Summary: After spending hours by your side in the med bay, Rex decides that maybe mistakes are meant to be made.
Rex x Jedi Reader (gender neutral), angst with happy ending.
A.N: Got inspired by the song The High Road and since Rex seems to be a source of angst for me, it fit perfectly. This is entirely from Rex's POV.
Warnings: Mentions of injury/hospitalization, self deprecation and questioning ones self worth, mentions/implied steamy situations.
The urge to take hold of your hand was eating him alive.
Kix said nothing when he stood guard at your bed side, just gave him a little smile and nod. Kix knew, but the captain couldn't much care right now. Hours passed and the pain in his chest never ceased, if anything it grew, spread like a poison down to his finger tips. And maker did they itch to touch you, as if his skin on yours was the only way to cure that poison.
Instead he focused on the steady rise and fall of your chest, the assurance that you were breathing- something that wasn't so easy to see when he pulled you from that wreckage. You had felt so small and cold in his arms as he screamed for Kix and he didn't think that memory would be going away any time soon.
It should have been him. It was his job, it was what he was made for!
But he knew what your answer to that would have been: that protecting others was what you were made for, the job the force had laid in your arms. It was one of the reasons he admired the Jedi so, their dedication to life, their fierce protection of the innocent and those who relied on them.
He still should have protected you. What good was he if he couldn't? Just another reason he didn't deserve you. Just another reason he held himself back from taking you in his arms.
And force, did he want to take you.
Every time you stood close to him, so close he could feel your warmth seep through the spaces in his armor. Every time you smiled at him, that smile that made his heart skip around like some child playing in the park. Every time your hand grazed his shoulder, the touch that set his skin on fire in the most delightful way.
Every time you spoke to him in that intimate tone, told him how proud you were to fight beside him, told him he was worth more than he knew, told him you would always be there for him.
He didn't know his heart could soar and shatter at the same time until he met you.
Rex jumped when Kix tapped him on the shoulder. When he turned he had a tray of food shoved onto his lap and Rex looked up at the medic in bewilderment.
Kix winked, "Knew you wouldn't leave the General's side, so I had Echo bring up some food from the mess."
The captain let out a long breath. Maybe he'd been holding it the whole time. He hadn't even realized how many hours had passed of him just sitting there with his eyes on your breathing.
"Thanks," he said and briefly thought about giving him a grateful smile, but realized it would probably just be a grimace.
He forced himself to swallow a few bites, again because he knew what you would say. You would tell him he needed his strength, then when he still resisted you would narrow your eyes and turn it around on him. Tell him he owed it to his men to stay strong and healthy. And you'd be right. You were almost always right.
His eyes couldn't stay away from you though, not even here. He always found it hard not to look at you when you were in the room. As if his gaze could never get its fill of you, as if trying to burn your visage into his mind.
And what a visage you were. That effortless aura of power and control, but still somehow so soft at the edges. Soft enough to laugh when Fives and Hardcase were at it again, soft enough to smile at Echo when he sassed his brothers, soft enough to ask a 'stick in the mud' captain to join the fun.
He always told himself to look away. You didn't deserve to be ogled, didn't deserve to feel his eyes running over every feature that he adored.
Rex was starting to realize that everything he did around you was a mistake. His feelings were a mistake. Even if there was ever a chance that you wouldn't recoil at his feelings, you were a Jedi. Even on the slim chance that you felt the same, you could never love him back.
That didn't stop him from letting little things slide, small acts slip through. His hand brushing yours. Eyes lingering even after you catch him staring. Leaning in just a hair closer than needed. Smiling at nothing more than you being near.
Whispering for you to stay with him between calls for a medic.
Every slip-up big or small was something he should regret.
When had he gotten so comfortable making mistakes? He had never allowed for such sloppy behavior before, he prided himself on his control and meticulous nature. It would seem as though he started to let mistakes slide, so long as they were tied to his feelings for you.
Rex wondered if you even noticed. He wondered if he wanted you to notice. If he ever made you uncomfortable he would never forgive himself. But, as far as he could tell, you were never uncomfortable with him. You always lifted your fingers towards his brushing hand, smiled at his lingering gaze, leaned in to match his closer than needed posture.
Maybe...
He closed his eyes and sighed. This was no time to think about that. Besides, none of that mattered. You were a Jedi. Anything that could ever be between you two would always be a mistake.
Again, Rex had lost track of time. Tup cleared his throat right behind him and only then did he take turn from you again.
"Sorry, Captain, but General Skywalker wants to see you. The Jedi council wants your personal report on what happened."
Rex saw the way his eyes flickered to you, the guilt that flashed across his face for just a moment. Tup had been one of the ones you saved with the force, one of the troopers you had pushed to safety as the building caved in. Tup, Fives, and himself. Just another day in the field, another time they owed their lives to you.
His body felt like it was made if durasteel as he rose. As much as he wanted to stay, wanted to be there when you finally woke up, duty came first.
And that's who he was. Duty. It always had to come first. You knew that, so both of you knew that any feelings between you two didn't matter in the end.
Duty came first, and anything else would be a mistake.
Rex hadn't been by your side when you woke. Anakin had ordered him to get some sleep the moment he was done debriefing the council. There were only a few times that he had wanted to defy orders, and that was one of them. In the end though, he knew his general was right, and of course, just like his eating, he knew you'd insist on it too.
Not that much sleep came to him. Every time he closed his eyes he saw your body in the midst of that rubble. Blood covered and as still as a corpse. Rex had seen too many of his brothers like that to not fear the worst as they dug you out.
He laid awake with nothing but his thoughts and in the end fate had kicked him again; he hadn't been there when you woke. Kix insisted that you were fine, well on the mend, nothing a few hours in a bacta tank couldn't solve.
Rex had to ignore the ringing in his ears as you explained that you managed to mitigate the worst of the impact with the force, cocooning yourself with it until the sheer weight was too much.
All in all, you were fine. All things considered it had turned out better than anyone could have hoped.
That didn't stop Rex from collapsing in the first dark hallway he found. His stomach heaving up bile in place of the food that wasn't there. He had kept such a tight hold on his grief and worry that, when it was rapidly replaced with relief, his body couldn't take it anymore.
You were okay! You were safe! You were alive!
His eyes watered when the dry heaving reached its peak, but he was able to get his breathing under control eventually.
How could relief cause such an effect on his body, even when it was relief over you? He pressed his forehead to the wall, the cool durasteel soothing him. Maybe he just need sleep, or food, or both. Maybe it was all just a combination that made his composure snap.
In the end all that mattered was that you were okay. He could live with himself so long as he knew that you hadn't died because of his mistakes. And of course, all he told you was that he was glad you were safe, because anything more would be an even bigger mistake.
Unfortunately for him, it seemed that fate, or the force, or some maker who hated him had other plans.
He had been in the gym, practicing his forms when the news came. Dressed in nothing but shorts and a black top, he had already worked up quite a sweat when Kix and Jesse wandered in. They were also dressed in training clothes and Kix was wearing an amused smirk as he talked.
Usually he wouldn't pay them any mind, but Rex paused when he heard your name and 'injury' in the same sentence. Wheeling around in an instant he called out, marching towards the men and all but demanding to hear what they had just said.
Kix straightened up, seeming taken aback for a moment, "Uh, was just joking that I should have a frequent visitor program, the General was in for another injury just now."
"What!?"
Kix and Jesse shared a quick look before Kix mentioned that you were in your quarters resting and- and Rex didn't know what else he had said because he was out the door in an instant.
Perhaps he looked like a mad man as he ran down the halls, but that was the furthest from his mind. It hadn't even been a week since you fully healed from getting near crushed to death and you were injured again? He didn't think he heart could take this, this constant cycle of aching worry and blinding relief. Especially since he knew that someday, that relief may never come.
He bypassed the keypad by your door all together, electing to pound his fist against the durasteel instead. If it wasn't locked he would have opened it without a word.
A call of your name died in his throat as the door hissed open, your eye wide the second they met his.
"Rex, what-!"
"Are you okay?" he closed the small distance between you two in an instant and the door slid shut behind him, "Kix said you were hurt again, I- what happened?" his hands were hovering over your arms, needing to touch, to hold, but afraid of hurting more. "Was it your last injuries? Were there complications-"
You held up your hands, shushing him gently, "Rex, Rex, I'm fine. I was training with Anakin and Obi-wan, and Obi just managed to nick my hand." You waved the bandaged palm, "Bacta patch is taking care of it as we speak."
Without thinking, he took your hand in his, gazing at the wrapping as he felt that blinding relief again. Just a scratch, just a little burn, it was nothing. So why did he feel so sick again? His fingers were stroking your palm an effort to ground his reeling thoughts as he felt the urge to tuck it against his chest.
He flinched when he felt your other hand brush his cheek
"Rex, you're shaking." It was a whisper, as intimate as the closeness of your bodies. "What's wrong?
He finally broke his gaze away from your injured palm to meet your eyes. What a mistake. Those eyes were so full of worry, a silent plea to confide in you, to let you in. You were right, he was shaking, and his heart was pounding in his chest violently. He should be calming down now, now that he knew it was nothing, that you were fine, that you were safe.
Instead, all he wanted to do was envelop you in his arms and beg you to never worry him again. Wanted to bury his face in your neck and tell you every little want and need in his heart.
The hand that was clasped in his started stroking his knuckles. "Rex, pleas-"
"I can't do this any more," he whispered, before dropping your hand, cupping your face, and pulling your lips hard against his.
He knew he shouldn't, knew it was a mistake, but he just couldn't take it, not now, not anymore! The hands holding your cheeks must have been rough against your soft skin, because he heard you moan into his mouth.
It was only then that Rex pull back, ashamed, " 'm sorry," he whispered as he began to step away, "I shouldn't have done that, I'm so sorry."
But your hands gripped his shirt tight, yanked him back against you.
"Don't you dare," your words were breathless as you cupped the back of his neck, "don't you dare stop kissing me, Captain," and your lips were back on his, all passion and desperate desire. Just as his had been.
It was his turn to moan into the kiss, wrapping his arms around you, making sure every centimeter of your bodies were pressed against each other. All he could think of was the way you moved against him, the way one hand slid down to grip his arm while the other moved to grip what little length his hair had.
But it didn't take long for reason to seep in.
When you pulled back for air his mind cleared just long enough for him to say, "We shouldn't, we shouldn't be doing this."
"Why?" was your only panting response.
