Point Nemo
If Only It Were So (Zutara) - 1 , 2
The Case of the Vanishing Healer (Dramione) - 1, 2
The Temp (Robert Reynolds x Reader) - 1, 2, 3
Three Goblin Art
Not today Justin

Product Placement
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
Xuebing Du
Sweet Seals For You, Always

tannertan36
YOU ARE THE REASON
One Nice Bug Per Day

oozey mess
DEAR READER
we're not kids anymore.

pixel skylines
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
h
Keni
Sade Olutola
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
seen from Spain

seen from United States
seen from Philippines
seen from United States
seen from TĂźrkiye

seen from Norway

seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands

seen from Netherlands

seen from TĂźrkiye
seen from Japan
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Indonesia
seen from France

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Venezuela

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
@po1ntnem0
Point Nemo
If Only It Were So (Zutara) - 1 , 2
The Case of the Vanishing Healer (Dramione) - 1, 2
The Temp (Robert Reynolds x Reader) - 1, 2, 3

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
hold still ; michael ârobbyâ robinavitch
summary: you have a sex dream about your attending that leaves you hot, flustered, late for work, and completely off your game. then things go from bad to worse when gossip spreads and the entire emergency department finds outâincluding dr. robby.
notes: i honestly haven't been this excited or motivated to write in forever, and i just really hope it doesn't suck. this one feels a little different, kind of like... it just flowed? my writing feels less mechanical, i think? i don't know, i feel like i've been stuck in a rut and even though this isn't perfect, it feels like i finally enjoy writing again. i put so much love into this and tried so hard to get the characters right, i just really hope you guys enjoy! please, please let me know what you think!
warnings: more sitcom than drama (just let them have a good day, i beg you), swearing, italics, reader can drive, medical descriptions, blood, medical procedure descriptions (it's not super graphic though), most definitely incorrect medical information (my friend is a doctor, i am not), implied age gap but never specified, very likely incorrect tagalog (i'm sorry in advance), reader doesn't know tagalog, implied smut but nothing explicit, reader gets injured (and stitches), and making out (on shift, lol, nothing graphic but still, mdni please).
word count: 12763
You wake all at once.
Not slowly, not gently, but with one sharp inhale like youâve surfaced from deep water.
For a second you donât know where you are. Your room is too warm, the air too heavy, every inch of your skin flushed and slick with sweat. Heat clings to you, your heart pounding wildly in your ears, sheets twisted tight around your legs, and for one disorienting moment you swear you can still feel himâwarm hands, breath close, the dizzying pull of something forbidden and overwhelming.
The echo of his voice follows you up from sleep, low and wrecked and impossibly real.
Dr. Robby.
Your stomach flips.
âFuck,â you mumble into your pillow, already mortified, already knowing your brain has crossed a line it absolutely shouldnât have this time.
Because it didnât feel like a dream. It still doesnât. Fragments flash behind your eyelidsâthe way he touched you, his voice softer than youâve ever heard it, the teasing burn of stubble where he shouldnât have been close enough to touch.
You roll onto your back and drag both hands over your face, groaning quietly as awareness settles in piece by piece. Your pulse refuses to slow, every nerve still humming like your body missed the memo that none of it actually happened.
You stare at the ceiling.
ââŚYou have got to be kidding me.â
YOU WIN SOME, YOU LOSE SOME âââ jack abbot
summary: you assume jack likes you until the pitt starts betting on how long it'll take him and samira to get together; jack assumes you like him until you get called into work while on a date with your coworker. turns out, all it takes is a bad bet and an even worse date for you and jack to realize how in love the two of you are. (7k)
characters: jack abbot / fem!loser!reader, trinity santos, samira mohan, nick barker, mcvadi crumbs
contents: friends to lovers, idiots in love, implied age gap, angst with a happy ending, hurt/comfort, jealousy, humor, so much flirting, cw for medical procedures, medical inaccuracies, and probably several hr violations
( NAVIGATION ) | ( MASTERLIST ) | ( AO3 )
You make it halfway through your shift with a lighter wallet and a heavier heart than when you started it.
You can hear Princess shuffling through her stack of cash from the other side of the workstation, flaunting her winnings from a well-placed bet. You try and fail not to let it distract you as you scribble at the clipboard before you, with your heavy head propped on your clenched fist.Â
Charting was hard enough back when the computers were still running, back when it was easy â let alone when you have to make every single note by hand, and flit physically through a hundred different files just to cross-reference all the information.
âIs this what it was like back when you were a resident?â youâd asked Jack, when he dropped off an order slip by the filing cabinet, beside the bulky fax machine you were standing in front of and trying to tame.Â
He slid in beside you with a wide hand on your lower back, smelling like a dizzying mixture of sweat and musky cologne. He adjusted your labs in the tray without another word, turning it around and flipping it right-side up for you.Â
âYeah, actually,â heâd nodded, dialing the proper number on the machine with his pointer finger, including the area code that you had forgotten to add. The corner of his lip flickered upward in a faint half-smirk as he joked with squinted eyes, âBack in the 1900sâ when charting was done by candlelight.â
me trying to finish my stories
đđ˘đđ đ§đ¨đŹđ˘đŹ: đđđŤđŤđ˘đđ? â đđđŹđđđŤđĽđ˘đŹđ
summary: One glitchy tablet, one HR email, and suddenly youâre married to your attending, Jack Abbot. HR thinks it was intentional and has already started merging your records. Claim it was a mistake, and your residency could be delayed. With only three months left until youâre an attending, Jack agrees to play along. Pretending to be married might save your careerâbut can your heart survive the side effects?
