flash warning on like half of my posts srrycreative - shitposter - all around tomfoolermultifandom
297 posts
graduated from "poor little meow meow" to brat rq
cw flashing lights/strobing imagery
My youngest son, Omar, is 5 years old. Suddenly, blisters appeared on his body. Unfortunately, there is no health care, no medical point, and no hospitals. I'm tired of posting so much to no avail. Our children are exposed to health problems every day. I hope he doesn't stop himself from the severity of the pain. I trust in your humanity. Any amount will make a difference in protecting it.
@bandzboy @el-shab-hussein @appsa @blackpearlblast @nabulsi @nesmamomen
MAKE FANDOM CRINGE AGAIN!!!!!! REBLOG IF YOU THING FANDOM SHOULD BE CRINGE AGAIN!!!!!!
I mean selfship, bad art, bad writing, bad cosplay, weird theories and harmless headcanons, crossover ships, oc x canon, mary sue ocs, all of it. If itâs for your own personal entertainment it hurts NOBODY!!!
Loving star wars is a curse and perhaps a mental illness of some kind
graduated from "poor little meow meow" to brat rq
cw flashing lights/strobing imagery
HE WAS IN THE WHAT?
CW flashing/strobing lights
it hasnât been 13 weeks without the bad batch if you keep rewatching the episodes
what was even the purpose of this shot? they really just want us to look at their *GUNSHOTS, people crying*
there was supposed to be more but i decided the half finished comic was still funny
People make a lot of good "thank god I'm not a kid anymore" posts about like school bullies or homework or puberty. But actually my #1 top of the "thank god I'm not a kid anymore" list is the fact that I can leave the event when I want to.
Any event I'm at! I can say "okay well I'm tired I'm going home goodbye." Could not do that shit as a kid. If you're a kid it's like yeah you will sit here at your brother's soccer game in the cold for the next 1.5 hours. You will sit here at your sibling's football practice. You will stay at this BBQ until the whole family is done with the BBQ. You are stuck at the mall until mom finds the pants she needs. You are stuck at the grocery store. No we don't know how long. You are stuck at band practice. It's running late but you're not allowed to leave. You are stuck at the party that the adults said you're leaving soon but they keep talking to these 2 people who showed up late. What the Fuck.
And that shit is on top of having homework.
me getting five notes from my regular mutuals on any given post
i do apologize that i didn't have a snippet out like i wanted but, compromise, here's the whole damn thing. i also switched some stuff around in ch2 for continuity reasons :3
i got very very busy with prepping for an art faire (if anyone knows where to get cheap high quality prints let a mf know PLSSS) and i was muy busy. but we're back. and echo's a sweet dork.
mando'a translations!
ke'pare - wait/hold on
ge'tal - red
vor'e - thanks
udesii - chill out/its okay
gender neutral pronouns, no y/n usage, only main descriptor im sticking to about the reader is that you're ginger. cus i am. sorry nerds.
-immediately follows the events of the preceding chapter-
You were fighting back a smile. You had no idea that some of the clones knew Mandoâa, let alone that the Mandolorian-adoptee turned clone-donor Jango Fett was taught during his short time on your home planet. You wondered if it was something the Kaminoans decided or if they all went about teaching themselves in Jangoâs honor. The idea of a bunch of clone soldiers sitting around a Mandoâa childrenâs dictionary makes the smile stitching onto your face that much harder to fight.
âIâm sorry about Tech. He can be, ah, a lot.â Echo grimaced while swiveling around the copilotâs seat, presenting it to you.
You obliged, and sat down. âOh heâs fine. Thereâs plenty of topics I could infodump about, just as annoyingly. I just have a bad habit of my thoughts becoming verbal.â You shook your head, soft auburn tresses flicking about. The lights from the cockpit glinted around the natural highlights of your hair, and it didnât escape Echoâs gaze.
The man cleared his throat. âStill, I appreciate you being so accommodating of my brothers. Nat-borns donât seem to get it, you know?â
You furrowed your brow and cocked your head slightly to the left, looking him in the eyes. While he didnât physically shudder, you could see the slight panic pulse in his iris when you met his gaze.
âWhere do you think clones get their camaraderie and brotherhood from?â
Echo shrugged. âKaminoans, I presume?â
You barked a laugh. âWell, yes. Keâpare, what did they tell you guys about Mandalore?â
âNot much. Jango was around for the first few years, but I rarely saw him. He didnât seem to hold much emotion for the regs. He seemed to like the higher ups, but I didnât become an ARC Trooper until I was shipped off that wet rock.â Echo finally slumped into his chair opposing you. As he spoke, he slowly relaxed into his seat, his hinges quietly scraping together as he moved. Once again his amber eyes met yours, a new twinkle seeming to arrive.
âYou know more than you let on, geâtal.â Echo said, narrowing his gaze.
He seemed to be sizing you up. Trying to parse out his next line of questioning. Truthfully, you were better at it than him. While his observation skills have been battle-tested, the ease in which you peppered questions at him showed years of practice he was simply unable to acquire. Outside of the occasional conversation at 79âs or a senator he was required to escort, Echoâs entire social sphere only extends to his brothers. You made him nervous. In a very good way.
You blushed at the newly acquired nickname. âI prefer to call it ânot showing my full handâ, but Iâll slide a few cards your way since you seem cute.â
The back of Echoâs neck started to bloom a soft red. He rubbed a palm on his knee, mindlessly self soothing. âSeem? What, the gray skin and hollow cheeks not working their magic?â He joked, gesturing to each feature respectively with a pointed index finger.
