ooh, I have a fun idea! Imagine, reader is getting ready for the bed with one of our copy and paste boys (anyone you want) and she puts her cold feet against his and he fusses, proceeds to move away from her but she snuggles up to him and he melts, kisses her goodnight....and then she puts her cold hands on his bare chest and he just straight up dies lmao 😂❤️
Thank you for your hard work, your fics always make me smile when I read them ❤️
Have a lovely day 🥰
“Cold Blooded”
Captain Rex x Reader
Rex was already half-asleep, lying flat on his back, his breathing slow and steady. You had just crawled beneath the covers, toes icy from the refresher tiles, and without a second thought, you slid your feet against his.
The reaction was immediate.
Rex jerked so hard the blanket nearly flew off the bed.
“Stars above—cyar’ika!” he hissed, dragging his feet away like you’d shocked him with a stun baton.
You grinned innocently and shimmied closer, latching onto his warmth again before he could escape. “Don’t be dramatic. They’re not that cold.”
“They’re kriffing freezing,” he muttered, trying to scoot to the edge of the bed. But you followed, pressing yourself into his side like a shadow. His grumbling tapered off when you rested your head on his shoulder, your breath brushing warm over his neck.
He sighed, melting despite himself, and turned to press a soft kiss to your temple. “Goodnight, mesh’la.”
For a blissful moment, he was relaxed—content, even—until you decided to up the ante.
Your icy hands slid boldly onto his bare chest.
“Maker preserve me!” Rex practically levitated, smacking your wrists and twisting like he’d just been ambushed in the dark. His eyes shot open wide, betrayal written all over his face. “Why would you do that?!”
You couldn’t help but laugh, the sound muffled against his shoulder. “Because you’re warm. And I love you.”
He groaned dramatically, flopping back onto the pillow as if you’d murdered him on the spot. “This is how I die. Not on the battlefield—just frozen to death in my own bed.”
Still giggling, you curled into him again, hands stubbornly splayed against his chest. He muttered more complaints, but didn’t push you away this time. His heartbeat slowed beneath your palms, steady and strong, until his lips brushed your hair again with a final, resigned murmur:
If I had a nickle for every time @blackkatmagic single-handedly made me obsessed with a one-off OP Star-wars side character with parental issues and long hair whose only canon references obscure his face under a hood I’d have two Fucking Nickles okay.
I designed him based off his description in the fic, the two canon pics that were mostly contradictory of each other, and some fanart I found of his father so if there’s something I WILDLY misinterpreted Please let me know. (The fic is called When the Dead Tree Flowers)
I am trying to get back into fanarting and apparently vectors is what tingles my brain right now – so of course I started practicing with clone boys and I am honestly not sure what happened here but have some catboy helmets?
Summary: “You never told us.” Anakin’s words pierce directly into Ahsoka’s heart; she can’t imagine what they do to his master. That stricken feeling flits through the Force again before Obi-Wan can wrangle it again. At least it gets Anakin to look up. He looks torn, agonized, pained, but repeats, unsteady, “You never told us.”
“The past is not an easy thing for me to speak of.”
Notes: (Obligatory ‘everyone finds out about Obi-Wan’s shitty childhood’ fic.) Past Abuse/Violence, Slavery.
“It really isn’t a problem anymore,” Obi-Wan tells them all very reasonably. “I haven’t had a vision in years--not a clear one, anyway. Feelings, things like that, but nothing so concrete as they used to be. Master Qui-Gon taught me how to see past the feelings years ago.”
“You used to get Force visions,” Ahsoka says, tone rather shrill, “and you never told us?”
Anakin makes a loud choking noise deep in his throat. Cody, sitting on a crate of supplies near where Ahsoka and her master collapsed half an hour after their latest battle, shakes his head. Ahsoka pulls herself up to sit beside him, feeling rather as if something very important has been ripped away from her before she even knew it existed. He looks up at Obi-Wan, the only one standing out of all of them, and says, “I don’t understand what the big deal is.”
“There isn’t one,” Rex supplies. Skyguy tries to swat at him without taking his arm from over his eyes, but Rex moves out of the way and leans back against a wall of the Resolute. He shrugs. “Jedi are just dramatic like that.”
