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Tech's Profile Appreciation Post
#star wars#the bad batch#tbb tech#sw tbb#the bad batch tech#tech lives#ct 9902#tech girlie#tech tuesday
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Reblogging again for tech Tuesday because I’m obsessed
Congrats on the followers id yet again like to throw in another request please?
growing up I had difficult with reading or learning to read in general. I was wondering if you could come up with a slight angsty and fluffy fic of tech trying to teach reader (fem) to read? Maybe he’s not patient, makes a very tech-like comment that reader overhears that upsets her which sucks because she really likes tech? ❤️ thank u ☺️
🌊 Reading Between the Lines
🫧 Pairings: Tech X Female Reader
🫧 word count: 6.1k

🫧 Plot: When Tech finds out you’re unable to read, he makes it his job to teach you. But after a comment to Echo, you think maybe he’s not the teacher for you.
🫧 Warnings: Safe for work, fluff and angst. Female reader, reader is unable to read. Tech makes accidental inconsiderate comments, comfort, play fighting, omega playing match maker, idiots in love trope, first kiss, reconciliation.
🫧: authors note: thank you @forbiddenwaves for this request and the kind words. Thanks for messaging me so we can work on this togther too. Enjoy 🤍

“Now, attempt the next word.”
You stared down at the datapad, the symbols swimming on the screen under the shadow of Tech’s tall frame. The sun beat down on your shoulders, and you bit the inside of your cheek, determined not to get this one wrong.
“Erm…”
“That is incorrect,” he stated before you could even finish.
Your brows furrowed. “I haven’t given you an answer yet,” you muttered, sharper than you intended. “It’s… con… cot…”
“Corellia,” Omega suddenly answered cheerfully from your other side as she bounds over.
You slumped with a groan, just as Tech gave a frustrated exhale.
“Omega,” he said, tone reproachful, “if you provide the answer, she will not learn.”
Omega winced, looking between the two of you with a sheepish shrug. “Sorry,” she said, eyes softening as they met yours.
“It’s alright,” you sighed in defeat. “I think I’m done for today. Besides, we’ve got to help the locals soon. That is why we’re on this rock after all.”
Tech folded his arms across his chest, expression unreadable behind his goggles. “We’ve scarcely covered anything of substance.”
“It’s been almost two hours,” you pointed out, rising from the crate you’d been sitting on, legs stiff. You turned to face him, half your features obscured by the harsh sunlight. “I need a break.”
He didn’t argue, but the way he took the datapad back from your hands with just a bit too much stiffness told you he wasn’t thrilled. “Very well. We’ll resume this evening.” Then, turning to Omega: “And I would appreciate no further interruptions.”
She nodded silently.
As Tech strode toward the ship’s gangplank, Omega reached for your hand, giving it a small, reassuring squeeze. “Hey, you got the first two letters right. That’s progress!”
From halfway up the ramp, Tech’s voice floated back over his shoulder. “Technically, it is not. Especially considering we’ve made no discernible advancement in two full rotations. And the fact that we just returned from a mission on Corellia should have made that word obvious.”
Then he disappeared into the ship.
You didn’t say anything. You couldn’t. Not unless you wanted to cry out of embarrassment.
Tech didn’t mean to be cruel because that isn’t in his nature. But he didn’t realise how much weight his words carried and how easily they upset you.
Omega was still watching you, lips pressed into a tight, worried line. “You’ll get there,” she said gently. “It takes time, that’s all.”
You exhaled slowly, wiping the back of your neck, now sticky with sweat and heat. “Maybe. But right now… it’s not looking great.”
It had been Tech’s idea to take on the responsibility of teaching you like it was a personal mission ever since the squad had learned that reading Basic wasn’t just a struggle for you, but a near impossibility.
Though, Wrecker and Echo did tell you that they were impressed since it never hindered any mission and they never noticed it being an issue for you.
At first, you were excited. One being that you could finally be able to read a sentence clearly for once by being taught by a complete brain-whizz and two, getting to spend some one on one time with Tech. Because well… you liked him. A lot. You had welcomed the chance to be near him, maybe even impress him.
But now? Now you just felt like dead weight.
These lessons had been going on for a while now and every time you thought you were making progress, he corrected you. When you think you have gotten the hang of it, your hope is snapped like a thin wire. And even though his tone was rarely harsh, the impact landed just the same.
You weren’t sure how much more of it you could take before you self imploded.
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When a few hours had passed and you were covered in dried mud, scraped hands and aching shoulders. Just a small testament to the day’s work. The mudslide had hit the outskirts of the local settlement hard. Homes had caved in, supplies were lost. You, Hunter, Wrecker, and Omega had been on the ground all afternoon, helping wherever you could.
And for a little while, it had helped. Being useful. Doing something physical. Something that didn’t require datapads or deciphering Tech’s disappointment.
Wanting nothing more than to jump onto the Marauder to have a wash, as you climbed the Marauder’s gangplank with your limbs heavy and clothes still damp, the sound of your name halted you just short of the open doorway.
“She’s trying, Tech,” Echo said from inside, his voice low but firm. “I don’t think you realise how hard this is for her.”
“I am aware,” Tech replied curtly. “But effort without measurable progress doesn’t change the result. If she cannot fathom basic reading material after this long, I fail to see the point in continuing the same method.”
Echo exhaled, clearly trying to keep his patience.
There was a pause, and then Tech added:
“I don’t understand how someone who can’t read was cleared to be in this squad. It’s inefficient.”
You didn’t stay to hear more.
Your hands clenched into fists at your sides, your breath sharp in your throat. Before you could stop yourself, you reached out and grabbed a datapad left near the hatch—someone’s, anyone’s—and turned sharply on your heel, boots pounding against the ramp as you vanished.
Inside the Marauder, Echo’s head turned toward the hatch, catching the blur of movement just as it disappeared.
He frowned. “Was that—?”
“Likely Omega,” Tech said without looking up from his datapad.
Echo didn’t answer. He stared at the doorway a moment longer with a small sliver of doubt.
Then he reached over and plucked the datapad from Tech’s hands.
“There’s nothing wrong with the material,” Tech started, instinctively straightening. “It’s relevant—”
Echo held the pad up and squinted at the screen. “You gave her an economics summary on Corellia’s supply line recovery?”
Tech blinked. “It’s context-based learning. The vocabulary is advanced but rooted in familiar scenarios. Planet names, trade metrics…”
Echo cut him off, reading aloud in a dry tone:
‘Blah, blah, blah… Corellia’s industrial sectors yielded a net increase of 17.3% in hyperlane freight throughput.’
He looked at Tech. “You do remember she’s a beginner, right?”
Tech’s jaw twitched. “Comprehension improves when one is challenged. It’s a proven learning model.”
Echo just stared at him, then gave a slow, knowing smile. “Right. You’re not making it harder so you get more time alone with her or anything.”
Tech shot him a glance. “That’s not what this is.”
“Mm-hmm.” Echo folded his arms. “Just a coincidence you give her material most cadets wouldn’t see until advanced training. And you happen to offer to teach it… one-on-one.”
Tech didn’t answer. Didn’t rise to the bait. But he also didn’t correct him.
You wandered until the forest opened up into a small clearing just outside the village, where a fallen tree had settled along the edge like a broken bench. The air was still, heavy with the scent of wet ground and crushed foliage. You dropped onto the moss-covered trunk, the datapad still clutched in your hand.
For a moment, you just stared at it—its dull, lifeless screen reflecting your muddied reflection back at you. You pressed the activation switch, but the interface was already unlocked. Swiping clumsily, you tried to navigate to something, anything. Maybe one of those Corellian reports Tech was so convinced would teach you context. But the layout made no sense.
Your thumb hovered. You tapped wrong. Backed out. Tried again.
Nothing worked.
And with every failure, that old, tight feeling started rising in your throat like a scream.
Calm down. It’s just a datapad. It’s fine.
But your hands were shaking now, the letters blurring into meaningless shapes.