âYou seem to deflect compliments because you canât believe them, so I was starting small.â You extended your own index finger and poked at his shoulder, annunciating the seem.
The now-scarlet tint of Echoâs neck began to creep towards his face. Eyes darting towards the floor, he opened his mouth to speak, but closed it. He pressed his lips together for a moment. The only thing he got out was a weak âVorâe.â
âUdesii. I came here, didnât I?â Your face softened. Echoâs almost immediate vulnerability around you made your knees feel like jelly, and you were sending a silent prayer somewhere that you were both sitting down. âYouâre not gonna scare me off, but you canât immediately go cracking jokes just âcus I said youâre handsome.â You continued. Soft, yet firm. You werenât allowing Echo to talk poorly of himself, even in jest.
Echo nodded, meeting your gaze once more. He looked off for a moment, seemingly in thought, before returning your gaze and asking softly: âHow do you always know what to say?â
You let out one quick heh. âSince I found someone to give the words to.â You reply cheekily.
Echo smiled once more and dipped his head. âWalked into that one huh?â
You both smiled, and a comfortable silence began to envelope the two of you. Both of you were looking out on the horizon. The sky was a deep pink and purple haze, stippled with the indigo hues of the impending twilight. Echo was scanning the distance, as if anything alive would be out there, let alone a threat. You were content watching the 2 ½ clouds in the sky move millimeters at a time, but something told you to look at your companion. Gazing at him, your eyes slowly roved up his face. His jaw was set in a defined line, lightly gritted in concentration. His cheeks were hollow, but his cheekbones sat quite prominently, catching the light. This, juxtaposed with his deep set eyes, allowed the light to dance right at the forefront of his face. As if a candle was eye level with him, across the room.
âSee anything cool?â You finally speak, hoping Echo didnât catch you staring.
âNah, perimeter check. Iâm sure all Iâll see is bones and dirt but, old habits die hard.â He replied, not looking away. After a beat, he nodded, and seemingly relaxed the scrutinous gaze he had moments ago.
âHuh. So, what makes your squad different from the other clones, other than haircuts, tattoos, and builds?â You change the subject.
âBeing experimental meant the Kaminoans could enhance certain characteristics. Wreckerâs strength, Techâs smarts, Crosshairâs accuracy, and Hunterâs senses.â Echo spun his chair to face you and threw one leg over the other.
âHuh.â You think for a moment before replying. âSo you think Hunter heard us approach?â
Echo nodded. âAnd Iâm willing to bet heâs going to call me a serf for the next 3 rotations.â
You barked out a laugh before realizing his implication. A hand shot over your mouth and your eyes grew wide.
The man laughed. âJust be glad heâs not close enough to hear your heartbeat.â
âWhat CANâT he hear?â You said, mildly exasperated. âHow do you get any privacy?â
âHeâs got noise canceling headphones but thatâs mainly for his own sanity. Wrecker got them for him after his snoring kept him up for 3 days in a row.â You laughed at that, and Echo felt a twinge of pride before continuing. âHe showed up in the cockpit one morning with his bandana over his nose and Omega had to ask him about his new fashion choices.â
You let out a series of giggles at that, holding your stomach slightly as you lean forward into it. If your eyes werenât scrunched shut, you wouldâve seen Echoâs face bloom in 4 different shades of pink. Every single part of him was committing this to memory. The way your eyes crinkled at the sides. The way your cheeks almost wanted to push your eyes out of their sockets. He never wanted this to end, the sounds of your joy echoing across the hold of the Marauder.
ââââââ
Hours had passed, the sun well below the horizon by this hour. The sky was peppered with numerous constellations and star systems, the names of which always seeming to escape you. The deep blue sea of sky felt more vast than ever in your little perch aboard the Marauder.
You and Echo went back and forth, sharing tidbits from your respective lives up until this point. You learned about the Rishi Moon incident that gave Echo his ARC status, he learned about the Siege that gave way to your arrival here. He told you about the Domino Squad, you told him about your own clanâs untimely demise. Hours of stories shared back and forth, as if you were both once stationed on the same battlefield and then whisked away, only to be brought back together once more after all these years. But there was no mutual history to draw upon this familiarity from. The two of you just fell into a steady rhythm. One that youâd individually practiced and honed for years, like a song that was never intended for a duet, only for the two to sound identical.
â...And thatâs where I learned Keldabe Handshakes are applicable as a neutralizing tactic across species.â You finished, explaining the first and only time a Shriek-Hawk has successfully taken you off guard.
âCharming.â A voice hissed, and then a pair of boots dropped to the ground with a soft thunk. âEcho, shouldn't you be putting your toys away? Itâs late.â Crosshair slunked into the cockpit, seemingly from the shadows. You scoffed and rolled your eyes. âI must be a pretty expensive toy to trade for speeder brakes.â
âI canât say Iâm surprised youâve never been with someone and lost track of time, Cross. That does tend to require social skills and, yâknow, liking people?â Echo crossed his arms and stared his brother down.
âWell unless theyâre taking your bunk, you should tell Tech someoneâs joining him in the cockpit tonight. Itâs too late to take them back now.â Crosshair seemed to spit the last part of the sentence, annoyed that someone else is in his space and bothering his brothers. While you understood hesitancy, you felt as if he reveled in his current position rather than proceeding with caution.
Echo turned to you and looked into your eyes softly. âItâs up to you.â
âIâm already cramping an already small ship. I can kick it up here with Tech for the night.â You said, smiling. While you very badly wanted to just crawl into Echoâs bunk with him, you werenât doing that the first day. Plus, you donât know how Echo feels about his personal space, or his sleeping positions, or if he prefers one side of the bâ
âHow touching.â Crosshair cut off your thoughts with the remark. He spun on his heel, and disappeared just as quickly as he appeared. Echo sneered at the doorway.
