Mai didn't wait for the firebender to hit the paving slabs courtesy of her thrown fan
before she was racing down the the amphitheatre towards Toph's fallen form.
The soldiers, distracted by ten rampaging komodo rhinos and the fleeing women and children,
had actually fallen prey to the Kyoshi Warriors with startling ease. In fact, they probably hadn't even noticed that they were under attack until Mai's
desperate cry of warning to Toph, by which time eight of them were already down - a pair of them literally trampled by fleeing women and children, two of them
recipients Mai's knives, Shu-Lin throwing one unfortunate off the cliff, two flat on the ground with concussions thanks to June and one crushed between the
two komodo rhinos he was trying to control.
As
she ran, Mai unloaded a full salvo from her dart launcher into a firebender trying to block what looked to him like an attempt to finish off the prince, and
then spun her remaining fan into one of a pair of soldiers who was fighting off Shu-Lin entirely too close to where Mai's sister lay. Now faced with only
one opponent, the Kyoshi Warrior smoothly cut him down with her sword and then moved to aid Jun.
Scrambling down to Toph, she rolled the small girl over onto her back, flinching as she saw
the terrible burn scorched through both the armour and the robes. The metal plates had been almost vaporised over the wound and blackened cloth and flesh were
literally smoking before her eyes. Fearfully Mai pressed her fingertips against Toph's throat and was relieved to feel a pulse - weak, slower than she
would like, but Toph's heart was still beating. When she looked closely she thought she could see a slight movement of the younger girl's
chest.
Pulling out three of her throwing knives, Mai rose and stalked over to the man who had
hurled lightning into her little sister. Another fire bender made the mistake of trying to stop her and fell to the ground, one of the knives buried in his
throat. Reaching her target, Mai kicked the stunned man over onto his back and had drawn back her hand to finish him off when the light flickered giving her a
clearer view of his face. Her eyes went wide and the two throwing knives slipped from suddenly nerveless fingers.
"A little help here, Mai!" called June from where she was holding off three of the
remaining firebenders from the back of a komodo rhino. One of them had already managed to catch her with a small bolt of fire, marked by the flames still
rising from her sleeve.
Mai straightened and without turning her head fired one of her remaining dart launchers
three times. One of the soldiers crumpled with a scream, clutching at his knee where a dart had punctured the thinner protection behind the joint. A second
simply fell to the ground like a sack of potatoes, the tail-feathers of a dart barely visible where it had buried itself in the armpit. June's eyes crossed
as she tried to track the third dart, which passed within a few inches of her face... and punched between the open lips of the third firebender.
"Scary girl," the one time bounty hunter sighed, kicking the one survivor of the
three in the face to ensure he stayed down. Then she looked around for the next opponent, casually beating out the flames now that she had a free
hand.
Down in the amphitheatre, Mai came to a decision and used the front of Zuko's shirt to
pull his shoulders up from the stones. His eyes opened blearily and failed to focus upon her squarely. "Mai?" he muttered.
"Jerk," she replied tersely and punched him across the jaw with the heel of her
free hand. The prince's head bounced off the ground and he lay still.
Shu-Lin dove under a stream of fire and thrust upwards with her sword into the firebender
before rolling to her feet. Suddenly the three Kyoshi Warriors were the only ones still standing. June and Shu-Lin coverged upon their leader's
position.
"How's the runt?" June asked bluntly.
"Alive," Mai reported bluntly. "Your arm?"
"Nothing to worry about," the older woman insisted.
Mai looked around at the wreckage. "We need to tidy this up. Shu-lin drive off the
komodo rhinos. June, throw the enemy soldiers off the cliff. The tide will dispose of them."
"What about the wounded?"
Mai stared at her blankly.
"Right." June reached for Zuko but Mai shook her head.
"Not this one. We're taking him with us."
"You know him?" Shu-Lin asked. "And since when was Toph a
firebender?"
"I'll tell you on the boat," decided Mai and headed back towards
Toph.
.oOo.
Getting down the cliff with an unconcious Toph and Zuko proved to be complicated. In the end
it proved necessary to improvise a sling and lower them one at a time directly over the cliff with Shu-Lin climbing down alongside Toph to ensure she
didn't come to harm. They weren't quite as careful with Zuko since his injuries weren't as likely to be aggravated and frankly, none of them were
particularly bothered about adding more bruises to his collection.
"So," Shu-Lin asked as June pushed the canoe off from the shore.
"Explanations?"
Mai didn't look up from her paddling. "His name is Zuko. After Toph discovered she
was a firebender, he was her teacher for a little while."
The other two looked at each other. "A little more detail could help," suggested
June. "I've seen Toph Earthbending. She's never been... all that great, honestly. And now she's firebending as well?"
Shu-Lin was practically glowing as she paddled. "She's the Avatar, isn't she?
Why didn't you tell anyone?"
Mai made a frustrated noise. "She was attacked by her parents." She ignored the
hiss from Shu-Lin. "They didn't want their blind little girl to be a bender, so they had someone do something to her. I don't know the details,
but something to do with her chi. You've seen her bending... that's as much as she can do."
June was the one to put it together. "The Fire Nation's been looking for the next
Avatar ever since the Battle of the Three Dragons. Right now, they know she must only be a child. If they find out she's blind, that she only has a limited
ability to bend... they'll know that they don't have to fear her any more. And morale in the Earth Kingdom would collapse: they've been hoping for
a powerful, aggressive Avatar to lead them against the Fire Nation."
"You said 'her parents'," Shu-Lin said slowly. "Not 'our
parents'. You aren't her sister, are you?"
