INTERTWINED⸴ EACH MOVE PULLING YOU DEEPER INTO THE UNKNOWN ⸸⌠(threads)#âŚâ¸¸ BENEATH THE SCARS LIES A MAP OF A LIFE LIVED IN SHADOWS⸴ EVERY LINE ETCHED WITH PAIN⸴ EVERY MARK A TESTAMENT TO SURVIVAL ⸸⌠(visage)#âŚâ¸¸ IN THE END⸴ WE'RE ALL JUST STORIES WAITING TO BE TOLD⸴ HIS IS WRITTEN IN BLOOD AND ASHES⸴ A LEGEND IN THE MAKING ⸸⌠(musings)#âŚâ¸¸ BENEATH THE MASK⸴ HE ISN'T WHAT YOU THINKâFOR EVEN IN THE HEART OF A STORM⸴ THERE LIES A MOMENT OF CALM ⸸⌠(about)#âŚâ¸¸ THE MOON WITNESSES ALL⸴ BLOODSHED⸴ SACRIFICES⸴ AND BROKEN VOWS⸴ YET IT REMAINS⸴ UNCHANGING⸴ AS DO I ⸸⌠(aesthetics)#âŚâ¸¸ EVERY STORY HAS TWO SIDES⸴ BUT HIS IS TOLD IN SHADOWS AND WHISPERS⸴ A TALE TOO DARK FOR THE LIGHT OF DAY ⸸⌠(verses)#âŚâ¸¸ NOT ALL WARS ARE FOUGHT WITH SWORDS⸴ SOME BATTLES RAGE WITHIN⸴ SHAPING THE SOUL INTO SOMETHING NEW ⸸⌠(headcanons)#âŚâ¸¸ BLOOD MAY BIND⸴ BUT TRUE FAMILY IS FORGED IN FIRE⸴ WHERE LOYALTY RUNS DEEPER THAN ANY VEIN ⸸⌠(family)#âŚâ¸¸ IN THIS WORLD⸴ THE LINES BETWEEN LIGHT AND DARK BLUR⸴ WHERE DESTINY IS FORGED IN FIRE⸴ AND THE TRUE BATTLE IS WITHIN ⸸⌠(main verse)#âŚâ¸¸ A WHISPER IN THE DARK⸴ A SPARK OF CREATION⸴ WHERE WORDS GIVE LIFE TO THE SHADOWS AND IMAGINATION RUNS WILD ⸸⌠(prompts)#âŚâ¸¸ A COSMIC CATASTROPHE⸴ STARS EXPLODE⸴ RUIN FOLLOWS⸴ THEIR LOVE IS BEAUTIFUL AND UNAVOIDABLE⸸⌠(astraia ⥠starborne)#âŚâ¸¸ ROTTEN LEAVES FALL⸴ THORNS PIERCE⸴ THEIR LOVE IS A TANGLE OF DECEPTION AND DESIRE⸴ FOREVER WILD AND CRUEL⸸⌠(tara ⥠rotdame)#long post. // //
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general tag dump since i lost the old one !
#SHRIEKING SUN OF LEGEND / * VISUALS . â#THE SCREAM I JUST SCRUMPT / * CRACK . â#THE CHOSEN ONE / * PROMOS . â#THAT'S THE THING WITH OPPORTUNISTS - DON'T SHOW THEM OPPORTUNITIES / * STARTER CALLS . â#AND STARS SHALL SCREAM / * DASH COMM . â#SOMETHING ABOUT A CROWN BEING HEAVIER THEN YOU'D EXPECT / * HEADCANONS . â#THE GRAND SCHEMER. / * OOC . â#I'M GETTING A LITTLE SICK OF EXPLAINING WHAT BETRAYAL IS TO PEOPLE / * ASKS . â#THE STARS GREW DISTANT AND LONELY IN THEIR ORBIT / * MUSINGS . â#LOOKING OUT FOR NUMBER ONE / * BANTER . â#ALL HAIL STARSCREAM / * THREADS . â#I KNOW WHO QUEUE ARE / * QUEUE . â#SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES / * OPEN . â#PEOPLE ASSUME I'M SCHEMING EVEN WHEN I'M NOT / * MEMES . â#I NEVER CLAIMED TO BE A SAINT / * DASH GAMES . â#GAVE YESTERDAY THE POWER TO BURN TOMORROW TO THE GROUND / * STATUS . â
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The Right Hand of Justice by Cinderfeather ( @cinderfeather )
âMaster Yoda!â Obi-Wan whirled to see the ancient master floating on his hover-chair in his nightgown. âI had not expected you to be lacking in sleep alongside me.ââVisions we all had. Sleepless we all are. Tell us your vision, you must. Connected to Skywalker they are.âThe Jedi learn of Anakin's fate.
