#not sure if jet would keep the astromech droid or not
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knightbird · 24 days ago
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@blood-injections made a cool killjoys starwars au post and i was like. HELL YEAH. so here we go
starwars-ing their designs was really fun. I tried to make jet star's helmet a mix of the canon design and a resistance pilots helmet. I figure when he joins up with the other main characters he paints it up to disguise it. (and also made him keep the uniform gloves and boots cause good work wear is Expensive, yo)
gave fun ghoul a shorter vest and longer shirt because Why Not. also a lightsabre bc i think the former jedi apprentice backstory is cool. though he'd probably not wear it out visibly like that. and then he's showing it to the kid & giving a history lesson :3
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iliumheightnights · 4 years ago
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We have a jedi [8] | Peter Parker x M!Stark Reader
Fandom: Star wars and Marvel
Pairing: Peter Parker x M!Stark Reader, Tony Stark x Son!Reader
Summary: (M/N) discovers earth has some secrets.
Read from beginning
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The sound of tools and workers filled the warehouse. (M/N) followed Fury up some stairs to an overlook of the ship. There he was able to see workers fixing the ship with Janai overlooking it. He wasn’t sure just how he felt about so many people crawling around their ship. Not that there was anything to steal...but they didn’t want any information to be taken,any one could be a spy for the empire. 
“So you’re Stark’s son. I keep tabs on everything around the avengers so imagine my surprise when I discovered he had a son I didn’t know about.” The man looked at me like how some of the masters back at the temple did, it was unnerving. “And you come from space. Your mother told me about some of what’s going on. A galactic war? I knew something would happen in space...didn’t know just how big it would be.”
This man was acting surprisingly calm for learning about a large war in space. I leaned on the railing and looked at him. “You don’t seem so shocked. I’m guessing we aren’t the first person from space you’ve met?”
Fury nodded his head. “Your right about that. Hell I’ve even been to space. It’s one of the reasons why the avengers were created...in case a threat from space ever came. It was also if a threat from earth got too big, but space is a big mystery with lots of dangers.” (M/N) laughed at that. “You’re definitely right about that. If only it was a blue milk run.”
The man looked at him in a weird way. “So I have to ask. If Jedi and Sith exist...is all of Star wars real?”
“What’s Star Wars?”
“So apparently there's a movie series about Jedi and Sith?”
“Oh that, yeah that’s just propaganda used to try and make planets more likely to develop space travel.”
“Then why did most of the jedi get killed off?”
“You have to have some drama.”
A couple days had passed since their arrival. (M/N) had told Janai about his vision and warning of Darth Kren. With what they knew, fixing the ship became an even higher priority. Progress had been going alright with the help of Tony and Bruce. Along with progress on the ship, (M/N) had been spending time with the avengers.
He of course spent the most amount of time with his father. He had met Pepper and talked more with Happy. Tony would take him out to see different hotspots and interesting things he thought he’d like. (M/N) was happy when doing this, it made him forget about the war going on for a bit. He also spent time with the others, he’d spend time with Bruce in the lab either teaching or learning. He’d often practice hand to hand combat with Natasha if she was available. At first she was a little hesitant with how young he was, but that changed after he one upped her in their first practice. After Thor returned from taking Loki back to Asgard, the two would talk about war stories. Asgard wasn’t part of the galactic war, but they definitely had a history of conquest. Steve and him would talk strategies. Steve wanted to learn about new strategies and techniques the team could use and came to him and Janai for advice since they had experience with fighting in space. Clint was the closest with (M/N) after his own father. The man practically acted as a second dad and made sure he was always alright. He’d make sure he ate and got the necessities before he’d take him out to something like the park or for ice cream.
“Where are you guys going?” (M/N) watched as all of the avengers paced around the tower, getting ready for their mission. He noticed how the quinjet had been prepared. “Oh it’s just a simple shake down mission. Some idiots think playing with alien tech is a good idea so we have to go take it from them.” Tony said to him. “Don’t worry bud, we’ll be there and back in no time.” Clint chimed in. “Hey he’s my kid.” Clint snorted. “He’s our kid now.” (M/N) rolled his eyes at that. “Girls,Girls you’re both pretty. Now go on.” The two shook their heads, Clint patted his shoulder and Tony gave him a hug before walking off to finish their preparations.
(M/N) had turned to go back to his room when he heard a low whistle. Turning around, he looked to see who was calling him. When he didn’t see anyone turned back around only to hear the whistle again. He once more turned back and glared. What was going on? Then he heard the whistle from inside the quinjet. He felt a surge of energy rush through him and push him a little, it was then he realized the force was guiding him. He watched as the avengers all entere the jet, they would never take him with them...he’d have to sneak on.
Once the last of them had entered and he heard the engines begin to roar, he made his move. He quickly dashed to the ship and jumped inside as the door was closing. Luckily he hadn’t been spotted yet and hid himself behind some seats. He felt the jet begin to take off, unlike his ship you could still feel the turbulence. He moved around a bit, he had a feeling he was going to be there for a while, might as well be comfortable.
They had been flying for a couple hours, he had heard bits of conversations here and there. Eventually when they had gotten closer to their destination, The avengers gathered around a holographic table. “Alright, so we don’t know much about who these guys are. All we know is they took a good amount of alien tech from new york and high tailed it here.” Steve began the brief. (M/N) listened to all of it, he needed as much information as he could get. Why was the force calling him out here? “Our goal is to receive all the tech and to capture all of them. We don’t need them trying to get anymore. One invasion was enough.” That was his dad. He smirked at that, (M/N) didn’t want to fight another invasion again just yet. It wasn’t long before the jet landed and the team all rushed out to where they were supposed to go.