You grit your teeth, jabbed the screen once more and when it brought up another menu you didn’t know, you let out a rough breath and flung the datapad down into the grass with a thud.
Slumping off the log, you slid to the ground and pulled your knees up to your chest, resting your forehead against them. You didn’t cry. Not really. But your eyes stung. Your chest ached. You were so tired of trying. So tired of hoping and for what? To be called inefficient?
Minutes passed. Then, from somewhere beyond the trees, you heard your name being called.
Your stomach twisted. You knew that voice.
You inhaled slowly through your nose, forcing down the storm of frustration that still bubbled beneath your ribs. You didn’t want to talk to him but you figured that avoiding him now would only make things worse.
“I’m over here, Tech,” you called out, keeping your voice level.
He appeared between the trees moments later, his eyes scanned the clearing until they landed on you, standing now beside the log.
“You wandered off,” he observed plainly. “Omega was not certain where you’d gone.”
“I needed some air,” you said, trying to keep your tone casual.
He took a step closer. “Are you ready for your lesson?”
Your gaze dropped to the ground. “I’m… I don’t want to do another one today.”
Tech blinked, thumb pressing beneath his chin in that thoughtful way he always did when evaluating something... or someone. “Lack of practice results in insufficient performance.”
“Yeah, I get it.” You rubbed your arm, eyes narrowing slightly. “I’m not in the mood to do anything else today. I’m… tired.”
He studied you, his brow furrowing faintly. “I suppose that is reasonable. You were engaged in extensive manual labor for most of the day. Very well. We will resume tomorrow.”
He turned to go but you spoke up, “I don’t want to do it tomorrow either.”
He paused mid-step, looking over his shoulder at you, an eyebrow raised. “And why are you putting off your studies?”
You opened your mouth, then closed it again. You wanted to tell him. Wanted to throw his words back at him, cut him open like he’d done to you without even knowing. But what was the point?
“I just need a break,” you said instead, keeping your voice even as you play with your fingers.
“We have plenty of free time to continue—”
“I said I wanted a break, Tech,” you snapped, your arms folding tightly across your chest. Your shoulders stiffened as every nerve seemed to buzz.
He blinked again, head tilting slightly. “Your tone suggests there is something else bothering you.”
You looked away, lips tight. “Or someone,” you muttered under your breath.
“What was that?”
“I’m going for a wash,” you said instead, ducking down and snatching up the datapad you’d discarded. You moved to step over the fallen log and held it out to him without looking.
He took it from your hand, confusion still etched into his features. “Were you just using this?”
You let out a tired sigh. “Tried to.”
The next morning passed slowly, the heat thick and relentless even in the early hours. Yourself and the others helped out in the village again —carrying supplies, sorting debris, fetching water—but your heart wasn’t in it today. Your hands worked on muscle memory whilst your mind is elsewhere.
You’d been quiet. Too quiet, apparently because Omega had noticed.
You were sitting beneath a large tree at the edge of the village, the sun flickering through its canopy, offering shade as a gentle breeze stirred the leaves. You were tracing random patterns into the dust with the toe of your boot when Omega plopped down beside you.
She offered a bright smile, hugging her knees to her chest. “Feels nice to be helping people, huh?”
You nodded in reply, smiling faintly. “Yeah.”
She watched you for a moment, rocking slightly as she stared out at the village. “You seem kinda quiet today.”
You shrugged, trying to play it off. “Just tired.”
Omega leaned her shoulder into yours, playfully and soft. “You didn’t even complain when Wrecker gave you that heavy crate. That’s how I really knew something was up.”
That got a small chuckle out of you.
She tilted her head. “You and Tech didn’t do your lesson this morning.”
You grimaced before you could stop yourself. “I don’t want to do them anymore.”
Her brows knitted. “Why not? You were doing good yesterday. You almost had Corellia right!”
You stared down at your hands, fingers fiddling with a loose thread on your shirt. “I just… I don’t think I can learn from him.”
Omega blinked, surprised. “Did you tell him that?”
You gave a little shrug, not looking at her. “Not really.”
She fell silent for a moment, thinking. Then, in a hopeful voice, she offered, “Maybe I could help?”
You looked up at her, surprised. “You?”
She nodded eagerly. “Why not? You already got the first letters down before I ruined it yesterday.” She says, “And I bet I could make it more fun than Tech.”
You hesitated at first but truthfully, it was the first time since yesterday you didn’t feel like a complete failure. Omega’s eyes were wide with hope and something that felt a lot like belief.
You smiled, a little uncertain, but it reached your eyes. “Alright. Let’s try it.”
“Great! Stay here!” She shot to her feet before you could ask what she needed.
You expected her to run into the Marauder for a datapad but instead, she ducked underneath the ship’s hull and rummaged around in the loose red soil.
A moment later, she returned triumphantly holding a thick, crooked stick like it was a prized trophy.
“No screens today,” she grinned, “just dirt!”
She crouched low beside you, and with one sweep of her hand, cleared a wide patch of dust between you. Then, with careful, deliberate strokes, she began to write out the alphabet.
“You ready?” she asked, smiling up at you.
You nodded and leaned in beside her, cross-legged.
“Okay. Repeat after me.” She tapped each letter as she said it aloud, slow and clear:
“A… B… C…”
You followed, stumbling a few times, but she didn’t mind. She would just start the whole thing over, patient and gentle. You did it again. And again.
And again.
And again….
Then she covered some of the letters with her hand and pointed to a random one. “What’s this one?”
You hesitated. “Uh… F?”
She shook her head. “Try again.”
You frowned, staring at the rest of the row, mentally replaying her voice in your head. “...G?”
“Yes!” She beamed. “Now this one?”
You pointed. “P?”
She giggled. “That’s a Q. Close though!”
With every repetition, you felt something shift. Like you were actually getting the hang of it.
You started getting more right. You hesitated less. By the time you went through the whole alphabet again, she sat back with a triumphant smile.
“Alright,” she grinned, handing you the stick. “Your turn.”
You blinked. “Huh?”
“I want you to write my name.”
You laughed nervously. “Omega?”
“Yup! Easy, right?”
“Uh… sure.” You crouched again, stick poised awkwardly in your hand. “Okay… O.”
“Perfect!”
“...M.”
She paused. “Hmm…”
You glanced up as she was pulling a face, lips squished to the side with one eyebrow raised. A funny way to say ‘try again’ without being harsh.
You looked back at the row of letters, furrowing your brow. “Wait… no. That’s N. This is M.”
You corrected yourself and carved it into the dirt.
“Nice!” she beamed. “Keep going!”
It took a few minutes, a few wrong turns, but eventually, you finished all five letters.
“O-M-E-G-A.”
She stared at the letters in the dirt, then at you with wide-eyed glee.
“You did it!”
You couldn’t help the grin that spread across your face. Not forced. Not faked. Just real, honest pride.
“Yeah,” you whisper, sitting back. “Guess I did.”
Over the next few days, Tech noticed a pattern.
Every time he approached you about resuming your lessons, you deflected. A quick, polite excuse here. A firm “not today” there. Sometimes you didn’t even look at him when you said it.
At first, he chalked it up to fatigue. You’d been helping the villagers every day; moving debris, rebuilding homes, lifting spirits. But then he started noticing something else.
You were still learning. Just not with him.
From a distance, he saw you under the same wide tree where Omega first brought the stick and drew the letters in the dirt. She was sitting beside you, her arms moving in animated gestures as she pointed at something in the soil. You were watching her, laughing. Your smile was so bright it nearly startled him.
He tilted his head, hands folded behind his back as he watched the exchange from across the field. You used to smile during his lessons too. The first day, you’d grinned when you got your first word right.
He remembered it well.
In fact… he had the recording saved. Privately.
He’d downloaded the footage from his goggles later that night, under the guise of reviewing your reading pattern. But really, he’d wanted to see your smile again. The way your eyes lit up, the little wrinkle in your nose when you laughed.
But slowly, through each lesson, that smile faded. Replaced by hesitation. Then frustration. Then silence.
