Nutrition Info: Johnny/Reader; 4k; a meetcute launched by Reader's inability to cook reasonable portions, and Johnny's... well, just Johnny
No matter how long you live alone, you canât get the hang of cooking for one person. Even when you try to make a single-serving meal instead of batch cooking, somehow it balloons out of control. Wasting food makes you feel awful, but you can only freeze so much.
One evening, desperate and utterly fed up, you go kick gently at a neighborâs door, both hands full, trying to mimic a knock with your shoe. Jason, you think his name was? Striking blue eyes, big frame, a cute cropped mohawk, amazing brogue, and heâs always been cordial when youâve run into him around the building. Friendly, but not too friendly.
Heâs understandably confused by your request at first, but seems happy enough for the food, and takes it around your repeated apologiesâfor bothering him, for existing, for anything you can find, really.
Unfortunately, not even forcing yourself to go and do all of that manages to pierce your shite sense of volume. Your trips to his door do get less awkward over time, though. And Johnny, his name is, always has sparklingly clean dishes and containers to return in exchange for the full ones.Â
Eventually he just starts showing up at your place instead and eats with you at your bar counter. He didnât really ask, and you definitely didnât, but there he is all the same, and⊠if you're honest? Heâs just so easy to be around, it quickly feels natural having him there. He puts you off your guard, puts you at ease and makes you smile, like those are somehow the most natural things in the world.
From that first night, Johnny has insisted on helping with dishes. Starting the second, heâs always got groceries with him. Even manages to talk you out of your discomfort over accepting them, so well that on his fourth night, youâve got a small shopping list ready. Heâs cheeky, you donât think heâll mind. And he is right, after all: you're probably feeding him at least three or four nights out of the week, what with all the leftovers.
You start eating better, and trying new things you'd always planned on âgetting around to,â now that you've got a reason to cook beyond not starving. Everything comes out fine the first time you make it, when youâre closely following a recipe, and Johnny has no qualms about trying anything you put in front of him. Youâve never met someone so genuinely un-fussy when it comes to food.
A couple months after heâs started eating at your place, he disappears for a while. âWork trip,â is all he'll say, and you donât pry, even though you really want to.Â
Once heâs back, he starts coming over weekend afternoons sometimes. You do brunch with beer or fancy drinks in champagne flutes, or occasional breakfast on the roof before other people are awake, him in a big hoodie or jumper, and you wearing a thick blanket like it's trying to digest you, looking like a half-drowned cat because no living being is meant to be awake at such an hour.Â
You cut fruit into mangled flowers and vague geometric shapes for the brunches, usually while just spending time with him. He tries his hand at it once, with you pulling up videos, laughing the whole time youâre explaining how itâs supposed to work, and the utter bastard is better at it on his first go than you were after weeks. His hands are confoundingly steady, and his hand-eye coordination borders on the unnatural.
Thatâs probably the official start of his sous chef arc. And thatâs what has him spending a night judging your knives and marveling, repeatedly and loudly, that you still have all your fingers.
You might put a piece of eggshell into his omelet that night in retaliation, and he might not even have the decency to react to it.
â...Johnny I can hear it crunching, oh my God would you spit it out!â You manage between laughter thatâs got your face hurting.
That happens a lot around him. Smiling so much it hurts.
âNah, iâs nice texture,â he says around the mouthful, then starts enunciating the longer words. âVery advanced technique. Shows a great awareness of the culinary experienceââ
âYouâre being such a prat. Why are you being such a prat!â
He talks over you as if he canât hear you, as if heâs doing some mockingly posh review. âAnd honestly, the crunchingââ he pauses and chomps down on the shell for effect, and how is it still intact, âit really engages the senses. Keeps me immersed in my dining experience.â
You regret loaning him your cooking books. Never again.
After that, though, he steals your knives, takes them home, and they come back so sharp you can cut windowpane slices of potato. He offers to teach you how to do it yourselfâafter stipulating with heart-clenching eagerness that heâs happy to come over and do it for you any time.
Johnny gets weirdly into shopping farmerâs markets, walking around discovering new produce and varieties of things heâs never seen before. âFuck would I know tomatoes come in this color? Look at this thing, itâs like a feckinâ... itâs a wee lumpy sunset, isnât it? And this! Like someone took the heart of a dragon,â his voice had gone terribly dramatic, and you definitely hadnât covered your face, âand stuck it on a bush somewhere.â
âBaby how are you so huge, but so adorable?â You don't know when the pet names started, but you know he started them; sometimes it feels like you two grew up together.Â
You like the challenge of the new and unexpected ingredients that come from his trips, and by this point, heâs keeping your kitchen pretty stocked with whatever oddball pantry items you ask for, so you're set up to deal with almost anything. But on rare occasions heâll call you with a question, too. Youâve had each otherâs numbers for a while, it just made coordinating easier.Â
âOi can you make sommat with uh⊠fiddlehead ferns?â
You always can, whatever he asks about. It just takes a quick internet search to find out if you can tackle it that same night, or if it needs to wait for another day. Sometimes it ends up disastrous, but like a shot, Johnny has you laughing or throwing something at him (usually-but-not-always also while laughing) before guilt or shame can get a proper foothold.
There was a night when he was too excited about something to wait for you to answer the door when he knocked, and since then, he just sort of comes in on his own after he announces himselfâat least when you know to expect him. That feels right, too, just like having him at your counter had.
Youâre feeding the both of you almost every night of the week by now, even if youâre still not cooking often. You like being around him so much, you canât imagine doing it less, not even when cooking is the last thing you want to be doing. Itâs like thereâs a bubbly little sun in your chest when heâs around.
Johnny makes you so happy, in fact, and youâre so afraid of losing your time with him, itâs nearly six months before the first time you have to tap out of a dinner, too knackered to make yourself even casually presentable, nevermind cook so much as instant noodles.
He reacts like itâs no problem at all, which of course heâd do, because heâs wonderful, but you donât manage to keep your heart from dropping that heâs not at least a little sad. That he doesnât, maybe, look forward to the nights like you do. You know your arrangement is practical, and heâs never been over unless there was food involved, but⊠well⊠seeing him seems to have become rather⊠vital to you.
Which means itâs better to put it away, anyhow, right?
So when, an hour after youâd texted him and basically all heâd said was No problem, thinking takeout, any votes?, heâs coming through your front door with delivery bags and talking a mile a minute like itâs just another night, you're left with your mouth open and your hand on the knob, because⊠because he's here.
You're not cooking, but he's still here.
You just stand there gobsmacked as he sits on the couch, nattering away, half the food out before he even realizes youâre still playing doorstop. He asks if youâre having the time of your life or if youâre going to come sit down, those horrible (wonderful) crinkles at the sides of his eyes, brows pulled up in the middle.
He looks confused when you say you want to freshen up, like he canât see that your hair mightâve lost a row with a feral rodent, or that youâre wearing clothes that shouldnât even be outside of a bin, nevermind on a person. He just tells you the food will get cold, and that itâll be no good that way.
So you run your hands through your hair and sit, subdued and uncertain like you havenât been around him in ages, as he amiably fills the silence. You know he can tell youâre not right, but heâs just⊠acting like itâs ok that you arenât.
Midway through the meal, he reaches forward to grab a container and put it in front of you, and it makes his knee come up against yours.Â
It doesnât move away when he sits back.
Then, as the night wears on and the very most jagged edges of your weariness have eased, he makes a joke and you bump your shoulder into him in retaliation. It pushes your legs flush⊠and neither of you do anything to separate them. He just keeps on being Johnny like nothing is different, like nothing strange is happening, like he canât see how bloody flushed you must be, like the room hasn't turned to glass and burst, leaving the both of you toppling through the air.
You're not stupid, so you have to tell yourself repeatedly that heâs just trying to comfort you. Heâs acting completely normal otherwiseâfor Johnnyâand you look like a person in need of a friend tonight. And same as him, youâre at all your meal nights instead of off with friends or dates. At least for him, itâs because of his career. You havenât even seen him bringing up a new fling in ages.
âŠYouâre not stupid. Right?
After the food is finished, Johnny putters about cleaning up, working his way around your kitchen like he knows it exactly as well as he does. He puts all but one container of leftovers in your fridge.Â
You hug your knees comfortably, just sort of watching him, too full of static to be paranoid about it, and he either doesnât realize or isnât bothered by it. Not being a complete creep, you donât keep it up for too long, anyhow. Youâve got plenty to occupy your thoughts.
He surprises you on his way out by casually setting a mug in front of you. Heâd made you something hot to drink while he was cleaning up, and you were so spaced you hadnât realized. He just gives you a little smile, a gentle squeeze on the shoulder with a stroke of his thumb, says, âWednesday, yeah?â (the night of your next normal get-together), and moves on toward the door. All normal. But thereâs some metal in your chest painfully bending itself into unaccustomed shapes, jabbing places that arenât used to the pressure, pushing into your windpipe until itâs hard to breathe, and you canât stop yourself from telling him that you made up a new seasoning blend for popcorn, if heâd maybe like to watch a movie before he goes.
He stands there by the door looking at you just for a split second too long, opens his mouth, closes it, then settles right back onto the couch up next to you. He reaches out an arm and pulls you gently into his side, moving in a way that makes it an invitation and not a demand, while heâs talking about what to watch.
You fall asleep there. So does he.
Things turn a bit funny after that in a way you canât quite put your finger on. At the surface, everything is the same. But nothing feels the same. Every time thereâs a tease, casual touches, close quarters, you have to chant not stupid not stupid not stupid on repeat in your head. Heâs just Johnny, thatâs all. The guy you could have grown up with.
You keep up the dinners and the weekends, and eventually, finally realize that with him around to take all your extras, you can bake. Itâs something youâve wanted to try forever, but recipes donât really make single servings, and you never had anyone to pawn off the other 22 muffins or Ÿ of the cake onto, or the sheet of croissants, because you absolutely want to try the most fussy, difficult things. And it turns out, when at last he tells you what he does, that Johnny works at the local military baseâwhich at least explains his sizeâso if he canât polish something off, well, he knows some blokes.
Youâre so excited after that, things almost seem to return to normal. He even comes over and hangs out while youâre baking sometimes. Just knocking about, licking the beaters and the spoons and the bowls, doing dishes as you go, fidgeting with this or that, all while knowing youâre equally as likely to produce something inedible as you are a treat.
Johnny tells you a little about his career one evening. He says that it means heâs in real danger often, thereâs a lot of secrecy with people in his personal life, long absences and surprise ones, shit pay, and likely a brief expiration date. (You donât really let that last one in). Heâs got a bit of a funny look in his eyes when he shares about all of it. Quite focused on you, in a way? It makes your cheeks heat. It isnât as if itâs on you to approve of his life.
But at least now you understand why heâs on his own. And you suppose youâre a bit small, because while youâre incredibly sad for him, part of you is thrilled that it means heâs not likely to be swept away by someone else too soon.
You just gather yourself up, smile, and tell him that at least heâs spending the time he has as best he can, which is a hell of a lot more than a lot of people doâalthough you personally hope thereâs a lot more of it. And that⊠at the end, you're glad for all the times you're involved.
Johnnyâs leaning against the counter while you fold nuts and rum-soaked fruit into a thick batter, his normally busy hands jammed into his pockets, posture a bit off, and so close you almost keep elbowing him on accident, the two of you just bantering back and forth.Â
You turn your head toward him to fire back, andâ
âhis mouth is just there, on yours.
He lingers, but doesnât move otherwise. Itâs⊠testing, you think. You feel his lips shake against yours, in fact, just once.Â
Your shock dies fast and your eyes slip closed, and while itâs a brief kiss, when he pulls away, you donât open them. You canât. Because if youâre honest, youâve probably been gone for him since the first time you gave him a friendly hug goodnight, and itâs only ever gotten worse. If you open your eyes, this wonât be real, or it wonât have happened, or it will shatter somehow.
After a pause, he runs the back of a finger down your temple, trailing the side of your face to your jaw. You still wonât open your eyes, so he just toys with your face until you do.
Heâs got a soul-crushing smile at the corners of his eyes.
âBeen wanting to do that for a long time,â he admits into the quiet.
â...Oh?â Your voice is embarrassingly, unhelpfully breathy. Itâd probably be mortifying, if you had the mental capacity to fully register embarrassment at the moment.
He pauses, smile making its way to his lips, and curling them up at the corners, bit by bit. He cants his head, just a little, like he wants to see you from another angle. âAye. âŠMightâve been since the first time I saw you at the mailboxes.â
âOh?âÂ
That had been one of the first times you remember ever seeing him. He never said a word to you other than, âMorninââ or âEveninâ,â if he said anything at all.
His smile blooms until you can see his teeth. âYou were wearing this little shirt. Green, thin. Bit worn, like it was a favorite. Showed a wee spot of skin at your back.â His fingers brush the spot, soft and testing, near the base of your spine, and it jolts you from scalp to toes. âMightâve⊠lost some time, thinking about what itâd feel like if I slid my hand up there.â He toys with the hem of your shirt and steps in, voice going deeper and rougher around the edges. âMightâve imagined pushing it up, getting a bit closer. Really mightâve imagined putting your back up to the slots, moââ
You kiss him this time, before he can go on, and itâs anything but testing.
And just like everything else about him, this fits.Â
His mouth fits against yours. His body fits against yours. And as if some band of control snaps, so abruptly you swear you feel it jolt through his skin, he's got you up on the counter, his thighs between yours, both of you already breathing hard.
His hands on you are perfect, calloused, slipping up under the back of your shirt, smoothing and gripping, making your chest and your thighs feel molten. It's ravenous, like he just has to touch your skin, has to get you closer. You arch toward him, fingers running up through his hair, legs curling around his and pulling him nearer.
His hips are carefully, stubbornly, infuriatingly back from you, but the kiss is so full of need, so close, that some of his breaths sound hollow against your mouth. It's like he can't decide whether inhaling or devouring you is more important, so he just doesn't choose.
When you're at the point of moaning unintentionally, of hungry little sounds forcing their way out of your chest, of your hips moving against the counter in desperation, when you're moments from outright begging, Johnny pulls back, and goes further when you try to chase his mouth.
His lips are red and full, his face dark--much worse when he catches sight of how completely drunk you must look--and he's panting. His fingers dig into your hips like he's trying to keep one or both of you from drowning. He squeezes his eyes shut.
You don't mean to, you really don't, but you look down, and lord help you butâ
âThat looks painful,â you tell him. Your voice sounds like it's been run over a washboard. He's tented against his denim, and his size is⊠proportional.
âŠYou can't seem to remember how to make yourself look up.
âReally rather not talk about my cock just now, love,â he gravels, fingers clenching briefly against you. His head tips forward onto your shoulder, breaths panting out against your collar bone, leaving you to pick up every bit of heat he's trying to get out of himself.
You hum, teasing. âShame, because I can't think of anything I'd rather talk abââ
His big paw covers your mouth. âFor the love of every Saint, Iâm beggiââ
You cut him off right back. By licking his palm.
He recoils in horror, but the moment your eyes meet, you both burst into laughter, made worse every time he tries to tell you how disgusting that is, something about his sisters as kids, you don't know what else.
You're the first to sober, breathing almost back to normal, thoughts already whirring on fast-forward. You look down, pulling your knees together, hands gripping the edge of the counter. âAre weâŠ. Will we be ok, after this?â
You peek up to see him looking at you like you're daft.
ââS been the better part of a year,â he says softly, moving forward and running his thumbs over your knees. Asking your legs to make room again, to let him get close again. âHave you really not figured it out, all this time?âÂ
Your legs open hesitantly, and he steps in and, when you look up at him, kisses one corner of your mouth, then the other, slow and warm and so tender it feels like your chest is cracking right down the center.
Eyes closed, brows a little pinched, you murmur, âWe can't all be SAS savants, Johnny.â Maybe you know. Maybe. But it has been all this time, so maybe you need to hear it, too.
He's still kissing, pace unhurried and savouring, making his way to your jaw and just beneath it. But it's calming now, somewhere between reverential and still trying to bring the both of you down. Himself especially, you think.
âThen let me spell it out for you. Gladly.â He noses up against the bottom of your ear and roughs, âYou are fucking stuck with me. Glued. Bloody welded.â He huffs a laugh and leans back uprightâbut not all the way, not too far back. âThis isnae a new thing for me. You know that, right? I justâŠ.â He shakes his head and abandons the thought, âHell, my mates have already been asking when they can come over for dinner, the dobbers.â
Your brows shoot up. âYou've talked about me at work?â
He looks down, and while his face is in half a scowl, you'd swear he does it to hide a slight flush, too. âHaven't shut up about you, more like. Should hear what my Lieutenantâ Ach, nevermind that.â
You hurry to say that they're welcome any time, but it makes him scowl fully.
âNot exactly keen on the idea just yet.â He puts his arms around you, buries his face in your neck, and just stands there, breathing you in. He mutters into the crook of your shoulder, âMind if I stay like this for a bit? Just while I, uh⊠calm down.â
His hips are still well back from you. Youâre not sure youâve ever adored and hated him so much at once.
âIâd really like that,â you tell him softly, arms going around his ribs, hands on his shoulders, chest to chest.
It's warm and resounding like this, so after a spell, without thinking, you bite his shoulder. Just sink your teeth in and leave them there. Itâs not even entirely conscious, it's just so comfortable and comforting.
âAll good, there, wee piranha?â he eventually asks, a smile in his voice.
You detach instantly. âAh, sorry! I, uh, might have a tiny bit of an oral fixation.â
He groans. âAre ye trying to do me in?â
âIâm not the one who said we had to stop, Mr. Military Discipline.â
His eyes darken in a flash, but he tamps down on it just as quickly and gets that godawful cocky look on his face, instead. âPardon me for not wanting to rush something that really matters.â His tone goes so soft at the end that you canât even be mad at him--exactly as you know he intended, the great bastard.
âHow did I not know what a sadist you are?â
And that look means heâs about to make you eat your words.