Exiting his hiding spot and leaving the jet he discovered he was surrounded by jungle. He could sense the force here, it was strong. He looked towards where his father and the other avengers had went and was about to follow when he heard the whistle calling him in the other direction. Giving one last look to the path the avengers took, he turned and walked the other way.
The path through the jungle was thick and teeming with life. It reminded him of being on Kashyyyk, except there were no giant Wroshyr trees. He could sense the many different life forms moving through the thick jungle canopy. The low whistle continued to call out to him until he found himself at a large crevice. He could hear the call through it. Taking a deep breath, he began to squeeze his way through. Finally he made it to the other side, it was dark and he couldn’t see anything. Taking his lightsaber, he ignited it to use as a light source. The light didn’t show anything useful except that he was in a cave. He continued to follow the call.
Walking for what seemed like ages, he finally arrived at a door. “Huh, what do we have here?” Moving his saber for better lighting he discovered the symbol of the Jedi on the door. “Jedi? What were we doing here?” Looking over the door, he saw there was no way to open it which meant one thing. Stepping back he reached out his hand and with the force, opened the door. With the door open, light was able to enter the cave. Walking through the door he turned off his saber and looked around. He was in a hallway which seemed to be a back exit of sorts. 
Walking down the rest of the hallway he found himself in a larger corridor. It was dusty and he could tell whatever this place was had been abandoned a long time ago. Old banners hung on the walls, many torn and tattered. The carpets were also in pretty bad shape. Exiting the corridor he was currently in he found himself in a large room, larger than even the main room in the Jedi temple on Tython. That’s when he realized it, this was a jedi temple. From the looks of it, it had been abandoned a long time ago.
Suddenly the room brightened and when the light cleared, the temple was different. It was bright, and the temple was filled with Jedi. The fountains below were flowing and the sound of younglings running around could be heard. He smiled at the sight. As quickly as it came, he was pushed from his vision and returned to the dreary desolate temple. “What happened here?”
The sound of a motor could be heard, it was faint like it was far away but coming towards him. It didn’t feel like a threat...yet. Suddenly he could see the maker of the sound across the hall. An astromech...an old astromech. “I guess this place isn’t as derelict as I thought.” The little droid saw him and seemed to jump a bit before rushing to try and reach him. Deciding to meet it halfway, (M/N) began making his way over to it.
Upon reaching the droid he knelt down to it’s level. The droid beeped happily at him. “Hey there little guy. What’s your name?” Beeepweer. “T3? It’s nice to meet you T3, I’m (M/N).” Bweepeep. “Do you know what happened here?” Bwooo. “Sith. I should have known it was the sith.” bwooh. “How long have you been here?” Bweeawamp. “Six hundred years? That was long before this war. How are you still charged?” Bwaaamp. “Stasis shutdown? So you were put in shut down until you felt someone comeback? So that person was me?” Bwoop. “Well...I’m glad I could help.” He felt a strong sense of cold come from the door besides them, but the whistle also called to him from in there. “I feel like I have to go in there. What is that place.” Bweep Bwoomp. “The Jedi council chambers? Then why does it feel so...dark.” bwoo. “Slaughter you say? No wonder it’s so cold. But I have to go in there. Wish me luck.” With a deep breath (M/N) entered the doorway.
Entering the old council chamber, he felt colder than he ever had. T3 had told him a slaughter happened here, but only now did he feel just how bad it was. He could feel the death that happened here. There was a lot of it.
“Look at you.” The voice came from a figure who stepped out of the shadows. The figure was dressed in dark armor. Stepping further out of the shadow (M/N)’s eyes widened at who it was. The figure...was him. “You’re weak.”
“W-what is this?”
“You could be much stronger.” Without a response, the other him ignited his lightsaber and lunged at him. (M/N) blocked it with his own. He then noticed how the other him had a red blade. A sith. “You call yourself a Jedi, yet all I see is a weakling.” The other him had gained the upper hand and seemed much stronger than he was. 
“I...I am a Jedi.”
“Are you? What kind of jedi actively ignores the rules of the order? Your attachments already make you not a Jedi. Break your chains!”
“I will be no sith!”
“You will never be a true Jedi!”
He was right. He never felt like he was a jedi and this other half knew it. “You’re right.” He used the force to push the other him back. Giving enough space, he turned off his saber. “I am no jedi.”  He dropped to his knees and closed his eyes. He waited for death to come. When he felt nothing come he opened his eyes to discover he was once again in that place he had spoken to Revan. He heard the low whistle once more and looked to see what was causing it. A kyber crystal. Grabbing the crystal he once again found himself in the council chamber, crystal in hand. “Huh...I guess it’s time.”
Looking around the council chamber, he discovered many discarded lightsabers from fallen jedi. “ I may never be a full jedi, but I will still try to be what you all believed in.” Closing his eyes he focused on the force. Parts and components from the discarded lights sabers broke off of them and gathered around his new crystal. After a couple of minutes he heard the final click as his new lightsaber fell into place. Grabbing the blade he ignited it and found a (Color) blade. “I will carry you with me and remember what you stood for.” He now had two lightsabers.
Exiting the council chambers he was once again greeted by T3. Bweep? (M/N) chuckled at him. “Yeah I’m fine. I found what I was looking for.” He looked at the little droid. “So what are you going to do now? Are you going to stay here?” Bwoop. “Well...Would you like to come with me? I could use a friend like you by my side.” The droid let out some happy beeps. “Good to know. It’s going to need some explaining to others but I’ll handle it. So, how do we get out of here?” The droid beeped and began rolling off.
(M/N) followed T3 to the bottom floor of the temple and through the main hall. After the vision he could feel the loss of what the temple looked like before. “Huh, What’s that?” T3 stopped and looked at him. (M/N) looked to another part of the wall where a mural was at. The mural had 3 figures, 2 men and 1 woman. “They seem...strangely familiar.” bweep. “Nothing, let’s go.” T3 and him continued through the main hall until they reached a large door. The little droid used a panel to open the door. The door opened and (M/N) found himself looking at the confused faces of the avengers. “Uh...hey guys.”
