#its me and my inability to sit down and get things done without undergoing a bunch of useless side quests in between
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I need to start on this critique or I will explode.
#its me and my inability to sit down and get things done without undergoing a bunch of useless side quests in between#i just wanna draw. goshdarnit all#the sidequest was me watching a video essay on PB from adventure time TT#and opening tumblr a bunch#and chatting up kou#DANGIT
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Chapter 11
Characters: Fox/Mouse (reader), appearances from Hound, Thire, Rule, Mace Windu, Yoda, and Padmé Amidala.
Warning: angst (y’all want me to hirt you right?)
A/N: so get ready to read nearly 6000 words of Fox’s self loathing, the CG being supportive vod, Jedi being Jedi, and Mouse being hurt yet again.
Current
The choices had been fresh ink or gut-rot barracks hooch. Fox chose the ink.
He’s down in the levels, he can’t remember which one exactly, far enough from prying eyes and questioning vod, that was all that had really mattered. The artist, a pantoran with a nice portfolio, was busy laying out the design. He can feel the cool transfer as it’s pressed over his heart and he drags in a ragged breath. This was penance. This was the closure he needed. He’d messed up. For two weeks he’d messed up and now any chance he had was gone along with her.
“You wanna talk about it, man?” The tattoo artist asks as he peels away the flimsy leaving the outline on his skin.
“No”
Two weeks earlier
Fox hates the sterile smell of the hospital, the beige walls, the gleaming metal all around. It reminds him of Kamino and a medbay he’d spent more than enough time in. He was never quite as strong or quite as fast as the other CCs in his batch, men that would go on to bear monikers like Gree and Bly and Wolffe. He made up for it in other ways. His mind was sharp, quick to come to a plan of action, he could think on his feet.
He remembers Sargent Kal coming into the CC classroom one day for a talk on urban combat- something that had piqued CC-1010’s interest from the word go- and how by the end of the lesson he’d ended up the star of the day. His observations as they’d talked through scenarios had left Kal remarking that he was “Sly as a Fox” and that the Triple Zero would be a good place for the likes of him. He was only the second in his batch to earn a name and he wore it around like a badge of honor.
Now he didn’t feel so honorable or so sly. He felt a lot of other things though. The psych droid, a loathsome device of he'd ever seen one, had talked him through what had happened in the Supreme Chancellor’s suite. It had questioned him over and over, maybe expecting the answers to change, about what his part in the assassination of Sheev Palpatine had been. He was tired. He wanted to wrap himself around his cyar’ika and pretend the whole day had been a nightmare.
That was impossible, she was somewhere else in the hospital being treated, shoved into a bacta tank. It had only been Rex’s firm voice that had convinced Fox to let the medic’s anywhere near her. When he’d let them take her limp body away from him-
Fierfek.
The handprint- a bloody partial across the left side of his breastplate, was still there.
“Commander Fox” a familiar voice cuts through the silent world of the room“ Much to think about you have“
He recognizes the Jedi Master, Yoda, immediately. There was no one else the ancient green Jedi could be mistaken for.
“I prefer to not“ being around a force wielder was not high on Fox’s current list of things to do.
“Such Is life”
“With all due respect sir,” he can hear the petulance in his own voice but he has neither the energy nor will to rein it in “I didn’t ask for this life.”
“But given to you it was, nonetheless. Choices you must make with what to do with it.“
Fox is quiet and the small Jedi Master matches it until the door opens again and General Windu joins the pair. Fox meets his gaze and the Jedi nods solemnly.
“Much discussion Master Windu and I have had these last few hours-“
“So it’s back to Kamino then? Reconditioning or Termination?” Fox can’t hide the bitterness in his voice. He doesn’t want to. He wants the world -or at least the two Jedi in the room- to see his pain. To feel it like he was.
Yoda sighs and moves to him, walking stick clicking in time with his steps. He hops up on the cold metal table next to Fox in a way that makes Fox think that the walking stick was not really necessary. He fights the urge to move away.
“A great disservice has been done to you, Commander. No, Kamino is not where you belong, deserve punishment you do not.”
The words burn. Fox is trapped between relief and a slow simmering rage, one that demands he be punished for his inability to protect those most vulnerable. First Fives. Now Mouse. He failed because he was weak-
“Stop” General Windu’s voice is firm. The look on Fox’s face must read pure terror because the Jedi huffs softly, “I don’t need to see inside your head to know what you're thinking. It’s all over your face. Do you know the kind of power Sidious possessed? To fight off that kind of insinuation would have been nearly impossible and that was before the chip-“
“The chip?” Fox attempts to rise to his feet but three green fingers press down on his arm. He looks down at the tired, ancient face of the Jedi Master and sits back down. “What of the chip? What has it got to do in all of this?”
The answer is simple. Everything.