He shook his head, and since he couldn't bare that look in your eyes, he closed his and pressed his forehead to yours. "I have no right. No right to impose my feelings on you, you're a Jedi-"
"I don't care," that was practically a growl as pulled back, making him look you in the eyes again. "I don't give a damn anymore. Rex, I love you, and now that I know you feel the same, I don't care what the Jedi say." You moved then, pressing his back against the cold metal of the wall. Then, placing a hand over his heart you said, "This can't possibly be wrong, Rex, I know it, I feel it." Next your hands were cupping his face, just as his had done when he first pulled you in. "Rex, do you want me?"
His answer was quick, as easy as breathing. "More than anything."
"Then don't stop kissing me."
He was a man who followed orders, and said nothing else as he leaned into your waiting lips. He wasn't holding back this time. The captain relished the whimper you let out when his tongue slipped passed your lips, eating it up, wanting more.
If you didn't care, then he couldn't find it in him to care either, not now, not here with all his dreams coming true. Mistake or not, it was yours and his to make, here, now, together.
Your robe found its way to the floor when he started backing you up towards your bed. He would spend hours giving you the worshiping attention you deserved, devote night after night to fulfilling any desire you wanted. If this was still a mistake, if he was a mistake, than damn it, he would make damn sure he was a worth while one.
Anything you wanted was yours, he swore it. Anything that was in his power to give was yours for the taking. He would make himself the mistake you couldn't live without.
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Warnings: there’s a bit of a makeout scene in the beginning, the rest I can’t give away without spoiling the story so be warned
A/N: It really was supposed to be fluffy at first but... it was too tempting. I based the Title off a KARD song. Also if the consensus demands it I’ll write the part two I’ve been planning for this. Feedback is really appreciated for this! I worked hard on it and I’m actually quite proud of it!
Summary: What happens when the reality of your secret relationship comes crashing in, and the fear peaks out from amongst the rubble.
AKA You push him away and he tries to pull you back in.
You could taste the desire littered across his tongue as you both consumed each other. His hands grabbed at the nape of your neck desperate to pull you closer to him than what was physically possible. You were clinging on to each breath as your mouths moved as one, refusing to let the other go. He was your safety net, the one thing you felt too selfish to ever let go of, even if it meant taking him down with you. Not that the galaxy would ever let you two find peace. It was tumultuous and violent, and there was no escape, not for any single inhabitant. But for the two of you, there was no hope. Your little secret was doomed to explode from the start.
He was a soldier and you a Jedi. There were countless things wrong with whatever this was, yet you could never seem to get enough, until now. If attachment and love were forbidden, then how was it so easy to fall into this in the first place? Especially when the man in front of you looked to be carved by the stars himself. Was this supposed to be what temptation was like? Painful and gut-wrenching but deliciously so. And how were you supposed to let him go?
“Mesh’la,” he breathes out. Effortlessly, like everything else he does. “I think I lost you back there. I only noticed because it’s kind of hard to make out with a durasteel wall.” You chuckled, looking into the warm irises of the man you’ve grown to love. It broke you, seeing that look of pure adoration in his eyes because you knew that in a matter of time, all you would see is misery within them. You tried to keep every bit of fear you had inside, instead choosing to relish in the unbridled happiness Rex brought you, but there is only so much a person can take before the dam breaks, and it finally did. A lone tear sinks down your cheek accompanied by a sniffle, the only signs you’re willing to let peak through, but it’s plenty enough to worry your beloved Captain. His calloused hands moved to hold your face and wipe the evidence of your turmoil.
“Cyare, talk to me. What’s going on inside that pretty little head of yours?” He moved to press a chaste kiss to your temple, and you couldn’t hold it in anymore. A cascade of sobs echoed across your quarters accompanied by soft hushes and words of encouragement, as he held you tight to his chest, rubbing circles into your hip bone.
“I’m sorry,” was all you could muster out in between your sobs, trying desperately to regulate your breathing.
“For what?” He asked, his gaze continuing to bore holes in yours, the concern ebbing off him in waves.
“For loving you,” you choke out. You were sure he wasn’t able to make any of it out between heaving, sobs, and snot-filled sniffles. But judging by the silence and lack of movement in the room, he was a bit shocked by your confession.
The silence that passed was agony as you watched those gears turn in his head as he was trying to make sense of it all. You watched as the facade of this hardened man started to crack and crumble above you. He was slowly starting to understand the connotation of your words and where this conversation was headed.
“Why?” He asked finally letting out that agonizing breath you had assumed he had been holding in.
“I just-” You took a breath, it coming out far shakier than you would’ve liked, “I can’t do this to you. Not anymore. I have been incredibly selfish with your feelings, knowing of the consequences that are destined for us. You deserve so much more than that.”
He was still frozen in his place, so you just decided to continue. “I’m sorry Rex. There’s not much hope for either of us with the lives we have led. I love you.” You stared at the stars countless nights, wondering, dreaming of this moment. The moment you finally put it all on the line and told him you loved him. But the last option to ever grace your thoughts was that you told him while you were doing this. You expected the moment to be filled with kisses and warm hugs and the only feeling that could be felt was love. Not this. “But that’s not enough. That will never be enough when this, us, is bound to break and shatter in all the worst ways possible.”
“And how is that guaranteed in your eyes? With the way you are talking, it sounds like we have no choice but to surrender to it. To run away and cower in fear. But how do we know for sure things are going to blow up in our faces? Shouldn’t we be allowed to be happy?” You were angry. Not at him, but at all this destruction, death, and violence that promises no reprieve, and yet he still chooses to hold on to the hope that one day it will. That one day this war will be over. When you know that there’s no way the galaxy could ever find peace.
“Because Rex” You screamed, your heart pouring itself out through your voice. “You are a Captain in the Grand Army of the Republic and I am a Knight of the Jedi Order. Someone catches one whiff of us and you’re court-martialed and I’m removed from the order. I could possibly live with that, but the punishment for you is not something I could live with. Rex, they would kill you.”
“You don’t know that,” he sighed.
“But I do, which is why I know we can’t do this anymore. Not with a cost this high,” you let out one last shaky sigh before you moved to the door. Finalizing your decision in ending your happiness and going back to the shell you once were, by command of the Jedi.
“You can’t leave,” he gritted out through barred teeth, “You made me a promise when you first came to our command. That we are a team.” He shot up from his position on shaky legs, all of his emotions evident in his stance, “And that we get through things together. You can’t make this decision on your own. You promised.” It was hard to catch that last bit, it was barely a whisper.
“This is the only decision to make, can’t you see Rex? We have no other choice.” You saw it. For the first time ever, your hardened but warm and loving Captain finally broke. Relinquishing the control he’s tried desperately to cling to since his inception, a tear falls down his cheeks. Something you’ve never seen before and it breaks your heart even more.
“What I see is you being selfish!” Those words hit you like a gut punch because he was right. You were being selfish. But it was all you could do to keep the one thing that makes you feel human, safe. You were taught nearly your whole life to avoid emotions and attachments, and because of it you nearly functioned like a droid. Your only focus was to do what they told you to. Then Rex came along and gave you a reason to fight, to feel, to exist. And the idea of losing him in this endless battle of torment was something you couldn’t stomach.
“I’m not a droid, Cyare. I make my own decisions, you can’t make them for me.” He was yelling now, even though his volume wasn’t ridiculously loud, avoiding unnecessary attention. It was still his choice of words and how he said them that made your knees buckle. There was an overwhelming feeling to fall to the ground and melt but you needed to be strong and get out of this, for both your sakes.
“I have never once compared you to that of a droid. You are fully capable, but I can’t play games with your life, Rex. You are the most important thing in my life.” You let out a sob, one of many since this debacle began, but one that fully conveyed just what you were feeling at that moment.
“Please, just stay. We can talk this through, what you’re feeling. We don’t have to leave it like this.” He put your face in his hands again, kissing you while he still shook in fear. One that was a silent beg, to not let go.
“I’m sorry,” you whispered, tears falling down your cheeks, “I don’t know how.” You opened the door knowing that once you take this step there was no coming back, and took one last look at the man who meant everything to you.
“Please,” he cried. And with that, you left. Abandoning the only bit of freedom you ever had.
Pairing: Captain Rex x Artist!Reader. No Y/N.
Word Count: 7.1k lmfaooo
Genre: spicy fluff to angst to fluff (+ mutual hurt/comfort if you squint)
Summary: You’ve dedicated your life to beauty, to color, to the fantasy of life. And then there’s Rex: gentle, steadfast, battle-hardened Rex. You respect it, you think you’ve accepted it. But sometimes it’s just too much to bear—and the differences in the lives you lead come to a head.
Warnings/Tags: TW: depiction of a mild panic attack and some depressive behavior. Implied sex, implied/referenced nudity but absolutely nothing graphic. A dream sequence involving some unsettling imagery (though not overtly nightmarish). Mention of death, mention of blood. Swearing. Arguing and making up again. Gender neutral reader. (If I’ve missed anything, please let me know)
Rating: T
Masterlist + Taglist :)
It's stormy over Coruscant and almost quiet. On days like these air traffic's limited: much less honking, shouting, occasional crashing. But in its place is the thunder, of course, and the wind and the rain and the bristles on canvas, and the snoring from the man behind you.
He got back late. He always does, dead on his feet and covered in bruises. I'm fine, he insisted. Kix patched me up. No matter. Don't worry. But you worried anyway. You always do. He showered and settled into your creaky pull-out couch; you traced the blooms of purple and black and the nicks too small for bandages, and he was gone within seconds. But you lay awake: watching the creases in his forehead fade and the rain clouds roll in over the city. Clouds like this are a rarity here. They bewitch your mind, filling it up with strange images... Lit from below by the ecumenopolis, they gathered themselves into coils and shapes that lent themselves phantasmagoric to your tired eyes. Broad, inhuman faces; wings like claws and wings like teeth; wings of beauty slipping away...
So here you are next morning before your easel, before the window. Beyond you, a masterpiece in its own right: plumes of black and purple and indigo-gray towering over the skyscrapers, lightning flashing gold and silver and violet. You forget, sometimes, what Light can do when the air is right. You forget how it fills the clouds like lanterns, or sprawls like the fingers of ancient, instant, skeletal gods. It floodlights your studio apartment and shakes the whole city with a wall-shattering CRRAAAAACK.