âJohnny I will happily kill you in your sleep.â
âI could handle that. Means you'd be in my bed, aye?â
He pulls your hands up from the death grip they've found on the edge of the counter and laces your fingers together. âI dinnaeâŠ.â He clears his throat, frowns. âJust being away on deployment is shite now, and I love what I do. But I miss you while I'm gone, think about you back here all the bloody time, and we havnae evenâŠ.â
When he doesnât finish, you whisper, heart clenching with the realization, âYou really don't want to rush this.â
He laughs quietly like he wants to argue. But what he says is, âNo. I don't. But while that's trueâŠ.â He steps in, chin ducking, eyes darkening even as they shine, voice lowering. âWhat do you say we turn the oven off? I've a funny feeling you willnae be getting around to that bake today.â
day 1 at the communal puzzle club: i see a puzzle with a sign next to it that says "please help with our communal puzzle" and i say to myself "don't mind if I do" and did the whole thing
day 2 at the communal puzzle club: i get gently reprimanded for not sharing the puzzle experience with the others. in my defense I thought they needed all the help they could get
day 3 at the communal puzzle club: we start a new puzzle and i put one of the pieces in my pocket and save it for later so i can be the one who puts in the last piece
day 4 at the communal puzzle club: the puzzle is almost complete so i reach into my pocket and realize i left the last piece in my other pants which are currently in the washing machine. i feign ignorance
day 5 at the communal puzzle club: the others are suspicious but they have no proof. they check my pockets before i leave but little do they know that this time i ate the pieces
day 6 at the communal puzzle club: i put an entire bottle of miralax in my coffee to get the pieces out of my digestive system but they are too far dissolved to be usable. my stomach is in so much pain and i can't stop shitting but i rinse off what's left of the pieces and make it to puzzle club anyway, only to find out they don't meet on mondays. i am inconsolable.
day 7 at the communal puzzle club: i realized those pieces are incriminating evidence so i slipped them in someone else's pocket. i should be good as long as they don't find residual traces of my dna
day 9 at the communal puzzle club: i am in such deep focus that the others are starting to fear me. either that or they are cowering away from the communal puzzle out of sheer respect for my skills
day 10 at the communal puzzle club: i'm getting better and better, i can now do several puzzles in one day. the others are discussing what to do about me in hushed tones. little do they know my laser focus allows me to hear everything they say. they aren't a threat.
day 11 at the communal puzzle club: the club manager unlocked the door but already i am inside. ive been here all night doing puzzles in the dark. they threaten to ban me from the club so in response i pick a 500 piece puzzle at random and complete it in under 45 minutes, just to show them who the real authority is
day 12 at the communal puzzle club: i have been officially banned from the communal puzzle club. in a fit of rage i grab as many pieces as i can and eat them, making sure to thoroughly chew and swallow every single one. if i can't do them, no one can.
day 13 at the communal puzzle club: it's monday again. the club doesn't meet today. it's the perfect opportunity to break in and do as many puzzles as my heart desires, without any of the club's petty drama to distract me
day 14 at the communal puzzle club: i am in jail because the club manager snitched to the cops like the pathetic weakling they are. this is the worst night of my entire life there aren't any puzzles here
day 15 at the communal puzzle club: the judge let me off with a restraining order since I didn't actually steal anything. i show back up to communal puzzle club just to make a show of ripping the order to shreds. no piece of paper will dictate my life, only jigsaw-cut cardboard has that power. nothing else.
day 16 at the communal puzzle club: everyone is so quiet today when I walk in. I eat some pieces in a show of force, just to remind everyone who's in charge. I comment that they taste somewhat like strychnine, they say it's just because Ravensburger has a new method of chemically processing their pieces. sounds plausible. 30 minutes later i am convulsing violently but i beg them not to call an ambulance until i finish the puzzle i was working on. but the bastards don't listen and I'm shipped off to the hospital kicking and screaming.
day 17 at the communal puzzle club: i spent the night in the hospital. a detective comes in and says they're investigating the manager of the communal puzzle club for attempted murder and asks what i know. i tell him honestly that i ain't no snitch and spit in his face. he says they have more than enough evidence to prosecute regardless.
day 18 at the communal puzzle club: the club manager is on trial for attempted murder and i am called as a witness. i tell the judge that i ain't no snitch and spit in his face. i am held in contempt of the court
day 19 at the communal puzzle club: the defense makes a plea of justifiable self defense, citing the restraining order that isn't even 1 week old. somehow the judge buys that flimsy defense. i mean, this is the same judge who didn't even recognize me from that same case despite being the same judge. i think the poor old man has dementia so i make a motion for a mistrial. it gets shot down because the system is corrupt.
day 20 at the communal puzzle club: the judge says i should get jail time but he decided i should be in a mental facility instead. i don't know why he would think that, i have been nothing but sane my entire life. god forbid a woman have hobbies
day 4 in the psych ward: i need to find those missing pieces i need to find them i need to find them i have been questioning everybody all the nurses all the doctors all the patients all the miscellaneous hospital staff but nobody knows anything. this is hopeless. i will never be able to overcome this trauma. my life is over
day 5 in the psych ward: it's so boring in here. without complete puzzles there's nothing to do except watch tv but the only channel they get is the local news. i begrudgingly watch out of nothing but all-encompassing ennui. but one of the stories is about the communal puzzle club and suddenly i am overcome with nostalgia. turns out there was a series of alleged poisonings attributed to that location. strychnine was found in three people so far, one of whom was myself. but the others didn't survive. this confirms my suspicion that i am in fact the chosen one
day 6 in the psych ward: with a renewed sense of purpose i will attempt to convince the doctors of my "sanity," but i also came to the realization that they don't care about sanity, they only care about sedation. they want to supress my passion, eradicate my truth, condition me to fall in line with the rest of the "sane" people. with that knowledge, i was able to tell them everything they wanted to hear. i acted polite, pretended i was cured, i even feigned complete disinterest in puzzles! it made my stomach boil but i did it, i convinced them, and just like that, i was free.
day 28 at the communal puzzle club: i don't know why everyone was so surprised to see me again, it's only natural that i'd come to finish what i started
(i know this is supposed to be day 27 at the communal puzzle club but day 27 was a monday so nothing happened) like what am i gonna say, "day 27 i sat alone in my studio apartment eating cereal and biding my time"
day 29 at the communal puzzle club: the communal puzzle club has been disbanded, the club manager has been arrested, and the whole place is swarming with cops. i watched as they hauled off a bunch of expensive looking printers and like a billion reams of paper and loaded them onto a big police truck.
apparently, the communal puzzle club was just a front for document forgery and counterfeit cash, and i had been inadvertently sabotaging them this entire time. which is sad because i support both of those things. but it also explains why they met 12 hours a day, 6 days a week and why they had their own building despite having no profit model and also why i was the only one who seemed to actually care about the puzzles. everyone else was too busy making fake passports to care.
in hindsight, i always knew they were all a bunch of casuals. but i didn't mind because they had so many excellent puzzles. I asked one of the officers if i could at least have the puzzles but he said they were already taken and locked away in the evidence room. the thought sickens me- all those puzzles, gathering dust, never to be assembled again. or maybe the pigs just took them for themselves! so they could have all the puzzles they want while the rest of us ordinary, law-abiding citizens have nothing to do except die of boredom!
the moral of the story is that we can never have nice things because of the fucking pigs. fuck the police.
my local library was having a puzzle swap and there was a puzzle with a sign next to it that said "please help with our communal puzzle" and i thought "wouldn't it be funny if i did the entire thing by myself" and then i did the entire thing by myself while rolling that thought around in my brain and as it rolled it started picking up all the various mold spores and fungus i keep up there. like a katamari
This thing has been out of print for like, 26 years and some of us want to make chubby classic pikachu so uh... I figure it's okay to share bc it's kinda hard to get your hands on the remaining physical copies.
Bonus points: Aelith made some embroidery/applique files for it too
This is FREE, please don't pay for the pattern.
Only the EMBROIDERY is paid.
Remade by AeilithArt so that we could use the pattern without like, destroying it. It's not exact since it's trace, but it's p much the same
Tags: mentions of oral (f receiving), anal sex, brief mentions of rimming, fingering, teasing, use of lube, Cody is an ass man
Check out my Kinktober Masterlist here!
âCyarâika.â The word, usually spoken with fondness, or moaned through clench teeth, comes hissed through teeth as a sharp warning, matched with narrowing eyes.
Your face turns to look over your shoulder at Cody, your brows furrowing in confusion. Heâs fixing the straps of his armor, strapping the plate across his chest as he shoots a look you way. You follow his gaze, to where you had kicked the blankets down to pool around your thighs, to where your sleep shorts are hiked up over the round curve of your ass.
Understanding, you flip over, sliding down to the end of the bed, letting his hand grasp yours as he pulls you into his chest. Your hands slide over his armor, his hands dropping to slide under the long edge of your shirt, fingers brushing your thighs.
âAre you trying to distract me?â He murmurs as you lean up to kiss him, his head tilting down to meet you half-way.
âIs it working?â You grin back, fingers hooking around the back of his neck, pressing yourself against him as his lips press against yours.
âMm,â He kisses you again, âFlashing your sweet ass at me always works.â
You cheeks flush and you bury your head in his shoulder, words muffled, âDonât know why you like it so much.â
âFuck, you donât want to know the things I want to do to it.â His lips curve in a smile, his hand coming up to cup and squeeze one of your cheeks, pressing you even more snugly against him as his codpiece digging into your hip.
So you ask, in a hushed voice - and his teeth sink into his lip as he considers, before his voice goes low as he groans.
âEat it. Fuck it. Make it mine, cyare.â
You almost choke on your own breath as his words, as his hand kneads your flesh.
âI could make you feel so goddamn good. Make you cum so hard with my cock buried in that tight little ass.â His mouth is so close to yours, and youâre leaning up to kiss him another time when he releases you, stepping away.
âCanât be late, sweetheart.â He presses a quick kiss against your temple, his lips pulling into a smirk at the dazed look in your eyes.
You watch him as he leaves, the comfortable confidence in his steps, slumping down on the bed as the door shuts behind him.
How are you ever going to make it through your day now?
ââ
You last only a few days before you tell him you want it.
It bubbles up until it bursts out of you, when the two of you are making dinner together in the evening. The holopad in his hand tilts dangerously as he leans against the counter, the closest youâve ever seen to him dropping something.
He looks at you with stunned surprise, his lips parting as he asks you to say it again.
So you do - and you take a little bit of time to talk it through, working out the details as he confirms again that you want this. And you do, you really do.
You spend some time researching and preparing yourself - and in the meantime, he explores all of you with his tongue when he eats you out, getting you comfortable with the new sensations, leaving you aching for more.
And then itâs time, and youâre thrumming with anticipation, stripped and spread out on the bed as Cody straddles your thighs. His thick finger circles your tight rim, just starting to press a fingertip inside.
âHas anyone ever been here before?â He asks in hushed tones, as your lips press together to hold in the moan.
âN-no one.â You shake your head, âJust you.â
âFuck,â he draws the word out, this voice deep and low as he breaches you, sinking to the first knuckle. âFuck, baby.â
His finger works slowly inside, carefully pumping it, slicking it up with more lube until he is down to another knuckle, until youâre rocking back against his hand.
âHow do you feel, cyarâika?â He checks in, his hand smoothing down your back, his thumb hooking around to slide against your folds.
You whimper, your head dropping between your shoulders, âGood, Cody. Feels so full already, I want more.â
He gives it to you, working his first finger all the way inside until itâs comfortable, carefully pressing the tip of a second. You hold your breath and he leans forward to press a kiss against your back as he presses, stretching you carefully open to take both.
His fingers are thick and it feels like so much, but he waits, adding more lube, carefully scissoring you open until you relax, and your hips start to rock back to meet him.
Every thrust of his hand sends his thumb sliding across your clit, pulling soft whimpers and moans as you press your face into the mattress. One of your hands grips the sheets as the other slides beneath you to cup your breast, your body clenching when a fingertip slides across your nipple, earning a low âshitâ from Cody.
Your fingers roll over you nipple again and fuck, you realize youâre really close, the heat in your belly roaring and coiling by the second. You both groan as you clench around him again.
âAre you going to come with my fingers in your ass, cyarâika?â He asks, his voice low as his movements adjust, focusing on your clit.
âYes,â Your mouth is open, your breath coming in short pants and moans, âFuck, yes, Cody - please-â
The words break off into a cry as your thrust back hard and arch against him, as your muscles stiffen. Cody keeps his hand buried in you, thumb sliding down to collect the slick dripping from you, bringing it back to draw out the way you shake as the pleasure arcs up your spine.
When you can finally move, you look over your shoulder at him, and are momentarily breathless. He looks beautiful, kneeling behind you, looking at you with such reverence, though youâre just you and heâs - him.
You want to give him this, share it with him.
âIâm ready.â Your voice comes out low, hoarse from moaning and you clear your throat.
âYou sure? I can keep going.â His eyes scan your face, thereâs no impatience in his expression - just concern.
âIâm sure,â You smile warmly, and his fingers ease out, leaving you whining.
The fingers at your clit dip into you, gathering your release before he brings it to his cock, tilting his head back in a moan as he strokes it, covering his length in you. Then heâs adding more lube, until heâs wet and slick, and moves to line himself up.
You head presses into the mattress, eyes screwed shut as you wait.
âCyare,â He coaxes, leaning over you to press a kiss into your neck. âYouâre going to have to relax, baby. Itâs going to be okay, Iâll go slow.â
His fingers tease you, gently rubbing at your clit, at your folds, until the tension leaves your muscles, and the tip of his cock is brushing your rim. Cody pushes forward carefully, leaving you gasping as he starts to ease into you.
He freezes, but you coax him to keep going, âIt feels good, itâs just new.â
You breathe slowly through your mouth as he sinks in, taking time to press kisses into your neck, keeping a gentle, circling pressure on your clit. He stretches you wide, itâs not uncomfortable but itâs intense, the pressure almost overwhelming. Youâve taken his cock before but it seems longer, wider like this, and you wonder briefly if itâs going to fit.
He gives a slow, gentle thrust, and with the movements on your clit, it makes you moan. His breathing is heavy, low groans coming from his lips when you clench around his cock. And then, hereâs there, his hips pressing smug against yours.
Your hips give an experimental wiggle, pressing back against him, and the moan he makes is closer to a growl, low and needy in his throat. He adjusts his hand, moving his thumb to your clit, his first two fingers to press and slide against your folds.
He starts a slow rhythm, a steady grind of his hips, just barely moving in and out of you, until youâre whimpering, a steady stream of âplease, please, pleaseâ sliding out of you, as the pressure starts to feel good, as the fingers against your pussy bring you closer to the edge.
âStars, youâre so fucking tight.â He grits, his hips giving a small, quick thrust, like he canât help himself, like he needs to go deeper, âLove watching your ass bounce on my cock, cyare. So fucking perfect.â
You start to rock back against him, and he picks up the pace, his hips starting to slap against yours, the room full of your echoing moans and wet flesh, until your mouth is open in a long cry as you press it against the mattress.
He has you close, and you donât have the words to tell him, you just clench tighter and tighter until the invisible string snaps, your voice pitching high as you pulse around him. You feel weightless, stars bursting behind closed eyelids as wave after wave of pleasure washes over you.
âFuck yes, sweetheart.â Heâs grunting, not far behind you, âGods, you look so good coming on my cock.â
Codyâs breathing is heavy, and youâre still clenching around him when he grunts, his hands gripping your hips as he arches against you, pressing his cock deep as he empties himself in you, splashing your walls with his release. Your name is on his lips as he groans, his hips working in small thrusts until youâve milked everything out of him, until his chest is pressing against yours as he tilts your head to kiss him.
Youâre still coming down from your high when he slides out of you, and you wince at the empty feeling afterwards. The mattress is soft beneath you and you slump, your stomach and then your hips slowly sliding down until youâre lying prone, and youâre sighing in contentment and exhaustion.
Cody is still behind you, his hands starting at your shoulders, and running down, until his large hands are cupping the globes of your ass.
âOh, sweetheart. Look at how youâre gaping for me.â He says the words in a growl, thumbs pressing into your cheeks to spread you wide, as the flush creeps down your neck, âSo fucking pretty.â
His hands let go, and the bed sinks as he lays down next to you, pressing a kiss to your temple, your cheek, your lips. When he pulls back thereâs a tenderness in his eyes, in the dimple of his cheek when he smiles.
âThank you, you did so good for me.â His arms wrap around you, gently tugging you against him as he sits up, âNow, come on cyarâika.â
âIâll run you a bath. Letâs get you cleaned up.â
warnings: no use of y/n, unedited, brief mention of blood/hand injury but no specifics, insecure reader and jack, slight miscommunication, age gap (jack's in his late 40s, reader is in her late 20s), suggestive language. i think that's it! let me know if i missed anything :)
a/n: my first da pitt fic!! and of COURSE it's jack abbot - my man my man my man. let me know what ya think if it tickles your fancy <3
word count: 3.3k
masterlist
Jack meets you after you come in one night, a dirty rag wrapped around your bleeding hand and voice panic-riddled asking for Trinity Santos. You were under the impression she was still on her nightshift rotation, not knowing sheâd completed her run a couple days before, which is what he tells you.Â
âSheâs not here?â You ask, a frown on your face. Your very pretty face, Jack couldnât help but think. Has anyone told you how pretty you look today? You should be told everyday. Jack should tell you. His eyes leave your face and travel back down to your hand, reminding him that youâre here because you have to be, not because you want to be. He leads you over to an empty room and sits you down, trying to calm you down.Â
âWhile Doctor Santos is a great resident here, I promise youâre in good hands,â he says, snapping on some gloves and delicately taking your hand in his. You werenât bleeding anymore â it looks like you just need the wound flushed and bandaged. âGood news, no stitches,â he says, his fingers gently prodding the skin around the wound. âAny tenderness?âÂ
âNo,â you mumble, your stomach turning at all the now-dried blood on your hand. Your eyes drift up, looking at the ceiling to distract you. You wince when Jack starts cleaning the cut and he can feel you tense, so he tries to distract you.Â
âSo, how do you know Doctor Santos?â
âHm?â You let your eyes fall back onto him, trying your best not to look at what heâs doing. âOh, Trinity and I went to school together, we were roommates before she went to med school and I went on to law school.â You flush a little when Jack whistles, his eye briefly meeting yours before he goes back to tending to your cut.Â
âA lawyer, thatâs impressive.â He doesnât mention you look too young to be a lawyer â youâre definitely at least fifteen years his junior, and he doesnât need to be made to feel more like a pervert for thinking his residentâs friend is one of the prettiest persons heâs ever seen.Â
âThanks,â you say, your eyes darting all over his face. Your eyes fall further down, reading the name on his tag. âAbbot? Wait, youâre Trinityâs boss.â
âWell, Robbyâs her boss,â he corrects, focusing on wrapping your hand. âI was her attending when she was on nightshift though.â
âShouldnât you be taking care of more important cases? I donât mean to keep you.â You feel warmth spread through your entire body when he smiles at you â itâs small and looks a little awkward, like he isnât used to flexing that muscle in his face. You find him way too endearing because of it. It doesnât help that heâs handsome and youâre a sucker for curly hair, especially when itâs grey. God, you want to give it a little tug.Â
âAll cases here are important,â he says, his eyes coming back up to meet yours after he makes sure the wrap is secure. âDoes it feel tight?â He gives you another one of those awkward smiles that looks displaced when you shake your head no. âAnd Trinityâs one of my favorite residents, so if I can do her a favor by treating her pretty friend, then itâs a bonus.â
âPretty, huh?â You ask, a smirk on your face. Jack didnât even realize heâd said it â didnât realize heâd let slip what he thought you should hear everyday.Â
You donât look disgusted, so he takes it as a win and gives you a smug smile right back.Â
âActually, I meant very pretty. Forgive me.â
âWell, y-youâre very handsome.â And Jack shouldnât take pleasure in the way you stutter in your reply, the smirk softening on your features as your cheeks flame again. Heâd like to see you flush in other ways, in other places, too.Â
He doesnât think heâll see you again after he sends a nurse to discharge you. Heâs called into trauma 2 for a consult and then when he walks out twenty minutes later, he sees you hovering around the nurseâs hub.Â
âEverything okay?â He asks, eyes glancing down at your hand â still pristinely wrapped.Â
âJust wanted to thank you again,â you say, a little more shy than you mean for it to come out. Seeing you blush again makes Jackâs entire body hum in warmth, too. Maybe he hasnât lost all his game. âGoodnight, Doctor Abbot.â
Heâs almost grateful you donât ask for his numberâyouâre a patient, it wouldnât be appropriate. Youâre also very young - at least late twenties if you went to school with Santos. Why does he feel so dejected when you leave with nothing else other than a pretty smile in his direction then?
