The following is a fanbased work of fiction. Avatar the Last Airbender is the property of Viacom, Nickelodeon, Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Koniezko. Please support the official release.
---
"A hundred years?"
Until about now, Aang had thought things were going pretty well, compared to the first time he woke up in a strange place with no recollection of how he got there.
The first time was in the Earth Kingdom after he and Appa accidentally crashed into the side of a mountain in the middle of the night. Some local villagers nursed the two of them back to health in a gesture of absolute kindness.
This time, well, he got caught in a storm after...leaving, and wound up frozen, then after being broken out of the iceberg, fell asleep on Appa's head. Thankfully, Appa was a good at following directions and Katara and Sokka were able to guide him into the village, which was a lot smaller than he figured it'd be.
"I don't believe it."
Speaking of Katara, this
beautiful, immaculate girl was now coming with him through this awesome but really, really weird ship that he had never seen before. Fire Nation ships were metal, but they weren't so...pointy. And large. They didn't have catapults on them either.
"I'm so sorry, Aang," Katara said, kneeling down beside him, looking into his eyes with her deep, shining blue eyes. "Maybe there's a bright side to all of this!"
"Well, I did get to meet you," Aang said, succeeding in smile, but only barely.
...the monks were going to kill him.
Katara smiled warmly back at him. "Come on, lets get out of here."
She extended a hand, and he took it with a more genuine smile this time, standing up.
The steel halls of the ship seemed more like a prison, in a way. Aang remembered the last time he and Appa had been on a fire nation ship, artfully created and open with a lot of windows to fly in and out. This had more in common with a labyrinth, closed off with near infinite paths to go through and get lost in.
It was all wrong.
"This place is creepy," Katara said from behind him.
"Yeah," Aang replied with a frown. He looked into one of the rooms and his face lit up. "Hey, there's our way out!"
"Huh?" Katara asked, following the young monk into the room.
Then, Aang found himself on the receiving end of a nasty surprise as he tripped on a rope and stumbled to keep his balance. Behind him, the two could here steel bars slamming shut over the entrance.
Aang caught his balance. "What did you say about booby traps?"
The room filled with the sound of hundred year old machinery starting to work, engines running, gears turning. Steam hissed out of pipes that started to work and above them, they could see a flare being shot high into the sky.
The monk took a surprised Katara into his arms. "Hold tight!"
Aang jumped and Katara cried out in surprise as they rocketed out of the wreck. Aang jumped down the piles of snow with his fair maiden in his arms until they got to the floor.
Perhaps it's fortunate there was no Prince there to see it.
---
In the Northern Hemisphere
"Again," Iroh commanded.
Zuko went through the motions, smooth and easy, his two front fingers extended. Electricity crackled and snapped as he drew the lightning in a circle. With a sudden surge forward, he united the positive and negative energies, throwing the bolt of lightning off the side of the ship.
Not for the first time, Zuko smirked as he felt the astonishment of the crew.
"Most excellent, Zuko," Iroh complimented. "You've gotten faster."
"Thank you, Uncle," Zuko replied with a bow. "You've taught me well."
"Do not discount what an excellent student you have been," Iroh replied with a small smile. "I believe that we are done for the day. Perhaps we should return to the bridge."
A year ago, Zuko wouldn't have dreamed that he'd ever be able to approach bending lightning, let alone come a fair way along to mastery. But following his discussion with his Uncle, something seemed to click. Gone were his worries and in their place was simply a burning drive to carve his own spot in the world.
Because his cares were gone, his hopeless desire to please his Father dissipated, something miraculous happened; firebending became fun. It became something to be truly passionate about and because of that, he stopped being frustrated and angry at himself when he made a mistake, allowing him to correct it faster. So here he was, one of the few, the proud, who could bend lightning. Not to mention how he was one of two smoke benders on the entire planet.
The last year had been very, very kind to Zuko. It even seemed like his scar was less...extreme. Like it had faded ever so slightly.
Though, Zuko figured it was just his eyes tricking him, not that it mattered. His scar was a scar. Who cared if it was fading or not?