⚠࣪ Ë word count: 132kâongoingâupdates weekly (might be later if life happens...)
⤡ CHAPTER INDEX:
âone.âtwo.âthree.âfour.âfive.âsix.âseven.âeight.ânine.âten.âeleven. âtwelve.âthirteen.âfourteen.â fifteen. â sixteen.âseventeen.âeighteenâ nineteen âtwenty âtwenty one
⤡ BLURBS INDEX:
â long shift
i'm not keeping a tag list for this series anymore. follow @s-writing-s-fics to get notified when i post a new chapter <33

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
âyouâve ruined my life
ââââââââââââââââââââââ
jack abbot x overachiever! intern! reader
summary: good things happen to those who are found crying in the supply closet by their hot, older, maybe flirty boss-slash-mentor.
wc: 14.5k (i have no idea how that happened)
tags/tropes: age gap (duh), slow burn with an insane amount of tension, lowkey very emotionally rife, hurt/comfort, not-so-unrealistic amounts of crying, langdonmel in the background if you squint (you donât have to squint very hard i love them so much guys im sorry) vaguely referenced but not subtlety implied bad childhood, gratuitous and frankly ridiculous medical inaccuracies because i took a lot of creative liberty, reader is an ode to Matilda by Harry Styles and Youâre Gonna Go Far by Noah Kahan, Pitt Crew becomes readerâs family :)
a/n: this was supposed to be a sort-of drabble for @leeknowpegger. idk what happened. pegger iâm sorry iâve been so dead recently (always) will you take this as an apology. If youâd like more cohesive tags, more context, extra details, and more in depth warnings, this fic has been cross-posted on ao3, and will be linked below :]
acknowledgments: thank you to @patrick-stewart for the amazing gif! my deepest, deepest apologies for not crediting sooner
ao3
ââââââââââââââââââââââ
ŰŤ ęŁŕ§
god tier dramione fanfics
Draco Malfoy and the Mortifying Ordeal of Being in Love by isthisselfcare {https://archiveofourown.org/works/34500952/chapters/85870804}
Isolation by bexchan {https://archiveofourown.org/works/23461513?view_full_work=true}
Rights and Wrongs series by LovesBitca8 {https://archiveofourown.org/series/1007625}
Remain Nameless by HeyJude19 {https://archiveofourown.org/works/23875939/chapters/57393508}
Breath Mints / Battle Scars by Onyx_and_Elm {https://archiveofourown.org/chapters/35668776?show_comments=true}
Wait and Hope by mightbewriting {https://archiveofourown.org/works/22818646/chapters/54531817}
Bring Him to His Knees by Musyc {https://archiveofourown.org/works/24481312/chapters/59089624}
Dragonâs Heartstrings by pinkinku {https://archiveofourown.org/works/46585585/chapters/117313114}
Cherry Mint by dirtymudblood {https://archiveofourown.org/works/21053894/chapters/50081633}
Love In A Time Of The Zombie Apocalypse by rizzlewrites {https://archiveofourown.org/works/28137807/chapters/68944698}
All You Want by senlinyu {https://archiveofourown.org/works/15153092/chapters/35140268}
Apple Pies and Other Amends by ToEatAPeach {https://archiveofourown.org/works/8156101/chapters/18691246}
The Gloriana Set by ThebeMoon {https://archiveofourown.org/works/16821571/chapters/39485710}
Love and Other Misfortunes by senlinyu {https://archiveofourown.org/works/14380728/chapters/33204618}
This World or Any Other series by olivieblake {https://archiveofourown.org/series/502333}
god tier dramione fanfics
Draco Malfoy and the Mortifying Ordeal of Being in Love by isthisselfcare {https://archiveofourown.org/works/34500952/chapters/85870804}
Isolation by bexchan {https://archiveofourown.org/works/23461513?view_full_work=true}
Rights and Wrongs series by LovesBitca8 {https://archiveofourown.org/series/1007625}
Remain Nameless by HeyJude19 {https://archiveofourown.org/works/23875939/chapters/57393508}
Breath Mints / Battle Scars by Onyx_and_Elm {https://archiveofourown.org/chapters/35668776?show_comments=true}
Wait and Hope by mightbewriting {https://archiveofourown.org/works/22818646/chapters/54531817}
Bring Him to His Knees by Musyc {https://archiveofourown.org/works/24481312/chapters/59089624}
Dragonâs Heartstrings by pinkinku {https://archiveofourown.org/works/46585585/chapters/117313114}
Cherry Mint by dirtymudblood {https://archiveofourown.org/works/21053894/chapters/50081633}
Love In A Time Of The Zombie Apocalypse by rizzlewrites {https://archiveofourown.org/works/28137807/chapters/68944698}
All You Want by senlinyu {https://archiveofourown.org/works/15153092/chapters/35140268}
Apple Pies and Other Amends by ToEatAPeach {https://archiveofourown.org/works/8156101/chapters/18691246}
The Gloriana Set by ThebeMoon {https://archiveofourown.org/works/16821571/chapters/39485710}
Love and Other Misfortunes by senlinyu {https://archiveofourown.org/works/14380728/chapters/33204618}
This World or Any Other series by olivieblake {https://archiveofourown.org/series/502333}
They ainât slick.