It isnât until three days later when heâs coming for shift change and he sees you standing at the nurseâs hub again, talking to Trinity. You perk up and excuse yourself from your conversation, walking over to meet him halfway.Â
âEverything okay?â And he feels a sense of deja-vu from the question, thinking about that last time he saw you.Â
âI came back so you can ask me out,â you say, your voice confident and no inkling of the shyness you showed him just a couple days ago when you were both standing in these exact spots. âIâm no longer a patient,â you lift your hand to show that your bandage has been taken off. You have a very light scar from the cut, but that will heal on its own. âSo, if you still think Iâm very pretty,â you say, your voice low so only he can hear it, âyou should probably snatch me up.â
And despite his clammy hands and the heat that licks at the back of his neck from the amount of eyes watching you two, he gets out a very smug, âHow does lunch tomorrow sound?â
Jack Abbot is very traditional when it comes to dating â heâs in his 40s, he doesnât understand half of what modern dating is like. But, to him, having the same person sleep in his bed almost every night for five months can only mean one thing: he is in an exclusive relationship.Â
So when Parker asks if he wants her to set him up with one of her friends, heâs very confused. Youâve been to the ED to visit him a few times, before, during and after his shifts. Everyone around the department has met you, has seen Jack and you be affectionate toward each other; chaste kisses goodbye, your fingers playing with his atop the breakroom table, youâve befriended enough people here intimately enough to have them follow you on social media, where you post about Jack and your relationship fairly frequently.Â
So what the fuck was Parker talking about?Â
âSheâs real cute,â Ellis offers, mistaking his silence as hesitation instead of confusion.Â
âParker, I have a girlfriend.â
âOh,â she says, surprise in her voice as she glances over at Shen quickly. âI didnât⊠never mind.â
âYou didnât, what?â Jack presses, frowning at the shared look between his colleagues. âYouâve met her before.â
âYeah, Iâm sorry. I guess, Iâve never heard you two refer to each other that way. Didnât know you made it official.â
Made it official? âWeâve been together for five months.â
âAnd you two had the talk, you asked her to be your girlfriend?â John asks, taking a sip and cringing at the awful hot breakroom coffee he has to settle for until he gets out in a couple of hours.Â
âAsked her⊠well,â Jack thinks. Heâs definitely introduced you to his friends as his girlfriend⊠right? Except, the only people heâs ever had to introduce you to is everyone he works with, most of which you already knew because of Trinity and the others youâd introduced yourself. You think youâre his girlfriend, obviously.Â
Right?
Parker and John quickly notice the shift in Jackâs demeanor and try to soothe him over.Â
âDo you think sheâs seeing other people?â He says, his mouth set but the frown is the tone of his voice, and Parker feels the guilt settle in her stomach for making him second-guess your relationship.Â
âNo, probably not.â
âProbably?â Jack says, almost pulling a muscle in his neck from how fast he looks in Shenâs direction.Â
âOf course she isnât,â Parker says, trying to remedy the situation she unknowingly created, âsheâs crazy about you.â
But Jack canât hear anything except the ringing in his ears, and the actual ringing coming from the bay.Â
After a brutal last three hours of nonstop emergency, the nightshift is finally handing over their load to the day crew, and Jackâs mind has not seemed to stop buzzing after what Parker said. But heâs come to realize this is a quick fix. Heâll ask you if you can meet for lunch and heâll talk to you about where your headâs at, and heâll tell you with no room for error that he is one hundred percent only interested in a committed relationship with you.Â
âYou okay?â Robby looks at his friend curiously â he hasnât seen this look on his face in awhile. Jackâs expression feels⊠empty, void.Â
âFine,â Jack sighs, running a hand over his face. âJust⊠when you and Heather⊠did you ask her to be your girlfriend?â
Robby cleared his throat, his face heating. âWell, we werenât⊠we didnât really define the relationship. I donât think there was ever really a solid relationship to define. It kind of ended when I thought it might be starting to become something. If that makes sense.â
âSure,â Jack mumbles, but that makes fuck all sense to him. Before he can say anything else, their conversation is interrupted by the sound of yours and Trinityâs laughter. They turn to see you both walking over to the nurse hub, where Robby and Jack are talking to each other.Â
âHe was totally hitting on you. Again.â
âHe was not,â you insist, quietly, giving Jack a small smile. The side of his mouth lifts involuntarily, the way it always does when he sees you.Â
âSo, when are you putting that poor guy out of his misery?â
You turn away from Jack, your eyebrows pulling in as you look at Frank.
âThe EMT who so clearly is in love with you,â he clarifies, nodding at Jack and Robby in greeting, sliding his arm around Danaâs shoulders.Â
âTold you,â Trinity says, reaching into your pocket for a scrunchie to tie her hair up.Â
âHeâs just friendly,â you defend, feeling uncomfortable talking about this in front of Jack.Â
âHe asked you if you wanted to get a beer after his shift.â
âHe invited both of us,â you say, rolling your eyes. âHis entire team is going. Itâs a Thursday shift thing.â
âHe invited me as a courtesy,â Trinity shakes her head, a smirk painting her features. âHe obviously wants you.â
Jackâs never been particularly insecure about the age gap between you twoâno one around you ever bats an eye, never makes a remark. When heâs got you in his bed, underneath him, there hasnât been a complaint about his stamina and heâs never not been able to satisfy you in the ways you need, physically or emotionally. But then he gets to thinking about how all the rules that come with modern dating fly completely over his head.Â
âYou should go,â he finds himself saying, causing everyone to look over at him, confused. Most of all you. âWhat?â
âYou think⊠she should⊠go out with the EMT?â Robby lets out, slowly, just to make sure Jack was on the same page as everyone else. Jack shrugs.Â
âWhy not?âJack knows he should stop talking, especially when he sees the looks everyone else is giving him, but he still hasnât been able to meet your eyes.Â
âAlright,â Robby says, nodding over his shoulder. âSantos, Langdon â youâve got cases to check on.â He shepherds his residents away, neither him nor Jack missing the cold look Trinity gives Jack when she brushes past him a little more aggressively than necessary. Robby gives you a nod as he pats Jack on the shoulder, leaving you two alone.Â
You two donât say anything for a few seconds, your eyes hovering over his face while his pointedly do not meet yours still.Â
âWalk me out?â You ask finally, to which he gives you a nod, hiking his backpack higher up his shoulder. When you two make it outside, you wordlessly walk across the street toward the park and Jack follows you, not needing to be told to. The entire two minutes it takes to cross the street and find an excluded enough place to talk, Jack is thinking that this is it. He doesnât know why he suggested you go out with the EMT â the point was to talk to you and eliminate any idea of either of you seeing other people. He wanted to go into a conversation with you and be selfish and tell you that the thought of you spending your time with a man that wasnât him made him physically ill, and though itâs only been five months heâs sure he loves you and if you ever went away heâd miss the mess you make in his apartment. Heâll miss begging you to leave your stuff scattered, calming your anxious mind that youâre making a mess in his otherwise neat house, but he doesnât mind the mess because itâs proof youâve tangled your life in his. Thereâs proof he has some parts of you that no one else gets. Heâs never told you that, though. He was so afraid itâd freak you out so early in the relationship. Heâs so stupid.Â
Youâre going to turn around and tell him you will go out with that EMT after work and that youâre so happy you two are on the same page of not wanting a committed relationship, and heâll be fine with the â what did Samira call Santos and Garciaâs pairing? A situationship? â situationship deal because apparently thatâs what modern dating is, and he doesnât want to lose you completely so heâllâ
âDid you break up with me at some point and I missed it?â You ask, stopping abruptly and turning on him, causing him to stumble forward as he tried to stop, his arms coming out to grasp your arms.Â
âWhat?â He asks, blinking at you slowly, trying to get his bearings back.Â
ââYou should goâ,â you say, lowering your voice to mock him. He was expecting you to be a little confused, sure, but he wasnât expecting you to be so angry. Thereâs a flush of red crawling up your neck, and he can see it spread over the top of your chest. âWhat the hell was that, Jack?â
âI just⊠weâI was talking to Parker, she was asking if I wanted her to set me up with her friend.â He watches your face to catch your expressions, and heâs gotten very good at reading you, so he sees the second your eyes go from angry to sad. And it feels like youâve reached your hand into his chest and pulled his heart out; heâd much rather you be angry at him.Â
âOh, I see,â you say, and you have to divert your eyes so you can blink away your tears without him noticing. Of course this was too good to be true, you think. Jack says he loves your mess, the way all guys do in the beginning of your relationships, but he doesnât really. You leave you product out of order in his bathroom, your perfume is littered on everything he wears, your favorite books are strewn all over his living room and youâre just taking up too much space. Granted, Jack lasted longer than most guys do. But all good things come to an end.Â
âYou see what?â Jack asks, taking a step closer to you to try to redirect you to look at him again. When youâre sure you arenât going to cry, you grant him his silent wish, your eyes meeting his.Â
âIf I go out with the EMT, you get to go out with Parkerâs friend,â when you see him frown, you think heâs trying to spare you a pitying look. âJack, if you didnât want to be in a relationship with me, you could have just said so. Before I basically invaded your space. Whatâs going to happen if the date goes well and you take her home?â
âTake her home?â Jackâs shaking his head nowâthis conversation has been derailed significantly.Â
âSheâs going to see another womanâs things all over your place, sheâs going to see all that mess everywhere. Wonât that be off putting?â
âWait,â he stops you, his arms coming back up to grip your arms, âyou said relationship. You think weâre in a relationship?â
âJesus, Jack. What the fuck?â You lift your arms to shrug him off but his grip just tightens a little bit, pulling you closer to him so youâre almost flush against him.Â
âThat came out wrong, wait,â he pleads, eyes searching yours, âI just need you to answer me yes or no, please. Youâre my girlfriend.â
âIs that a question?âÂ
âBaby, yes or no,â he pleads again, the pet name slipping out and softening your hurt a little bit.Â
âYes. Or â well, yes. I thought so.â And before you can question him or ask him what the fuck heâs talking about, his mouth is on yours â and it feels desperate. His hands raise your arms so theyâre circled around his shoulders and his arms trail back down to wind around your waist, tightening around you so you stumble into him completely. Your fingers card through his curls as you try to match his pace, opening your mouth when you feel his tongue glide against your teeth. You only pull away when you hear the trill of a bicycle, someone yelling for you to get a room.Â
âDonât you dare go on that fucking date,â Jack breathes out, his mouth not completely pulling away from you. âParker mentioned I never asked you to be my girlfriend officially â I didnât even know that was something I needed to do. Iâm sorry, the old is catching up to me.â
âShut up,â you mumble, pressing your lips lightly against his again for a quick peck, smiling when his mouth chases after yours again when you pull away. âIâm basically living in your house, Jack,â you mumble, âI figured the conversation about girlfriend and boyfriends was settled a long time ago.â
âThank God,â he whispers, kissing you one more time before he pulls away, only to grab your hand and kiss your knuckles. âStop calling your stuff a mess,â he scolds, beginning his walk back to his house, tugging you along with him. âItâs decor.â He smiles when you snort, tightening his grip on your hand.Â
âIt is a mess, Hurricane Me has taken over your entire home.â
âI love it,â he says quietly, letting go of your hand in favor of wrapping an arm around your shoulder, wanting you nestled against him as close as possible. âI love seeing your stuff everywhere. Seeing it there⊠makes me feel special. Like, you chose me to make a home for you.â
âJack,â you whisper, your voice soft and your arm around his waist squeezing him.Â
âI love it,â he repeats, slowing his pace until you both stop so he can turn and face you, his hand moving to cup your face so you have to look at him when he says, âand I love you.â
You blink rapidly, having to stop your tears for a second time in the span of fifteen minutes because of the same man, but you much prefer he sees these tears. âI love you right back,â you say, your voice still soft, hushed, like you just want him to hear it. And Jack doesnât even notice if there are people around to hear it, he doesnât think there areâhow could there be when you both are obviously floating in your own bubble of warmth? Itâs the last thought he has before heâs bringing your face closer to his for one more kiss before he takes you home.
Word count: ~11k words
Pairing: Scorch (RC-1262) x GN!Reader (Reader is a GAR Safety & Compliance Officer. Scorch nicknamed them Salt.) - Platonic-ish.
Warnings: No warnings. Some spoilers of RepCom game and Triple Zero novel. Bureaucratic hell.
Summary:
Your job is simple: keep the Grand Army of the Republic compliant, make sure every demolition, crash, and casualty is neatly logged, and pray the Repubic Oversight Committee doesnât slash the budget because one commando thought the only way to solve problems is using explosives.
Taglist: @orangez3st
For the record, you never signed up for this.
âYouâre not supposed to write kaboom,â you slammed the flimsi back on your desk. The little clone trooper bobblehead one of the shinies had left you bobbled its ridiculously big head in silent mockery. âHow the hell am I supposed to explain to the Republic Oversight Committee that Sector G6, Level 3761 was partly demolished because one commando decided âkaboomâ was a sufficient justification? That was messy.â
RC-1262 stretched in the chair heâd dragged into your cubicle, helmet propped on his knee, grin plastered across his heavily scarred face, a fresh cut slicing the left corner of his mouth. âWell, it was accurate, wasnât it?â
You pressed your fingers into your temples, picturing Senate auditors tearing into your unitâs quarterly report. The reparations bill for G6 would be astronomical. Worse, it was in the underworld - meaning months of subcontractor corruption, workers bribed or bullied into silence, citizens filing claims that the Republic would drag its feet on settling. Not that Coruscantâs lower levels ever believed the Republic gave a damn about them anyway. Well, that part was true, the Republic gives no shit, but that was beside the point.
âAccurate isnât the same as professional,â you bit out. âThereâs a reason the template asks for structural damage estimates, blast radius, munition typeââ
âYeah, yeah,â Scorch twirled a stylus between his trigger fingers. âBut youâd rather I wrote a novel? âDear bureaucrats, todayâs fireworks were brought to you by one well-placed thermal detonator and my sparkling personality.ââ
You leveled a flat stare at him. âHonestly? That wouldâve been better than âkaboom.â At least then Iâd have a word count.â
He barked a laugh, leaning forward onto your desk so abruptly the bobblehead toppled over. âCareful, sweetheart, I might just drag you on our next underworld op so you can see for yourself how fantastic my explosion is. Soooooo good it doesnât need justification.â He shoved the flimsi back towards you with one finger. âNext oneâs Benduday. Like Skirata says, weâre not stopping until every last seppie cell is dust.â
âSweetheart?â you scoffed, jabbing a finger at the flimsi. âThe only thing youâre getting from me is a rewritten report that wonât have the Oversight Committee slashing our budget in half.â
âOh, come on,â he drawled. âYouâd miss me if I stopped turning them in like this. Admit it. Gives you something to yell about.â
Before you could retort, a head appeared around the cubicle wall. Fixer. Somehow the only reasonable man in that squad. The one who didnât act like (1) an edgelord sociopath, (2) a hyperactive kid high on detonator fumes, or (3) an unhinged trash-talking sergeant whose only contribution during his rare visits to your office was to stand stiffly in the corner and mutter âfuck me, not again.â Not what again? Youâd never know.
Fixer looked between you and Scorch with a pair of dead bored eyes. âScorch,â he said flatly. âStop flirting with the officer and finish your paperwork. Boss wanted us to be done with it yesterday.â
âWeâre not flirting,â you and Scorch said in unison.
Fixer sighed, muttered something that sounded suspiciously like âkill me now,â and disappeared behind the manual sliding door that separated your cubicle from the rest of the office. Not that youâd ever demanded exclusivity, but apparently being the Safety and Compliance Officer (temporarily covering Risk Assessment too, since the sleemo who held the post resigned last quarter to become a holonet fashion influencer) meant your desk had turned into a revolving door of frontline troopers and spec-ops. It had gotten bad enough that upper management finally decided your constant parade of armour-plated visitors was âdisruptive to the peace and productivity of the workplace.â Their solution was to wall you off and install a door. A flimsy little thing, manual slide, but it did the job. Honestly? You were grateful for the privacy.
âFine,â you sighed. âTwenty-four hours. I want it in my inbox. Written in your own words. Not churned out by those automated generators you troopers love so much. They strip context, blur accountability, and interfere with transparency. The Senate committee will gut us if they think frontline reports are being fabricated by software instead of actual operators.â
âLast time I checked,â Scorch scoffed, âIâm not one of the GARâs comm officers. So if I want to use those automated tools, I will. Not a part of my job desââ
âOr Iâll personally call your Mandalorian handler and get you disciplined.â
That shut him up for a second before he leaned in and hissed through a grin, âOh, you would never. Because if you did, Iâd call yourââ
âSCORCH.â The bark came from behind your door. You both turned to see another figure behind the frosted transparisteel window in orange-and-white armour, and a standard regulation cut. âWe were supposed to be at Qibbuâs an hour ago,â Boss snapped.
Scorch winced as he rose, helmet under his arm. âGuess Iâll have to finish threatening you later, sweetheart.â
You groaned and immediately grabbed the little bottle of overpriced ârelaxingâ room spray youâd panic-bought from some wellness shop at the Embassy Mall. One quick spritz, two, three - still not enough to kill the smell of armour, sweat, and whatever seppie-fueled hell Delta Squad had just crawled out of. When was the last time they showered? You didnât even want to know.
Sinking back into your chair, you pulled the flimsi towards you and forced yourself to reread the report.
GAR Incident ReportÂ
Filed by: RC-1262, âScorchâ
Mission Code: [Redacted]
Sector: G6, Level 3761
Objective: Root out separatist cell. Blow stuff up.
Actions Taken: Kaboom. Threw thermal (bigger boom).
Collateral Damage: Approx. 1/3 of the block is now âmodern open-plan design.â G6 train station maybe offline. Check with locals?
Civilian casualties: none witnessed.
Notes: Explosion was fantastic. Recommend giving me more thermals for future ops.