You flinch. Not from fear. It's the gasp. Almost louder than the thunder and infinitely worse to your ears. It's the sound of shifting sheets and newly labored breaths. Your heart aches; your throat constricts. You set your brush on your easel and your pallet on your stool.
"Just the thunder, Rex."
He sits bolt upright on the low mattress, panting harder than if he'd just run a mile. Lightning flashes against his face and highlights the beads of sweat already at his brow. You catch them on your thumb and he leans into your touch, closing his eyes.
"'M sorry," he mumbles.
"Shh. Go back to sleep." You kiss his forehead and pull away.
"What time is it?"
"Late."
"Not too late, I hope. Wouldn't want to sleep through all my leave."
You shake together and mix another shade of blue. He doesn't leave again until Wednesday. You don't mention it.
"You could use the extra rest," you hum. "No, not too late. It's midmorning, I think. Hard to say."
"Mhm."
The bed groans—those springs have been broken for a year and a half—and is silent; you hear heavy footfalls behind you. Warm, strong, bare arms wrap around your waist. Rex buries his face in your neck, kissing along your shoulder, searing your skin, tugging at your oversized black shirt.
"Is this mine?"
"You left it here months ago."
"And you turned it into a painting shirt?"
"You never asked for it back."
His head drops to your shoulder, breathing deep. His arms tighten around your waist; his fingers trace up and down the textured flecks of paint and feel like butterfly wings against your skin.
"'S better on you, anyway. Come back to bed."
"In a minute, Rex."
He grumbles something incoherent; you don't bother asking what he meant. You only laugh and kiss him lightly at the corner of his mouth. "Just a little bit more."
The warmth pulls away. The mattress groans again under his weight.
"What's that?"
"It's a thunderstorm, Rex."
"I know. I meant that yellow. In your background."
It takes you a moment—too long—to notice the burst of white and yellow through the whirlpool of blues. Not lightning in the clouds but long, bold, bright rays breaking through the horizon. You shrug.
"Sunrise, sunset. Doesn't matter."
"No sunrise out there."
"Then feel free to make your own."
"And your window faces North—"
"Oh, go to bed," you grumble as you add still more yellow to the center. A little more light. Just a little—
"Where were you this time?"
"Felucia. Again. I'm getting sick of it."
"That's the one with the flowers, isn't it?"
"Giant, glow-in-the-dark ones, yes." You can hear the smirk in his voice, but you don't engage.
"It sounds beautiful."
"Sure it is, when it's not crawling with Seppies. They've all but destroyed the place."
And Republic gunnery can't be helping things, either, but you don't say that. Your hand stills. "There's nowhere on the whole planet you could go to see the flowers as they are? Somewhere that's not a warzone?"
"Well, I... I guess there is, but that's not where we end up."
"I don't like that for you," you say firmly, resuming your brushwork.
"It's the job, sweetheart."
You don't like that job for him, either. You look at the canvas and sigh; it's time to put away your paints.
"You done? The whole bottom half's missing."
You gather your brushes into a cup of turpentine in the kitchen, trying to ignore the jaig eyes on the table. They're turned right towards you as you clean, beautiful and strange and powerful. "Not yet. The paint needs to dry. Can't... I can't do anything about it."
If there's a wistful note in your voice, Rex doesn't notice it. "I don't know how you have the patience for it."
"Neither do I," you mumble. More to yourself than anything. But when you turn around, you can't deny yourself a small smile. Rex is leaned back in bed, an arm beneath his head, gazing at you with a sleepy but contented smile. He's broad, bare-chested, uncovered by the thin bed sheets, and his dark eyes twinkle with mischief. Your face heats up. You know he's caught you staring.
"Don't look at me like that," you tell him sternly, smile still breaking through.
"How should I, then?"
You sit on your side of the bed, the one closest to the window, and ignore the creaky springs as much as you can as your hand trails lightly down his chest. His skin runs hot beneath you.
"Not at all, really. I'd rather you go to sleep."
He pulls you by the waist, tugging at your shirt until you're half on top of him, until your lips meet. You brace himself on his shoulders. The muscles flex beneath your fingers, solid and steady from years of bearing his armor, while he kisses you with everything he has. His hands dig into your waist hard enough to leave bruises; you squirm in his grasp. The vibrations from his chest to yours are enough to make you shiver as he groans into your mouth.
"Sounds like an awful waste of a weekend off," he pants when you pull away. You rest your head in the crook of his neck. The warmth almost overwhelms you. It takes you to an other-place far away; it grounds you as you nip the column of his throat.
"I want you at your best for when you have to leave... well-rested... just in case."
Rex sighs and lifts you off of him, lying you both on your sides. He could manhandle you easily and you're floored—again and again—at the gentleness with which he cradles you. Directly across from you now he can hold your gaze more steadily, lightning flickering against his cheekbones around the shadow you cast. The thunder rolls still.
"I know you don't like it. But orders are orders. This is what we're made for.”
You bite your tongue. No, no, no! No one's made for this. No one's made for a thousand days of war and clouds of smoke, cannons, gunfire, the decimation of whatever is good. No one's made to bear the wounds and scars of a Republic divided on innocent, unblemished skin. And damned if you know for sure what you are! but—Maker—he's wrong. He's wrong—
"Okay," you whisper. Your fingers dance across his side. "But... damn it, Rex, look up at the sky once in a while. Look at the sun. At the flowers. Once in a while."
"Sure thing, sweetheart."
"I mean it, Captain." You run your nails through his close-cropped hair. "I want you to have at least one good memory to look back on."
"Mhm."
Without warning he pushes you down on your back and kisses you again until you're both breathless. When he pulls away, it's only an inch—enough to let his eyes, darkened and dilated, rake down your face and neck below. A hand works its way beneath his old shirt.
"Oh, believe me, sweetheart. I intend to."
* * *
Sometime in the very early morning the clouds broke; they're still breaking now. Rex is still asleep and almost all on top of you: half settled between your legs, his head nested in the crook of your neck, a heavy arm looped around your waist. You've managed to shift away just enough to breathe, but you're not going any further. So you continue to lie quietly. One hand draws figure eights in his hair and the other stretches out towards the closed window where the clouds whisper their silent hellos.
Strange. Strange that among such large swathes of purple-gray sky, the little wisps that seem to float just feet away still burn like tongues of fire in all manner of summer and autumn. They are far, so far from you, but you imagine even so. Stretching, stretching—as if in a dream—until your fingertips graze the mist... It would be cool to the touch, freezing perhaps, and your fingers stained red and gold. Not water droplets but evaporated paint collecting on your skin, on bristles, too—if you could just open the window and stand on the sill, balanced on your toes, raising your longest brush into the sky.
How vivid would your paintings be, dyed with the clouds themselves? It's worth it though you struggle and strain, though you may fall. So much more tangible. So much more real than water and fire and canvas and flesh—
With the softest sigh, Rex breaks the spell. Hot air fans across your bare chest; his arm curls around you more tightly; his fingers begin to dig into your waist. You feel his lips against your neck and his tongue against the marks he left there yesterday.
"Morning." His voice is coarse and heavy with sleep.
"Mm."
"Time is it?"
"I don't know."
He's content at that, for the moment. Content to lie further, content to trace the blooms across your neck and chest. And you're content to lie still, content to run your fingers through his hair and watch the candle-flames outside give way to a golden morning in the East. The rays shine through to your quiet room and break through the lonely, sleepy shades of purple.
"Kriffin' hells," Rex mutters into your skin.
"What?"
He lies on his elbow a little above you. His other hand strokes up and down your side. "You... are... a vision."
You pull his head down to yours. Or maybe he lowers to kiss you himself; you truly can't tell. His hand encircles your neck like he's cradling a rose in full bloom, pulling it to his nose; it's warm and large and perfectly shaped to hold your head against his.
"Rex," you murmur against his lips.
"Mm?"
"Did you feel it, when the rain stopped?"
"Excuse me?"
"I mean—"
A high-pitched beeping cuts you off. Rex gives you a look—one you can't exactly read—, hauls himself off of you, and wraps one of the top blankets around his waist. The beeping comes from his pile of belongings on the kitchen table.
(You shouldn't call it a pile. It's immaculately organized, much more than the painting shirts and whatever other clothes—you don't even know—you have hanging over the wooden chair. No matter how tired he is when he shows up at your doorstep, Rex always takes the time to arrange his things properly even if you find neither rhyme nor reason in it. It's the military training, you suppose.)
From somewhere near the top of the pile—stack—assembly, he pulls out his comlink. His back straightens.
"Yes, sir."
"Rex, where are you?"
Rex looks at you from the corner of his eye. You probably shouldn't be hearing this, whatever it is, but there aren't exactly a lot of places he can go.
"Off-base, sir."
"Off-base? What the hell are you doing off-base?"
"My apologies, sir. It's our leave."
"I'm sorry about that, Rex, but I need you back here as soon as possible. We're an emergency call to Naboo; the Queen's worried about another invasion attempt."
"Sir, yes sir." Rex's face hardens. You sit up, pulling the sheet around you, and stare at him. The comlink's light dies; immediately he begins to pull on his blacks like a machine.
"Who was that?"
"That was General Skywalker," he replies, his back to you. "501st's being sent to Naboo."
"I heard that," you say quietly. You wait for him to face you again, but he doesn't—he doesn't speak again, either.
"So that's it, then?"
"Hm?"
"You're leaving. Just like that."
"Yep."
You look back out the window, hands flexing in the sheets. "You're supposed to have two more days. This is official leave time, isn't it?"
"Orders are orders." He's putting his armor on now and he still won't look at you. You bite your tongue, almost hard enough to draw blood but not quite, watching the still-shifting clouds.
"It's not right."
"It is what it is. Me and my brothers, it's what we're here to do."
"It's not though, is it?"
You're surprised to hear you've spoken it aloud. Even more surprised that you've raised your voice—just a fraction of a degree, but enough. Rex finally turns around. You still can't read his face. But it's towards you now and you've spoken your mind. There's nothing else for it.
"I'm afraid I don't catch your meaning."
"I mean—" You swing your legs off the bedside and pull yesterday's shirt over your head. "—that it's something you do, not something you're here to do. There's a difference."
"Is there, now?"
"People aren't just made for war and they're not just made for the government's fickle interests. No one's born a lamb to the slaughter."
He chuckles. You'd be hard-pressed to find any humor in it. "Very nat-born of you to say."
"I'm sorry?"
"My apologies. I mean that only nat-borns think that way. Things are different for clones."
