Where Every Scroll is a New Adventure
Delta Squad playing Loteria
Fixer, holding up the card and waving it around: Escalera ooooooooh!!!!!!
Scorch, having Escalera: AH FUCK YEAH!!!
Boss: Give me the name of a Mexican dish that ends with “ito”!
Sev: ..Dorito-!
Fixer: What-?!
Scorch: *standing up and clapping* Good answer, Sev- good answer!
Sev: *stands up and yells in victory*
wait u guys- i thought of something and i dont if this has been thought of already but.. wtv- i’ll say it.
so like, the ending to repcomm right? right. say Sev is still on Kashyyyk. and that man is living life with the wookies. but we dont know that. ok. and then. Bad Batch season 2 episode 6. when they arrive to Kashyyyk and BOOM- SEV SHOWS UP AND ITS LIKE ‼️‼️‼️ yk.
I MISS SEV, YOU GUYS.
Scorch: She’s sittin’ up there talkin’ about “i wasn’t romantic enough”.
Sev: That’s petty.
Boss & Fixer: *nods*
Scorch: Exactly! I was like, “Bitch, I’m not romantic?? I ate 6 cookies outta ya ass!!”
Boss: *spits out caf*
Scorch: So I don’t give a fuck what she was talkin’ about- I don’t know where-
Sev: YOU WHAT.
YOU GUYS.
HEAR ME OUT.
WAIT- WAIT-
WAIT-
YOU READY???
Crosshair x Reader x Sev ……….
The delta squad!!
i’ve been playing republic commandos and I love it :) I feel like I’ve adopted these guys
…because I have I’m their squad momma now
I think scorch might be my favorite he’s so sweet💕
I've just come across this recently. This looks SO cool & incredibly detailed. If ANY OG Lucasarts Star Wars game deserves a remake, it's this gem of a video game, Star Wars Republic Commando (2005). Thank you so much Oleksandr Maziura for this Republic Commando Intro Remake.
In addition: Taun We's hand gesture was a really nice touch (showing her care & empathy towards Baby Boss). Also, after encountering that A-DSD Advanced Dwarf Spider Droid in the Training Simulator, I remember when playing the game I'd IMMEDIATELY toss a good ol' Detonator towards 'em, target 'em & then order ALL Squad Members to concentrate fire on THAT Target.
Back in the day I used to ❤️ using the Engage Target Command and see my Squad just unload their array of Blaster, Sniper & Anti-Armor rounds (in addition to their Thermal & EC (Electro-Static Charge) Detonators) while my Target's health just slowly drained away. Nothing beats Concentrated Firepower!
Wanted to post this to show that during his origin story in the classic 2002 video game Star Wars Bounty Hunter, Jango Fett did indeed care about the Clones. Jango said he was "proud" of them; he even let this be known to his son Boba Fett.
(Unlike the in-universe narrative claiming Jango cared nothing about the Clones & the only Clone Jango ever cared about was Boba.)
In the following Cutscene Storyboards from Star Wars Bounty Hunter, Mandalorian Bounty Hunter (And Prime Clone Template) Jango Fett said his Clones were a damn fine Army, ready for battle. When Jango discussed this with Boba, Jango told him: "You shouldn't feel sorry for them. I don't. I feel…Proud."
And I❤️this from @fox-trot talking about Jango Fett & his concerns with the lives & treatment of the Clones….
Jango Fett consistently fought the Kaminoans over reconditioning/ decommissioning. In the early days he managed to convince the Kaminoans to change the expected standard, allowing for more leniency regarding deviations in physical appearance, speech patterns, behavior, temperament, etc. This saved many lives. He also regularly stepped in & rescued clones scheduled to be reconditioned for ‘aberrant’ behavior or mental health concerns. The Null ARCs & Delta Squad were saved from death because of his intervention. He also had a secret operation where he smuggled at-risk clones off of Kamino.
Scorch × Reader
Blaster bolts lit the Shipyards catwalks like strobe lights in a night‑club. Not the vibe you’d planned when you sliced the maintenance door for a clean bounty grab. One step in—boom—three Separatist commandos, a Vult‑droid wing overhead, and four Republic commandos in matte Katarn armor stacking up beside you.
Boss—orange pauldrons, voice like a field sergeant holo‑ad—barked, “Unknown armed asset on deck C‑7, identify.”
You spun your WESTAR pistol. “Asset? Cute. Name’s [Y/N]. Freelance.”
To your right, the green‑striped commando muttered, “Freelance complication.”
Behind him, the crimson‑visored sniper gave a low chuckle. “Complication’s bleeding already.”
And then the demolition expert—Scorch, yellow stripes, joking even under fire—leaned out, lobbed a flash, and yelled over the alarm, “Hey, freelancer! Where’s your head at? Left or right? Pick a lane before someone decorates the floor with it.”
Something about the grin in his voice made you smirk. You dropped behind a crate with them just as the flash popped. “Guess it’s with you nerf‑herders for the next five minutes.”
Five minutes stretched into an hour of shutdown corridors, hacked bulkheads, and mortar echo. Fixer sliced the security mainframe; you handled the underside maintenance ports he couldn’t reach without alerts. Your bounty (a Neimoidian logistician) was fleeing in the same direction as Delta’s target datapack—perfect overlap.
Sev provided overwatch, grimly amused, “Bounty hunter’s got decent trigger discipline. Don’t shoot her yet.”
Boss’ voice echoed over the comms, “Mission first. Everyone out alive—optional.”
Scorch, planting shaped charges, kept the tone light. “C’mon, Boss. Optional? I was just getting to like her. She laughs at my jokes.”
“I’m laughing at the absurd probability I survive this.”
“Stick with me, you’ll live. Probably. Ninety‑ish percent.”
you and Scorch sprinted down a service tunnel to place the last charge.
He tossed you a spare detonator. “Push that when Sev says ‘ugly lizard,’ okay?”
“Why that code?”
“Because he only says it when a Trandoshan shows up, and that’s exactly when we want the bang.”
Sure enough, Sev’s dry voice soon crackled, “Ugly lizard, twelve o’clock.” You hit the switch. The deck buckled, cutting off enemy reinforcements. Scorch whooped, slammed his gauntlet against yours. “Told ya. Harmonic teamwork.”
⸻
With the datapack secured and your bounty stunned in binders, you and Delta reached the evac gunship. Boss motioned you aboard. “Republic intel could use your debrief.”
You eyed the Neimoidian. “He’s my paycheck.”
Fixer chimed in “Republic will pay more for him and the pack.”
“And we didn’t vaporize you. Factor that into the fee.” Sev said dryly.
Scorch stepped closer, visor tilting. “Look, [Y/N]—head’s gotta be somewhere, right? Why not keep it above water instead of floating in space? Ride with us, collect a bonus, maybe grab a drink later.”
You raised a brow. “With commandos?”
He shrugged. “I make a mean reactor‑core cocktail. Ask Sev, he hates it.”
“Because it’s toxic,” Sev deadpanned.
You exhaled, Chaos, adrenaline—these kriffers matched the tempo of your life better than any cartel employer had.
“Fine,” you said, hauling the Neimoidian up the ramp. “But the drink’s on you, Demo‑Boy.”
Scorch’s laugh filled the gunship bay. “Knew your head was in the right place.”
