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#fire sage zuko
a-witch-in-endor · 3 days
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the fact that you had zuko saying the ‘i heard’ ‘i have spoken’ from his watertribe lessons in his trial- *slams head on desk fervently and passes put*
Hahahaha, I loved writing that. The quiet rebellion of references that won't be picked up.
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tuktukpodfics · 4 months
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“You’re cheating!” “No I’m not, you’re just bad at it.”
Podfic of @a-witch-in-endor's Fire Sage Zuko AU: Chapter 10
In which Zuko and Sokka bond in a Northern Water Tribe prison.
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saxonroa · 1 year
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While Mighty Oaks Do Fall
@a-witch-in-endor
I have been obsessed lately with this fic. So fire sage Zuko :D. This took me almost 6 hours, worth it.
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sunhatwafers · 2 years
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The heresy trial, based on Chapter 14 of While Mighty Oaks Do Fall by @a-witch-in-endor
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scrayanna · 1 year
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Zuko, I don't have draw in a while so here is my childhood crush
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psychologeek · 2 years
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dasafafad
i have so much to do... finish papers due to sunday, send 4 meeting reports, read 3 essays, etc.
i also need to finish packing, since i’m moving sunday morning, and find someone w/ car to help me.
what do i DO?
looking at  “while mighty oaks do fall” fan arts and making a suprise
[also its like 6 am and i didn’t go to sleep....]
good luck me :( 
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jarlequinn · 1 year
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NEW MUSIC OUT NOW
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comradekatara · 1 year
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every agni kai we see zuko fight involves his opponent acting dishonorably/cheating:
ozai burns zuko after he surrenders, when banishing him would’ve sufficed.
zhao tries to strike zuko when his back is turned, as he’s walking away from his victory
azula aims at katara.
of course ozai and zhao are violent, spiteful, petty, and cruel. it is the final instance that especially stands out to me because azula, of all people, resorting to cheating is such a profound testament to all she has lost by this point. she doesn’t even care that this act must immediately disqualify her from winning the fight, from winning the throne. all she cares about now is making zuko hurt; she‘s been reduced to the desire for him to know her pain.
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hanadoesstuffwrong · 6 months
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Wait, what do you mean Zuko and Katara don't get married and usher in a Golden Age???
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You mean to tell me they didn't just win back THEIR kingdom together?!?!?
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Excuse me sir that is his Queen!
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a-witch-in-endor · 1 month
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Chapters: 19/30 Fandom: Avatar: The Last Airbender Rating: Teen And Up Audiences Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply Relationships: The Gaang & Zuko (Avatar), Zuko & the Fire Sages, Sokka/Zuko (Avatar), Yue & Zuko (Avatar), Azula & Zuko (Avatar) Characters: Zuko (Avatar), The Gaang (Avatar), Yue (Avatar), Azula (Avatar), Zuko's Hat Additional Tags: Funny Hat Zuko AU, Fire Sage Zuko AU, Ozai (Avatar) Being a Terrible Parent, Found Family, Fire Hazard Siblings, canon-typical child abuse, Zuko is the Temple's Baby Nerd, Worldbuilding, Zuko Joins The Gaang Early (Avatar), Zuko has never met a hill he wasn't ready to die on, Autism Summary:
High Sage Kenji blesses Fire Prince Zuko with the resilience of the reed, who bends in the wind and never breaks. When he is done, Fire Prince Ozai narrows his eyes, seemingly displeased by this blessing. But Kenji does not speak for himself; he is only a vessel. 
-
The newly-crowned Fire Lord Ozai offers his firstborn son to service in the temple.
This turns out to be a catastrophic mistake.
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tuktukpodfics · 1 year
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Podfic of chapter 7 of @a-witch-in-endor's Fire Sage Zuko AU.
In which subtle Bato is subtle, Sokka is distracted, and Zuko goes for a swim.