âAre you sure? I donât mind sleeping up here. Like I said, Tech can be a lot sometimes.â Echo looked back at you, eyes full of worry.
âTell you what, Iâll come get you if heâs being too much and we can switch, okay?â You compromise, getting the understanding that Echoâs going to worry either way.
âDeal.â Echo said firmly with a nod, and stands up. âFor as much of a dick as he is, Crosshairâs right, it is rather late.â You nod and shrug slightly in agreement.
Echo turns to you and leans down. âTry and get some rest.â He gives you a quick peck on the cheek before turning on his heel and borderline speeding out of the room.
When the door shuts automatically, you ghost your hand along your cheek, and an uncontrollable smile breaks across your face.
I think he likes me.
What would happen if Obi-Wan turned to the Dark Side instead of Anakin?
what do you mean "instead of"? anakin can't make his own decisions he'd just join obi-wan
i do apologize that i didn't have a snippet out like i wanted but, compromise, here's the whole damn thing. i also switched some stuff around in ch2 for continuity reasons :3
i got very very busy with prepping for an art faire (if anyone knows where to get cheap high quality prints let a mf know PLSSS) and i was muy busy. but we're back. and echo's a sweet dork.
mando'a translations!
ke'pare - wait/hold on
ge'tal - red
vor'e - thanks
udesii - chill out/its okay
gender neutral pronouns, no y/n usage, only main descriptor im sticking to about the reader is that you're ginger. cus i am. sorry nerds.
-immediately follows the events of the preceding chapter-
You were fighting back a smile. You had no idea that some of the clones knew Mandoâa, let alone that the Mandolorian-adoptee turned clone-donor Jango Fett was taught during his short time on your home planet. You wondered if it was something the Kaminoans decided or if they all went about teaching themselves in Jangoâs honor. The idea of a bunch of clone soldiers sitting around a Mandoâa childrenâs dictionary makes the smile stitching onto your face that much harder to fight.
âIâm sorry about Tech. He can be, ah, a lot.â Echo grimaced while swiveling around the copilotâs seat, presenting it to you.
You obliged, and sat down. âOh heâs fine. Thereâs plenty of topics I could infodump about, just as annoyingly. I just have a bad habit of my thoughts becoming verbal.â You shook your head, soft auburn tresses flicking about. The lights from the cockpit glinted around the natural highlights of your hair, and it didnât escape Echoâs gaze.
The man cleared his throat. âStill, I appreciate you being so accommodating of my brothers. Nat-borns donât seem to get it, you know?â
You furrowed your brow and cocked your head slightly to the left, looking him in the eyes. While he didnât physically shudder, you could see the slight panic pulse in his iris when you met his gaze.
âWhere do you think clones get their camaraderie and brotherhood from?â
Echo shrugged. âKaminoans, I presume?â
You barked a laugh. âWell, yes. Keâpare, what did they tell you guys about Mandalore?â
âNot much. Jango was around for the first few years, but I rarely saw him. He didnât seem to hold much emotion for the regs. He seemed to like the higher ups, but I didnât become an ARC Trooper until I was shipped off that wet rock.â Echo finally slumped into his chair opposing you. As he spoke, he slowly relaxed into his seat, his hinges quietly scraping together as he moved. Once again his amber eyes met yours, a new twinkle seeming to arrive.
âYou know more than you let on, geâtal.â Echo said, narrowing his gaze.
He seemed to be sizing you up. Trying to parse out his next line of questioning. Truthfully, you were better at it than him. While his observation skills have been battle-tested, the ease in which you peppered questions at him showed years of practice he was simply unable to acquire. Outside of the occasional conversation at 79âs or a senator he was required to escort, Echoâs entire social sphere only extends to his brothers. You made him nervous. In a very good way.
You blushed at the newly acquired nickname. âI prefer to call it ânot showing my full handâ, but Iâll slide a few cards your way since you seem cute.â
The back of Echoâs neck started to bloom a soft red. He rubbed a palm on his knee, mindlessly self soothing. âSeem? What, the gray skin and hollow cheeks not working their magic?â He joked, gesturing to each feature respectively with a pointed index finger.
âYou seem to deflect compliments because you canât believe them, so I was starting small.â You extended your own index finger and poked at his shoulder, annunciating the seem.
The now-scarlet tint of Echoâs neck began to creep towards his face. Eyes darting towards the floor, he opened his mouth to speak, but closed it. He pressed his lips together for a moment. The only thing he got out was a weak âVorâe.â
âUdesii. I came here, didnât I?â Your face softened. Echoâs almost immediate vulnerability around you made your knees feel like jelly, and you were sending a silent prayer somewhere that you were both sitting down. âYouâre not gonna scare me off, but you canât immediately go cracking jokes just âcus I said youâre handsome.â You continued. Soft, yet firm. You werenât allowing Echo to talk poorly of himself, even in jest.
Echo nodded, meeting your gaze once more. He looked off for a moment, seemingly in thought, before returning your gaze and asking softly: âHow do you always know what to say?â
You let out one quick heh. âSince I found someone to give the words to.â You reply cheekily.