The two arrived in the bridge and sat at the table, looking at the map carefully.
"Permission to speak, Prince Zuko?" Lieutenant Jee asked.
"You don't need to ask, Jee," Zuko replied, still looking at the map.
"If the Avatar had lived at the Southern Air Temple like you and the general figured out," Jee started with a thoughtful frown. "Shouldn't we have made our way down to the south pole by now? He was probably around there if he hadn't gone anywhere north."
"Fair question," Zuko muttered in response. "We're looking into the idea that the Avatar actually went to the Spirit World to hide. That's why we're still up here since there's more shrines that we have access too than down south."
Lieutenant Jee's eyes narrowed, but he nodded. "Very good, sir."
"Lieutenant! Sir!" A voice came from the voice pipe.
Lieutenant Jee walked to the pipe. "What is it, sailor?"
"There's been an altercation in the mess hall," Came the reply. "It's been broken up and I was ordered to inform you."
"It's probably the cook and Zikka," Jee muttered in annoyance, shaking his head. "I'll be right down."
He shut the grate and gave the Prince and General a bow. "If you'll excuse me."
Zuko and Iroh nodded and when the Lieutenant was gone, the Prince let out a breath.
"I don't think you can keep up this charade of looking for the Spirit World for much longer," Iroh muttered, his eyes firmly on the helmsman's back.
"I know, Uncle," Zuko replied quietly. "I just need to figure out a way past the blockade so I can get to Hira'a. Just one solid plan. I'll go back to looking for the Avatar once I've done that."
The most likely plan had crumbled when the smuggler he had hired was arrested by the Fire Nation for smuggling Fire Nation armor to the Earth Kingdom army. He was taken directly to the Boiling Rock, which meant the death of yet another one of Zuko's plans to get into the Fire Nation without anyone seeing that he was violating his exile.
"You could search for the Avatar and help him restore balance to the world," Iroh suggested, his voice as close to silent as he could. "Then you could go wherever you wanted."
Never in a million years did Iroh think he could seriously suggest that to his nephew. At least, not before they found that...interesting Airbending scroll.
"Uncle, I already told you that I don't want anything to do with him," Zuko replied dispassionately, looking at the map which had many details added, such as the location of every spirit shrine...and the exact line and formation of the Fire Navy's blockade around the nation. "This would be so much easier if I didn't think the crew would snitch the second we got into port."
Iroh grunted. He trusted these men and knew them, even though they had been disgraced or weren't going anywhere fast in their careers; but he knew better than to say that they'd be alright with treason.
---
Aang knew things weren't going to turn out well when he saw the mob of villagers come out to meet them. Sure, the kids all seemed happy to see him but the adults were mad. Especially Sokka, who immediately came out and started hurling a guilty verdict in his direction.
Of course, Sokka was right and Aang admitted it because, well, he had learned a long time ago that it was better to confess when you did something wrong than to try to hide it and wind up piling a bunch of other wrong-doings on top of it in the process.
In spite of Katara's passionate defense, he was banished. Banished! From the Southern Water Tribe!
He had never been banished from a place before! The monks would kill him for it too, because it made it harder for future monks to go there peacefully.
Well, he was exaggerating, but they would be really, really upset with him.
So there he sat, on top of an ice flow with his one and only good friend, Appa, trying to meditate and figure out what to do.
Appa grumbled at Aang.
"I know," Aang sighed. "I liked her too."
With that, the Monk jumped up on Appa.
"Come on boy, we got to go," Aang snapped the reins. "Yip-yip!"
Appa took off and Aang took one last look at the ice flows.
Absent, was the surprise, massive invading force that Sokka had feared. More realistically, there was no Fire Prince intent on hunting him down. No firebenders ready to raze the home of his friends to the ground.
There was nothing but water and ice.
So with a sigh and heavy heart, Aang left the South Pole.
Even though something inside was desperately trying to tell him not to go.
---
Sokka got ready for war. Wrapped in leather, and painted with warpaint, he got ready for the incursion of the Fire Nation.
