"Hmm. The scenery
looks oddly familiar."
"That's because you've been
leading us in a big circle. We've past this tree at least three
times now."
"Well Zuko, since we've been walking for a while
let's take rest under the shade of these trees. It is almost
midday, and walking in this heat can play tricks on the mind. Ahh,
yes," replied Iroh as he slowly gathered himself under the leaves
of a large maple-greenwood.
"Uncle, we need to keep moving.
This is the direction Azula chased the Avatar. We may be able to
reach him by sundown…"
"Patience Zuko, even Azula
needs her rest. Now, why don't you gather some food for our little
break. I believe I spotted some tea bushes not too far from here. Tea
would be very nice. It would do well in bringing me back to full
strength. And it is good for the mind." Zuko looked forward into
the range of maple-redwood trees and then back down at his uncle.
Slowly he said, "The avatar can wait." Zuko backtracked in the
direction of the tea bushes, leaving his uncle beneath the leaves of
the giant maple-redwood.
A cool breeze blew through the
encircling forest as water thundered down from the cliffs above. From
the air, the waterfall had seemed an island of stone in a sea of
emerald green. From the ground, it was a tower of blue and gray, with
a watery trail leading to it and an apex that pointed to a cloudless
sky. It was a place that, even if it were in a world that lacked
magic, could make a person believe in things beyond the
material.
"Woo-eee, boy does Appa need a bath. And what better
place than an 'enchanted' waterfall."
"It's not
enchanted, Sokka," replied Aang, "Ever since my friends and I
used to come here I had always had a strong feeling as if someone was
watching me. I didn't know I was the avatar back then, so now I
guess it's just all the spirit energy that surrounds this
place."
"Enchanted… spirit… same thing."
"So you
don't know the history of this place?" asked Katara.
"Nope…
but there is this cool cave right behind the falls. That's
where we would jump.
"There must be something more to this
place, right?" asked Katara.
Sokka began to scrub between Appa's
toes. The giant flying bison let out a yawn and then flipped into the
large stream, belly-up.
"Obviously we wait until something
magical appears at midnight, fruitcakes."
"You know what?
That actually makes sense," noted Sokka as he moved from one paw to
the next. Katara looked over at Aang, asking her question
without a word passing between them.
"What? Am I the only
one that can connect the dots here? And I can't even see…and
speaking of fruit – did you unload the food before throwing that
cow into the water?"
Sokka stopped brushing and his eye widened
as he glanced to his left and watched all their supplies floating
down the stream.
"I did not throw Appa into the water. He got
in on his own."
"Great. There goes all the food. Well, you
know what, I'm feeling mighty nice today," said Toph. Sokka gave
Toph a look of disbelief, "I can take the bison and get some
supplies. We passed over a market a few hours away. And all this
hocus pocus is giving me a head-ache."
"Toph, are you sure
you can go…" Katara said before realizing what she was about to
say and instead suggested, "You should really wait until Appa
finishes his bath. He gets really cranky if he flies wet".
"I'll
wait then. I wouldn't want to make him cranky," she said.
"Nope
'cus then he'll just drop you while you're flying." His hands
motioning a falling bird falling down to its death. "Wheeeeeee…splat.
Ehh, Toph luck." Scoffed Sokka.
"Ready for your next
waterbending lesson?" asked Katara.
"Of course…. sifu
Katara," replied Aang. Katara blushed, and Aang followed her to the
banks of the waterfall.
"Ah. Much better," Sokka said to
himself as he began to sniff Appa, although the look on his face said
otherwise. "Well, at least it's better than before. He's all
yours." Wiping his hands together and giving Toph a smug grin,
Sokka took a step back to watch the show. She climbed aboard, sat
down, and called out, "Ok. Ready, fly!"
Sokka
snickered.
"Ahem, I think the words you're looking for
are 'pooh-pooh'."
Agitated and losing her patience, Toph
commanded the bison, "Pooh-pooh!". Sokka clasped his hands over
his mouth to try and conceal his laughter, but it was really too
much. His histerical laughter was followed by the crushing sounds of
rocks. Three giant triangular stones had enclosed Sokka as the sharp
corners nearly pierced his skin. His grin faded and all he could say
was "Yip, yip." And the bison took off.
"Hey what about
me!" Sokka called out from his tiny playpen, but Toph was too far
to notice. Katara and Aang looked back and laughed. Sokka turned his
head as far as he could, a mighty fifteen degrees to the right and
asked, "A little help here would be convenient."
Katara and
Aang together threw their hands in the air forming a large wave and
splashed it against the rocks. Although Sokka was now completely
covered in mud, he easily squeezed his way out of his pen and rinses
himself under the falls as Aang and Katara continued their
lesson.
Sokka examined the sides of the rocky waterfall. "Say
Aang, how again did you get to that cave?"
