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#zutara month 2022
heartofkandrakarz · 1 year
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here’s some old zutara art <33 i did this for zutara month
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lotustiled · 2 years
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Zutara Month Day 25: Modern AU
@zutaramonth
lawyers!zk except they're assigned the same case against each other.. i would like to see it
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risemaclay · 2 years
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Wall date
@zutaramonth day 25 and 28: modern au/catching feelings
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fabdante · 2 years
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@zutaramonth : catching feelings
i like to imagine the two of them spent a lot of nights around the fire, long after everyone else was asleep, just talking. 
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Attention all Zutarians!!!
You've all heard of Euphoria high, Squidward's Community College, and the infamous Clown School, but now it's time for....
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Yes, ZUTARA SCHOOL!!!💙❤💙❤
We have a great faculty of educators who are greatly knowledgeable on the best ship in cartoon history
The schedule of classes consists of:
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LUNCH TIME 12:30
Pick from our menu with both options of dishes that come from the FN and SWT 🔥💧
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Remainder of Classes:
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Now Zutara School isn't all fun and games. While attending here, you must follow a dress code.
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If you don't , you will be sent to the Principal...
DR. WANG FIRE
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If you refuse to comply with dress code you will have to spend some time in detention with...
THE GWORLS
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There you will be forced to watch the kiss scene 😐😷 and you will have to recite a scripture from Bryke's bible 🤫🙏
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Don't be too sad, you can still head to the school's Library!
Wan Shi Tong will be happy to assist you in the many fanfics and lore of Zutara but ...
DON'T BRING UP NO SHIP WARS!!!! He will not hear it!!!
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BUT
If you do have any canon complaints, just head down to the Guidance Counselor Joo Dee. Shhh shhh she knows, "There's no Kataang in ba sing se ;)"
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So please drop out of real school and come to Zutara School! Tuition is free!!!!
🗣HAPPY ZUTARA MONTH 🔥💦🌞🌚🌗
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ameliedraws · 2 years
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Day 27: Tea Shop
@zutaramonth
I was inspired by the amazing fanfic Stitch Me Back Together by @spacelattesao3 for this prompt where Zuko and Katara send pictures to each other when they go at Iroh’s tea shop separately.
Also, this is my last contribution to Zutara month this year! It was soooo fun to imagine scenarios for each prompt and challenging myself with new positions, expressions, and techniques. I feel like I did improve in this short period of time and I don’t know what I will do with myself now that it’s over 😅
Thanks to everyone who liked, reblogged or left nice comments in the tags and in the comment section, it really warmed my heart knowing that you enjoyed what I did 💖
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zutarabender · 2 years
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@zutaramonth day 27: Tea Shop
---
"Why did you decide to retire here, sir? Why not closer to Zuko?"
This had been bothering Katara for months, especially since Zuko and Mai's break-up. Zuko was lonely. He had made loyal friends and allies in his court, but his letters were still wistful and taciturn. Knowing this, Katara had jumped on the opportunity of representing her family in King Kuei's wedding, knowing that Zuko would be there, but her anxiety hadn't receded. She still hadn't gotten to see him. He'd been in the Royal Palace for hours in a meeting of heads of state.
Katara had come to wait for him at the Jasmine Dragon, and that was where she'd stubbornly stayed. The tea shop had long closed for the day, but old General Iroh was still kind enough to sit with her for a cup of tea before performing all of the closing duties, and was now pondering her question with the gravity it deserved.
"An old man has his dreams too," he said after a long pause. "My nephew has his own path to follow, and he won't think on his own if he expects me to do all the thinking for him. Unfortunately," the man went on with a sigh, "that old habit seems to come back whenever I'm around."
Katara shook her head. This wasn't about the Fire Nation, or honor, or anything royals and nobles concerned themselves with.
"I think he really needs you."
When the old man put down his cup of tea, Katara was surprised to discover that he was smiling.
"Do you wish for your father to be with you all the time, Katara?"
She wanted to say yes, of course she would, but the words got stuck in her throat. After having so much responsibility thrust upon her, after seeing so much of the world, going back to the role of a daughter hadn't been as much of a relief as she'd thought it would. Her father had been glad to make up for lost time, but Katara wasn't the little girl he'd left behind. His form of support, while welcome, wasn't always what she needed. Katara sometimes felt they got along better the more distance there was between them.
"No, I suppose not," she conceded, and decided to drop it. If General Iroh understood her point, he was deliberately avoiding it. Zuko himself never acted sad or resentful over his uncle's choices, so anything else she could say would be overstepping.
"My nephew would be a fool if he let you go. You could make each other very happy."
Katara choked on her tea, coughing furiously and feeling her face grow hot. Where did that come from, now? Had her true feelings been so obvious? It wasn't like she tried to conceal them, not particularly. Zuko was her friend, and deserving of affection. But having the truth so plainly out in the open was a whole new level of terrifying.
"It's not-I mean, sir, Zuko... your nephew... he's, well, great, and all, but..."
The door to the tea shop opened. Zuko stood there in his full royal garb, and Katara could do nothing but stare, her mouth still open from the sentences she'd struggled to get out. It had only been a few months, but his hair had grown longer, his posture more confident. He embodied his role as the Fire Lord with a naturality that astounded her. As focused on him as she was, it was hard to miss the precise moment in which he noticed her. Zuko's face lit up so vividly that Katara's heart melted, her senses tingling, and he walked toward her 
"Katara! It's so good to see you."
Anything she could have said was lost in his embrace. She just held him tight, hoping this gesture would get the right amount of feeling across. Had she dared to open her mouth, Katara would have had no chance of convincing General Iroh of her indifference.
"When did you get to Ba Sing Se?" Zuko was asking her, searching her face for answers to questions he wouldn't voice. "It's a long trip for you. Shouldn't you be resting?"
"No, I'm fine. Got here this morning, got plenty of rest. I... I just came here to see you." Wanting to gloss over after what she'd just said, she gestured toward the empty cups. "We were talking over tea."
"Right," he said with a smile. "Let me get that."
"No, no." General Iroh got up from his seat, cup in hand. "You sit down and rest, Fire Lord Zuko. I'll get back to work."
"Uncle, I-"
"If you want to make yourself useful, please walk Katara to her apartment when she wishes to go. Even in the Inner Ring, a lady cannot be too careful."
As General Iroh walked away, Katara and Zuko exchanged a glance. His cheeks were red, his expression mortified, and his eyes jumped away from hers as if they burned.
Katara's stomach clenched. Zuko knew exactly what his uncle was up to, and they were not going to see the end of it until the old man got his way.
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sokkastyles · 2 years
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Zutara Month Day 13: In Which Toph Meddles
Katara sighed as she looked at Toph, who was currently absorbed in the stimulating task of ignoring the pile that was her sleeping mat, cast off laundry from the previous day, and a stack of dirty dishes that was beginning to attract flies.