"But they shouldn't—"
"Shouldn't what? Can you even hear yourself?" You flinch at the harshness in his voice. "Clones aren't born. We're created. And even if we had been, what are we supposed to do? Rebel? Send the Chancellor a polite letter? There's over a million of us. We've got the group to think about."
You clench your fists until you feel your nails cut into your skin. Your face burns; your blood boils. "That doesn't mean you don't deserve better."
"Well," he laughs again, "when you figure out a way to end the war, and all wars forever, until you feel more comfortable, let us know. We'll take you right to the Senate; I'm sure they'd love to hear."
"It's not just me—"
But your voice betrays you. It's much too thick and your throat tightens with welling tears until you can hardly breathe.
"I just... hate this for you, Rex."
"I know."
In full armor now—though helmetless—his footsteps are heavier than ever on the thin floor. His gloved hand is gentle but cold when he takes you by the chin. There's something in his expression, something soft, that reminds you of the Rex who woke up on top of you this morning. But it's not quite him. This is the Captain. A CO of the GAR who looks at you now with hardened eyes.
"I know, but you've got to try and understand. You're—" He shakes his head with a deflated sigh. "You're soft, sweetheart. Good soft. But maybe too soft."
You pull yourself from his grasp. He's close enough, still, to see the beads that cling to your lashes. You hate crying in front of him. And you flat out refuse to cry before the Captain.
"They don't care," you choke. Your head throbs. "They don't care if you die."
"Some of them would. But they're not meant to. Try to understand."
You look away in silence, back to the clouds. They're almost gone now. Rex clears his throat.
"I'll be back in a few weeks..." He squeezes your arm. "Don't go anywhere while I'm gone."
You don't know how to respond, and you don't. You don't even look back at him, though you feel him let go—hear his heavy footsteps back across the room, the door opening, the door shutting. Footsteps down the hall. And silence.
It's a long time you stand there. Long enough for the morning to yield to full and freshened day. And when you force yourself to sit you gasp, and your heart races. It's the mattress. You need to replace it. You should have replaced it by now. But all you can do at this all but inextant moment is sit still. You don't want the springs to shriek again.
And something inside you spreads like slow poison, changing your blood to lead and your cells and your muscles to mercurial moonlight. You should eat, a distant voice calls to you through the mist. Drink some water. Move, at least. But you'll have to get up and you want to get up but you're afraid, afraid of the bed groaning. So you sit still, so still you fall asleep without intending to. And when you wake up golden light pours through the window into your kitchen and the far corner. This time, though, it's towards the right and now the left. It's sunset, the voice returns. You sit up. The springs creak and there's a crick in your neck; it's autumn outside but inside you're dreadfully hot and almost sticky. This is why you don't take naps in the middle of the day.
But at least your limbs will move again. You pull yourself out of bed, drift aimlessly to the window, unlock it with numbed fingers. The air is cooler but only just—that heavy, humid cool in the days before and after a storm. But with the air the daily pandemonium: engines and horns and shouts in every pitch and timbre that crush your ears and fumigate every nook and corner, the pockets of air in the sheets on your bed, the air between your shirt and your skin.
"Come on, move!"
"Out of the way!"
"Never taking this lane again; like it never ends—"
Out of the way. Out of the way. The words echo in your brain. You can't get them out. Your heart races but your lungs have quit you; a millstone hangs around your neck and resin in your diaphragm. The air, the air—it's not coming. If not for the easel you might have collapsed: you clutch it like a vice, and the wood feels grainy under your hands... Splinters. You'll get splinters. You'll get splinters if you grip too hard, too long, and you can't get them out. So coarse—
And then that canvas! Fuzzy corners, blended colors, dim and muted, swirled and muddy, melting snow on early, strengthless daffodils. Chuck it. Chuck it—somehow, somewhere out the window to the endless, noisome pit below, the brushes, the paint, the easel—the very stolen shirt you wore—stolen! yes, you'd stolen it—out the window. Out the window.
Out.
Out.
Out.
But the easel stays put. The painting, too. Your hands still on the splintering wood, the millstone on your chest, sludge the paint, sludge in your veins, sludge your paralytic.
And when the millstone lifts your lungs balloon with air; your hands release and slip away with just enough time, not a moment to spare, to make to to the bed before tears come in droves.
He shouldn't have gone.
He shouldn't have gone.
He shouldn't have gone.
You should have said goodbye.
And didn't you? Surely you said something. You must have. You had to. And what can you do with yourself? It's not like he'll be back tomorrow. Back next week. Back next year. Not for certain. At war for months, for years with no reprieve. Or maybe not. Maybe awaiting hasty burial, dead in a sunless field, where the remains of grass and flowers smoulder. Or maybe not. Maybe left a hundred years, dead in a sunless field, to feed the next generation of reeds.
No, no—they don't leave brothers behind. Not if they can help it. They bury them with honor. They'd bury him with honor. They'd say goodbye. But you didn't know how.
How can you do it? you asked him long ago. He'd just told you about the search-and-rescue missions that sometimes—too often—turned into body recoveries. And you'd shuddered at the portrait: searching and and recovering and burying a hundred men and a hundred of your own face. I don't know how you do it.
"It's difficult work," he agreed gravely. "But we manage, all of us. Me and my brothers. No matter."
"I can't imagine. Or don't want to, maybe." You lay down on the grass, what felt like grass; it was green and almost blue beneath your head and soft as fleece. Rex sat beside you fully-armored, though helmetless. One of his hands stretches out towards yours, not quite touching. "Not just difficult work, but... soul-destroying, it would seem. Or you don't think so?"
"Well... I wouldn't know about that. We don't have the luxury of thinking like that."
"I wish you would," you hummed. The sky darkened. A star or two was showing. "It's only human."
"And only of a different sort," he countered. There was a smile in his voice, but a serious note, too. You didn't quite understand. So you continued, pointing:
"What are those?"
He looked up. Huge creatures with wings shaped like pterodactyls', vivid red and white and black like butterflies', wheeled above your heads like carrion birds, above the flowers tall as lamp posts. They swayed without a breeze; their broad leaves and broader petals glowed teal and magenta in the twilight and reflected off the bellies of the beasts. Or maybe the beasts glowed themselves. You couldn't... You couldn't tell—
"Those are the ——," Rex answered coolly.
"The what?"
"The ——."
You stared at him. What was he saying? It was like he spoke to you through a pool of deep water, or through very thick glass. Far, far away.
"Rex?"
His mouth was moving, forming words, but it came to you a garbled mess.
"Rex? Rex, where are you?"
He spoke still, pointing to the circling creatures. They seemed so much closer now than they had just a moment ago, like the transports that sometimes brushed by your apartment... Every so often you glimpsed the rest of them through the thick foliage, so thick it fully canopied your grassy little clearing. But suddenly a creature poked its head through a skyscraper of a cerulean lily and much to your horror it was a human face. But still so birdlike!—shiny black, convex eyes twice the size of dinner plates stared back at you over a beak-like nose, thinly stretched over with bloodless skin. Its mouth is large enough to devour you whole.
"Rex—?"
"Not to worry, sweetheart."
You worry anyway. You hated not to understand him but this is somehow worse, and when you turn around you find he's not even there. He's walked straight up to the creature without fear, mumbling something where its ears should be.
"That's a good girl, aren't ya?" He pats its neck. "Don't worry; she's with us. And she'll fly us back home if you'll hop on her back."
And now that you think of it, of course these creatures are part of the GAR. You've all but grown up with them outside your window.
But going home... Home's just around the corner, isn't it? Yes, it is; just behind that wall of daffodils. You walked from home to meet here with Rex; you remember somehow. But Rex is leaving on his carrion bird...
But you can run home! If you run, you can meet him there when he arrives. So you run, run home but the lane never ends. There are no corners to turn off into. Just a little more, just a little further ahead—that's the avenue you need. The enormous stems tower above you like skyscrapers and in the narrow gaps between them you catch snippets of home. Nothing so much as a door or a shingle but the painted blue and white that decorated its walls. And house-side of the foliage, a hawk flies low to the ground. It's paced with you, never ahead and never behind; perfectly silent, dark and indistinct, with a long tail.
You're running still. The lane never ends. You get flashes of home, and a hawk flies beside you. It's quiet and shadowy. You're running and running.
The lane never ends. A hawk flies beside you. It's getting dark out. The sun is setting. You're running. And then everything is still. Still so soon, still so fully that you lurch and your heart skips a beat.
And then everything's so bright. Too bright... you left the curtains wide open, you realize. And the window, too. The morning air blows into your apartment. But it's not cold air. It must be late, very late morning.
Shit—you're probably late for work. And late by a good hour or two.
You roll onto your back; the sheets are cool against your neck. What's the point of rushing? It must be noon, or almost noon. How long were you asleep? It couldn't be as long as that... But you think and you think and you can't remember even waking up in the night, not even to close the window. But you do remember—what a strange and awful dream. You close your eyes, not to sleep but to think.
Had you... really said that to Rex? "Soul-destroying," you'd said. "Soul destroying work"—what on earth had you meant by that? You can't just say that to people. You couldn't have. It was a dream.
But—you had.
You had said that. Just in passing. It must have been months ago now, maybe a year, back when you'd first met him or a little after. But you'd been in a daylit diner with walls and booths and people—people of an ordinary size, people with ordinary features. And you'd said it so off-handedly! That's right, a casual conversation... And what did he say? ... You couldn't remember. Or had he said anything at all? Maybe not. Maybe he'd just continued to wolf down his food like he'd never see it again. Whatever he did, he couldn't have seemed particularly bothered. You would have remembered, surely, as you lie on the old pull-out couch in the late morning.
And when you open your eyes the light remains; off and to the left your painting stands unfinished. And of course it does, unless any creature flew to your window and carried it away in the night. Noonday sunshine forms a pleasant halo while a shadow hangs over its surface. It makes the colors look so dull and faded. Not nearly so abhorrent as they had seemed last night; you're too tired, really, to hate it too much. Abhorrence is born of the fire within, and the fire's long rained out. The ashes smoulder and smoke and your lungs are heavy. There's just enough spark to heave a great sigh, turn back on your side, and fall asleep again. Maybe Rex will have beaten you home after all.
But Rex doesn't come home that day.
You wake up next morning at dawn; your boss chides you for missing a Monday; the days move on and you along with them. You rise tired, you sleep tired. You do it all again. And in the day-to-day it's easier to eat, to move, to drink, and you find yourself firmly tethered again. The fire is gone and with it your fear; the night is over and the morning not begun. Now is the twilight and the working-hours: the colorless and the nameless and the painless. The memory of the carrion birds darkens. And Rex doesn't come home that week, nor the next.