Blast radius: âbig enough.â
Structural damage: âsee attached doodle.âÂ
You pulled out an attachment with a crude sketch of a building with little âboomâ clouds drawn in, and a stick figure (labeled âMEâ) holding what looked like a thermal detonator.
Conclusion: Kaboom. đ
The flimsi fluttered as you let it drop back onto your desk. You stared at the stick figure drawing hoping it might spontaneously combust and put you out of your misery. Somewhere out in the office, someoneâs caf machine hissed. You pressed your forehead to the desk.
âIâve told you to ask for a transfer if this job frustrates you so much,â Besany from the Logistics Center said as she slid a tray across to you, steam rising from the white ceramic bowl of dumpling soup and a rice noodle on the side. Sheâd been your only semi-sane friend in the building since last year, which meant sheâd appointed herself your unofficial career counselor.Â
âGo apply to the Republic Science and Technical Center,â she continued, unwrapping her burger and squeezed out a sachet of spicy condiment. âI heard theyâve got a compliance officer vacancy. And you know how those scientists are, theyâll happily push a prototype into testing without documenting blast limits or failure contingencies. Someone has to babysit their âbrilliantâ ideas before they vaporise half a lab.â
âEh. Iâm good here.â You shrugged, picking up your spoon. âBesides, the payâs decent. Iâm on a permanent contract now. Donât feel like starting over in a quarterly contract at the Science and Tech Center. Yes, I saw the ad.â
âI mean, you always complain about troopers, especially commandos, not giving you a proper compliance report after finishing high-stakes missions.â She bit into her burger, muffling her next words. âFunny. Guess these lot are better as friends, not colleagues.â
âTo be fair,â you stirred your soup, âmaybe a select few would make good colleagues. Iâve never heard Zita complain. That guy works with the Corries at the Senate Building, and apparently his desk is blissfully quiet. No commandos barging in, no stick-figure doodles attached to reports.â
âIs this about Scorch again?â Besany perked up immediately. âI swear to whoever created this wretched galaxy, you always have a problem with that one! I thought the edgy one would be trouble.â She barked a laugh. âYou know, I saw him zoning out in one of the hangar lifts once. I asked him what was wrong, and he simply said, âOh right, forgot to push the buttons,â and walked straight out. Didnât even look embarrassed.â She cackled, shaking her head. âThose commandos are such a riot.â
âOh, of course,â you murmured. âYouâre biased. Youâre dating one of them.â Chuckling quietly, you kept your volume low so the analysts at the next table wouldnât overhear.
Besany almost choked on her nerf burger. âExcuse me? There is nothing between me and Ordo.â
âNobody said anything about Ordo,â you laughed, pointing at her with your spoon. âOoooohâunlessâŠâ
Her cheeks flushed the faintest pink, and she jabbed her straw into her drink. âDonât start,âÂ
âMaker, I knew it. All this time youâve been lecturing me about my so-called commando problem, and youâve been sneaking off for caf with âone of the most esteemed ARCsâ himself.â
âIt was one time,â she whispered fiercely. âOne caf. For work.â
âUh huh. Sure. Totally professional. Just like my office smells totally professional after Scorch drags in half the underworld with him.â
Besany groaned, hiding her face in her hands. âStars, youâre insufferable.â
âI better see Scorchâs revision in my inbox before sunrise tomorrow. Otherwise itâs over for him and hisâooh, wait.â Your datapad pinged, cutting you off. âItâs only been six hours?â
You opened the mail. No attachment. Only a single line in the body text:
Subject: (no subject)
Message: kaboom
Underneath, heâd slapped in a blurry photograph of himself giving a thumbs-up with a half-eaten ration bar hanging out of his mouth. Behind him was Sector G6, judging from the cracked street sign hanging at an angle,a blast site he was supposed to report properly.
You unceremoniously flipped your datapad to Besany.
Across the table, Besany nearly spat her drink. âOh my stars, is that what counts as work correspondence with him?â
âI⊠hate him. I really do.â You stared at the screen, equal parts furious and begrudgingly amused.Â
Subject: addendum
Message: pls tell the oversight committee the blast radius was âyay bigâ (see attached) and literally zero casualties.
You opened the attachment and groaned. A photo of Boss and Sev, standing at the centre of the blast site, both pointing vaguely at the background. Nothing in the frame except scorched duracrete, shattered piping, and a blackened transit sign. The entire sector was scorched, pun fully intended.
Sighing, you turned back to Besany. âHe says âliterally zero casualties.â Which means I now need to triple-check it with Civilian Affairs for property claims, Health and Welfare for casualty cross-reference, and the bloody Coruscant Guard Incident Registry in case the CSF down there already filed complaints. And then I have to do the Risk Assessment report with all three reconciled before I can even draft my compliance note for the Oversight Committee.â
Besany winced. âThatâs like⊠five offices.â
âSix if Infrastructure and Utilities decides to scream about the train station.â You jabbed your spoon into your soup. âScorch gets to write âkaboom,â and I get to chase down hundreds of divisions and a thousand subcommittees for the next two weeks.â
âIf I were you, Iâd just take him out for a caf and ask him nicely.â Besany finished the last of her meal. âSometimes itâs the only way to get through to them. You know how the Republic treats them. Their BAS is abysmal, their rations are worse, and on top of that, theyâre expected to blow things up and do paperwork afterward? I understand compliance is important, but stars, it must be exhausting for them.â She sighed, softening for a moment.
You rolled your eyes as you chug down your soup. âBoss and Fixer never complained. Sev either, oh especially Sev, he gets very descriptive. Itâs scary how detailed his reports are sometimes. He once wrote two pages on what a body looked like after a flamethrower exposure.â You shuddered. âThe Omega Squadâs been compliant too, and theyâre deployed out of system most cycles. So no, I donât think this is about exhaustion.â
âMm.â Besany chewed thoughtfully, eyes narrowing. âSo itâs just him.â
âNo. Donât.â You pointed your spoon in her direction. âHardcase from the 501st also behaves the same way, butââ
âBut heâs not like Scorch?â Besanyâs smile curved.
You ignored it, plowing on. âBut his captain and lieutenant actually review everything before submitting in bulk to me.â
âReally? An entire legion? Rex and Jesse do that?â
âNo, just Torrent Company,â you muttered. âAnyway, thatâs besideââ
âI still think a caf is on the table,â Besany interrupted smoothly, leaning back with that maddeningly smug look.
âYouâre supposed to be on my side.â You groaned, dragging a hand down your face.
âI am,â she said sweetly. âAnd my side says, stop drowning in subcommittees and bribe him with caf.â
To his credit, Scorch did eventually submit a revised report before the deadline. It wasnât good, but it was legible. Well, legible enough that you could scrape together actual data points and build a compliance file that wouldnât get shredded by the Oversight Committee. Of course, that meant you had to spend the next few days chasing down Civilian Affairs for casualty verification, cross-referencing the Coruscant Guardâs incident logs, and pulling in Infrastructure and Utilities to sign off that the transit lines were âstructurally compromised but not a total write-off.â By the time you packaged the whole thing into a neat document, you were running on two hours of sleep, three cups of strong black caf, and the faint hope that your inbox wouldnât ping with another disaster before noon.
So when Delta Squadâs next mission file hit your desk, you braced for more flames, rubble, and the usual stick-figure doodles. Instead, you got Boss himself dropping a stack of flimsi on your desk.
âNo detonation this time?â you asked warily, flipping through the report. âNo broken infrastructure?â
Boss scratched his jaw. âWell⊠our sniper shot down two speeders when they started tailing him. Had to, or weâd be fucking toast.â He pointed a finger at the report. âDouble-check with Jusik if you donât believe me. Fi was there too. Recon mission was ass. Boring as fuck.â
âBoss.â
âMinimal damage,â he said quickly, holding up a hand. âCouple engines slagged, one karking crash into a kriffing wall. Building didnât fall down, so thatâs a fucking win in my book.â He scowled. âDo you know how fucking hard it is to haul a team of commandos through the underworld without blowing the place sky-high? Itâs like sneaking a herd of rancors into a civilian speeder. Filthy, heavy, smells like shit. And the higher ups still expect us to write a polite little fucking compliance report about it?â
You pinched the bridge of your nose. âBossââ
âLook,â he huffed, planting his hands on your desk, âyouâll get your compliance forms, love, but donât you dare tell me we didnât do the galaxy a favour by not turning half the district into scrap metal. Thatâs me behaving, in case you missed it. So stamp it, sign it, send it, whatever the fuck you do back here, and let me get the hell out before my boys throw a house party at Qibbu's.â
He turned towards the door before he paused to look over his shoulder. âOh, and Scorch said something about sending you proof there were no explosions this mission. Expect it by noon. Kidâs floating in bacta right now, pulled a couple muscles. Fucking hilarious. Let him loose with a satchel of thermals and heâs skipping like a fucking cadet, but tell him to sneak around quietly and he injured himself.â
You spent the better part of the morning scanning the paperwork Boss had submitted, and filed them one by one to the laggy GAR intranet system. It was the kind of thing that made you want to file another report directed at the HR division for subjecting you to psychological torture. Every line had to be combed over at least three times. For instance, Boss had written âminimal damageâ in three separate places, but in one section he also admitted that âa rowdy speeder chase was happening in the Entertainment District.â Heâd called it âon-site improv,â which you had to rewrite into âcounter-surveillance measures taken to prevent compromise of mission objectives.â Then there was the line where he described the local gang whoâd been doing some intel work for the Separatists as âshit-for-brains street scum.â That one, you spent an entire ten minutes debating how to sanitise into acceptable language before finally settling on âlocal non-state actors engaged in obstructive activities.â By the time you reached the conclusion section, where Boss had simply written âjobâs done, fuck off,â you had your head in your hands and the beginnings of a headache behind your eyes.
So when your datapad pinged again with a message from [email protected], you knew, deep in your bones, that you were about to regret opening it.
Subject: proof no kaboom
Message: told ya. zero explosions. all stealth. 10/10 would do it again.
Attached was not, as you desperately hoped, a proper incident log or even a schematic showing zero detonation evidence. It was another blurry bacta tank selfie of himself, submerged up to his neck in bacta fluid, giving a smug thumbs-up with one hand whilst the other floated limp in its waterproof sling. Behind him, Sev peeked behind the tub with his sniper rifle, and Bossâ and Fixerâs reflection could be seen in the mirror behind Sev with their middle fingers raised directly at the camera.
You stared at it in silence for a long moment before you locked your datapad and let your forehead rest against your cold metal desk.
The datapad pinged again, and you lifted it lazily to see a follow-up message.
Subject: addendum
Message: see?? no kaboom but my bodyâs cracked (because no kaboom). Â
You closed your eyes, and prayed for patience. Sitting up straighter, you cracked your knuckles before typing the driest, most by-the-book soul-sucking response you could muster.
To: [email protected]
From: [email protected]
Subject: Re: proof no kaboom
Dear RC-1262,
Thank you for your submission. Unfortunately, the attachment provided does not constitute acceptable compliance documentation under Republic Oversight Committee standards. As per GAR Compliance Directive 14-C, missions where no detonations are used must still include proof of compliance. Minimum documentation required:
- Ordnance Inventory Log signed by your squadâs quartermaster (to confirm no issued explosives were deployed).
- Weapons Discharge Record (to verify engagements were limited to small arms/sniper fire as reported).
- Structural Integrity Clearance from the local Infrastructure and Utilities division (to confirm no damage to public works).
- Civilian Casualty Cross-Check with Civilian Affairs/Coruscant Guard (to verify zero civilian injuries or fatalities).
- After-Action Statement from your squad leader, in full sentences, detailing operational measures taken in place of demolition.
Please revise and resubmit within 12 standard hours. A photo of yourself in a bacta tank does not qualify as acceptable evidence.
Regards,
Safety & Compliance Officer 894
GAR Risk and Compliance Division
Commlink Code: 990808
You sent it off, satisfied at the blunt professionalism. For all of thirty seconds.
Your datapad pinged again.
Subject: Re: proof no kaboom
Message: rude. that bacta selfie took effort. had to hold my breath so the bubbles wouldnât ruin it.
You let out the longest sigh of the week as you massaged your temples. You told yourself not to reply, though your fingers had brains on their own.
Subject: Re: proof no kaboom
Message: Effort would have been filling out the form correctly the first time.
Best.
Ping.
Subject: Re: proof no kaboom
Message: iâm injured, you know. youâre bullying a wounded soldier.
You rolled your eyes so hard it hurt and hammered back a reply.
Subject: Re: proof no kaboom
Message: I will gladly call your CO and ask him to discipline you if you keep misusing government email.
Barely a minute laterâ
Subject: Re: proof no kaboom
Message: do it. boss loves when you call him. says your voice makes you sound like youâre about to strangle someone. heâs into it.
âFor fuckâs sake.â You shut off your datapad before you could throw it across the cubicle, and forced yourself back to the stack of work on your desk. Grabbing your desk comlink, you punched in the line for the Coruscant Guardâs admin desk to double-check incident filings before you even thought about finalising Deltaâs compliance package.
Next to their ever-growing pile was Omega Squadâs, not much better, though at least Niner could string together coherent sentences. Beside that sat a smaller pile from Ordo and Mereel. All three groups had been tied up in the same underworld op, which meant triple-checking overlapping claims, reconciling their different reports, and trying to build one consistent narrative the Oversight Committee wouldnât laugh you out of the chamber for.
In your inbox, another mountain waited for you. Wolfpackâs compliance from a joint sweep, plus a possible bundle from the 212thâs spec-op squad once they got back from their deployment in the neighbouring system. Which meant your week was about to dissolve into a carousel of âurgentâ cross-checks and signatures from people whoâd rather eat their expired rations than fill in a Form-62B.
You scrolled down the shared staff directory, debating who you could bother to make your life easier. Risk & Compliance was technically a division, not just you, but after the last round of budget cuts, most of the junior staff had been shuffled to other offices. You still had Leebee, your long-suffering data clerk, who could chase casualty records and fast-track other clearances if you bribed him with decent lunch. Ravi handled Policy and Procedures, half the time they answered your pings, half the time they ignored you until you showed up at their desk in person with that nice caf from Fabosi District. Investigation and Resolution had their own rep, a tired middle-aged officer named Colin, who was usually willing to fast-track your requests if youâre willing to sit and listen to him yap for two hours. For cross-system missions, you sometimes had to lean on Regional Oversight liaisons, poor bastards stuck parsing comms reports from across Mid Rim and Outer Rim. And when things got really bad, you had a list of rotating interns from the Administrative Office who could be worked into data entry shifts.
The quick call with the Corries confirmed it - no explosions, no secondary blasts, no panicked civvie complaints in their registry. Which was, frankly, a miracle. Great. Wonderful. That meant you could strike one nightmare off your list which was you didnât have to draft a ten-page letter to the Ethics Office of the Republic and the Republic Oversight Committee explaining why a thermal detonator had been âoperationally necessaryâ. No tedious citations of tactical plan, no rehearsed lines about âminimising civilian risk.â No having to attach a signed memo about why blowing a hole in a water main was actually essential to rooting out a Separatist cell. Stars, you could cry from relief.
Still, you had no idea how the other Safety and Compliance officers spread across the GAR handled their workloads. Were they all drowning in the same endless tide of half-assed reports, conflicting testimonies, and âoops, the building collapsed, but donât worry, minimal casualtiesâ? Or had you just been cursed by some cruel twist of fate to be assigned to every spec-ops lunatic in rotation? You had the pick of the litter: the 501stâs Torrent Company and their stray tookas; the 212th, who had a charming habit of âredecoratingâ entire sectors in pursuit of one droid nest; the 104th, steady but prone to sudden wolfpack rampages that left you reconciling insurance claims from an entire district; and, of course, the commandos. Delta, Omega, the strays that answered to Mandalorian handlers - all funneled their paperwork disasters directly into your inbox.
Some days you daydreamed about packing up, sneaking aboard the next supply shuttle headed for the Unknown Regions, and vanishing without a trace. No datapad, no flimsis, no reports stamped URGENT. Quiet. Stars, even a primitive outpost with no comms relay would be better than filing one more compliance memo defending the use of military-grade explosives inside city limits.
Later that evening, you packed up like it was any other bland Coruscant evening. Datapad powered down, flimsis stacked into a neat âtomorrowâs problemâ pile, the office lights dimming to that corporate-sterile glow that meant the night shift droids were clocking in. You swiped your ID, rode the lift down, and did the exact same thing you did every night when the day finally let you go - stopped by the bodega tucked into the corner of the plaza. The clerk didnât even look at you as you grabbed a pre-packaged dinner from the warmer, a sad excuse for bantha steak, an overly-salted protato mash, and a small chocolate brownie.
Then your comlink pinged with an unknown code plastered on the screen. You frowned, thumb hovering, before curiosity got the better of you.
Unknown: hey, i got some nice snacks from kal. i will bring it up for you on my next visit so you wont be such an angy officer
Your brow furrowed.Â
You: Who is this?
The answer came almost instantly.
Unknown: itâs scorch dummy. before you ask, you had your number in your email signature. iâm not being creepy. yes something poofed again. can you believe that?â
You groaned. Of course. Of course heâd find a way to invade your off-hours. The comlink buzzed again before you even put it down.
Scorch: iâm injured and DID A KABOOM. ISNâT THAT BADASS?
You set the tray aside, threw your commlink on the sofa behind you, buried your face in your hands, and seriously considered whether flinging yourself out of Tomkip Towersâ thirty-second floor window would be less painful than dealing with this man.
Still, your fingers itched, because if you didnât reply heâd probably spam your inbox until morning. You snatched the commlink back up with a sigh.
You: That will be your next visitâs problem. Iâm trying to enjoy dinner now.
It was strange, really. No trooper ever texted you personally. Not unless it was a commanding officer chasing paperwork on behalf of his company. Jesse and Rex sometimes, Cody when he didnât trust his lieutenants, Wolffe once or twice. They were the ones who had enough responsibility to care about compliance deadlines. The only real exception was Fox, the poor marshal commander of the Coruscant Guard, who had an alarming habit of messaging you at three in the morning with things like âplease confirm: do demolitions count as collateral if the Corries did it to defend Republicâs sector in level 4781?â or âdelta squad in your office again? tell me everything.â He never admitted it, but most of his messages were just gossip under the pretense of âcoordination.â You always entertained them, partly because you needed the Guard on your side for smooth verification, and partly because you pitied the man. Fox worked twenty-four hours a day, five days a week. Sometimes you wondered if he even remembered what sleep felt like.
Your commlink buzzed again.
Scorch: snacks are worth texting abt. kal got some nice ones this week heâs such a nice dad. u like sweet or salty?
You: I like compliance reports that donât make me want to strangle someone.
Ping.
Scorch: salty then. also you ever notice how your texts read like email? âi like compliance reportsâ who even talks like that đ€
You sank deeper into the couch.
You: This is harassment of a government employee. I can and will file a report.