Inspired by this tweet :)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
oops, all zutara || atla movie edits pt. 2
pt. 1 here
Point Nemo
If Only It Were So (Zutara) - 1 , 2
The Case of the Vanishing Healer (Dramione) - 1, 2
The Temp (Robert Reynolds x Reader) - 1, 2, 3
Chapter 2 of If Only It Were So is out!
Even the leaves will forget you when they fall
Chapter 2 of If Only It Were So (Zutara Fan Fiction) Read Part 1 here.
Word Count: 7,325
Summary: Katara arrives in the Fire Nation expecting diplomacy, but quickly realizes the situation is more controlled than it is welcoming. The palace is beautiful, but it doesnât feel open, and she begins to notice how carefully her space and movement are managed. When she meets Zuko again, itâs no longer as someone from her past but as the Fire Lord, and the conversation between them brings up old history and new tension as they clash over what it means to protect people and do whatâs right.
Chapter Warnings: None
This work has multiple chapters.Â
Authorâs Note: Uh this took a while, but I actually am very proud of it. Please be kind, and let me know how everyone is feeling about this one. I think in the next coming weeks it'll be a little more difficult to get the story out, just because of how busy it'll become - but super stoked for where the story is heading!
The ship did not announce its arrival.
There were no horns sounded across the harbor, no lanterns lifted high along the docks to mark her presence, no gathering of officials waiting to receive her with ceremony or spectacle. The Fire Nation capital revealed itself slowly instead, its outline emerging from the darkness in layers of muted gold and shadow, the architecture rising in clean, deliberate lines against the night sky. The water beneath the hull remained steady as the vessel eased into port, guided with a precision that suggested long practice and little need for correction. Even the movement of the crew was quiet, their steps measured, their voices low, as though the entire process had been arranged to pass without drawing attention.
Katara stood near the edge of the deck, her hands resting lightly against the railing as she watched the shoreline come into focus. The air carried a different kind of warmth here, not the open, shifting warmth of the coast she had left behind, but something contained, held close by stone and structure. It pressed against her skin in a way that felt intentional rather than natural, as though even the climate had been shaped to fit within the boundaries of the city.
Above the harbor, faint traces of ash drifted through the air.
They moved slowly, carried on currents too subtle to feel, their descent almost graceful in its restraint. At a distance, they might have been mistaken for snow, soft and quiet as they fell, but there was no softness in the way they settled. Each fragment carried the memory of something burned, something reduced and released into the atmosphere without ceremony. Katara watched as one drifted closer, its path wavering slightly before it reached her. For a moment, it seemed as though it might land against her sleeve, a small, insignificant contact that would leave no mark.
It did not.
The current shifted just enough to carry it past her, the fragment slipping by without touch before disappearing into the dark water below.
Katara did not move. Her gaze lingered on the space where it had been, on the absence left behind by something that had come close enough to matter and then chosen, or been made, not to.
Behind her, the sound of footsteps approached, steady and unhurried.
âKatara.â
She turned slightly at the sound of her name, her attention shifting to the figure moving toward her across the deck. Captain Tuoni carried himself with the same composed precision she had seen on the shoreline, his posture unchanged by the transition from open coast to controlled harbor. His uniform remained immaculate despite the journey, the lines of it sharp and unbroken, as though he had stepped into the role only moments before approaching her.
âWe have arrived,â he said.
Katara inclined her head once in acknowledgment, though the statement required no confirmation. The city stood directly before them now, its presence undeniable.
âI can see that,â she replied.
If he registered the edge in her tone, he did not respond to it. âYou will disembark first,â he continued, his voice even. âArrangements have been made.â
Of course they had.
Katara turned back toward the harbor as the ship settled fully into place, the final shift of its weight barely perceptible beneath her feet. Ropes were secured, the quiet exchange of orders moving through the crew with practiced efficiency. A gangplank was lowered without announcement, its placement precise, aligned perfectly with the dock below.
No one rushed forward to greet her.
There were officials present, positioned at measured intervals along the edge of the harbor, their expressions composed, their attention fixed without being overtly intrusive. Guards stood among them, not in rigid formation, but not at ease either. Their placement was careful, spaced in a way that allowed for movement while ensuring that no space remained entirely unobserved. It was not a show of force. It was something more controlled than that. Presence without aggression. Awareness without escalation.
Katara stepped forward.
The wood of the gangplank held firm beneath her feet as she descended, each step carrying her further into the structure that had already begun to close around her. She felt it before she fully registered it, the subtle shift in the air, the way the open space of the harbor narrowed into something more defined as she reached the dock. The distance between her and the guards was intentional, neither close enough to restrain nor far enough to ignore. Their gazes did not linger on her directly, but she could feel the weight of their awareness all the same.
Captain Tuoni followed just behind her.
Not close enough to crowd her movement, but close enough that his presence remained constant, an unspoken reminder of the role he occupied within this arrangement. When she reached the bottom of the gangplank, he stepped forward again, positioning himself just to her side.
âThis way,â he said.