“I thought we were past this,” she said, “everyone in the group has to -”
“Hey,” Toph interrupted. “I told you I’d get to it when I get to it, didn’t I? Some people aren’t used to taking orders, right Sparky?” Here Toph gestured at Zuko, who, for his part, wordlessly stooped to pick up Toph’s moldering stack of dishes and added it to the one he was currently carrying, which included not only his own bowl from breakfast but Aang’s and Sokka’s, too.
Now it was Toph’s turn to sigh, dramatically pulling a face as she addressed Katara. “He’s doing it again, isn’t he?”
Katara frowned. It irritated her how quickly Toph had taken to Zuko, even more irritating than the way she kept trying to rope him into her schemes. Which, it also irritated her to admit, he kept refusing to be roped into. She supposed, if anything, it was a learning opportunity. Toph seemed to look up to him for some reason - if looking up to Zuko was even a thing. But somewhere, deep down, Katara had to admit that Zuko was helpful around the camp. Unlike some people she knew. She was about to open her mouth to say as much when Toph interrupted her again.
“He’s only doing it because he wants to…”
Now Zuko paused in carrying the neat stack of soiled dishes to look at Toph, and something odd, uncomfortable and unspoken seemed to pass between them. He seemed to be trying very hard not to speak.
“Nothing,” Toph said. “None of you are any fun.” And she folded her arms across her chest.
“What?” Katara said, looking between the two of them, eyes narrowing in suspicion. “Zuko wants to do what?” 
But Zuko was moving away very quickly towards the small well pump that they used for washing dishes, balancing the stack with both hands, his face hidden between the mop of shaggy dark hair. Katara had the impression that he was deliberately not looking at her, which she dutifully ignored, along with the vague impression of herself, reaching out a hand to brush the bangs away from his face, fingers perhaps just briefly touching his skin, to look him in the eye as she once had, when they were alone with only each other, that time so long ago. 
She banished the thought, and as he walked past, Toph’s sullen expression suddenly morphed into something wide and grinning that Katara instantly disliked.
“Actually, nevermind,” Toph said, between Katara and Zuko’s retreating back. “This is fun.”
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cynical-mystic · 2 years
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ZKMonth22 Day 26: Scars
The screams tore at Katara’s throat as they wrenched her out of sleep. Her hands were clutching the blankets she was tangled up in, and before she could get her bearings the door adjoining her and Zuko’s room opened.
“Katara!”
She was in Zuko’s arms once he crossed the room, and she buried her face in his chest.
“Shh,” he said, running his hand over her hair and patting her back.
It was then she realized she was sobbing, huge stomach sobs that made her shoulders ache. Instead of fighting it, she let it run its course, snuggling into Zuko and making him hold her even tighter.
Finally, after what felt like an eternity, her tears subsided and she collapsed in Zuko’s arms. He pulled her into his lap and continued to hold her, rubbing her back and whispering comfort until she wrapped her arms around him in return.
“Nightmares?” he asked, letting his arms settle around her waist.
She nodded into his neck.
“Azula?”
She nodded again.
“Me?”
She let out a dry sob as she nodded again.
“I’m right here, Katara,” he soothed. “Azula lost. You saved me. Everything is alright.”
She nodded again, burying her face in his shoulder.
He pulled her closer and returned to rubbing her back. They sat in a companionable silence for a while before Zuko spoke again.
“I have them too.”
She pulled back and looked at his face. His golden eyes met hers and she saw the pain she felt in them.
“Sometimes I don’t get in front of you in time,” he whispered. “Sometimes I have to watch from the ground as Azula beats you. Sometimes…”
His voice trailed off.
“I’m here,” she whispered, putting her hand on his scarred cheek. “Azula lost. You saved me. We’re both alright.”
He let out a puff of air, amused at her turning her words back on him.
“I know,” he said, reaching up to put a hand on the one she had on his face. “I’m so glad.”
Katara put her forehead on his and closed her eyes, soaking in his presence.
“Stay with me,” she whispered.
“Always and forever,” he whispered back.
It didn’t take much for Katara to meet his lips with hers. They kissed deeply and slowly before releasing each other. Katara moved off of Zuko’s lap and wriggled back under the covers. He joined her, pulling them over himself and laying as close to her as he could get. She rolled away from him and he pulled her to his chest, resting his arm over her waist and sliding the other beneath her head. She snuggled into him and he sighed.
Together, they slept, the scars of their past held at bay for one more night.
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jasmine-tea-latte · 2 years
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delicate - chapter 14
In which Katara and Zuko join her family for a dinner at the Beifong’s, where their pretend courtship will be put to the test against the living lie detector known as Toph Beifong…
AKA, the chapter in which Toph and Suki channel their inner Rachel and Phoebe to figure out what these two pining idiots in denial are hiding, like in the episode of Friends when they find out about Chandler and Monica.
“They think they can mess with us? The mess-ers become the mess-ees!”
(technically Chandler’s line but who’s keeping score?)
and of course:
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While poor Sokka (who’s both Joey AND Ross in this scenario) just wants food and for this to all be over with, because this is his best friend and his sister 😩
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The Friends references really write themselves, don’t they?
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poeticmoonspirit · 2 years
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The Adventures of Zuko and Katara
Chapter 5: Scars
Zuko was furious.
He was so upset that he had to control his breathing, lest he make a mistake and set the whole camp on fire. He let out repeated breaths: in, out, in, out. He exhaled, emitting a soft flame before speaking.
“That was way out of line Aang, and you know it.” Aang looked away.
“Aang, you’re on punishment starting now!” The earthbender yelled.
“Seven years.” Katara said, ignoring everyone’s protests. Aang turned around, eyes wide at his waterbending teacher. Sokka walked closer to Katara and placed a comforting hand on her shoulder, seemingly knowing exactly what she was referring to. Toph was silent.
“It’s been seven years, Aang! Seven years since they murdered my mother! And you wanna know who saw her body first?” She was in Aang’s face now, not wavering in the slightest at his almost fearful expression. She clenched her fists.
“N-no…”
"Me!”
Suki gasped, her hand covering her mouth in shock. She had no idea that Katara had experienced such a horrible ordeal. Sokka had told her about what happened to their mother, sure, but she didn’t know this. And maybe Sokka didn’t tell her because he felt it wasn’t his place to. Her heart went out to her waterbending friend, and it twisted in resentment towards Aang for judging her so harshly. 
“Katara…I-I didn’t know…” She wouldn’t even let him get a sentence out. The gentle, compassionate girl he once knew was replaced by rage.
“Yeah, you don’t know! And you never bothered to ask, either! So stop telling me what to feel! Stop acting like you’re so much better than us!” He flinched at the emphasis on “better”. Did he really think he was better than them? Aang was unsure of how to deal with this, so he turned to Sokka, silently asking for help.
The warrior shook his head, “Don’t look at me. You’re the one who screwed up here. Now you have to be the one to fix it.”
(I know it's been a month since I updated this but I decided to wrap this story up sooner than later.) Happy Zutara Month!
Read it here!
@zutaramonth
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stardust948 · 2 years
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Was this another dream? Zuko sat up, ignoring his body’s protests and hesitantly touched her face. He feared she would evaporate leaving him alone in that dark cold dungeon.
Except she didn’t.