Fox sits in cold shock as the Jedi describe to him what they’d learned of Palpatine’s- no, Sidious’ plans for the clone army. He stops them once to go to the bathroom and vomit. It wasn’t just Tup and Fives and him. It was all his vode. The entire clone army programmed to turn on their leaders, their friends with the utterance of a single phrase. He thinks of the hints Bly had made about his Jedi when they’d last spoken.
For a moment it’s more than he can fathom, and he holds a hand up for quiet. The Jedi allow it. He gives himself a minute, just one, before he pulls himself together, before he sits up straight and pushes the anguish, hurt, and the dirty feelings deep down.
“What now?” The implications of what has happened are finally becoming clear “The Republic can’t know the truth. There’ll be chaos in the streets. They’ll turn against the clones entirely” Fox worries more for his brothers than ever before. If the citizens knew…
“Correct you are, Commander” Yoda agrees..
“It needs to stay under wraps. The only people that will ever know it was anything other than an sudden death by natural causes will be us and the others that were in that room. Skywalker, Captain Rex, and-“
“Don’t say her name” it comes out as a growl, “leave her out of this.”
“There she was, Commander. Secrets she must learn to keep.”
Fox’s nails bite into the palms of his hands, “you won’t-“ he can’t bring himself to say the words.
“We will not force thoughts into her head.” Mace clarifies. “From what I’ve heard of her I think she’ll understand our reasoning for secrecy. Her injuries will be said to come from a mugging. You’ll fill out the report. Wrong place wrong time”
Wasn’t that the truth.
Fox nods slowly, “and what of my brothers?”
“Come out the chips must.” Fox flinches when a green finger taps at his temple, “but uncomplicated and quick it is.”
“We will let it be known that the chips are faulty and to continue to use them puts the clones in danger of having unforeseen medical problems.” Mace’s eyes narrow as Fox scoffs. He raises a brow challengingly, “do you think they’d rather know that they were all ticking timebombs? That at any moment they’d be triggered into mindless killers? Pawns?”
A tense moment passes with the two men glaring at one another. Of course Fox doesn’t think that would be any better.
“We’ll begin rotating troops through the nearest medical units capable of removal immediately.” Mace explains. “We can have the entire Coruscant Guard done by the end of the week and it appears with minimal down time. A day, tops.” He explains.
A quick nod is all the acknowledgement Fox can muster. He doesn’t like the idea of keeping the Guard in the dark and he hates having them undergo any medical procedure even more. He wasn’t the only clone who had lingering emotions when it came to the medbay, not by a long shot.
“I’ll go first.”
The Jedi at his side makes an agreeable hum. General Windu nods.
“As I would expect a good leader to do.”
Fox isn’t sure how much he buys into their approval.
13 days earlier
The official story was that Supreme Chancellor Sheev Palpatine had succumbed to a sudden illness. The holonews was ablaze with stories: from the official release to the tabloid fodder. Fellow politicians waxed poetic on him as a man and a leader, someone who stepped forward when the Republic was in its darkest hour to take control of the chaos.
It was said his last words were, “and sorry I couldn’t give more for my people and the galaxy.”
If Fox’s eyes rolled any harder he was sure they’d fly from his head and ping around in his bucket. Sidious was dead. He didn’t deserve the adoration of billions or the high honors of his burial. He was a hu’tuun. The skanah was better suited as feed for the carrion birds than the marble burial chamber he’s laid to rest in with military honors provided by clones he’d have used as weapons against the very Republic they swore to protect.
10 days earlier
Four days without Mouse and Fox feels twitchy. It’s been over a year since he’s gone more than two days without laying eyes on her. Knowing that she was recently released from the bacta tank doesn’t make it any easier. He’d not wanted to see her floating in the tank for a plethora of reasons, the least of which was his own guilt. That didn’t stop him from setting up a guard rotation at her door as soon as he was cleared to return to duty. It also didn’t stop him from demanding regular updates on her care from the kits he was setting up at her room.
Ryk had been present when she’d been taken out of the tank and said she’d seemed in good spirits as she’d slowly come too.
Wren had gently indicated that she’d love some company while she was on bed rest.
Rule had given him a look that screamed, ‘don’t be a scum sucking piece of nerf fodder.’ As he’d explained that Mous’ika had been asking for him.
She’d been asking for him. Even after everything she wanted to see him.
And he couldn’t do it.
He’d made his way twice to the nurses station before turning and making an excuse to leave.
He couldn’t look at her. Sidious’ words still swirled in his head. even though General Yoda had reassured him that he was no longer under the sway of the Sith, the thoughts still lingered.
You were supposed to use her to fuck your baser urges out.
She’s using you to obtain a foothold in the guard.
She’s fooled you all.
The underlying message was unmistakable.
Why would anyone choose to care for a clone?