"I
jumped."
"He… jumped?" Stated Sokka blankly as he
stared vertically upward at the towering cliff, "Well, why don't
I try jumping too…" he mumbled to himself as he began to scale
the treacherous slope.
As they were practicing some basic warm
up skills, Aang said, "Maybe I should tell him there's a pathway
around the falls?"
"I think he'll be able to find it
himself," replied Katara. "Good job, Aang. Now that you know most
of the major techniques, I want to try something different today. I
want to duel."
"Duel? Me? I… don't think that's a very
good idea," Aang made a short pause and finished, "Sifu
Katara." Katara unlaced her shoes and undid her blouse. She waded
into the water, turned to Aang and smiled.
"Are you ready?"
Aang's lower jaw unhinged from his mouth as soon as those lips
spread into that smile. She looks so…
"Aang, are
you ready?" Katara said as Aang threw off his shirt and hopped in.
"Don't go easy on me now."
"I won't," replied Aang
smiling back at her. Both duelists knew who had the clear advantage:
one a waterbending master and the other the most powerful bender
alive, the Avatar. But from the bank, onlookers would argue
differently. Both benders were matched in speed and technique. When
one tried sending a flurry of frozen discs the other built an ice
blockade, sending the discs ricocheting in all directions. And I mean
all directions. Sokka had just reached the edge of cliff, when a
frozen disc hit the rocks just above his hand. "Oh no..NOOOoooo.."
his voice trailed as he plummeted into the now icy water.
"I'm
OK, don't worry about Sokka. He's fine," Sokka stated shivering
but neither bender heard a word. It was then that Sokka decided a
different approach was needed. He began to walk around the falls
hoping to find another way up.
"You're holding back!"
Katara amusingly exclaimed.
"No, I'm not. The one who's
holding back is you," replied Aang. "Hmm. I wonder, what it will
take for you to unleash that master bending?" questioned Aang.
"Maybe we should bring Toph out here to show you how it's done?"
She smirked. Haha, cute, but not good enough, Aang.
"Or
we can call Zuko out here…"
Katara gritted her teeth and
barked, "He paid dearly for what he did to you; I made sure of it,"
And what he said to me! She added, mentally. Katara's
movements became more vigorous now.
"Yea, I guess Zuko's just
too easy for you. He might call the whole Fire Nation for backup,"
laughed Aang. Katara froze. Images of black fire nation brigades
raiding her home flooded her mind. The sounds of screaming children,
the loss of her community…the death of her mother flashed before
her eyes. Tears began to crawl down her cheeks. Katara was now
looking down at her own reflection disgusted that she could do
nothing to stop the madness.
"Katara, I'm so sorry, I…"
But it was far too late. Katara's bottled up hatred had taken on a
life of its own. A thick fog began to rise between the two. "Katara,
what's happening?" questioned Aang frantically. He looked about
and saw, rising above the fog, Katara in the center of a whirling
water tornado. She clasped her hands together and the water
surrounding Aang froze. He couldn't move. In an effort to protect
himself, Aang motioned his arms over his head forming an igloo by
bending the ice into a semi-sphere. The water tornado froze into a
tower of ice with Katara at the top. She threw her hands upward and
then down at Aang with all her fingers pointing at the little igloo
house. Two tidal waves rose out of the steady stream matching the
height of the icey tower. The new towers froze and then dismantled
into an array of ice arrows. The little igloo home could not
withstand the speeds. It wasn't until Katara began to see shades of
pink on the walls of the little igloo that she realized what she had
just done.
"Strange, the lizards have led to
this market but no Avatar," noted Azula.
"You stop!" She
commanded. The local cabbage vender halted. Azula revealed a scroll
with the faces of Aang, Katara, Sokka, and Toph.
"Have you seen
any of these people before?" Just as the vender was about to reply,
he was interrupted,
"Look, up in the sky…" shouted
TyLee.
The vender replied, "I can't see well; it's
much too bright out here. Is it a bird?"
"No, it's a
bison!" replied TyLee.
Mai looked up and confirmed, "Yea,
she's right this time. It's a bison."
The vender looked at
the three girls, glanced over his left and right shoulder, picked up
his cart, and slowly but swiftly ran away. "Crazy, lunatics…flying
bisons, bah!"
"Hmm. But no Avatar," whispered Azula.
"Maybe it's a different bison?" suggested TyLee.
"No
this is the one. We'll wait and then we'll follow."
As
the sun began to set, Toph and Appa were nearly half-way to the falls
as they followed the direction up the stream, when Appa began
descending.
"Yip, Yip," Toph barked, "Yip, Yip". Appa
only moaned.
"What's wrong with you?" she asked as
Appa landed on the bank of the stream and placed practically his
entire head into the water. Toph got off and stood next to the bison.