And now you were smiling again. Just not at him.
That afternoon, while you were away with Hunter and Echo, Tech approached Omega, who was fiddling with the stabiliser plate under the Marauder’s wing.
“May I speak with you for a moment?”
Omega blinked up at him, wiping a bit of grease from her cheek. “Sure!”
He adjusted his goggles. “It’s about her… reading progress. Has she been improving?”
Omega lit up. “Oh yeah! She’s doing so well. She even wrote my name in the dirt without help the other day!”
He nodded slowly, filing away the information. “I see. That is… impressive.”
Omega tilted her head then shrugged. “She said she might try reading a ration label next.”
Tech blinked. “Ration labels?”
“Yep! Said she wants to know what she’s eating before Wrecker makes her try it.” She giggled, then paused. “Why? You don’t think she can learn from me?”
“I did not say that,” he replied quickly, perhaps a bit too stiffly. “I merely did not know what… qualities you might offer that I lacked.”
Omega gave him a long look, then shrugged. “I guess I’m just more fun than you.”
Tech frowned. “Most likely.”
She smirked, but then the teasing faded, and she turned more serious. “She didn’t stop lessons with you because she doesn’t want to learn. She just… got upset.”
Tech’s brows drew together. “Upset? With me?”
Omega nodded, biting her lip. “She told me that she heard something. Well, she overheard you. You were on the ship talking to Echo about her.”
Tech’s mind reeled back. He’d said many things to Echo over the course of those conversations—some blunt, some logical, most private. “I did not say anything bad.”
Omega gave him a tight look. “You told me that she heard you say that it was ‘inefficient’ for her to be on the team because she couldn’t read.”
Tech opened his mouth, paused, then exhaled sharply.
“Ah,” he said at last. Perhaps that came out harsher than he intended.
He hadn’t yelled at you. He hadn’t scolded you. He never once implied you weren’t trying. But now, playing back through someone else’s voice, his words sounded callous.
Omega watched his face, seeing the moment it clicked.
“If it makes you feel better,” Omega started softly, “She doesn’t think you meant it, but it still hurt her. That’s why she’s been sad.”
Tech’s voice was quiet. “I see.”
Omega studied him for a beat. “You really didn’t mean it?”
He hesitated but only for a moment. “No,” he said sincerely. “I believe I was frustrated with myself. Not her. And the lesson was overly advanced. Echo pointed that out.”
Tech sighed through his nose, adjusting his gloves. “I believe I may have allowed my feelings to affect my judgment.”
Omega looks startled. “Your feelings?” She teased.
He looked away. “It is irrelevant.”
But Omega was already grinning. “You like her.”
He adjusted his goggles again, silent but not dismissive.
“I knew it.”
Tech rolled his eyes but then a thought clicked. “Did she inform you of anything else she heard? Possibly regarding my… feelings?”
Omega shook her head, “Nope, but maybe you should speak to her about that to her face.”
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You sat by the old log again, your knees tucked up loosely and your fingers picking at a loose thread on your pants. The sun had started to shift, casting longer shadows across the clearing. Omega was supposed to meet you soon and today's lesson would be under the trees for a change of scenery. Actually she was the one who suggested it, thinking you might like some quiet after spending so much time helping the villagers.
A twig snapped in the distance, and you smiled softly. "Omega?" you called, turning your head toward the sound.
But when the figure stepped through the trees, your breath caught in your throat.
It wasn’t Omega. It was Tech.
He moved towards you, eyes scanning the area until they landed on you. His expression was neutral and composed. Then, you swear that his gaze softened.
You scrambled to your feet, trying to act casual even as your stomach twisted. “Oh—uh, is Hunter looking for me? Do I need to head back to the village?”
Tech shook his head, stopping a few feet from you. “No. The situation there is under control. Echo and Wrecker are assisting, and Omega is occupied with another matter.”
You hesitated. “…So… you’re here instead of her?”
“Yes,” he said plainly. “I thought it appropriate that we talk, also.”
Your stomach sank a little, and you dropped your gaze to your boots, toeing the dirt. “I, um… I’m sorry I didn’t come and tell you I was dropping your lessons.”
“There is no need to apologise,” he replied, his voice measured but… gentler than you expected. “In retrospect, I recognise that my methods were poorly suited to your learning stage. I attempted to teach you material that was far too advanced, and for that, I take full responsibility.”
You looked up slowly, your throat a little tight. “I don’t think I’m ready now either,” you admitted, your voice low.
“That’s perfectly alright,” Tech said simply. “I did not come to resume formal instruction. I only wish to observe what Omega has already taught you.”
You tilted your head slightly, studying him. His shoulders weren’t tense, and there was no datapad in his hands. He looked reasonably patient which wasn���t what you had been used to.
You still hesitated. But then, he smiled and Maker, your knees almost crumbled beneath you. Curse him for being annoyingly adorable.
“S-sure,” you stammered eventually, barely managing a nod.
He stepped forward and sat beside the log without another word, resting his arms on his knees. You sat back down with him and instinctively held your hand out, ready to ask for the datapad, but Tech gently shook his head.
“Omega mentioned that using the ground has helped you more visually. I see no reason to change a method that has been working.”
You blinked at him, genuinely surprised. “You’re… being very lenient.”
“I’m being adaptable,” he corrected, though the corners of his mouth twitched like he was trying not to smile again.
You couldn’t help but return a small one of your own. “Alright… what would you like me to do?”
Tech reached into one of his belt pouches and pulled out a long, clean stick—clearly chosen specifically for this.
“Please write out the basic alphabet for me,” he said, offering it to you.
You took it and then you turned toward the dirt, drew a steadying breath, before lowering the stick.
Crouched beside the alphabet you'd just drawn in the dirt, Tech had his hands loosely clasped together. He said nothing as you finished the last letter, and though a part of you itched for his input, he simply observed in silence.
You weren’t sure if that was better or worse.
After a moment, he reached into one of his belt pouches again and carefully pulled out a folded stack of flimsi. “Omega prepared some simple quotes,” he explained. “Short phrases. Easier to process at this stage than full documents.”
He handed them over, and you took them carefully, the thin sheets a little crinkled at the edges from being carried around. You glanced down.
The first said: “Wrecker is loud.”
You gave a small huff through your nose.
The second: “Hunter smells like the forest.”
You smiled faintly. You could hear Omega’s voice in your head. As you read them out, slowly but surely, you see Tech nodding beside you with each word you get right.
The third said: “The moon is big.”
Tech, predictably, cleared his throat. “Technically, that is a misleading generalisation. There are thousands of celestial bodies classified as moons, and their size varies depending on the system. Some are smaller than a standard transport—”
You didn’t look up, but your smile widened all the same. You could practically feel the lecture coming.
You kept reading, fumbling only on a couple of the trickier words. The pace was slow, but steady. You were halfway through the last sheet when Tech said, quite suddenly:
“I’m impressed.”
You paused.
Your eyes stayed on the flimsi, but your expression changed. His voice had been gentle, even sincere—but for some reason… it didn’t land the way it used to. Not like before, when any praise from Tech would have lit you up inside.
You slowly lowered the flimsi. “You don’t have to lie to me,” you murmured.
Tech tilted his head slightly, brows drawing together. “I am not lying. I am genuinely impressed by how quickly you’ve picked up the basics. Your progress is tangible.”
But still, you didn’t look up. The compliment just didn’t feel real. Or maybe it felt too late.
There was a long pause before he spoke again.
“It has come to my attention,” he begins carefully, “that you may have overheard a conversation I had with Echo… a few days ago.”
You went still. Your grip on the flimsi tightened slightly. It was not something you wanted to talk about but supposedly getting it out in the open was better than letting it tear you up inside. And judging by Tech’s quieter approach, it was tearing him up too.
You gave a single nod, still not meeting his gaze. “I don’t want to be inefficient to you.”
Tech didn’t respond right away.
Instead, you felt the flimsi gently slip from your hand. He set them then shifted, turning his body slightly more toward you.