Echo smiled once more and dipped his head. âWalked into that one huh?â
You both smiled, and a comfortable silence began to envelope the two of you. Both of you were looking out on the horizon. The sky was a deep pink and purple haze, stippled with the indigo hues of the impending twilight. Echo was scanning the distance, as if anything alive would be out there, let alone a threat. You were content watching the 2 ½ clouds in the sky move millimeters at a time, but something told you to look at your companion. Gazing at him, your eyes slowly roved up his face. His jaw was set in a defined line, lightly gritted in concentration. His cheeks were hollow, but his cheekbones sat quite prominently, catching the light. This, juxtaposed with his deep set eyes, allowed the light to dance right at the forefront of his face. As if a candle was eye level with him, across the room.
âSee anything cool?â You finally speak, hoping Echo didnât catch you staring.
âNah, perimeter check. Iâm sure all Iâll see is bones and dirt but, old habits die hard.â He replied, not looking away. After a beat, he nodded, and seemingly relaxed the scrutinous gaze he had moments ago.
âHuh. So, what makes your squad different from the other clones, other than haircuts, tattoos, and builds?â You change the subject.
âBeing experimental meant the Kaminoans could enhance certain characteristics. Wreckerâs strength, Techâs smarts, Crosshairâs accuracy, and Hunterâs senses.â Echo spun his chair to face you and threw one leg over the other.
âHuh.â You think for a moment before replying. âSo you think Hunter heard us approach?â
Echo nodded. âAnd Iâm willing to bet heâs going to call me a serf for the next 3 rotations.â
You barked out a laugh before realizing his implication. A hand shot over your mouth and your eyes grew wide.
The man laughed. âJust be glad heâs not close enough to hear your heartbeat.â
âWhat CANâT he hear?â You said, mildly exasperated. âHow do you get any privacy?â
âHeâs got noise canceling headphones but thatâs mainly for his own sanity. Wrecker got them for him after his snoring kept him up for 3 days in a row.â You laughed at that, and Echo felt a twinge of pride before continuing. âHe showed up in the cockpit one morning with his bandana over his nose and Omega had to ask him about his new fashion choices.â
You let out a series of giggles at that, holding your stomach slightly as you lean forward into it. If your eyes werenât scrunched shut, you wouldâve seen Echoâs face bloom in 4 different shades of pink. Every single part of him was committing this to memory. The way your eyes crinkled at the sides. The way your cheeks almost wanted to push your eyes out of their sockets. He never wanted this to end, the sounds of your joy echoing across the hold of the Marauder.
ââââââ
Hours had passed, the sun well below the horizon by this hour. The sky was peppered with numerous constellations and star systems, the names of which always seeming to escape you. The deep blue sea of sky felt more vast than ever in your little perch aboard the Marauder.
You and Echo went back and forth, sharing tidbits from your respective lives up until this point. You learned about the Rishi Moon incident that gave Echo his ARC status, he learned about the Siege that gave way to your arrival here. He told you about the Domino Squad, you told him about your own clanâs untimely demise. Hours of stories shared back and forth, as if you were both once stationed on the same battlefield and then whisked away, only to be brought back together once more after all these years. But there was no mutual history to draw upon this familiarity from. The two of you just fell into a steady rhythm. One that youâd individually practiced and honed for years, like a song that was never intended for a duet, only for the two to sound identical.
â...And thatâs where I learned Keldabe Handshakes are applicable as a neutralizing tactic across species.â You finished, explaining the first and only time a Shriek-Hawk has successfully taken you off guard.
âCharming.â A voice hissed, and then a pair of boots dropped to the ground with a soft thunk. âEcho, shouldn't you be putting your toys away? Itâs late.â Crosshair slunked into the cockpit, seemingly from the shadows. You scoffed and rolled your eyes. âI must be a pretty expensive toy to trade for speeder brakes.â
âI canât say Iâm surprised youâve never been with someone and lost track of time, Cross. That does tend to require social skills and, yâknow, liking people?â Echo crossed his arms and stared his brother down.
âWell unless theyâre taking your bunk, you should tell Tech someoneâs joining him in the cockpit tonight. Itâs too late to take them back now.â Crosshair seemed to spit the last part of the sentence, annoyed that someone else is in his space and bothering his brothers. While you understood hesitancy, you felt as if he reveled in his current position rather than proceeding with caution.
Echo turned to you and looked into your eyes softly. âItâs up to you.â
âIâm already cramping an already small ship. I can kick it up here with Tech for the night.â You said, smiling. While you very badly wanted to just crawl into Echoâs bunk with him, you werenât doing that the first day. Plus, you donât know how Echo feels about his personal space, or his sleeping positions, or if he prefers one side of the bâ
âHow touching.â Crosshair cut off your thoughts with the remark. He spun on his heel, and disappeared just as quickly as he appeared. Echo sneered at the doorway.
âAre you sure? I donât mind sleeping up here. Like I said, Tech can be a lot sometimes.â Echo looked back at you, eyes full of worry.
âTell you what, Iâll come get you if heâs being too much and we can switch, okay?â You compromise, getting the understanding that Echoâs going to worry either way.
âDeal.â Echo said firmly with a nod, and stands up. âFor as much of a dick as he is, Crosshairâs right, it is rather late.â You nod and shrug slightly in agreement.
Echo turns to you and leans down. âTry and get some rest.â He gives you a quick peck on the cheek before turning on his heel and borderline speeding out of the room.
When the door shuts automatically, you ghost your hand along your cheek, and an uncontrollable smile breaks across your face.
I think he likes me.