He took a station at the wall, where his watch-tower was supposed to be but had been brought down through Aang's careless actions.
It's just so stupid, Sokka thought in anger. The Fire Nation killed all the Air Nomads, why would Aang help them by leading them straight too us?
He growled softly in frustration, not loud enough for any of the kids to hear. Did he really not know about the war? How long was he in that ice for?
With his hands on his weapons, Sokka kept a close eye on the horizon, scanning for the guaranteed, inbound attack on their village coming courtesy of the Fire Nation.
It doesn't matter, Sokka thought resolutely. I have to keep them safe. For Dad.
So he waited.
He waited the entire day.
And another day.
He held vigil a third day.
Then on the fourth day, Sokka's vigil was interrupted by the member of his tribe that was the most put off by the Air Nomad's departure.
"So! Sokka!" Katara's slightly shrill and annoyed voice came up to him. "Where's the Fire Nation?"
Sokka groaned in annoyance, knowing what was coming and was not looking forward too it. "They're not here yet!"
"I thought that Aang had lead them right too us!" Katara shouted back up. "Where's the war, Sokka?"
Sokka tried to ignore her. He really did. "It's not here yet!"
"It's been three days, how could it not be here yet?" Katara shouted back, her anger starting to seep through to her voice. "I thought we banished the first person who brought fun back to our village because he doomed us all!"
Katara was never going to let him live this down and Sokka knew it.
"Okay, maybe I overreacted," Sokka allowed loudly, still pointedly keeping his gaze on the horizon.
"Maybe?" Katara shouted, the wall starting to crack as the first warning sign that his sister was really, really upset? "Maybe you overreacted?!?"
"Katara!" Sokka called down, grabbing the snow wall and gripping it for dear life as the wall below him started to crumble. "Calm down!"
That was the absolute worst thing he could've sat at this particular second.
"Calm down?" Katara roared, the wall cracking even further. "After you banished what was probably the last airbender from our village?"
The wall broke, causing Sokka to fall and slide into a pile of fresh snow, right in front of his sisters angry, raging face. "He was going to take me to the North Pole! We were going to find a Water Bending Master!"
His sister was crying, which made Sokka feel like the worst human being the world had ever seen.
"And now, thanks to you," Katara's breathing was uneven and she had stopped shouting, at least. "He's flown off to who knows where and thinks he can't come back!"
She stormed off through the hole in the wall, still crying.
Aang wasn't really trying to help the fire nation, Sokka realized with a groan. He was just being an idiot. And now I look like an idiot because there's no Fire Nation attack.
"Katara, wait!"
---
Zuko and Iroh were enjoying dinner together on the bridge with Lieutenant Jee and the Helmsman. Lieutenant Jee, because he was also an officer and the Helmsman because he couldn't really leave his post and Iroh thought it was rude to eat in front of him.
"So you developed lightning redirection from watching Water Benders," Zuko began, placing some meat in his mouth.
"Indeed," Iroh answered. "Water Bending is all centered in joining a flow of energy and redirecting it, as opposed to Fire Bending, which creates energy that goes where we tell it."
"I don't get it," Zuko replied.
"Are we adding Water Bending to the Prince's studies, now?" Lieutenant Jee asked with an annoyed expression.
"Well, the Avatar probably knows it already so better to understand what he can throw at us," Zuko replied with a shrug. "And we got smokebending out of airbending, so..."
"Is there a problem, Lieutenant Jee?" General Iroh asked, taking a sip of his tea.
"With all due respect General, Your highness," Jee began. "But it seems like the Prince is more concerned with seeing the world and learning inferior bending forms than truly hunting the Avatar."
Zuko shrugged. "To be honest Lieutenant, I am."
Iroh and Jee both looked surprised.
"Why is that, your highness?" Jee asked with confusion.