"After she was... hurt, she ran away," Mai said carefully, "My parents took
her in. She didn't tell anyone she was an earthbender and everyone was thrilled that she was a firebender."
"So you're from the Fire Nation." There was an ugly undertone to June's
conclusion. Both of of the other Kyoshi Warriors had their issues, Mai knew. Shu-Lin's were with parents, but June's were with the Fire Nation.
"Why would one of them choose to throw in her lot with the Avatar?"
"She's my sister," Mai said. "Blood doesn't matter. Women are
expected to join other families and be as loyal to them as they were to their parents. Marriage, or adoption, it doesn't matter. Would you abandon a
sister?"
June clenched her fist, but Shu Lin stopped paddling for a moment. "Kyoshi Warriors do
not leave their sisters behind," she reminded the other woman. "Would you have left Toph and I after she challenged him to that
duel?"
"...no," June admitted grudgingly. She looked down at Zuko. "What about this
one? He'd be a very ugly sister. Why spare him? He already almost killed Toph. When he finds out she's the Avatar..."
Mai shrugged, feigning indifference. "He's important within the Fire Nation. Too
important to just vanish without anyone looking for him. Suki's going to need to decide what happens to him."
"Does she know?" asked Shu-Lin. "About Toph, I mean?"
"I haven't told her. But I'm sure she suspects something."
They paddled in silence the rest of the way.
.oOo.
She could feel the cold stone beneath her feet, but it seemed cold and dead, no vibrations
to tell her anything more than what she was touching. Cold terror seemed to paralyse her. Had her earthsense deserted her completely.
Toph felt a small hand touch hers.
"Hello Toph. I've been looking forward to meeting you." A boy's voice,
young, from in front of her.
The smack of her fist touching flesh was startling and her hand was empty once more.
"Who are you!? What have you done to me!?"
"Ow!" Indignance more than pain. "You didn't have to hit
me!"
She could hear him, she knew his approximate location and sank into an earthbending stance.
"Answers!"
"I didn't do anything!" the boy protested quickly. "You're in the
spirit world, no one can bend here."
Whatever she'd expected, this wasn't it. "I'm... dead?"
There was the pad of light feet on stone and she could hear his breathing, closer now. Not
quite in arm's reach. He feared her. Good.
"Not quite. It could still go either way." He sighed. "There's someone
who wants to speak to you. Come with me?"
"I'm not going anywhere," Toph retorted automatically. "Not with someone
I don't know, who just sneaks up on me."
"Really I'm a friend," the boy promised. There was a whoof of air from his
direction and Toph heard heavier footsteps, far too heavy to be a person and... six legs? Sounded like whatever it was must be as large as a badgermole,
perhaps larger. "And this is Appa. He's a friend too, aren't you boy?" There was an agreeable rumble from the animal.
"I've not been having the best of luck with friends lately," Toph pointed out
warily. "In case you didn't notice, the reason I'm here is that my former firebending teacher decided to hit me with some freaky
attack."
The boy hesitated. "You realise that he didn't know who you were?"
"I guessed when he didn't realise I was a firebender," Toph shrugged. "I guess all that facepainting must really work
afterall."
"It really does," he agreed cheerfully. "So, come on. Your spirit guide
awaits."
Toph glared. "You're my spirit guide?"
"Well, no. She sent me to bring you to her..."
"So you're what? The hired help?" Toph asked incredulously. How gullible did
he think she was? For all she could tell he might be about to feed her to that big Appa of his. He hadn't even told her his name!
"No, I'm Aang!"
Okay, now he'd told her his name. Wait... Aang? "Eew! I knew that Bumi guy was
creepy, but having fun with a little boy? That's just sick."
"You know Bumi?" Aang sounded surprised. "Wait, what do you mean sick.
He's a great guy. We used to play on the mail slides when he was a kid."
"When he was a kid?" exclaimed Toph. "But he's ancient and you're
like, eight or something."
"I'm a hundred and twelve!"
"Months, maybe."
Aang groaned in frustration. "I'm dead, alright? People stop getting older when
they die. I was only twelve when I died. Bumi's been alive the whole time, that's why he looks older than me." He took her hand again and started
pulling at her again, but couldn't shift her from her stance.
"Listen, lightweight, no one takes me anywhere I don't want to. Bumi says hi, he
misses all the fun, now buzz off."
"Oh really?" There was a mischievous sound to Aang's voice. "Appa, give
me a hand here, buddy." The big creature mooed accomodatingly and Toph braced herself, for all the good it did when several tons of herbivore butted her
gently but firmly off her feet. Grabbing blindly for something - anything - to break her hold, Toph latched onto something long and smooth, only to be lifted
clean off the ground when it moved upwards.
"Good work, boy," Aang said cheerfully. "Now, yip yip!"
There was a whoof of air and Toph screamed in mingled fear and indignation as her stomach
advised her that she was being lifted higher and higher off the ground, dangling from the horn of the sky bison as it ascended into the air.
.oOo.
Suki was waiting at the dock when the canoe arrived. After months of practise Mai could make
out the emotions beneath the mask of warpaint and she could tell the leader of the Kyoshi Warriors was concerned by the fact that only three figures were
visible above the gunwhales of the boat. "What happened?" she asked immediately, catching hold of the rope that Mai threw her from the
bow.
"Toph is injured, and we have a prisoner," Mai said, indicating the two prone
forms lying in the bottom of the canoe. "Chin Village has been destroyed. The women and children were fleeing the area, last that we saw of them. They
only saw Toph and other than this one, all the Fire Nation soldiers are dead."