RAAAAH im sorry i haven't been on in a few days yawll i was prepping for my first vendor event!!! i sold some prints AND i sold an original!!! very slay
i also sold some of my friends handmade jewelry :3 live love diy events
also working on a short little comic =) a little oneshot type deal but i'm proud of the concept
one thing about me you will NEVER catch my ass gatekeeping
ring x earrings
everyone shut the fuck up and look at my earrings
u are so sweet for listening thank u and good day
no the crosshair rings such a quirky coincidence, why do you ask?
fanfic writing for star wars is a different kind of annoying sometimes because why are both the bikes and the flying cars called SPEEDERS?
everyone shut the fuck up and look at my earrings
u are so sweet for listening thank u and good day
no the crosshair rings such a quirky coincidence, why do you ask?
i May or may not have wanted an excuse to refer to the keldabe handshake
my guess rn is probably 4-5 chapters max? gimme a bit i need to cook đ§âđł
hey what if i
that'd be so crazy right
ch 1 ăăťÂ°Â°ăť
gender neutral pronouns, no use of y/n, clones know mando'a, crosshair doesn't turn, no beta we die like tech.
The sun had begun to slump lazily in the sky. Outcroppings of clouds blotted around it, allowing the rays to gleam down rather than the barrage of heat from early this morning. Hues of bronze and amber were slathered across the atmosphere, partly due to the dust in the air. Here past the city limits, one became acutely aware of the planetâs true climate. Roves of sand and limestone were all the eye would be met with for miles. Large, twisted succulents shot randomly out of the ground, their insides bitter and viscous with water from a long many cycles ago. The stubborn fauna was a mirror image of the people that inhabited this planet. Fierce and unyielding, hoarding what little resources are to be found, if only to assure survival for longer than tonight.
While the sun had dipped in severity, your emotions seemed to not get the memo. In fact, your heart was rattling your ribcage and wracking your nervous system. In a matter of hours you had your first customers in days, albeit shallow pocketed, and instead of doing the proper salesperson-like thing and talking Echo down to another product, you ran his pockets and asked him out.
And he said yes.
Well, not in those words. But it wasnât a No. Or a Sure, why not. And thatâs more than enough for you.
Unbeknownst to you, Echo was relying on the speeder handlebars in front of him to maintain his grip on reality.
Echo tried not to get his hopes up whenever he noticed wandering eyes on him in the past. Heâd said it jokingly, but he wasnât kidding when heâd said he was just happy you werenât looking at him in disgust.
Or worse, someone to pity.
You hadnât given him the sad eyes when you noticed his metal arm and scomp. You hadnât given him the sad eyes when you noticed his gait on the way to the counter. Hell, you didnât even make mention of the piece wrapping around his skull. He didnât even have to ask.
And now you were wrapped around his back, pushing your weight into him as he ripped across the wastes. Your arms were slinked around his core, hands folded and your pinky ghosting across the tip of his navel. While Echoâs own hands on the speeder was his current tether to reality, the warmth of your hands was equally coaxing him back out. Coaxing him backwards to rest his shoulder blades on your chest, coaxing him to let go of the handlebars, coaxing him to close his eyes, savor the moment. But he doesnât. The same steadfast, battle-tested resolve that made him an ARC Trooper, all of that resolve, is being called upon at this moment.
Echo flicked the gear shift forward and pressed his foot down evenly, eyes honing in on the gray dot of the Marauder coming into view on the horizon. You gripped tighter with the increase in speed, and Echoâs cheeks got warm. Omega tailed closely behind.
Earlier, before the three of you had broken the city limits, Echo gave you the rundown of his ragtag family.
Tech. Wrecker. Hunter. Crosshair.
You mentally listed the members of the Batch, trying your absolute best to commit them to memory. Itâll be a lot easier once you actually see them, trust me. Echoâs words rang through your head, a metaphysical balm to your mild-yet-steadfastly brewing social anxieties.
A loud, metallic groan roused you from your thoughts. The ramp of the Marauder began to descend, and an overwhelmingly large figure appeared at the lip of the ramp.
â9-1 odds, that's Wrecker?â You call out loudly, desperate to be heard over the speeder engine. Before Echo could respond, a surly, thickly accented voice cut through the air.
âWhat stray did you bring in from the rain this time, eh Echo?!â
âYou would be correct.â Echo glances over his shoulder at you, before turning back and calling out to his brother. âAdoption is Hunterâs speciality. Is your chip acting up again?â Wrecker answered with a barking laugh, walking off the ramp that is now level with the planetâs surface.
Echo brought the bike to a rolling stop, the engine softly tut-tut-ing before being kicked off. Omega came up beside the two of you, parking respectively. Echo stepped off the bike and stuck his hand out for you, while Wrecker came over and swooped Omega off the bike and onto his shoulders. You coyly took his hand. âStill keeping up this smooth charade?â You chide, throwing your leg over the bike and pulling yourself up with his assistance.
âCharade? Now thatâs just rude.â Echo stuck his nose up, fake indignantly.
You grin, leaning into the bit. âOh my, how may I make up for this transgression Milord?â
Wrecker and Omega watched on with shit eating grins. Neither of them were going to be the ones to break the moment, nor were they going to be the ones to tell either of you about the matching blush the two of you were wearing.
âIâm sure Iâll find a remedy in time, fret not serf.â Echo smiled as he stuck his elbow out for you to take.
âSerf? Iâll have you know my father was a knight!â It was your turn to act fake indignant, huffing and whipping your head away from Echo. Both of you erupted into laughter at the shared moment, closing in on the ramp.
Unbeknownst to you, Hunter was in the hallway, up the ramp and around the corner, a soft smile stitching its way onto his face. He, like Wrecker and Omega, was deeply enthused about his brotherâs stroke of luck with you. Hunter had heard the two of you before youâd arrived, his acute senses hearing the rumblings a few klicks away.
Hunter decided to make his presence known, slipping out of the shadows and into the main doorway.