⸻
.Hours later, in a Republic forward hangar, the bounty transfer finished. Boss handed you a cred‑chip far heftier than expected. “Hazard compensation,” he explained.
Fixer simply nodded—respect acknowledged. Sev offered a half‑grin. “Next time I say ‘ugly lizard,’ you better still be on our channel.”
Then Scorch leaned against a crate, helmet off, sandy hair plastered, scorch‑mark across one cheek. “So… drink?”
You twirled the chip between gloved fingers. “Where’s your head at now, Scorch?”
He winked. “Currently? Somewhere between ‘mission accomplished’ and ‘hoping you stick around long enough for me to find out what other explosives we make together.’”
You laughed—a real laugh, no alarms or blasterfire backing it. “Buy me that reactor‑core cocktail, and we’ll see.”
As you walked out side by side, the distant clang of sortie sirens sounded almost like drums.
And in the thrum of the hangar lights, you realized: this rhythm—wild, unpredictable, deafening—might be exactly where your head belonged.
Boss x Reader
The door to your quarters hissed open, and before you even turned around, you felt him. That familiar presence—silent, commanding, unwavering. Boss was back.
You didn’t need words. The way his heavy boots hit the floor, slow and steady, told you everything. The weight of the mission still hung in his posture, but beneath it, something softer—a need. For you.
He finally looked up, eyes dark behind that helmet’s visor, and you caught a flicker of relief. You stepped forward, your hand reaching for his arm, fingers curling around the reinforced armor. The tension in his shoulders eased, just a fraction.
No words were spoken, none needed.
Your fingers traced the edge of his visor, then slid down to his neck plate, where the cold metal met bare skin. Boss’s hand found your waist, pulling you closer—no space left between you now.
The heat built slowly, burning through the quiet. His grip tightened, and you tilted your head up, brushing your lips lightly over the rim of his helmet as if to remind him you were here. That this was home.
A low, almost inaudible sound vibrated from his chest—a promise, a confession. You smiled, heart racing.
Then, the world faded until it was only you and Boss, the steady beat of two hearts finding their rhythm again.
He finally took off his helmet to reveal his eyes—intense, dark, tired. The kind of tired that comes from seeing too much but still standing tall.
“You’re here,” his voice was low, rough around the edges like gravel, but steady.
You reached up, fingertips brushing over his cheeks. “I’m not going anywhere.”
A shadow of a smile touched his lips. “Every time I leave, I wonder if I’ll come back.”
Your hand slid from his neck to his chest, feeling the steady beat of his heart beneath the armor. “You always do.”
His other hand cupped your cheek gently, thumb stroking as if trying to memorize your face. “You’re my anchor. The only thing keeping me grounded when everything else is chaos.”
You leaned into his touch. “Then stay grounded. Stay with me.”
For a moment, all the walls around him seemed to crumble, and he looked vulnerable—the soldier behind the mask.
“I want to,” he admitted, voice barely above a whisper. “More than anything.”
You closed the small distance between you, resting your forehead against his. “Then show me. Stay.”
The tension between you was electric, but it wasn’t just desire—it was relief, connection, and the unspoken promise that no matter how dark the mission, you were both each other’s light.
He pulled you closer, the strength in his embrace both protective and tender.
And in that quiet space, with nothing but the sound of your breathing and his steady heartbeat, you both knew this was home.
Boss’s hands slid lower, tracing the curve of your waist, pulling you tighter against him. The heat between you grew, the space shrinking until the world outside ceased to exist.
His voice was a low growl near your ear. “I’ve waited too long for this.”
You whispered back, “Me too.”
Just as his lips brushed yours, soft and promising, the sudden buzz of the comms cracked through the silence.
Boss pulled back slightly, annoyed but alert.
“—Scorch here. Uh… I might’ve accidentally blown up the supply depot. Again,” came the familiar voice, a mix of sheepish and panicked.
Sev’s harsh reply followed, “You’re gonna pay for that, Demo. I’m coming for you.”
Boss shook his head, a smirk tugging at his lips despite himself. “So much for a demolition expert.”
You laughed softly, the moment broken but the warmth lingering as Boss reached for his helmet.
“Duty calls,” he muttered, eyes meeting yours one last time. “But I’ll be back.”
You nodded, voice steady. “I’ll be here.”
With that, he was gone, leaving you both wanting more — and counting down until the next time.
Sev x Reader
The Senate landing pad still stank of charred durasteel when the four commandos in Katarn armor strode out of the dawn mist. Boots hit duracrete in perfect cadence, and every aide around you startled, skittering out of their way like spooked tookas.
The one in the center stopped in front of you.
“Senator,” the vocoder rasped, calm as a metronome, “Delta Squad assumes your protection detail.”
You’d asked for one discreet guard after the Separatist torpedoes punched holes in your shuttle last night. Instead you’d been delivered a miniature shock battalion.
“I requested subtle,” you said dryly, sweeping your gaze over identical T‑visors. “Instead I’ve been issued four portable war crimes.”
A bark of laughter crackled through the comms. The clone on the left—armor scorched black at the shoulders—tapped two fingers to his helmet. “Portable war crime, that’s a new one, Senator. I’m Scorch. Demo expert. You break it, I blow it.”
“Stand down, Scorch,” the leader murmured. “I’m Boss. These are Fixer and Sev.”
The tallest—Sev—inclined his helmet a millimeter. “We’ll try not to stain the carpets.”
You almost smiled.
⸻
Your suite looked less like a workspace and more like a forward operating base. Scorch crawled through the ceiling vents, humming while he tucked micro‑det charges behind every ornate sconce. Fixer was wrist‑deep in the security terminal, ripping out obsolete boards and muttering about “code that predates the Jedi Order.” Boss paced, mapping angles of fire that only a clone commando would notice.
Sev took the window.
He didn’t move, didn’t even sway—just stood with the DC‑17m sniper attachment snug against his shoulder, visor tracking the boulevard five stories below.
You returned from the kitchenette with a tray of caf. “I assume troopers run on caffeine the way senators run on spite.”
Fixer declined with a grunt. Scorch popped down from a vent to snag two cups—one for himself, one he tried to hand to Sev by clinking the rim against the sniper’s elbow. Sev accepted without breaking sight‑line.
“Thanks,” he muttered. The voice behind the filter was low, gravel under ice.
You leaned against the sill beside him. “How long can you stare at traffic before you see stars?”
“Long as it takes.”
“Healthy.”
He gave a quiet huff that might have been a laugh. “Health is secondary. Mission first.”
Your lips twitched. “Let’s keep them aligned, Trooper.”
He finally turned his head. The visor reflected your own weary expression. “Call me Sev.”
“So,” you ventured, “Sev. What’s that actually short for? Your brothers keep calling you ‘Oh‑Seven.’ ”
A low rasp filtered through his vocoder. “Serial: RC‑1207. Clones don’t waste syllables—turns into ‘Zero‑Seven,’ then ‘Sev.’ Vau tried to rename me once—Strill‑bait—but Sev stuck.”
“Efficient,” you mused. “I was hoping for something poetic.”
“Closest thing to poetry we got,” he answered, “was Sergeant Walon Vau reading after‑action reports aloud and marking every missed shot in red. I preferred numbers.”
You huffed a laugh. “Numbers never filibuster.”
“Exactly.” He tipped the caf under his helmet, then added with a shrug you felt more than saw: “Still, seven isn’t a bad omen. Seven Geonosian snipers on my first real op. They’re the stripes.”