You let out a slight exhale when you felt his hand brush against your wrist. Just a light, uncertain touch that was enough to draw your attention.
You turned toward him slowly, sitting up straighter.
“Your strength,” he utters quietly, “has never been in what you already know… but in how determined you are to learn. That’s something even I struggle with.”
You stared at him, lips parted slightly. Your cheeks prickled with heat at the unexpected praise. He didn’t sound like he was saying it just to fix things, he genuinely meant it. “And I am sorry for what you heard. I often say things without thinking of the possible repercussions.
“…Thank you,” you reply softly, voice barely louder than the breeze through the trees.
Tech’s hand withdrew from your wrist, but his gaze lingered, as if searching your expression for more unspoken feelings. After a moment, he cleared his throat gently and adjusted his posture.
“Would you like to resume your lessons with me?” he asked.
You looked at him, your heart still thudding a little too hard. But this time, the words came easily, bright with something lighter than before.
“Yes,” you say quickly, with more eagerness than you meant to let on. “I—I’d like that.”
A flicker of something passed over Tech’s face. Maybe relief. He reached beside him and picked up the remaining flimsis from the small stack, selecting a fresh one before handing it over to you.
“Then let us continue,” he said, voice returning to that familiar cadence you knew; firm, but encouraging.
You straightened up and took the flimsi with both hands, your eyes scanning the first line.
“Wrecker… eats… all… the rations.”
Tech gave a soft snort. “That one may be based on an actual occurrence.”
You smiled and read on. The next was simple too, and the one after that. Occasionally, you stumbled. When you did, Tech didn’t chide—he simply leaned in, pointing softly to the word with a gloved fingertip, his voice low and patient.
“Try this syllable first—yes, exactly. Now the next.”
You did your best to focus on the letters but it was difficult. When he leaned that close, all cognitive thinking was out of the window. His shoulder brushed yours now and then and you could smell the faint metallic tang of his gear, mixed with the sharp scent of oil and a tinge of light sweat. However there was something else entirely him. Every time he moved nearer, your stomach fluttered like a startled flock of birds.
You were just getting into a good rhythm when you picked up the next flimsi from the pile. you could tell even before you started reading that this one was Omega’s doing.
Still, you gave it your best shot.
“Tech… has… fe-…”
You frowned, squinting at the next letters.
“Fe-el… fe-lin… no—”
Your voice trailed off as Tech suddenly reached forward and plucked the flimsi right from your hands, holding it out of view with alarmingly fast reflexes.
“That one,” he said stiffly, “was a mistake. Omega must have included it by error.”
You blinked at him. “I was just starting to get it. I saw both our names.”
He faltered. “Yes, well. She must have been… testing your recognition skills.”
Your frown deepened as you leaned slightly, trying to peer around his shoulder. “What did it say? I recognised ‘Tech’ and my name. But not the rest.”
He looked mildly horrified, holding the flimsi higher as if you might leap up and grab it. “It was… structurally inconsistent.”
“…With what?”
“With the lesson plan.”
You raised an eyebrow, slowly. “So it didn’t not say something?”
Tech cleared his throat, looking up at the sky as though he might find a convenient distraction there. “We should return to the prior reading. I believe you were progressing well.”
Your lips twitched. Despite the warm burn in your cheeks and the racing questions spinning in your head, a flicker of amusement bloomed in your chest. Because Tech was very clearly flustered.
And for once, you weren’t the only one stumbling over your words.
“I believe we should return to the lesson,” Tech resumes, voice slightly higher than usual as a flush creeps up his neck.
You bit your tongue on a grin, letting him have the diversion. For now.
“Fine. But I’ve been struggling with something.”
Tech adjusted his goggles, “Yes?”
“It’s the ‘oo’ sounds,” you said, fiddling with the stick in your hand. “Like… how do I know if it’s pronounced like in ‘book’ or ‘moon’? They look the same to me.”
“Ah,” Tech said, pleased to be back in familiar territory. “That is a very common challenge, even for native speakers of Basic. It is primarily about memorisation, but there are contextual cues…”
He gestured as he spoke, one hand drawing invisible words in the air, the other occasionally flicking toward the dusty alphabet he'd helped you draw earlier. His brow creased adorably in concentration, and it was then that you realised you’d stopped listening to the explanation. Completely.
You were watching him . Watching the way he talked, how his whole body became animated with his words.
It hit you all at once. That same warm flutter you’d felt during your very first lesson with him. When it was just you, and him, and a thousand ways he accidentally made your heart beat faster.
“Tech,” you cut in suddenly, blinking yourself back to focus. “What did Omega write?”
His hand froze mid-gesture. Slowly, his eyes widened behind his goggles. “I… do not believe that is relevant to the lesson.”
Your eyes narrowed with a teasing smirk. “That wasn’t a no.”
He shuffled slightly, edging away as if he was guilty of something.
That was all the confirmation you needed.
You lunged.
He yelped in a surprised sort of way as you dove over his lap, trying to reach the hidden flimsi. “This is not going to help with your literacy!” he protested, trying to fend you off with one arm as he reached behind him with the other.
“Oh, I think it might,” you laughed breathlessly, dodging his elbow and scrambling after the paper. “Consider it a very interactive learning experience!”
“I must protest—!” he began, but you’d already tangled yourself half across him, your fingers grazing the edge of the flimsi just before—
He rolled.
One quick movement and your world flipped, quite literally. Your back presses into the warm ground as he pinned you there. Tech hovered over you, one hand braced beside your head, the other knocking the flimsi just out of reach again.
You stilled.
He stilled.
Both of you froze in the silence that followed, hearts pounding. It wasn't from the mock wrestling, but from the fact that now Tech was so close. His goggles were slightly askew, and the wild fluster in his expression was undeniable.
Neither of you spoke. Not at first. Your hands were still tangled in the folds of his armour, his knee pressing into the dirt beside your hip, his weight above you holding you firmly in place.
“…This is also not helping with your literacy,” he said finally.
“I really didn’t mean to upset you,” he then speaks quietly, breath catching halfway through.
Your own voice was soft when you answered. “It’s okay. I’ve had two really good teachers.”
The wind picked up gently, brushing strands of hair across your face, and carrying with it the flimsis that had been scattered beside the log. You didn’t even notice them dancing away at first, neither of you willing to look anywhere else but at each other.
Your gaze broke from his however when a pale scrap fluttered to the ground just beside your hip, its scrawled ink catching your eye.
And you read it aloud before you could think twice.
“‘Tech has feelings… for…’” you read slowly, your breath catching, “f-for… y-you.”
Silence followed.
Tech didn’t speak.
Didn’t even correct your pronunciation.
Instead, his eyes dropped from yours, and you watched as the heat crept up his neck, blooming across his ears. He cleared his throat, the motion stiff and unconvincing. “That… appears to be the one Omega wrote.”
Your heart thudded. You didn’t know what to do at first or what to say. You had dreamed of hearing those words, but somehow reading them yourself felt like a different kind of victory.
Slowly, you reached for the hand he’d braced beside your head, your fingers brushing his. There was hesitation in your touch, and something in it made him glance up, brows drawn.
“I have feelings for you too,” you said softly, carried on a nervous breath.
He stared at you with those beautiful wide eyes, clearly stunned. “You… do?”
A warm laugh slipped out of you. “I do.”
And before you could say anything else, before you could even process the shift in his gaze, Tech slid an arm around your back and pulled you upright with unexpected, fluid strength.
You gasped as you landed squarely in his lap, eyes wide, your hands flying instinctively to his shoulders. “Tech!” you squeaked.
But his hands found your waist, firm but gentle, grounding you again.
He was impossibly close now. Goggles still a little wonky, breathing slightly elevated. “I believe,” he starts softly, “I no longer require you to read aloud whether I may kiss you.”
A grin tugged at your lips, heart hammering as your fingers brushed the curve of his cheek and then carefully fixing his goggles. “Well,” you murmured, barely more than a breath, “I don’t mind at all.”