“You’re real…”
Katara gave him a watery smile as she placed her hand over his.
“You’re real.” He repeated with tears escaping his eyes. “You came back.”
“Of course.”
Katara pulled him into a tight hug while being mindful of his sensitive wounds. Zuko wrapped his arms around her and sobbed on her shoulder.
“I was so scared.” Katara cried as she stroked his tangled hair. “I thought that monster killed you.”
Excerpt from Yesterday I Died, Tomorrow's Bleeding (Rated M)
Zutara Month Day 26: Scars
@zutaramonth
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fabdante · 2 years
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Detours
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“Do you know where we’re going?” He asks and she almost lets out what sounds like a laugh. But she holds it back. Hiding it like her face is hidden from him.
“No, no one knows where they’re going in here,” she says and he blinks, stopping. She takes a couple steps before she notices he’s stalled and stops herself. When she turns to him, she’s far too calm for his liking.  
“Then shouldn’t we go back while we still know which way back is?” He asks, gesturing behind him with the hand that holds the flame and she shakes her head, instead taking steps toward him and grabbing his free arm.
“It’ll be fine,” she says, this little twinkle in her eye that he’s almost about to fall for and forget all his worries. Before he comes to his senses, though. They don’t have enough food to survive being lost in a cave. “Don’t you trust me?”  
“With my life,” he replies easily, holding her gaze, “but I don’t trust this cave.”
And she says, “then trust me, I want to show you something.”
Summery:  After the war Zuko asks Katara to help him find his mother and she agrees. While in the Earth Kingdom, Katara decides to take him on a site seeing trip. And then they talk a lot. (Finished and posted for @zutaramonth​ ‘s day 2 prompt, Cave of Two Lovers, based off fan art I did for Zutara week 2021 which is reposted above)
Words: Too many 6689
Rating: G (does make reference to Zuko’s childhood, the war, and character death, no more intense then the show itself does)
Read Here!
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gemgirl28 · 2 years
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The Ember Island Players Present: Chapter 29
@zutaramonth Day 29: Avatar Katara/Zuko
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NORTH STARS: PART II
PART I IS HERE
It’s one of the best days of the year! Today is @lizanthium 's birthday, which means that today is the reason we all get blessed by her presence, her art, her brain and her existence in general. Happy birthday, my dear twin. I offer you the ending of a story I’ve given you a beginning to, so that you can infer all the middle bits with no effort on my part. ;P In all seriousness: you sparkle so well, and it’s always a privilege to have some of your light in my life in whatever form it comes in. Here is to many more years blessed with growth and quiet moments and creativity and good family and friends. 
Without a word, Katara padded to her brother’s side and sat beside him on the edge of the ice walkway. Even through her parka, the ice was chilly, but she made herself ignore the sensation in order to sit very still and watch the horizon. Sokka sighed beside her, and Katara watched from the corner of her eye as he turned a very misshapen carving of an otter seal over and over in his gloved fingers. 
“Are you going to do it?” she asked, after a moment, still innocently studying the horizon like her heart wasn’t in her throat at the possibilities of what that evening could bring. Both potential outcomes made her on edge, but the emotions behind the quickened pulse were as different as the way the river could twist. 
“I don’t know,” Sokka all but whispered, glum. “I don’t… Our tribe is counting on me. Dad and Bato are counting on me.” He glanced around a little theatrically. “Aang being able to stay hidden for a while longer and just… goof off and be a kid… The very tentative end to a hundred years of war… I could screw that all up by stopping that wedding. For a woman I’ve known for only three months. Three months, Katara.” 
There were a hundred things Katara wanted to say to him, but some of them were tainted with frustration and hurt, and Katara was learning to keep those inside until their blades were dulled a little bit. Not every battle had to be fought with blood and wounds. A lesson that still sometimes tasted bitter. But, with hands that were learning how to heal people with the gift that thrummed like blood and breath inside of her, Katara clasped Sokka’s hand. And squeezed. He squeezed back, and she remembered that he was only sixteen, and she dropped her head onto his shoulder. 
For a long moment, they were both quiet. Katara’s thoughts were on the Fire Nation ships that had come into the Northern waters that morning, and the handful of people clad in red who had been allowed to descend the gangplanks into the Northern Water Tribe. And her thoughts were on her father and Bato and the other select men and women from the South who had arrived the day before. And then she thought to Chief Arnook, and the Northern Tribe’s council of Elders, and all the arguments that could be made of all they’d done wrong and right during the war and during this situation. Would they be ruining hard-earned peace between the Water Tribes and the world, and the beginning of better relations between Water Tribes with their plan? Possibly. Was said plan only going to fulfil the selfish whims of four teenagers? Also possible. 
But just as possible was finding the long-lost Avatar in an iceberg three months after a hundred years of war had ended because there was suddenly the desperate, hopeful chance she could learn Waterbending, and she’d already been eagerly practising. Just as possible was the fact that Yue was right, and the Spirits had organised things to happen this way, and some things were just destiny, and the adults just had to… be helped to see it. Or, if she couldn’t get her head around being that important to the Spirits, then she could at least hope for the fact that they were unimportant enough for destiny to still flow around them, even if they altered the course just slightly. Just slightly enough for four unimportant teenagers to be a little bit selfish. 
“Are you going to do something even if I don’t?” Sokka asked her, and Katara smiled, fondly, at how well her brother knew her. 
“Yes,” she told him, only a tiny bit unsure of her answer even though she and Zuko had taken a large chunk of the three months they’d known each other to even become friends. Her heart was just… sure.  “I really think it’s worth it to try.” 
Sokka laughed, not unkindly, and pulled away from her a little, making Katara have to lift her head. Once she was sitting upright, Sokka pulled off his glove, jabbed his thumb to his chest and then painted an invisible mark on her forehead. She knew he was painting the Mark of the Brave, even though she hadn’t been through her ice dodging ceremony just yet. She rolled her eyes at him, but there was fondness in her for the brother who was braver than he thought he was, and was probably about to find that all out for himself. 
“Give your hand here,” she instructed instead of turning things as sappy as she wanted to, and she began to heal all the little cuts the carving knife had left on him. 
***
There was no good moment to interrupt a marriage ceremony, Katara learned that day. But Sokka, brilliant as he was at strategy, somehow managed to crash in at the moment that almost made the most sense. Or, perhaps it wasn’t planning at all. Perhaps the words had just burst out of him in giddy adrenalin as Yue and Zuko were instructed to stand beside one another in the presence of their gathered witnesses. 
“I am Sokka of the Southern Water Tribe!” Sokka yelled, cutting across Elder Anik’s grand speech in a squeaky, breathless rush. It was so unexpected that even Katara jumped in surprise. “And I — I — I do not condone this match!” 
The second bit, at least, came out a little bit stronger. Katara heard her father inhale sharply behind her, and she quickly bent the ice under his feet slick, causing him to suddenly slip and have to cling onto Bato, who almost fell at the sudden, crashing weight. She’d apologise later. Right now, Sokka needed to be able to say his piece. Her brother caught her eye, and she nodded, and he squared his shoulders and turned back to the Northern Water Tribe Elders and Fire Lord Iroh and the four Fire Sages he’d brought with him, all who were staring at Sokka with varying degrees of quiet surprise. 