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generalfoolish · 4 years ago
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We Go Together
General Dameron!AU
Chapter 1: A Welcome Party of One | Chapter 2
Rating: General for now! It gets more spicy later, and I’ll update accordingly.
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Summary: OC character starts flying with the resistance, and happens to meet General Poe Dameron. Eventually, they'll do more than just talk and badly flirt.
A/N: Hey guys! This is my fic from AO3, and I wanted to add it to my master list. It’s a work in progress! Also, we deviate a bit from the actual story of the sequels, but I try to stay pretty close to the lore of the SW universe. 
The explosion burned too bright against Darial’s eyes. The darkness of space enveloped the blinding whites, and glanced sharply against her radiation shield. A red laser shooting from the wreckage jerked her back to life; and in seconds she was maneuvering away from the burning ship behind her.
Dary heard the crackling in her ear piece, and she breathed deeply to steady herself. The casualties would be many. They were increasing ten-fold after each mission. This re-con had gone sideways, fast. She cursed under her breath and banked a hard left against a Tie Fighter shooting near her rear. Her eyes followed the green beams coming from her own X-wing, and smiled when they found their mark.
“Green Two!” The static garbled the words, but she made her call name out.
“Green Two responding,” She grimaced at her own croaky voice. She needed water, and badly.
“Green Two, disengage. Pulling back.” The words were more chewed up this time, her commander getting lost in the static.
“Pulling back, Green Leader.”
“Settle for Base.”
“Base bound, Green Two off.” She eased off the thrusters and checked the nav. Deftly, she punched in the coordinates for Ajan Kloss, and rolled her neck as hyperspace engaged.
She had enough time to glance around and see her team doing the same, before she was flung into the dazzling rush of white jets of light. She could never get over hyperspace. The urge to jerk out of the tunnel, she realized dimly, had never gone away either. Dary knew that the only reason she preferred hyper was that space was too inky black for her comfort. In her years as a pilot, she had never found comfort amongst the stars. She was always unsettled in the darkness, and felt uneasy in the absence of any celestial bodies.
“Something to keep my mind off the dead, at least.” She murmured to herself. In the brightly lit cockpit, there was nowhere to hide those dark thoughts. Her orange jumpsuit glowed, nearly reflective, as if to prove her point.
The nav system started beeping, and gave her the respite she needed to ignore the deep seated survivor’s guilt building in her stomach. She punched a few buttons, flicked a few switches, and dropped out of hyperspace. She found herself laughing, and wished flying was as easy as dropping out of hyper. She nosed her X towards the green moon.
Dary hadn’t had the opportunity to see Ajan Kloss yet, and she had heard it was a beautiful moon. The landscape rushing up to greet her after her descent into the atmosphere was a welcome sight. The rumors weren’t true, though. They left too much unsaid. The whispers of a jungle had missed the devastation of how mesmerizing the moon was. It was so alive, that Dary felt a sob stick in her chest. She shook her head slightly, and focused on the landing pattern.
“Green Two, requesting landing.” She breathed into her mic; still moved by the beauty of the greenery around her. A welcome sight after days of barren space.
“Green Two, welcome home. Head to bay 4.” The gruff voice told her. She was glad to hear Basic in a friendly tone, and never happier to get rid of the undertone of urgency or panic. She docked down in Bay 4, and noted that it looked like every other bay in the resistance, before switching her engines off.
The astromech popped the radiation shield for her, and she pulled her helmet off.
“Thanks R6.” Dary smiled warmly at her droid. He beeped in response. She left him for now, and knew he was in good hands. The Resistance loved their droids, and pilots doubly so. She had left her helmet in the cockpit, and climbed down the ladders a mechanic had pushed, over after she had touched down. The mech was nowhere to be found now, and she decided not to take it personally. She wasn’t anyone special, and the mission had been a failure to be sure. Plus, she didn’t know anyone on this moon. She rolled her eyes at herself.
“What? You expectin’ a welcome party, Dary? A full roll out?” A hardness settled in her chest, and she screwed her eyes up as she jerked the zipper of the flight suit down. She had just stepped out of the suit, focusing singularly on her muddy boots, when she heard the throat clearing cough come from behind her. She turned slowly, making a mental note to clean her shoes later. She was annoyed. She wanted to cry in the shower. She wanted to find her new quarters.
“Yes?” She was sharper than she meant to be, but she was tired.
“Yes, sir.” He said, a smirk dancing on his lips. She raised an eyebrow, but didn’t echo his request. “Because I’m Poe. General Poe Dameron.” He continued, and she realized he had expected her to know him.
“General Dameron!” She exclaimed with as much forced enthusiasm as she could muster. “What can I do for you, sir?” She asked, snapping to attention. Her flight suit still bundled around her boots. He dropped his smirk.
“You’re Green Two, right? Ardan?” His voice had lost nearly all traces of the humor from before.
“Yes, sir.” Dary answered quickly, not wanting to get into real trouble. She held his eyes for a moment, before stooping to grab her flight suit. “How can I help you, sir?” She asked genuinely, folding her suit as she talked. He smiled again, and she couldn’t help but notice he was that much more handsome for it. He was slim, but muscular beneath his loosely fitted button up. The light material really made his tanned skin glow in the bright sun.
“They tell me you saved a lot of lives doing something very dangerous and very reckless.” Her mouth fell open, and she snapped it shut with enough force to rattle her back teeth.
“Sir, I was taking calculated risks to ensure that my fellow pilots made it back in one piece.”
“You were outmanned and outgunned, why would you try to take down a Starfighter alone?”