She laughed as the water level diminished exponentially and patted
the furry bison. Something wasn't right, however. She kept petting
the bison while keeping her head away from the disturbance. Yes, she
had sensed six pairs of legs slowing down to a complete halt just a
hundred meters from where she stood. From the pace, it has to be
lizards, she thought. That could only mean one thing.
"Ok
Appa, time's up. We need to get moving big fella'." Quietly she
added, "We're being followed by some fire lovers and I know
they're not too friendly, so going home is a definite no. They want
a chase; we'll give them one. Yip yip." As Appa, ascended into
the air, TyLee began to move forward, when Azula stopped her.
"She
has been following this river for quite some time, but she suddenly
changes course after she …clever. No, we will not be following the
bison any longer." Excited with her recent discovery, even Azula
failed to notice the lone figure, which stood in the distance. "No,
Azula, the avatar is mine," he whispered.
"Well, he could've told me there was a path," Sokka muttered as he climbed the path. Scared of falling down again, he stayed close to the sides and he walked behind the water curtain and into the safe cave. He half expected it to be pitch dark, yet there were holes in the walls allowing for stray moonlight to enter. He walked further in until, "Ow! What the heck is this?" he exclaimed, but he knew what it was as soon as the last words left his lips. It was a dial placed in the center of the cave. On one end of the dial an arrow pointed to the ceiling to a whole which light had not yet passed through. And on the other end of the dial, another arrow pointed in the opposite direction, where Sokka saw, in the dim light, what seemed to be an arch. As he stepped closer, his foot fell into a dip in the ground. He looked down and saw two holes roughly the size and shape of a man's foot situated between the dial and the "arch". Suddenly, a gust of wind forced its way through the water curtain, knocking Sokka off balance and causing him to stumble such that his feet wound up situated in the shapes on the floor.
Must have dozed off for a couple of hours thought Iroh to himself. He slowly got up, turned around and stretched. What is taking Zuko so long? Maybe he can't find a cup. Iroh's gaze stopped over a patch of shrubs behind where he was napping. Well what do you know; the tealeaves were behind me the whole time! The sun was playing tricks on my mind. He went to get a closer look.
As the final
rays of light disappeared, Toph felt the time to attack was now or
never. "Okay, Appa, this is far enough," she said. Appa landed
and Toph hopped out prepared to encounter the three devils. But the
only thing she could sense was the pacing of two lonely feet a few
meters from her. To her it looked like an old fellow smelling a bush.
"Hey, you over there. What are you doing?"
The old man
kept his back facing the young girl and replied, "Examining tea
leaves. It's a very selective process. When I'm done, though, you
are more than welcome to stay. I enjoy the company of strangers as
long as there is tea."
"You're the old man who offered
me the tea, before?" At these words Iroh froze. He stood up and
turned around to see the very same earthbender he had shared teatime
with only a few days before and thought, Oh no. Zuko.
The
ice that had surrounded Aang was now melted, leaving Aang floating on
top of the water. His face scarred from slashes, and his cheeks and
arms red from blood. "Aang! AANG! Oh no." Katara swam over to the
little airbender and held him in her arms. The tears returned but in
greater volume this time.
"I'm sorry Katara," he squeaked.
Wading through the water, Katara placed one arm around him to support
him. She placed her right hand on his arms to heal the slashes.
Speechless, she brought her hand to the scratches on his
neck.
"Katara, I shouldn't have…" Aang said as his
eyes filled up with tears.
"It's all my faul--" She put a
finger over his lips and pressed him closer to her, even as he
shivered in her arms. She was still sobbing as she brought her hand
to his bloody cheeks; even though he was healed, Aang looked
miserable. He blinked, and the first tears trickled down his face.
Aang could not stand to see her like that, and shivering, he took
both his hands and placed them on her cheeks even with her shaking
her head. Cupping her cheeks in the palms of his hands, he wiped away
the fresh tears with his thumbs. Her hand moved down his face and
around his neck pulling him close to her. His hands gently followed
down her cheeks and around her neck. Katara could see the bright
white moon's light in his eyes. The water was still, the wind
unmoving, and they moved in unison. Like two magnets brought too
close, their lips locked under the light of a full moon. Neither was
shocked at the occurrence, if not only because shock was not among
the emotions the two of them felt. Her arms did not withdraw from
around his neck nor did his own from hers. The tears which fell from
their eyes were no longer just tears of sorrow and pain but now of
comfort and longing. What onlookers would say lasted only a moment,
lasted a lifetime for them. Time was simply tossed aside.
Sadly, time resents such gestures, and is always quick to assert its presence.
"Well, well, well. Out for a midnight swim are
we?" asked Azula.
"Kissy, kissy. Muah," added TyLee as she
blew a kiss to Aang.