"Shu-Lin, go fetch a healer," Suki ordered quickly. "June, take the prisoner
and secure him. Don't do anything to him until I hear Mai's report. Is he a bender?" When she heard confirmation she nodded firmly. "If
necessary, ask the healers for a sleeping draft. Better he doesn't wake up until I make a decision on what to do with him."
The other two Kyoshi Warriors climbed onto the jetty, June carrying Zuko over her shoulder.
Suki looked down at Toph and shook her head. "I shouldn't have let you take her with you."
Mai said nothing, instead lifting her sister gently up so that Suki could take her. Beneath
her make-up Suki paled at the wound. Toph seemed to weigh almost nothing and her breathing was so faint that only a slight warmth to her body showed she was
still alive. "I know, you know. That she's the Avatar." There was still no response from Mai as the girl jumped up onto the jetty. "Who did
this?"
Toph's sister pointed to where Jun was barely visible in the distance.
"If she dies, he dies," Suki swore. "What sort of monster would do this to a
child."
"She'd be offended to be called a child," Mai said, her voice betraying
uncertainty as to what to feel about the matter. "Toph challenged him to a duel. I don't know why he accepted."
Suki shrugged and started towards the shore, careful not to shake Toph around. "I meant
what I said there," she added flatly. "I don't care how valuable he might turn out to be..."
"He's the Fire Lords's son."
"He's the wha-!?" Suki half-screamed, then lowered her voice to a whisper.
"What do you mean he's the Fire Lord's son?"
"I mean that Ozai is his father. What else would I mean?"
"Are you sure?" asked Suki, nervously. First the Avatar, and now a Prince of the
Fire Nation? What next, the Earth King arriving on a dancing bear?
"Pretty much," Mai said. "I lied about being a merchant's daughter. My
family is an old one in the Fire Nation. I went to school with Zuko's sister, so I saw him every now and then."
If
Suki hadn't been carrying Toph she would have slapped Mai, so she did the logical thing. As soon as she put Toph down on the grass at the end of the jetty,
she cracked a backhanded blow across the taller girl's face, knocking her from her feet.
"I probably deserved that," Mai conceded numbly, sitting up.
"So what's Toph's story? Your father's byblow?" Suki asked angrily.
"Is she even your sister at all?"
"Toph's a runaway," Mai said quietly. "Family means more than blood in
the Fire Nation. When my parents took her in, she became my sister in every way that matters. When my brother was abducted, Toph risked her own life to save
him. When I learnt she was the Avatar, I left my parents to protect her from the Fire Nation. I've given up everything else in my life, even..." She
shook her head. "Don't ever say she isn't my sister."
Suki stared down at her. "I should probably lock you away with your firebender
friend," she said at last. "For the Avatar's sake, I won't do that. But if you ever give me even the slightest reason to doubt you again, one
deception... I'll think of a way to explain your death to her."
.oOo.
"Here we are!" Aang announced happily as Appa's feet touched the
ground.
"Great," Toph grumbled and let go of the horn, landing lightly on dusty stones
that felt somewhat like a path to her feet. Feeling the sky bison whuffle against her, she used her hands to feel her way across his face and then grabbed the
huge beast by the nostrils and tugged downwards. "Don't ever do that again!" she roared at the top of her voice.
Appa squealed and tried to back away from the crazy small person. When that didn't work,
he opened his mouth and blew, trying to dislodge her but he had to stop when she refused and the pulling on his sensitive nose grew too painful.
"Leave him alone!" Aang protested, running around and grabbing Toph's ankles,
trying to pull her away. As she was still refusing to release Appa, this let to a bellow of protest from the unfortunate sky bison. "Let
go!"
"You let go!"
Another bellow from Appa was followed by a torrent of water descending upon them all.
"You can play later, children," a new voice declared. Older, female. Not an accent that Toph recognised. Aang obediently dropped her
ankles.
"Who are you?" the young earthbender demanded, not letting go yet.
"She's your spirit guide," Aang hissed.
"So why did you send muppet here to come get me." Toph asked, letting go of Appa,
who prudently backed away. She felt Aang brush past her as he rushed to comfort his companion.
"I had several reasons, Toph," the woman said in a grandmotherly tone. "Come,
sit with me."
Grudgingly, Toph obeyed. But only because she wanted to anyway!
"Unlike my two predecessors, I do not have a spirit companion to carry me across the
world," the old woman told her. "And I felt that you might prefer to be met by someone your age, rather than by an lady of a certain
age."
"You aren't old, Kanna," a man's voice said from nearby. "Not
compared to Kyoshi, anyway."
"Don't you have anywhere to be, Roku?" the woman's voice - Kanna,
presumably - asked pointedly.
Toph jumped to her feet. "You're... you're Avatars!" she burst out,
backing away. "What do you want with me!"
She heard the man approach and then he paused and she heard his robes rustling on the
ground. He's... kneeling? What? "For myself, Toph, all I wish to do is to apologise on behalf of my great-grandson."
"Who?" she blurted.
"My grand-daughter is wed to the Fire Lord Ozai," Roku explained. "Therefore
Zuko is my descendant."
Toph shrugged. "You aren't to blame for what he did," she said reasonably.
"If you're responsible for what he did then I'd be responsble for what my - yeah. Never mind."
"You are not to blame for your parents' actions."
"Well if you know that, then what are you bringing it up for?" Toph
asked.
Roku chuckled and then she could hear his robes brushing around his knees as Kanna cleared
her throat. "Yes Kanna, I'm done now," he promised.
"I'm sure you have many questions," Kanna said gently to Toph. "I asked
Aang to bring you here so that I can answer them."
Toph sat down cautiously. "You're the one with the plan, why don't you
start."
