I kick a stone. The desert sucks! Especially for a waterbender. I try to bend water from the air, but only come up with a few droplets. I gulp it down either way. I ache everywhere with thirst, and I realize that small drink just sharpened it. I look around, at the everlasting desert, the roaring flames, and the disgustingly blue sky. Wait, flames? I look to my left, and sure enough, a massive wall of flames is there. Where did that come from? I go towards them, trying to see the source. It's like they just popped out of no where! Oh, now I see where they came from. The heat is so intense, the ground so dry, that they just started! Which means they aren't about to cease to exist. As I think that, more flames appear around me. I hop away before I get burnt. The sunburns are already more than enough. But I have to run. The flames are advancing quickly. I sprint as hard as I can in the dry air, but the flames are faster. Soon they have overcome me, making a sphere around me. The only thing stopping them from burning me is me trying to bend water from the air. All I have is a few droplets, but it's enough for now. Sweat forms on my forehead from the heat of it all, and I use that, too. With that addition of the water, I expand my 'force field'. I keep bending the sweat from my forehead, and the water from the air, and soon I think I have enough to waterspout my way out of this, so I try. It works! And I make it over the wall of flames. Struggling to keep the waterspout up and to not turn into steam, I look around. I see the edge of the desert! I make my way over there, and drop myself into grass. Oh, how I missed grass. But the flames are coming this way, and They'll burn the forest I found! I bend water from the now moist air, and water from a few trees around me, and water from plants and grass, and I have a lot. I create a wall of water. It's hard, but I do. The flames come closer. I hold the water. The flames press against the wall, but turn into steam. My wall is winning! I press the wall forward, trying to put out as much of the fire as I can.

For the rest of the day and part of the next, I keep pushing my wall. Eventually, I put all the fire out. Aching everywhere, I manage to run to the cool shade of the forest and rest. That was some battle.