The kiss met you halfway, tentative for a moment, then deepening with quiet certainty. His lips were soft, tasting of sunlight and stored-up longing, his hand moving to cradle the back of your neck like you were something rare, fragile and cherished.
And as the trees whispered overhead and a forgotten scrap of flimsi fluttered past your boots, all thoughts of lessons, of hesitation, of past hurt all melted away.
The lesson was over.
But something else had only just begun

Tags: @littlefeatherr @kaitou2417 @eyecandyeoz @jesseeka @theroguesully @ladykatakuri @arctrooper69 @padawancat97 @staycalmandhugaclone @ko-neko-san @echos-girlfriend @fiveshelmet @dangraccoon @plushymiku-blog @pb-jellybeans @nunanuggets @sleepycreativewriter @erellenora @zippingstars87 @ezras-left-thumb @the-rain-on-kamino @tentakelspektakel @stellarbit @tech-aficionado @grizabellasolo @therealnekomari @tech-depression-inventory @brynhildrmimi @greaser-wolf @kaminocasey @marvel-starwars-nerd @ladytano420 @ladyzirkonia @thesith @raevulsix @cw80831 @knightprincess @crosshairlovebot @imalovernotahater @sithstrings @whore4rex @imperialclaw801 @temple-elder @mysticalgalaxysalad @yunggoblin @photogirl894 @the-bad-batch-baroness @lulalovez
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Tech Tuesday: Curtis Everett

Summary: Your ex-boyfriend is a patient in the ICU where you work and he plays at your heartstrings.
A/N: Reader is female. No physical descriptors used.
Warnings: Abusive ex, Hospital setting. Please let me know if I missed any.
Previous
Tech Tuesday Masterlist

Chase had woken up and seen you. Whether he remembers you or not is another story. Right now he's still too weak to do much but lay there and go in and out of sleep with the all the machinery he's hooked up to. But he knows you're there, and that scares you.
Part of you knows you'll be okay. He doesn't hold sway over you anymore. You're not the naive girl you were when you first got together, thinking he was the bad boy with a good heart. That he only treated you badly in public to keep his reputation. That the sweetness he treated you with in private was proof he really cared about you.
You know better now.
You also know that men can be better than Chase. Well, you think they can. You know Curtis is, right? Or are you still just hoping he is?
You message Curtis saying you're not up for gaming tonight. He's quick to tell you that's okay and doesn't question why. Yet more evidence that Curtis is better than Chase. Chase questioned everything you did and made you feel like what you wanted was always less important than what he wanted. Curtis trusts you. More importantly, he respects you. He knows if you wanted to talk about it you would. It's not indifference, it's trust and respect. Right?
Okay, maybe Chase does still have some sway over you.

Curtis isn't gaming tonight. He's got too much nervous energy to sit still. Instead he ends up cleaning his entire apartment. He wants to be near his computer in case you need to talk. The frustration at not being able to just step in, and not being able to pull the plug on the machinery keeping Chase alive, is let out, bit by bit as he scrubs every inch of his place.
He has to hold back. He needs to prove to you that he can be trusted to simply have your back. He wants to protect you, but he must acknowledge and respect that you are strong in your own right. That you can fight your own battles. More importantly, that your boundaries are not stomped on.
Then he thinks of something. It's not much, but hopefully it'll help. Especially if he asks permission first.

That's odd, you think as you see the notification from Curtis. Usually he waits for me to say something.
Snowpiercer85: Can't sleep. Gonna go for a drive. Want me to bring you anything?
You feel yourself wanting to cry. He's offering help without forcing you to accept. And you know if you turned down the offer, he wouldn't make you feel guilty about it. He's not the type to hold that against you.
HeartMonitor3000: Will you let me pay you back? Snow: Sure.
Heart: You know that cafe, Mad Hatter's Tea? They have the most delectable red velvet macarons. Snow: How many do you want? Heart: I'll take what you can get me. They're open late for the college kids but they might be low on stock. Snow: I'll let you know when I've got the macarons. Heart: Thank you, Curtis. I really needed this.
You really could use the comfort food. The cafe is nowhere near your apartment and, even on your days off, you're either too tired or too busy to go there. You probably could've chosen something closer to the hospital for him to drive but, looking over at Chase's bed, you know you can use all the help you can get. And maybe, just maybe, letting Curtis help wasn't such a bad idea.

Curtis tells you he's arrived and you tell your boss you're taking your break. Curtis might be expecting just to drop off the cookies, but, hopefully, he won't mind talking with you for a bit.
He's out of his car by the time you get to the parking lot. He greets you with a smile, holding out a box with the Mad Hatter's Tea logo on it.
"Got their last batch," he informs you. He's not going to mention that he got a deal on them because he doesn't want you thinking about the price, about paying him back. His heart wrenches when he sees you. You look so tired, especially when you got close and finally let your shoulders relax.
You open the box and let out a little squeal at how many there are. "Did you try any?" you ask him. He shakes his head and you give a playful pout. "That's no good! You gotta try one, they're delicious!"
Curtis smiles and takes the one you offer him. His eyes widen as he eats it.
"I told you! Delicious!"
The rest of your break was spent talking and laughing with Curtis as you share stories and cookies. By the time you have to go back to work, you're feeling so much better that you give Curtis a big hug as thanks. You don't feel how his heart races at having you so close, but you do feel how firmly he holds you.
Back at the nurses' station, Vanessa tells you Chase woke up enough to write to her about if he wants or needs anything. He wrote your name.

Tagging @alicedopey; @delicatebarness; @ellethespaceunicorn; @icefrozendeadlyqueen; @jaqui-has-a-conspiracy-theory; @late-to-the-party-81; @lokislady82; @peaches1958; @peyton-warren @ronearoundblindly; @stellar-solar-flare; @thiquefunlover63
#tech tuesday#tech tuesday: curtis everett#curtis everett x reader#curtis everett x nurse!reader#curtis everett x female!reader#curtis everett x you
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TECH MOMENTS PT. 30
The Bad Batch S2 E14: Tipping Point
- Echo: “It’s heavily encrypted, but I know someone who can crack it.” My man’s skills are legendary.
- HE’S TEACHING OMEGA HOW TO FLY! ❤
- I love how Tech never gets nervous, but the second it’s Omega operating the ship, he’s a tense mess.
- “Up. Up. Up, Omega, pull up!”
- Omega: “The collision alarms haven’t gone off once.”
Tech: “Because it shorted out during your last lesson.”
- You know, sometimes arrogance would annoy me. But with him, it amuses me. Especially since I know it’s grounded, and I know it doesn’t make him think worse of others.
- “Now, that is not what it is called. But I rather like it.” My man. I love his expression and pose when he says this. ❤
- His screaming in terror is so funny to me. Only in this situation, though.
- “Much better.” ❤
- He smiles while Echo and Omega are talking over the comms. He’s really excited to see Echo again, too.
- I feel like Echo challenged Omega to that race just to have her mess with Tech. Typical sibling behavior.
- LOL the way he staggers as he walks out of the ship.
- He immediately offers his help with the encrypted data. It’s how he shows he cares, rather than a basic hello.
- I have to say it every time: Tech is such a beauty. ❤
- “Hunter, I decrypted the data. You need to get back to the ship.” He’s so concerned about what he found.
- “Previous transfer records recovered from the ship’s logs list other clone prisoners detained by the Advance Science Division… and Crosshair is one of them.” He looks so worried.
- He went back and checked their old comm channel to see if Crosshair said anything. (He knew that’s what his brother would do if ever in that situation.) I wonder if he did that often.
- “Plan 88. The Seeker. We are being targeted. I believe he is warning us.” He still believes in Crosshair after everything.
- When Hunter says that it could be a trap again, Tech does not look amused by the suggestion. Setting a trap is one thing, but if Crosshair is even potentially in danger, he can’t just ignore that.