“Boy,” one of the Elders boomed. “You do not—” 
“I have every right to object!” Sokka fired back at him, head thrown back proudly. “The North has violated one of the very oldest promises between the sister tribes, and I, son of the current chief of the Southern Water Tribe, will not be silent and allow it to go grossly unaddressed for another year.” 
Yue’s eyes were transfixed on Sokka as she reached out and gripped Zuko’s hand. Zuko, on the other hand, was warily alternating his gaze between the five Fire Nation representatives, the Northern Elders and the Southern representatives, entire body tense as though ready to fight. She realised, with a twist in her heart, that he expected somebody to attack Sokka for his interruption, and he was getting ready to intervene. To protect, like nobody had done for him. Once again, she was sad that Ozai hadn’t come to the North Pole so that she had no chance to accidentally drown the man. 
“Sokka,” Hakoda said, almost sharper than Katara had ever heard him. 
Elder Oki cut across her father. “The South is not truly independent,” he sneered. “The title of chief that your father holds gives him as much power as one of us Elders. If that.” 
Instead of cowing Sokka, this only made him stand taller and take a step closer to the Elders. “Exactly. The Southern Water Tribes, plural, were always meant to be under the leadership and protection of the North. Protection. Where were you in the last hundred years? Where were you in the raids that stole our Waterbenders from us? The ones that killed my mother?” Oki’s mouth snapped shut, whatever he was going to say evidently getting knocked out of him. “If any of the Water Tribes deserve compensation from the Fire Nation, it is us.” The Fire Lord’s eyebrow raised, and he tilted his head to the side, as though agreeing. “The North, our great ‘big sister’, the seat where our Chief resides, did not even offer us that reparation. They simply asked for a few delegates to come and watch the wedding. Without discussion. Without apology for years of silence.” 
There was certainly silence in the hall as Sokka took a pause, his chest heaving slightly. The same emotions that were clearly thrumming through him were in Katara’s chest, heavy and achingly hot. Some instinct made her glance at Zuko to find that his wary tracking had stopped and he was, instead, watching her. Okay? he mouthed at her, and some of the tension in her chest left as she gave him a small smile and a little nod. 
Sokka didn’t let them stew for too long. “There is only one way to make reparations between North and South. Only one way to repair the brotherhood that has been broken here for so long. And that is the promise that should have been ours over generations: the good faith, unity, and celebration of marriage. That is what I am demanding on behalf of my people.” 
The silence shattered to murmurs that rippled at different decibels across the room, people leaning in to whisper to one another. Only Sokka, Katara, Zuko and Yue stood perfectly still and perfectly upright. 
“Sokka, son,” Chief Arnook said, and his gentle tone couldn’t quite cover the grief there. Katara noticed he was pointedly not looking or speaking to her father at all. “I… I understand your hurt. But there has been a war treaty signed between —” 
“The treaty was signed to honour unity and to step forward into peace with good faith,” Zuko interrupted, voice clear and usual awkwardness completely gone. He stared Arnook head on, and only the way his free hand trembled gave away how much speaking up was costing him. “If I were still to marry Princess Yue, knowing all this that has been brought to light, it would be a violation of the very thing the marriage is supposed to stand for.” 
“Prince Zuko,” the Fire Lord said, and nobody in the room could miss how Zuko flinched instinctively. In the too-long pause that followed, Yue did what Katara longed to do but could not and placed a subtle hand on the small of Zuko’s back, rubbing small circles there to try and soothe him. The Fire Lord very briefly closed his eyes in what Katara thought might have been sorrow at his nephew’s reaction. “And Warrior Sokka. What is it that you would both suggest?” The Elders started murmuring louder, so the Fire Lord turned a mild gaze to Chief Arnook. “It would be worthwhile to hear them out, I think, Chief?” he asked, with a little bow. 
Chief Arnook, lips pressed together into a very thin line, waved his hand in agreement and in offer for Sokka to continue. Zuko looked over at Sokka, who suddenly looked very unsure. Alarmed, Katara started mentally willing him to scrape it back together. 
“Well, um,” Sokka floundered. 
“Princess Yue should be given to Warrior Sokka in marriage,” Zuko prompted him, giving him a long stare. 
“Yes,” Sokka agreed, a little dumbly. 
“So that you could become Chief of the North,” Elder Oki sneered, insinuation in every drip of his words. 
And, luckily, his accusation woke Sokka back up. Scowling, he folded his arms. “Is there a better way for us to ensure the North continues to rule the South well, as they’re supposed to, than making a Southerner Chief?” he demanded. 
A few eyebrows raised in what almost looked like concession, and Katara dared to hope that this wild, wild gamble would work. 
“And you would leave the South without a chief? Are you not set to take over from your father?” an Elder whose name Katara didn’t know asked, sounding much more measured than Oki, as though he were genuine in his asking. 
“I am. But Katara, my sister, has lived and trained and served as much as I have. She will make as good a chief as I ever would of the Southern Tribe. And they,” he said, very loudly, over the sudden growing protests, “would accept her as their chief without question.” 
“Our laws and traditions clearly state —” 
“Your laws and traditions,” Katara cut across Kiugak, finally unable to keep silent, “are only about the position of Chief. As has already been established in this court, there is only one Chief. The title held in the South is an honourary one. And there are no laws in the North about not having people on par with Elders who are women.” She gave them an overly sweet smile.
Pakku smirked without reservation at the blustering of some of the other Elders. 
“Right!” Sokka said, brightly, steering them back where he wanted them all to go. “I’ll marry Princess Yue, and govern the North. Katara will be Chief of the South. Together, we’ll ensure that the mistakes of the past are made into promises of the future.” That was completely Yue’s line; Katara saw her biting her lip to stop her smile of pleasure. “And if the Water Tribe Elders and the esteemed Fire Lord”— he paused to bow to Iroh —”still want to ensure the unity between the Water Tribes and Fire Nation after the terrible acts in the past… Well. There have been none promised to Katara in marriage.” 
Later, Katara would freeze every one of his favourite socks for the way he let that be worded. 
“You cannot just offer your sister up in marriage,” Hakoda snapped, really sounding angry, now, and Sokka turned with an apologetic grimace to his dad, hands up in surrender. 
“Your sister, who is fourteen,” Chief Arnook said, also sounding vexed. “She’s not of marrying age, yet.” 
“I’ll wait for her,” Zuko blurted out at once. In the stunned silence that followed that, the prince’s face blushed a colour very reminiscent of a cherry blossom.
Chief Arnook’s eyes narrowed. “What,” he said, very slowly, “is going on here?” 
“Nephew?” the Fire Lord asked, in a tone that was dumbfounded but also delighted. Zuko was resolutely staring at the ground, growing a darker shade of red by the moment. 
Katara caught her brother’s patent I’ve gotten myself into trouble and can’t get out; help, sis look and she turned around to finally face her bewildered looking father. 