Nor the next.
And the fragile autumn blue gives way to early winter. In the heart of Coruscant winter is mild, with the metal and concrete and exhaust from the pit. It's good, you think, that it's not so bitterly cold, else that might be too much to bear, good that you can still open the window without shivering. You like for the fresh air to blow in. And what's winter on Naboo like? Or is it winter? Might it not be spring, or high summer? ...
And you think of the 501st in the spring and the lengthening days. Everything is waking up. Everything is new.
But here the nights stretch on and on, like a snake from its coil; you leave and return to your studio without the sun. On these days you stand again at the window. Hundreds of thousands of man-made lights in every tint and shade imaginable—but they do little to cheer up the late afternoons. No lamp you light will suffice. And it's on such a day as this (a near-night, rather, and a Saturday) that you watch the sun set at four in the afternoon.
It's the winter solstice, you believe; a coworker mentioned going out for drinks several days ago. No... no, that was only Friday. One day, then. Two thirds of a day. It doesn't matter. You've long lost track of time in the endless, twilit work day, and now the night is upon you again.
In the corner are your paints and brushes. Your easel, your brushes, your abandoned canvas. The paint's been dried for weeks, and now a new layer of fine dust—the sun reaches it only rarely here and it's easier to forget. But the empty bottom half, two thirds, really, seems so expansive—so much more so than when you'd first set it aside. You'd resevered the emptiness for the city before you and its discarnate, artificial light. But you've stared at them so long; all you want now is the kiss of the sun, a warmer summer wind, and the padding of grass and clover you've never felt beneath your feet.
You move the easel back to its spot before the window; in the last real dying rays you mix together your paints. And you pull on the old, oversized blacks. The sleeves are cold against your skin.
In your mind's eye, a field. Not a field, a meadow firmly beneath your grounded feet. Hills beyond or mountains, maybe—indigo beneath the storm above, veiny tracts of gold-lined lilac where the sunlight's broken through. Flowers in the foreground. Poppies red as pomegranites, daisies white, forget-me-nots scattered across the slopes. Would they really grow side by side? Do they bloom at the same time? ... You don't know, nor do you care. You paint them all the same. The storm sends a great wind to prepare its way, or to herald its departure. It blows their petals up and all around: an airborne current of blue and white and red.
It's beautiful. Much more beautiful than here. But the canvas still isn't used up—not even the mountains behind suffice to fill the negative. And the meadow seems so terribly lonely. Stroke by stroke you create a frame, solid and steadfast.
You've heard Naboo is a beautiful place. And you've seen pictures, too, of the lake country and its mountains all around and the palace at Theed with its high turquoise domes. And you imagine them now: they'd look like eyes, wouldn't they? Great blue eyes watching you and the sun and the stars, could you fly as a bird overhead...
And you never looked back at him.
Your hand stills. That's right. You hadn't. And you resume.
Fabric from fabric his hand slipped away. You felt it. You heard the footsteps. You heard the door. And you did not turn.
A shuddering breath. You grip your brush in your fist like a child holds a pen. You squeeze your eyes shut.
When did Rex last look at you? You only remember from across the room, across the sky, across the valleys, the Captain with the hardened eyes.
You wash your new-sketched frame with titanium white and check the time on your datapad. Ten o'clock. You're not going to stop; you're not going to allow it another minute in that sunless corner. And you're not going to stop because it is what it is and you'll manage, all of you, no matter.
And you sleep and eat and work and sleep again, and winter surrenders to spring. Longer days from longer nights; the sun shines and the air warms. Your apartment is made light again and clean. The painting is finished, varnished, and hung by your bedside. Morning is at hand.
* * *
It's early, very early Morning (and a very wet one, too) when you hear footsteps in the hall. The door opens, the door shuts; there are footsteps in the room—heavy yet soft, in a controlled sort of way—and then the silence. You've been washing your face in the bathroom before bed; you press your face against the door as your heart races. From the other side, you catch a broken sigh.
"Hello?"
You throw the door open a little too suddenly. "Rex?"
Rex stands still and at attention. His helmet tucked in the crook of his arm, he's straight and stiff as if he were speaking to his CO. But even in the dim orange light you can see the weary lines around his eyes. He won't quite meet your gaze.
"I'm sorry to wake you."
The five feet between you might as well be a chasm, bridgeless and bottomless and prone to slides. "You didn't. I just... I hadn't been expecting you."
"I know. I'm sorry."
He rubs the back of his head. You feel strongly that he's not angry with you. Just... you don't know.
"Why don't you take all this off," you nod at his armor, speaking slowly, "and take a shower. Have you eaten?"
"Yes, sir."
You stare at him. His face crumbles, and he sighs. Your heart breaks.
"You're dead on your feet, Rex," you murmur. You take a step towards him to take his free hand; to your relief he doesn't back away. And now that you think of it, you don't know why you expected him to. "Let's get you some rest."
Rex nods and begins to take off his armor, mechanically and methodically. You go to pull out the bed and arange the sheets but sneak glances of him as he works. His cuirass first and then his cuisses, the greaves, the vambraces, the spaulders, and a dozen other plates you don't know what to call—stacked neatly atop each other like shells or reams of paper. His comlink fits gently in the curve of his gauntlet. Surrounding them all is his belt and finally his helmet. When he leaves for a five-minute shower, the jaig eyes remain and watch you carefully. They're a comfort to you.
When Rex comes out you're in the kitchen, setting the caf machine for just a few hours. You faintly hear him sit on the bed.
"When did you get back?"
"A few hours ago. What time is it now?"
"1:33."
"Hm. Sounds about right." He pauses. "You fixed the springs?"
"New bed, actually," you hum. "But the sheets are still the same."
He doesn't answer. And you're content to finish your chores, but the silence goes on, much longer than you had expected or hoped for, while you set out two clean mugs for later. The ceramic on laminate grates on your ears. You'd ask how long he's here for, but not this late—this early, rather. He could leave in an hour for all you care: he's here. And that'll be enough for the moment.
But then the silence breaks for real and when you turn around, it's worse than you could have imagined:
"What is this?"
Rex sits, bent over, on the bed with a full canvas in his hands. It's dim but you can't mistake the moody purples, the burst of yellow, the crop of blonde hair. Shit. Shit. You should have put it away. And he's taken it down from the wall! You could have put it away—he was in the shower just a few minutes ago—and you hadn't even thought of it.
No matter. No matter. It's here and so is he. But your voice is quiet.
"It's a painting, Rex."
"I know; I—I..." He shakes his head and seems to deflate. You flip of the kitchen lights and drift towards him slowly, your eyes readjusting to the softer orange of your bedside lamp. Slowly, slowly.
There in his hands is the painting.
That whirl of stormclouds, that sunshine breaking through, kissing the flowers and the hills and the valleys. But in the foreground, tall and broad and grounded, is the Captain himself. In full armor—though helmetless—he faces the mountains beyond. But he looks up: up towards the sun, up towards the rivulet of flower petals blowing softly overhead; one brushes against his gold-lit cheek. A butterfly—huge and bold and red and black—rests on his shoulder while his hand rests at his side, clutching a short bouquet of poppies and forget-me-knots. The colors are vivid, the composition sure: yes, it turned out well. Even if you're mortified that it's now in his hands.
"Is this me?"
"That's you."
"It's... I..." Rex releases a shuddering breath. His hands grip the edges of the canvas as hard as they can without tearing it.
"It's lovely."
"Rex?"
He won't look at you. Decidedly. You reach a slow hand to his shoulder; he's shaking.
"Hey. Hey—"
You tug the painting from his grasp, propping it against the arm of the couch, and go to cover his hand with yours. But at that moment he looks at you and to your horror there are tears in his eyes.
"Is this... Is this how you see me?"
You're quiet for a moment as you hold his gaze steadily. You'll feel tears pricking at your own eyes soon, no doubt. But you'll manage.
"Yes," you say finally. "And this is... how you are, I think. But I can't really say that."
He nods, and nods, until it's not nodding at all but shaking with deep, shaky breaths. You pull him into your arms, tightly against your chest. And Rex weeps.
It's a long time before either of you speak. Doubled-over as you are, stretching your arms as far as they'll go over his bare and bruised and bandaged back, his skin still damp from the shower—the water seeps into your nightshirt and you almost shiver. But he is an anchor to you and you to him—even as he weeps and you with him against the sound of the pouring rain. And when your tears dry and the outpour ebbs, you still hold him. His arms clutch at your waist; his face is buried in your chest. He mutters something you don't catch into the fabric.
"It's what?"
"It's you," he mumbles.
"Hm?"
"Soft. You're... so soft..."
The words trail off. Fresh tears well in your eyes. "Rex—"
Your voice trembles and your head throbs. "Rex, I'm sorry—"
"No." He gathers your shirt in his fists, pulling himself impossibly closer. "Don't."
"But I didn't—didn't even—" Your throat constricts as the beginnings of a sob surge in your chest.
"I didn't even look at you."
He doesn't say anything, though his arms grip you tighter.
"You shouldn't—" You swallow, forcing the words out one by one. "You deserve better, Rex. Better from me."
He's shaking again.
"Sweetheart—" Rex lifts his head and you're startled to see how red and swollen his eyes are, though yours probably look much the same. "You can't."
"But—"
"And you deserve better from me," he says firmly, hoarsely. "And I... I can't give it to you. That's just... how it is. But—" He takes your face in his hands, wiping your tears away even as his own still dry on his face. "—I can keep coming back to you. If you'll still wait for me—"
He doesn't get to finish. You've thrown your arms around his neck, pressed your lips to his. Chapped and warm and salty with tears and he kisses you back like a man starved: all but devouring you, fixed beneath his hands. So much power there and raw strength—it's what he was made for, after all. But he holds you so gently. He could break you in half in the blink of an eye and he won't, not ever. It's not his way.
And not yours, either, to tear him apart.
"I promise you. Forever, forever..." you whisper, "... and I'll be better. Better to you, my love."
Rex mumbles your name against your lips. It's sugar-sweet, flower-fragrant on your tongue. Another kiss, an oath, a brand, and tongues of fire shared between your lungs; a love whispered and a current petal-soft behind your eyes. I love you. I love you. I love you more. I promise.