“Much as I dislike the generalization,” Obi-Wan interjects, “I have to agree in this case. Force visions can be upsetting and helpful in equal measure, and they faded from my mind a long time ago. I’m surprised my medical files even contain a record of those after all these years."
“What if they come back!” Anakin sits up, glaring. “You never even said anything. I’ve heard Master Windu talking about how forceful they can be--you cold pass out if a vision comes at the wrong time! I’ve heard some younglings are prone to seizures!”
The thought makes Ahsoka shudder. She wraps her arms around herself surreptitiously. Cody sends her a sympathetic look.
The next words out of Master Kenobi’s mouth make her blood go cold. “Well, yes, I know that, Anakin. I was the youngling Mace was speaking of.”
“What.”
Obi-Wan waves his commander off, though, and shakes his head. “Honestly, it’s fine now. We wouldn’t even need to have this useless conversation if you hadn’t sliced into my medical files, Anakin--”
Rex is already across the room and peering over Anakin’s shoulder as her master rifles through his datapad, so Ahsoka chalks Obi-Wan’s efforts up as a lost cause. She pulls her own datapad out and shuffles closer to Cody instead; Skyguy sent her a copy of her grandmaster's file as soon as he could manage. Something about not being able to trust Obi-Wan when he said he didn’t need to go to medical.
Ahsoka thinks that is the pot calling the kettle black, but--
“You have nerve damage?”
At Rex’s incredulous exclamation, Obi-Wan closes his eyes for a long, long moment. Then he opens them, runs a hand over his beard, and looks around for a place to sit. “This is going to be a long conversation, I see. Is everyone sure they wouldn’t like to move to, I don’t know, anywhere but the cargo hold, before we begin?”
“Shinies are everywhere else,” Rex points out briskly, “but the cargo hold is too cold for most of us. We run too warm to be comfortable here.”
“That isn’t good. You should’ve told us sooner--I’ll have to talk to Master Shaak Ti about what we can do for you.”
“Deflecting.” Anakin intones. In any other setting, his stern tone would make her laugh. Obi-Wan sighs again, and settles down into a meditation pose across from his former padawan, fixing them all with a half-exasperated, half-doting look.
“Yes,” Obi-Wan says. “I have nerve damage. I’m sure you’ve all seen how many layers I wear? It’s to help my blood circulation. I can’t keep myself warm enough otherwise, because I can’t feel how cold my surface skin is until it’s too late. So, extra clothing all the time, just in case. I can deal with a little sweat if the outcome is less chance of frostbite.”
“ Why do you have nerve damage?”
“Have you seen how many times I’ve been electrocuted?” Obi-Wan answers. He’s too serene for Ahsoka’s liking.
“I’ve been electrocuted twice as much as you have,” Anakin points out. At his shoulder, Rex nods, but stops when Anakin snaps his gaze to his captain. He turns back to his former master. “And I don’t have nerve damage.”
“You’ve been electrocuted twice as much as I have been recently.” Her grandmaster normally looks a little tired, but this conversation seems to be getting to him more than most; he rubs at his face again, and, with his hand still over his eyes, says, “Electro-whips and prods were the weapon of choice in the mines.”
The words are quiet, like Obi-Wan really meant for them to be under his breath, but it makes every spine in the room go rigid.
Very slowly, Anakin sits forward on his knees. His datapad slips from his lap. Rex only just catches it before it clatters to the floor. Ahsoka has never seen her master’s eyes look as sharp as they are now. “Which mines, Master? And what were you doing there?”
Obi-Wan’s lips thin. “You do realize I’ve had an entire life without you? Twenty years or so, in fact. Things did happen to me before you came along.”
It’s always been a fact that Obi-Wan is older than herself and her master. It’s never bothered Ahsoka before--until now. To know he’s been alone--without them, at least--for so long? The clones are all artificially aged to be around Obi-Wan’s age, maybe a little younger. It’s easy for Ahsoka to forget they haven’t been around forever, that Cody hasn’t been one step behind his general every day of both their lives. It turns her stomach.
“Answer the question!” Anakin all but demands.