“I reasoned that if I were successful, then it would be a great advantage for my team.”
“What if you weren’t?” She couldn’t read him, and so she tried pleading her case earnestly.
“Then I would have done everything in my power to make sure that I at least bought my team a few minutes for a retreat.” She swallowed painfully; her throat was tight and dry.
“Good work out there today, Ardan. That kind of honest fighting is how we’ll win.” He took her by the shoulder, and simply held it for a moment. It wasn’t lost on her that his palm devoured her shoulder, and engulfed her more than she thought possible. His words filled in her a sense of pride, and her heart hammered against her ribs.
“Thanks, sir.” She squeaked out, and immediately regretted how she sounded. He only smiled, and opened his other hand in a gesture. He swept his arm back, indicating she was to move that way, and somehow her brain registered the signal and started walking. Her steps felt as clumsy as a newborn banthas.
“Have you been to the base before?” He asked, his hands swinging lazily by his side. She struggled to match his long stride, although he seemed to be moving at a leisurely pace.
“No, but the view flying in was something else.” She told him, shyly moving her hair behind her ears.
“It always reminds me of Yavin.” He told her, a small smile lifting to his eyes.
“I’ve never been,” She admitted freely, “It must be lovely to be comparable to here. Is Yavin another base?” He chuckled a little, and studied her face.
“I was born on Yavin, but it does have a...rich history involving resistances. Look, not to be forward, but I was on my way to dinner. The brass has me doing some drills at an unbelievably early kriffing hour, and so I plan to turn in early. You can say no, but you’d be doing me a pretty big favor. We don’t get a lot of new faces, especially pretty faces. Whaddya say, take another risk?” He laughed, and any doubts she had were gone. If it was inappropriate, surely he wouldn’t ask.
“That sounds lovely.” She told him before she could reconsider. Her eyes trained on her boots as they walked forward. She didn’t know how her boots had gotten so dirty. There isn’t mud in space, she breathed out her nose in a sort of snort laugh, and caught Poe’s eyes. He raised an eyebrow at her.
“Something funny?” He asked, amused
“Just...well it’s dumb, but my boots are filthy. No idea how, I’ve been in space for days. No mud in the cockpit.” She told him aimlessly, the words falling out easily. She couldn’t help it; he was impossibly easy to talk to. He grinned at her, nodding along.
“Forget being clean. The first rule of the Resistance is to be as dirty as possible, but also you must always be absolutely presentable.” He laughed, pointing a finger at her in a menacing way. She liked this. She hadn’t really fit in on her last post.
“Let me stash my suit,” She managed between laughing fits. His stories were coming more freely, and the long walk to the end of the terminal was almost over. She jogged to a locker and found her code name. Green Two. Impersonal, but perfect. Especially, she grimaced, in the heat of battle. It was a precaution, just in case the First Order happened to tap the comms. She stashed her suit quickly, and turned on her heel to find Poe just waiting for her. Patiently, he was watching her. Her breath caught, and before she could let that color her face she forced her legs to close the distance between them.
“Hungry?” She groaned.
“So, what happened after you got caught?” She asked, picking up the last thread of conversation easily, as they started the last leg of the walk to the commissary.
“Well, what you need to know is how to confuse a bageraset--I escaped, of course.” He shrugged, throwing her a smirk. She could smell the stew now, and knew that it would be just edible. Her stomach growled in anticipation, though. Which earned her a shoulder nudge from her companion.
“Starving, actually. I wasn’t joking about being in space for days. All I’ve had are those dreadful ration bars.” He laughed in response.
“That won’t do. The food here isn’t as bad as some of the posts. The cook is trained, so he does alright.” He opened the right side of the double swinging doors with one arm, and gestured her in with the other. The bustle of the canteen hit her right away.
Laughing, yelling, eating, drinking, and just a general buzz of life. She normally prefered the quiet, but the energy was contagious. She turned a quick grin to Poe before ducking past him.
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kyberled · 7 years ago
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Flashback
Send “Flashback” to have your muse see one of my muse’s bad memories || Accepting
(Length warning - 5204 words, cut put in place to save your dashes)
The roof of the inn leaked. He wasn’t sure why he was so surprised; the entire building had screamed ‘cheap’, and the bags over the windows (’to keep the weather out’, he’d been told, but the fact that they were opaque had not been lost on him. He hadn’t complained then, and certainly wouldn’t, now (at least, not much), but it didn’t change the fact that there was water dripping onto his nose. His brow furrowed as he glared at the far wall.
He didn’t know what he had been expecting.
He groaned as he sat up, stretching his arms over his head. He glanced up to the ceiling, and a fat, icy droplet plopped onto his face. He flinched, and grumbled as he wiped it away. A metallic rattling drew his attention to the corner of the room, where R7 was shivering and holding a scrap of cardboard over his dome. He beeped sadly at Braig, swivelling his sensors in the ex-Jedi’s direction.
“I know, I know, I’m cold, too.” Braig sighs as he stands, shaking his head vigorously to send water droplets flying in every direction (much to Tess’s chagrin, and the little rabbit droid let out an irritated chirp).
“Rust!” Tess whined, wiping frantically at his head and shaking back and forth in an off-kilter mimicry of Braig’s own attempt to dry off.
“You’re not gonna rust, Tess,” Braig said, rolling his eyes and pulling the hair tie off of his wrist with his teeth before pulling his shaggy hair from his eyes. “We got you and R7 coated a few rotations ago, back at that one station, you know, the, uh–” He snaps his fingers in the air, scrunching his face up and pressing his forehead into the space between his thumb and forefinger as though that might help him remember.
“The one with the crushed-ice machine,” he gave up with a sigh, shaking his head and keeping his face pointed down as he reached for the door.