Katara did not ask where they were going. She did not need to, the path had already been decided.
They moved through the harbor without interruption, the space clearing ahead of them with a quiet efficiency that spoke of prior instruction rather than spontaneous deference. Doors opened as they approached, attendants stepping forward just in time to allow passage without requiring pause. The rhythm of it was seamless, each movement aligned with the next. Katara noticed it all. The way no one spoke to her unless necessary. The way every interaction remained contained within the boundaries of function. The absence of any moment where she was left entirely alone. Even in the briefest pauses between transitions, there was always someone present, always a figure within reach, always an awareness that extended just beyond the edge of her immediate space.
She was not being restrained. She moved along a path already decided, each step anticipated before she took it. They passed through the outer gates of the palace without ceremony, the heavy doors opening inward with a controlled ease that suggested they had been waiting for her arrival. The architecture shifted as they moved further inside, the open structure of the harbor giving way to enclosed corridors lined with polished stone. Light flickered along the walls, cast from carefully placed lanterns that illuminated the path ahead without casting shadows deep enough to obscure anything of importance.
It was beautiful.
Katara registered that distantly, the detail settling into her awareness without fully engaging her attention. The craftsmanship, the precision, the deliberate balance between form and function, it all spoke of a nation that had rebuilt itself with intention, that had shaped its environment to reflect control and continuity rather than chaos and recovery. It should have felt like stability, but it didnât settle that way.
They moved deeper into the palace, each threshold marking a transition from one controlled space to another. The further they went, the more contained everything became, the outside world falling away in layers until only the structure of the palace remained. The air grew warmer, the scent of ash fading into something subtler, something curated.
Kataraâs steps remained even. She did not slow, did not hesitate, did not allow the weight of the space to alter the rhythm of her movement. She moved as she always had, with purpose, with control, with the quiet awareness of someone accustomed to navigating environments that were not entirely her own.
But she felt the shift. It wasn't the space itself, but in her place within it. When they reached the inner corridor that led toward the residential quarters, Captain Tuoni slowed slightly, his attention turning toward her for the first time since they had entered the palace grounds. âYour accommodations have been prepared,â he said.
The word prepared left nothing to question. Katara met his gaze, her expression unchanged. âOf course they have.â
Tuoni inclined his head once, accepting the response without comment. âIf there is anything you require, it can be arranged,â he added.
Katara held his gaze for a moment longer than necessary, the silence stretching just enough to acknowledge what had not been said. Everything had already been arranged. She did not respond to the offer. Tuoni turned then, continuing down the corridor without waiting for further acknowledgment, his steps measured, his posture unchanged. Katara followed him. The final set of doors opened before they reached them. Attendants stood on either side, their movements precise as they stepped back to allow passage, their expressions neutral, their attention carefully managed. Beyond the threshold, the space widened into a chamber that was unmistakably meant for residence rather than transition. Katara stepped inside. The doors closed behind her with a soft, deliberate finality.
For a moment, nothing moved.
The room was expansive, the walls lined with polished surfaces that reflected the warm glow of the lanterns set at measured intervals throughout the space. The furnishings were arranged with careful intention, each piece placed to create a sense of openness rather than confinement. Fabric draped along the edges of the room in soft layers, the textures felt rich but not overwhelming, comfortable without trying too hard.
It was not a cell - that much was clear immediately.
Katara took a slow step forward, her gaze moving across the space with quiet precision as she registered each detail in turn. The room revealed itself in layers rather than all at once, as though it had been designed to be understood rather than simply entered. A low table stood near the center, its surface deliberately bare except for a single arrangement of folded linens placed with careful symmetry. A seating area rested along the far wall, angled toward open windows that overlooked an inner courtyard, as if the room itself had been oriented to observe rather than withdraw. A basin of water sat just within reach, its surface perfectly still, reflecting the light above it without distortion, without hesitation.
Everything about the space had a level of consideration here that extended beyond necessity and into something far more deliberate, as though the room had not simply been assigned but composed. Someone had expected her. Not her arrival in the abstract sense, but her presence. Her duration. The possibility that she would remain.
Katara moved toward the window.
It stood open, allowing air to drift in from outside with a warmth that carried none of the sharp salt of the harbor. The courtyard below was quiet, its design mirroring the rest of the palace in precise symmetry. There were no visible barriers, no gates locked in plain sight, no overt structures that declared restriction. At a distance, the space suggested openness so complete it could almost be mistaken for freedom.
And yet Kataraâs gaze shifted slightly, her attention catching on what existed just beyond the surface of design. A figure stood at the far edge of the courtyard, motionless in a way that suggested watchfulness rather than rest. Another presence lingered along the upper walkway, partially obscured by shadow but positioned with unmistakable intent. They were not obstructing the space. They were defining it.
She did not lean further out. She did not test the distance between observation and escape. She did not need to.
The ash was still falling.
She noticed it now against the darker backdrop of the courtyard walls, faint fragments drifting through the air in slow, deliberate descent. It moved without urgency, without resistance, as though even gravity had been softened here. One fragment caught the light as it passed near the window, its edges dimming as it burned itself out in the process of falling.
Something in the way it moved felt like recognition.