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muffinlance · 1 year
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So, how does Zuko wind up at the Tree of Time in Chaos Avatar to bust Vaatu out? Didn't you say the start is pre-banishment, post-mom gone? What, does he, as a descendant of Roku, have enough of a knack for spirit stuff to fall into a meditative trace while hiding at the turtleduck pond and missing his mom or whatever, and poof! He's at the Tree of Time?
FINALLY someone asks for the START. You are correct that the turtleduck pond is involved. <3
* * *
The turtleduckling had disappeared the day after mother did, but at least Zuko knew where it had gone. But he still wasn’t talking to Azula. 
“You have to talk to me sometime, Dum-Dum,” she said.
He crossed his arms, and stared at the remaining ducklings as they hid under a bush on the opposite side. There were four left.
“It was an accident, I didn’t even see it, and anyway it should have moved. You have to forgive me for accidents, moth—”
Mother said so. But they didn’t talk about mother anymore. 
Azula sat down next to him. She crossed her arms, too. And puffed out her cheeks, and glared, and he did not look like that. Not that he was paying attention to her. 
He was paying attention to the turtleducklings. Because… because there were five.
Azula went very still next to him.
The fifth turtleduckling had a darker shell and feathers, like it had been rolled in ashes. It waddled into the water, heedless of its parents' warning quacks and the two children the rest of its siblings were hiding from. 
Quack, it said, and paddled merrily along. 
Quack, it said, and disappeared like it had swum behind a screen. Except the screen was a normal patch of water and air, and he could see straight through it still. No fifth turtleduck.
“Is our pond… haunted?” Zuko asked.
“I thought you weren’t talking to me,” Azula said, but it was more of a reflex, as they both stared. Then, more sharply: “What are you doing?”
Zuko was standing up. He found a pebble and, without a mother to re-advise him against throwing rocks into certain ponds, launched it towards the spot they’d last seen the ghost duck. 
Quack, quacked an extremely offended quacker, who was still out of sight. The rock had disappeared, too, with no ripple on the water to show it had ever landed.
“...Dare you to go in,” Azula said.
“How stupid do you think I am?”
“I don’t think you’re stupid,” Azula said. “But a coward? That remains to be seen.”
Zuko glowered. Azula smirked. …Zuko started rolling up his pants.
“I wasn’t serious,” she snapped. “And I take it back, you are stupid,” which meant that now he was definitely going in. “Father is going to be angry when he sees you in wet robes,” she said, as he toed off his shoes. “And I’m not covering for you,” she said, as he caught his balance on the first slimy algae-covered stones, “and I’ll demand the servants attend me so they won’t be able to help you change, and—”
By then he was near the center of the small pond, and poking at air. His hand disappeared.
“I hope it hurts,” Azula said. She was on her feet now, with her arms crossed even more firmly over her chest.
“It just feels… normal? Maybe a little cold? It doesn’t—oww!” 
He jerked back his hand, complete with one ghost turtleduckling clamped over his palm. 
“Oww oww oww,” he shook it, and shook it, but it wasn’t coming off, and then he tripped on a stupid slimy rock and fell sideways—
“I’m not coming after you!”
—into somewhere that wasn’t the palace gardens at all. He’d fallen in water, but it was a shallow stream now. The day was colder, the wind stronger and drier. And there was a tree, up ahead.
The duckling dropped off his hand, and paddled away. Zuko barely glanced after it.
That was a very, very big tree. A purple light pulsed at its bulging, split-barked core.
“Hello, mortal,” the tree said.
At which point Zuko scrabbled backwards until he splashed back into the stiller, warmer, deeper water of the turtleduck pond.
“Evil tree,” he told Azula.
“Dum-Dum,” she said, and stomped off. 
By the time Zuko got inside, the servants were busy drawing their little princess a warm bath. He was made to wait his turn.
* * *
“I am unaware of any records pertaining to… evil trees,” the sage in charge of the royal archives said. 
“What about the spirit world?” Zuko asked.