Your gaze dipped to the dried‑maroon slashes across his plate. Those kills were in the official record—no campfire exaggeration, just Sev doing Sev. “Better trophy than a Senate commendation,” you said.
“Commendations don’t stop blaster bolts,” he agreed. “Armor paint might. Enemies aim for the bright bit.”
“Note to self—add high‑visibility stripes to every lobbyist I want removed.”
He chuckled, deep and short. “You handle it with speeches, I handle it with DC charges. Same outcome; mine’s louder.”
The ceiling vent banged open and Scorch—all riot‑yellow hazard marks—dropped in upside‑down. “Louder? Did someone say louder? Because I have a three‑det primer that’ll make democracy sing.”
Sev kept his rifle steady, unamused. “You done wiring the vents?”
“Finished! Whole place is a merry little grave waiting to happen.” Scorch swung like a loth‑monkey. “What’s the banter—numerology and murder? Count me in. My favorite number’s forty‑seven—arms, legs, whatever’s left.”
Fixer snapped from the terminal, voice flat. “Scorch, your ‘festive’ cabling is shorting the main feed. Touch another conductor and I’ll teach you binary via blunt‑force trauma.”
“Harsh love, Fix.” Scorch saluted invertedly…and clipped a coil. Screens died, lights cut; the building’s distant alarm groaned awake.
Pen‑light clicked—Sev’s, white beam spearing the dark. “Stay with me, Senator.” He toggled comms. “Boss, primary’s down in the principal’s suite—unknown cause, probably Scorch.”
Boss answered, calm and clipped. “Assume breach until proven Scorch Error. Fixer: backups. Scorch: vent lockdown. Sev, keep the package intact.”
“Copy.” Sev shifted, square in front of you. Above, Scorch’s grin hovered in the torch.
“Bright side,” Scorch quipped, “if hostiles come now, they won’t see the scorch marks!”
“Touch that wire again,” Fixer warned in the dark, “and the next blackout’s permanent—for you.”
The auxiliary kicked in; light flooded back. Scorch fled up the duct, chastened but humming. Boss appeared in the doorway, orange visor band bright.
“Clear. Scorch is off det‑detail,” he declared.
Sev’s low chuckle rumbled. “Discipline, Delta‑style.”
You toasted him with the caf. “To functional anarchy. First amendment: electrified committee chairs.”
He gave a tiny nod. “Second amendment: motion passes with high‑explosive majority.”
A distant “I CAN SUPPLY THOSE” echoed from the shaft.
Side‑by‑side at the window, you both let the city’s neon river roll past, sharing bruised humor and the mutual certainty that, whatever happened next, you’d handle it—whether by votes or by very precise blaster fire.
⸻
Sleep never really came. You were half‑draped across a stack of datapads when every pane of transparisteel in the lounge shattered inward at once—a prismatic roar of sound and stinging air.
A glare‑white projectile streaked through the breach, thunked against the far wall, and bloomed into a spiderweb of crackling ion static. Lights died. Grav‑conduits hiccupped. Gravity itself seemed to wobble.
“Contact, east aspect—breach charges and ion!” Boss’s voice snapped from the darkness, all business. He’d been on silent watch in the corridor.
Sev materialised out of the gloom between you and the ruined window, rifle already hot. “Droid jump‑squad—minimum six. Senator, with me.”
You barely had time to register the whirring hiss of BX‑series commando droids vaulting the balcony rail before Sev’s gauntlet closed around your forearm.
Boss kicked the apartment’s panic door open with enough force to shear its hinges, emergency chemlights flickering along his orange‑striped armour.
“Fixer, Scorch—status?” he barked into squad‑comms while shoving a palm‑sized beacon into your hand. An amber arrow blinked on its surface: PROX‑CODE DELTA.
“Dining area’s a toaster, Boss. I’m boxed—two droids.”
“Vent shafts compromised—make that three,” Scorch added, laughing like it was Life Day.
“Hold and delay,” Boss ordered. “We’re exfil Alpha with the principal.”
Sev herded you down the service hall, DC‑17m coughing scarlet bolts that popped droid skulls as they rounded corners. A ricochet sizzled past your ear; you felt the heat, smelled scorched upholstery.
“Keep your head ducked,” he growled. “That helmet budget of yours is still pending.”
You shot back, breathless, “Filed under agricultural subsidies—nobody reads those.”
“Smart.” He clipped a spare vibroblade from his thigh and pressed it into your palm. “If it comes to close‑quarters—stab the gap at the jaw hinge.”
“Charming bedside manner, Sev.”
“Better than a funeral eulogy.”
The maintenance lift doors yawned open—just in time to reveal the empty shaft beyond. Gravity stabilisers flickered; wind howled up the vertical tunnel.
Boss lobbed a glow‑stick; it spiralled downward, showing two hundred metres of nothing before emergency nets. “Main lift’s offline. We rappel.”
A cable launcher thunked against the upper frame. Sev snapped the line to your belt, then to his own. “Clip in and step off on my count. Boss goes first.”
Blaster‑fire rattled down the corridor—Fixer’s voice on comms: “Third droid down, corridor secure.”
“Copy, Fix,” Boss replied. Then to you, calm and steady: “Three… two… one.” He vanished over the edge.
Sev guided you after him. The world flipped; you were suddenly running down a wall of permacrete, black void on either side, cable humming overhead. You focused on Boss’s glowing armour below, and on Sev’s hand firm between your shoulder blades.
Halfway down, a BX droid leaned out a blown‑open access door and fired upward. The cable near your hip sparked.
Sev twisted mid‑descent, rifle spitting crimson. The droid’s chest plate caved; it pinwheeled into darkness.
“Cable integrity?” Boss called.
“Nominal,” Sev grunted. To you: “Still with me?”
“Not filing that helmet request after all,” you gasped.
“Good. Would’ve been a waste of paperwork.”
Boots hit deck plating beside Boss. An auxiliary hangar gaped before you—service speeders, loading cranes, and, at the far end, a battered LAAT/i gunship painted civilian grey.
Boss punched the hatch codes. “Borrowing that. Scorch, Fixer—vector to my beacon.”
Scorch: “Roger—bringing the fireworks!”
Fixer: “And the repair bill.”
Sev swept the bay, visor pinging heat‑sigs. “Two more droids on the gantry.”
“I’ll drive,” you said, surprising yourself.
Sev angled his helmet. “Can you?”
“Committee on Combat Logistics. I made sure senators kept their pilot’s certs current.”
Boss tossed you the cockpit datakey. “Then fly it like you filibuster—fast and ruthless.”
⸻
The gunship thundered out of the sub‑level exit just as Scorch vaulted aboard, demo‑satchel first, Fixer broken‑armed behind him. Sev slammed the side hatch; Boss took the troop bay guns.
City lights blurred past. Sirens dopplered below. Somewhere behind, your shattered apartment flickered with fresh explosions—Scorch’s parting gift.
Sev crouched beside the cockpit, shoulder braced against the bulkhead. “Secondary safe‑house is eighteen klicks. We’ll clear traffic for you.”
You tightened your grip on the yoke. “Appreciate it. Next housing allowance better cover blast windows.”
“That, or we install the windows we like—three metres thick, transparisteel.” His tone was almost light. “Adds character.”