Obi-Wan’s hand falls from his face and for a second Ahsoka can detect something stricken in the Force before his expression smooths over into an artificial calm. “It’s really not--”
“No.” Cody says. It’s all he can seem to get out. Ahsoka tries not to flinch at the darkening mood in the Force and reaches out to loosely grip Cody’s wrist. After a moment, he turns his hand over and offers her his palm as Obi-Wan begins, reluctantly, to speak. Ahsoka takes it.
Obi-Wan bites his lip when he tells them about being sent away from the temple.
It rocks Ahsoka to her core when he speaks about the situation on Bandomeer, even more so with the revelation that he nearly wasn’t a Jedi. A Jedi Order without Obi-Wan Kenobi? A Council without his guidance? A GAR without the Negotiator?
Her lineage without his support?
“You had to fight a Hutt without anyone to help you.” Anakin sounds more choked than he did before. Ahsoka wishes she could reach out and soothe him in the Force, but she’s doing her best to keep her shields up. The Force knows how Master Obi-Wan is feeling right now.
“Master Qui-Gon helped me when he could,” Obi-Wan assures. His voice isn't as steady as she’s used to, but he carries on admirably. It makes Ahsoka wonder how long it took him to perfect his sabacc face. Her heart twists in her chest. “He’s also the reason I only spent a few weeks in the mines--I was fitted with a Force-inhibiting collar, you see, so I had to have help navigating my way out with the rest of the--” He cuts himself off. It takes a minute for the gears to turn in her head, for Ahsoka to realize he doesn’t intend to continue.
“The?” Rex prompts, face and tone bleak. “The miners?”
Obi-Wan actually does wince now. “The slaves.”
“It was a bomb collar,” Anakin says. "You were fitted with a bomb collar." His face is blank until Obi-Wan nods, at which point his expression seems to crumple in on itself. Anakin puts his head between his knees and breathes loudly through his mouth. Obi-Wan pauses and refuses to go on until Anakin raises his head and glares her grandmaster into submission. In the back of her mind, in the only small corner not screaming in horror, Ahsoka hopes one day she’ll be able to cow her own master like that.
She regrets the thought as soon as Obi-Wan speaks, quiet and too soft into the dead silence of the air around them, about Melida/Daan. “They were just children,” Obi-Wan whispers. His hands clench and unclench on his thighs and it is all Ahsoka can do not to let go of Cody’s fingers and throw her arms around him. “I couldn’t leave them behind, even if it cost me my place among the Jedi. They had no one else to turn to. You must understand?”
It explains so much of his file--parts of it are redacted, too early in his apprenticeship to signal anything but disaster, and he’s reported too many times to the Halls of Healing--too many times he’s had to be carried in. If Ahsoka had the same medical record her grandmaster does, she’d have to get herself grievously injured on every other mission, and she’s grown up in a Force forsaken warzone.
She’s positive she doesn’t want to hear the rest.
Ahsoka isn’t sure how long it has been when Obi-Wan’s voice peters out soon after his explanation of Cerasi’s sacrifice on his behalf (and Force, did everyone Obi-Wan ever loved have to keep dying in his arms, it’s so disgusting, it’s awful, how could this happen so much to just one person, to someone she loves--). After a long moment of quiet, Ahsoka finds the strength, herculean as it is, to lift her gaze from where it has been fixed on her knees. Her grandmaster stares into middle space just the same as her, and his face is as she has never seen it before--stone cold, closed off and unwelcoming. It’s sort of like when Skyguy gets into one of his moods.
Speaking of Skyguy, he doesn’t seem to be faring much better; his head is between his knees again but his hands, like Rex’s beside him, are clenched into fists. He’s shaking so hard she can see it from across the room. Ahsoka realizes that at some point Cody let go of her own hand, and glances around to see him clenching his bucket on his knees fit to crush it between his very human palms.
Then her grandmaster draws himself up into a proper sitting position and sighs, a light puff of air that Ahsoka has come to learn is his way of reorienting himself. “It worked out in the end. Qui-Gon came back for me when I called and was able to help bring balance to the planet--something I couldn’t have done alone. I was admitted back into the Order as his apprentice and then--” Obi-Wan’s lips twitch into a sardonic smile. “Well, nothing much happened until we went to Mandalore, but you know just about as much as I am willing to tell you about that experience.”