Kataraâs fingers tightened slightly at her side, though her posture did not change. Everywhere she went, people knew her before they met her. They spoke to her as though she had already been defined, as though she existed somewhere between what she had done and what they needed her to become next. And when she did not align perfectly with that versionâwhen she hesitated, when she chose differently, when she was simply a person instead of an expectationâsomething shifted.
Disappointment rarely arrived as rejection. It came as something quieter. Distance that widened without explanation. Conversations that ended just a little too soon. Glances that lingered long enough to measure what was missing before moving on. Katara had learned how to recognize that moment before it fully formed, how to step through it before it settled into place. How to remain useful. How to be what was needed before anyone had to name it.
It had worked. It had always worked.
Until now.
Her gaze lowered slightly, her focus narrowing as the thought settled into something heavier. If no one needed her, what remained?
Not the titles. Not the roles that had followed her across nations. Not the carefully constructed expectations that had shaped the way people saw her before she ever spoke. Those had never been hers to begin with. They were projections, carried from place to place, adjusted as needed, until they resembled something stable enough to rely on.
Just her and she did not know what that meant anymore.
The realization did not arrive as panic. It settled instead, quietly and completely, like still water that refused to move even when disturbed. For so long, movement had been the answer. Action had been the response. There had always been something to fix, something to prevent, someone to stand between harm and consequence.Â
Katara lifted her gaze again, her attention returning to the courtyard and the steady, controlled fall of ash that never quite reached her. The distance between contact and absence felt smaller now. Noticeable in a way it had not been before, as though she had only just learned how much space could exist without touching anything.
Even this did not touch her.
Even this passed her by.
Even the leaves would forget her when they fell.
Her hand moved unconsciously to the place where the folded letter rested against her side. The weight of it was slight but persistent, a reminder that even decisions made on her behalf could be carried without her consent. Diplomatic protection. Observation. Words chosen carefully enough to sound stable while avoiding anything that might resemble truth.
Katara remained where she was, the quiet of the room settling around her without resistance, without interruption. Outside, ash continued to drift through the air, each fragment passing through light and shadow without consequence, without memory, without leaving anything behind. For the first time since stepping into the palace, the question did not feel distant. It felt immediate.
Who is Kataraâif no one needs her?
Her gaze shifted slightly, not toward the door, not toward the guards she knew stood beyond it, but inward, toward something that had no defined shape yet. The answer did not come. Only the awareness that whatever it was, it existed here now, within walls she had not chosen, within a space she could not yet leave.
Katara stood in the center of the room, unmoving, the silence pressing in around her not as force, but as expectation. She was not bound. She was not free and for the first time, she did not try to resolve the contradiction. If this was what remained, then she would have to learn what it meant to exist without being needed.
âââââââ
The difference was immediate, even before Katara fully stepped into the room.
Fire Nation spaces did not move. That was the first thing she noticed. In the Water Tribe, everything had been shaped by flow, ice carved and reformed as needed, walls adjusted with the seasons, structures that responded to weather, to people, to change itself. Nothing had ever felt completely fixed. Here, everything was decided in advance. The walls did not suggest flexibility. The layout did not invite adjustment. Every surface, every placement, every angle had been chosen and then left alone, as though the room had already reached its final form long before she arrived.
Katara walked further inside, her attention shifting from the room as a whole to the details within it. A low table had been set with fresh linens, folded neatly and placed with quiet precision. The seating area near the window was angled just enough to suggest comfort without encouraging idleness. And near the far wall, positioned where it would be easily accessible without drawing too much attention, was the basin.
She stopped when she saw it.
The water inside was clear and still, filled to a level that felt measured rather than generous. It had been placed within reach, but not within abundance. Enough to use. Not enough to control anything beyond that.
Kataraâs gaze lingered on it for a moment longer than necessary before she looked away.
They had thought about this.
Not just that she was a waterbender, but how she might respond to being confined. They had given her access to her element in a way that appeared accommodating, even respectful, while quietly limiting what she could do with it. It was controlled. Contained. Predictable.
As if water only existed where it could be seen.
Katara moved past the basin without touching it. If they believed that was enough to restrict her, then they did not understand her at all. Water was not something that needed to be offered to her. It existed everywhereâin the air, in the ground, in the body. The thought came and settled just as quickly, not with anger, but with a quiet certainty.
If she needed it, she would find it.
A soft knock sounded at the door before it opened, measured and unobtrusive.
Katara turned slightly as Captain Tuoni stepped inside, his posture composed but not rigid. He did not carry the same distance the others had maintained throughout the day. There was something steadier about him, something that suggested he was not simply following orders but paying attention to the person those orders applied to.
âI trust the room is to your liking,â he said.
It was not an assumption. It was not quite a question either. Katara considered him for a moment before answering.
âItâs thorough,â she replied.
Tuoni nodded once, as if that response had confirmed something he already suspected. His gaze moved briefly across the space, not inspecting it, but acknowledging it in the same way she had. âThe palace tends to favor preparation,â he said. âIt avoids unnecessary adjustments.â
Katara almost smiled at that, though it didnât quite reach her expression. âIâve noticed.â
There was a brief pause, not uncomfortable, but deliberate. Tuoni stepped further into the room, though not far enough to suggest intrusion. He kept a respectful distance, his attention returning to her rather than the space around them.