* * *
The ghost turtleduckling swam with impunity between realms. And stole entire loaves out of Zuko’s hands, before fleeing on its tiny paddling feet to the safety of the other side.
“Hey!” 
It had learned that Zuko wouldn’t follow. Neither would its equally hungry siblings.
* * *
A place of death could form a rift, if the spirit did not realize its own passing. If it still desired to return, and was unaware of the general impossibility of the task. Spirits worked mostly on not realizing they couldn’t do a thing. 
“Oh,” Zuko said, to the scroll.
As this was a more common occurrence with animal spirits than with humans, who tended to overthink things even in death, it did not help Zuko narrow down his mother’s location.
* * *
Azula had stopped coming to the pond. And they had different bending instructors, now; father said a private tutor would stop her from being held back by… others. She preened.
Since Zuko was left alone at his lessons, he had a private tutor now, too. It didn’t feel like a reward.
* * *
“...Hello again, mortal,” the tree said, its voice oozing like a courtier’s. “Do come in. No need to be shy.”
“Are you evil?” Zuko asked, only his head poking through the rift.
“Such terms rarely apply to spirits,” the tree said, exactly like an evil tree would. “Consider our meeting, rather… an opportunity. Is there something you require assistance with? You would not have found yourself in this part of the spirit world, if I could not help. Perhaps we could— Mortal, come back here—”
Zuko pulled his head back out. It was definitely evil. But he’d gotten a better look at the patterns on the glowy purple part, so he sat down on the pond’s edge, and drew them before he forgot. He’d brought paper this time.
Maybe he wasn’t a good bender. Or heir. But there was an evil tree in the royal turtleduck pond, and he wasn’t a coward. He’d take care of it.
* * *
The sage in charge of the archives blinked. Took the paper from him, and blinked again. 
“Yes,” he said. “Yes, I believe I have seen something like this. Come.”
The scroll was old. So old it wasn’t even the original: it had been copied, and had time to grow old all over again. The sage fretted over every crackling inch they unrolled.
“Where did you say you saw this design?” the sage asked.
“...I, uh. Dreamed it?” Zuko said.
They stared, together, at an inked drawing of the Avatar’s patron spirit. 
* * *
…If Zuko found the Avatar, father would definitely like him better than Azula.
* * *
“Mortal,” the evil tree greeted, much less cordially.
“Are you the Avatar?”
“What,” it inquired, with a sort of rustling tree sigh, like it was already disappointed in his answer, “is the Avatar?”
Oh. So… no.
“It’s just, there was this picture in a scroll, of the Avatar’s patron spirit. And they looked like you, except without the tree, and white—”
“Raava,” the tree hissed.
Which had probably been the kanji that he hadn’t recognized. But neither had the sage, so it must have been a really hard one.
“Tell me about this… Avatar,” the tree said.
And maybe Zuko should have gone back to the training grounds to practice his katas more. Or read over the next chapters in his textbooks again, so he’d actually understand them when his instructors went over them tomorrow. But he was still sore from the extra sets his master had assigned as remedial instruction after Zuko had embarrassed them both in front of father. And sometimes when he read ahead he thought too much and got all the wrong ideas in his head, like the time he’d asked why Sozin hadn’t formed a coalition of other nations against the threat of the Air Nomad army. And that just made more work for his instructors to fix, so.
So Zuko sat down, on the stream bank nearest his escape route, and talked to an evil tree.
“They’re the master of all four elements,” he said. “The last one was an enemy to the Fire Nation, and the new one’s been hiding, probably because he’s too much of a coward to face us—”
* * *
He brought an extra loaf of bread next time. One for the ducklings who needed it, and one for the duckling who just thought she did. The ghost duckling tugged and tugged against his grip, before grudgingly clambering up to eat in his lap.
She was really soft.
She bit really hard.
“How many of these… Avatars… have there been?” the evil tree asked.
* * *
“How many Avatars have there been?” Zuko asked the sage.