You glanced back, met his visor. “And here I thought I was the expensive one in this arrangement.”
“Worth every credit, Senator,” he said—and for the first time you heard a smile in RC‑1207’s gravelled voice.
Outside, the dawn line crept over Coruscant’s horizon—crimson, like Sev’s war‑paint—while Delta Squad regrouped in the hold, bruised but intact. The war would send more droids, more nights like this, but for now you flew toward the rising light, the commando’s words lingering like an unspoken promise.
⸻
The scarlet bloom of predawn still clung to Sev’s visor as Delta Squad escorted you across the durasteel bridgeway toward the Sienar Senatorial Cutter waiting in docking cradle G‑43.
You’d only decided an hour ago—papers signed, aide‑team recalled—that it was time to go home: to the domed foundries of your world, to the committees that actually listened. Coruscant could keep its marble tombs.
Fixer had already swept the cutter’s nav‑core; Scorch grumbled that the fuel cells were “too clean, suspiciously sober.” Boss, always by the datapad, had plotted the twenty‑six‑hour jump. Sev walked at your left flank, rifle slung but senses wired tight.
“I still think the Senate Medical Board could clear you in two days,” he said through the vocoder, voice low.
“And I think if I stay two days more, the war will veto me permanently.” You managed a wry smile. “Besides, your safe‑house couch is murderous on the lumbar.”
“Could requisition a better couch.”
“You’d blow it up for target practice.”
“Fair.”
A claxon whooped overhead, routine pre‑launch. Hangar crews gave thumbs‑up as they sealed the cutter’s boarding ramp, crimson Republic insignia catching the light.
Scorch jogged back from the refuel pylon, yellow armor bright against the grey deck. “All green—ship’s thirstier than a cadet, but she’s topped.”
Boss nodded. “Mount up. We launch in eleven.”
You rested a hand on the cool hull, exhaled. Going home. For the first time in weeks, the knot behind your ribs loosened.
A muffled whump—more vibration than sound—rippled underfoot. You frowned; Sev’s helmet snapped toward the cutter. An instant later a second, deeper concussion rolled across the ring. Cries echoed; deck crew scattered.
Sev’s shout hit like blaster fire: “DOWN!”
He tackled you behind a cargo skid just as the Senatorial Cutter blossomed into white‑hot shrapnel. The blast‑wave hammered the gangway, ripping durasteel like foil. Chunks of hull screamed overhead, flaming arcs against the pale sky.
Boss’s orders barked through squad‑comms—“Perimeter! Trawl for secondaries!”—even as Fixer dragged a stunned tech from the collapsing ramp. Scorch ran straight into the haze, thermal scanner up, searching for unexploded ordnance.
Your ears rang. Liquid fire licked the wreck thirty meters away; atmosphere pull whipped the flames sideways until emergency force‑screens slammed down.
Sev’s weight still covered you, armour shielding against stray shards. Heat washed over the two of you; the copper tang of scorched electronics filled your lungs.
He leaned close, voice pitched for your ears only. “Senator, you all right?”
Heart hammering, you forced a nod. “Yes.” The word came thin. “Our ship—”
“Gone,” he said, absolute. “Someone timed a shaped charge for pre‑board.”
You felt the knot snap tight again—rage this time, not fear. “That hangar was Level Three clearance. Only Republic personnel.”
“Or someone wearing their code cylinder.” Sev’s visor reflected the inferno. “Saboteur’s still out there.”
Fire‑suppression foam oozed from ceiling vents; med‑droids hissed down the smoke‑curtains. Boss herded survivors past you, every gesture clipped, professional.
“Saboteur planted thermal baradium in the starboard fuel neck,” Fixer reported, one gauntlet cradling his bandaged arm. “Timed off the pressure equaliser—no remote signal.”
Scorch skidded up, visor flecked with soot. “Found partial detonator casing. Separatist‑pattern, but tractable.”
Boss looked to you. “Senator, the ring isn’t secure. I recommend immediate extraction to Defender‑class corvette Vigilant—Command has a cabin we can hard‑seal.”
You opened your mouth—I still have to reach my planet—but Sev cut across gently, “Your world can wait eight more hours. You can’t if there’s a second bomber.”
You met his visor, saw your own shaken reflection. A breath in, out. “Corvette it is.”
The Vigilant detached from the ring on emergency vector, hyperdrives spooling. Through the small viewport the docking cradle burned, a smear of smoke against the stratosphere.
You sat on a cot, jacket singed, palms trembling. Sev posted at the door, Boss conferring with the bridge. Fixer typed one‑handed at a forensic padd; Scorch fussed, pulling charred slivers from his pauldrons.
“You know the irony,” Scorch called across the room, irrepressible even now. “Hangars scare me more than battlefields. Too many things that go ‘boom’ when they’re supposed to behave.”
Fixer grunted. “Statistically still safer than letting you cook ration bars.”
You managed a weak laugh, rubbing temples. “Gentlemen, please—one trauma at a time.”
Sev stepped forward, offered a flask of electrolyte water. “Sip slowly.”
You obeyed, then asked, “Anyone else hurt?”
“Minor burns only,” Boss answered, approaching. “But the Separatists just escalated. Cutter’s manifest leaked thirty minutes ago—only a very short list knew you’d leave today.”
“Which means,” Sev finished, “there’s a mole in Republic logistics.”
Silence pressed in, broken by the corvette’s hyperdrive howl—the stars outside stretched to lines.
You set the flask aside, straightened. “So we find them.”
Boss inclined his helmet. “That’s the plan.”
Sev’s voice dropped, meant only for you. “And until we do, no transports. No public schedules. We move when we control every variable.”
A beat. Then you asked, quietly fierce, “Does that include better couches?”
The sniper’s helmet tipped, the faintest nod. “And blast windows thick enough for a rancor.”
Despite everything—the smoke, the dead crew, the gut‑deep dread—you felt a spark of something steadier than fear. Delta had you. And you weren’t done fighting.
Outside, hyperspace opened like a blue fracture, swallowing the Vigilant—but not the promise Sev had made, soft as a sniper’s breath: They’d failed to kill you twice. Third time would never come.
⸻
The Vigilant slipped into hyperspace hours ago, but sleep never boarded with the rest of you.
When the muted corridor lights dimmed for ship‑night, you found yourself drifting—restless—until the muffled clank of a familiar gait guided your steps.
Most racks were dark, humming behind containment fields, yet one bench lamp burned low. Sev sat there, helmet off, the harsh light carving shadows along the scar that split his right temple. He was field‑stripping the DC‑17m with the same care a jeweler gives crystal.
You halted at the threshold. “Couldn’t sleep either?”
Crimson eyes flicked up—tired, alert, softening when they found you. “Blaster lubricant’s cheaper than sedatives.”
You ventured closer, palms tucked in your sleeves to hide the tremor still living there. “I wanted to thank you. You put yourself between me and—” You gestured at empty air that smelled faintly of ionized smoke. “Everything.”
He reassembled the last actuator, set the rifle aside. “That’s the job.”
“I know when duty ends and choice begins.” You lowered onto the next bench. “Saving me was duty. Staying here polishing gun parts at three a.m.—that’s choice.”
For a moment the only sound was the distant thrum of hyperdrive coils. Sev’s gaze dropped to your hands. “You’re still shaking.”
“Adrenaline’s a stubborn tenant.”