#tech moments#tech tuesday#the bad batch#tbb#sw the bad batch#star wars tbb#bad batch#tbb tech#star wars#sw tbb#tech bad batch#tech tbb#bad batch tech
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My head fr
#star wars#the bad batch#tbb#bad batch#the clone wars#star wars the clone wars#the bad batch star wars#tcw tech#tech star wars#star wars tech#tech tuesday#tbb tech#tech tbb#tech bad batch#bad batch tech#the bad batch tech#tech the bad batch#richard grayson#nightwing#dick grayson#nightwing dc#dc nightwing#dc meme#tbb meme#dick Grayson dc#nightwing meme#dick grayson batman#dc comics#tbb tech tuesday#dc dick grayson
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Tech portrait #99
#the bad batch#tbb#tbb tech#tech tbb#the bad batch tech#clone trooper tech#clone force 99#star wars fanart#the bad batch fanart#tech lives#tech tuesday#a bit early but it’s Tuesday in Australia hehe#vimse art
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Tech is so cute Ɛ>







#the bad batch tech#tech bad batch#clone trooper tech#tech tuesday#tbb tech#tech#ct 9902#tbb#sw tbb#star wars
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Tech being Tech 👓
Quote sources below ⬇️
Hunter quote
Echo quote
Wrecker quote
Omega quote
Crosshair quote
Incorrect quotes are my favorite thing ever so here’s a big thank you to anyone who makes them 🫶 (I hope it’s okay I use them for art inspo haha i love you all 😭💕)
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He gave her wings and she’ll make him proud.
(The Tech Turn™️ is 100% going to be crucial for the Rebellion.)
#omega tbb#I am still very sad#And mad if I’m honest#scheduled post#omega bad batch#star wars the bad batch#the bad batch fanart#the bad batch#sw tbb#the bad batch art#star wars fanart#clone force 99#the bad batch omega#viv art#star wars tbb#the bad batch season 3#tech tuesday#tech lives forever#tech Tuesday is forever#tbb omega#bad batch omega#bad batch#sw bad batch#sw the bad batch#star wars bad batch#sw fanart#sw art#sw tbb s3#sw tbb season 3#sw tbb fanart
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HARDCASE LIVES!!!!!!!!!!!

Oh sweet, sensible Tech…. 😂
(Ya girl would love to hear everyone’s crazy theories about how our boy ‘Case survived!)
💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚
(Also, a VERY special thank you to @mythical-illustrator for inspiring this drawing of Hardcase with THIS beautiful post!)
(And as always thank you to my friend and creative partner @legacygirlingreen for all that she does!!)
💚Tag List💚
@legacygirlingreen @thora-sniper @sukithebean @thecoffeelorian @neyswxrld @somewhere-on-kamino @clonethirstingisreal @royallykt @morerandombullshit @burningfieldof-clover @tbnrpotato @keantha @returnofthepineapple @justanotherdikutsimp @antisocial-mariposa @techs-stitches @resistantecho @kimiheartblade @dezgate
#Leena the Green Girl#HARDCASE LIVES!!!#hardcase needs more love#hardcase fanart#tcw hardcase#clone trooper Hardcase#hardcase is my other favorite reg#Hardcase my beloved#tech tuesday#tbb tech tuesday#tbb tech#star wars#star wars fan art#Star Wars au#star wars multiverse#the bad batch au#the bad batch#jesse clone wars#arc trooper jesse#clone wars art#the bad batch fan art#PabuVerse#pabu au#the bad batch happy on pabu#oc Leena#the clone wars au#the clone wars#i love hardcase so much#bad batch#clones
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⚡ Happy Tech Tuesday ⚡
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Perfectly Plucked
🫧 Pairings: Tech X Female!Reader
🫧 word count: 3.2k

Plot: Omega mentions to Tech that you love flowers, and luckily enough for him, you love him also.
Warnings: Fluff, safe for work, female reader (she/her), idiots in love, first kiss, nervous Tech.
A/N: it’s been a while since I wrote something cute with my darling, Tech 🩵
“So, what’s the plan?”
Omega’s voice is filled with mischief as she sways from side to side in the co-pilot’s seat, her eyes locked on Tech.
Tech doesn’t immediately respond. His fingers tapped lightly over the datapad, scanning through the incoming reports. But when Omega’s voice cut through the steady hum of the Marauder, his eyes lifted briefly, landing on her as she swayed back and forth in the co-pilot's seat. “Meaning?”
Omega leans forward, her grin widening as she tilts her head toward the viewport, pointing with her chin toward the object of their conversation. “You know... her,” she says in a teasing tone, her eyes sparkling with barely contained excitement. “Are you going to ask her out?”
Tech’s expression faltered for a split second—his eyes widened, just enough to give him away—before he quickly averted his gaze, pretending to focus on the datapad once more. “I’m not sure what you mean.”
“Oh, you definitely do. We’ve alll seen how you look at her. It’s pretty obvious.” Omega replies, rolling her eyes dramatically before jumping to her feet.
“I do not ‘look’ at her.” Tech mutters, his tone defensive. “I simply observe. That is all.”
Omega arches an eyebrow, a knowing smirk tugging at her lips. “Sure, ‘observe.’”
She pauses, tapping her chin thoughtfully as she begins to pace the cockpit.. “You could always make her something. You know, something nice and romantic! A gadget of some kind.” Then she frowns. “Although that doesn’t scream romantic.”
Tech looks up with a sigh. “Of course they are not. They are tools for beneficial use. And I do not believe she requires anything like that.”
Omega halts, then leans against the control panel, “Okay, maybe not gadgets,” she says, “But flowers might work. People give flowers all the time as romantic gestures.”
Tech blinks, his mind racing as he processes the suggestion. “Flowers?” His voice carries a hint of skepticism. “Why would she need flowers? They have no functional use. I would know if she had an interest in... what was it she said, ‘botanical remedies’?” He gives a small, self-assured smirk, as though this topic was already discussed between the two of them. “She tends to consult me on those matters.”
Omega rolls her eyes once but grins, “It’s not about the practical use, Tech. It’s about the gesture. Besides, she loves flowers.”
Tech’s brow furrows in thought. He glances over at you through the viewport, seeing you sitting outside the Marauder and methodically cleaning and refurbishing your armour.
His mind memorises Omega’s point, you were interested in flowers or any fauna.
Omega watches his expression change, a gleam of victory in her eyes. “You should really pay attention when she watches those holo-romcoms. You’d see how much she likes the idea of flowers.”
Tech’s fingers tap thoughtfully against his datapad, but his attention has clearly shifted. “I suppose that is true,” he murmurs, as though the idea of flowers suddenly isn’t so far-fetched after all.
Omega, sensing her triumph, beams. “So you’ll do it then? You’ll get her flowers?”
“No,” Tech answers quickly, looking back at his datapad with feigned disinterest. “I do not appreciate your attempts to manipulate me into admitting feelings. Again.”
She chuckles, remembering the long conversation she had chewed his ear off about flying being a ‘feeling’.
“So you do admit it?”
Tech shoots her a pointed look, his tone sharpening just a little. “Omega.”
She raises her hands in mock surrender, backing away with exaggerated slowness. “Alright, alright,” she sings. “But I know she would appreciate it. You just have to admit it.”
Tech huffs, his lips pressing into a thin line. He watches you for a moment longer, his mind still running through the possibility, before he mutters under his breath, “I’ll consider it.”
Omega’s eyes twinkle, her work clearly done. “Perfect.”
The warm, refreshing breeze threaded through your hair as you leaned back against the crate, letting yourself savor the simple pleasure of open air. Sure, it wasn’t exactly a luxurious beach chair on a pristine coast like you had been craving, instead it was a beat-up crate on an overgrown forest floor. Though after days cooped up inside the Marauder, it felt like paradise. Even if the company inside was great. More than great, really.
Your mind wandered, inevitably drawn to a certain member of the squad. You caught yourself smiling, and immediately cringed, pressing a hand over your face.
"Why do feelings suck?" you muttered under your breath, shaking your head at yourself.