“Dad,” she said, loud and clear enough for the whole room to hear. “You’ve always promised me that I could choose the man I will marry. Do you still stand by that?” 
Hakoda searched her face for a moment and then nodded, expression turning resolute. “Yes,” he vowed, to the room, clearly thinking he was refuting his son’s claims and willing to do it, anyway. Katara felt a rush of affection for him in that moment. 
“Okay, great, thanks.” She pointed at Zuko. “I want that one.” 
“Y—what?”
“And I’m kind of, sort of, really in love with your daughter, sir,” Sokka blurted to Chief Arnook, who shared the same utterly bewildered expression on Hakoda’s face a moment after Hakoda started wearing it. Yue, on the other hand, bloomed like a flower into a huge, beaming smile that she unleashed on Sokka in full force. “So if… uh… everybody’s okay with it, we’ll just…” Sokka made a tumbling motion in the air with his hands. “We’ll just switch things up a tiny little bit?” 
“I’ll stay in the North until Katara comes of age,” Zuko piped up, finally no longer staring at the ice as though he wanted it to melt and suck him down with it. He looked from Arnook to his uncle. “I’ll… you can make me do whatever you want. Or I’ll go to the south to start learning. Or… whatever. You need. Whatever the treaty needs. Just…” He gave his uncle a giant, pleading look. “There must be a way to negotiate the treaty a little bit? Please?” 
“What by Tui and La…” Elder Anik said, sounding a little bit faint. 
“Chief Arnook.” The Fire Lord’s voice was grave enough that, if Katara hadn’t seen the way his eyes were sparkling, she would have thought him to be very displeased. “I think it may be prudent for us to discuss the treaty once more. Perhaps with Chief Hakoda present.” 
“Dad,” Yue said, soft but with such deep yearning it spoke of the depths of the ocean. She gave her father a hopeful smile, one hand still gripping Zuko’s tightly. “Please?” 
Arnook slumped as though whatever had been holding him up had just been cut. “I suppose we’d better,” he said, sounding utterly bewildered. 
“I told you you should have curbed the habit when they were only bringing home abandoned otter penguin chicks,” Katara heard Bato mutter to her father, laughter in his voice. “You couldn’t say no to them then. Now look. It’s as good as done.” 
Sokka and Katara shared a grin of pure, giddy hope. 
***
It was the longest summer of Zuko’s life.
Granted, he’d spent the first two weeks spending every minute he possibly could in the sun, relishing in the heat that he’d last felt over two years ago. He’d eaten copious amounts of all the foods he’d missed and had visited all the places he’d dreamed about and then he’d… simply been ready to leave most of it behind, again, after a month. The Fire Nation, he discovered, now all felt like Ember Island to him: exciting to be at for the first while, full of nostalgia and great memories and wonderful people and experiences, but not home. He found himself missing aspects of Water Tribe culture, and thinking fondly of the mixed-nation cuisine that was starting to take over the cooking pots of the Southern Water Tribe. He thought about penguin sledding when he was climbing up volcano walls, wondered if komodo chicken could be made into jerky and walked along the ocean edge alone thinking of the people he wanted to share every experience with. Uncle and Lu Ten were both incredibly busy, and things were strange enough between him and Azula that hanging out with her, Mai and Ty Lee soon grew uncomfortable. Zuko missed his friends. Enough that he would willingly say goodbye to the sun again when it was time to leave, as much as that was the one thing his very soul yearned for. 
(He may have cried, just a little bit, that first morning when the sun rose on him and soaked him in heat from above while the warming soil curled something like a hug through his bones from below. Two years was a long, long time to only set foot on a boat or on a land of ice.) 
And so, in the end, what Zuko had worried might conflict him only served as another confirmation that he was making all the right decisions for probably the first time in his life. He was waiting in full Fire Nation royal robes, his Water Tribe beads hidden in his top knot, when the Northern Water Tribe ships arrived. Arnook had, respectfully, declined the invitation, but had sent his daughter and son-in-law as his representatives, along with Water Tribe finery as a gift to honour the new Fire Lord on his coronation day. Lu Ten received these gifts with polished grace, but Zuko could see the genuine delight over some of the things on his cousin’s face. Lu Ten had never been to either Water Tribe, but he’d badgered Zuko for information enough that Zuko had been able to easily hint to Sokka and Yue what things to bring. 
“Fire Lord Iroh,” Sokka greeted, as he and Yue both did a very impressive Fire Nation bow that Zuko was very proud of. And with good reason. 
“Not for much longer, Warrior Sokka,” Uncle beamed, bowing back. “Allow me to introduce you to my niece and brother.” Even Yue, who smiled at everybody, looked strained as she greeted Ozai. And she used a Water Tribe greeting very pointedly. Zuko didn’t know whether to be alarmed or amused. Uncle, true to his nature, simply pretended he hadn’t noticed a thing wrong. “Now that all the formal stuffy nonsense is over, come! Let us just be friends in one another’s presence.” 
Yue immediately launched herself at Zuko with a cry of, “My fiancé!” 
Cheeks flaming, Zuko nevertheless hugged her back, tightly, all the months of missing her crashing down on him at once. “You really have to let that joke go,” he complained, knowing she would not heed him in the slightest. She and Sokka were well-matched in humour, after all. 
“Actually, you may have to, love,,” Sokka said, and Yue looked crestfallen. “If the engagement goes ahead, Katara gets full dibs on that title.” 
“Oh, that’s fine! It will only be until they get married. And then I can use it again.” She grinned. 
“Or you could just not,” Zuko offered. “It makes a lot of people really uncomfortable.” 
There was a sudden glint in Yue’s smile. “I know,” she said, still perfectly innocently. 
Zuko was still trying to formulate a response when Sokka swept him up in a hug, not even bothering with a first pretence of a bow or even a traditional Water Tribe arm clasp. And… he hugged Sokka back a little longer than necessary, too. He really had missed them, after years being in their company near-constantly. Ignoring his family’s varying looks at the sudden visual confirmation that Zuko had changed his thoughts on hugging, Zuko asked for permission to give Sokka and Yue a tour of the palace. He chose not to care what the servants and guards would whisper back to his Uncle, even after Sokka nearly broke a six-hundred-year-old heirloom jar with his antics. 
At that point, if Lu Ten refused to allow the planned betrothal to take place, Zuko was going to let himself be willingly kidnapped back to the South Pole, diplomatic incidents be damned. 
***
By the time Katara, representing Hakoda and the rest of the Southern Elders, arrived two days before the coronation with Aang in tow, Zuko had to admit he was a little nervous. Every time the two of them had reunited after a little time apart in the past two years, the niggling worry that she would have changed her mind about him while she’d been gone ate at the corners of his mind. And this time was no different. In fact, this time was almost worse, because he’d left for the Fire Nation the day after her sixteenth birthday, before they’d had any real time to just be alone and talk about the fact that she was finally sixteen, and the idea of marriage was no longer out of their grasps. 