The attempt at humor falls a little too flat.
“You never told us.” Anakin’s words pierce directly into Ahsoka’s heart; she can’t imagine what they do to his master. That stricken feeling flits through the Force again before Obi-Wan can wrangle it again. At least it gets Anakin to look up. He looks torn, agonized, pained, but repeats, unsteady, “You never told us.”
“The past is not an easy thing for me to speak of.”
“You didn’t tell me.”
Anakin’s eyes spark with heat. She can’t see much of Obi-Wan’s face from here when he turns his head, just enough to know they’re having one of their silent conversations. Those have become few and far between, of late. It’s almost a comfort to see.
“You were my padawan.” Obi-Wan says slowly, like he’s formulating his words as he thinks of them. Ahsoka herself feels drained, empty, a husk--she can’t imagine how he must feel right now. “Ahsoka is my grandpadawan. Rex and Cody are my subordinates. It’s incredibly inappropriate, not to mention irresponsible and near abusive, to unload such traumatic, personal stories upon those who cannot legally or knowingly consent--”
“Sir, permission to speak freely?” Cody doesn’t wait for more than a surprised, dry laugh, before he says, “That is absolutely the biggest crock of bantha fodder I’ve ever heard.”
“Perhaps. That does not mean it is not true. I should not have even told you now--I just don’t want you to find out from some clinical diagnosis instead. You all deserve better.”
“Oh, I have no doubt you believe everything you just said, even that kark you just spewed. It’s just horrifying to know you think it.” Cody’s grip relaxes on his helmet with no little effort. He breathes in through his nose, out through his mouth once, and then opens his eyes and nods decisively first to Rex, who nods back, and then to Obi-Wan, who looks puzzled. “But we’re here to help, Sir. No matter what.”
Obi-Wan’s smile pulls a little wider. “Even if I don’t want it, hm?”
“Especially then,” Rex agrees. “Right, General? Commander?”
“Of course.” Ahsoka says, the words struggling so much to stampede out of her mouth that they trip over themselves.
“Always.” Anakin croaks. He’s the first to scramble to his feet as his master rises. He’s the first to throw himself at Obi-Wan. He’s the first to wrap him in an embrace that lasts maybe a bit longer than Master Kenobi’s sense of decorum would prefer. (Not that she sees her grandmaster complaining, of course.)
Anakin is not the last.
Rex settles for a nod and a clap on the shoulder. It’s only his position closer to Skyguy and Obi-Wan that gets her captain there before his commander; Ahsoka shoves him bodily out of the way and wraps her arms as tight as she can around Obi-Wan’s middle. Her skin itches and her muscles flex with the need to squeeze the sadness, the pain, the terrible past right out of him, even if she knows that’s silly. She tries anyway. Subtly, of course. Obi-Wan holds her back, just as he held Anakin before her, warm and all-encompassing and so safe. (Now she knows why. Now she knows he needs to feel that she and her master before her and every youngling after them is safe, that they are protected against a world that threatened to swallow him up and spit out his bones.)
Cody is last, stepping up to his general as Ahsoka pulls away reluctantly. He holds out a hand and Obi-Wan, without missing a beat (although his eyes are a little misty, but so are Ahsoka’s, and Anakin's, and Rex’s), grips his commander’s forearm. He goes very still when Cody pulls him into a keldabe. Ahsoka turns her eyes away when he lets out a trembling breath. Cody speaks, but his rumbling tone is too low for Ahsoka to pick out words. It’s alright, though; they aren’t for her.
“Mishuk gotal'u meshuroke, pako kyore.” Cody murmurs, slightly louder. Obi-Wan scoffs quietly and Ahsoka turns her head just in time to see Cody smirk back, pull away, and shake Obi-Wan’s arm, just a little, friendly, familiar. It makes the clawing, cloying thing in her chest that has grown throughout the evening finally ease. Skyguy wraps an arm around her, guiding them both out of the cargo hold and back to their quarters. He’s got the right idea--she’s very tired now.