"Very well then. You are the Avatar, Toph. Roku, myself and even Aang are your past -
just a few of the thousands of lives that you have lived, protecting the balance between the four elements, and between the mortal world and this one. And you
have never been more badly needed. The Fire Nation is badly out of control. Unless they are checked they will use the power granted by Sozin's Comet to
catastrophically destroy all balance between the elements. I know that it is not fair for you to carry that burden so young, but I believe that you can restore
the balance."
Toph shook her head. "That doesn't make sense. I mean, I know the history - Sozin
destroyed the Air Nomads, but the world didn't collapse because of that. It's not as if all the air vanished when the Air Nomads were wiped out. I
don't want the Fire Nation to conquer everyone, but it's not going to destroy the world."
"In that you are wrong," Kanna said quietly. "The Fire Lords' ambitions
know no bounds. When they struck at the Northern Water Tribes, they not only destroyed the civilisation there, they also attempted to kill the spirits Tui and
La, the Ocean and the Moon. The consequences had they succeeded would have been disasterous for all concerned. It was only with a great deal of luck that I was
able to save them and to spirit away a few survivors to a refuge near the South Pole." She chuckled drily. "That was a joke: 'spirit
away'?"
"Yeah, keep trying."
"For much of my life," Kanna continued, "I devoted my attention to repairing
the damage caused by the Fire Nation. I did not confront them directly - perhaps I was influenced too greatly by the customs of my own people, who believed
that women should use waterbending only to heal. I found the more confrontational ways of earthbending very difficult to learn and fire even harder. By the
time I was ready to study airbending, the Air Nomads had been extinct for almost half a century. Because of this, the Fire Lords have been free to ravage the
world for generations. When I finally challenged them, twelve years ago, I was too late. Too weak."
"And now you are the Avatar. Unlike myself and Aang, you have a warrior spirit, Toph.
Indomitable, irresistable. The world needs you to do what we could not."
Toph shook her head. "I don't know if you've noticed, but I'm not exactly
in fighting form."
"You did very well against Roku's descendant," observed Kanna.
"I lost. That's not good enough," Toph told her. "Unless you have any
ideas how to repair the damage to my chakras I won't be making the Fire Lord Ozai tremble in his pointy boots."
.oOo.
Mai stared down at Zuko. The prince had been stripped of his finery and chained to a wall in
one of the few stone buildings of the village. He had been kept sedated for several days, but the healers had warned that continuing doses would be damaging
and so Suki had decided to allow him to wake. In case he tried to break loose - and not only Suki but also several islanders familiar with bending had
questioned Mai intensively on his capabilities - two Kyoshi Warriors were assigned to guard him at all times.
She had not been trusted with that responsibility. Mai had barely left Toph's side,
sleeping on a mat in the same room where healers kept the younger girl under constant supervision. Toph had not woken in all that time, slipping into a coma.
None of the healers had been tactless enough to comment within Mai's hearing on the likelihood of Toph never waking, but Suki had relayed their estimations
with brutal honesty.
"Stop brooding about Toph," Suki ordered. Zuko was expected to wake at some point
that afternoon and the leader of the Kyoshi Warriors intended to interrogate him immediately, so she was waiting in the same building, taking the opportunity
to read reports from the various detachments around the island. "I know what the healers said, but I've sent word to some allies of ours. They have
excellent healers and I'm sure that they'll send someone able to help her."
Mai hmmed noncommittally and looked away. She would feel better if Suki was willing to tell
her who these allies were, but she supposed that it was too late to look for trust between the two of them. After a moment she looked again at Zuko. Stubble
was visible across his head but the locks that had been part of his topknot were still obvious in contrast. Mai could not think what he had been thinking to
start wearing his hair in that ridiculous fashion.
Because she was looking at him, she was the first to see his eyelids flickering.
"He's waking up," she warned and stepped back, allowing the two guards to stand ready with a clear field of view towards Zuko.
Nonetheless, when his eyes opened they focused almost immediately upon her. Emotions raced
across his face: shock, followed by joy and then bitter anger. Mai felt her own face stiffen into immobility in response. Carefully, testing his limits, Zuko
shifted to a sitting positon, grimacing when he realised that the chains were too short for him to be able to stand. Slowly, he looked around the room,
measuring all four of the Kyoshi Warriors.
"So you have me prisoner," he concluded. "What now? You must realise that you
have a dragon by the tail, safe only as long as you can hold on." He took a deep breath, centring himself and then caught Mai's eye. "Perhaps not
even then."
"I've given serious thought to killing you," Suki admitted candidly. "You
are Prince Zuko of the Fire Nation, or so I'm told. I've heard a great deal about your recent activities on the mainland. Most of it does not lead me
to believe that your death would be a tragedy."
"I thought I heard someone call Toph's name," Zuko noted, "Just
before I was knocked out. Is she alive too?"
There was a deadly silence.
"Thus far. No thanks to you," answered Suki.
"Wh-" Horrified realisation crossed Zuko's face. "That was her? Damn you
Mai, it wasn't enough that you'd betray m- your people, you dragged her into it. You let me fight her?"
"Let?" Mai asked, coldly. Mockingly. Was this the Zuko she thought she knew.
"You don't know Toph as well as you think, your highness."
"You should know," Suki added, taking the advantage of Zuko's consernation,
"That if Toph does die of her wounds I'll be burying you next to her." Her smile was horrible. "If I'm feeling merciful, maybe I'll
kill you first."
Zuko looked at her in surprise and then nodded his head slowly. "In that case, I offer
my services as a healer." His lips curled. "I certainly have ample motivation to want her to survive... and I'm a firebender. Treating burns is
something I'm used to."
Suki shook her head. "We'll see. For now, I have some questions for
you."