He reached into a med‑pouch, produced a flat stim patch. “Cortical calmative. Won’t knock you out—just tells the nerves the shooting’s done.”
You accepted it, hesitated. “Could put it on my own neck, but I imagine you’re more precise.”
His expression did something rare—softened into a hint of a smile. He peeled the backing, brushed your hair aside with surprising gentleness, and pressed the patch below your ear. Heat bloomed, then a slow coolness spread through muscle and marrow alike.
“Better?” he asked, thumb lingering against your pulse as if counting the beats to be sure.
“Getting there.” You studied the scar on his temple—white against tan skin, the kind Kamino med‑droids never fully erased. “Geonosis?”
He nodded once. “Turret ricochet. Left a mark. Reminds me to keep my head down.”
“You kept mine down today.”
A silence stretched, warm instead of awkward, until he said, low: “When the cutter blew, time slowed. Thought—if that’s the last thing I do, it’s enough.”
Your breath hitched. “Don’t say that.”
“It’s true.” His hand dropped to the bench between you, open‑palmed—an invitation without expectation.
You laid your fingers across his. Armor‑calloused knuckles felt like forged durasteel, but the grip he returned was careful, almost reverent.
“I’m glad,” you whispered, “that ‘enough’ didn’t end there.”
His lips curved—a small, earnest thing. “Me too, cyar’ika.” The Mandalorian endearment slipped out before he caught it; color touched his cheeks. “Sorry”.
“Don’t be.” You squeezed his hand. “I speak fluent subtext.”
From the passageway came Scorch’s distant voice complaining about ration bars; somewhere Fixer muttered diagnostics. But inside the armory a hush settled—two steady heartbeats, the scent of cleaning solvent, the promise of unexploded tomorrows.
Sev reclaimed his rifle, but his other hand never left yours. “Stay a while. The patch works better with company.”
You leaned your shoulder to his, felt the tremor finally subside, and decided the armory was, for tonight, the safest place in the galaxy.
Fixer (RC-1140) x Reader
Your caf shop wasn’t fancy.
One countertop. Four chipped booths. A sputtering holosign that read “CAF & CRUNCH – OPEN” with a flicker that hadn’t been fixed in years.
You didn’t get many clones here.
Too far out. Too quiet. The garrison was small, the rotations fast. They didn’t stay long enough to know your name.
Except one.
Helmet always on. Barely spoke. Green armor with white detailing, scuffed and battle-worn. He ordered the same thing every time: strong black caf, no sweetener, no conversation.
You didn’t know his name.
So you called him Greenie in your head.
And Greenie had come back five times in two weeks.
Fixer was not… sure why he kept returning.
He told himself it was logistical.
The caf was strong. No risk of contamination. The shop was unassuming—good line of sight to both entrances, windows provided 180-degree visibility, and the booths weren’t bolted down, making them usable as cover in case of attack.
It made tactical sense.
But when he sat there—helmet on, fingers curled loosely around the mug—he found himself… pausing.
Observing.
You always had a smudge of caf dust on your apron. You were quick with a smile, not pushy. Efficient. Clean workspace. Minimal chatter unless engaged first. He liked that.
And once, when he’d stood up too fast and knocked a napkin holder onto the floor, you’d just picked it up, smiled, and said, “Even commandos have off days, huh?”
He’d stared at you for three seconds too long. An eternity in commando time.
The next day, he came back.
And the next.
And today, too.
You slid the mug in front of him with a soft clink.
“Double strength, no frills. You’re predictable.”
He paused.
“…Efficient,” he corrected, voice metallic through the helmet.
You leaned against the counter. “So’s a vending droid. At least you tip better.”
He almost smiled.
Almost.
It became routine.
You worked mornings. Fixer showed up during early rotation hours. You made the caf before he even ordered it. He never told you anything—not his name, not his rank, not his mission—but he watched you like he was memorizing your movements. Not in a creepy way. More like… cataloging. Like he was trying to understand something he didn’t have the words for.
Like you were the tactical puzzle he couldn’t solve.
Once, during a light rain, you asked, “Ever thought of taking the bucket off?”
He tilted his head. “No.”
You laughed. “Figures.”
Fixer didn’t feel like he was capable of anything outside the mission.
That’s what being a commando meant. That’s what Skirata had hammered into them. That’s what the Kaminoans designed them for: purpose. Obedience. Kill and move. Survive and follow orders.
He didn’t know what to do with the warmth in his chest when he saw you slide him that caf with a smile.
He didn’t understand why he had memorized the way you tucked your hair behind your ear when you were annoyed. Or the way you sang—quietly, under your breath—when you thought the shop was empty.
He didn’t understand why your voice filtered into his mind even when he was on missions. Why he thought about what your laugh might sound like without the helmet filtering it.
So he stayed quiet.
He came back.
Again.
And again.
And again.
It wasn’t until the sixth visit that you reached over the counter with a datapad.
“Can I at least know what to call you? Something better than ‘Greenie’? Because that’s what I call you in my head and I’m not proud of it.”
He blinked under the helmet. “That’s… not mission-critical information.”
“You’re not on a mission right now.”
“I’m always on a mission.”
You leaned closer, arms crossed, smile playful but firm. “Even when you’re drinking caf?”
He hesitated.
“…Fixer.”
You raised a brow. “That your name or your function?”
“…Yes.”
You laughed, not unkindly. “Alright, Fixer. I’ll remember that.”
He nodded.
He didn’t say it, but he’d already memorized your name from the receipt tucked under the register. He knew your schedule. Your preferred blend. The way you wrote cursive Y’s when you took orders by hand.
He knew too much. But not enough.
⸻
A few days later, the war came closer.
There was an explosion not far from the marketplace. Distant but sharp. You flinched when it hit, spilling caf across the counter. Patrons ducked. One of the booths cracked.
And he was there—immediately.
Fixer pushed through the front entrance before the echoes even died out, blaster raised, visor scanning the room. He found you kneeling behind the counter, heart racing, but unhurt.
You looked up.
“…Fixer?”
He crossed to you fast, like the space between you was an obstacle to eliminate.
“Status?”
“I’m fine.”
He didn’t answer. He just knelt in front of you, one gloved hand gently resting on your shoulder, scanning you for wounds like you were a member of his squad.
You put your hand over his. “I told you I’m okay.”
There was silence. Then—very slowly—he retracted his hand.
“I’m glad.”
You smiled, a little breathless. “You’re not supposed to get attached to civilians, you know.”
“I know.”
“You’re doing it anyway.”
“I know that, too.”
And this time, you reached for his hand. Not as a test. As an answer.
“Good,” you said softly.
He didn’t respond. Not verbally.
But he didn’t let go.
The warmth of your hand lingered in his glove longer than it should have.
Fixer didn’t move at first. Your fingers were still resting gently against his, your eyes steady on his visor, like you could see the man under the armor. Maybe you could.
But then—
“Fixer, move! We’ve got heat east side, half klick. Now!”
Boss.
Fixer’s helmet comm crackled with urgency. Nothing friendly. All business.
He stood abruptly, the shift from human to commando so clean it almost hurt.
You blinked. “Fixer—?”
But he was already backing away, rifle primed.
“Stay inside,” he said shortly. “Secure the back door. Bolt it.”
He paused just before turning to leave—like he wanted to say something else—but then Delta Squad’s comms lit up again.