âWhatâs this about me adopting someone else?â Hunter says, eyes casually shifting about the group, seeming to do a mental headcount.
âWell Iâm terrible with a blaster, but I can sell exhaust pipes something fierce!â You reply sarcastically, and you offer your name and a handshake. Instead, the clone claps your forearm and shakes it once. You follow the motion, entirely through muscle memory, clapping his forearm with similar force. A soft smile sits on your face at the gesture, it was something you hadnât done in a few cycles at this point.
âHunter, though Iâm sure Echoâs filled you in already.â He offers a pleasant smile, now more curious about the stranger aboard his ship.
âHeâs only given me names.â You shrug. âBut, Iâve run into two of you now, and itâs a 50/50 on whether or not your monikerâs obscenely obvious. So I think Iâll be okay.â You finish the statement with a soft, mildly forced laugh, hoping to make it as obvious as possible that youâre joking.
I just made sure Echo can kinda stand my presence, I canât have his brother be the hard sell now.
Hunter nods and closes his eyes with a soft chuckle. âYou got nothing to worry about, kid. None of us bite.â
âExcept maybe Crosshair.â Three separate voices say at the same time.
Laughter erupts from the hallway and cockpit. From the gunnerâs nest, a hissing grimace. Hunter beckoned Wrecker and Omega into the cockpit, nodding to you and Echo as he went. The aforementioned biter slunk his way down the ladder and towards the cockpit, casting nary a glance to the new person aboard the Marauder. A toothpick flew from in front of him, twirling in the air nonchalantly before sticking upright in a crack between the durasteel paneling of the floor. Your eyes honed in on it.
âHe wonât actually bite you, but good luck getting more than three words that arenât snarky outta the vod.â Echo spoke quietly and clasped a hand between your shoulder blades, noting your gaze. âI wouldnât let him.â He said even quieter, barely above a hum.
You let out a breath you didnât realize you were holding. Once again, Echoâs simple words are a balm for mental wounds he did not cause, and completely unintentionally. You relax your shoulders, and pull them in a circle.
âSo, Techâs left, right?â
Echo nodded, and gestured with his scomp for you to lead the way. You obliged, and went up the stairs. Through a small hallway filled with a myriad of colors and buttons, you led the two of you into the cockpit.
A somewhat larger space opened up, with similar durasteel walls peppered with buttons and lights. However bulletproof panes of glass took up a majority of the wall space, looking out at the expanse of the wastes. It made the desert look even more swallowing, seeing it from a slight elevation. Nothing else for miles and miles had the view you did right now. Something about Desert Fever slung its way through your brain, some whispers you had barely overheard from stallworkers about afflicted moisture farmers on the outskirts.
âAlso colloquially known as desert mania, desert fever is usually characterized with bouts of irrational behaviors and depressive episodes, as a result of the absolute nothing around you. Some hypothesize it to be an amalgamation of chronic understimulation.â A tall clone materialized next to you from the pilotâs chair.
âThat was supposed to be internal, my bad. I take it youâre Tech?â You say sheepishly, rubbing a hand on your neck as you extend the other, introducing yourself.
âYou are correct. Pleasure.â He replies, holding his hand up softly as to say None for me, thanks in response to your hand out. You quickly pulled it back to your side, eyes flicking to Echo behind you for mild reassurance.
Getting the message, he cleared his throat. âWhereâs everyone finding themselves tonight?â
âHunterâs busying himself inventorying the supplies brought in, Crosshair is brooding on top of the ship, and Wrecker and Omega are outside testing her ability to detonate multiple delayed explosions.â Tech replied curtly, understanding Echoâs meaning instantly. âI will retire to the bunks if you need me. I have my holopad and charger. Kandosii, vodâika.â
Echoâs fingers twitched at his thigh again as color shot up from his collar. âThank you Tech!â He said, very abruptly. He politely spun you around and began to push you towards the copilotâs seat.
A part of Echo prayed you werenât paying attention to Tech all that much.
A bigger part of him knew you understood every word thrown about.
hey what if i
that'd be so crazy right
ch 1 ăăťÂ°Â°ăť
gender neutral pronouns, no use of y/n, clones know mando'a, crosshair doesn't turn, no beta we die like tech.
The sun had begun to slump lazily in the sky. Outcroppings of clouds blotted around it, allowing the rays to gleam down rather than the barrage of heat from early this morning. Hues of bronze and amber were slathered across the atmosphere, partly due to the dust in the air. Here past the city limits, one became acutely aware of the planetâs true climate. Roves of sand and limestone were all the eye would be met with for miles. Large, twisted succulents shot randomly out of the ground, their insides bitter and viscous with water from a long many cycles ago. The stubborn fauna was a mirror image of the people that inhabited this planet. Fierce and unyielding, hoarding what little resources are to be found, if only to assure survival for longer than tonight.
While the sun had dipped in severity, your emotions seemed to not get the memo. In fact, your heart was rattling your ribcage and wracking your nervous system. In a matter of hours you had your first customers in days, albeit shallow pocketed, and instead of doing the proper salesperson-like thing and talking Echo down to another product, you ran his pockets and asked him out.
And he said yes.
Well, not in those words. But it wasnât a No. Or a Sure, why not. And thatâs more than enough for you.
Unbeknownst to you, Echo was relying on the speeder handlebars in front of him to maintain his grip on reality.
Echo tried not to get his hopes up whenever he noticed wandering eyes on him in the past. Heâd said it jokingly, but he wasnât kidding when heâd said he was just happy you werenât looking at him in disgust.
Or worse, someone to pity.