A retelling of the Norse myth of The Binding of Fenrir featuring Anakin as Fenrir and Obi-Wan as Týr. Completed, 2.6k words.
*** ** * ** ***
âSometimes I have dreamsâŚ.â Anakin swallowed. âDreams I swallow stars.â [...]
âI canât break it. Let me out.â Silence. âLet me out.â [...]
Anakinâs head was bowed, but on speaking he had opened his eyes. They were yellow. Like an Irewolf. âI have been drawing on the Force, deeper and deeper to try to free myself. This is what I am now.â [...] âI cannot break this yet, but I will. Injustice keeps growing. Pain and anger keeps growing. People live, die, suffer, and suffer some more. All the suffering, from the slavery on the Outer Rim to the Republic drafting clones as cannon-fodder to the invasion of the Separatists. All of it I feel. All of it I am.â âIâm going to free you," said PadmĂŠ. Anakin studied her for some time. âWhen Iâm free my power will tear apart the galaxy.â [...] âI had to make an impossible choice. Do a terrible, awful thing to prolong life in the galaxy for a bit longer. Itâs going to end. And soon. But not yet, Little One.â Not yet.
#Yesss#Fenrir myth legend with Anakin (Fenrir) and Obi Wan (Tyr)#This was so good#fragments of imagination#ao3#fic rec#fanfic snippet#fanfiction#fanfic#even stars burn out#star wars#anakin skywalker#darth vader#vaderkin#sw
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rise and warriors best worlds mvs no contest
#like. dont get me wrong i enjoy some of the other ones as well#ignite. legends never die. gods#burn it all down is pretty good as well#i like what star walking had going on at the beginning but not really the rest#but rise and warriors are another level#kinda sad about gods. if the animation had more energy to it i think it could have been up these with these two#especially with the story line they got going on in it#like the when the chorus plays it would have been so cool if the animation matched its energy !!!!!!!!!#but its doesnt :9#it just feels too slow. even when theyre fighting#LIKE SORRY WHY IS THE FIRST CHORUS MAINLY TAKEN UP BY DEFT STARING AT HIS COMPUTER LOOKING SAD WHEN IT SHOULD BE THE MATCHES#also the not chorus parts of the song could use a little oomph to them#like not exactly like the chorus but i feel like they dont need to be that slow#anyways thats all folks thanks for reading#cait.txt
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tag drop ft. people.
#â   đ.   countenance Â Â ďš Â Â bees hum funeral dirges in his wake.#â   đ.   character study Â Â ďš Â Â heaven and hell are warring inside youâ always brutalâ always merciless.#â   đđ.   dean winchester Â Â ďš Â Â when the laurel grows heavy on your browâ where do you lay down the burden.#â   đđ.   sam winchester Â Â ďš Â Â you were never made a godâ but you were remembered.#â   đđ.   sarah braeden Â Â ďš Â Â he feels sunlight in the warmth of her skin and trace mountains in the peaks of her spine.#â   đđ.   gunchamber Â Â ďš Â Â her laughter is the sound that makes flower bloom and her rage is is the thing that burns empires.#â   đđ.   lily winchester Â Â ďš Â Â how long can a heart survive without the head?#â   đđ.   wailshe Â Â ďš Â Â youâre the dawn that rises bloody and wrecks ships in its wake.#â   đđ.   frankie shaw Â Â ďš Â Â youâre all bronze and biteâ all venom and fistfight.#â   đđ.   fightforbetter Â Â ďš Â Â there is only so much flesh and muscle can hold back before her divinity shines.#â   đđ.   hallie anders Â Â ďš Â Â you fight because it is the most intimate act you can think of.#â   đđ.   rueben baker Â Â ďš Â Â being ruined isn't a bad thingâ it means that you're going to be a legend.#â   đđ.   jamie walker Â Â ďš Â Â you will grow back over and overâ no matter how badly you are devastated.#â   đđ.   odessa muyne Â Â ďš Â Â she is the stuff of dreamsâ a shooting star that burns too bright.#â   đđ.   lisa braeden Â Â ďš Â Â i still see a constellation of you in the sky.#â   đđ.   sarah miller Â Â ďš Â Â as long as your heart beatsâ there's fight.