“Scorch, get your shebs on the west flank. Sev, overwatch from the north tower. We’re drawing them in.”
Fixer was gone.
⸻
Outside, the air was sharp with smoke and ozone.
A low-flying transport had been taken out above the market square—probably a Republic one—and the Separatist droids were crawling from alleyways and downed cargo haulers like insects swarming a carcass. Civilians screamed in the distance. Blaster fire echoed in tight bursts. Close.
Fixer moved with precision, slipping into cover beside Boss, who was already giving orders like the leader he was.
“Sev’s in position. Scorch is making a mess—”
“Hey! Controlled chaos!” Scorch’s voice chirped over comms, followed immediately by a thunderous explosion and a cheer. “They loved that one.”
Boss didn’t flinch. “Fixer, tighten the east corridor. Thermal count says another squad’s flanking through the maintenance tunnels.”
Fixer nodded. “On it.”
“Wait, you came from the caf shop, right?” Scorch broke in again, teasing. “See your girlfriend?”
Fixer didn’t respond.
Sev’s dry voice cut in from the high perch. “Confirmed: Fixer’s still pretending he doesn’t care. Target rich environment out here, by the way.”
Boss sighed. “Focus.”
“I am focused,” Scorch muttered. “Focused on how Fixer only starts calling for backup after he’s finished checking on his civilian crush.”
“Mission protocol prioritizes non-combatant safety,” Fixer replied flatly, already sweeping a corner with his DC-17m.
“Oh sure,” Scorch drawled, “real tactical of you to hold her hand first.”
There was a brief silence on comms. Boss might’ve smirked behind his visor. Sev definitely did.
Fixer didn’t dignify it with a response. Instead, he tapped a few commands into his HUD, redirected two proximity mines, and crouched behind a stack of durasteel crates near the alley entrance.
“Contact,” he said coolly.
The moment the droids stepped into range, his trap triggered—concise, brutal, clean.
Three droids dropped. One limped, firing blindly. Fixer silenced it with a single shot.
“Boring as ever,” Sev muttered from above, “but effective.”
“Hey,” Scorch chimed in again, still grinning. “You think if we all survive this, Fixer will ask her out? Or will he file a formal requisition request for feelings first?”
Fixer adjusted his grip on the rifle. “I’m removing your access to my armor diagnostics.”
“You’d have to admit you have emotions to do that, Fixer.”
“Scorch. Focus.” Boss’s voice was flat, but even he sounded amused now.
Delta moved like a single organism—tight communication, seamless roles. Boss pushed forward through the square, marking targets. Scorch covered left, laughing and setting a charge with a little too much enthusiasm. Sev picked enemies off from above with clinical detachment. And Fixer—silent, efficient—was always one step ahead, rerouting their tech, coordinating their intel, watching every back but never speaking unless necessary.
But even as he moved through the field, his mind flickered once—briefly—to the warmth of your hand. Your voice. The way you’d looked at him like he wasn’t just another armored shadow walking into fire.
It made him hesitate, just for half a heartbeat.
Enough for a B2 to round the corner and raise its arm.
The blaster charge lit up red.
Fixer ducked—too slow.
The bolt clipped his shoulder plate, sending him sprawling behind cover.
“Fixer, report!” Boss barked.
“Still operational,” Fixer said through gritted teeth, locking down the pain response. “Hit left pauldron. Armor held.”
“You good?” Scorch piped up.
“Focus on the droids,” Fixer snapped.
But he wasn’t angry.
Not really.
He was… rattled. Not by the injury. By the distraction.
You.
⸻
Back inside the caf shop, the attack faded into muffled blasts and distant fire.
You stayed behind the counter, just like he said, listening. Waiting.
And worrying.
He had said he was always on a mission.
But now, you were his distraction.
And whether that was a danger or something more… you weren’t sure.
Not yet.
But you planned to find out.
The front bell above the caf shop door gave a soft ding as it opened, and you were already halfway around the counter before you even saw who it was.
Fixer stepped in, pauldron scorched, boots heavy with ash and grime, but otherwise unscathed. Your eyes immediately snapped to the dark blast mark burned into the green-painted armor at his shoulder.
“You’re hit,” you blurted, crossing to him fast. “Are you—?”
“It didn’t breach,” Fixer said flatly, already raising a gloved hand as if to calm you. “Armor held.”
You frowned. “Then why is it black?”
“Because that’s what happens when you’re shot,” he said matter-of-factly.
“Smartass,” you muttered under your breath, then caught yourself and looked up at him. “You scared me.”
He hesitated.
The visor tilted slightly—just enough for the gesture to feel human.
“…Didn’t mean to,” he said.
You exhaled and reached toward the damaged armor before pausing. “May I?”
He nodded once.
Your fingers ghosted over the edge of the charred plate. “I don’t see any cracks. Must’ve been a glancing shot.”
“It was close.” A beat. “Got distracted.”
You looked up. “By what?”
He paused.
“…By nothing,” Fixer said quickly, though even he knew it wasn’t convincing.
The moment stretched—almost something there between you, something unspoken—until the door slammed open again behind him.
Ding!
“Oh, look who’s still alive,” Scorch called, already marching in and tracking mud across the floor like it was a personal hobby. Sev followed, glowering at the bell above the door like it had offended him.
Scorch spun toward you with a grin. “Hope you’re not charging for emotional trauma because this one’s racked up a tab.”
You stifled a laugh as Fixer’s shoulders stiffened.
“Don’t you have ordinance to prep?” he said, still facing you but clearly addressing the clowns behind him.
“We did that already,” Sev said dryly. “Between Scorch’s interpretive dance through the war zone and your heroic trip back here.”
“Very heroic,” Scorch added, sauntering toward a table in the corner and dropping heavily into a chair. “He braved fire for caf and companionship. That’s love.”
Fixer didn’t even look at them. “I will incapacitate you both.”
“That’s the most romantic thing he’s ever said to us,” Scorch said, placing a hand on his heart. “He cares, Sev.”
“Threats of violence are usually how I express affection,” Sev stated, sitting across from his brother and immediately flipping over the sugar jar to poke at it with a spoon.
You tried very, very hard not to laugh.
Fixer finally turned, slowly, helmet tilting in their direction. “If either of you speaks again before I walk out of this shop, I’m initiating lockdown protocol in your armor suits.”
“Oh no,” Scorch gasped, hands in mock horror. “You wouldn’t dare run a diagnostic loop on my HUD in the middle of a firefight!”
“Or reroute his targeting overlay to display motivational quotes,” Sev added blandly. “‘You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.’”
“‘Live, laugh, lob a thermal.’”
You couldn’t hold it in anymore. A laugh escaped, bright and warm.
Fixer turned back to you, somehow looking both flustered and resigned despite the expressionless helmet.
“Sorry about them,” he said simply.
“I kind of love them,” you said. “In a ‘please don’t ever leave them unsupervised with anything explosive’ way.”
“Too late for that,” Sev said, deadpan. Almost staring into Scorch’s soul.
Scorch waved. “Tell him how much you love him, too! It’ll be great. Cathartic. Might even make his audio receptors short-circuit.”
Fixer sighed audibly through the comm, a long-suffering sound. “I’m going to detonate your ration packs.”
“Bold of you to assume I don’t already eat explosives.”
Sev nodded. “He does. It’s a problem.”