Fox almost wishes the headaches would return so he could focus on the pain in his head vs. that dull empty ache in his chest, a black hole behind his rib cage, but he hasn’t had one since both the Sith Lord and the chip were removed from his life.
9 days earlier
Bail Organa is voted into the Chancellorship by an overwhelming number of his peers.
It’s the best choice, as far as Fox is concerned. With Senator Amidala announcing a leave of absence to give birth to the best guarded secret since the clone army, it’s the only choice Fox finds acceptable.
Not like anyone would ask his opinion.
Organa is a good man, even if he is a politician. He’s only ever looked out for the Republic, never given in to self indulgent whims, never taken more than he deserved.
Fox touches the fresh scar on the right side of his head gently as Holonet News continues to replay the new Chancellor's inauguration from earlier. Barely more than a week and everything has changed.
General Windu was correct, medical had been able to get through the entire guard in rapid fire. All of his men were sporting matching scars, many were more than a little curious as to the actual reason their chips had been removed. He’s both insanely proud and horribly frustrated at the theories being bandied about. Some far too close for comfort.
They can never know. Nobody can ever know.
But somehow Bail Organa knows.
He’s only had one meeting, early this morning before the inauguration, in private with the new Chancellor but he’d alluded to things that left Fox speechless. He’d known Bail to have friends in high places, but he hadn’t realized how high.
“Think he’ll do better than the last one?”
Thire hovers in the doorway, unmoving until Fox inclines his head toward the open seat across his desktop.
“Can’t be any worse.” There’s no humor in his tone but Thire huffs out a quiet laugh.
There’s a lag in the conversation, not like one has truly begun, and Fox takes a breath before setting down his datapad and flicking the holo off. “How long have we known one another?” He asks looking up at his lieutenant.
“Long enough.”
“So, you and I both know that you're here for something else and It's not just to make quips about the new Alor.”
“I suppose that’s true” Thire’s face gives nothing away. Fox liked that about the shock trooper. He was reserved, yes, but also pragmatic. A problem solver, not ruled by his emotions. Which was all well and good but something about the way he’s staring makes Fox feel like he’s the problem needing solving.
“Spit it out.”
“Go see her.”
Fox raises a brow in his vod’s direction. “Is that an order”
“Respectfully sir” the corner of Thire’s mouth quirks almost imperceptibly before it falls away.
The little shit.
In reality, Fox had known this one going to come from one of his men. He’d expected Rule or Hound, the more brash and aggressive boys, to be the ones but Thire is not a complete shock. He’d never seemed particularly close to Mouse but the lieutenant did play things close to the chest.
“She had a nightmare last night while I was on watch. Woke up crying your name.”
Inside Fox crumbles. No amount of talking to a psych droid was going to fix that feeling. No amount of time would make him feel ok about what he’d allowed to happen to the woman he loved. Thire continues.
“A clone's lot is not much. They decant us. They train us. They ship us out to fight in their war. We live, maybe. We die, more likely. Nothing is given to us.” Thire runs a hand over his head, fingers scratching at the crown. “Sometimes though, a di’kut like you gets a break. That woman in that bed cried in my arms. Talked to me like I was you for over an hour and I let her. You know why?”
Fox has to unclench his jaw, work past the jealous ache rising up in his chest to respond, “why?”
“Because it’s the closest I’ll ever have to feeling that kind of emotion. I’m not ashamed to say I pulled your girl into my lap, held her close and said soft things I didn’t even know I knew into her pretty hair until she calmed down. I was happy to pretend to be your atin’shebs but you know what the real kicker is, Vod?”
Fox’s hands are like vice grips on the edge of his seat, knuckles pale white as a shinies armor. The thought of Mouse hurting is one thing, but to have someone else be the one to comfort her? It tears at him. “What?” He asks through gritted teeth.
“When she calms down she says, “I know you're not him. Thank you for letting me pretend for a minute”.
7 days earlier
He pretends like he doesn’t know where he’s going. Like talking to the kriffing psych droid really had him so out of sorts he didn’t realize he was getting on a turbo lift and heading up three flights after his appointment.
He tries to act like he doesn’t know his feet are carrying him to the room with the familiar red and white sentinel outside the door.
Rule quirks his helmet before snapping to attention.
“Commander Fox, sir?”
“At ease Sargent.” It's late, well past visiting hours but the few sentient nurses and the droids assisting them make no move to rush him along. Perks of the armor.
Rule relaxes and glances through the small transparisteel window on the door behind him before turning back.
“She just had some medicine.” He explains, “pain was getting pretty bad again.”
Fox’s bucket hides his cringe, allowing him to outwardly remain impassive and aloof, his voice even as he asks simple questions about visitors and any possible issues arising.
“No problems here sir. I think I heard her Doc say something about discharge tomorrow. She’s doing ok” what isn’t said hangs in the air.