Before the door closes behind Rex as they step outside, she hears Cody’s last words to Obi-Wan and wonders what they mean.
“ Aliit ori'shya tal'din.”
The Force is noticeably lighter when Ahsoka wakes in the morning.
Rex x fem!reader. Our reader is the medic but she’s the one being injured and rex has to stich her leg up or something but he has a crush on her and cant stand the thought of hurting her 🥺🥺🥺
“Blood on the Ground”
Rex x Medic!Reader
The battlefield had quieted, but your leg was on fire. You didn’t realize you’d caught shrapnel until you stumbled behind cover, hand flying instinctively to the warm slickness running down your thigh.
“Osik—” you hissed, trying to keep your weight steady.
You were supposed to be patching them up, not the other way around. Medic, not patient. But luck never favored the careful.
A shadow fell over you, and you looked up into the hard lines of Captain Rex’s helmet. His blaster was still hot in his hand, smoke curling from the barrel.
“Medic—” his voice cut off as he saw you trying to put pressure on your leg. Immediately, the soldier dropped to his knees beside you, stripping his helmet off in one swift motion.
“Kriff, you’re hit.”
“Just a scratch,” you lied, forcing a shaky smile. “Save the dramatics for someone else.”
Rex’s jaw tightened. He wasn’t buying it. He never did.
“You’re bleeding,” he said flatly, already unclipping the small field kit from his belt.
You tried to wave him off, stubborn. “Rex, I can patch myself—”
His gloved hand caught your wrist gently but firmly, stopping you. His eyes, usually so steady and composed, burned with something that made your chest ache.
“Let me,” he said softly.
You nodded, swallowing back the protest.
⸻
He worked fast but careful, slicing open the fabric around your thigh to reveal the gash. Shrapnel had torn deep, blood spilling freely. He swore under his breath.
“This is going to need stitches,” he muttered, pulling out the suture kit.
Your throat went dry. Normally you’d be the one holding the needle, not the one staring at it. “Oh, stars…”
Rex’s gaze flicked up to yours, and for a moment the war wasn’t there—just the two of you, crouched in the dirt. He hesitated, the needle poised in his steady hand.
“I don’t want to hurt you,” he admitted quietly.
You blinked at him. The words carried more weight than they should have. It wasn’t just about the stitches—he meant all of it. Every bruise, every close call, every time he watched you run headfirst into blaster fire for the sake of his brothers.
“You won’t,” you said, softer than you intended.
He exhaled slowly, shoulders loosening just a fraction, and gave you the tiniest nod. Then he started.
⸻
The needle bit, sharp and clean. You sucked in a hiss of air, your hand instinctively shooting out. Rex caught it before you could pull away, his fingers wrapping around yours, grounding you.
“Sorry,” he murmured, his thumb brushing across your knuckles almost unconsciously. “I’ll be quick.”
You squeezed his hand back, biting down hard on your lip as he worked. His movements were precise, methodical, but every so often you caught the way his brow furrowed, his mouth pressing into a thin line. He was more tense than you were.
“Rex…” you whispered, trying to distract yourself from the sting.
“Mm?”
“You’re doing fine. Better than some medics I know.” You smiled weakly.
His lips twitched, the closest thing to a smile he could manage in the moment. “Don’t make me laugh while I’m holding a needle.”
You chuckled anyway, despite the pain. The sound made his chest ache in a way blaster fire never could.
⸻
A few stitches later, it was done. He tied off the last thread, bandaging your leg with practiced efficiency. When he finally leaned back, his shoulders sagged in relief.
“There,” he said. “Good as new.”
You glanced down at his work, then back at him. His hand was still around yours, warm and steady, like he’d forgotten to let go.
“Not bad, Captain.” You gave his hand a gentle squeeze. “Maybe I should let you handle all the medical work from now on.”
“Not a chance,” he said, voice rough but fond. “I’d rather not see you hurt again.”
Something unspoken hung heavy between you. You held his gaze, the weight of everything you’d both left unsaid pressing in on your chest.
Finally, you smiled softly. “Guess I’ll have to let you look out for me then.”
His lips parted like he wanted to answer, but instead he just gave your hand one last squeeze before reluctantly letting go.