âIf anything is required,â he continued, âit can be arranged.â
Kataraâs gaze flicked briefly toward the basin before returning to him. âIâm sure it can.â
Something in her tone must have carried more than the words themselves, because Tuoniâs expression shifted slightlyânot defensive, not dismissive, but aware. He did not challenge it. He didnât pretend not to understand either.
âThis is not meant to restrict you,â he said after a moment.
Katara held his gaze. âNo,â she replied evenly. âItâs meant to manage me.â
For a second, it seemed like he might argue. Instead, he exhaled quietly, the tension in his posture easing just enough to suggest honesty rather than obligation.
âThere are concerns,â he said. âOn both sides.â
Katara nodded once. That, at least, was true. âAnd Iâm the solution.â
âPart of it,â he corrected, though without much force.
Another pause settled between them, this one heavier, shaped less by formality and more by recognition. Tuoni studied her for a moment, not as an officer assessing a situation, but as someone trying to understand the person standing in front of him.
âYouâre not being treated as a prisoner,â he said.
Katara glanced toward the open window, toward the courtyard beyond it, where movement existed but never approached. âNo,â she said. âYouâve made sure of that.â
Tuoni followed her line of sight, his expression unreadable for a moment before he looked back at her. âThereâs a difference.â
Katara didnât respond right away. She let the silence sit, let the room exist around them exactly as it had been designed toâopen, controlled, complete.
âYes,â she said finally. âThere is.â
He inclined his head slightly, as though acknowledging the answer without fully agreeing with it. âYouâll be informed when the first council session is scheduled,â he said. âUntil then, you are free to move within the designated areas of the palace.â
Designated.
Katara nodded once. âOf course.â
Tuoni hesitated for the briefest moment, then added, âIf you need anything, you can ask for me directly.â
That was new.
Katara studied him for a second longer, noticing the shift in tone, the absence of distance that had defined most of her interactions since arriving. He wasnât just relaying instructions anymore. He was offering somethingâsmall, but intentional.
âIâll keep that in mind,â she said.
It wasnât quite acceptance, but it wasnât rejection either.
Tuoni seemed to understand that. He gave a final nod before stepping back toward the door. âGet some rest,â he said. âThe palace can beâŚadjusting.â
Katara let out a quiet breath. "I've noticed that too." This time, there was the faintest hint of something in his expression that might have been amusement, though it disappeared quickly. He stepped out without another word, the door closing behind him with a soft, controlled finality.
Katara remained where she was. The room had not changed. The space was still open. The windows were still uncovered. The basin still sat untouched where it had been placed. Nothing about it suggested confinement. And yet she could feel it now, not as something imposed, but as something built into the structure itself. This was not a cell. It was something designed to make a cell unnecessary.
ââââââââââââ
Katara did not leave the room that first night. Or the next morning.Time passed without marking itself clearly, measured only in the shifting quality of light as it moved across the walls and settled into different corners of the space. At some point, she had sat down. At some point, she had stood again. The movement had not felt important enough to remember. Most of it blurred together into stillness.
She found herself staring at the same section of wall more than once, her gaze fixed without really seeing it. The surface was smooth, polished in a way that reflected light but not detail. It gave her something to look at without asking anything in return. Her thoughts did not stay there. They moved, despite everything else being still.
Sokka would have said something by now. Not about the room, not about the guards or the structure or the quiet pressure of it all, he would have made a joke about something else entirely, something slightly off, something that would have forced her to shift out of this space even if only for a moment. He always knew when silence had gone on too long.
Aang would have noticed without saying anything at first. He would have sat with her, let the quiet exist without trying to fix it immediately. And then, eventually, he would have asked a question that didnât sound like a question at all. Something simple. Something that made her answer without realizing she had been holding anything back.
Katara exhaled slowly, her gaze dropping from the wall to the floor. They were not here and that was the point. The knock came sometime after the light had shifted again, soft but deliberate, measured in a way that suggested patience rather than urgency. Katara did not move right away. It came again. She crossed the room at a steady pace and opened the door.
Captain Tuoni stood on the other side, his posture composed, though not as rigid as it had been the day before. There was a brief pause as their eyes met, as if both of them were deciding how this interaction would unfold before it had even begun.
âMay I come in?â he asked.
It was the first time anyone had asked.
Katara stepped aside without answering, allowing the space itself to respond for her. Tuoni entered, his gaze moving briefly across the room before returning to her. He did not linger on the details. He had already seen them. Instead, his attention settled on her in a way that felt more direct than before.
âYou havenât left,â he observed.
Katara crossed her arms loosely, leaning back against the edge of the table. âThere didnât seem to be much point.â
âThatâs not entirely true.â
âNo?â she said, her tone even. âWhere would I go?â
Tuoni didnât answer immediately. He seemed to consider the question instead of dismissing it. âAnywhere within the designated areas,â he said at last.
Katara let out a quiet breath that might have been a laugh if it had carried any humor. âRight.â
The word settled between them.
Tuoni shifted slightly, not uncomfortable, but aware. âYou were given access for a reason.â
âAnd boundaries for another,â Katara replied.
He nodded once. âYes.â
There was no attempt to soften it. For a moment, neither of them spoke. Tuoni broke it first. âI wonât take more of your time than necessary,â he continued, though there was no real urgency in his posture. âThe Fire Lord has requested to see you.â
âWhen?â she asked.
âNow.â Of course.