Katara had left the Southern Water Tribe a day or two after him with Aang, because Aang had said he was ready to quietly find a Master to teach him Earthbending, even though he still wanted to wait for a while until the world heard that the Avatar had returned. Zuko and Katara both agreed with his choices, even though they were both privately a little worried that, left to himself, Aang would simply find more good reasons to keep running for the rest of his life. Katara had promised Zuko she would get the Earthbending teacher in on the full situation once said teacher had proven themselves trustworthy. And she’d kept him abreast on the situation as best as she could from the back of a covertly flying bison, detailing their trip from the South Pole to Kyoshi Island, where Aang had wanted to look for a teacher first because of the connection to his past life. They hadn’t found any Earthbenders there, but they’d found some of the fabled Kyoshi Warriors, who had connected them with their sisters still in the Earth Kingdom helping with the war rebuilding efforts and the demilitarisation of villages across the land. Aang had gone to meet the leader of the Kyoshi Warriors, who was dating an Earthbender that had apparently led his entire village on a riot that toppled a whole fleet of Fire Nation ships during the last days of the war, but Aang had had some kind of Spirit vision that told him to find a very specific teacher somewhere else in the Earth Kingdom. So off he and Katara had gone, following half a dream of Aang’s. And the letters had lessened, and then stopped. 
It could mean nothing. But it could mean everything. And the approaching Water Tribe ship held no answers for Zuko as he stood and sweat next to his family, Lu Ten unknowingly making things worse by muttering teasing things to him as the ship docked. When Katara had been the one coming to Zuko on a ship before, she’d always grown impatient at its speed and had flung herself off the edge of the boat to Waterbend to the shore quicker, flinging herself into his arms. This time, she descended the gangplank in demure finery. 
It could mean nothing. But it could mean everything. 
Katara greeted Uncle, first, as she should, and then Lu Ten, Ozai and Azula. He had expected her to do things correctly, but now, with his heart in his throat, Zuko being excluded felt less like he was in the same boat as Yue and Sokka beside him and more like the first notes of a death march. Katara introduced Aang simply as a member of the Southern Water Tribe, and Zuko tried not to see every glance that Ozai threw the boy’s way as something sinister. There was very little chance that even Azula’s cunning would leap onto the truth that Aang was the Avatar unless the boy started Airbending, which he’d already sworn up and down he wouldn’t do. And that was a large part of the reason Katara had cut her arrival so close to the coronation: less time for Aang to accidentally break that promise and start some kind of chaos with the revelation that the Avatar was alive and well. 
Zuko knew all of this, but he was still desperate for some kind of sign that she hadn’t come to some realisation as she travelled with Aang that she was better than the likes of him. He wouldn’t blame her for that realisation, really, but he wondered if it would be more loving to her to fight to prove his worth or to just let her go. 
As he had with Yue and Sokka, Uncle called off the pomp and circumstance of the greeting, allowing Yue and Katara to embrace and to start chatting about Yue’s new hair pieces. Aang and Sokka greeted each other in a clownish fashion and Zuko just stood there, not knowing what to do with his arms at his sides or the size and weight of the heart in his throat. Lu Ten nudged him in the side. And then again, sharper, when Zuko didn’t move. 
“Come on, little cousin. I’ll only tease you a tiny little bit, as is my due,” Lu Ten teased him, under his breath. 
Zuko’s mouth was too dry to answer. 
“Looks like the stories of your great and epic love have been exaggerated,” Azula piped up, dryly, a smirk twitching at the side of her mouth, and Zuko wanted to ask Aang if he knew enough Earthbending to just… bury him. 
Sokka went in to hug Katara and Aang bounced over to Zuko, saw something on his face and changed the exuberance to a bow, looking confused at the stiff way that Zuko responded. The confusion gave way to concern, and he made some excuse to go and whisper to Yue. Yue looked over at Zuko, and her expression turned fond. She whispered to Aang, who nodded and then immediately launched into a very loud and very sudden story about riding the Unagi that captured everybody’s attention except Zuko’s. He instead watched Yue subtly lean over to Katara and whisper something very short. Katara’s eyes widened, and she immediately looked over at Zuko. 
Caught in his staring, Zuko looked away sharply, trying not to flush. As Aang started making Uncle and Lu Ten laugh, Katara wove around the group like water until she was standing at his right side, still seemingly watching Aang. The familiar warmth of her fingers ghosted against his for a moment before she firmly clasped their hands together. And Zuko found that he could breathe. Katara squeezed, and he squeezed back. 
“You idiot,” she breathed, almost too low for him to hear, even out of his right ear. 
In response, all that he did was trail a thumb up to her pulse point, and Katara leaned closer almost instinctively. They let go of each other once the party made its way up into the Fire Nation palace, but Zuko was no longer anxious. Even another barb by Azula — this one with an edge of concern to the end of it, Zuko noted — didn’t pierce the insecurity back into him. Katara and he would talk, later, and then the uncertainty would be sorted out, one way or another. 
Unluckily, Zuko’s occupied thoughts had kept him from hearing Aang and Uncle’s conversation until Aang made a suggestion that made Zuko suddenly very alarmed and very focused. He saw Katara stiffen and turn away from Sokka at around the same time. 
“You’d… like to go where?” Uncle asked, blinking in surprise. 
“To school, please, Fire Lord,” Aang repeated, eagerly, pushing his hair out his eyes. It was getting a little long, but Zuko couldn’t blame Katara for wanting to be sure it hid his forehead arrow. “I used to visit — eyahhhhhmean I’ve… heard… a lot about Fire Nation schools…” Katara and Zuko gave each other a look across the room. “And I’d love to be able to go for a day or two. I’ll blend in and I won’t cause any trouble.” Katara’s look intensified and Zuko scrunched his face up at her in response. 
“Aang,” Katara said, soothingly. “Maybe this isn’t the best time.” 
“I can ask my old tutor to give you a few lessons,” Zuko tagged on, also trying to be soothing and not panicking about the Avatar revealing himself in a Fire Nation school on some random afternoon. 
“I think it could be arranged,” Uncle said, and Katara and Zuko shared another look. 
“Uncle,” Zuko started. “There’s no need to bother —” 
Uncle chuckled and waved a hand. “It won’t be a bother. I’ll simply explain to the teacher.”
Aang beamed. “Thank you so much!” he breathed. 
Katara and Zuko looked at each other, helplessly. 
They spent the entire day that Aang was at school waiting for some disastrous report to come and, as the sun set and there was still no sign of the younger boy, they began to seriously plan a quick search and rescue mission. Until Aang happily bounced up the pathway, shouting a greeting like he handn’t scared them half to death. 
“Where were you?” Katara scolded. “We were worried! You can’t just  — Aang. It’s your idea to keep it on the downlow. If you’re going to change that, then we have to do it properly. Not in a place that can cause confusion and panic!” 
“I didn’t even do anything,” Aang pouted. “The fight wasn’t my fault.” 
Zuko pinched the bridge of his nose. “What fight?” he groaned. 
Slowly, in stops and starts and tangents, the story came out how Aang had invited some friends he’d made at school to the palace to see the gardens, and how he’d been stopped from doing so from the local bullies, who didn’t like all the attention he was gleaning. Zuko arranged for Aang’s new friends to come see the gardens the next day, telling his Uncle ten more than the number Aang gave him because he knew how quickly the kid accumulated friends. 