“Nigh uncountable,” the man said. “Have you had more dreams, my prince?”
“Um,” Zuko said.
* * *
“A lot,” Zuko told the tree. “The sage in the archive said the histories don’t go back that far. He guessed there were at least a hundred.”
“...And how long does your species of mortal live?”
“Avatar Kyoshi lived a really long time. But most of us don’t live more than seventy or eighty years. And some of the Avatars probably died a lot sooner than that, if people resented their meddling as much as the textbooks say.”
“Seven thousand years,” the tree said. “At least.”
And then it got really quiet, for a long time. Which was natural for a tree, but not for an evil tree. Zuko sat with it. He’d brought his homework, so he wouldn’t be wasting his study time.
…Except he kind of did, because apparently ghost turtleducklings could sleep—or at least, dream of sleeping?—and this one did it right in his lap.
* * *
They had flambéed quail-shark for dinner, and Zuko had almost been late, but father was too busy watching the flames to notice him sliding onto his cushion. Azula did.
“Look,” she whispered, “a dead bird can firebend better than you.”
* * *
“Flambé,��� Zuko scolded, trying to pull half a loaf of bread out of the mouth of a ghost turtleduckling intent on choking herself.
“...What is ‘flambé’?” the evil tree asked.
And, after Zuko was done with that explanation: “What is… ‘taste’?”
* * *
“I need a recipe book,” Zuko told the sage. “With pictures.” 
“I… of course, my prince. But first, would you like any of these?”
The man had set out a whole table of toys. Most were wooden. They all looked really old. There was another sage there, one of the ones from the high temple. He was just kind of standing there, watching them for some reason. 
“Thanks,” Zuko said. “But I’m too old for toys.”
They both watched him leave.
* * *
“Which turtle do you hail from?” the tree asked.
“I… don’t know?”
The tree sighed. “Air. Water. Earth—”
“Fire!” Zuko said.
“Yes,” it said drily, “that is the final option.”
“No, that’s… that’s what I bend. I’m from the Fire Nation.”
“Ah,” the tree said, in its oil-slick voice. “The element of power. A fine fit, for such a promising young larva.”
So today was going to be one of those days.
Zuko crossed his arms. “I’m glad you’re feeling better,” he said, “but if you keep trying to make me evil, I’m going to go back and practice my bending some more.”
“No need for anything so dramatic,” it said. “But I would wager that there’s something you need more power for. Some task to do, or someone to impress. Perhaps someone to… surpass?”
Azula was two sequences ahead, now. Father had rewarded her with an even better tutor. They were very famous, or something. 
“Perhaps we can help each other,” the tree said.
“Do you want more water?” Zuko asked. Because he’d been sitting here day after day thinking how dry the ground was, even with the stream, and the stream was actually really far from the tree’s roots. Maybe that was why it looked so dead. Maybe it wasn’t evil, it was just really thirsty. “I could dig the stream closer. I saw farmers doing that, when mo— When we toured the countryside, when we were younger. They said it was good for the plants.”
“I…” the tree said, like that was not the response it expected. “No, larva. I do not require more water.”
“What else do trees need?” Zuko asked.
“...I am not the tree. I am inside the tree.” 
“Oh. Oh. …You can come out, if you want. I’ll try not to be scared.”
It was silent again. And then it was laughing, but not a funny laugh. And then it was shouting, and Zuko knew better than to talk back when someone was shouting at him. 
“I cannot simply come out. I have been trapped here, alone, for millennia beyond your comprehension, and…”
The spirit stopped, and took in great big breaths, which wasn’t a thing father or his tutors did until they were done yelling. The spirit had stopped itself early, without Zuko apologizing even once. 
“...Is that why you’re lonely?” He’d thought it was because it was a tree, and evil trees without many leaves probably didn’t get many visitors. But being inside a tree probably wasn’t any better.