She moved without hesitation, stepping past him toward the door. Tuoni shifted slightly to the side, allowing her to pass before falling into step beside her as they entered the corridor. He did not walk ahead of her, nor did he lag behind. He matched her pace exactly.
The palace was already awake.
Servants moved quietly along the edges of the halls, attendants carrying items from one place to another with practiced efficiency. Guards stood at intervals that felt natural until they were noticed, and then unmistakably intentional. Everything flowed, but nothing was unobserved. They walked in silence for a time. It did not feel forced, but it was not entirely comfortable either.
âWhat happened at the port,â Tuoni said, his voice low enough that it did not carry beyond the space between them, âshould not have happened that way.â
Katara did not look at him immediately. âNo,â she said. âIt shouldnât have.â
Another few steps passed between them before he spoke again. âWhat you did,â he added, âwas honorable.â
That made her glance at him. He was not looking at her when he said it. His gaze remained forward, his expression composed in the same way it always was, but there was something less formal in the words themselves. Â âThey were going to be moved,â he continued. âOff the record. It happens more than it should.â
Kataraâs jaw tightened slightly. âAnd you knew that?â she asked.
âI suspected,â he said. There was no defensiveness in it. âBy the time confirmation comes, itâs usually too late to intervene without escalating the situation.â
âSo you donât.â
It was not an accusation, not entirely. Tuoni let out a slow breath.
âI operate within the authority Iâm given,â he said. Then, after a brief pause, âThat doesnât mean I agree with all of it.â
They reached a turn in the corridor. The guards posted there stepped aside without being told. âIâm sorry,â he added, more quietly now. âFor what you were put into.â
Katara held his words for a moment, weighing them.
âYou didnât put me there,â she said.
âNo,â he replied. âBut I was part of what allowed it to happen.â That, at least, was honest.
Katara nodded once, a small acknowledgment rather than acceptance, and let the conversation fall away. They continued the rest of the walk in silence, but it felt different now. When they reached the doors, Tuoni stopped. âThese lead directly to the Fire Lordâs chamber,â he said. His tone had shifted back into something more formal, though the earlier conversation still lingered beneath it. âI will remain here.â
Katara studied him for a moment. âNot that I donât appreciate your words,â she said, her gaze steady, âbut why admit this now?â
He inclined his head, his expression turning thoughtful before he answered.
âThe Fire Lord is determined to protect his people and preserve the peace, as much as he is able,â Tuoni said. âBut the conversation he intends to have with you may not be one of a friend. It will be one of a leader.â He paused briefly, then added, more quietly, âI wanted you to know you have someone in your corner.â
There was no hesitation in the words once they were spoken. He stepped back, allowing the guards to open the doors. Katara held his gaze a moment longer, letting what he said settle, before turning forward. The room beyond was exactly what it needed to be. Not overwhelming, not intimate, but deliberate.
The space was wide without feeling cavernous, its high ceilings supported by dark wooden beams that drew the eye upward without demanding attention. Light filtered through tall windows along the far wall, softened by sheer fabric that shifted gently with the movement of air. A long table stood to one side, covered in carefully arranged documents, while the center of the room remained open, unobstructed. Zuko stood there.
He did not move when she entered. For a moment, he seemed distant, as though her presence had not yet reached him. Katara found herself staring before she could stop it. Time had been good to him. He looked older, not just in years, but in presence. He seemed stronger. His shoulders broader, his posture steadier, his hair longer and carefully kept. The sharp edges of the boy she had first known had not disappeared, but they had been tempered into something more controlled, more calculated.
He looked like a ruler now.
Not the angry, restless boy she had once met. Thenâ âWater Tribe Ambassador,â he said.
The title landed between them like a blade. Katara felt it immediately, the distance it carved, the space it enforced. âFire Lord,â she replied. Her voice matched his. It was even and controlled.
They stood facing each other, separated not by distance, but by everything that had been placed between them.
âYou received the directive,â Zuko continued.
âI did.â
A pause followed, thin but present.
âYou are under diplomatic protection within the palace,â he said. âUntil the joint review is concluded.â
âI read it,â Katara replied.
There was no gratitude in it, no acknowledgment beyond fact. Zuko did not react, not outwardly, but something in the set of his shoulders suggested he had expected nothing else. Another silence followed, but this one did not settle, it stretched. Katara broke it âYou kept them from charging me.â
It was not a question. Zuko held her gaze. âYes.â
âYou also made sure I couldnât leave.â
There it was, a single beat passed between them, and in it, something sharpened.
âYes.â The word did not waver.
Katara let it sit there, unsoftened, before stepping forward, not enough to close the space, but enough to change it. âThey were being held without charges,â she said. âNo trial. No oversight. And the system allowed it.â For Katara, it was simple: a system that required people to suffer in order to become better was already failing.
Zukoâs expression remained composed, but the stillness in him tightened, like heat pulled inward rather than released. âI am aware of the report,â he said.
âThatâs not what I asked.â Her voice cut cleaner now, the control still there but edged with something harder. âThey were going to disappear into a process that never ends,â she continued. âAnd youâre standing here telling me the system is working?â
âIâm telling you the system exists,â Zuko replied, his tone deepening, not rising. âAnd it does not change overnight because one part of it fails.â
âTheyâre not parts,â Katara said, the words coming faster now, pushing forward. âTheyâre people.â
âAnd if I dismantle the structure holding everything together every time it fails,â Zuko shot back, something sharper breaking through, âthen I donât protect anyone.â
The words landed harder than he intended. Katara took another step closer. âThey werenât protected,â she said. âThey were detained without cause.â In cages.