D for Drakensis
You're only young once, but immaturity is forever.
before she was racing down the the amphitheatre towards Toph's fallen form.
The soldiers, distracted by ten rampaging komodo rhinos and the fleeing women and children,
had actually fallen prey to the Kyoshi Warriors with startling ease. In fact, they probably hadn't even noticed that they were under attack until Mai's
desperate cry of warning to Toph, by which time eight of them were already down - a pair of them literally trampled by fleeing women and children, two of them
recipients Mai's knives, Shu-Lin throwing one unfortunate off the cliff, two flat on the ground with concussions thanks to June and one crushed between the
two komodo rhinos he was trying to control.
As
she ran, Mai unloaded a full salvo from her dart launcher into a firebender trying to block what looked to him like an attempt to finish off the prince, and
then spun her remaining fan into one of a pair of soldiers who was fighting off Shu-Lin entirely too close to where Mai's sister lay. Now faced with only
one opponent, the Kyoshi Warrior smoothly cut him down with her sword and then moved to aid Jun.
Scrambling down to Toph, she rolled the small girl over onto her back, flinching as she saw
the terrible burn scorched through both the armour and the robes. The metal plates had been almost vaporised over the wound and blackened cloth and flesh were
literally smoking before her eyes. Fearfully Mai pressed her fingertips against Toph's throat and was relieved to feel a pulse - weak, slower than she
would like, but Toph's heart was still beating. When she looked closely she thought she could see a slight movement of the younger girl's
chest.
Pulling out three of her throwing knives, Mai rose and stalked over to the man who had
hurled lightning into her little sister. Another fire bender made the mistake of trying to stop her and fell to the ground, one of the knives buried in his
throat. Reaching her target, Mai kicked the stunned man over onto his back and had drawn back her hand to finish him off when the light flickered giving her a
clearer view of his face. Her eyes went wide and the two throwing knives slipped from suddenly nerveless fingers.
"A little help here, Mai!" called June from where she was holding off three of the
remaining firebenders from the back of a komodo rhino. One of them had already managed to catch her with a small bolt of fire, marked by the flames still
rising from her sleeve.
Mai straightened and without turning her head fired one of her remaining dart launchers
three times. One of the soldiers crumpled with a scream, clutching at his knee where a dart had punctured the thinner protection behind the joint. A second
simply fell to the ground like a sack of potatoes, the tail-feathers of a dart barely visible where it had buried itself in the armpit. June's eyes crossed
as she tried to track the third dart, which passed within a few inches of her face... and punched between the open lips of the third firebender.
"Scary girl," the one time bounty hunter sighed, kicking the one survivor of the
three in the face to ensure he stayed down. Then she looked around for the next opponent, casually beating out the flames now that she had a free
hand.
Down in the amphitheatre, Mai came to a decision and used the front of Zuko's shirt to
pull his shoulders up from the stones. His eyes opened blearily and failed to focus upon her squarely. "Mai?" he muttered.
"Jerk," she replied tersely and punched him across the jaw with the heel of her
free hand. The prince's head bounced off the ground and he lay still.
Shu-Lin dove under a stream of fire and thrust upwards with her sword into the firebender
before rolling to her feet. Suddenly the three Kyoshi Warriors were the only ones still standing. June and Shu-Lin coverged upon their leader's
position.
"How's the runt?" June asked bluntly.
"Alive," Mai reported bluntly. "Your arm?"
"Nothing to worry about," the older woman insisted.
Mai looked around at the wreckage. "We need to tidy this up. Shu-lin drive off the
komodo rhinos. June, throw the enemy soldiers off the cliff. The tide will dispose of them."
"What about the wounded?"
Mai stared at her blankly.
"Right." June reached for Zuko but Mai shook her head.
"Not this one. We're taking him with us."
"You know him?" Shu-Lin asked. "And since when was Toph a
firebender?"
"I'll tell you on the boat," decided Mai and headed back towards
Toph.
.oOo.
Getting down the cliff with an unconcious Toph and Zuko proved to be complicated. In the end
it proved necessary to improvise a sling and lower them one at a time directly over the cliff with Shu-Lin climbing down alongside Toph to ensure she
didn't come to harm. They weren't quite as careful with Zuko since his injuries weren't as likely to be aggravated and frankly, none of them were
particularly bothered about adding more bruises to his collection.
"So," Shu-Lin asked as June pushed the canoe off from the shore.
"Explanations?"
Mai didn't look up from her paddling. "His name is Zuko. After Toph discovered she
was a firebender, he was her teacher for a little while."
The other two looked at each other. "A little more detail could help," suggested
June. "I've seen Toph Earthbending. She's never been... all that great, honestly. And now she's firebending as well?"
Shu-Lin was practically glowing as she paddled. "She's the Avatar, isn't she?
Why didn't you tell anyone?"
Mai made a frustrated noise. "She was attacked by her parents." She ignored the
hiss from Shu-Lin. "They didn't want their blind little girl to be a bender, so they had someone do something to her. I don't know the details,
but something to do with her chi. You've seen her bending... that's as much as she can do."
June was the one to put it together. "The Fire Nation's been looking for the next
Avatar ever since the Battle of the Three Dragons. Right now, they know she must only be a child. If they find out she's blind, that she only has a limited
ability to bend... they'll know that they don't have to fear her any more. And morale in the Earth Kingdom would collapse: they've been hoping for
a powerful, aggressive Avatar to lead them against the Fire Nation."
"You said 'her parents'," Shu-Lin said slowly. "Not 'our
parents'. You aren't her sister, are you?"
"After she was... hurt, she ran away," Mai said carefully, "My parents took
her in. She didn't tell anyone she was an earthbender and everyone was thrilled that she was a firebender."