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Voices Carry
The Null ARC troopers have heard a rumor - a Republic senator claims to have inside information about clone trooper genetic material. When they decide it's worth investigating, Mereel offers to slice the data during a simple comm call with the senator.
The mission doesn't offer much of a challenge... or so he thought. Mereel hadn't counted on a stalwart and unyielding senatorial assistant foiling his every effort.
Mereel Skirata x fem!reader
Rating: G (for now - rating WILL change)
Word Count: 800
Warnings: plans of attempted espionage
Next | Masterlist
---
Part One
âBut does he actually have anything?âÂ
It was the question that had dominated the last hour, and the conversation was starting to circle.Â
âThe only way we can be sure is to check for ourselves,â Mereel decreed.
âWhy would some boracyk Senator from a backwater planet have information about the kaminii gene cloning program?â Jaing asked.Â
It wasnât the first time he had asked it. What was more, Jaingâs perfect memory meant he knew he had asked the question before and Mereel was getting tired of giving the same answer.Â
But he did it anyway. âBecause itâs a weird lead. Itâs weird that he said it in the first place. But Julgum is a karkinâ Senator. I can get through his entire library of information in less time than weâve been talking about it. All I need is access to his officeâs mainframe.â
All of this had started when Prudii had uncovered an interview aired on a fringe news source, featuring the senator from Farrfin. Senator Julgum wasnât a popular man, mostly because of his unique and unpopular views. But Farrfin was notoriously corrupt and the general opinion was that his money had bought more votes than any of his politics had.
But the Null troopers didnât care about politics - except maybe Ordo, who seemed to thrive on useless information. No, their only interest in Senator Julgum stemmed from the point in the interview when he said that the galaxy should be wary of clone troopers.
âIâve received some information about the genes that the Kaminoans used,â he had claimed. âIt all seems fine from the outside, but when you start to dig a little deeper⌠Well, letâs just say that I wonât be rushing to sign any clone rights bills into law until I figure out how far the problems run.â
The Nulls were split evenly between the two sides: Ordo, Jaing, and Aâden thought it was a waste of time. Komârk, Prudii, and Mereel thought it was worth following up on.Â
There was only one thing for it: Mereel looked over at where the figure of Kal Skirata stood, pondering the arguments in silence. âWhat do you think, Kalâbuir?â
Silence settled over the Nulls as their adoptive father figure considered his answer. Whatever Kal Skirata decided, the group would do. That was the way it had always been, and he had never steered them in the wrong direction. Well, he had, but he always took any failures harder than the Nulls themselves did.Â
âMereel is right,â he said eventually, and Mereel felt a fierce pride spike through his chest at the implied praise. âItâs a lead, and we should follow up on any of those that come our way. Merâika, it wonât take you long to get into the Senatorâs system, will it?â
âNot at all,â Mereel assured. âIn and out in a few minutes at most. Then another day to sift through the data.â
âI think itâs a chance worth taking,â Kal said, glancing at the men around the room. Some were physically present, some were holographic, and all were watching him with the typical intensity born of being raised on the actively-hostile Kamino. âBut Iâm willing to hear arguments.â
âNo, Kalâbuir,â Aâden refused. âIf you think we should check it out, we will. Go for it, Mereel.â
Mereel flashed a grin, brimming with his typical confidence. âIf the good senator has any real information, weâll have it before the end of the week.â
Yes, confidence was never an issue with Mereel, but he would be the first to admit that accessing Julgumâs system was more difficult than anyone had expected.