When you turn off the lamp darkness settles in, though not the silence. You settle in, him on his side, you on yours; the curtains blow like streamers in the gentle, humid air of early spring, wafting through the open window beyond which shapes of blue and silver, red and gold shrink and stretch and die and light again. It's lessened now, you think.
One hand rests again in Rex's hair; the other lies towards the window where you've fixed your gaze. But Rex, using your stomach for a pillow, takes your outstretched hand in his and pulls it to his lips. And he keeps it there, squeezing tightly, while you trace figure eights against his scalp.
"Rough day, hm?"
"Something like that," he chuckles. The sound alone is fresher air to your soul than any that's ever blown in from the window. "Maybe a rough year. But I'll tell you tomorrow. Let's get some sleep."
You hum in response and close your eyes as your breathing harmonizes with his. All is still, yet gently moving. Perfect for a moment.
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warnings: angst, canon typical violence, mentions of violence, blood, lots of blood, cursing
prompt: “I’m so excited that requests are open? Could I request angst with Rex where the reader is injured on the battle field and is struggling to stay standing and fight to protect Rex? And when the battle is over and they’re taken off the field, there’s a fear they might not make it back alive? I just need some gut wrenching angst with some comfort at the end in my life, thanks!”
a/n: hi lovely i'm so so sorry this took me so long to write! the one who sent in the request was anon! i finally found it in my master doc! nonethless, i hope you enjoy <3
"where is that stupid skywalker kid when you need him?"
there's a crackle in the comlink, obi-wan's voice so utterly distant on the other end.
yet, you're well aware he's out there somewhere in the midst of the fire. somewhere out there in the clouds of smoke that nearly choked you as you stood your ground, wiping sweat off your brow.
maker, your eyes burned. your throat was tight, every inhale a battle itself as the stench of burning flesh, artillery, and smoke hung in the air.
"reinforcements should be here at any given moment. stay strong, we're getting help soon."
gritting your teeth, your gaze flickers over to the nearly lifeless body, the once shiny white and royal blue armor now covered head to toe in ashes. a harsh reminder of what happened only moments ago.
you weren't there in time.
it was your fault.
"cyar'ika," there's a croak, the word sputtered out, "please, just do it."
just do it.
the world around you stills. just for a moment. the piercing shrill of artillery only white noise, fading away as you knelt beside him. the only thought blazing across your mind was him.
he's hanging on, just barely.
as you cradle his head in your arms, his lashes flutter, your heart sinking as you notice the trail of crimson trickling from his lower lip. his breathing is ragged as his lips manage to curve into a meek smile.
"you've never looked so beautiful, cyar'ika."
squeezing your eyes shut, you lower your head, pressing a tender kiss to his forehead, "don't you dare waste another breath. reinforcements are coming."
"my love," he shakes his head slightly, a gloved hand wrapping around the base of your neck, "it would be better if you left me behind. y-you know what you have to do. for the sa-sake of your own life and for the republic. you know--"
"no."
you barely recognize your own voice as the word slips out. it's strained, laced with a sob. a gut-wrenching, a heart splitting open, kind of sob. tears spring up, flowing down your cheeks with ease.
"no. no. no."
"t-this isn't the time or pl-place to be arguin' with me--"
there's a blast, the earth shaking beneath as you clutch onto him. lifting your head, your eyes dart around, searching for the possible cause. adrenaline pumps through your veins, electrifying every part of your being. your mind was racing now, searching for a possible cause of the rumbling sensation.
surely it wasn't a separatist bomb. it couldn't be. you guys had already been hit.
that's how you ended up here.
that's how rex ended up in your arms, any last strength subsiding by the minute. where were those reinforcements obi-wan promised?
maker, how much longer could you wait here?
how much longer?
"oh no."
it takes only a second to realize that the words weren't rex's, but your own.
horror settles in as you sense warmth envelop your back, seeping into your robes. there's a warped noise that gurgles in your throat, a noise that couldn't quite be deciphered.
"sh-shit," rex's eyes widen, and you sense your own hand reaching towards your back, just below your left rib-cage.
swallowing thickly, you feel something soaking your fingertips. pulling it away, you look down, spots dotting your field of vision.
scarlet.
that's all you could see.
blurry.
maker, everything was so fucking blurry.
yet, you could see one last thing, a blurry shape. platinum blonde with honey eyes.
his eyes, searching yours, fear plastered across his features. his voice, fuzzy in your ears. desperate, wracked with sobs.
.✫*゚・゚。.★.*。・゚✫*.
Nepenthe... (n.) one that brings a pleasurable sense of forgetfulness, or the erasing of an unwanted memory.
It felt better than last time, at least.
No, it wasn’t perfect. Nothing was ever perfect when it came to wartime- least of all emotional well-beings. But you had once been at the lowest of all points, and now you could say otherwise. Now, at least, your emotional state was better than others. Better than comrades, friends, and those who you dearly missed without even being allowed to.
You had known it was a silly thing to do from the very beginning. For one, it was against the code you had sworn to uphold and heed. You knew the Jedi would never have approved of what you allowed to take place, but the sincerity of it all had admittedly clouded your judgement. Secondly, it was simply ridiculous enough of you for encouraging it to begin with. It was even more ridiculous to continue to cling onto what had happened, all within the confines of a slim, onyx box.
The parchments were fragile from time, but protected from how well you’d treated them. You’d been sure not to crinkle the pieces anymore than you’d needed to. Even taken extra care in not smearing the ink when your thumbs were rubbing over top of it. With a rather unrealistic fear of the papers turning to dust at the very mention of the air, you rarely took them out to see with your own eyes.
But what in the wide open galaxy could’ve been so precious, someone would never take them out out of fear of oxygen?
Treasures from your worst time, of course. From Umbara, when you had been called to fill in for General Kenobi and Skywalker on a month long mission in retaking the shadowy world. It hadn’t taken long for you to lose any notion of spirit to exhaustion. Your body and soul had turned sour with a dull ailment, as if you were dressed in the feeling of dry throat. But, of course, you had been prepared to ride this feeling out until the end of your task.
And then something had made it far more bearable. First only a little, then a lot.
No, you were never able to prove it. But you knew. And in return, Rex knew that you knew. Whether he noticed your demeanor and mood or not was irrelevant. What mattered was that the man had taken time out of his rather busy schedule to write you small, but simple, declarations of his admiration for you. It was probably the nicest things anyone had ever done for you, and the Captain had done it purely out of his own golden heart.
So, that was what you kept in the box. Notes from the man who had touched you deeply, and therefor carried you to the end.
You hadn’t seen Rex since the second siege of Umbara- the mission you’d been involved with. But that was about five months ago now. You had already returned to your own battalion, returned to your own battles, returned to the people who were already counting on you. You still saw Anakin and Obi-Wan fairly often, even aided the latter in a space battle against Grievous. Other than that, you worked with General Plo Koon in guarding the skies. And all was well.
You never asked about Rex. Though you desperately wanted to inquire of his health, it would’ve been too off putting for both your colleagues and your own men. After all, nobody knew what had transpired between the two of you. And even then, neither you nor the Captain acknowledged it. So it wasn’t like you had much of a right to any concern for him anyway. You weren’t his lover, or even his friend. You were a superior, and it was not much allowed to act as though there was anything more to it.
Though as your fingers ghosted over the last slip of paper he had written to you, a certain fondness was hard to deny.
“ᴜɴᴛɪʟ ᴡᴇ ᴍᴇᴇᴛ ᴀɢᴀɪɴ, ɪ ᴡᴏᴜʟᴅ ꜰᴏʟʟᴏᴡ ʏᴏᴜ ᴀɴʏᴡʜᴇʀᴇ. ᴛʜᴀɴᴋ ʏᴏᴜ ꜰᴏʀ ɪᴛ ᴀʟʟ ᴍʏ ɢᴇɴᴇʀᴀʟ, ᴍʏ ʟᴏᴠᴇᴅ.” How were you just supposed to forget that? Though you supposed that must’ve been the mans intention. He hadn’t wanted you to forget it, even if it was a bit of a distraction to both of your duties.
With a slow exhale from your nose, your thumb strokes the corner of the parchment a final time. Then, you fold the paper back up, stack it up in line with the other pieces, and carefully place them back in the black box. You only have to lean over in your sitting position to place the box under the shelf you call your bed. Once you sit up again, you’re met with the boring gray walls of the inside of a Venator. And without realizing it, the last thing you think of before you lay down for sleep, is how you’d much rather be looking at a certain Captain instead.
You would get your wish.
.✫*゚・゚。.★.*。・゚✫*.
You grip the table in front of you as your ship jolts. Overhead, lights lining the ceilings and walls flash red like sirens. A few of the officers and men around you stumble as well, and you just know a trillion more problems are arising.
“C’mon Plo...” you urgently hiss under your breath. “Hurry up, please.”
As if on cue, you watch his star-fighter spin outside the bridge window, closely followed by a spray of enemy shots. A low trill from in front of you grabs your attention instead, and you raise your head to meet your fellow Jedi.
“General Y/N?” Anakin inquires importantly. “Are you there?”
Another shake runs through your ship, causing your knuckles to pale from the intensity of holding on. “I’m here,” you answer. “Our forces are overpowered. General Koon won’t be able to hold out for much longer. I suggest we-” another shake of your ship. “I suggest we pull back.”
General Skywalker nods his head firmly, then looks around with darting eyes. “We’re coming out of hyperspace now, General. Whether or not we’ll be in one piece is up for debate, though.”
You raise an eyebrow in question. Your fellow Jedi know your lack of speaking enough to understand that this quirk is encouraging them to explain. “We’ve been... badly damaged. Admiral Yularen is out cold. If we stay on this ship, we’re done for.”
You nod as you get the message. “Understood,” you say, and the hologram disappears. “Open up the hanger and lower rear shields. Prepare for incoming escape pods,” you say to one officer. As he nods his head curtly, you raise your communicator to your lips and turn to the bridge window. “You hear that, Plo?”
“Affirmative,” the Kel Dor answers through blasts.
“As soon as everyone arrives, I want us in hyperspace,” you say to your Admiral.
It only took three moments before the giant window you looked out to was painted with blue and white streaks, and then a tunnel of indigo. A slow breath escapes you as anxiety quietly builds inside. Skywalker’s plan went horribly. He’d known the Separatist ships had outgunned you and Plo this time, but he insisted you hold your position. You had attempted to warn him against this, but clearly to no avail. Now you’re down a ship, Yularen, and several men. Not to mention all the shots your own cruiser had taken.