"So you're from the Fire Nation." There was an ugly undertone to June's
conclusion. Both of of the other Kyoshi Warriors had their issues, Mai knew. Shu-Lin's were with parents, but June's were with the Fire Nation.
"Why would one of them choose to throw in her lot with the Avatar?"
"She's my sister," Mai said. "Blood doesn't matter. Women are
expected to join other families and be as loyal to them as they were to their parents. Marriage, or adoption, it doesn't matter. Would you abandon a
sister?"
June clenched her fist, but Shu Lin stopped paddling for a moment. "Kyoshi Warriors do
not leave their sisters behind," she reminded the other woman. "Would you have left Toph and I after she challenged him to that
duel?"
"...no," June admitted grudgingly. She looked down at Zuko. "What about this
one? He'd be a very ugly sister. Why spare him? He already almost killed Toph. When he finds out she's the Avatar..."
Mai shrugged, feigning indifference. "He's important within the Fire Nation. Too
important to just vanish without anyone looking for him. Suki's going to need to decide what happens to him."
"Does she know?" asked Shu-Lin. "About Toph, I mean?"
"I haven't told her. But I'm sure she suspects something."
They paddled in silence the rest of the way.
.oOo.
She could feel the cold stone beneath her feet, but it seemed cold and dead, no vibrations
to tell her anything more than what she was touching. Cold terror seemed to paralyse her. Had her earthsense deserted her completely.
Toph felt a small hand touch hers.
"Hello Toph. I've been looking forward to meeting you." A boy's voice,
young, from in front of her.
The smack of her fist touching flesh was startling and her hand was empty once more.
"Who are you!? What have you done to me!?"
"Ow!" Indignance more than pain. "You didn't have to hit
me!"
She could hear him, she knew his approximate location and sank into an earthbending stance.
"Answers!"
"I didn't do anything!" the boy protested quickly. "You're in the
spirit world, no one can bend here."
Whatever she'd expected, this wasn't it. "I'm... dead?"
There was the pad of light feet on stone and she could hear his breathing, closer now. Not
quite in arm's reach. He feared her. Good.
"Not quite. It could still go either way." He sighed. "There's someone
who wants to speak to you. Come with me?"
"I'm not going anywhere," Toph retorted automatically. "Not with someone
I don't know, who just sneaks up on me."
"Really I'm a friend," the boy promised. There was a whoof of air from his
direction and Toph heard heavier footsteps, far too heavy to be a person and... six legs? Sounded like whatever it was must be as large as a badgermole,
perhaps larger. "And this is Appa. He's a friend too, aren't you boy?" There was an agreeable rumble from the animal.
"I've not been having the best of luck with friends lately," Toph pointed out
warily. "In case you didn't notice, the reason I'm here is that my former firebending teacher decided to hit me with some freaky
attack."
The boy hesitated. "You realise that he didn't know who you were?"
"I guessed when he didn't realise I was a firebender," Toph shrugged. "I guess all that facepainting must really work
afterall."
"It really does," he agreed cheerfully. "So, come on. Your spirit guide
awaits."
Toph glared. "You're my spirit guide?"
"Well, no. She sent me to bring you to her..."
"So you're what? The hired help?" Toph asked incredulously. How gullible did
he think she was? For all she could tell he might be about to feed her to that big Appa of his. He hadn't even told her his name!
"No, I'm Aang!"
Okay, now he'd told her his name. Wait... Aang? "Eew! I knew that Bumi guy was
creepy, but having fun with a little boy? That's just sick."
"You know Bumi?" Aang sounded surprised. "Wait, what do you mean sick.
He's a great guy. We used to play on the mail slides when he was a kid."
"When he was a kid?" exclaimed Toph. "But he's ancient and you're
like, eight or something."
"I'm a hundred and twelve!"
"Months, maybe."
Aang groaned in frustration. "I'm dead, alright? People stop getting older when
they die. I was only twelve when I died. Bumi's been alive the whole time, that's why he looks older than me." He took her hand again and started
pulling at her again, but couldn't shift her from her stance.
"Listen, lightweight, no one takes me anywhere I don't want to. Bumi says hi, he
misses all the fun, now buzz off."
"Oh really?" There was a mischievous sound to Aang's voice. "Appa, give
me a hand here, buddy." The big creature mooed accomodatingly and Toph braced herself, for all the good it did when several tons of herbivore butted her
gently but firmly off her feet. Grabbing blindly for something - anything - to break her hold, Toph latched onto something long and smooth, only to be lifted
clean off the ground when it moved upwards.
"Good work, boy," Aang said cheerfully. "Now, yip yip!"
There was a whoof of air and Toph screamed in mingled fear and indignation as her stomach
advised her that she was being lifted higher and higher off the ground, dangling from the horn of the sky bison as it ascended into the air.
.oOo.
Suki was waiting at the dock when the canoe arrived. After months of practise Mai could make
out the emotions beneath the mask of warpaint and she could tell the leader of the Kyoshi Warriors was concerned by the fact that only three figures were
visible above the gunwhales of the boat. "What happened?" she asked immediately, catching hold of the rope that Mai threw her from the
bow.
"Toph is injured, and we have a prisoner," Mai said, indicating the two prone
forms lying in the bottom of the canoe. "Chin Village has been destroyed. The women and children were fleeing the area, last that we saw of them. They
only saw Toph and other than this one, all the Fire Nation soldiers are dead."
"Shu-Lin, go fetch a healer," Suki ordered quickly. "June, take the prisoner
and secure him. Don't do anything to him until I hear Mai's report. Is he a bender?" When she heard confirmation she nodded firmly. "If
necessary, ask the healers for a sleeping draft. Better he doesn't wake up until I make a decision on what to do with him."