The nearest he could figure was that the jetii had fixed up the network in Julgumâs office for him. Mereel would need the key code to access the network itself. Normally, that wasnât much of a deterrent, but tracking down a key code took time. And this code in particular reset every few hours on an ever-changing time interval.Â
Mereel was one of the better slicers in the galaxy, but even he had some limits. The effort it would take to access the senatorâs office network just didnât make sense, especially when the Nulls were working on a time limit. Even a slice code took time to construct, especially if the user wanted to keep anyone from knowing that the system had been breached.
Fortunately, there was a way around either necessity: he could contact the senator directly. If Mereelâs comlink was patched through to the senator himself, he would be able to access the mainframe and pull any (or all) information from the system without being detected and without spending weeks working on a functional slice code.
All he had to do was call.
---
Author's Note - Thank you for giving this fic a chance! Since it's shorter than my typical chapters (by a lot), I'm posting the second chapter today as well. Feel free to check it out if you enjoyed this one!
You can find other works on my masterlist or sign up for my taglist here. The taglist for these first two chapters will contain people who asked to be tagged in new series and those who asked to be tagged in Legends materials. Part Three will only be those who edit their taglist choices. I'm happy to untag anyone who asks!
Taglist: @rexs-wife @sugarpuffsstuff @stargazingthenightaway @just-some-girl-92 @kimageddon @ladysongmaster @carodealmeida @nomercyforthewarrior @boomtowngirl @quietplaceinthestars @bitchylittleredhead @blck-omen @lackofhonor @salaminus @archivedreading @hikime @808tsuika @ladykatakuri @bikerlorian @torchbearerkyle @frietiemeloen @tsedeshgishnii @justanothersadperson93 @leotatombs @mavendeb @rain-on-kamino @itsagrimm @dancingwiththeplanets @hummellchen @theclonesdeservebetter @cyarinka @ladyemxo @murder-of-crows-1 @ollovaemisc @rosmariner @staycalmandhugaclone @notvalidblogname @coruscanticoffee @crookedwiings @eyecandyeoz @fordo-kixed-rex @musigrusi @lucyysthings @dinsverdika @bombshe77 @cawyden
#voices carry#voices carry fic#star wars#star wars legends#star wars republic commando#mereel skirata#null 7#null 7 | mereel skirata#mereel x reader#mereel x you#reader insert#reader insert fic#null arcs#star wars fanfiction#ink's fics#slow burn
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Here's a WIP for WIP Wednesday!
Excerpt from a later arc in my Republic Commando fanfic "Reckless not Carless", a Mereel x OFC long fic that I have yet to actually publish but I'll get there!
Anyway it's under the cut
Subduing an angry nikto isn't easy when you're only one and a half meters tall. He's swearing at me in an obscure Huttese dialect which, I can speak but the words don't warrant repeating. Let's just say he's a little more than miffed. But, he's complying. Probably because my favorite DL-44 is shoved nicely in the base of his spine, safety off, and the binders that hold his arms snugly behind his back keep him from doing anything besides body checking me and trying to run.
I shove him onto the platform of the Rendili transport ship and drop him onto the floor. "Don't move." I demand in that Huttese dialect and knock on the back of the cockpit wall to indicate to Rusty, my pilot, I'm ready to take off. The engines start up with a rumble I can feel in my entire body.
"Wait!" A voice shouts from outside of the RD80. I do not have time for this. "Are you headed to the FOB in Sector Gamma? I could use a lift." I cross my arms and tuck my chin to my chest, eyeing the Lieutenant ARC trooper from over the top of my sun visor-the one with the thick square frames. He adjusts the rotary blaster over his shoulders.
"Sorry Lieutenant, this bird's taken, you'll have to find another one." I feel shifting behind me, that nikto's moving around.
"Es'ika?" The ARC asks. There's only a few ARC Lieutenants that know my name, only two who's ever called me that, and only one who's still alive.
I will forever consider myself lucky that Mereel visibly directs his attention to the nikto behind me, pulls out his double blaster pistols seemingly without a thought and points them at the nikto. "Get down! Get on your knees!" He shouts
#star wars#republic commando#repcomm#mereel x ofc#wip wednesday#wip#the clone wars#its a mix between legends and canon and youre just gonna have to deal with it#slow burn
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