She’d be doing better if you were with her
“That’s good. That’s good” Fox agrees, readily avoiding the things left unspoken. “Have you been relieved for dinner?”
“I have a ration bar in my pack sir.”
“Do I need to say it?”
The sunny tone of Rule’s voice tells him everything he needs to know. He can imagine the shit eating grin that accompanies it. “I’m not entirely sure what you mean, sir?”
A quick glance up and down the hall shows nothing but gleaming white tile. No staff. No visitors. No one but Rule to bear witness to his moment of weakness.
“Take the night off Sargent. I’ll cover the watch.”
He stares at the emotionless visor for a beat waiting for his kit to argue, for him to make a smart comment.
It doesn’t happen.
Rule rolls his shoulders, stretching slightly as he makes his move past Fox. At the last second, Rule's hand shoots out, resting over Fox’s vambrace. The moment lingers without either speaking until Rule gently pulls the Commander in and knocks his bucket against Fox’s, pressing his forehead to his Commander’s.
Fox, claps a hand behind the sargents head and they sit there frozen for a moment in time, Rule offering more comfort in that one gesture than he’s felt in days. A Keldabe kiss to ease his fragile psyche.
“Alverde.” Rule offers quietly when the pair finally part.
“Sargent” Fox gives a minuscule nod. “Enjoy your night.” He watches the youngster head down the hall until he turns a corner and is gone from sight.
Fox manages to avoid looking in the room for five minutes exactly. He’s able to fight off the pull to enter it for another twenty. The draw of her is too much in the end and he finds himself slipping into her room before the first thirty minutes are even past.
The lights are low and the monitors and electronics surrounding her hum and buzz steadily. Everything is white and stark. His cyar’ika is nearly the same color as the sheet she lays under.
She looks small, and so achingly fragile Fox is afraid the weight of his look alone will break her. She shivers lightly and he lurches into motion, dragging the itchy comforter over her legs and tucking it around her shoulders. Her body stirs as his gloved hand grazes along her cheek.
He freezes as her eyes flutter open. Her pupils aren’t quite right. It seems to take her a moment to piece together what’s going on but when she does the realization that washes over her is visible.
“Fox” his name sounds like a long lost friend rolling from her lips. She struggles to sit up. A look of pain flashes across her face as she twists under the blankets.
“Stop that” he demands impotently, his gloves moving to press gently against her chest. “you’re going to hurt yourself.”
She blinks owlishly up at him in the way only a person on good pain meds can, like she doesn’t quite understand what’s been said and she’s not sure whether she should comply or question it. It’s somewhere between bemused and scared.
He cups her cheek in his hand, “easy precious girl.” He soothes. Mouse relaxes into his touch as his gloved thumb rubs softly. Her eyes flutter shut and he can feel the soft sound she makes against his palm.
This was already far past what he intended. He just wanted to see her, to prove to himself she was really alive and in one piece despite him.
Now, he finds himself already slipping into old habits.
More focused, her eyes open. Her hand slips up and grips his vambrace. Slowly she pulls his hand away from her face. She lets her fingers slip down into and through his. Her voice is thick with sleep when she speaks and Fox has to lean in to hear her.
“I knew you’d come”
Of course she had. Fox wonders if she knew him better than he knew himself. This was always going to happen no matter how many times he’d lied to himself. He pulls his hand away. Mouse’s hangs empty in the air for a moment before she sets it down over her chest.
The quiet burr and hum of the monitors around her are the only sound between them until he reaches up to his bucket and lets the seal pop with a soft hiss.
Her eyes scan his face as he sets the helm off to the side. There’s a question there he can’t decipher. “What can I do?”
A harsh laugh escapes Fox’s lips and Mouse frowns at him.
“I think you’ve done enough, cyar’ika.”
“Fox-“ it’s a scolding tone that holds no weight when she looks like a battered doll in a too big hospital bed. She closes her eyes when he doesn’t give in and offer her more.
The bed dips under his weight as he sits at the edge of it. “I just wanted to make sure you were, ok. Alright?” He holds back from touching her again. It takes an enormous amount of will.
“I’m ok, Fox. Because of you.”
It’s a lie. All of it. It can’t be anything else. “You're in a hospital bed,” he growls, pushing up to his feet and stalking toward the window. He can’t look at her. “You spent days floating in bacta. You-“
“I’m alive.”
“That’s not because of me.”
He hears the ruffle of sheets as he looks out over Coruscant. The lights of the buildings and speeders in the sky lanes, like stars in the polluted evening light.
“Fox-“ her hand touches his arm and he spins to steady her. Anger swells up in him.
“Kriff- Mouse, get back in bed” he orders lowly, “you’re going to get hurt.”
She sways gently on her feet in the too big hospital gown but her jaw is set, “will you listen to me?”
“Will you get back in bed?” Fox pinches the bridge of his nose and takes a deep breath before looking at her again. “Get back in bed and I’ll listen. Please.”