Fixer shook his head and leaned just a little closer to you, as if to reclaim some fraction of normalcy.
“You’re okay?” he asked again, quieter now.
You nodded. “Yeah. Thanks to you.”
He shifted slightly on his feet. “…I’ll check in again before we redeploy.”
“Looking forward to it.”
For a moment, he didn’t move. And then, with the softest rasp of durasteel, he stepped back, already preparing to rejoin the chaos he’d walked away from.
“Don’t worry,” you called after him, grinning as Sev and Scorch stood to follow. “I’ll keep your seat warm.”
Scorch stopped beside you, stage-whispered, “He likes you,” and ducked just in time to avoid a light punch to the helmet from Fixer.
The three of them walked out, side by side, back into the fray.
And you watched them go, heart a little lighter.
Boss (RC-1138) x Reader
Theed’s skyline shimmered under the afternoon sun, its golden domes reflecting the light in a display of serene beauty. Yet beneath this tranquil facade, tension simmered. The recent assassination attempts on Queen Jamillia and Senator Padmé Amidala had prompted the Royal Security Forces to request additional protection from the Republic.
You stood at attention in the palace courtyard, your crimson uniform crisp, hand resting on the hilt of your blaster. As a member of the Royal Naboo Guard, your duty was to protect the monarchy and its representatives. Today, that duty extended to welcoming the Republic’s elite clone commando unit: Delta Squad.
The low hum of a Republic gunship grew louder as it descended, kicking up dust and causing your cape to flutter. The ramp lowered, revealing four armored figures stepping out in formation.
Leading them was RC-1138, known as Boss. His orange-striped armor bore the marks of countless battles, and his posture exuded authority.
Behind him, RC-1140, or Fixer, moved with calculated precision. His green-accented armor was immaculate, and his visor scanned the surroundings methodically.
To Fixer’s left was RC-1207, Sev. His armor bore red markings resembling blood splatter, a reflection of his grim sense of humor and reputation as a fierce sniper.
Bringing up the rear was RC-1262, Scorch. His armor was marked with yellow accents, and he carried himself with a relaxed confidence.
As they approached, Boss stepped forward, his helmet concealing his expression.
“Sergeant RC-1138, reporting in,” he stated, his voice modulated through the helmet’s speaker. “Delta Squad is at your service.”
You offered a formal nod. “Welcome to Theed, Sergeant. I’m Lieutenant [Y/N], Royal Naboo Guard. We’ve been briefed on your assignment.”
Boss inclined his head slightly. “Understood. Our primary objective is to ensure the safety of Queen Jamillia and Senator Amidala.”
“Correct,” you affirmed. “We’ll coordinate patrols and share intelligence. Your squad will be integrated into our security protocols.”
Behind Boss, Scorch leaned slightly toward Sev and whispered, “Think they have any good caf here?”
Sev replied dryly, “As long as it doesn’t taste like ration packs, I’ll consider it a luxury.”
Fixer, without looking up from his wrist-mounted datapad, interjected, “Focus, Deltas. We’re here for a mission, not a vacation.”
Boss turned his head slightly. “Maintain discipline. We’re guests here.”
You raised an eyebrow, a hint of amusement tugging at your lips. “Your squad has a unique dynamic.”
Boss’s tone remained neutral. “We operate efficiently.”
⸻
Over the next few days, Delta Squad integrated into the palace’s security framework. Joint patrols were established, and you found yourself frequently paired with Boss. His stoic nature made conversation sparse, but his presence was reassuring.
One evening, during a perimeter check, you decided to break the silence.
“Your squadmates have distinct personalities,” you observed.
Boss glanced at you. “They’re effective.”
“I’ve noticed,” you replied. “Scorch’s humor, Sev’s intensity, Fixer’s precision. And you—you’re the anchor.”
He paused, considering your words. “Leadership requires stability.”
You nodded. “It’s commendable.”
A brief silence settled before he spoke again. “Your team is well-trained.”
“Thank you,” you said. “We take pride in our duty.”
As the patrol continued, a comfortable silence enveloped you both, the foundation of mutual respect beginning to form.
⸻
The days turned into weeks, and the collaboration between your unit and Delta Squad deepened. Shared meals and joint exercises fostered camaraderie. Scorch’s jokes became a familiar background noise, Sev’s rare smirks were victories, and Fixer’s occasional nods signaled approval.
With Boss, the connection grew subtly. Shared glances during briefings, synchronized movements during drills, and the occasional exchange of dry humor.
One night, after a successful operation thwarting an assassination attempt, you found yourselves alone on a balcony overlooking Theed.
“The city’s peaceful tonight,” you remarked.
Boss nodded. “A welcome change.”
You turned to him. “Do you ever think about life beyond the war?”
He was silent for a moment. “Sometimes. But duty comes first.”
You smiled softly. “Always the soldier.”
He looked at you, his gaze intense. “It’s who I am.”
“And yet,” you said, stepping closer, “there’s more to you.”
He didn’t respond verbally, but the way his hand brushed against yours spoke volumes.
The city lights glittered below like the reflection of a thousand quiet thoughts. The silence between you and Boss wasn’t strained—it was gentle, natural. It had become that way over the last few weeks. You stood shoulder to shoulder, close enough to feel the warmth of his armor radiating softly through the Naboo evening chill.
His helmet was still on, the ever-present barrier between his world and yours. But something in his posture shifted, a subtle drop in his shoulders, a small exhale that sounded more like a sigh than static.
Then—quietly—he said, “It’s strange.”
You turned to look at him. “What is?”
“Peace.” A beat. “This planet. The quiet.” He paused, like he was deciding whether to say more. “I’m used to marching into warzones. Places that smell like carbon and blood. Where the air’s thick with ash and tension. But here… it’s almost too quiet. Makes you feel like… something could go wrong any second.”
You studied him for a moment, surprised he was sharing this. “Maybe it’s not that something will go wrong. Maybe it’s just that you’ve never known anything but chaos.”
There was a pause. Then, slowly, his hands came up to his helmet. You heard the hiss of pressure release before he pulled it off and cradled it against his side.
This was the first time you’d seen his face. You had imagined it—many times—but the reality was softer than you’d expected. Strong features, yes, but tired eyes. Eyes that had seen too much, too fast. He looked younger without the helmet, and older all at once.
He didn’t look at you right away. His gaze stayed fixed on the skyline.
“I don’t usually take it off,” he admitted. “Feels… exposed.”
You smiled gently. “You don’t have to explain. But thank you for trusting me.”
His eyes finally met yours then, sharp and searching, but not cold. “You’re different from the officers I’ve worked with before.”
“Good different?” you teased softly.
He didn’t smile, exactly—but something softened around his mouth. “Real different.”
You leaned against the railing beside him, your fingers brushing his. This time, he didn’t move away. He turned his hand slightly until his gloved pinky hooked around yours.
“I don’t know what happens after this assignment,” you said quietly. “But I know I’ll remember this. You.”
He nodded once. “Same.”
The moment stretched—not romantic in the overly dramatic way holodramas would tell it, but intimate in its honesty. The weight of your fingers against each other. The hush of the Naboo breeze. The flickering of torchlight behind you, and the way his gaze lingered on your face like he was memorizing it.
And then, with the kind of quiet confidence that came from someone who rarely acted on impulse, Boss leaned in slightly—slowly, giving you time to stop him if you wanted. His forehead came to rest gently against yours. It was a simple thing. No kiss, no dramatics. Just contact. Shared breath. A moment stolen from the endless march of duty.