Sure enough, Aang pitched up after his second, and his last, day of FIre Nation School with nearly thirty people in tow. They were all Fire Nation enough to behave perfectly when Zuko was in their midst, though, so things ran smoothly for the afternoon. Just as they were saying goodbye to all the kids to send them home, Katara cleared her throat pointedly. When Zuko glanced at her, she widened her eyes and inclined her head. Following her gaze, Zuko found Aang and a pretty young woman lingering together. 
“I’ll write to you, I promise,” Aang was saying. 
“Will you tell me all about the Southern Water Tribe?” the girl asked. She was blushing, prettily. “I’d love to hear about it.” 
“Sure! Of course. Maybe… depending how big the messenger hawk is… I’ll send you some, um… things….”
“I’d really like that, Aang.” 
“Okay,” Aang said, colouring deeply. He rocked on his heels. “So…” 
“Yeah. I’d… I’d better go.” She made no move of going at all. 
Zuko and Katara met each other’s eyes and they both grinned. “Hey, Aang?” Katara called, sounding far too innocent. “Prince Lu Ten’s coronation still needs some paper cranes folded. I said I’d help out, but Zuko just asked me to help him.” There were definitely enough paper cranes for the coronation ceremony. Zuko kept this completely to himself. Paper cranes, after all, were very easily accidentally burned. “So do you think you can fold them, please? I know it’s a lot of  — Oh, hey! It’s On Ji, right?” The girl nodded, still flushed. “Do you have time to stay and help?”
“I’ll contact your parents personally for permission,” Zuko offered. 
On Ji brightened, and tried desperately not to look as eager as she did. “I’d be honoured to help the royal family,” she said, and Katara disguised her laugh in a cough. “Thank you, highness.” She bowed to Zuko, and then to Katara. 
“I’ll send them a message,” Zuko said, amused. “You two get folding.” 
Once around the corner, he and Katara muffled giggles into each other’s shoulders. After they gained composure, they tiptoed on silent feet to peer around the corner and watch Aang and On Ji blush and fumble and grin and giggle around each other. The number of times their hands accidentally brushed as they reached for the origami paper was quite frankly ridiculous. 
“Shall I see if she can somehow be invited around the day after the coronation?” Zuko whispered to Katara, hoping that the reason would be an engagement party.  
Grinning up at him, fond happiness all over her face for her young friend, Katara nodded. They tiptoed away again hand-in-hand. 
***
As was usually the case, it was Sokka’s idea, and Zuko somehow got talked into it despite his lingering reservations. It wasn’t a bad plan, which was typical of Sokka’s plans, but it also had the potential to go wrong, which was also typical of Sokka’s plans. And the fact remained that they weren’t in the Water Tribes any more. Things going wrong in the Fire Nation meant that Ozai was around to see them go wrong. And, despite having full confidence that Uncle and Lu Ten would do all they could to protect his friends from Ozai’s oily opportunism, there was also still a part of Zuko that watched his father’s gaze with wary anticipation every time one of his friends was in the same room as the man. Just in case. 
“Prince Lu Ten!” Sokka said in his best commentator voice, arms spread wide and grin infectious. “We have called you to this courtyard on this, the afternoon before your coronation, for a very special gift! We ask you to be our special witness in a ritual old and honoured by the Water Tribes. When the emerging chief of our tribe has a suitor for their hand, the suitor must prove their worth in a battle, either of weapon or of element. Those witnessing will give their verdict on whether the match is advantageous for the chief and for the tribe!” 
Lu Ten looked delighted to be given that much honour, and Yue clapped and cheered happily as she escorted Uncle and Lu Ten to a seat in the tree. Azula’s expression was complicated, and Ozai was very faintly sneering. Katara looked utterly lost. Sokka prompted them to meet in the middle of the courtyard to bow to one another, and she went, clearly trying to ask her brother for clarity as she did. Just go with it, Sokka mouthed to her. 
“What is going on? There’s no such tradition?” Katara whispered in Zuko’s right ear as they bowed. 
“Sokka wanted a show. And we thought we’d give you a chance to show off.” Katara blinked. Zuko smirked. “All the vegetation here is fair game, too, by the way.” 
When she straightened again, Katara no longer looked confused. Instead, there was a very satisfied smile curling at her mouth and sparking in her eyes. “Showing off means I won’t go easy on you,” she taunted. 
Zuko laughed. “I wouldn’t have it any other way, Waterbender.” 
There was no slow start: Katara ripped water from one of the underground feeds into the palace as soon as Sokka yelled go, sending half a tsunami Zuko’s way. He was, luckily, used to sparring with her when they were absolutely surrounded by her element, and rolled out of the way with practised ease even as Uncle let out a surprised little shout. Before he even rose, Zuko kicked fire at Katara’s legs, and she broke her stance with a curse. Her retribution was swift, and he had to melt ice daggers as they sailed his way, wincing as one or two bit into his forearms and his shoulders. 
Before she could launch the next lot of prepared ice his way, Zuko used a Waterbending move to knock her off balance again. She could have just let all the ice fall to the ground: he knew this. It was, in fact, the easiest way to disperse of the weapons while she regained her balance. Instead, the usually graceful Katara flailed instead of wove like an ocean current, and some of those ice daggers embedded themselves in the wall right above Ozai’s face. Zuko’s father went rather pale. Katara met Zuko’s eye and smiled like the wolf after a kill. 
In the rest of the battle, Ozai accidentally nearly got impaled another twice, and got drenched once, and Zuko was torn between amusement at how much fun Katara was having and absolute, exasperated horror that this was what Sokka had evidently meant when he’d told Zuko Katara will want to show off for Azula and Ozai, especially. He was going to char every piece of meat in Sokka’s presence for the next month. 
The sparring match ended in a usual fashion; Katara had an icicle to Zuko’s throat, and Zuko had one hand around the back of her neck and the other on her sternum. He could feel the fast beat of her heart through her skin and the thinner material of her blue tunic, and it became the focal point of his whole world until she tilted her head up and met his gaze with her fathomless, bottomless ocean eyes. Almost impossibly, Zuko’s panting breaths picked up speed even more. Katara bit her lip as she began to smile. 
“And that’s a match! Both of you, disengage and step away from each other.” 
Reluctantly, they disentangled as Sokka dictated, but there was still heat in the little gazes Katara kept throwing at him. Sokka was going on about their dance, and Tui and La, but Zuko wasn’t paying much attention. There was a bruise on the underside of Katara’s jaw, and he wanted the talking to be done so she could heal herself. And he very much also wanted to kiss the little triumphant smile she was trying and mostly failing to hide. 
“What is the verdict of those watching about the match?” Sokka asked, and that was actually enough for Zuko to turn his attention back to the audience. 
“It is blessed!” Yue cried at once. 
“It is blessed,” Aang echoed, also grinning. 
“An auspicious match indeed,” Uncle said, looking more delighted than Zuko thought he had any right to. After all, Uncle had been there when he and Katara had first admitted their feelings for each other very publicly, and he’d given his blessing to their intentions back then already. 