Mouse stands, arms crossed, glaring pointedly. Fox has had enough. Quick and smooth like a tactical insertion he scoops her up. Mouse makes a small noise as his arms slide behind her knees and his other arm cradles behind her shoulders. She breathes heavily as she looks up at him.
“You’re going back to bed.” He covers the small room in just a few steps. When he goes to set her down she slips her arms around his neck and holds on for dear life.
“I’m not getting back in that bed unless you come with me.”
“You’re not in the position to make demands.” But that’s a lie because, with him, she was always in the position to make demands. She just never had to.
“Please, Fox. I just want one good night. You can leave as soon as I'm asleep.”
It’s hard to say if it’s the tired tone of her voice, the smell of her skin so temptingly close, or just his own beaten down need to be close to her, regardless Fox gives in.
“The armor stays on.” He says as he settles into the bed, he tries to keep his boots off the bed the best he can. Mouse curls tighter against him. It can’t be comfortable against the plastoid but to look at her he’d never know. One hand rests along his jaw while the other wraps around his back keeping him from easily disentangling himself.
Fox can’t help himself as he slips one glove off and cards his fingers through her hair, stopping every so often to work out a tangle. Mouse sighs against him.
“Precious girl,” he hums lowly as her fingers trace along the stubble at his jaw, “go to sleep.”
“You're going to leave once I do.”
“Yes, that was the deal.”
“You’re not going to come back.”
Again, he’s struck with how well she knows him. “No, cyar’ika. I’m not.”
6 days earlier
His knuckles are wailing in pain and it feels so kriffing good. His hands, wrapped in protective tape are held tight and safe as he tenderizes the heavy bag in front of him. A low, guttural growl works its way up from his chest with each landed blow.
It’s the first time he’s felt in control in days. Even if it only lasted for his duration in the sparring rooms he didn’t care. When he closes his eyes he doesn’t see Mouse at the end of his blaster, the way her body recoiled and convulsed at the first shot. He doesn’t hear the scream that rips through her when the second bolt burns through her side. He doesn’t dwell on the voice in his head demanding the kill while Fox did everything to drag his near perfect aim away from center mass.
He pictures Sidious’ face on the bag and the pile of sloppy mash his fists were making it into. There’s catharsis in the exertion that a psych droid couldn’t give him.
“Commander, sir?”
Fox turns to see Hound stripped down to just his black under armor pants. He was a burly boy as far as clones went, thicker and more muscular through the torso, next to Hound, Fox looks almost lithe.
Fox pants lightly as he dips to grab a bottle of water and straighten back up. “What can I do for you?”
“I- do you need to-“
Fox watches as the man chooses his words carefully, finally gesturing first toward the mat.
“You wanna go a few, rounds? Looks like you could use it?”
A roll of tape is flipped through the air in answer. Hound catches it smoothly, giving Fox a happy grin as he begins wrapping his hands.
5 days earlier
There’s a neat hole in his wall, fist sized and fresh, less than a week old. Fox pretends like he doesn’t see Chancellor Organa eyeballing it with some amount of apprehension. What he can’t pretend is that a visit from the newly minted Chancellor to his office isn’t a surprise.
“Commander, you can drop the title with me.” The Chancellor says for the second time since his arrival.
“Sir, it’s frowned upon-“
“-not by me”
Fox huffs and closes his eyes to hide the roll of them. “Ok, fine. Can I get you something to drink? Some caf?”
Bail waves off the offer, “I won’t be long and it looks like you're woefully underserved.” He tips his head back toward the door and the empty desk.
A bristle of irritation tingles down Fox’s neck. “She was in the hospital. She was…” the words trail off. Part of protecting his little Mouse was keeping her involvement in the Sidious event quiet.
“I know, Commander.” Bail says quietly, “we share a friend on the council who’s made me aware of many interesting things.”
It feels like he’s being baited. He likes to think Organa wouldn't try to try to weasel information from him but his trust is a very delicate thing at the moment and he’s not willing to give an inch. His loyalty is to his men and the republic, after that only one other person had earned any devotion from him and that was not Bail Organa. At least not yet.
“If there’s anything I can do for her, anything she needs we can make that happen.”
Fox glances at the picture on his desk. It had come by courier earlier in the day. It’s been neatly matted and framed to be hung, a children’s drawing of a small green twi’lek child and him holding hands. He’d stared at it on his desk in silence for far too long before he felt something ugly bubble up. Now he had a hole in the wall. He hoped the picture would cover it.
Fox continues to look at the picture. He needs a second to pretend like he knows what Mouse needs. He doesn’t listen to the nagging voice inside of him saying it to him. He hates that voice, would smother it if he could.
“She needs time to heal.”
“I can make that happen.”
“Thank you.”