Scorch: oh please. you love it. if i didnât text youâd be bored watching whatever garbage holo u got on right now
Your eyes turned guiltily to the holovision, where a laugh track blared over the sitcom that was, in fact, absolute garbage.Â
You: Iâd prefer garbage holos to your selfies, thanks.
Scorch: liar. you saved that selfie didnât u
You: I DID NOT
Scorch: liar again. bet itâs in your âimportant documentsâ folder đ€Ł
Setting your commlink down, you exhaled sharply through your mouth before picking your device up again, because you knew if you didnât shut him down properly heâd keep going.
You: If you ever send me another selfie instead of an actual revised report, I will personally request the Ethics Office to draft a new policy banning you from GAR communications.
Scorch: worth iiiiittttt
âI told you Iâd bring snacks!â The demolition expert gave you a shit-eating grin as he dropped a cardboard box full of things youâd never seen before. Crisps in transparent no-brand bags, nuna jerkies, protato crips covered in cheesy dust and supposedly barbecue powder in questionable neon packaging. Most of them you vaguely remembered spotting in markets buried in the lower levels. âAll salty! For the salty compliance officer,â he added smugly.
âYou bleached your hair.â You squinted up at him. The roots were still dark, but the rest was uneven - some toned to a nice cool shade, the other half brassy yellow.Â
âWhy didnât you reply to my last text?â He only grinned wider.
âBecause you asked me how to bypass the reporting system if you hypothetically destroyed an entire city block in Sector C97, Southern Underground. Did you actually?â
âI would,â he shrugged as if it wasnât worth the effort, âbut of course I didnât. That place is crawling with seppie hideouts. Southern Undergroundâs vile. Iâd rather be stationed in the Outer Rim.â He said it so casually you almost missed the important part, which was the fact that he hadnât denied considering it.
Sighing, you dragged the flimsi across your desk and pointed a stylus at the worst of it. âYou actually wrote more than kaboom this time, so Iâll give you that. But I still need clarity hereââ you tapped the line item, âSection 4B: Munition Type, Quantity, and Serial Registration. You put âtwo thermals, both compact.ââ
The commando gasped.
You tapped your stylus lower. âAnd here, Section 5C: Collateral Damage Assessment. You wrote âbuilding now has big windowâ I need confirmation, was the wall load-bearing or not?â
âIt was a load-bearing wall. But the seppies were behind it. So⊠better no wall than more clankers, right?â Scorch leaned over the desk.Â
You closed your eyes and counted to three, imagining the Senate Oversight Committee tearing this flimsi apart line by line whilst the man in front of you popped open one of the mystery snack bags without asking, âSee, youâre making it sound worse than it was.â
âBecause you wrote it worse than it was,â you muttered and yanked the snack from his hand.
âRelax, angy officer.â He reached into a pouch that he had been carrying to pull out his datapad, and started swiping through his gallery with greasy cheesy fingers. âI got proof. Lookâsee? This oneâs the wall before.â
He shoved the datapad across your desk. Grainy picture of a dingy underworld corridor, mouldy grey wall intact, and then he swiped to the next picture. âAnd this oneâs after. See? Barely a boom. Clean breach. Load-bearing? Sure. Catastrophic collapse? Nah. Buildingâs still standing. Bit more⊠breezy, thatâs all.âÂ
The corridor was now open-air rubble, at least thatâs what you could see from your seat, with thick dust covering its surroundings. âBarely a boom? Scorch, thatâs structural damage.â
âDestructive? Sure. But not catastrophic. Thatâs compliance-friendly, yeah?â He waved it off, digging another handful of chips.
âJust show me the damage report from the other site.â
Scorch simply chewed his crisps, and swiped his datapad. Suddenly, a picture of Sev deadpanning into the camera while Scorch himself posed behind him with two dead battle droidsâ heads. Another swipe, Fixer, caught unflatteringly with his mouth wide open, datapad in hand. Another swipe, and it was a picture of Boss sleeping upright in a chair, helmet propped on top of his head like a hat.
âCompliance documentation, huh?â
His cheek flushed red, thumb fumbling as he swiped too fast. âUh. Fun shots. Yâknow. Internal use only.â
âRight.â
Grinning again, he finally landed back on the proper documentation. At least a metre tall pile of battle droid limbs, and the âbarely a boomâ breach expanding wide behind them. âSee? Totally minimal.â
âMinimal. Uh huh. Iâll be sure to phrase it exactly like that in my summary for the Senate Oversight Committee.â
âOh, come on.â
You ignored him and quickly finished typing the last of the clarifications into your computer, cross-checking the photo against the flimsis until it was at least borderline acceptable. Scorch, meanwhile, was still munching happily, easily sweeping the crumbs collecting on the edge of your desk to the floor.
âYou are dismissed. Why are you still here?â You hit the enter button with a force.Â
âDunno. Got nowhere to be right now.â
âYou donât have drills? Debriefs? A whole entire block of city to blow up, maybe?â
âNah,â he said easily, kicking his boots up onto the corner of your desk. âMeeting with Skirata and his boys isnât until Primeday. My brothers are busy running laps around the BlasTech Gikosphere.â He made a disgusted face. âI donât like running. Prefer classic PT. Weights. Push-ups. Yâknow, real exercise. Not chasing your own ass around a track like some fresh-off-Kamino cadet.â
You glared at his boots, nudged them off your desk with your stylus, and sighed. âThis is an office, not your barracks. And not a gym. Iâm not here to babysit you when youâre bored.â
âEh, I didnât ask.â
âSo?â You shooed him towards the door.
âUmm. No thanks?â He popped another crisp into his mouth. âOh stars, this is so good. Think itâs the spice powder. Whatever it is, fits me. Salty, addictive, bad for your health.â
âThatâs the most accurate self-assessment youâve ever made. ActuallyâŠâ you gave him a look over your monitorsâ...probably the only accurate self-assessment youâve ever made.â
âWhatever,â he said around another mouthful. âIâm starving. Could go for lunch right now, and no, not the mess hall.â He punctuated it with a sudden loud and unapologetic burp.
âUgh. Then go, Scorch. No oneâs keeping you here.â You wrinkled your nose.Â
âDonât pretend I didnât hear your stomach growl back there,â he cackled. âCome on, itâs almost twelve.âÂ
âAre you serious?â You stared at him flatly.
âDuh,â he said, smiling from ear to ear. âBecause you work too much, and because I know youâre dying for something better than whatever sad microwave slop you eat every night.â
âI donâtââ
âI know where you live.â
âThatâs fucking creepy.â You blinked.Â
âWell,â he said with a shrug, crumpling the crisp packaging into a ball and tossed it to the rubbish bin, âto be honest, Boss told me not to say that to you. But I promise it was strictly professional intel. We were investigating a GAR officer running double as a Separatist agentââ He paused, his grin faltering for a split second. âOop. I probably shouldnât have said that.â
âScorch.â
âForget I said it. Totally classified. You never heard it.â He held up both hands.
âMaker, give me strength.â
âPlease just go for lunch,â he picked the clone trooper bobblehead and shoved it in your face. âIâm starving. And if Iâm starved, technically youâd be responsible for starving a child cause Iâm eleven.â
You gave him a long, dead-eyed look. âYouâre eleven in clone years. Youâre twenty four in natborn years.â
âHeh. Natborn,â he repeated, chuckling to himself. âYou mean randomly ejected individuals?â
âI donât care,â you said again.
âWell, tough luck. Iâm not leaving until you get your ass up and eat lunch with me.â He leaned back in his chair with his arms crossed, and crumbs dusting his fitted black undershirt.
With your head buried in your hands, you tried to go back to your flimsis, forcing your eyes onto Section 6A. You could almost make sense of the nonsense Scorch had scrawled there, something about âlocal criminals discouraged by intimidation (see attached doodle).â You silently told yourself if you ignored him long enough, heâd get bored and leave.
But no. Of course not. Every time you moved in your chair, you heard the obnoxious crunch of another crisp, the rustle of foil packaging, the occasional satisfied hum as if he was intentionally testing your patience. And when you risked a glance, he was still there, eating the snacks he had given to you happily, completely immovable. You realised, with a sinking feeling, that he wasnât bluffing. He could sit here for hours, perfectly content to snack his way through your workday, derailing your schedule, driving you insane until you cracked.
âOkay, fine,â you groaned, kicking your chair back so hard it screeched against the floor. You stood, grabbed your jacket in one angry motion, and stomped towards the door.
Behind you, Scorch popped up immediately. âKnew youâd see reason.â
âThis is not reason. This is giving up.â
âEh, same difference.â He followed you out.
The walk didnât take long, Scorch seemed to know every shortcut through the military district, cutting your route past uniformed officers, military barracks blocks, and supply depots until you ended up in a shadowed corner behind a supermarket. A literal hole carved into the duracrete wall of the parking structure, no signage, no tables, only a couple of greasy counters wedged in the wall, some plastic chairs, and a thin haze of steam curling out. A man stood behind it, ladling broth into white bowls with vintage nuna illustrations. A cluster of troopers loitered nearby with plates in one hand, eating like this was the finest dining Coruscant had to offer.
âThis,â Scorch announced proudly as he grabbed his order, âis where the boys like to eat.â His eyes lit up as the vendor handed him a steaming bowl piled high with noodles and meatballs, which he dug in immediately. âSo? Whatâd you order?â He glanced at you over the rim of the bowl.
You held up your plate when the server handed it over. Not noodles, not soup. Just a heaping plate of rice, doused in broth, with two slabs of fried soy-cakes stacked on top, a ladle of curried greens on the side, and some fried gluten crisps thrown in for good measure. Cheap, fast, greasy, exactly the kind of meal youâd lived on since moving to the capital of the Galaxy.
Scorch paused to gawk at your plate. âHeh. You know your stuff. Most Republic officers wander up and order noodles cause it looks safe. You went straight for the soy-cakes.â
âYou know this place isnât a novelty, right? Thereâs one under my apartment. Their soy-cakes taste better than this, spicier too. This oneâs good,â you admitted, taking a bite, âbut the one near mine? Heavenly. Proper kick that makes you sweat.â
âHeavenly soy-cakes, huh? Subtly offering to take me there, or am I supposed to show up under your apartment and guess which stall sells âem?âÂ
Rolling your eyes, you shoved a spoonful of rice into your mouth to avoid answering.
âYeah, thought so.â He cackled as he pointed his chopsticks at your tray. âStill. Respect. You climbed about three ranks up the cool people hierarchy.â
Both of you ate in silence for a few moments, letting the grease and spice work their magic, watching the line of troopers in plain fatigues and various coloured armours filtering into the hidden corner. They clustered in twos and threes, laughing with their mouths full. The air was filled with the scent of the steaming broth, the clatter of cutlery, the background noise of a dozen conversations you werenât supposed to overhear.
Scorch gestured with his chopsticks towards the little crowd. âThis is why we eat here. Mess hallâs efficient, sure. Ration bars, protein cubes, vegetable soup, choice of carbohydrates, all very nutritionally balanced, but it tastes like kriffing plastoid. We feel more like people here. Nobody checks your portion, nobody times how fast you eat. You pay the guy a few credits, get your food, and sit or stand where you like. No saluting, no marching, no eyes up your ass.â
It was true. None of them looked like soldiers here, only a bunch of identical young men with different haircuts wolfing down cheap food in the middle of a long shift.
âGuess that explains why this place is packed.â You picked at your soy-cake, chewing thoughtfully. Before you could stop yourself, the question slipped out. âSo why do you commandos always look⊠bigger? Broader? Everyone else is built lean, but you lot walk in like youâve been hoarding growth serums.â
Scorch snorted into his broth, coughing before he could answer. âHoarding growth serums⊠Hah, thatâs a new one.â He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, still chuckling. âWeâre bigger cause they made us that way. Different program. Heavier PT, higher-calorie rations. They wanted us bulked up to carry twice the gear, smash through twice the doors, take twice the hits. Supposed to look scarier for âintimidation factor,â too, I think thatâs what Fi called it.â He jabbed a chopstick at his own chest. âWhich basically means more food, more weights, more bruises. You shouldâve seen our intake while the CTs and CCs were running obstacle courses, we were hauling massive cannons till our arms gave out. Push-ups till we puked, then another set because according to Vau, we should never give up even if our guts hate it.â
âThatâs brutal.â You winced, setting your spoon down.Â
âEh,â he shrugged. âBuilt me into this fine specimen, didnât it? Salty, addictive, bad for your health. Remember?â
You rolled your eyes, but you didnât miss the way he was watching you as he said it. âWhatever. I have to finish this fast and be back in my office in less than thirty minutes. And you⊠You will go back to your pack.â
âNo,â he immediately refused.
âNo?â
âI will go back to your office too.â
âNo, you will not.â
âYes, I will.â He slurped another mouthful of noodles, finishing it. âOtherwise I wouldnât be able to do my job properly.â
You stared at him, waiting.
âBecause my mission logs are in my datapad, which I, uhâŠâ He waved his chopsticks vaguely. ââŠleft in your office.â
âYou what?â your face was a study in both offence and confusion.Â
âLeft it in your office,â he repeated. âSee? I gotta come back. Canât log a mission without my datapad.â
âYouâre unbelievable.â
âYou canât get rid of me.â
And from then on, it became a habit. Somehow, Scorch decided he was the one who would deliver Delta Squadâs paperwork instead of Boss. At first you fought it, insisted the squad leader was supposed to handle formal submissions, and he could only be there to give clarity to his otherwise blank reports, but eventually you gave up because every time Scorch sauntered in, he carried not only the flimsi but the entire story of the mission in his mouth. Where Boss wouldâve written âmission completed, minimal interference,â Scorch would yap with his mouth full of snack, describing exactly which stairwell theyâd taken, which civilians ran screaming, how many times Sev acted like a smartass, how Fixer suddenly became a maniac in the field. Heâd tell the story, and youâd take notes, piecing together actual compliance-friendly language from his rambling.Â
Once the report was patched and filed, heâd drag you out to eat. Always. You stopped pretending you could say no. It was easier to let him talk you into whatever hidden stall or hole-in-the-wall heâd discovered than to fight him whilst he laughed like he knew youâd cave anyway. Lunch with Scorch became part of your calendar, sandwiched between audits and verification calls, an annoying interruption that you found yourself looking forward to in spite of yourself.
The routine bled wider than you meant it to. You learnt the ins and outs of Delta without ever trying. Who did what in the field, which ops went sideways, almost-confidential details about the infamous Triple Zero mission. He didnât even realise how much he was giving away. He would just sit in your office chair, recounting how Walon Vau screamed at Kal Skirata for having different ways of raising the soldiers, or how Sev and Atin are in this perpetual beef. You werenât supposed to know these things, but you did, and it felt oddly intimate.
And then came the texts. At first it was an extension of work, âkaboom happened again, iâll bring proofâ or âboss says send in a good example for form 98-A or heâll strangle someone.â But soon it changed into absolute nonsense - from tooka memes pulled from the holonet, group selfies of Delta Squad crammed into a speeder, Fixer sleeping under his bunk, Sev flipping the camera off with dead eyes. Half the time the photos were useless, grainy, badly lit, but they made you laugh anyway. Heâd double text, triple text, no shame whatsoever. Your commlink became a dumping ground for his stream-of-consciousness nonsense, and somehow, you didnât mind.
Scorch: hey.
Scorch: u awake?
Scorch: [attached image: tooka with its face smashed against transparisteel] me waiting outside your office
You: Itâs 1am. I am not awake.
Scorch: ooo. are your pants on fire?
Scorch: [attached image: Fixer asleep at his datapad] this man has been talking abt hacking and encryption for 6 hrs
Scorch: should i draw a dick on his helmet
You: If you do, Iâll make you write a 40-page memo on vandalism of GAR equipment.
Scorch: [attached image: Sev with both middle fingers raised] he loves me.
You: Tell Sev Iâll approve his request to have you gagged during debriefs
Scorch: wow betrayal
Scorch: anyway just wanted to say your dumpling place recommendation near the republic mil base >>> the noodle place. i owe u.
You: Finally, something we agree on. Now sleep.
Scorch: k night salty â€ïž
One fine morning you trudged into the office expecting your inbox to have at least 89 unread compliance updates, a red URGENT flag from Infrastructure, and a polite but passive-aggressive reminder from the Oversight Committee about âtimely submission of finalised reports.â Business as usual.
You grabbed a mug of caf from the mess hall before clocking in, the bitter sludge enough to make your brain semi-functional. By the time you dropped into the chair, you were already scrolling through the dayâs firestorm in your datapad when your commlink buzzed.
Scorch: [attached image: a bowl of stir fried soy-cakes drenched in chili oil] breakfast of champions. bet you canât handle this heat
You snorted into your caf, almost spilling it on your desk. Another buzz.
Scorch: forget it, my stomach just gave up on me
That brought a laugh out of you, which you immediately stifled, but it was too late. Besany appeared out of nowhere with her caf in hand, and eyes narrowed in. âWhat,â she sank into the chair in front of you, âis making you smile before nine in the morning?â
âNothing,â You said quickly, flipping the commlink face down on the desk. âWork.â
âUh-huh.â She leaned over, sipping her caf, gaze locked on you. âWork doesnât make you laugh like that. What was it? Another message from your favourite demolition expert?â
âBesany.â Heat crept up your neck.
Besanyâs eyebrows shot up as she beamed. âOh my stars. Heâs already trained you to smile at your commlink like a lovesick shiny at 79âs.â
âI am not lovesick!â you snatched the commlink up to silence it. âIâm just managing him.â
âMmhm.â She gave you a wicked smile. âWell, from where Iâm sitting, it looks like heâs managing you.â
âHey.â You rolled your eyes. âThatâs more like what Ordo does to you.â
Her smirk faltered for a second. âThatâs unfair. Besides, Iâve admitted to you that yes, Ordo and I have gone on a couple of dates. At least I admit it.â
âTheyâre wrapping up their missions here by the way. So that means your man is also leaving?â You leaned back in your chair, victorious for all of three seconds.
That wiped the smirk clean off her face. Besany glanced away, fiddling with the handle of her caf cup. âItâs notâheâs notââ She sighed, the bravado draining out of her. âYeah. Probably. Soon.â
Tilting your head, you watched her carefully. It wasnât often Besany Wennen went soft; usually she carried the hard edge of someone whoâd survived years in the Republic Treasury Audit Division. Yeah, not Logistics like she let most people assume. A few days ago, as the Triple Zero mission wrapped up, youâd learned the truth, that sheâd been posing as a Logistics officer all along to investigate Vinna Jiss. But now, for once, she looked more human. ââŠYouâll miss him,â you said.