“Plo,” you say into your communicator, slowly. “Do you read me?”
Silence.
“Plo?”
“I’m here.” You exhale in relief at the sound of his voice. “I’ve met General Skywalker in the hanger bay. They have wounded.”
“I’m on my way.”
.✫*゚・゚。.★.*。・゚✫*.
“General Y/N!” Anakin exclaims. His notorious smirk is creeping against the edge of his lips, and his hands are outstretched to make his words all the bolder. Despite his warm greeting, clones are being carried away in stretchers all around him, and your once clean bay is now streaked with skid marks.
“I have to say, this is one of your worse landings,” you tell him once you enter earshot. Unlike the man in front of you, you were not one to shout your half of the conversation from across the room. You nod once to General Plo as he passes you by.
“Yeah, well, I improvised.”
Clearly, you think as you watch a Clone remove his helmet and gasp for air.
“We lost a whole squadron of men,” Anakin continues. “Yularen was injured while we were out flanked. And Obi-Wan...” Anakin sighs and squares his jaw. “Obi-Wan’s gonna kill me.”
What about Rex? You resist the urge to scream. Instead, you say, “I can cover you for this one.”
“No,” the man says quickly. He folds his arms somewhat bitterly, though you know it’s not directed towards you. “No. It’s my mistake.”
You’ve barely opened your mouth before someone else steals your attention again. Behind you, a distorted voice rings clear and true. “General Skywalker,” it calls, and your heart gives a great pound, even though you’ve heard the voice over a thousand times today.
You shift your body so you’re half facing the voice. You watch a trooper in blue marked armor march up to where you and your comrade stand. Helmet scarred with tally marks... Blasters on both hips... The appearance only confirmed what you had already known.
Coming closer, Rex lifts his hands and removes his helmet from his head, revealing his face.
Maker, had he always looked like this? Or was this a trick of your brain from a new addiction to him?
Bleached hair cut close to his head, striking features and golden eyes. Angular as ever, but symmetrical nonetheless. You hadn’t really experienced attraction much in your life. The Jedi code kept barred you from it, and you hadn’t much of a desire to really seek it out. But you had spent so much time wondering about the man that when you saw him again, even after all this time, you knew at once that not only was Rex attractive, but you were attracted to him.
“Ah, Rex,” Skywalker says in turn. “Good to see you’re in one piece. I was just about to mention you to our host here.”
You watch the Clones pupils dilate as he bites the inside of his right cheek. Although you’re feeling the same amount of both excitement and anxiety as he is, his discomfort means more to you. In a quick but meaningful attempt to quell his rather put-on-the-spot feelings, you speak first.
“Captain,” you say steadily. “I’m glad to see you well.”
What a poor thing to say. Could you truly not have thought of anything better to say to the man?
“How are the men?” Anakin asks from beside you, nearly making you jump. You’d momentarily forgotten where you were, and the fact that other people just so happened to exist.
Rex dips his head. You can see the weight of stress against his shoulders, and a darkening shadow within his eyes. In the pit of your own stomach, a prick of guilt and empathy sparks. Is this how he had felt seeing you in such a state? Had it truly felt this jarring?
“They’re... heavily injured,” the Captain answers. A thumb rubs against the side of his helmet like a ghost, just over the tally marks. “We’re still counting the casualties.”
“If you’d like to help your men...” Anakin trails off.
Rex snaps back to attention, his voice as clear and strong as any soldier. “I would. Will you be alright without me?”
“Rex,” Anakin assures with a lighthearted smile. “We’ll be fine. I’ll contact you if we need anything.”
Rex is sure not to make eye contact with you again as he goes. He silently questions Skywalker a few seconds longer with his large, amber eyes. Then he puts his helmet back over his face, turns around in uniform fashion, and heads to assist Kix in the corner.
You knew how dedicated of a man he was before. He had his conflict, but he always put it aside for the greater good of those around him, meaning he was selfless as well. Rex remained hardworking and level headed, which didn’t surprise you much, but still. He impressed you with how he walked and talked and treated other people, you being one of them. Focused, diligent... there was so many things you could say about him. All of them flattering. Instead, you muttered:
“He always was a good man.”
“Well he hasn’t changed much since you saw him,” Skywalker elaborates. “I was hoping to promote him to Commander this year, but I doubt it will happen now.”
Your eyebrows furrow slightly as you turn back to your fellow Jedi. It’s a silent question of ‘why? what makes you say that?’.
Anakin takes a small step forward, which allows you to inhale his scent. It’s an intimate act, though not in a sexual nor romantic way. It’s an intimate act of secrecy, and you’re sure to give him your full attention in the coming moments.
“Rex tends to... self deprecate.”
Your first instinct is to be somewhat offended on the clone Captain’s behalf. But your mind is quick to quiet this instinct, giving way to the logical answer.
Skywalker isn’t wrong. Though his phrasing may not be the most accurate, it gets the point across. Rex does self deprecate. He shares the loss with everyone as if it were his own. As if he were responsible for the failure or wrongdoing whether he really was or not. And, sadly, most of the time he’s not. But he’ll never see it that way.
The Captain considered all the men lost on this mission his fault. Anakin could offer Rex the position of Commander all he wants, but the clone would never accept after a mission like this.
You turn back towards his direction. Rex crouches down next to his medic friend, occasionally nodding his head solemnly. Even now, in a state that tugs on the edges of your heart, he looks pretty.
“How long do you expect to stay?” you ask with focused eyes.
“I don’t know,” the Skywalker says with a sigh. “But you don’t mind if my men stay here while me and Obi-Wan do some recon, right?”
“No,” you answer slowly, the idea solidifying as you watch the Clone push himself to his feet. “Stay as long as you need.”
.✫*゚・゚。.★.*。・゚✫*.
You wrote it out carefully. The grip around the pen was tight and secure, and the letters that bled from it were tiny and neat. In an age where holopads ruled the galaxy, you’d almost forgotten what your handwriting was like. It was nice to remember.
Writing was simple. It was more peaceful than holding a lightsaber, and you didn’t destroy anything through your hands movements. When the letters appeared at your will, you could imagine a life where they did this all the time. A life on the countryside maybe, or the beach. You’d heard Scarif was beautiful often. Maybe there?
The feeling of sullen peace doesn’t last long. As soon as you finish your statement, you’re back to being a Jedi knight. It saddens you in it’s own way, but you tell yourself it’s for the best, as you usually did. Then, you read your gift over in your head.
ʏᴏᴜ'ʀᴇ ᴀ ɢᴏᴏᴅ ᴍᴀɴ.
It didn’t seem like it was enough, so you flipped the parchment over to the other side and wrote more.
ʏᴏᴜ ᴅᴏɴ'ᴛ ʜᴀᴠᴇ ᴛᴏ ʙʟᴀᴍᴇ ʏᴏᴜʀꜱᴇʟꜰ ꜰᴏʀ ᴇᴠᴇʀʏᴛʜɪɴɢ.
And you meant what you had written, too. Rex, like any other Clone, didn’t deserve the guilt that war brought. He didn’t deserve the weight of the galaxy on his shoulders, but he had to bear it anyway. Maybe your little words with alleviate some of it for him, just as it had for you.
I slip the paper between the folds of your robes. At nightfall, you creep into the darkness, a messenger of your own terms.
You knew that Rex had received and read your offering. The moment yours eyes met, it was done for.
You weren’t going to act out. Your face didn’t change in the slightest. Rex’s, however, has shifted his eyes into a widened state, and his lips are parted as he realizes what you have done. Whatever doubts he had about it were now quelled, for at first he had assumed it was a simply a kind soldier.
Instead it was you, the Jedi he had thought about every day since first sight.
Slowly, you raise your breakfast bread to your lips. Your teeth break through the little cloud of dough, savoring the dry taste. Rex seems to be paralyzed on the other side of the room. He doesn’t even seem to recognize that he’s in public, in a sea of clones and officers who would be able to read the look on his face if they squint enough.
You hold the man’s stare for a few seconds longer. Then you turn away, just in time to catch Plo and Anakin approaching you.
“General,” Anakin greets. You bow your head in recognition.
“We received a transmission from General Kenobi and Windu this morning,” Plo booms. “They’re on their way to support us best they can, but they estimate they won’t be here for the next three days.”
Three days. You have three days to calm Rex’s nerves.
You swallow down your bite of bread before you respond. “Any news of the enemy?”
“None so far.”
“We should send out scouts in all directions,” Anakin steps forward. “We have to locate Grievous before he escapes again.”
“He could’ve already jumped into hyperspace by now,” you urge. “Unlike him, we may not have that fuel. Not until Obi-Wan gets here.”
.✫*゚・゚。.★.*。・゚✫*.
Rex found the second note that evening.
He’d already struggled to push the first from his mind, but now his head felt like it was filling with clouds. What should he have focused on? Your lingering scent on the cards? The cleanliness of your handwriting? The fact that it was from you? For him? Maker, he hadn’t even said thirty sentences to you, and he was already drunk with love.
Not infatuation. Not lust. Love.
With a shaky hand, the soldier purses his lips. He bends over in his blue painted armor. He feels the paper against the fingertips of his gloves. At once, he feels you too. He can’t turn it over fast enough.
Rex’s throat dries fast. The light in his ambers eyes resembles the embers of a fire, alive and awake with the spark of a promise. But the man knows there may be more, and he turns the parchment to the other side, nearly giving himself a paper slice.
ɪ ʀᴇᴀʟʟʏ ᴅᴏ, ʀᴇx.
It’s you. This confirms it.
You’ve addressed him by name now. You’ve made it solid with the motion of your wrist and the ink of a pen. So how does Rex respond? Confront you directly? No. You’re his superior. Rex isn’t even fully sure he’d have the courage to do that yet. Lead his men into battle? Any day, no problem. Speak to you, with your piercing eyes and your analytical mind? His tongue would tie itself before he’d be able to get any words out.
Should he write a letter in return? That’s not how this works. Rex remembers he’s out of paper at the moment anyway. He can’t talk to Anakin about it without getting you in trouble. Confiding in his brothers would’ve only led to frustration, lame advice, and court marshals. That’s not an option.
The only other path is simple: no confrontation at all. Rex rides out the wave of your words until you split paths again. You disappear to do whatever it is Jedi do, and the Captain is forced back into having to find ways to inquire about your wellbeing to Anakin without seeming unnatural.