Earlier this day
“Senator Amidala” Fox greets the senator at the door, “this is a surprise. If I keep receiving politicians in my office I’m going to have to have it made more suitable.”
The senator gives him a bright smile, “it’s good to see you Fox.”
He lets out a breath he didn’t realize he was holding, “it’s good to see you too Padmé.”
They were friends, of a sort. They’d seen enough together that Fox would gladly file her under battle buddies in his short list of friends. She looks lovely, as always, absolutely glowing. Her hand rests softly over the growing baby bump she was now proudly displaying.
“You look wonderful. Congratulations on the coming Ik’aad.” He offers gesturing toward her belly. His eyes linger and he remembers laying Mouse across his bed, placing kisses in a ring around her naval and imaging what it would be like someday when he-
Fox gives his head a quick shake and refocuses on the senator.
“Thank you.” He watches her eyes travel to the child’s drawing on the wall behind his desk before returning to him. “And how are you doing?”
“As well as can be expected. Chancellor Organa keeps a busy schedule and he’s insistent that I go with him. He’s got a lot of ideas and he asks my opinion. It’s different… but it’s nice.”
Padmé slips into the chair across from him.
“That’s wonderful” but she doesn’t sound like it’s wonderful. She sounds like she was here on a mission that he hasn’t been briefed on. He raises a brow at her. They’ve known each other long enough that she should know to just come out with it.
“We’re leaving for Naboo today. I want to have the baby in the lake country. It’s beautiful and peaceful.” She lets out a tired laugh, “and far away from the prying eyes of the holonet news.”
“They’ve been very… interested in you as of late” he offers diplomatically.
Another small laugh, “to say the least” Padmé sobers. “I just wanted to make sure you were ok with her going?”
Confusion must show on his face. Her?
Padmé frowns gently, the look of pity is out of place on her serene features, “you weren’t told, were you?”
“I’m afraid you’ll need to speak clearly.” Fox tries to bite back the tension but it slips into his voice.
She says Mouse’s name. Her real name.
“The Chancellor asked if we would take her with us. That she needed a place to finish recovering.” Padmé is watching his face. She’s trying to gauge his reaction.
He tries to give her nothing.
“She’s an amazing woman. She said if she went then she had to be useful. She’s going to be my assistant while I’m on leave-“
Fox holds up a hand. “She’s excellent at what she does. You’ll never be in better hands.”
“What about you?”
“I’m not her keeper. Mouse deserves to be safe and happy.” He shoots her a forced smile. “That’s not with me.”
Current
He had the rancor etched into his arm after Thorn had been killed in action on a mission Fox was supposed to have led. It was an inside joke they’d heard as shinies. Something about a Jedi and a rancor walking into a cantina. He can’t remember the punchline. It wasn’t funny anyways.
The Pantoran works the needle over his freshly shaven chest. Back and forth, outlining and filling. Pressing the ink into his skin to permanently mark him with another mark of regret, penance. Everytime he looks in the mirror, stripped down from his armor and his blacks he’ll see the reminder of what never was supposed to be, the thing that he went after when he knew it wasn’t allowed. The love that nearly destroyed the person he cared for beyond all others.
“So, this picture is pretty wicked” the Pantoran says conversationally. He glances back and forth from the reference picture Fox gave him, a partial hand print pressed against his armor, the fourth and fifth finger only partially visible and the heel of the hand smeared red. “Was it done in ink?”
“No. Blood.”
The Pantoran makes a sound of understanding. The buzz of the tattoo gun fills the quiet.
Seconds, minutes, hours it’s all the same as Fox sits still as stone in the chair, the press of the needle intimately familiar.
He thinks of Mouse on a shuttle to Naboo.
This was what he’d needed. Mouse far away, somewhere safe. Somewhere no one could hurt her. Where he couldn’t hurt her. No matter what he’s told he still doesn’t believe there isn’t something in him that can be persuaded, to be flipped on, that won’t harm her.
He needed to focus on his job, his men, the Galactic Republic. There was no world in which he and Mouse would work and it was better that she wasn’t there to know that.
“Alright, mate.” The Artist sets the gun down and claps his hands once before rubbing them together. “You’re all set. Why don’t you take a looksy in the mirror while I grab the bacta gel and a dressing?”
Fox nods and pushes himself up. His back is stiff from laying still and he takes a moment to stretch and twist before stepping in front of the mirror. His eyes trace the ink. It’s a perfect replica of the picture, deep vibrant red fingers pressing into his armor, only now pressing into his heart. A reminder of what happens when he becomes selfish. When he wants more than the greater design allows for.
“It’s perfect.”
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Triumphs and Tragedies Only Military Families Will Understand
Inspiring Stories
Jen BabakhanJun 21
When military service members return from deployment wounded, the effects of their injuries ripple through their families mercilessly. One nonprofit organization, Hope for the Warriors, has set out to support not only those injured in battle, but the families they return to as well.