“I am not lonely,” the not-a-tree growled. “Listen, human larva. I will grant you power beyond your mortal imagining. You can be that Avatar you speak of, if you join with me. All I require in exchange is to not be in a tree.”
* * *
“Could someone who isn’t the Avatar learn the other elements?” Zuko asked the sage.
“...I suspect,” said the man, looking somewhat tired, “that the most likely explanation for such a phenomenon would be that this person was the Avatar. I happen to have a book here, with select personal accounts of how those who came into the knowledge prior to their sixteenth birthdays adjusted to the situation. If you would be interested.”
Zuko scowled, because that wasn’t helpful at all.
* * * 
“You’re never going to catch up, Zuzu,” Azula said. “But I suppose you could come train with me, if you asked nicely. My new tutor believes in the benefit of sparring, even against lesser opponents. We don’t even need to ask father, so long as you can refrain from embarrassing us both.”
“Mmhmm,” said Zuko, who was thinking.
“Well?” she snapped.
“Sorry, what?”
His sister stomped away.
* * * 
She wouldn’t talk to him at dinner, which was normal, because she always talked with father then.
She wouldn’t talk to him at any other meals, either, which wasn’t. Father wasn’t even there for those, it was just them and the servants who silently scurried in and out.
She didn’t even barge into his room to read his essays over his shoulder and laugh. …Or read the play scrolls they’d smuggled out of mother’s room before the servants had cleaned it, and laugh together. 
* * *
The servants were polite, but father hated for them to waste time on idle chatter.
Uncle was still missing. 
The sage in the archives kept looking at him funny.
“Could we spar sometime?” Zuko asked Azula, because he missed training together.
For some reason, that made her ignore him even harder.
* * * 
Flambé nibbled at his pant legs, then bit his ankle, then waddled petulantly away. Zuko hadn’t brought any bread, this time. 
“I don’t think power would help me,” Zuko said. Not unless it could make him smart enough to learn faster, or help him find mother, or fix whatever in him was so broken that father didn’t even like to look at him. “But… would you like to see the rest of the turtleducks? The not-dead ones.”
Flambé quacked derisively from the side.
“No,” the probably evil spirit said. “I do not desire to see more turtleducks. One is quite enough.”
“...Maybe the garden? It’s nice.”
“No, I—” it said. And then it paused. And got out its oily voice again, like that was something that it needed with Zuko. Maybe it didn’t know how else to talk when people were being nice to it. “...Yes. Yes, I would enjoy seeing your delightful little garden. Simply place your hand into the tree, and…”
“And?” Zuko asked.
“…This is a permanent thing, larva. Beyond even your single miniscule lifetime, as your so-called Avatar discovered. Are you certain?”
“Yes,” Zuko said. And stepped past the banks of the stream, and marched right up to the tree itself. He pushed his hand into his friend’s prison. 
Someone that wouldn’t ignore him, who couldn’t leave him. Zuko had never been more sure in his life.
“What’s your name?” he asked.
“Vaatu,” whispered the oil-slick voice, inside his own mind.