“Rust.” Tess sulked again, at the lowest audible range his speakers would allow. Braig paid him little mind. The door opened with a creak almost before Braig’s fingers even touched the knob. He blinked, frowned, patted at his jacket until he was certain he could feel his sabers under his jacket, and checked both holsters to ensure that his blasters hadn’t been lifted.
Still both there.
He glanced to R7, who whizzed over to him with a whistle and opened one of his compartments to reveal a neatly-hidden stack of credits. Braig grinned, popping his eyebrows for just a second before R7′s compartment closed and the ragged trio stepped out into the mould-scented hallway. If the puddles on the floor were anything to go by, the entire building was in disrepair. Braig wrinkled his nose at the sorry state, then turned back to his door. He closed it, then gave it a nudge with the knuckles of his loosely-curled fist. It creaked, and, with a groan of protest and a little more pressure, it opened again.
Braig scowled, pursing his lips into a thin line of displeasure.
“Kriffin’ barve’s just lucky the important stuff’s hidden away on the ship,” he muttered, pushing a few stray locks from his face (though he knew they’d fall back into place as soon as he started walking, again). He stuffed his hands into his pockets, hunched his shoulders, and set off down the hall, giving a nod to signal for his two droids to follow (though they were already all but clinging to his ankles at every step; places like this were magnets for scrappers, and neither of them wanted to be torn apart and sold on the invisible market). Braig sniffed, still blinking sleep from his eyes and craning his neck against the moisture-borne stiffness that was settling itself oh-so-neatly in his muscles. His head throbbed, and he ground the heel of his left hand into his temple as his right fished in the inner pocket of his jacket for the cold metal flask that he kept closer to his heart than a beloved childhood toy.  
It made things easier.
The cap came off with a pop, and the spout was cold against his lips. A nice, if not somewhat jarring, contrast. He tipped the flask back to prompt more of the foul-tasting liquid down his throat. He was about to descend down the stairs, when a slew of voices caught his attention. Normally, such a thing wouldn’t have phased him, but the Force was being particularly insistent that he take heed. His foot hovered over the top stair, and he raised one eyebrow as he stood otherwise frozen in place at the top of the stairs. From where he stood, he could just barely make out the light from the open doorway. At his feet, Tess peered around Braig’s leg, clutching onto the rough material of his trousers, and R7 rolled forwards just enough to nudge at Braig’s side. He paid them little mind, instead craning his head to listen, and felt his blood curdle even as it froze as he understood what was being discussed.
“Oh, yeah, I’ve seen him,” that was the inkeeper’s voice, nasally and phlegm-filled, and yet somehow dry and raspy at the same time. There was a faint rustling sound that Braig could only imagine was the reptilian scratching at those loose, half-shed scales that framed his face like  scraggly facial hair, sending a few flakes falling like fetid snow to the mouldy floor. “Staying up on the second floor, he is. Had a couple of droids with him, too - they worth anything to ya?”
“Negative,” came a second voice, and Braig had to take a half-step back to keep his balance, remembering at the last second that the floor creaked (that was always the mistake they made in holos), and to instead prop his weight against R7 before he could give away their position.
He knew that voice.
He knew that voice very well, had, at one point, known it almost better than his own.
Even worn down by age, by decades sloughed off long before they were due, he knew that voice.
“We’re not interested in clan– in droids,” the voice corrected itself, adding a cleared throat for emphasis. “Just the Jedi.”
Braig turned and ran. He hesitated just long enough to scoop Tess into his arms (rabbit droids were not, ironically enough, known for their speed or agility) and bolted down the hallway. There was no point for stealth now, not with that slagbrained inkeep pointing the soldiers in his direction, not when he could hear their feet pounding up the rickety staircase (he felt a bit of grim satisfaction when he heard the wood splinter beneath a plastoid boot, and a string of Mando’a curses as the soldier struggled to free himself from the poor construction). The whole reason Braig had paid for this dilapidated piece of trash was because he’d been assured of the anonymity of the patrons would be closely guarded, and, having judged by the signatures of those he had sensed bustling in the background, Braig had believed it. How foolish he had been.
And now, I won’t even get in on that ‘cheap’ breakfast, he thought to himself, trying desperately to bring some light to his otherwise desperate situation. The Force let out a blood-curdling shriek to his left, and he threw himself into the right wall just in time to avoid being pierced by a bright green blaster bolt. Tess squeaked at the sudden impact, though Braig wasn’t sure if it had been prompted by fear or discomfort. He didn’t stop to think about it. He kept running, legs and lungs working to put as much distance between himself and the soldiers as he could. Another bolt was heralded through the Force, and he pivoted abruptly, amethyst blade screaming to life in his hand as he did so. The two vivid streaks of light connected, sending the bolt ricocheting off to the side. R7 whistled loudly, and little jets sparked up around his wheels to propel the old droid through the filthy window. Braig followed after him, throwing Tess into the air, clipping his saber to his belt. He hit the ground in a roll. Glass dug into his jacket, scraping at any exposed flesh it could reach. Tess dropped from the air; Braig caught him as he stood, huffing a breath and raising his eyebrows in a silent apology for the rough handling. A shout from behind; more bolts whizzing by. More scorch marks on the wall; they’d blend in with the others. He doubted the chaos behind him would even draw any stares, unless they overheard the shouts of ‘Stop the Jedi!’
He really hoped nobody heard.
Another bolt; he swerved again, then noticed R7 bobbing down beside him.
“Sev,” he said, and the little droid turned his dome towards his friend.
“Catch.” Braig said, and tossed an indignant Tess through the air once more. Tess clutched on to R7 desperately, and the astromech bobbed a bit under the sudden increase in weight and booped his offence. As the pair of droids reached an alley that veered off in two different directions, Braig waved them one way and turned himself down the opposite path. Sure, they’d said that they weren’t interested in his droids, but (another bolt) better safe than sorry.