You hadnât given him the sad eyes when you noticed his metal arm and scomp. You hadnât given him the sad eyes when you noticed his gait on the way to the counter. Hell, you didnât even make mention of the piece wrapping around his skull. He didnât even have to ask.
And now you were wrapped around his back, pushing your weight into him as he ripped across the wastes. Your arms were slinked around his core, hands folded and your pinky ghosting across the tip of his navel. While Echoâs own hands on the speeder was his current tether to reality, the warmth of your hands was equally coaxing him back out. Coaxing him backwards to rest his shoulder blades on your chest, coaxing him to let go of the handlebars, coaxing him to close his eyes, savor the moment. But he doesnât. The same steadfast, battle-tested resolve that made him an ARC Trooper, all of that resolve, is being called upon at this moment.
Echo flicked the gear shift forward and pressed his foot down evenly, eyes honing in on the gray dot of the Marauder coming into view on the horizon. You gripped tighter with the increase in speed, and Echoâs cheeks got warm. Omega tailed closely behind.
Earlier, before the three of you had broken the city limits, Echo gave you the rundown of his ragtag family.
Tech. Wrecker. Hunter. Crosshair.
You mentally listed the members of the Batch, trying your absolute best to commit them to memory. Itâll be a lot easier once you actually see them, trust me. Echoâs words rang through your head, a metaphysical balm to your mild-yet-steadfastly brewing social anxieties.
A loud, metallic groan roused you from your thoughts. The ramp of the Marauder began to descend, and an overwhelmingly large figure appeared at the lip of the ramp.
â9-1 odds, that's Wrecker?â You call out loudly, desperate to be heard over the speeder engine. Before Echo could respond, a surly, thickly accented voice cut through the air.
âWhat stray did you bring in from the rain this time, eh Echo?!â
âYou would be correct.â Echo glances over his shoulder at you, before turning back and calling out to his brother. âAdoption is Hunterâs speciality. Is your chip acting up again?â Wrecker answered with a barking laugh, walking off the ramp that is now level with the planetâs surface.
Echo brought the bike to a rolling stop, the engine softly tut-tut-ing before being kicked off. Omega came up beside the two of you, parking respectively. Echo stepped off the bike and stuck his hand out for you, while Wrecker came over and swooped Omega off the bike and onto his shoulders. You coyly took his hand. âStill keeping up this smooth charade?â You chide, throwing your leg over the bike and pulling yourself up with his assistance.
âCharade? Now thatâs just rude.â Echo stuck his nose up, fake indignantly.
You grin, leaning into the bit. âOh my, how may I make up for this transgression Milord?â
Wrecker and Omega watched on with shit eating grins. Neither of them were going to be the ones to break the moment, nor were they going to be the ones to tell either of you about the matching blush the two of you were wearing.
âIâm sure Iâll find a remedy in time, fret not serf.â Echo smiled as he stuck his elbow out for you to take.
âSerf? Iâll have you know my father was a knight!â It was your turn to act fake indignant, huffing and whipping your head away from Echo. Both of you erupted into laughter at the shared moment, closing in on the ramp.
Unbeknownst to you, Hunter was in the hallway, up the ramp and around the corner, a soft smile stitching its way onto his face. He, like Wrecker and Omega, was deeply enthused about his brotherâs stroke of luck with you. Hunter had heard the two of you before youâd arrived, his acute senses hearing the rumblings a few klicks away.
Hunter decided to make his presence known, slipping out of the shadows and into the main doorway.
âWhatâs this about me adopting someone else?â Hunter says, eyes casually shifting about the group, seeming to do a mental headcount.
âWell Iâm terrible with a blaster, but I can sell exhaust pipes something fierce!â You reply sarcastically, and you offer your name and a handshake. Instead, the clone claps your forearm and shakes it once. You follow the motion, entirely through muscle memory, clapping his forearm with similar force. A soft smile sits on your face at the gesture, it was something you hadnât done in a few cycles at this point.
âHunter, though Iâm sure Echoâs filled you in already.â He offers a pleasant smile, now more curious about the stranger aboard his ship.
âHeâs only given me names.â You shrug. âBut, Iâve run into two of you now, and itâs a 50/50 on whether or not your monikerâs obscenely obvious. So I think Iâll be okay.â You finish the statement with a soft, mildly forced laugh, hoping to make it as obvious as possible that youâre joking.
I just made sure Echo can kinda stand my presence, I canât have his brother be the hard sell now.
Hunter nods and closes his eyes with a soft chuckle. âYou got nothing to worry about, kid. None of us bite.â
âExcept maybe Crosshair.â Three separate voices say at the same time.
Laughter erupts from the hallway and cockpit. From the gunnerâs nest, a hissing grimace. Hunter beckoned Wrecker and Omega into the cockpit, nodding to you and Echo as he went. The aforementioned biter slunk his way down the ladder and towards the cockpit, casting nary a glance to the new person aboard the Marauder. A toothpick flew from in front of him, twirling in the air nonchalantly before sticking upright in a crack between the durasteel paneling of the floor. Your eyes honed in on it.
âHe wonât actually bite you, but good luck getting more than three words that arenât snarky outta the vod.â Echo spoke quietly and clasped a hand between your shoulder blades, noting your gaze. âI wouldnât let him.â He said even quieter, barely above a hum.
You let out a breath you didnât realize you were holding. Once again, Echoâs simple words are a balm for mental wounds he did not cause, and completely unintentionally. You relax your shoulders, and pull them in a circle.
âSo, Techâs left, right?â
Echo nodded, and gestured with his scomp for you to lead the way. You obliged, and went up the stairs. Through a small hallway filled with a myriad of colors and buttons, you led the two of you into the cockpit.