“I do heartily concur,” Lu Ten said. He was grinning, but the smile he sent Zuko next was soft enough that Zuko’s chest warmed. “I’ve never seen you bend like that, cousin.” 
Embarrassed, Zuko could think of nothing to do except bow to Lu Ten in thanks, which caused some soft laughter and made his blush grow. He didn’t expect Ozai or Azula to weigh in on anything, and Sokka didn’t prompt them for their opinions, but, very suddenly, Azula’s voice cut across the courtyard. 
“It is blessed,” she said, as confident as she was about everything else. 
Floored, Zuko looked at her. The siblings met each other’s gazes for a long moment, shocked to composed, and then Azula smiled, ever so slightly. It looked like the smiles of memory; of back when Mom was still alive. It was what Uncle had spent so long trying to coax back out of her since he’d become Fire Lord, even though Zuko had heard him confess, in heavy grief, that Ozai might have poisoned too deeply. Zuko smiled right back, and gave her a deeper bow than he’d given Lu Ten, the entire courtyard quiet as it held the moment for them. 
Sokka, Yue and Aang brought attention back to them with talk about a pre-dinner snack, and Zuko left them to their planning with Uncle about which tea they should make that day — one for celebration, already, or one for victory, or perhaps one to help Lu Ten sleep well in the evening, even though Lu Ten stood beside them as they argued and laughingly insisted that he would sleep fine without any help. Instead, he gravitated toward Katara’s side. 
“Let me see,” she said, at once, dropping her glowing hand from her own bruises to the cuts and marks on him. She winced at a particularly deep, bleeding gash on his arm. “Oh, love. I’m sorry.” 
“We promised we wouldn’t be,” he reminded her, still fascinated by what her water could do as she touched the glow to his injuries. “If it wasn’t intentional, then there’s no apology necessary in a spar. Otherwise we’ll never really test one another.” He frowned at her, and pushed some loose hair back over her ear. “You’re usually fine with it. What’s wrong, this time?” 
Instead of answering with words, Katara simply reached up with one hand and gently cupped his scarred cheek, running one thumb lovingly across the bottom of the puckered flesh. “I’m just… very conscious of who is watching, this time,” she explained, her expression fierce. “And I…” 
He kissed her palm. “It’s not even close to that.” 
“I know that, logically. But…”
But she noticed Ozai in similar ways that Zuko did. He loved her for it, and also wished that she could be free of that burden. 
“Besides. You heal me every time.” 
That made her smile and drop her hand again. “Yes. I am great like that.”
Zuko playfully scoffed, and she splashed some water at him, and they were giggling when Lu Ten reached them and broke the moment. 
“I was just about to ask if I’d been lied to,” he said with a grin. “Everybody told me you were a healer.” 
“Oh, I can definitely also heal,” Katara said, cheerfully, finishing with a split in Zuko’s lip with a slow pressure of her thumb that left him flushing. And then, a little more seriously, she turned and bowed to Lu Ten. “Thank you. For your blessing over us. Yours was the last one, and I know how important you are to Zuko, and now that we have it… It just makes it feel better, this way.” 
Lu Ten’s grin turned to something soft. “To be honest, I wasn’t yet sure about you, even as you arrived,” he admitted. “I know what Dad said. But Zuko… Zuko deserves better than what the world has tried to give him.” 
“Lu,” Zuko protested, weakly, feeling overwhelmed and embarrassed and a little choked up. 
“And then I watched the two of you… Well. You call it sparring. But I’ve seen battles. And I’ve seen this nation learn how to dance, again, after years of it being banned. And I definitely know what that looked more like.” The grin came back, wicked sharp and laughing-eyed. “I knew you were the right one the first time my uncle nearly got impaled.” 
“Lu,” Zuko hissed. 
Katara almost preened. “If you ever need a little accident to happen once you’re Fire Lord, you know where to find me.” 
“Kata— There are people who could be listening!” Zuko hissed, horrified. 
Completely ignoring him, Katara and Lu Ten clasped hands in the Water Tribe way, both smirking knowingly. 
“Dear Agni, dear Spirits,” Zuko said. “I think I’d like to detract my proposal.” 
“I’m the one who proposed to you, technically,” Katara reminded him. Her smile was fond, but by no means less fierce. “And I’m not letting you go anywhere that isn’t by my side.” 
It was formality and nothing more for Zuko to stick the hairpin into Katara’s hair two days later in front of the court and the visiting dignitaries and Aang’s friend On Ji, who Zuko had managed to smuggle into the second-coronation-party-slash-engagement-party that had been planned with all the coronation party leftovers. While he loved the way the blue gems clinked every time she moved, he’d been woven into her for a long time before then. It was equally unnecessary for her to braid a bead into a strand of his hair, but he let her while Sokka pretended not to cry. 
“Now everybody else knows what is true,” she sang, softly, as she worked. “You belong to me, and I to you.” 
“I’m looking forward to it,” he promised her in a whisper. 
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zutarabender · 2 years
Text
@zutaramonth day 28: Catching Feelings
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"Zuko?"
Between the cool summer breeze and the warmth of Appa's fur, Zuko had been lulled into a restful state, but he couldn't quite sleep. Katara's whisper cut through the night, and one look at her told Zuko that she, too, was still reeling down from the stress of the last few days.
"Everything okay?" He asked.
"Yes, Zuko. I'm fine. Listen..." She shuffled, turning around to face him and snuggling deeper into Appa's fur. "I know you're angry at us for not doing enough to prepare for the fight, and I'm really sorry. I just... The days in Ember Island... They were some of the happiest days of my life. I wanted to thank you for that."
Zuko wanted to argue; they were in the middle of a war. But Katara always had been in the middle of a war. And it had been glorious days. Lazy mornings in the house, fun beach afternoons, loud evenings out in town. Group hugs, shared meals, long talks over a campfire.
"I'm not angry." He wasn't anymore, at least. It was almost embarrassing in retrospect. Especially knowing how much those days of relative peace had meant to her. "Katara, I..."
There were too many ways that sentence could go. He could say that he had been happy, too, training, resting, spending time with his friends. He could say that he hadn't done all that much, really. He could say he would do anything to make her happy.
The words got caught in his throat. They were too little. They were too much.
"You don't have to say anything," Katara said after a short pause, smiling. "I just wanted you to know."
"I... I'm happy. Here, now. Despite everything."
And again, thoughts overwhelmed him. He wanted to thank her, too. He wanted to tell her how humbled he was by her forgiveness, how glad he was that they were allies. He wanted to tell her how much she meant to him.
"The calm before the storm," Katara agreed.
"Katara, if... when we win the war, we should..."
They should go back to the beach house and spend more happy days together. They should celebrate, and rebuild a peaceful world. They should keep in touch and remain friends, or...
Zuko never finished his thought, and Katara didn't push it.
Long after they'd said their goodnights, long after Katara's breath had evened out, Zuko still looked into the stars. When the war was over, this is what he wanted. Nighttime conversations under the moonlight, just the two of them. Just the two...
Oh.
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