They were friends, and together held the privilege of carrying the legacy of the Jedi in the datachips under their casings (Or, the legacy of the Jedi, from his own point of view).
Another bolt.
That one had come a bit too close, sparks shooting off of the impact site. A few nicked his ear. It burned. The footsteps were getting closer. Shouts; ‘Jedi’, and he could almost smirk, almost laugh. He wished that didn’t sound like an insult.
That it didn’t sound like a death knell.
Another bolt.
He glanced over his shoulder, and the shrivelled, shattered old thing in his chest clenched.
The storm trooper suits looked so much like what the men had worn, back when they were still considered ‘men’. Not quite, though.
He looked forward; a building was coming up. He didn’t bother looking up; Crouched, coiled, and let the Force hurl him into the air.
More shouting, more bolts; One connected with his shoulder. Just a clip, but it still burned. He hissed, swore against the wind that screamed around him. A part of him was numbly aware that he would have gotten into a lot of trouble for language so foul only a few decades prior. The bolt had altered his focus; he hit the ground harder than he would have liked, any further profanity kept locked in his mind as air was forced from his lungs. He didn’t give himself time to breathe.
Stood, pressed his hand over the injury with gritted teeth as he threw the Force around it to suppress the pain.
The soldiers wouldn’t hesitate. He couldn’t, either.
He stood, feeling the ground thundering under his feet as he ran. The voices were louder behind him, though the fact that they had to go around the building slowed them down. He vaguely noted that most of them were different. Not all of them, though.
There was still the one he remembered.
Don’t think about it.
Run.
The good thing about hiding out in the slums was that it wasn’t organised into blocks and districts like the city proper (like home had been); it was a maze of shacks and ditches and shanties, the perfect place to get lost in. The downside was that he didn’t know this place any better than they did - and, if these soldiers were stationed here often, they’d have some idea of how to get around. He, however, did not, and found he had no way of knowing where he was. Didn’t matter; keep running. He wasn’t sure where he was going, or what awaited him up ahead. Didn’t sense anything worth worrying about, and so kept running. He knew he couldn’t keep this up forever.
Hopefully, the soldiers couldn’t, either. He was pretty sure he could hear and sense them falling farther behind. He let himself slow as buildings began to thin out, as dirt-trodden ‘roads’ made way to dried out plains of yellowed grass. He staggered a few steps, then bent forward to rest his hands on his knees as he gasped. He had to consciously remind himself that that was a poor way to regain breath, and stood to correct his mistake. In through the nose, out through the mouth, in measured, increasingly deeper breaths until his lungs weren’t wailing quite so loud. His throat still burned from the run, and he swallowed, hoping to soothe the dry, scratchy texture, even a little bit. He pushed his hair out of his face, ignoring the sheen of sweat that dripped between his fingers as he did so. He looked around, squinting against the light that somehow filtered through the bleak grey clouds that gathered overhead. Nothing but dirt, dust, and grass for as far as the eye could see, in every direction except for behind him. Braig turned fully to face the dilapidated town, mouth still hanging slightly open as his tired body worked to cool itself off and return functions to a normal pace. His brow furrowed, and concentration lapsed in the wake of exertion, and he winced and sucked his teeth as the bolt-burn on his shoulder let out an inaudible shriek through his nervous system. He seemed to scrunch in on himself as he pressed his palm against the wound. It sizzled and oozed and crackled all at once, and he grimaced as he felt the gritty texture of dirt, likely lodged there during the chase. It hurt, but he didn’t want to heal it up, here - that would require him to go into a meditative state, and he wasn’t sure that was such a good idea with Imps on his tail. He glanced to the comm on his right wrist, and was about to tap the button to signal R7 to his position when a distant, buzzing rumble caught his attention. His head snapped up, pupils shrinking to pinpricks as adrenaline hit him hard.
It wasn’t a voice, but it was a very familiar sound.
Speeders.
Of course, they would have speeders.
Braig was already backing up when his fingers found the comm button; its cheery beep seemed grossly out of place given the current situation.
“R7, you there, buddy? Gonna need you to bring the sip around- Like, now-!” He was about to turn and run when the first speeder breached the perimeter of the slums. Braig knew there was no way he’d ever be able to outrun a speeder, not when it was that close, and there was no cover; He caught the birth of a whistle before he shut his comm off. R7 and Tess would be on their way, so all he had to do was hold off until they got here. They just might stand a chance if they could get into the air. He took a deep breath, then drew both sabers, letting them come to life in his hands as more speeders emerged from the alleys he had lead them through.
He had been right; He noted with a bleak huff of amusement that these soldiers really did know the lay of the land here better than he did. No real surprise there; he’d only been here for a little less than a full day. No, the surprise came when the final speeder pulled into view. The others had formed up in a wide semi-circle, spaced evenly and caging him off from the city. These were all white, gleaming in regulation plastoid, just like their faceless, inhuman riders, who all sat stock-still with blasters trained on him, but not firing; That was strange. He didn’t sense enough fear from any of them to justify being literally petrified, in fact didn’t sense much fear at all. They had numbers on their side, and the reputation of the Jedi wasn’t as imposing as it had used to be, but it was more than that… His brow furrowed, and he was about to search deeper through the Force when it hit him like a sewage-coated brick. He almost staggered back, instead compensating the sudden loss of balance by shifting his weight and adjusting his stance. The Force spat at him like a feral cat as the dark grey speeder settled to the centre of the perimeter, its rider’s dark robes billowing out like noxious smoke in its wake. Black leather boots stepped into the dust, a cloak of an equally dark shade swishing around the dark figure’s ankles as they walked.