After a few minutes, you sat up and surveyed your armour with a satisfied smile. You had to admit, you were really good at keeping it looking brand new. Gathering the pieces in your arms, you headed back toward the ship, still riding the lazy warmth of the afternoon.
You were halfway up the gangplank, not paying attention, when you collided with something - someone - solid. You grunted, stumbling back as a few pieces of your armour clattered to the floor.
“Oh stars, sorry, Tech!” you blurted out as you realised what happened, rubbing your forehead where you'd bumped it against him.
"Not to worry, I was not looking where I was going either," he said smoothly, though there was a softness to his voice that made your cheeks warm. Stars, he really got to you.
You quickly crouch to gather up the pieces of your armour, and Tech mirrors your movements without hesitation. His gloves brush against your fingers as you both reach for the same piece, and for a heartbeat, neither of you move. The slightest spark shoots up your arm, and judging by the way Tech’s hand stiffens just a fraction, you pondered wishfully if he felt it too.
True to form however, neither of you say anything about it. You clear your throat and pull your hand back, allowing him to pick up the last piece.
Once everything’s collected, Tech takes it and puts your armour in the Marauder. You move to step around him, but Tech moves at the same time. You both shuffle right. Then both to the left. You stifle a laugh, glancing up at him helplessly as you try again — and again — failing miserably to find your way past.
“We look ridiculous,” you mutter, half-laughing as you impulsively reach out and grab his shoulders to steady him and yourself.
His body goes stiff beneath your touch, as though uncertain what to do, and his adorable wide eyes blink down at you behind his goggles.
“Hold still,” you say through a grin, guiding him gently aside. He lets you manoeuvre him into place without a word, though you hear him clear his throat a little.
You finally step through the doorway into the ship, peeking back at him. “What were you up to, anyway?” you ask casually, hands on your hips
Normally, Tech would answer any question with straightforward precision, but today... today he falters. “I, ah... was merely seeking... additional reference material. For research purposes.” His voice, usually so confident and clipped, wavers strangely. It’s so unlike him that you tilt your head in suspicion, narrowing your eyes in a playful squint.
“Oh?” you say slowly, intrigued. “What kind of research?”
His mouth opens — and then promptly shuts again. He adjusts his goggles unnecessarily, his hands fidgeting at the edges of his belt. Definitely suspicious.
Your curiosity only grows. “Well, if you need help,” you offer lightly, “I’d be happy to join you. I wouldn’t mind stretching my legs.” But then you realise, “Actually, I don’t want to leave Omega on her own-”
You barely finish speaking when a voice pipes up right behind you, startling you.
“I can look after myself, you know,” Omega says, clearly having been eavesdropping the entire time. She crosses her arms proudly. “I’m not a little kid anymore.”
You and Tech both turn toward her. “Not going to start the ship up and fly away without us, right?” You tease.
“Well I can’t promise that” Omega teases, looking between the two of you. “But I’ll do my best to resist.”
“Alright then,” You nod, allowing her to stay behind but then look to Tech to get his verdict.
“I suppose we will not be long.”
“Great!” Omega chimes, “You two can enjoy your date - uh, I mean…”
You stare at her, wide-eyed and mortified at her slip (if it even was) of her tongue.
Tech’s ears burn under his goggles, shooting her a look that you don’t see. He straightens his posture, clearing his throat.
Soon after giving Omega one last warning not to do anything disastrous on your outing, you fall into step beside Tech as he leads the way off the ship.
He doesn't say much at first and you don't push about why he was oddly quiet. You’re quite content for a moment to simply walk through the warm, open air and the forest ahead looks inviting. And being with Tech was such an added bonus.
“So, what exactly are we doing?” you ask after a short while, glancing over at him. “You never did tell me what kind of research this was.”
He pushes his goggles up his nose, fingers twitching on a small device in his hand. “It is a standard environmental survey,” he says quickly, “Nothing particularly noteworthy.”
You squint at him, reading him like a book. “You’re a terrible liar, Tech.”
“I am not lying,” he says, his tone stiff. “I am merely withholding certain specifics for operational efficiency.”
You bite back a smirk but let it go, following him deeper into the trees.
The forest itself hums with quiet life around you. The soft chirping from unseen creatures and the faint trickle of a nearby stream was tranquil. The trees tower overhead, their bark a deep reddish-brown, had wide canopies of green and gold leaves that flutter gently in the breeze.
If Pabu didn’t exist, you would actually consider having a home here.
After a few more minutes of walking, you watch as Tech slows and veers off the beaten path. He stopped at the edge of a rocky clearing and looked over a bed of wildflowers that had tiny blossoms in vivid colours that sway.
He activates the device in his grasp with a quiet beep and starts scanning the flowers.
You lean against a large boulder nearby, resting your chin on your arms as you watch him work. His brows are knitted in focused concentration, a tiny crease forming above his nose.
Honestly? Adorable.
“You’re really invested in this ‘environmental survey,’ huh?” you tease lightly, smiling.
He doesn’t glance up. Instead, he carefully kneels and inspects a cluster of bright yellow blooms. He selects one, pulls a small pair of pliers from his utility belt, and snips the stem.
“What’s that one?” you ask whilst he holds the flower delicately between his gloved fingers.
He looks up at you, and there's something almost shy in the way he offers the information. “It is a part of the aurelia family, a plant known for its versatile healing properties," he explains. "It is particularly effective in creating salves for minor abrasions, something you once mentioned a preference for, if I recall correctly.”
You blink, caught off-guard by the thoughtfulness that he remembered a conversation you had with him quite a while ago now.
Before you can find the right words, he steps closer and offers the flower to you. “I would like you to look after it,” he says simply, placing it carefully into your hand quite quickly and looking away.
You cradle the delicate bloom as if it were made of glass. “I’ll guard it with my life,” you say with a mock-seriousness, but your heart thumps a little faster all the same.
Tech merely nods, satisfied, and turns to continue walking. You follow behind, hand still clutching the bright flower like it was something far more precious than just a plant. Well, to you it was anyway. You loved flowers.
You walk in easy silence for a while, the forest thickening around you as the path narrows.
You're still cradling the yellow flower carefully in your hand when you notice Tech slow again, his scanner flickering softly. He kneels by another patch of blooms — this time a cluster of small, delicate flowers in a soft shade of your favorite colour. You watch as Tech examines them, but instead of scanning them like before, he hesitates. His hand hovers for a moment before he plucks one gently between his fingers, standing up and turning toward you.
Without a word, he steps close, the flower dangling loosely in his grasp. His expression is unreadable behind his goggles, but there’s something almost... tentative about his posture.
You tilt your head, curious. “What’s that one?” you ask, smiling.
Tech visibly stiffens. His mouth opens, but whatever explanation he had seems to falter halfway through forming. “It does not possess any notable medicinal properties,” he admits, adjusting his grip on the flower. “It is... actually scientifically insignificant.”
You blink at him, confused. “Then why did you want me to hold it?”
For a second you swear you see Tech’s composure crack. He shifts awkwardly, looking anywhere but at you. “I considered it might be useful for... cross-referencing petal structure... for research purposes,” he says, far too quickly and far too technically to the point it sounded weird.
You narrow your eyes in mock suspicion, catching on that there’s definitely more he’s not saying. “Uh-huh. Sure,” you say, voice light but you can’t ignore that your heart beats a little faster. Did he want to give it to you… because he wanted to?
He seems to be silently warring with himself. His fingers twitch like he’s about to hand you the flower after all but at the last second, he stops.
Without another word, Tech then turns and — in a move so uncharacteristically flustered it makes you bite back a laugh — he tosses the little flower into the underbrush as he walks away.
You stare after him, baffled and amused in equal measur. Definitely suspicious.
Tech continues gathering flowers as you both wander through the forest, stopping here and there to snip a stem or examine a petal with meticulous care. You gave up asking about each one after the third or fourth as it became obvious he was just handing them to you without much explanation.
Instead, you quietly let him do it, your arms gradually filling with an array of blossoms: soft yellows, rich blues, gentle lilacs, vivid reds. The bundle was chaotic and beautiful.