Learning importance of hope
Courtesy Robin Kelleher
When Robin Kelleher saw her close friend struggling after the return of her injured Marine officer husband, she knew she had to help her to cope in some way. “At the time, I was dealing with my husband’s back-to-back deployments as well, but I wanted to get my friend out of the house, so I asked her if she wanted to go for a run.” Kelleher and her friend were both runners, and they soon came up with the idea to start a charity run as a way to bring the community together and support Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune in North Carolina. The charity run turned into more of a success than either of them expected, and Kelleher knew there was more to be done to support families as they welcomed home injured service members. She was inspired to begin a non-profit organization that focused on supporting service members and their families, and Hope for the Warriors was born.
“The military was training our service members extremely well, but as a country, we’re not prepared for the wounded military,” Kelleher says. “There weren’t services available, and as I researched what gaps there were to fill, I realized there were a lot.” Kelleher says the early days of the organization were at a grass roots level, and she spent a lot of the time working at the dining room table while she was home caring for their small children and her husband was deployed.
Today, the organization has grown to serve more than 13,000 service members with offices across the nation and partners with other companies to provide specialized services. Hope for the Warriors has a simple, but profound mission: to restore families and hope. “Our goal for service members is that they come in with a need, which we meet, but then they become part of our team. We want them back in a serving role again, which is what they want most themselves,” she says. “We offer financial, emotional, educational, and spiritual support. We cover things that no one else will.” Its Warrior Wish program helps to restore families, sometimes in unusual ways. For example, “We had one soldier who lost an arm, but used to love wrestling with his children,” says Kelleher. So the group hired a trainer to teach him how to wrestle with his kids again.
The help for service members extends to family members as well. The organization has a scholarship program for caregivers and spouses to help them be competitive in the job market and earn the income their service member husband or wife lost.
Kelleher admits the work is hard and can take a personal toll. “There have been days I wake up and say to myself, ‘I can’t do this anymore,’” she says. “There has always been a sign from above saying, ‘Yes, you can.’ We’ve stayed humble—we focus on doing good work for good reasons—and I think that’s why we’ve been successful.” Supporting wounded warriors has never been so easy—here are simple yet powerful ways you can help veterans.
Finding the “new normal”
Courtesy Vintage Lens Photography in St. Louis
In 2013, as Mark Daniels, a Marine K9 handler, was deployed in Afghanistan, his wife, Jesca Daniels, was staying at a Ronald McDonald House in North Carolina while her one-year old daughter was undergoing surgery to fix a hole in her heart she was born with. In the middle of the night, the manager of the Ronald McDonald house knocked on her door and told her there had been an explosion, but her husband was alive. “My heart stopped at ‘explosion.’ I didn’t hear anything after that,” she says.
As it turned out, Mark and five other Marines had been hit by a remote detonated bomb on the way back from a patrol. Their vehicle flipped and threw Mark to the back of the vehicle, where he went unconscious, resulting in traumatic brain injury (TBI). Mark was awarded a Purple Heart and offered medical retirement, which he declined because of his desire to continue serving his country. His recovery has been difficult for the entire family, and has put Jesca into the role of caregiver to him as well as their two daughters. “When Mark originally came home he had a lot of memory issues and really bad headaches. He was unable to walk unassisted and required a cane and physical therapy,” Jesca recalls.
Mark’s injuries have taken more than his physical ability. “He’s not the man I married. There are days I miss him and he’s sitting right next to me,” Jesca says. Another military wife offered her some difficult but valuable advice. “She told me, ‘This is your new normal, and he may never be who you married again,’” Jesca says. “It made me realize that you have to decide whether you love the new person enough to fight—and a lot of the time the fight is with myself. The good always outweighs the bad, though, and seeing him become this new person is worth it.”
Hope for the Warriors helped the Daniels have a wedding celebration, something Mark and Jesca, who originally married at a justice of the peace in 2009, never had. “Mark was the one who really wanted a wedding,” Jesca recalls. “He worried that if something ever happened to either one of us, we wouldn’t have memories of our first dance or a special day.” Hope for the Warriors helped coordinate and fund the couple’s dream wedding, which reunited them with both of their families and some of Mark’s fellow Marines.
Today, Jesca and Mark continue to strive to focus on the positive and celebrate the good in life. Jesca insists that Mark continues to celebrate what those in the military call an “Alive Day,” the day they were injured and survived. “It’s a day to celebrate how far they’ve come and to remember those that aren’t here with us anymore,” she says. “I believe that everything in life makes you stronger, even the stuff that completely breaks you.”
Receiving life-changing support
Courtesy Brittany Zurn
Childhood sweethearts Aaron and Brittany Zurn met when he was 13 and she was 11—they began dating three years later. Eventually, they married and had three children as Aaron joined the Marines, working up to become part of the Marine Corps Forces Special Operations, an elite position that requited a seven-month trial period with strenuous physical and mental testing.