The other two Kyoshi Warriors climbed onto the jetty, June carrying Zuko over her shoulder.
Suki looked down at Toph and shook her head. "I shouldn't have let you take her with you."
Mai said nothing, instead lifting her sister gently up so that Suki could take her. Beneath
her make-up Suki paled at the wound. Toph seemed to weigh almost nothing and her breathing was so faint that only a slight warmth to her body showed she was
still alive. "I know, you know. That she's the Avatar." There was still no response from Mai as the girl jumped up onto the jetty. "Who did
this?"
Toph's sister pointed to where Jun was barely visible in the distance.
"If she dies, he dies," Suki swore. "What sort of monster would do this to a
child."
"She'd be offended to be called a child," Mai said, her voice betraying
uncertainty as to what to feel about the matter. "Toph challenged him to a duel. I don't know why he accepted."
Suki shrugged and started towards the shore, careful not to shake Toph around. "I meant
what I said there," she added flatly. "I don't care how valuable he might turn out to be..."
"He's the Fire Lords's son."
"He's the wha-!?" Suki half-screamed, then lowered her voice to a whisper.
"What do you mean he's the Fire Lord's son?"
"I mean that Ozai is his father. What else would I mean?"
"Are you sure?" asked Suki, nervously. First the Avatar, and now a Prince of the
Fire Nation? What next, the Earth King arriving on a dancing bear?
"Pretty much," Mai said. "I lied about being a merchant's daughter. My
family is an old one in the Fire Nation. I went to school with Zuko's sister, so I saw him every now and then."
If
Suki hadn't been carrying Toph she would have slapped Mai, so she did the logical thing. As soon as she put Toph down on the grass at the end of the jetty,
she cracked a backhanded blow across the taller girl's face, knocking her from her feet.
"I probably deserved that," Mai conceded numbly, sitting up.
"So what's Toph's story? Your father's byblow?" Suki asked angrily.
"Is she even your sister at all?"
"Toph's a runaway," Mai said quietly. "Family means more than blood in
the Fire Nation. When my parents took her in, she became my sister in every way that matters. When my brother was abducted, Toph risked her own life to save
him. When I learnt she was the Avatar, I left my parents to protect her from the Fire Nation. I've given up everything else in my life, even..." She
shook her head. "Don't ever say she isn't my sister."
Suki stared down at her. "I should probably lock you away with your firebender
friend," she said at last. "For the Avatar's sake, I won't do that. But if you ever give me even the slightest reason to doubt you again, one
deception... I'll think of a way to explain your death to her."
.oOo.
"Here we are!" Aang announced happily as Appa's feet touched the
ground.
"Great," Toph grumbled and let go of the horn, landing lightly on dusty stones
that felt somewhat like a path to her feet. Feeling the sky bison whuffle against her, she used her hands to feel her way across his face and then grabbed the
huge beast by the nostrils and tugged downwards. "Don't ever do that again!" she roared at the top of her voice.
Appa squealed and tried to back away from the crazy small person. When that didn't work,
he opened his mouth and blew, trying to dislodge her but he had to stop when she refused and the pulling on his sensitive nose grew too painful.
"Leave him alone!" Aang protested, running around and grabbing Toph's ankles,
trying to pull her away. As she was still refusing to release Appa, this let to a bellow of protest from the unfortunate sky bison. "Let
go!"
"You let go!"
Another bellow from Appa was followed by a torrent of water descending upon them all.
"You can play later, children," a new voice declared. Older, female. Not an accent that Toph recognised. Aang obediently dropped her
ankles.
"Who are you?" the young earthbender demanded, not letting go yet.
"She's your spirit guide," Aang hissed.
"So why did you send muppet here to come get me." Toph asked, letting go of Appa,
who prudently backed away. She felt Aang brush past her as he rushed to comfort his companion.
"I had several reasons, Toph," the woman said in a grandmotherly tone. "Come,
sit with me."
Grudgingly, Toph obeyed. But only because she wanted to anyway!
"Unlike my two predecessors, I do not have a spirit companion to carry me across the
world," the old woman told her. "And I felt that you might prefer to be met by someone your age, rather than by an lady of a certain
age."
"You aren't old, Kanna," a man's voice said from nearby. "Not
compared to Kyoshi, anyway."
"Don't you have anywhere to be, Roku?" the woman's voice - Kanna,
presumably - asked pointedly.
Toph jumped to her feet. "You're... you're Avatars!" she burst out,
backing away. "What do you want with me!"
She heard the man approach and then he paused and she heard his robes rustling on the
ground. He's... kneeling? What? "For myself, Toph, all I wish to do is to apologise on behalf of my great-grandson."
"Who?" she blurted.
"My grand-daughter is wed to the Fire Lord Ozai," Roku explained. "Therefore
Zuko is my descendant."
Toph shrugged. "You aren't to blame for what he did," she said reasonably.
"If you're responsible for what he did then I'd be responsble for what my - yeah. Never mind."
"You are not to blame for your parents' actions."
"Well if you know that, then what are you bringing it up for?" Toph
asked.
Roku chuckled and then she could hear his robes brushing around his knees as Kanna cleared
her throat. "Yes Kanna, I'm done now," he promised.
"I'm sure you have many questions," Kanna said gently to Toph. "I asked
Aang to bring you here so that I can answer them."
Toph sat down cautiously. "You're the one with the plan, why don't you
start."