“I can’t afford to be soft,” he murmured, voice barely above a whisper. “But you make me want to be.”
You closed your eyes, forehead still pressed to his. “Then let this be the place where you can.”
His hand, calloused and heavy, rose to cup the side of your neck for a second before falling away. Not because he didn’t want more—but because he wasn’t ready yet. And maybe you weren’t either. But that was okay. It was enough.
Tonight, it was enough.
|❤️ = Romantic | 🌶️= smut or smut implied |🏡= platonic |
Boss
- x reader “directive breach”❤️
- x Reader “Shadows of Theed”❤️
- x Reader “Duty Calls, Desire Waits”❤️
Sev
- x Reader “still just a rat in a cage”❤️
- x Reader “Storm and Starlight”❤️
- x Reader “Vertical Evac”❤️
Scorch
- x reader “Pull the Trigger”❤️
- “Where’s your head at” 🏡/❤️
Fixer
- x Reader “Caf Break” ❤️
Overall Material List
Warnings: injuries, suggestive content,l
⸻
The jungle was thick with steam and smoke, the scent of burning metal and charred flesh choking the air. Delta Squad’s evac had been shot down. You were the only survivor from your recon team. Boss had taken command of the op—naturally.
“Stick close,” he ordered, his voice rasping through the modulator, sharp like durasteel dragged across stone.
You rolled your eyes, already moving. “I didn’t survive a crashing gunship to get babysat by a buckethead.”
He turned just enough to look at you, that T-shaped visor catching the fading light. “I don’t babysit. I lead.”
“And I slice,” you shot back, shouldering your pack. “Let me do my job.”
“We already have a slicer” he respond, before he turned forward again. But you could feel him watching you—tracking your movements with that eerie commando focus. It had been two days of this now: evading patrols, patching up your leg, sleeping back-to-back under foliage so thick you couldn’t see the stars.
Tonight, it rained. Not the cooling kind—this rain was warm, heavy, pressing the jungle into silence. You sat in a hollowed-out tree, tuning your equipment while Boss kept watch. When he finally returned to your makeshift camp, you didn’t look up.
“How bad’s your leg?”
“Fine.”
“You’re limping harder than yesterday.”
“You’re observant. I’m touched.”
“Stop being stubborn,” he muttered, kneeling in front of you. His gauntlet brushed your knee as he examined the torn fabric and swelling underneath. “You need rest.”
“You need to stop looking at me like that,” you whispered.
Silence stretched. You met his gaze, even if you couldn’t see his eyes behind the visor. Something heavy passed between you. Maybe it was the danger. Maybe it was the exhaustion. Or maybe it was the way he’d hauled you out of that wreckage, swearing he’d get you home.
“You shouldn’t be here,” he said finally, voice lower. “You’re not one of us.”
“No. I’m not. But I’m here now.” You leaned closer, your voice daring. “And so are you.”
His breath caught, almost imperceptible beneath the rain. Then—he reached up and disengaged the seal on his helmet. The hiss of depressurization was drowned out by your heartbeat.
And when he took it off, you saw him—finally. Tanned skin streaked with grime and blood. Jaw tight. Eyes locked on yours like they were burning through you.
“Tell me to stop,” he said.
You didn’t. You leaned in.
He kissed you hard—like everything he’d been holding back had snapped. His gloves were rough on your skin, tugging you closer, anchoring you to him like he was afraid you’d disappear. You curled your fingers into the collar of his armor and pulled until you could feel the heat of his body beneath the plastoid.
“I’ve got one night,” he murmured against your throat. “One night before I’m a soldier again.”
“Then make it count,” you whispered.
And he did.
⸻
The war would keep going. The Republic would keep taking. But in a jungle no one would remember, under a rain no one would care about, Boss let himself be something other than a number—and you let yourself fall for a soldier who wasn’t supposed to love.
⸻
He was covered in blood the first time you saw him.
Not his. Probably not even human. You weren’t sure. You were just a bartender on Ord Mantell, working a hole-in-the-wall bar tucked under the crumbling skeleton of an old shipping yard, where the lights flickered and the rain never really stopped.
The kind of place where soldiers came to disappear and drifters stopped pretending to care.
But Sev?
He didn’t disappear.
He stood out.
He ordered without hesitation. “Whiskey. Real if you’ve got it. Synthetic if you want me to break something.”
You gave him the real stuff. Poured it slow, hand steady, even though he looked like he’d just torn his way through a war zone.
“Rough night?” you asked.
Sev stared at the glass. “What night isn’t?”
Then he downed it and left.
That was six months ago.
Since then, Delta Squad had started showing up after ops in the sector. You figured they had something black ops going on nearby—classified runs, deep infiltration, the kind that turned good soldiers into ghosts.
Scorch always laughed too loud. Fixer looked like he’d short-circuit if someone tried to talk to him. Boss barely said a word unless someone needed shutting down.
But Sev?
He watched you.
Always from the shadows. Always with those eyes—like he was cataloguing your movements, weighing them against something dark he couldn’t explain.
Tonight, it was just him.
Rain pounded on the rooftop. Rust leaked down the walls. A dying holosign outside buzzed like it was gasping for breath. Sev sat at the bar, hunched forward, a smear of something red on the side of his gauntlet.
Armor scratched. Helmet off. Blood on his knuckles.
“Was it bad?” you asked.
He didn’t look at you. “They always scream. Doesn’t matter who they are.”
You paused, a bottle in hand. “You okay?”
He let out a dry laugh. “You always ask that like it’s a real question.”
You leaned forward. “And you always answer like you’re not human.”
That got his attention. He looked at you now—eyes sharp, dark. “You think I’m human?”
“I think you bleed like one,” you said. “And drink like one. And come back here like you’re looking for something.”
He stared at you. Hard. Like he was daring you to flinch. You didn’t.
Finally, he said, “I don’t know why I come back here.”
You leaned your arms on the bar. “Maybe you’re tired of being a weapon.”
His jaw flexed. That was too close to the bone.
“I was made to kill,” he muttered.
“But that’s not all you are.”
He shook his head. “You don’t get it. None of you civvies do. You think we’re heroes. Soldiers. Whatever karking fairytale makes you sleep better at night. But out there? We’re rats in a cage. Dying for people who forget our names the second the war ends.”
You didn’t move.
Then softly, you said, “I don’t forget yours.”
Sev blinked. Slow. Like the words caught him off guard and hit something he didn’t realize was still bleeding.
You reached out, resting your hand lightly on his wrist. His arm was tense under the armor, coiled like a trap—but he didn’t pull away.
“You scare me,” you admitted.
He looked down at your hand. “Good. You should be scared of people like me.”
“But I’m not,” you whispered. “Not really.”
Silence.
Then Sev stood. Close. Too close. His breath was hot against your cheek. You could smell the blood, the dust, the war that never seemed to leave his skin.
“Why?” he asked, voice low and frayed. “Why the hell not?”
You met his eyes.
“Because even rats deserve to be free.”
He didn’t kiss you.
He just stared like he didn’t know what to do with the feeling rising in his chest. Like you’d opened a door he thought was welded shut.
Then he leaned in—just enough to rest his forehead against yours, rough and desperate—and for a second, he breathed.