Two weeks after the couple’s third child was born, Aaron was deployed to Afghanistan, where he communicated with Brittany daily. So when he went four days without calling or texting in 2014, she knew something was wrong. Then, when Aaron finally reached Brittany, his call left more questions than answers. “He told me he fell from a helicopter and hurt his shoulder and head,” she recalls. “He was heavily medicated and he couldn’t give me much more detail than that.” It turned out that not only did Aaron have a TBI from his fall, but his mental capacity was diminished to that of a 13-year-old and he was suffering from severe PTSD.
An added insult to injury was the financial burden the couple faced as a result of Aaron’s inability to continue serving in the special forces. Aaron’s paycheck was cut in half suddenly, while their expenses remained the same. “When Aaron was injured, Hope for the Warriors was the first assistance check I received,” Brittany recalls.
While it has been a long road for Aaron, Brittany’s life has been turned upside down as well. “I went from a stay-at-home mom taking my kids to the park to becoming a caregiver for my husband,” she says. She now spends three or four days a week taking Aaron to doctors appointments at the VA and hours on the phone with doctors and insurance companies. “I feel like his assistant now,” she says.
For Brittany, the hardest part of Aaron’s injury is the loss of their life-long relationship. “I’ve loved him over half my life,” she says. “Not having the relationship that we had before the injury is like a death, only when someone passes you can heal. With a brain injury, it’s a shadow of what was.”
In an effort to become the healthiest version of herself possible during this trying time, Brittany began going to therapy. “My therapist told me, ‘You’re surviving the loss of your husband, and now you have to get to know this new man.’ It put it in perspective for me,” she says. With the aid of a scholarship from of Hope for the Warriors, Brittany returned to college, earned her bachelor’s degree, and began working full time.
Brittany’s commitment to using her family’s tragedy to help others has proven helpful to her own healing. She offers words of wisdom for those who now stand in her shoes searching for hope. “You’ll go through a time of thinking you can do it all on your own—but take the help,” she says. “Join the support group. Keep doing things for yourself, still shower and get ready every day. Make sure your family fully understands and gets involved as well.”
In the future, Brittany hopes to continue advocating for veterans and invisible injuries like the one her husband suffered. “There’s never enough we can say to thank service members. Traumatic brain injury and PTSD need to have more recognition,” she says. “My hope is that in the future we can find a new normal with a new label that isn’t ‘wounded’ or ‘injured.’” Find out the 60 things every caregiver needs you to know.
Going through the healing process
Courtesy Catherine Bane
After finishing high school in 2003, Catherine Bane was excited to join the U.S. Army as a chaplain assistant. Her grandfather, father, and six of her brothers served in the armed forces, and she was proud to add to the family’s legacy. Her excitement quickly diminished after a sexual assault. “Within the first year of my service, I realized my experience in the military was very different than what my family had experienced in their careers,” she says. “Being sexually assaulted shook me to my core and for many years, changed the way I saw myself.” Worst of all, she had convinced herself it was her fault, she says.
Then, the unthinkable happened: She was sexually assaulted a second time. “I went completely numb inside,” Bane says. Though she struggled to remain positive, her personal relationships continued to suffer. “I moved on with life desperately trying to mask the pain,” she recalls. “Many of my relationships struggled and I was surviving life, but not thriving.”
It was in May 2015 that Bane ran her first Hope for the Warriors half-marathon, and it was there she became involved with the organization that set her on the path to healing she walks today. “Hope has not only helped me to truly face my past and my assaults but has helped me to begin to work through the healing process. Through Hope for the Warriors, I have found a community and family that has helped me to find my worth again,” she says.
Catherine is now married with three children. She and her family enjoy running together, and they set a family goal of running 100 miles in honor of Hope for the Warriors. “We have found that when we move as a family, we grow as a family,” she says. “Setting goals for ourselves as individuals and also as a family has been a wonderful tool for us.”
Today, Catherine is in the process of earning her degree in psychology with a special focus on military resilience. She hopes to use the painful experiences of her past to reach out to others in need of healing. She offers those who have also experienced sexual assault in the military some hard-earned words of wisdom: “The military has a brotherhood and sisterhood so strong [that] there is no place for sexual violence. It destroys the core of what the military stands for. This is your journey; be patient with yourself and never give up. You are worth fighting for, and you aren’t alone in this fight. You can get your life back,” she says. “No matter how you get through this race of life—fast or slow, running on two legs or one, or on a bike—just don’t give up.” Don’t miss 10 of the nicest ways strangers have helped veterans.
Original Source -> Triumphs and Tragedies Only Military Families Will Understand
source https://www.seniorbrief.com/triumphs-and-tragedies-only-military-families-will-understand/
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