"Very well then. You are the Avatar, Toph. Roku, myself and even Aang are your past -
just a few of the thousands of lives that you have lived, protecting the balance between the four elements, and between the mortal world and this one. And you
have never been more badly needed. The Fire Nation is badly out of control. Unless they are checked they will use the power granted by Sozin's Comet to
catastrophically destroy all balance between the elements. I know that it is not fair for you to carry that burden so young, but I believe that you can restore
the balance."
Toph shook her head. "That doesn't make sense. I mean, I know the history - Sozin
destroyed the Air Nomads, but the world didn't collapse because of that. It's not as if all the air vanished when the Air Nomads were wiped out. I
don't want the Fire Nation to conquer everyone, but it's not going to destroy the world."
"In that you are wrong," Kanna said quietly. "The Fire Lords' ambitions
know no bounds. When they struck at the Northern Water Tribes, they not only destroyed the civilisation there, they also attempted to kill the spirits Tui and
La, the Ocean and the Moon. The consequences had they succeeded would have been disasterous for all concerned. It was only with a great deal of luck that I was
able to save them and to spirit away a few survivors to a refuge near the South Pole." She chuckled drily. "That was a joke: 'spirit
away'?"
"Yeah, keep trying."
"For much of my life," Kanna continued, "I devoted my attention to repairing
the damage caused by the Fire Nation. I did not confront them directly - perhaps I was influenced too greatly by the customs of my own people, who believed
that women should use waterbending only to heal. I found the more confrontational ways of earthbending very difficult to learn and fire even harder. By the
time I was ready to study airbending, the Air Nomads had been extinct for almost half a century. Because of this, the Fire Lords have been free to ravage the
world for generations. When I finally challenged them, twelve years ago, I was too late. Too weak."
"And now you are the Avatar. Unlike myself and Aang, you have a warrior spirit, Toph.
Indomitable, irresistable. The world needs you to do what we could not."
Toph shook her head. "I don't know if you've noticed, but I'm not exactly
in fighting form."
"You did very well against Roku's descendant," observed Kanna.
"I lost. That's not good enough," Toph told her. "Unless you have any
ideas how to repair the damage to my chakras I won't be making the Fire Lord Ozai tremble in his pointy boots."
.oOo.
Mai stared down at Zuko. The prince had been stripped of his finery and chained to a wall in
one of the few stone buildings of the village. He had been kept sedated for several days, but the healers had warned that continuing doses would be damaging
and so Suki had decided to allow him to wake. In case he tried to break loose - and not only Suki but also several islanders familiar with bending had
questioned Mai intensively on his capabilities - two Kyoshi Warriors were assigned to guard him at all times.
She had not been trusted with that responsibility. Mai had barely left Toph's side,
sleeping on a mat in the same room where healers kept the younger girl under constant supervision. Toph had not woken in all that time, slipping into a coma.
None of the healers had been tactless enough to comment within Mai's hearing on the likelihood of Toph never waking, but Suki had relayed their estimations
with brutal honesty.
"Stop brooding about Toph," Suki ordered. Zuko was expected to wake at some point
that afternoon and the leader of the Kyoshi Warriors intended to interrogate him immediately, so she was waiting in the same building, taking the opportunity
to read reports from the various detachments around the island. "I know what the healers said, but I've sent word to some allies of ours. They have
excellent healers and I'm sure that they'll send someone able to help her."
Mai hmmed noncommittally and looked away. She would feel better if Suki was willing to tell
her who these allies were, but she supposed that it was too late to look for trust between the two of them. After a moment she looked again at Zuko. Stubble
was visible across his head but the locks that had been part of his topknot were still obvious in contrast. Mai could not think what he had been thinking to
start wearing his hair in that ridiculous fashion.
Because she was looking at him, she was the first to see his eyelids flickering.
"He's waking up," she warned and stepped back, allowing the two guards to stand ready with a clear field of view towards Zuko.
Nonetheless, when his eyes opened they focused almost immediately upon her. Emotions raced
across his face: shock, followed by joy and then bitter anger. Mai felt her own face stiffen into immobility in response. Carefully, testing his limits, Zuko
shifted to a sitting positon, grimacing when he realised that the chains were too short for him to be able to stand. Slowly, he looked around the room,
measuring all four of the Kyoshi Warriors.
"So you have me prisoner," he concluded. "What now? You must realise that you
have a dragon by the tail, safe only as long as you can hold on." He took a deep breath, centring himself and then caught Mai's eye. "Perhaps not
even then."
"I've given serious thought to killing you," Suki admitted candidly. "You
are Prince Zuko of the Fire Nation, or so I'm told. I've heard a great deal about your recent activities on the mainland. Most of it does not lead me
to believe that your death would be a tragedy."
"I thought I heard someone call Toph's name," Zuko noted, "Just
before I was knocked out. Is she alive too?"
There was a deadly silence.
"Thus far. No thanks to you," answered Suki.
"Wh-" Horrified realisation crossed Zuko's face. "That was her? Damn you
Mai, it wasn't enough that you'd betray m- your people, you dragged her into it. You let me fight her?"
"Let?" Mai asked, coldly. Mockingly. Was this the Zuko she thought she knew.
"You don't know Toph as well as you think, your highness."
"You should know," Suki added, taking the advantage of Zuko's consernation,
"That if Toph does die of her wounds I'll be burying you next to her." Her smile was horrible. "If I'm feeling merciful, maybe I'll
kill you first."
Zuko looked at her in surprise and then nodded his head slowly. "In that case, I offer
my services as a healer." His lips curled. "I certainly have ample motivation to want her to survive... and I'm a firebender. Treating burns is
something I'm used to."
Suki shook her head. "We'll see. For now, I have some questions for
you."
D for Drakensis
You're only young once, but immaturity is forever.