A somewhat larger space opened up, with similar durasteel walls peppered with buttons and lights. However bulletproof panes of glass took up a majority of the wall space, looking out at the expanse of the wastes. It made the desert look even more swallowing, seeing it from a slight elevation. Nothing else for miles and miles had the view you did right now. Something about Desert Fever slung its way through your brain, some whispers you had barely overheard from stallworkers about afflicted moisture farmers on the outskirts.
âAlso colloquially known as desert mania, desert fever is usually characterized with bouts of irrational behaviors and depressive episodes, as a result of the absolute nothing around you. Some hypothesize it to be an amalgamation of chronic understimulation.â A tall clone materialized next to you from the pilotâs chair.
âThat was supposed to be internal, my bad. I take it youâre Tech?â You say sheepishly, rubbing a hand on your neck as you extend the other, introducing yourself.
âYou are correct. Pleasure.â He replies, holding his hand up softly as to say None for me, thanks in response to your hand out. You quickly pulled it back to your side, eyes flicking to Echo behind you for mild reassurance.
Getting the message, he cleared his throat. âWhereâs everyone finding themselves tonight?â
âHunterâs busying himself inventorying the supplies brought in, Crosshair is brooding on top of the ship, and Wrecker and Omega are outside testing her ability to detonate multiple delayed explosions.â Tech replied curtly, understanding Echoâs meaning instantly. âI will retire to the bunks if you need me. I have my holopad and charger. Kandosii, vodâika.â
Echoâs fingers twitched at his thigh again as color shot up from his collar. âThank you Tech!â He said, very abruptly. He politely spun you around and began to push you towards the copilotâs seat.
A part of Echo prayed you werenât paying attention to Tech all that much.
A bigger part of him knew you understood every word thrown about.
Can he do that?
snaggletooth | 21 | nb queer | they/them | US
ao3 here!
bluesky here!
latest fic/snippet here!
latest piece here!
latest edit here!
current obsessions â´
shows â彥: clone wars, the bad batch, svu, arcane, fallout, brooklyn-99, unhhhh
movies â彥: star wars (ot/pt), godfather (1&2), donnie darko, akira
games â彥: stardew valley, marvel rivals, elder scrolls series, red dead redemption series, fallout series
please do not repost any of my work to any other sites, i have not and will never consent to AI scraping, and any AI "artists" will be blocked.
ask box is always open! open to edit and art requests, currently on indefinite writer's block with fics x_x
enjoy your stay!
Listen dude, I knew we went on that magical adventure to nutritionland. We learned a lot from president cauliflower. But I'm gonna be real dude, I think nutritionland is an ethnostate.
by the recommendation of exactly two (2) people iâm making the echo one shot (x) a liiiiiiittle bit longer so i thought iâd put a lil snippet here :P
Brake Check: Chapter 2 snippet
gender neutral pronouns, no use of y/n, teen(??) rating
The sun had begun to slump lazily in the sky. Outcroppings of clouds blotted around it, allowing the rays to gleam down rather than the barrage of heat from early this morning. Hues of bronze and amber were slathered across the atmosphere, partly due to the dust in the air. Here past the city limits, one became acutely aware of the planetâs true climate. Roves of sand and limestone were all the eye would be met with for miles. Large, twisted succulents shot randomly out of the ground, their insides bitter and viscous with water from a long many cycles ago. The stubborn fauna was a mirror image of the people that inhabited this planet. Fierce and unyielding, hoarding what little resources are to be found, if only to assure survival for longer than tonight.
While the sun had dipped in severity, your emotions seemed to not get the memo. In fact, your heart was rattling your ribcage and wracking your nervous system. In a matter of hours you had your first customers in days, albeit shallow pocketed, and instead of doing the proper salesperson-like thing and talking Echo down to another product, you ran his pockets and asked him out.
And he said yes.
Well, not in those words. But it wasnât a No. Or a Sure, why not. And thatâs more than enough for you.
Unbeknownst to you, Echo was relying on the speeder handlebars to maintain his grip on reality.
Echo tried not to get his hopes up whenever he noticed wandering eyes on him in the past. Heâd said it jokingly, but he wasnât kidding when heâd said he was just happy you werenât looking at him in disgust.
Or worse, someone to pity.
You hadnât given him the sad eyes when you noticed his metal arm and scomp. You hadnât given him the sad eyes when you noticed his gait on the way to the counter. Hell, you didnât even make mention of the piece wrapping around his skull. He didnât even have to ask.
And now you were wrapped around his back, pushing your weight into him as he ripped across the wastes. Your arms were slinked around his core, hands folded and your pinky ghosting across the tip of his navel. While Echoâs own hands on the speeder was his current tether to reality, the warmth of your hands was equally coaxing him back out. Coaxing him backwards to rest his shoulder blades on your chest, coaxing him to let go of the handlebars, coaxing him to close his eyes, savor the moment. But he doesnât. The same steadfast, battle-tested resolve that made him an ARC Trooper, all of that resolve, is being called upon at this moment.
Echo flicked the gear shift forward and pressed his foot down evenly, eyes honing in on the gray dot of the Marauder coming into view on the horizon.
i have a habit of watching tv when i draw (mainly video essays or documentaries), this time i was watching a miniseries on richard nixon.
and so naturally i think to myself "huh maybe i can draw some old dudes, help with character design choices!"
anyways. pabu everyone lives au. he'd definitely get into more dapper and proper clothing as he got older
Jabba says you can have an extra hour in the ballpit
guys iâm afraid i enjoyed this whole âalbum cover redrawâ thing way too much so hereâs frank oceanâs blondie đđđ