But that doesn’t totally seem like an option either.
Unknown to the man, you sit on security cameras. You watch as he stands outside the doorway of his barracks, clutching the note close to his chest, before you head to your sleep.
.✫*゚・゚。.★.*。・゚✫*.
Rex is happier the next morning.
His broad chest is puffed out further than before. It’s not noticeable for most people, but it’s noticeable for anyone who’s memorized the walk and posture of their lover. The same goes for the corners of his lips, which aren’t as dragged downwards as usual. His eyes are bright from a well rest.
He is physically healthy. You can only hope his head is beginning to follow suit.
You write him one note, which is read before lunch time. A simple:
ʏᴏᴜʀ ꜱᴍɪʟᴇ ᴍᴀᴋᴇꜱ ʏᴏᴜʀ ꜰᴀᴄᴇ ɢʟᴏᴡ.
Which you could swear resulted in softer expressions on his part throughout the day. No smiles. The atmosphere was too grim and crowded for a full, cheery curve. It’s a bit of a shame, because you meant your words. The thought alone of Rex grinning in sheer joy is enough to make you want to grin too. Still, you understand. Disappointment and understanding tend to go well together.
After overseeing some construction, you receive a cut along your palm. It is sharp and deep, and the crimson blood seeps into the crevices of your fingers. Despite the stinging, you offer little outside reaction. You are quick to carry yourself to the infirmary.
Rex leaves the infirmary at the same time.
You tell yourself you won’t turn to look at him. But then you hear him speak “General, are you alright?” and you abandon your internal swear.
The promise of seeing his face is too tempting. You turn smoothly, meeting his eyes. “Yes,” you tell him, as if nothing ever existed between the two of you. “I’m alright.” Then your brows crease together. “Are you?”
Rex takes a split second to respond. He is distracted, trapped in his own thoughts thanks to you. “Oh- yes, General. I was just, ah, visiting Jesse. Some friends of mine were injured in the crash, sir.”
Your gaze softens considerably. Your next lines come out without thinking, but they flow as freely as a stream regardless. “You always were a kind man.”
Which isn’t a bad thing to say to anyone, by any means. But in relation to you and him, it feels like a big step. The words sound like something that should’ve been kept in between the folds of paper, and left by the side of a door.
Both Rex and yourself tense up at the exact same time. Eyes widen, shoulders square.
But Rex is true to his nature. “And you always had quite the way with words, General,” he says. The end of his sentence is capped with a clipped up smirk, and a charismatic glint in his eyes that is too raw to be untruthful.
So the Captain finds another letter addressed to him that day, right before bed.
ᴛʜᴀɴᴋ ʏᴏᴜ ꜰᴏʀ ᴄᴀʀɪɴɢ.
And on the other side,
ɪ'ᴅ ɢɪᴠᴇ ʏᴏᴜ ᴛʜᴇ ɢᴀʟᴀxʏ.
.✫*゚・゚。.★.*。・゚✫*.
And then it’s the last day that you’ll be together. The day you’d been dreading. The day you’d been putting off.
You hadn’t meant to get so attached. It goes against your training, your code, everything you’ve sacrificed yourself for. But you’re too far in now. You are absolutely star struck, invested, and trapped in a rabbit hole created by Rex himself. Not that you blame him. You’re glad for it. You could be happy like this.
You don’t want to lose him. Therefore, a line of thinking pops into your intelligent little brain. It wouldn’t solve all the problems. In fact, it would probably create more. But it would be binding. It would be official. You could escape.
You wanted to. You wanted to go forward with your line of thinking. But Maker, it was a leap. Would it be worth it?
Yes. If you had to answer now, the answer would be yes.
An entire section of your brain was dedicated to mulling it over the entirety of the day. Even as you commanded your troops, signaling and training and clutching the end of the holotable with your bandaged fingers, about seventeen percent of your brain power was stuck on the future.
The answer was reached at the very last moment.
As Obi-Wan emerged from hyperspace, along with several fighters, your mind went blank. And then the blankness washed away, and all you could feel was the simplicity of a crackling fire, the waves on a beach, and the promise of safety. You imagine yourself writing every day with pen and paper, creating whimsical works for yourself and your lover. There is nothing but peace. No war, nor responsibilities. Only the beach, the parchment, and Rex.
Rex.
.✫*゚・゚。.★.*。・゚✫*.
Your lover already received what he had assumed would be the last letter from you. He’d seen it in the morning. It was simple and sweet, and while it didn’t do much to soothe himself from the thought of parting from you, it had made him feel warm inside.
So you can imagine the way his dark eyebrows knit together at the sight of another.
Perhaps it was an accident. The Captain had been returning to his quarters to gather whatever belongings he’d left inside before transferring over to Obi-Wan’s cruiser with General Skywalker. No. That was a ridiculous thing to think. You were simply immune to making mistakes.
Rex bends over. Again, his black gloved hand stretches out and clasps the parchment up. He is always careful with it, as to not crinkle the memories and sentiment wrapped within. Like you, he is sure to keep everything you send to him in either a box or an envelope for future reference.
Your last note is not a statement. It is not a compliment to be taken at face value. It is a question, a proposal. It is a leap of faith.
You got your answer the next morning. Before loading himself onto the transport, your Captain is sure to meet your eyes. You step forward with one foot, searching for any signs. And for the first few seconds you are concerned that he has answered with a simple ‘no’, but then you realize that he is simply teasing. Something you’d have to get used to, it seems.
Rex gives you a smile. A soft one, but a sincere one. His right hand reaches up, and pats against his armor, right over his heart. He does this one, two, three times, before slipping his handsome face inside his helmet, and disappearing behind the visor.
.✫*゚・゚。.★.*。・゚✫*.
You are married on Obi-Wan’s cruiser. General Koon sends you over the next day to obtain information in person instead of holograms for fear of bugs and spies. And, yes, you were true to your mission.
But where no one could see you, you met Rex in a humid hallway. The lights were dimmed and near glowing red, but the area was totally cleared out. Neither clone, nor Jedi disturbed the lovers, whose shadows were looking into each others eyes.
Rex has your hands in his. They are rough, and a reminder of how you observed them and thought he had stood out at first sight. He still has the scar on his palm, though this time you have your own to match it. This time, you also match in terms of jewelry, for both of your left ring fingers are tethered by simple, silver bands.
The kiss that sealed the idea was chaste at first. You hadn’t known what to do, though it hadn’t taken you long to through that thought to the wind. Kissing Rex felt good, even if you had nothing to compare it to. It was the kiss you had been waiting for, and the tongue prodding at your lips had only confirmed your suspicions that Rex was an adventurous man.
And so, in the hallway where the lovers met, all was well.
At least until Order Sixty-Six came.
.✫*゚・゚。.★.*。・゚✫*.
finally.
might edit though, but i always say i’ll do that and then don’t.
There’s no peace in a bottle, Rex knows. Perhaps the hollow illusion of it at the top, the faint hope that maybe this time it will come; by the bottom, only the deep ache of knowing that if it exists at all, it’s found somewhere he’s never been.
He turns the bottle in his big, restless hands. 79’s is quiet, and he hasn’t even put on civvies or anything comfortable. Just shucked the top half of his armor like a shell that no longer quite fits, so the stone in his shoulders can sag beneath his regulation blacks as he leans onto his elbows, eyelids heavy as he glances around the bar. His brothers think of this place as a safe haven, away from the rigid and grueling things they are so finely crafted to do. They come here to laugh, dance, drink, chase tail, meet people. Have fun.
Rex knows he’s no fun. Or at least that the only place he can have fun seems to be in the thick of what he was bred for. A joke in the middle of drills, a wink around the holomap on the bridge, a laugh as he surprises his enemy, something suspiciously lighthearted as he carries the lead weight of a badly injured vod towards a medic station or a gurney after battle. Something that sounds like laugh it off, trooper, you’ll be fine in no time but means please, brother, don’t go.
Fun is not what he is looking for, and peace is beyond his grasp. War is in his bones, even on leave, even at rest. His nightmares have sharpened in Umbara’s wake, and he finds himself staving off sleep with the wan light of the bar digging past his sight to pierce the ceaseless dull ache in his head. The second beer does not prove a better compass than the first. It cannot tell him why he’s so conflicted, now. Why every order that’s issued to him reeks of death, why he’s waiting even for General Skywalker’s face to darken as Krell’s had when Rex issued the grounds for his arrest. Shame pools sour in his cheeks; his jedi would never do such a thing, he knows it. Yet the fear is still there.
He is not used to fear. Even the ubiquitous fear of losing his brothers is too dull to be anything but waiting sorrow, inevitable as the void between the stars.
It doesn’t grab him by his guts until he’s asleep. His body will not yield in any other state; even now as the wraiths of Umbara linger behind his weary eyes he does not feel it, not really. His body seems as stoic as ever. His mind darts between futures, all of them terrible, desperately seeking a way to prevent those abominations from ever happening again. In his mind, he is relentless. He finds a way, by Jango’s bones, to protect these men.
In his dreams, he fails.
Upon waking covered in cold sweat, heart a punishing hammer between his lungs, he hears it. The fading voices of the brothers he failed on that mission, lost to the gloaming by his hesitation. You should have done something, they wail. You followed broken orders when you knew something was wrong--
But I didn’t! he thinks. I disobeyed them. I found a way around them. I adapted on the field, I risked my assignment, made every call I could--
It did not save us.
“Sir?” The voice shakes him from the thrall of his guilt. He realizes his head has sagged onto the bar between his crossed arms, beer bottle still loosely in his grasp. Rex’s eyes snap up, wide and sharp as they fall on the man who spoke.
“Fives,” he says as though he can chase away any semblance of vulnerability with a stern, quick lash. The ARC trooper’s brow is knit as he regards his captain with eyes that promise to hold what he can see plainly on Rex’s face in unshakable confidence. The man is less opaque than he tries valiantly to be, after all.
“You having trouble sleeping too, sir?” Fives asks coolly as he takes his seat and accepts a bottle from the barkeep with a familiar nod. Rex watches him a moment. His determined brother, so boisterous and brave, is here with the same shadows under his eyes as his captain. He takes a swallow of his drink.
“Yeah. I am.” But it sounds like thank you, vod.
For the first time since they lost Echo, Fives sits quietly beside his brother, ranks fallen from the air between them. In that silence is the gift of forgiveness. Whether he deserves it or not, Rex has yet to decide.