After a while, Tech finally straightens and looks around the clearing with a satisfied nod. “This will suffice,” he announces.
You stop beside him, brushing your fingertips over the petals lightly, inhaling the gentle, sweet scent. “You picked a really pretty bunch for your research,” you admit softly, smiling over the bouquet at him.
Tech adjusts his goggles with a slight nervous twitch to the motion. “Yes, well...” he starts, voice a little stiffer than usual. “In truth, I would prefer you to keep them.”
You blink, surprised, lowering the flowers slightly to peer at him more clearly. “Keep them?”
He shifts on his feet, clearly uncomfortable but forcing himself to explain. “Omega mentioned that you appreciated flowers. She also suggested that they were considered a... romantic gesture. More appropriate than, say, a customised multitool.” He clears his throat, rapidly gaining momentum as he continues rambling.
“You wanted to get me flowers?” you interrupt softly, the words slipping out before you can stop them.
Tech freezes mid-sentence of his tangent. His mouth opens and closes once — then he nods, sharply, as if resigning himself to it. “Yes. That was the intended outcome.”
Your cheeks burn so hot you swear Tech could probably feel it. You hug the messy bouquet a little tighter to your chest, heart thudding so hard it drowns out the hum of the forest around you.
Tech, seemingly unaware of just how much he’s affecting you, blunders on, still trying to justify himself as if he really needed to. “Initially, Omega suggested a handcrafted gadget. However, after observing flora within the holo-romcoms you frequently view, I concluded that a floral gift might have a statistically higher probability of being well-received, despite its lack of practicality—”
You’re barely listening anymore. You’re too busy staring at the ridiculous, wonderful bouquet in your hands, and the man who meticulously gathered every single stem just to give them to you.
“So... there was no research,” you say, your voice catching slightly.
Tech hesitates, then tilts his head slightly, almost sheepish. “No, not exactly,” he admits.
You bite your lip, trying and failing to hide the grin spreading across your face.
Thinking for a split second, you pull a small flower from the messy bundle — a delicate little thing with soft pink petals — and step toward him. Tech watches you with a sort of curious stillness, almost like he’s bracing for whatever strange human interaction he’s about to experience for the first time. A soft tenderness he yearned for you.
Carefully, you tuck the flower into the side of his goggle band, the bright bloom resting just above his ear. You step back to admire your handiwork, smiling. “There,” you say lightly, “now you look even cuter.”
Tech blinks, his hand automatically coming up to touch the flower like he’s not sure it’s really there. He tilts his head, studying you as a small, almost hesitant smile curling at the edges of his mouth.
“That would suggest that you found me ‘cute’ beforehand.” He exhales through a deep breath he didn’t know he was holding.
You meet his gaze, feeling daring. “Maybe,” you say coyly with a shrug, the word slipping out in a playful lilt.
Something shifts between you. Tech’s smile lingers, but it’s gentler now. His hand drops back to his side, but he takes a small step closer, close enough that you can smell the faint, clean scent of him — old leather, warm metal and tools, and something sharper underneath, something just him.
Your heart thuds painfully against your ribs.
Neither of you speaks. The forest seems to go quiet, the golden leaves above stilling like even the world around you doesn’t want to interrupt.
Slowly, carefully, Tech raises his hand, fingertips brushing against your arm like a silent question. You don’t pull away. If anything, you lean closer, your bouquet pressed tight to your chest like it’s the only thing keeping you anchored.
“Would it... be acceptable,” he says, voice almost a whisper now, “if I—?”
You don’t even let him finish. You nod, once, fast and certain.
The distance closes naturally. His gloved hand slides up, cupping your cheek with a reverence that makes your breath hitch. You tilt into him instinctively, and when he finally, finally leans in, his kiss is as careful and deliberate as everything else he does. A featherlight brush of lips at first, testing the waters, before deepening ever so slightly as he feels you melt against him.
It’s sweet, and a little clumsy, and absolutely perfect.
When you finally pull away, you’re both smiling genuine smiles that don’t need words to explain.
The flower you tucked behind his goggles is a little crooked now, and somehow, that just makes it even better.
🫧 Masterlist
Tags: @tech-aficionado @grizabellasolo @therealnekomari @tech-depression-inventory @brynhildrmimi @greaser-wolf @kaminocasey @marvel-starwars-nerd @ladytano420 @ladyzirkonia @thesith @raevulsix @cw80831 @knightprincess @crosshairlovebot t @littlefeatherr @kaitou2417 @eyecandyeoz z @jesseeka @theroguesully @ladykatakuri @arctrooper69 @padawancat97 @staycalmandhugaclone @ko-neko-san @echos-girlfriend @fiveshelmet @dangraccoon @plushymiku-blog @pb-jellybeans @nunanuggets @sleepycreativewriter @erellenora @zippingstars87 7 @ezras-left-thumb @the-rain-on-kamino @tentakelspektakel l @stellarbit @imalovernotahater @sithstrings @whore4rex @imperialclaw801 @temple-elder @the-bad-batch-baroness @mysticalgalaxysalad @yunggoblin @photogirl894 @lulalovez
#the bad batch#tech#late#tech Tuesday#tech x reader#tbb tech#tbb tech x reader#bad batch tech#tech the bad batch#tech the bad batch x reader#nahoney22 writes#tbb#bad batch
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Awwww it was adorable. The kids were so cute, celebrating their father by spoiling him and of course, Sunshine did too. They make such a lovely family.
And Ransom 🥹my baby boy is rewarding the only positive father figure he knows. I want o hug him so much.
Sorry I am only seeing this now. I missed so much during my work limbo.
How do The Twins celebrate Father’s Day with Jake?
It was such a fun filled day for the entire family, just how Jake likes it!
When Sunshine got up she told him to go back to sleep or at least pretend he was asleep when he heard the excited "whispers" of The Twins. He smiled and snuggled into bed, hugging Sunshine's pillow.
He must've fallen back asleep because next thing he knows, Leia is hopping on the bed, "Happy Dada's Day!!" He smiles groggily as Luke lays on his chest to hug him with a "is your day, Dada!"
Jake playfully grabs the two in a big hug, making them both squeal with laughter.
The Twins urge him to get out of bed because "we made bweakfast! Mama taught us how ta make pancakes!"
"You two work with Mama? I know it'll be the best breakfast ever!" he smiles at them, making Luke beam with happiness while Leia giggles and happy-stomps her feet.
The breakfast of chocolate chip pancakes with a side of gummy worms, courtesy of The Twins, was delectable. Sunshine tells him all the ways they "helped" and Jake makes sure to "ooo" and "ahh" appropriately, enjoying every second of it.
After that came the gifts. Cards from The Twins and a Lego set from Sunshine. "They're perfect," he says, tearing up.
The day was spent alternating between playing video games together and watching Jake's favorite (age appropriate) movies.
🥞🥞🥞🥞🥞🥞🥞🥞🥞🥞
At work the following Monday, Jake gets a surprise visit from Ransom.
"I saw Father's Day was yesterday," he starts. "Try not to make a big deal of it, but I made you a little something. Because you're a good dad and that's... that's something to be rewarded."
Ransom sets down a little handmade "Dice Jail" made from glued together wooden pieces.
"I love it!" Jake smiles, eyes tearing up.
"I'm gonna get out of here before you try to hug me," Ransom mumbles.
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Social media exchange between Tech and Omega.
#I'm still salty we never got a proper hug between the two of them#tech and omega#star wars the bad batch#clone force 99#sw tbb#star wars memes#tbb tech#bad batch tech#tbb omega#omega bad batch#clone trooper tech#tech the bad batch#omega the bad batch#ct 9902#tech tuesday
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Credits to @annarchist7567 on pinterest (tumblr account tagged)
#star wars#the bad batch#tbb#bad batch#the bad batch star wars#the clone wars#star wars the clone wars#the bad batch tech#tech is alive#tech bad batch#tech tuesday#tech tbb#tbb tech#tech#bad batch tech#tbb meme
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Burrito Tech
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