âMaybe.â She said quietly before aiming her finger at you. âBut donât change the subject. You and Scorch. Admit it.â
âLiterally nothing.â You pressed your datapad to your chest and stood up. âLunch later?â
Besany smirked. âOnly if a certain RC isnât kidnapping you.â
You groaned, tugging your jacket straighter. âHe doesnât kidnap me. He⊠ambushes me.â
âAmbush or ambush?â She stretched her arms upwards before sipping her caf with infuriating calm. âWell, if you disappear around noon, Iâll know who dragged you into some back-alley food stall again.â
âStars help me,âÂ
Behind you, Besanyâs voice piped up the empty mess hall. âItâs a date, whether you admit it or not!â
âOne, two, three. Gotchaânot a couple. I win again.â You pointed your spoon, triumphant even with your mouth still full of rice. Across the restaurantâs corner, two massive Nautolan men sat shoulder-to-shoulder, hunched over steaming bowls of curry, chatting animatedly with their head-tendrils moving in sync.
Scorch threw his hands up. âHow the hell are you so good at this? They look like a couple. Beefy, cute, sitting close. If this was a holoseries, theyâd be sharing noodles by now.â
âNope. Brothers. Cousins, maybe. Look how they mirror each other when they eat? Thatâs family, not date, fraternal twins possibly. Pay attention.â
He squinted, following your line of sight. âKriff. Youâre right. They both sip at the same time.â
âMmhm. Synchronised slurping, familial trait.â You shoveled another bite into your mouth.
Scorch slapped his chopsticks on the rims of his bowl. âFine. But that oneââ he pointed at a table by the far wall where a human woman was leaning across to fix her companionâs collar, âis definitely a couple. Look at that. Intimate grooming!â
âIntimate grooming? You make it sound like theyâre tookas licking each otherâs ears. Thatâs her coworker, Scorch. Sheâs fixing his uniform because he clearly canât keep a proper fold.â A scoff escaped your lips.
âWhat kind of monster helps a coworker fix their collar if itâs not romantic?â
âThe kind who cares enough so the other doesnât get chewed out in inspection,â you shot back.
âAH HA!â His voice shot up loud enough that two nearby troopers looked over. âThey kissed!â He slapped a hand over his own mouth so fast it was almost comical. âI knew Iâd win one day,â he hissed through his fingers.
âCongratulations. You identified a couple in a food court. Would you like me to draft you a commendation?â
âYes, please. Make it official. To whom it may concern, RC-1262 is an expert in guessing game, please promote him immediately.â He propped his elbows on the table, grinning like an idiot.Â
âRight.â You checked your chrono and pushed your tray away. âI have a meeting at two, which means I have to sprint back. You good?â
âYeah,â he said with a shrug, still chewing on the last of his meal. âOh, almost forgot. Theyâre shipping us out to the Chaykin Cluster. Some ghost ship thing. The briefing note said itâs an assault ship that went missing months ago and then just, poof, reappeared. Weâre supposed to get the data core.â
Your eyebrows touched a stray fringe. âSounds simple.â
âSimple, sure,â he gave a sheepish smile. âExcept ships donât just wander off into the void and stroll back on their own. So, naturally, theyâre sending us.â
Filing away the mental note that if Delta came back in one piece, youâd be drowning in more illegible reports for safety and compliance. âAnd youâre telling me this because?â
âBecause youâll miss me,â he said immediately. âAnd also because when I get back, I expect deep fried soy-cakes with that umami batter. The spicy ones from your apartment block.â
âYouâre not dragging me to lunch the minute you return from a mission,â you warned.
âWrong,â he said cheerfully, standing to dump his tray. âThatâs exactly what Iâm doing. Call it part of the routine.â
By the third day without a single ping from RC-1262, you told yourself it was peace. Your inbox was quiet, free of incoherent reports about accidental destruction of city infrastructures, no late-night memes, no interruptions at your desk. You had time to clear Omegaâs tidy paperwork, process Wolfpackâs accident reports, and even file a full 212th compliance bundle without once being forced into a hole-in-the-wall lunch. The silence should have been a blessing.
By the fifth day, it started gnawing at you. Every time your datapad and commlink chimed you checked them too fast, and every time it wasnât him you shoved it aside.Â
By the seventh, youâd convinced yourself you didnât think about it anymore until your inbox finally pinged with a message from [email protected]
To: [email protected]
From: [email protected]
Subject: still alive
Message:
hey salt,
in case you miss me (you do), iâm still alive.
turns out the Prosecutor is a real piece of work. we boarded fine, then all hell broke loose. comms cut, we had to split our way. boss went aft, fixer to the port, sev is retrieving the sensor logs. i ended up searching for the bio metric logs. havenât linked back up yet. shipâs half alive and it's eating our signals on purpose. been living on ration bars and whatever the galley didnât rot. fun times!
datapadâs running low but figured iâd check in, cause i know if i donât youâll miss me! anyway, yell at me so i know you got this.
â scorch
The message caught you off guard. You knew how these commandos were, you knew the risks, the endless dangers written into every deployment. Hell, you were the one filing safety and compliance reports based on their flimsi scribbles, the one measuring the damage they caused and the injuries they sustained. You knew, better than anyone, how dangerous the missions were that they were sent on. And never, not once, had you let yourself hesitate over them. They were just names on your desk, soldiers you worked with, nothing more.
So why was this different?
You typed slower than usual, forcing your brain to think of an appropriate reply.
Subject: Re: still alive
Message:
No need to report to me as no Republic-owned infrastructure is broken in this mission. Therefore, there is no compliance assessment required on my end.
You paused, staring at the blinking cursor. A single bead of sweat slid down your temple, and you wiped it away with the back of your hand. Another sigh escaped you, and before you could stop yourself, you added:
But feel free to send me your status update anyway.
You closed your eyes and took a deep breath before finally hitting transmit.
The message left your outbox with a soft ping, and you closed your datapad shut, sighing long and heavy, already hating yourself for cracking first.
The reply didnât take long. Your datapad buzzed with a new message.
Subject: re: still alive
Message: ha! knew it. you said no need to report but then said i could anyway. donât worry salt, iâll keep u updated. better than yelling into the void. heading for the forward data core now. iâm pinging advisor and the boys too so everyoneâs in the loop but comms still choppy as hell, lots of static. itâs kinda cool that my message found you! sev says the ship is haunted. fixer says iâm an idiot. boss says both of us are idiots.Â
anyway. iâll grab the logs, link back up, and send you something funny so you donât look so grumpy at your desk.
p.s. miss me yet?
You stared at the screen, lips pressed tight, before giving him a quick âgood luckâ reply. According to your services, it was sent, but not delivered.
And that was the last you heard.
No pings. No blurry selfies. No smug âkaboomâ updates. Silence, for days.
Things like this happened often, the communications officers reminded you when you finally caved and asked. Signal traffic was their wheelhouse, not yours. Operations and Communications clerks in the command center, Signal Intelligence techs on the fleet side, even the Advisor staff who monitored spec ops comm channels. They were used to it. A mission went dark, signals dropped, sometimes for days. You knew the routine. You knew the systems. And you had never once worried before, because it wasnât your business. Above your pay grade. Not your fight.
But curiosity clawed its way past your good sense. So you asked again, and this time, someone gave you the answer.
A Trandoshan dropship had been spotted squatting in one of the Prosecutorâs hangars, scavengers planning to sell the cruiser to the Separatists in exchange for battle droids. Delta Squad was ordered to destroy the dropship and eliminate the Trandoshan threat. Standard sweep-and-clear. Except somewhere along the line, Scorch had been cut off from the rest. You barely absorbed the rest of the briefing your colleague rattled off. Just fragments. Within moments of the Trandoshan shipâs destruction, a Droid Control Ship arrived to claim the Prosecutor. Advisor sent a distress signal. The Republic starship Arrestor is en route to assist.
The gnawing anxiety slowly consumed you, biting at the edges of your thoughts, disturbing your sleep. You told yourself it wasnât about him, you disputed it every time the idea crept in. Your worry did not stem from growing care for what you used to call the most annoying clone in the galaxy. No, it was just the silence. The absence of noise in your inbox. That was all.
Days went by, and still no news. If there were updates, they were highly confidential. You knew your place in the Republic war machine - you werenât Intelligence, you werenât Operations Command, you werenât even Fleet Comms. Who were you, really, in the grand scheme of a galactic war? Just a paper pusher.
A Safety and Compliance Officer. You took the reports others dashed off in frustration or exhaustion and rewrote them into neat, audit-ready documents that the Oversight Committee could parse without triggering a headache. You chased signatures, logged structural assessments, confirmed casualty numbers. And because the officer who handled Risk Assessment had quit to become some kind of holonet influencer, you covered that too. Which meant you also drafted impact statements, ran cost estimates for collateral damage, and flagged repeat safety violations for internal review. You were there to make sure the Republicâs own war didnât bankrupt itself in insurance claims and repair bills.
It was unglamorous work. Necessary, but invisible.Your name never left the paperwork, and nobody thanked you for doing it right. The only time you got noticed was when you failed to catch something and the Senate committees were very good at noticing failures.
So no, you werenât supposed to care whether an RC operator youâd threatened with disciplinary review every other day was alive or dead on some derelict assault ship in the Chaykin Cluster. It wasnât your business. It wasnât your responsibility. It wasnât your place.
And yet, there he was, living rent-free in your head.
Days turned into weeks, and you shoved that gnawing curiosity deep down where it couldnât eat you alive. Back to work, back to being the corporate slave you were. Wolfpack casualties to process, 212th spec-ops damage reports, Torrent Company once again doing something so reckless that left a crater in some backwater planet and a furious senator filing a complaint. You grumbled your way through it, quietly grateful you were only assigned to a handful of elite companies and special operations units. You couldnât imagine handling an entire legion or battalionâs worth of damage reports. No wonder GAR had opened another vacancy for Safety and Compliance last week.
Usually, you barely left your wing in that massive Republic Military Base. Your cubicle, your files, your inbox. But lately, youâd caught yourself wandering farther than you needed to. Drifting towards the main buildings, the hangars, even the crowded main mess hall. Telling yourself it was just to avoid another sad canteen lunch, when really it was just⊠searching. Hoping to catch a glimpse ofâ
Knock. Knock.
Your head snapped up. âCome in,â you called.
âBET YOU THOUGHT YOUâD SEEN THE LAST OF ME!â That obnoxiously cheery voice filled your office, bouncing off the walls.
There he was. Helmet under one arm, armour still scuffed and battered, hair a mess and overgrown, grin wide as ever. RC-1262. Scorch.
You blinked at him, heart beating faster than you cared to admit, but you would never, never in a million years say that youâ
âWhy are you still alive?â you snapped, regaining composure, clinging to the only defense you had - sarcasm. You had to hold back the conflicting urge to punch him and hug him at the same time.
âOh, you think you can get rid of me that easily?â the commando flashed his teeth. âThe answer is no. Also, cool thing, after we finished that ghost ship mission, we answered a distress call!â
âOh god,â you groaned, burying your face in your hand at the dangerous level of excitement in his voice. That tone only meant that he was about to yap for days. Stars, youâd missed it.
âUh huh! A Red Zero distress signal, no less. Sent out by none other than Omega Squad!â He plunked his helmet on your desk, squeezing himself - armour and all - into the chair across from you until it squealed. âOf course, hah, theyâd be helpless without us - the superior squad. So we grabbed a Neimoidian shuttle weâd found aboard the Prosecutor, flew it right into the mess, and pulled them out.â He mimed piloting with one hand as he relieved every moment.
You stared at him, equal parts exhausted and relieved. âAnd somehow, no oneâs dead.â
âExactly!â He beamed. âAnyway, hi!â
âSo⊠no public infrastructure damage for me to explain to the Republic Oversight Committee this time, right?â
âNope,â he said cheerfully, popping the p for emphasis. âGhost ship, remember?â
You frowned. âThen why are you here?â
Scorch shrugged. âDunno. Thought Iâd stop by. Say hi. Annoy you. Keep you company while you do all that boring paper stuff.â
âSo youâre wasting my time.â With arms folded, you groaned.Â
âExactly,â he grinned, utterly unrepentant.
You huffed, trying to summon your usual exasperation, but it came out softer than you meant. ââŠYouâre insufferable.â
âAnd yet.â He propped his elbows on his knees. âYou didnât tell me to leave.â
The inbox pinged with another details of the compliance report you were working on, Foxtrot Group this time. Theyâd been newly assigned to you just last week, fresh from their posting on some Outer Rim campaign. Their captain, Gregor, had already managed to charm the entire office when he first dropped off their compliance report, all easy smiles, great hair and polite words, as if he hadnât just survived a brutal frontline assignment.Â
When you looked up again, Scorch was still there, in the chair across from you. Still beaming like heâd never left. His hands were busy toying with the handmade clone trooper bobblehead perched on your desk.
You rolled your eyes, fighting a smile of your own. âFine. If youâre going to loiter, at least make yourself useful. Hand me that flimsi stack.â
Scorch picked it up obediently. âSee? You would miss me.â
You ignored him but the warmth blooming in your chest betrayed the mask. The silence that had haunted you for weeks finally shuddered apart under his presence.
âOoh, Foxtrot!â he blurted suddenly, pointing at the header of the flimsi youâd just opened. âTheyâve got cool armour, you know? But a completely different function since theyâre attached to battalions. Do you even know how that works?â
A content sigh came out of you as you braced yourself for the incoming lecture, but there was no hiding the small smile tugging at your mouth.
Scorchâs voice faltered for a moment. He tilted his head, watching you with that mischievous glint in his eyes. ââŠYouâre smiling again.â
âNo, Iâm not.â
âYeah, you are.â He grinned wider. âMaybe we should go for dinner later tonight.â
âMaybe.â You shrugged.Â
âItâs a date then!â He smiled brightly, hands waving animatedly as he continued with his stories about armour upgrades, and way too many inside jokes you couldnât follow. You let him yap, stylus scratching half-heartedly at your notes, listening more than you wrote. The inbox in your computer pinged again with another incoming report, and you didnât bother to check it.
It was just you, and Scorch, and his endless chatter. The world outside could wait.
Summary: You have a problem. He stands at 6 feet tall, shares your apartment, and might just be perfect for you. Too bad he doesnât see you the same way you see him. Itâs fine though. You have Spinder. How hard can finding one good boyfriend be, after all?
Pairing: Commander Cody x GN!Reader
Word Count: 1106
Warnings: The reader here is, frankly, oblivious. Reader is called sweetheart and sunshine, but there are no gendered terms.
A/N: I had an idea. This...is not that idea, but this is good too. I hope you all like it. Also, I'm still struggling, a little, with burn out. So I'm not going to post a story every day. Also also! Spinder is Space Tinder, obviously.
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âI have come to a decision,â you announce as you step into the kitchen.
âHave you decided youâre never going to cook again?â Cody asks dryly from where heâs standing in front of the kitchen sink, eyeing his cast iron skillet critically, âI think you killed it.â
âExcuse you, Iâm an amazing cook.â
âIf you count burning food to char as cooking, then sure.â
You scowl at him and set a hand on your hip, âI decided,â you repeat, âThat Iâm going to go on a date tonight.â
Cody pauses, just long enough for you to notice, and then he turns to look at you critically, âYou have a date?â
âWhy do you sound like you donât believe me?â
âBecause you said, and I quote, âmen are trash, Iâm never dating againâ after your ex cheated on you.â
âThat was clearly the devil talking through me!â You counter, waving his words away.
âClearly.â
You huff out an annoyed breath, âLook. Itâs time I put myself back out there, yeah? I canât become a hermit.â
âWhy not? We can be hermits together.â
You point at him, âNo.â
Cody leans against the counter for a moment, his expression amused, âYou know,â He starts, âI bet your date is going to talk about himself non-stop.â
âYou donât know that!â
âI bet he wonât even bring his wallet, to make you pay for his meal.â
âWow, you have a stellar opinion on people.â
âYou know what, you should let me run a background check on him. Just to be safe.â
âCodyââ
âYou never know! He might be sith.â
A laugh slips from your lips, âCody, Iâm pretty sure Sith Lords donât use Spinder.â
âThey might. How else are they supposed to recruit new baby Siths?â He straightens and snatches your phone from your hand, âHere, let me seeââ
âCody! Give me back my phone!â You try to snatch it from his hand, only he lifts it over his head where you canât grab it, âCody!â
He presses his free hand over your face, âShush, Iâm working.â
âYouâre being nosy, it what you are!â You pull his hand off your face and stand on your toes to grab his wrist. Sadly, you would need to work out a lot more than you do before youâd ever be able to over-power him.
And so, he opens the app to your one, single match.
âThis is him?â Cody asks. âWhere are the other matches?â
âThere arenât any. Iâm not exactly a catch, Codes.â
âSee, this is why you shouldnât use these things. Theyâre programmed to make you feel bad about yourself.â
You roll your eyes, âSure, sure. Give me my phoneââ
âNot yet. Sweetheart, are you sure you want to go out with this guy? Heâs a walking red flag.â
âHow do you even know that term?â You demand.
âFives.â
âOf course.â You jump to try and snatch your phone back, but heâs too quick for you, âCody!â
âLetâs see.â Cody scrolls through your dates profile, âSee, he still lives with his parents.â
âSo do a lot of people. Itâs not cheap living on Coruscant.â
âYou manage on your own.â
âI have a roommate. You. You dingus!â
â...oh, yeah.â
âHonestly, Cody. Thereâs nothing wrong with him.â
âHmm...oh, he doesnât have a job.â
âI...his profile doesnât say that.â
âNo, no. It does. Right here. See, here under career, âan employee of lifeâ.â Cody waves your phone in your face, âYouâll be paying for everything, sunshine. In my professional opinion, heâs a leech.â
âYou donât even know him. Maybe heâs just aâa hippie, or something.â
âYouâre stretching there, sweets.â
âI already agreed to the date, and we already agreed where to meet up, so Iâm going.â
âSure, sure.â Cody twists away from you and opens the messaging app.
âWhat are you doing?â
âDonât worry about it,â He replies as he sends a message. And then two more.
âCody? Cody! What did you do?â
âOoh, he messaged back.â Cody says cheerfully, âWow, heâs not nice. Heâs calling you a two-credit whore here. And this message suggests that he wants to break your nose.â
âWhat did you do?â
âI told him you needed to push the date back an hour due to work things.â Cody tosses you your phone, which you fumble with and nearly drop, and then you look at the messages.
And your shoulders slump.
Codyâs message was exactly what he said it was. But the messages your date sent you were twice as abusive as he actually said. â...Iâm glad I didnât go anywhere alone with him.â You finally admit.
âThereâs no need to be disappointed, we can order dinner and watch that movie youâve wanted to see. The spy one.â
âIâm going to die alone and unloved.â You say dramatically as you cancel the date, and delete the app.