“What do you know, a real life Jedi!” They said, in a sing-song voice that brought to mind curdled lullabies and ash-covered nursery rhymes. “Perhaps I should call a zoo - you don’t see too many specimens like this, any more.” A sneer decorated a washed-out face, once an almost sky blue, now a dishwater grey. That was what really knocked Braig off kilter - he remembered that face.
He bared his teeth, an instinctive reaction to accompany the snarl building up in the Force around him, but the battered old thing in his chest gave a painful tug when he made contact with those wide, gold-tinted eyes,
(’Padawan Braig, are you sure these jackets will be warm enough? I don’t want to freeze before I can find my crystal.’ Looking down to that earnest face, so full of naive fear and yet brimming with eagerness at the journey ahead of them; clutching fistfuls of his own sleeves, the youngling had alternated between staring out the viewports of the ship, chattering with the others, and posing countless questions and concerns to him, their chaperone, and Braig had smiled down and told him that ‘of course, I’m sure, you’ll be fine–’)
“Ry'Za,” he said aloud, breaking the trance of memory. The Nautolan scoffed, tossing their head to the side. The saber in their hand shrieked to crimson life, and it confirmed what Braig never wanted to be true. Another fallen to the dark side.
(’Look, look, I did it, I found one!’ Bounding out of the frigid caves, little mitten-wrapped hands clutching their crystaline prize to his chest like it was the most valuable thing in the galaxy, and, perhaps to them, it was. ‘I found my crystal! I can be a real Jedi, now, just like you!’ The smile that was directed up at Braig was pure and brilliant, but lasted only for a moment before Ry’Za’s attention was pulled back and away to the chatter of the other younglings; they would still be carrying on long after the last of their group emerged from those tunnels.)
Braig wanted to ask what had happened to that bright-eyed little one, but he knew already that he wouldn’t like the answer; He wanted to ask where that pride in being a Jedi had gone, but he knew there hadn’t been anything to be proud of for a long time.
He wanted to ask what Palpatine had done to turn such brilliant hope into such burning hate, but he knew he had enough nightmares, as it was. All he could do was stand and stare as Ry’Za strode forward, the point of their angry red blade scouring the ground with every step.
“If any of you hit me,” they announced, scowl of distaste melting into a feral, toothy grin, “I’ll kill you.” They said so in such a casual tone that it could have been a joke, but nobody laughed. Braig didn’t have time to; a violent red arc was intercepted by a slash of purple. Sabers clashed again and again. Braig ducked, slashed at Ry’Za’s knees; missed. Ry’Za sprang back onto their free hand, then pushed off to flip back onto their feet. Distance now between the two Forcefuls, the troopers let loose. Flurries of green erupted in an unforgiving gauntlet. Braig stumbled back, throwing sabers up to deflect the onslaught. It should have been easy. But exhaustion was a cruel mistress, and the burned gauge in his shoulder crueller still; a bead of sweat rolls down his temple, and his jaw clenched as he called upon the Force to give him a second wind and force the pain to the back of his mind. He knew he wouldn’t be able to hold out like this, especially not when the Force gave a malicious howl of frenzied excitement over his head. He leaped backwards to avoid being cleaved in two, and even then his sabres came up in an X to intercept the attack. Frustration and pain made a home for themselves on his face, a twisted mockery of the delighted grin Ry’Za sported. This couldn’t go on. He had to get the upper hand, or all Tess and R7 would find when they finally showed up would be a few miserable scorch marks in the grass (where were they?).
Muscles coiled and released as Braig lunged - left hand flipped to reverse-grip, right slashed up at Ry’Za’s chest. Deflected- Turned to parry another round of bolts (realised he was now stuck between Ry’Za on one side, and the troopers on the other - not a good position to be in), flicked his wrist to block, flourish, bring blade down on Ry’Za’s wrist - missed, but only barely; a satisfying hiss from his opponent.
(’Do we get to pick our crystal colour? …. Because I want mine to be green, like Master Yoda’s. I want to serve the Order as long as he has.’)
Another blast from the side. Braig took advantage of Ry’Za’s pain; sabers joined together with a practised flick- hand curled around the darksider’s damaged wrist and dug into singed flesh (a snarl from Ry’Za), pivoted. Knife-edge of his boot met Ry’Za’s knee with a satisfying crunch, throwing them off-balance and into the path of an incoming stream of bolts. Only a few made contact, striking the side of the ribs, the shoulder, the arm. It seemed to be little more than an irritant, and Braig found himself wondering what kind of armour the Imps were doling out, and how he could get his hands on some. Ry’Za reeled from the impact and came up spitting like a feral beast.
“I told you if you hit me, I’d kill you!” There was the fear he had been looking for, rank and vile in the split second before Ry’Za raked their hands through the air and sent three of the speeders careening sideways, crashing into each other with a noise like confused thunder amid the screams and yelps of the men who had been riding them. The dusty air filled with a metallic, sulphuric scent as smoke billowed upwards. Braig used the brief distraction to glance up to the skies, hoping to see his ship somewhere on the horizon, but there was nothing. He looked back down as Ry’Za turned to face him, raising his brows and tiling his head to the side to accompany a shrug.
“That wasn’t very nice,” he chastised the former youngling, and Ry’Za snarled before lunging again. The rage and hate that burned off of him was suffocating (’Padawan Braig?’), fuelled each strike like an exploding star. Slash, block, block, step back- Pivot, turn. Strike, duck, jump back roll duck block strike slash parry (’What is it, Ry’Za?’) At some point, Ry’Za had caught on to Braig’s bad shoulder; most attacks were aimed to that side.
It hurt.
The remaining storm troopers had exchanged looks before helping the survivors from their wreckage before taking aim and firing, though more hesitant this time, lest they once again strike their superior (’Were you ever afraid of the tunnels, when it was your turn to go?’)