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puppyeared · 2 months
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Atla live action 😐
#thats my honest reaction 😐#to be fair ive only seen 20 minutes of the s1 finale bc my parents are watching it but. mmmmm kinda mid#like. the casting is definitely an improvement since the last time they tried a live action but it feels like the writing falls flat#or maybe im being harsh bc ive only heard negative criticism on it beforehand. but fr anytime u bring up the original its already#good and not just because its the original. so much fucking detail went into it to the point of someone noticing azula wielding mai's knive#to how well thought out irohs character is used as a way of uniting the cast especially as zukos foil#i heard that sokkas sexism was toned down and i have to agree that feels like a cheap move. like i get WHY they think it would be better#but its not about how that reflects on real world its about how it affects the story. sokka starts out as a misogynistic asshole because#it makes it that much more impactful when he changes. toning that down makes it flatter and makes his character development weak#and someone pointed out they didnt even make him wear the kyoshi warrior uniform and i know it feels like such a small detail but#come on man. they did that in the original because not only does it help him really walk in their shoes - wearing 'feminine' clothing and#makeup and having suki explain its significance but it also ties in with the shows theme of harmony and intersectionality#i was also disappointed when they had the fire sages explain how the water tribe draws power from the moon because in the original it was#IROH who explained it to aang and everyone else BECAUSE we as the audience is under the impression hes with the 'bad guys'#and it builds up to how he learned from the other nations which reconciles his past as a war general and his character overall#AND its an excellent starting point for the cast and audience to understand how the nations arent as closed off as you would think#plus you would think its only fire nation doing propaganda but they expanded on that with earth kingdom censorship and it WORKS#a lot of things in the live action also feel arbitrary like. they gave momo a near death experience for 5 minutes for no reason#im firmly on the stance of bringing back filler moments instead of putting major events right after each other so that u give your#audience a sense of time passing and to really absorb the story. but i think thats more like shock value than filler and yeah its a small#thing to gripe about but those things build up and its really annoying. the thing abt avatar filler moments is that however small#its at least meaningful. hell even the beach episode emphasizes how isolated zuko and his friends are as child soldiers#i also swore to never watch the first live action since it was that bad but i really liked the stylized tattoos they used for aang#anyway. those arejust my thoughts. im not gonna watch the rest because im a ride or die for the original aftr growing up and#rewatching it at least 20 times as a kid. but theres definitely room for improvement and i wish ppl wouldnt take it as 'better' just cuz#netflix is adapting it. i wouldve killed for them to just reanimate the entire avatar series and touch NOTHING ELSE no redub#no changes to the story. just reanimate the thing and leave the rest alone and youd make easy money just the same#ALSO its very jarring not hearing jack desena and dante basco voicing sokka and zuko cause their voices were the most recognizable to me#i get that its because its live action but im allowed to feel a little sad abt that. and uncle irohs accent was really soothing#yapping
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asiriyep · 2 years
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Atla Gen Week 2022.
Day 5: Childhood/children.
This is a glimpse of our AU "Fire Sage Lu Ten".
[ID: Mini comic with two vignettes in monochrome magenta.
In the first vignette, a pre-teen Lu Ten confidently and excitedly says "I'm a prince!, how hard can it be?" he holds Zuko and Azula who are little children in each arm, Zuko in the right arm and Azula in the left arm, they are holding hands on the front of Lu Ten. In the background on the left side it reads "Babysitter for the first time" with emphasis lines on the edge of the vignette.
In the second vignette, in a darkened stillness, Zuko and Azula are floating, both with glowing eyes, mouths open as they hold hands. Lu Ten screams frightened. End ID].
@atla-gen-week
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the-genius-az · 24 days
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Tuberculosis Au.
The day of the comet.
Azula reluctantly prepared herself, she was subjected to being the Fire Lord, but that was okay, she wasn't going to last long, but she was going to do what she could for her Nation, it was the only thing she had left.
Until Zuko and the waterbender showed up, with their flying bison. And that's where her rage broke out, her girls-no... Mai and Ty Lee left her for stupid Zuko, always him, always him, why? Why do they always have to choose Zuko over her? HAS NO SENSE! WHAT DOES HE HAVE THAT SHE DOESN'T HAVE?
And so he accepted the Agni Kai with his damn brother, he wanted to show that he didn't need anyone but his power.
Everything was almost the same as in the series, until Zuko scoffed, and she prepared to launch a lightning bolt... but stopped when she had a coughing fit, the lightning bolt falls to the ground at Zuko's feet, making him goes flying, and Azula faints.
Katara, in shock, didn't know what to do, help Zuko who had burns on his feet? Or the girl who fainted after spitting up blood? Obviously it was because of Azula, she was mean, but she was her age, how could she refuse to help someone in need? Besides, Zuko was fine, he was still breathing and looking at the sky, he would be fine, he was a firebender, he could take burns.
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