âDonât be silly. Youâll have me.â
âUntil you get married and I get kicked out of my own apartment.â
Cody laughs and turns back to the sink, âYou really donât have to worry about that. After all, youâre the only person Iâd be willing to marry.â
â...what?â
He glances at you over his shoulder, âDid you think I was kidding when I said I loved you?â
âNo, of course not. But, like, as a friend.â
âTrust me, sunshine. I donât think about my friends the way I think about you.â Cody grins, âAnyway, I thought we were already dating?â
âI...no?â
âNo? We go out to dinner together. We watch movies together. We clean the apartment together and go grocery shopping togetherââ
âButâbutâyou never asked!â
He wipes his hands clean and then walks over to you to squish your cheeks together, âWell then, Iâll be a lot more transparent from now on. Would you like to have a stay-home date with me tonight. With greasy pizza and a bad spy movie that Iâm going to hate but will tolerate because you like to swoon over the female lead.â
â...yeah, okay.â You pause, âYou really donât like the spy movies?â
âEh,â He shrugs, though his grin doesnât waver, âI like you, so it makes up for it.â Then Cody drops a kiss to your forehead, and releases your face, âYou burned food onto my good skillet, which means you have to scrub it. Iâll make you pancakes while you work.â
â...yeah, okay.â
Cody drops one more kiss to your temple, and mumbles something against your skin, before he releases you and heads to the pantry. And you turn your attention to the skillet, thinking that today went a lot better than you feared.
Y'all thought it was the Force or luck that saved Obi-Wan during Order 66? Nope, it is a known fact in the 212th that the closer Cody gets to a weapons system, the farther your shot gets from the target.
broke: Cody runs around doing Infantry Things with Ghost Company because the writers donât understand how things work IRL
woke: Cody does Infantry Things because of the fundamental nature of the clone army and the purpose it was created forÂ
bespoke: Cody is an electromagnetic anomaly and is at all times barred from being even slightly near a laundry list of military equipment, so out into the field he goes!
There's so much for you to explore that it's almost hard to explain! I put all of the technical details in the dev log on itch.io, so for now, I'll just skip straight to the point and give you the goods:
Play the Demo Here
Along with the new UI, engine, soundtrack, art, save system, and countless added features, this update brings the public demo from 270,000 words to around 460,000!
Thank you for your endless understanding, support, and patience: I very much hope you enjoy!
Cody is a commanding man, ironically enough. Dating him is never boring, especially when he likes to test your limits. You canât complain, though - you often do the same to him.
Part One - Warnings for semi-public touching, brief grinding, dom!Cody, semi-public nudity, spanking, brief voyeurism, sexual touching.
Part Two - Warnings for teasing, public touching, spanking, semi-public fingering, references to masturbation.
Part Three - Warnings for angst, slight dubcon in an established relationship, spanking, underprepared piv sex, rough sex, use of a safeword, hurt/comfort, slight AU.
Part Four - Warnings for discussions of menstrual cycles and accompanying discomfort, dom/sub undertones, period sex, blindfolds, minor dirty talk, fingering, unprotected sex.
This surely took a while, troopers. Apologies again for the delay! We've compiled every single fanfiction entry to Delta Squad Week 2025 into this masterlist, so here are some points you should pay attention to:
This masterlist is sorted by author's Tumblr handle alphabetically.
We've attached the work links to our reblog. For recently updated version (if the author ever does) please go to the original post since reblogs don't record any changes.
We took liberty to come up with titles for title-less entries. We also provided summary for your entries. These are temporary until you DM us of any changes (optional).
NSFW works are marked with NSFW.
Please DM us if there are any link-related errors (leads you to browser, unable to open, wrong links, etc.).
Enjoy 75 FANFICTION ENTRIES brought to you by our very talented writers for DELTA SQUAD WEEK 2025 below the cut.
Or Should I Call You Scorch? - Existing Character(s) - Vau glanced down at the curly haired boy who was clearly trying not to sound too eager. Heâd chosen RC-1262 to be Delta Squadâs demolitions expert because was smart, calm enough, and heâd shown some aptitude for the calculations required to mix the explosives properly.
Sev & the Wookiees - Existing Character(s) - Just a silly story about Sev finding and naming baby Wookies on Kashyyyk.
Boss' Dream - Reader's POV as Existing Character - Boss' recurring dream about Sev. Some locations and context for parts taken from the Republic Commando books & TCW.
Entries by @arliganzey
What Should We Drink To? - Existing Character(s) - Delta Squad's hunt for rogue Kaminoan scientist Ko Sai has led them to Tropix Resort, a fabricated luxury beach resort on the planet Dorumaa. General Bardan Jusik has tasked Delta with an important mission: eat dinner at the resort restaurant.
Sex Education - NSFW Scorch x OC - Sometime after the war, Scorch caves and asks Mereel and Kom'rk everything they know about dating and having sex. He finds a partner in Pella - but can he overcome his self-consciousness about his scarred body?
Light Kidnapping - Existing Character(s) - Delta Squad has assimilated into the Imperial army. Being commandos is the only thing they know, thanks to their training from Walon Vau. They know some commandos have deserted and are probably living it up with Skirata. But Delta isn't made for civilian life. Given the choice to leave, will they take it?
My Brother, My Brother, My Brother, and Me - Existing Character(s) - Three vignettes about Scorch and his brothers.
Entries by @blue-marbles
Delta Squad: Bonds - Existing Character(s) - About two years before Geonosis, Sev gets injured in a training exercise. He doesn't want anyone to know - not even his squad mates. But his brothers are way more perceptive than he believed them to be. And sometimes, accepting help is harder than any mission...
Never Forgotten - Existing Character(s) - One year after their fateful Mission on Kashyyyk, Scorch remembers Sev and decides to make a promise.
Demagolka - Existing Character(s) - It had been years since the war ended, years since Walon Vau had last seen most of the Commandos he trained. Yet, the memories of what he did to them still linger and haunt him more than any time spent on a battlefield ever could. Working through nightmares and memories, he has to ask himself how deep his guilt goes, how to live with the regret, and whether there can ever be redemptionâŠ
Delta Squad: Trapped - Existing Character(s) - On what should have been a routine reconnaissance mission to an abandoned mining outpost, Delta Squad finds itself trapped in a room full of tibanna gas tanks. The facility's power keeps flickering on and off for no apparent reason, and it seems like somebody locked the door behind them. When the Deltas try to work out what they are actually dealing with, Fixer has a crazy theory that makes his brothers wonder if he finally lost his mindâŠ
Delta Squad: Vode An - Existing Character(s) - After a successful mission, Delta Squad is waiting for extraction. While his brothers are resting, Boss is on guard. He starts thinking about the lyrics of Vode An, and delves into memories about his brothers and the meaning of brotherhood. But then enemies approach, and Delta Squad has to prove once more that their strength lies in their bonds as brothers in arms.
Smoke and Stars - Existing Character(s) - Kashyyyk, 19 BBY. As the Clone Wars are slowly coming to an end, Sev finds himself separated from his squad, with his comm down, and under attack. He knows that if he wants to see his brothers again, he has to fight his way out of this situation, and take a massive risk.
Entries by @clonegirl99
Bet I Can Make You Smile - Sev x Reader - âIâm going to make you smile, Sev, and youâre going to like it.â
"You're Hurt" - Sev x Reader - You giggle again and squeeze Sev's hand. âIâll go first. Tell me about this scar you have that the boys teased you aboutâŠâ
Scars - Sev x Reader - âSo he bactaâd me and glued my head back together â look, no scar,â You lean forward and Sev studies your forehead â Aâden did do a good job, he has to admit. âAnd now, here I am.â
"I Dreamed About You" - Sev x Reader - Sev had been a wildcard. Youâd known men like him before â taciturn, stoic, singularly focused â and they tended to fall into one of two categories: complete aversion to any kind of vulnerability or affection, or touch-starved snuggle monsters.
Entries by @ct7567329
Full Plates, Fuller Hearts - Sev x Reader - Your boyfriend, Sev, is back on Coruscant after a long mission, so you decide to treat him to a special home-cooked dinner.
Pieces We Mend - Scorch x Reader - Scorch rushes to his go-to weapons technician to repair his beloved blaster for the umpteenth time. When sharing stories of his deployment takes an unexpected turn, scars of your past are revealed.
When Dreams Slip (Pt. 1) - Fixer x Reader - A near-death mission brings Boss to the Jedi Temple for healing and you straight into Fixerâs head.
When Dreams Slip (Pt. 2) - Fixer x Reader - Delta Squad has returned from their mission! Scorch, Sev and Boss will NOT let Fixer forget about their 'unofficial' second mission.
Target Acquired - Boss x Reader - When Delta Squad comes to help train your Rebel village, you think you're prepared. You already know how to fight. What else would you need to be ready for? Definitely not feelings.
Here and Gone (Pt. 1) - Sev x Reader - One day while hiking, you accidentally stumble upon a Republic sniper post, a quite handsome Commando seated inside. Suddenly, your hikes start to coincide with his shifts, giving you a reason to return again and again. In the quiet moments you share, something unspoken grows between you.
Here and Gone (Pt. 2) - Sev x Reader - It's been over a year since Sev left, but it still feels like just yesterday he was here. You're unsure what hurts more: the fact he left you or the fact that you can't let him go.
Entries by @detroitbydark
Beyond the Clouds - Existing Character(s) - Featuring a reluctant sniper, an overly enthusiastic demolitions expert, and a sky full of possibilities.
What Dreams May Come - Existing Character(s) - His hands press into the soil anchoring him to the moment. Just for a second Scorch pretends heâs not alone. His brothers are at his side and the world is limitless.
Ba'vodu - Existing Character(s) - His heart thuds inside the cage of his chest. Around him, the kitchen has gone quiet. Laseema and Atin are the only others around to witness his lapse in training. Them- and Kad.
Tell Me That Your Soul Lies Now (Chapter 1) - Sev x OC x Scorch - A surprise acquisition leads to questions in Kyrimorut. Sev, Scorch, and Wal'buir are left to question the meaning of family, loyalty, and love.
Caf Bribe - Existing Character(s) - Talking about his feelings (YUCK) was not going to stop Sev from waking up panicked and wild from nightmares. It wasnât going to make him eat more than half the food Scorch dutifully brought to his room every day. It wasnât going to get him to talk.
Day of Planting - Existing Character(s) - Scorch celebrates his first holiday in Mandalore.
Entries by @fractiouskat
Terrible Parenting: A Biography - Existing Character(s) - Third-cycle cadet RC-1140 takes a tumble, and Vau is forced to vaguely attempt something resembling responsible parenting. It goes about as well as you'd expect.
Entries by @hellfiresky
Where the City Glows at Night - NSFW Sev x Reader - You hadnât done a one-night stand with someone off a dating app in a while, but you let Sev, a Republic Commando, ruin you anyway. Well, the city was glowing and loneliness was one hell of a drug.
Thought This was a Simple Recce Mission - Boss x Reader - What started as a quiet recce mission with Boss quickly devolves into a skirmish through the Kashyyyk jungle.
Entries by @i-willstealyourtoes
Midnight Munchies Invitation - Scorch x Reader - Although your words might have come across as rhetorical, you truly were confused to get a call from Scorch. Especially since you you didn't know he even remembered your name.
Reminders of Failure - Existing Character(s) - Scars never really bothered Scorch. They were just a symbol of all the 'awesome' things he's done and survived, right?
I Had A Dream About You - Fixer x Reader - The others-especially Scorch-had already taken a liking to you by the time Fixer finally admitted his appreciation towards you.
Convenience Store Date - Scorch x Reader - Scorch then spent at least an hour just looking around every shelf, and another half hour picking and buying (technically, you were the one buying, but you didn't mind. It wasn't expensive anyway).
Left Behind - Existing Character(s) - Brothers. Not everyone has one, but Sev was lucky enough to have 3 of them close to his heart.
Show You Where The Fun Is - Existing Character(s) - It felt weird to comm someone for reasons other than work, but Addy reckoned the best person to ask about this would be Mr. Clown himself.
Infighting - Existing Character(s) - Now, it was like every moment they weren't fighting enemies, they were fighting each other. Or rather, Scorch was the one picking fights with him and Fixer. And the truth was, Boss couldn't even be mad at him for it.
Entries by @lonewolflupe
You're Hurt - Existing Character(s) - Watch the master at work; cadet Fixer is testing his slicing skills during a training exercise.
Baby Wookiees? - Existing Character(s) - Too cute; when Delta Squad is finally back on Kashyyyk for an evac, Scorch is in for a hairy surprise.
I Dreamed About You - Existing Character(s) - Boss, Iâve got a problem here; alone and forsaken on Kashyyyk, Sev remembers his brothers
Tell Fixer That - Existing Character(s) - Could you can the chatter; unfortunately, Scorch has little useful to say today.
We Have A Problem - Existing Character(s) - That was a lot more intense than the simulations; a squad of commando cadets find their way into a smelly situation.
Where's My Caf? - Existing Character(s) - Maybe itâs the heat; Boss tries keeping sane between all the squadâs bickering.
I Love You - Existing Character(s) - Delta, give me an explosive solution; Scorch is asking the real questions here.
Entries by @orangez3st
Pardon The Way That I Stare - Boss x Reader - Delta Squad's sergeant is having a silly little crush on a cafe stage performer.
Something More - Fixer x Reader - It was really stupid of Fixer to ignore your affection. You're the kindest person in the worldâhe doesn't deserve you. But he's willing to change how he thinks about you.
(Not the) Weirdest Group Photo - Existing Character(s) Drabble - Wreckerâs posing with his Deece next to Scorch who's doing the peace sign. âOh yeah, look at us. The explosion scar duo.â
We Hate Kashyyyk - Scorch & Self-Insert - And it just had to be the Kashyyyk mission. The most dreaded of them all. Say what you want about Geonosis and Assault Ship⊠âGod, I hate Kashyyyk so much.â
Torture Me To Sleep - Scorch x Reader - For a fleeting moment, there seems to be the tiniest glimpse of hope. Although, the future remains uncertainâwith Scorch's constant and cold presence towering over you.
Glowing, Fairytale, Knowing - Scorch x Reader - Three years after denouncing your Jedi path, you were still waiting for your soulmate. One night, he came to you in a dream.
Coruscant Guard, the True Professionals - Existing Character(s) Drabble - Inside the briefing room, Stone gestures to Sevâs DC-17m. âThat kinda Deece ever jammed in the middle of a firefight?â
Get Tooka-fied! - Existing Character(s) - Tooka-fied Delta Squad is doing the exact same thing they usually did when reporting back to command center like this; their posture straight and⊠and, well, just that. There's no bucket to be taken off when there's none, and there's no verbal communication when some sort of barrier now exists. Language barrier. Species barrier, whatever.
Pani Popo - Delta Squad x OC - Raye's first day at Vau's turns nostalgic real quick.
How Do You Explain Unsolved Murders by Plasma Bolt?! - Sev x Reader - You always get away from the mysterious deaths of the people who bully you, only because of this dead dude from another galaxy who names himself Sev acting as your avenging angel, if that even exists.
New Orders Just Came In - Boss x Reader - Boss loves to take care of you, especially when you're sickâeven if you put up a fight.
Tortured Even When I'm Asleep - Existing Character(s) Drabble - Something inside him was broken to shards, in its place now reigned fear. It keeps him awake at night, even now.
How Delta Squad boys confess their feelings for you - References
Entries by @the-stars-are-warring
Sergeant - Existing Character(s) - The breath comes out of Vau in a rush and Three-Eight braces, the other man's broken arm still held against his ribs. He broke Walon Vau's arm.
Keep Your Bucket On - Existing Character(s) - Something explodes behind them and Scorch shuts up and goes to pull his helmet back on but then the floor bucks under him and Scorch grabs for the wall (floor? Ceiling?) with the image of Boss mid-stagger with Sev falling into him as the last thing he remembers seeing before he wraps his arms over his head and bounces off of something as they hit the ground.
Blow It All To Haran - Existing Character(s) - Fixer winces. "Command wants the data so we get the data." He should care about the data. He should care about doing what command wants and getting it right and slicing into separatist systems and he doesn't.
Surviving - Existing Character(s) - It takes him a moment of fighting to get his breath back, and Sev runs his tongue over his teeth and spits again. His right knee aches, bone deep and spiking sharper. He's in it up to his neck this time and there's no cheerful Omega sap to pull him up and pretend it's not shameful for a commando to fall.
Old Scars - Existing Character(s) - Sev has to be dead because Fixer couldn't find anything. He'd spent months looking for anything. Something he'd missed, interference. Some kind of evidence that whatever had happened hadn't taken Sev's kit offline.
Lovely Afternoon For A Firefight - Existing Character(s) - Sev sweeps his scope over the valley one more time and pauses, tracks back - They'd set up here expecting an early morning patrol, so the mid-afternoon sun glaring off the rocks is interfering with his rifle sight.
Entries by @viridaee
Find A Way - Existing Character(s) - Scorch survived the fall in Bad Batch season 3 finale and now he's going to find a way out of Mount Tantiss's planet.
Entries by @yarnspunmuse
Eat Or Be Eaten - Existing Character(s) - The Deltas are bored until Scorch's legendary animal magnetism strikes and things get interesting. Fixer is infodumping. Sev is going feral. Boss just wants to lay down please.
Chronic - Existing Character(s) - Sev's throat is bothering him. It's Fixer's job to help. Neither of them are excited about it.
Improvisation - Existing Character(s) - Sev and Scorch are unsupervised on an active battlefield. They pick up some strays, make up plans as they go, solve some problems and create a few others. All in all, a pretty good day.
Tooka Troubles - Existing Character(s) - Scorch thinks he's alone on the squad's shuttle, just using the quiet time to get some boring grunt work done. Unfortunately, he is incorrect.
Bleach Bonding - Existing Character(s) - Sometime before Geonosis, Scorch learns about the wonderful invention that is hair bleach. This is alarming to Fixer for a multitude of reasons, so he decides to step in. Thus, a new tradition is born.
Tracyn - Existing Character(s) - Delta Squad gets an accidental crash course in wildfire awareness. It doesn't go well.
Kar'taylir Darasuum - Existing Character(s) - Sev and Boss and a late night conversation on Kashyyyk.
Summary: The first year of the war, Monnk meets a woman at 79s and spends the night with her on his lap and kissing her breathless. Four years later, with the war over and with a shiny new set of rights under his belt, Monnk is haunted by the memory of her lips.
Pairing: Commander Monnk x F!Reader
Word Count: 1193
Warnings: Spicy implications at the end
A/N: I was in a Monnk mood and decided to do something about it. Thus, this story was born. Sorry if it's not the greatest. I'm very tired.
Click HERE to be added to my taglist
In Monnkâs personal opinion, heâs the most pathetic man to ever exist.
For one, very simple, reason.
Itâs because four years ago, he met a young woman at 79s, and heâs been stuck on her ever since. Every time he closes his eyes, her face swims into view. And when heâs dreaming at night he can hear her voice and feel her lips against his.
Itâs, frankly, embarrassing.
He doesnât even know her name.
And itâs been four years, and he never saw her again after that first meeting.
And yet, here he is. Retired from military work, yet still living on Coruscant just in case he runs into her at the store or at the park or something.
She tasted like cotton candy. Her kisses sugary sweet in a way that Monnk became addicted to over the course of a single night. If he had been a smarter man at the time, he would have gotten her name or number.