Braig’s jaw ached with how his teeth clenched at the smouldering ache in his shoulder. The snarl on Ry’Za’s face morphed into a twisted grin, dancing into a hissing, savage, bloodthirsty cackle. Braig’s blood curdled at the sound. (’Mm, well…’) He jumped a few paces backwards, landing in a roll and bringing his saber up just in time to intercept another near-lethal blow (’Maybe a little. Just don’t tell anyone, okay?’). Ry’Za’s laugh morphed into a chuckle as they pressed down, inching shrieking plasma closer to Braig’s face. Gnarled yellow teeth bared in a victorious smile as the angle shifted suddenly. Braig let out a hiss– His shoulder screamed its own pain through his nerves as the pressure was forced to his freshly-weakened side. His arm buckled.
(’Hey, Padawan Braig?’)
He threw one saber aside, putting both arms behind one to release the strain. He found himself looking up to Ry’Za, and wondering when the little youngling had grown so much - but part of his mind rationalised that the height difference wasn’t just because Ry’Za was taller. They were also forcing Braig to lower his stance, closer and closer to kneeling as though he was waiting for execution - he almost was.
(’You can just call me ‘Braig’, you know.’)
He looked up into those wild, dead eyes, searching for any trace of familiarity, of warmth, of light. Ry’Za only grinned again and leaned in until Braig could feel the rank dampness of their breath mingling with the heat of the saber blades as it danced across his face. He had to squint against the blinding light.
(’Oh, okay. Braig?’)
Ry’Za hadn’t noticed the discarded saber. They likely thought it had been cast aside, and would be ignored for the rest of the fight. And, if Braig had been interested in fighting fair, they would have been right; but, he hadn’t lived through the war by fighting fair.
(’What is it?’)
He pivoted abruptly- Weight was thrown to his rear leg as he turned. Forward leg stayed where it was, taking advantage of the force Ry’Za had been exerting to send the young Inquisitor toppling off balance.
(’Will we see each other again?’)
Braig’s free hand found strands of the Force.
Pulled.
(’Hm… I don’t know.’)
The discarded saber’s locking mechanism clicked, its blade howling as it flew threw the air.
(’I hope so, though.’)
Devouring amethyst bloomed from Ry’Za’s throat, right over where their precious armour had ended.
(’Yeah…’)
Their dying scream was little more than a gurgle accompanied by a puff of steam.
(’I hope so, too.’)
They collapsed to the dust in a heap; their saber rolled slowly to a stop at Braig’s feet as he pulled his own into his hand. 
Silence fell, and Braig felt his shoulders rise and fall as he panted for breath. To him, it seemed as though he was staring at that corpse, the black of their robes making a fitting funeral shroud. The Force around him seemed to grow emptier all the time, and he nearly managed to shudder before a bolt flew by his head, and he jumped back just in time to take another bolt to his leg. 
He snarled as he fell to the ground, bracing his landing on his forearms to keep from smashing into the ground. He looked up through rivulets of sweat and strands of hair to glare at the troopers, struggling to stand even with the Force bolstering his efforts. Blasters were steadied in his direction, and the curse that crawled upon his tongue would have curled the toes of the saltiest spacer died with the sudden roar.
He closed his eyes– The wind tugged at his hair and kicked a cloud of dust into the air. Flash of light.
Screams. 
Heat, explosion. 
He looked up to the sight of the ship touching down. The gangplank hit the ground with a thunk, and R7 rolled out, nearly toppled over as his wheels caught on a rock, and whizzed over to Braig’s side. The battered rogue gulped a breath as he wiped sweat from his eyes, then reached out to pat the astromech’s dome affectionately. 
“Thanks, buddy,” he said raggedly, grunting as he struggled to his feet. R7 beeped cheerily, scooting forward to act as a support when Braig’s freshly-injured leg threatened to give way.
“Thanks again,” Braig said, though exhaustion sapped the emotion from his voice. R7 began rolling towards the ship, and Braig limped alongside him before he stopped and turned to the smouldering heap that had once been the squad of storm troopers.
“Wait,” he said to R7, nearly losing his footing when the oblivious droid kept trundling on for a few seconds. R7 paused, letting out a curious whistle, but followed after his friend, anyways. Braig knew that he should be getting onto the ship, even if only to lay down and rest or drown himself in Bacta, but he had to know.
He had to be sure. 
Dirt and grime dripped into his eyes as he limped forward, and he no longer cared enough to wipe the hair from his face. He kept his eyes focused on the ground, searching for that corpse that had until now been host to that familiar voice. The smell of charred meat reached up to him, but he’d grown used to that from a lifetime of war, and so barely noticed. He stumbled over one, two, two and a half bodies by the time he made it to the one that had brought back memories. He only found a fragment, but, fortunately, it still had its head attached. R7 booped warily, focusing his sensors on the corpse, then on the tired man at his side. Braig muffled a noise of discomfort as he crouched down, used his good hand to tug the helmet aside. His vision seemed dull as he regarded the face - so similar to the others, and yet so different at the same time. 
He remembered the scar on the aged clone’s lower jaw, just as well as he remembered the explosion that caused it (faintly, but he remembered), but more than that he remembered the small tattoo right under his ear. A gentle swirl of spirals, allegedly inspired by the waves on Kamino. Braig felt his face crumple, just slightly, and he bowed his head and closed his eyes as R7 slunk a bit closer.
“Otto,” Braig said simply, nodding to himself. “That was Otto.” He sat there for a moment longer before he nodded again and struggled back to his feet, leaning heavily on R7 as he did. “Let’s go - staying here was a bad idea.” R7 chirped his agreement, and spun his dome to express his enthusiasm. As they walked side-by-side back to the ship, R7 gave a soft, low-toned boop.
“Yeah,” Braig nodded, pushing his fingers through his hair. “I miss home, too.”
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