"The Avatar will not be found until he reveals himself," Zuko pointed out with a frown. "We could go, say, to the South Pole like you suggested last week to look for him. It's a good idea. Except that if he were there, the Southern Raider's would've encountered him. And been humiliated. No. I say there is no point in actively looking for the Avatar until the right time. I'm using...Uncle, what's it called? Blank Jing?"
"Neutral Jing," Iroh corrected with a slow nod. "Which, incidentally, is the key to Earth Bending."
Zuko frowned thoughtfully, filing that little tidbit of information away for later. "Neat."
"I hadn't considered that, your highness," Jee said with a bow in his seat. "My apologies for doubting you."
"I'm not mad," Zuko replied with a shake of his head. "Preparation can look like you're not doing anything important, right Uncle?"
"I agree, Prince Zuko," Iroh agreed.
Dinner continued until Lieutenant Jee finished. "If I may be excused, I need to make my rounds before I retire."
"Go ahead, Lieutenant," Iroh dismissed him with a kind smile.
With a bow, Lieutenant Jee left the bridge. After a few more minutes, the helmsman finished his dinner and got back on the wheel, weighing anchor to set sail as he'd been ordered. The ship would be going up towards the northern coast of the Earth Kingdom before turning back around to come down the west.
"I hadn't realized you'd become adept at lying," Iroh whispered neutrally, his expression passive.
"It wasn't a lie," Zuko replied with equal discretion. "It's the only truthful reason I have for stalling."
"So will you actually chase the Avatar?" Iroh asked with a frown. "If or when he reveals himself?"
"No," Zuko shook his head with an annoyed expression. "But I'll have to think of something, won't I?"
"It's not like you'd have anything else to do once we've finished tracking your mother," Iroh pointed out with a raised eyebrow. "Once you find someone or even something to smuggle you across the Naval Blockade, you'll be able to easily get to Hira'a."
"That's the trick, isn't it?" Zuko asked with annoyance. "First, it was finding a map with the village on it. Then it was finding out where the holes to the blockade were, turns out none. If I could just buy a whole other ship and crew it for a single voyage, this would be simple. But none of the colonies will sell me a ship and I need a Fire Nation ship to get past the blockade."
"Or something else," Iroh pointed out.
"Like what, a flying bison?" Zuko asked, remembering that the Airbending Scroll talked about the Bison extensively. "Those are extinct. I don't even think the Avatar would have one even if he did reappear."
"You never know."
---
After a week of flying, Aang had finally made it. The Southern Air Temple.
It was as tall, open and beautiful as he remembered it. The spires reached through the clouds and the wind seemed to blow with an eagerness to it around him, as if the place was welcoming him home.
But what he saw was just as important as what he didn't see, and he frowned. "Where is everyone? Shouldn't there be Monks and Bison flying around?"
Appa let out a low rumble.
"Maybe they're all still doing their morning practice," Aang said with a slow nod. "Thanks, buddy!"
The last Airbender took his Bison in for a landing.
---
Author's Note: Don't kill me. Katara and Sokka's role in this fic isn't done yet but, if you watch the Boy in the Iceberg, you see that the only reason Katara and Sokka got together as quick as they did was because Zuko was there to force Aang's hand and violate his banishment to save everyone. No Zuko, nothing forcing Aang to stay and so he leaves.
To illustrate this point, Zuko's on the other side of the world and deliberately ignoring calls to go back to the South Pole because he's busy trying to figure out how to get back into the Fire Nation without anyone knowing.
Also, yes. I know Uncle Iroh is being really, really heavy handed. But then, Zuko's become the type of person you almost need to be heavy handed with just to get him to listen...so just like in canon, but with the opposite advice.
Special thanks and shout out too Melden V, Anders Kronquist, Ray Tony Song, Volkogluk, Aaron Bjornson, iolande, Martin Auguado, Julio, Jiopaba, Hackerham, Tim Collins-Squire, Maben00, Sultan Saltlick, Ventari, PbookR, Seij, ChristobalAlvarez, Aenor Knight, Apperatus, EPiCJB19, Seeking Raven and Handwran. Your continued support helps make this possible.
Until the next time!
~Fulcon