But he had been a dumbass kid, basically, and let his angel slip through his fingers.
At this point, his brothers are starting to give him a hard time about it, calling him pathetic for being stuck on someone who might not even exist. And when Monnk started pushing back, they decided the best way to handle the situation is to set him up on a series of, increasingly bad, blind dates.
Honestly, Monnk isnât sure why he still goes on these dates. Other than he doesnât want to deal with his brothersâ nagging him about standing up his date.
Which brings him to now.
Heâs dressed casually, a button down shirt and some nice-ish trousers, as he sits at a table in a restaurant that he doesnât really like, waiting to meet a date heâs pretty sure heâs going to hate.
The last three dates heâs been on have hated his hairâshe said that men shouldnât dye their hair blue or wear it longâand one said that if she was going to date him, he would have to get his tattoo removed, which is never going to happen.
He shifts in the chair and rests his chin on the palm of his hand with a sigh. Maybe if he just leaves, he can tell his brothers that he got stood up and theyâll stop with this ridiculous blind date thing.
Monnk is pulled from his thoughts when someone drops into the chair across from him, and he flickers his gaze across her face. Sheâs pretty, her hair pulled into a braid down her back, and her lips are painted in the same shade of pink that you see on bubblegum.
Sheâs not really looking at him, though. Sheâs messing with her purse, and talking in his direction. Something about work being a hassle and that this isnât really her thing, but her friends insisted.
And then she looks at him, and Monnk is able to get a good look at her face, and he straightens in his seat. Heâd recognize her face anywhere. Stars know heâs dreamed of it enough times.
âOh! Itâs you!â She sounds pleased when she looks at him, and a bright smile crosses her pink lips.
âMonnk,â He offers her his hand, which she takes as she offers her own name, âMaybe now weâll be able to talk more than once every four years.â He offers with a small grin.
âHopefully!â She doesnât seem to want to pull her hand away from his, her soft fingers gliding against his wrist, âI went back to 79s the next night, looking for you.â she admits, sounding almost sheepish.
âI got deployed that morning,â Monnk explains, âAnd I was gone for six months.â
âWell, thatâs alright. Because weâre here now, yeah?â
âYeah,â His grin widens, âSo, do you still wear that cotton candy lipstick?â
A bubbly laugh falls from her, and then she shifts her chair so sheâs able to press her knee against his, âIt is my favorite.â
âItâs my favorite too.â He turns in his chair, just enough that heâs facing her, and he brushes his fingers against the corner of her lips, âIs that what youâre wearing today?â
She shakes her head with a teasing grin, âI decided to wear something new today.â
âFlavored lipstick?â
âOf course.â
Monnk taps his thumb against her lower lip, âWhat flavor?â
Her grin widens, âWhy donât you tell me?â
His gaze flickers to her lips, and then he leans back, âYou know, I havenât ordered anything yet. You want to get out of here?â
She tilts her head, almost coyly, âArenât you hungry, Monnk?â
âStarved,â He replies immediately, âbut thereâs nothing here that will hit the spot.â
She averts her gaze for a moment, but then locks her gaze with his again, âWell, in that case, we should definitely leave.â
It takes less than five minutes for Monnk to get up, for him to help her up, to guide her out of the restaurant, and to tug her into an alley not far from the restaurant so he can crash his lips against hers.
She tastes like strawberries, and sheâs so soft as she presses against his body, her arms wrapping around his neck to pull him closer. Itâs the kiss, and the body, heâs been dreaming about for years.
So, really, itâs not his fault when he pulls back so heâs able to trail his lips down her jaw to her throat. And itâs not his fault when he lightly nips on the soft skin of her neck.
And when she whimpers, and tangles her fingers in his hair and pulls on it, Monnk starts to plan his wedding with her.
Her soft fingers trail through his hair, and she breathes out his name like itâs a prayer, and Monnk has to remind himself to check his grip so he doesnât hurt her. But his gaze meets hers, and thereâs something soft and hot in her gaze, and he canât help but grip her hips even tighter.
Her eyes flutter slightly, âMonnk,â she murmurs, âYou should walk me home.â
Itâs an innocent comment.
âWill you let me stay?â Monnk asks, he doesnât want innocent.
Her fingers glide against his jaw, âUntil you get tired of me.â
âSo, never then?â
And she grins at him so brightly that her eyes crinkle at the corners.
The following morning, Monnk wakes up with his legs tangled in hers and his arms tight around her waist. Heâs deliciously sore from the scratch marks on his back and the hickies covering his body.
His comm is chiming with multiple incoming messages, so he grabs his comm to check his messages, all while tracing the marks he left on her body with a careful finger.
She groans and buries her face in his chest as he opens the many messages from Cody, and then Monnk releases a laugh. She whines and pulls back to squint at him, âMonnk?â
âLooks like you werenât my blind date last night, princess.â
She blinks slowly, her sleepy brain struggling to comprehend, âThatâs okay. This is better.â
âOh,â Monnk leans in and steals a heated kiss, âI absolutely agree.â
Summary: You and Cody film something special before the 212th ships out for their next campaign.
Pairing: Cody x reader
Warnings: NSFW, 18+, P in V sex, praise kink, Cody likes to be called Commander in bed, excessive use of the word cock, unprotected sex, creampie, filming, sex tape.
A/N: Once again, I am here to be booked into horny jail. This originally was going to be a longer fic, but I decided to cut out the boring stuff, and changed it a little. May be persuaded to make a part 2 to this one if people are interested....
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You stare down at him from your position above him. His gaze is lowered, focused on the datapad in his hand. Itâs resting on his stomach, focused on where youâre hovering over his cock, hand slowly jerking him.Â
Itâs risky, doing this on GAR issued technology, but you trust Cody.Â
You line up his cock, slowly sinking down onto it. You let out a moan, more exaggerated than you usually would, but youâre doing this for him. Youâre about to head off on whatâs going to be a grueling campaign, and neither of you will have the time to sneak away and do this. Itâs the least you can do to give him something to relax with, when he gets those rare moments.Â
You gasp as you settle on his cock, thighs gripping his hips as you give yourself a moment to adjust. He keeps the datapad steady, focusing where your bodies meet. You lift yourself up slightly, holding there before you sink back down. He lets out a quiet groan, watching you through the screen as you use him, bouncing up and down on his cock.Â
You play up your moans, reaching behind you to use his thighs for leverage. Youâll tire out long before you reach your orgasm in this position, but youâre far from done. Youâve got a lot to give Cody still, wanting to make sure he has enough to remember you for these next few weeks.Â
Cody films you for a couple more minutes before he sets the datapad down to wrap his arms around you. He flips you over, rolling you onto your stomach on the bed. He straddles your thighs, picking up the datapad again to film the curve of your spine, the roundness of your ass. You lift your hips just slightly, giving it a shake for him. He smacks a hand onto one cheek in response, grabbing a handful and squeezing.Â
He releases you, shifting to set the datapad on the side table, keeping it focused on the lower halves of your body. He drags the head of his cock along your slit before he presses into you, shifting his body until heâs leaning over you, hips pressed against your ass. He slowly starts to thrust his hips dragging his cock in and out of you.Â
You press yourself back into him, squeezing around him as he grinds against you. He drops himself onto his elbows, pressing his chest into your back. His lips attach to your shoulder, pressing open-mouthed kisses to the sensitive skin.Â
You curse quietly, moving your hips back against him as he works you closer and closer to an orgasm. He pushes himself back up to his hands as he snaps his hips against your ass, picking up the pace. The force of his thrusts drag your clit along the bed, your back arching as pleasure washes through you.Â
You moan loudly as you cum, his thrusts slowing to a stop as you spasm around him. He wonât cum. Not yet.Â
He lets you come down from your high for a moment before heâs wrapping his arms around you, turning you onto your back. Heâs so gentle, smoothing his hands along your body as he stares down at you. You meet his gaze, biting your lip at the lust shining in them.Â
He parts your thighs, pushing them up, your hands grabbing the backs of your knees as he grabs the datapad once more. He focuses it between your legs, running his fingers through your folds before he takes hold of his cock once more. He teases your slit, focusing the datapad on your pussy as he presses his cock into you. You moan loudly, sensitive from your first orgasm. He presses all the way into you, holding the datapad still as he begins to fuck into you again.Â
You moan, walls clamping around him as the angle drags the head of his cock along that spot inside you with every thrust. He can see the shine of your slick on his cock in the video, your thighs and lips shining with your slick. Heâd worked you up good before he started filming, using his mouth and fingers in the way he knows you like. He has a way of driving you insane, making you wet with just a look.Â
Your back arches, pressing against him as he fucks you. He holds the datapad with one hand, the other dropping to your waist. You groan at the feeling of his calloused skin against yours, his hand holding you possessively as he works you up to your second orgasm of the night.Â
He shifts the datapad just high enough to film the way your tits bounce as he fucks you, his hand sliding up your side to grab a handful. He squeezes for a moment before releasing you, dropping the datapad back down to where youâre connected.Â
Heâs close, you can tell by the way heâs groaning, the sound mixing with your own moans. Your back arches as he circles your clit, thighs threatening to close around him as he pushes you to your second orgasm, pleasure nearly blinding you. He stills, moaning sweetly as he cums inside you. He fills you up with every last drop before pulling out of you, moving the datapad between your thighs. You hold yourself open, the spasming of your walls forcing his seed to leak out of you. He films it as it slides out of your pussy, a satisfied smirk lifting the corner of his mouth.Â
He turns off the datapad, setting it on the table. He crawls his way up your body, your hands finally releasing your knees. You wrap your arms around his shoulders, pulling him against you.Â
âSo good for me.â He says, lips brushing yours. âAlways such a good girl.âÂ
You shiver against him from the praise, his half-hard length pressing against your thigh. âThank you, Commander.â You say, kissing him.Â
He groans against your lips and you know you have him. He reaches between your legs, spreading his cum along your folds as he drags his cock along your slit. He slips back into you, easing his cock into you. He settles against you, still kissing your lips. This oneâs just for you two, your last private moment before you have to sneak back to your barracks.Â
***
Youâre half asleep in the mess the next morning. Cody had kept you up late, and you hadnât been able to settle after you returned to your own barracks. Your mind was racing, preparing itself for this campaign. You know youâre going to be working long hours, trying to keep as many troopers alive as you can.Â
You had also found it hard to relax with Codyâs cum leaking into your panties.Â
You need caf desperately.
Youâre in line when you hear it. You think itâs just exhaustion, perhaps a little delirium.Â
Until you hear it again.Â
You know that sound. You scan the mess, finding table after table of troopers all grouped together, huddling over datapads. You frown, stepping out of line for the caf machine to approach Waxer and Boil where theyâre bent over a datapad.Â
âWhat are you doing?â You ask.Â
Both clones look up at you mischievously. You can hear it louder now, a nervous sweat starting to form on your back. You know that sound.Â
Itâs you.Â
âSomeone uploaded a sex tape to the GAR server last night.â Waxer smirks.Â
Panic begins to bubble in your throat, threatening to choke you. It could be anyone, right? You know many clones like to pick up dates while theyâre on shore leave. Youâve passed fellow civilian workers slipping out of barracks in the early hours of the morning before too.Â
You move to stand between them, looking over their shoulders at their datapad. Your stomach drops, palms sweating as you stare at the bodies writhing on screen. Itâs not just anyone. Itâs you and Cody. Last night.Â
Kriff. Cody must have uploaded it to the wrong server.Â
âThe entire GAR has access to it.â Boil says. âEveryone thinks itâs someone in Command, by the looks of the room.âÂ
âWeâre trying to figure out who it is.â Waxer says, staring hard at the screen. âItâs definitely a clone.â
âProbably some barrack bunny.â Boil says, whistling lowly. âWhoever it is, heâs one lucky guy.â
You look up as more figures enter the mess, your gaze meeting Codyâs. Judging by his demeanor, he has no idea. You give him a panicked look, trying to decide if you should strangle him right here in the mess, or drag him somewhere more private.
Hiii, I was just wandering if you wouldnât mind blabbing about the symbolism and stuff behind some of your design choices with the horse men that you might not have mentioned. Like with pestilence and death specifically I feel like thereâs a lot of symbolism Iâm picking up on without fully understanding. Like with Deathâs sickle, both a homage to the classic scythe and a nod to the âreaping/harvestingâ of souls. And with pestilence I feel like thereâs something that Iâm skirting around without grasping. The multiple legs strike me as a deliberate similarity to insects, and if Iâm right I think that the rider is bound in a body bag type deal, similar to how disease and pestilence is so often both spread through the improper disposal of bodyâs, and how wide spread pestilence leads to mass graves filled with disease and the horrible anonymity that comes with being just one face in a pit of hundreds etc? All of this is, ofc, to say that Iâve adored your series of the horsemen so far and would go absolutely rabid for some insight on some of your design choices<3
My horsemen of the apocalypse! I will add the original commentary and some extras, less about the symbolism and more about what brought me to design them the way I did.
The symbolism is for you to chose, there is no wrong answer.
WAR
I can't bring myself to represent war with a cool knight. It's horror. War is a bound child crowned with shrapnel, tied to a wounded horse that is being pulled forward by unseen people.
I've read a handful of books regarding war. A lost quote said that it should be shown as horror, it should make generals vomit, it should make you sick. I haven't seen war but my family has.
It was the first horseman I've designed, and it was in my sketchbook for months (maybe over a year, maybe even more) before I had the courage to draw it. I was really scared about how people would react to a mutilated child.
Recommended reading: The Red Crown - Mikhail Bulgakov, a short story about a man coping with the loss of his brother in the war
FAMINE
Someone who lived thro a famine shared that their head was only occupied with thoughts of food. Famine consumes your mind. All animals were eaten. Neighbors gave their pets away cuz they couldn't do it themselves. People walked around town as if in a dazed dream, slowly
Recommended reading: The Last Witnesses - Svetlana Alexievitch, a collection of testimonials of people who were children when WW2 began. Some quotes below;
'''A cat! A cat!' Other children saw it and started chasing it. The educators were local habitants, looked at us as if we were insane. In Leningrad there were no living cats left...A living cat was a dream. Food for one month...We talked about it, but they didn't believe us.''
''During the first year of evacuation, we didn't notice nature, everything that was nature provoked in us only one desire - taste to see if it's edible. Only a year later I noticed the beauty of the Urals''
''I dreamt of catching a sparrow and eating it...''
''A candle burns and the shopgirl cuts the bread pieces. People follow her with their gaze. Her every movement...with burning eyes...crazed...and all that in silence.''
''People walked slowly through the city like shadows. Like in a dream...a deep dream...As in, you see it, but you think you're seeing a dream. Those sluggish movements...floating...As if a person walked on water and not on land.''
''In Leningrad there are a lot of monuments, but one is missing that should exist. They forgot about it. The monument to the dogs of the seige. Dear doggy, forgive me...''
I don't like talking about it. It made no sense to draw Famine with a horse.
PESTILENCE
Based on the notes of a doctor who said the most frightening thing about viral disease was how it didnât frighten. People didnât know or didn't care. They lived and spread until it was too late and they became another name on the record
The clothing being made out of shredding plastic is no coincidence; pollution is a form of pestilence too
Recommended reading: Notes from a Countryside Doctor - Mikhail Bulgakov. Roughly translated quote below;
''Ah, I verified that here syphilis was frightening precisely because it did not frighten. That was why I evoked that women.* I remembered her with a kind of affectionate respect: because she had been afraid. But she was the only one!''
*Early in the chapter, doctor mentions a woman that appeared in the clinic with a letter from her soldier husband, where he wrote that he had syphilis and told her she should go to the doctor too.
DEATH
Recommended reading: Voices of Chernobyl - Svetlana Alexievitch. The Death of Ivan Ilitch - Lev Tolstoi
âDeath is the fairest thing in the world. No one's ever gotten out of it. The earth takes everyone - the kind, the cruel, the sinners. Aside from that, there's no fairness on earth.â
Death is the only horseman that doesnât need to mount their horse; they will reach everyone eventually. Who is the saddle for then? Open ended question because this one you have to figure out personally
Many people pointed out how the horse is a Clydesdale. Good eyes! I purposefully asked a friend to guide me towards what type of horses are the sturdiest and most-friendly looking. I drew the horse grazing. It's not injured, it doesn't gallop. It's grazing peacefully because life moves on.
This is the only design that had a painting serve as a base - The Reaper, by Alexey Venetsianov. Not much or nothing at all is written about, I saw it in a book. It is a literal reaper but it haunted me, as if it's portraying more than a person.
The choice to make it a woman was due to a book about a crematory (Smoke Gets in Your Eyes - Caitlin Doughty) that connected women to death because everyone born is bound to die.
Ahhh, I don't want to give it all away. It's fun to figure things out. About them all. From the enviroment, to the movement, to the horses themselves. Many people even mentioned details that I did not notice and didn't add purposefully that were so inspired and amazing. I truly mean that the interpretations of the public enrich the works even more than my own words. And it's an honor to share that work with everyone.
Joel Miller x f!reader | 28k | 18+ | masterlist | coming soon!
summary: Joel Miller gave up on the idea of a soulmate at least 20 years and one apocalypse ago. But it turns out the universe hasn't given up on him quite yet.
a/n: hi. this is the [redacted] Joel fic Iâve been talking about â surprise, itâs soulmates! and it started as a prompt from @chaotic-mystery for her #WIRED4YOU challenge. I am very late, lol, sorry!! My song prompt was Still Falling for You by Ellie Goulding, and my immediate idea was a Joel soulmate AU, which then became a bit of a love letter to the life I wanted him and Ellie (and fam) to have in Jackson. probably as a response to season 2. Itâs also a bit of an exploration of what it would mean to a man like Joel Miller to have to interact with the idea of fate against his will. I thought it would be about 2k words and itâs, um, not. đ€Ą It's totally finished, see the posting schedule below â the next three Tuesdays. I hope you enjoy. Thank you to @katareyoudrilling for bouncing ideas for this around with me for weeks and also being the best beta. It is a way better fic because of you.
tags/warnings: soulmate AU, Jackson era after they get back from Salt Lake, is there a cure? you decide, Ellie and Joel family vibes, Joel being the best dad, flirting, fluff, angst, teasing, a bit of miscommunication but they figure it out, figuring out being family, smut later on (fingering, hand job, kissing, fondling, breasts mention, oral sex (f receiving), p-in-v sex, creampie (see below, she isnât getting pregnant lol)), Joel can dance, panic attack (Joel)
about reader: at least 24-25 ish before the Outbreak so do with that age what you will (she finished college and had at least one job before, so in my mind she's at least 44-45, but imagine whatever you'd like), reader was an engineer in this and has a nickname everyone in town calls her, no physical description other than walking and a bit of dancing, at one point reader specifically wears jeans, reader sits in Joelâs lap at one point, Maria is readerâs best friend, reader had a brother
Part 1 (7.3k)
Part 2 (10k)
Part 3 (10.6k)
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