âAnd they were released,â Zuko replied immediately. âBecause you intervened.â
âThat doesnât change anything.â
âNo,â he said, more firmly now. âIt doesnât.â The admission came clean, but it did not soothe anything. If anything, it made the space between them feel more volatile.
Zuko exhaled slowly, deliberately forcing the tension back under control. âI didnât create this system,â he said. âBut I am responsible for maintaining it while itâs being rebuilt. If I lose control of thatââ
âYouâre already losing control,â Katara cut in. Silence fell. Zuko did not answer right away. When he did, his voice was quieter, but it carried more weight.
âControl is not the same as perfection,â he said.
Katara let out a breath that bordered on a laugh, but there was no humor in it. âNo,â she said. âBut it should at least mean people donât disappear while everyone waits for permission to care.â
That landed. Zukoâs gaze flickeredâbrief, but real. She saw it. Â âYou think I donât know that?â he asked, and this time something cracked through, not anger, not fully, but strain, contained too long.
âThen why does it keep happening?â she demanded.
Because that was the question. The one that only led to harder truths. Zuko held her gaze, but something in him pulled back, closing down just enough to keep himself from saying more than he could afford. âBecause change takes time,â he said.
Katara shook her head, stepping closer again without realizing it. âIt always does,â she said. âFor the people who arenât the ones waiting.â She did not believe people had to become casualties of a system still learning how to function.
Now they were close. Too close for this to still be formal. âZukoââ The name slipped out. It stopped everything. Not the room necessarily, but him. Zukoâs expression shifted, not visibly to anyone else, but to her, it was unmistakable. The control didnât break, it faltered. A beat passed between them, heavy with everything they had not said in years. âWe were friends.â
The words were quieter, but they carried more force than anything she had said. Zuko looked away. He didnât mean to. It was instinct. A reflex he couldnât fully stop. âI know,â he said.
His voice was lower now, thinner at the edges. Kataraâs chest tightened, but she didnât step back. âThen why does this feel like Iâm standing in front of a stranger?â she asked.
Zukoâs jaw tightened. âBecause weâre not children anymore,â he said. âAnd you are not just Katara from the Southern Water Tribe. You are an ambassador.â
âAnd youâre not just Zuko?â she shot back.
âNo,â he said, more firmly now. âIâm not.â
The space between them collapsed entirely. Neither of them noticed when it happened. âYou walked into a Fire Nation port and used force against my soldiers,â Zuko continued, and now there was heat in it, not uncontrolled, but undeniable. âYou escalated a situation that could have been handled through diplomatic channels.â
âThey were being detained without cause,â Katara fired back. âThere were no channels to use.â She refused to stand down.
âThat doesnât give you the right to decide how to intervene,â Zuko said. âNot anymore.â
Katara stared at him. âNot anymore?â she repeated.
âYou represent your people now,â he said. âYour actions donât just affect you. They affect every nation trying to hold this peace together.â
âAnd doing nothing would have done what?â she demanded. âProtected that peace?â
âIt would have prevented escalation,â he said.
âIt would have allowed injustice,â she snapped.
Zuko stepped closer without thinking. âAnd what you did,â he said, his voice lower now, more intense, âputs me in a position where I have to answer for it. Where every decision I make after this is questioned. Where every nation watching us wonders if the Fire Nation has control over its own territories.â
âAnd what about the people in those cages?â Katara shot back. âDo they get to wait while you prove a point?â
âItâs not a point,â he said, sharper now. âItâs stability.â
âItâs justification,â she countered.
Zukoâs jaw tightened. âItâs what keeps the world from breaking again.â
âItâs already breaking,â Katara said. âJust not where it affects you.â
A flicker of something crossed his faceâfrustration, restraint, something heavier. âYou think I donât see what is happening, Katara?â he asked, his voice lower now, more controlled for how close it was to slipping. It was the first time he had said her name. âYou think I havenât stood exactly where youâre standing and asked the same question?â
âThen why are you still defending it?â
âBecause I donât get to pretend thereâs a version of this where everyone walks away unharmed,â Zuko said, the words landing harder now. âI donât get that luxury anymore.â
Katara didnât step back. âThatâs not a luxury. Thatâs the bare minimum.â
âIn a perfect world,â he snapped, and now the heat was there, unmistakable. âBut this isnât a perfect world, Katara. Itâs one thatâs still trying to become something better, and that processââ He exhaled sharply, forcing the rest of it into something steadier. ââit doesnât happen without cost.â
Her eyes hardened. âThen itâs the wrong system.â
Zuko shook his head once, not dismissive, certain. âNo. Itâs the only one we have.â
âAnd the people caught inside it?â
His gaze held hers this time, unflinching, even if it cost him. âI canât save everyone,â he said. The admission didnât come easily. It sounded like something he had learned the hard way, something he hated.
âBut I can stop everything from collapsing,â he continued. âAnd right now, that has to be enough.â
They were inches apart now, neither of them had meant to get there. Kataraâs breath caught slightly, but she didnât step back. Zuko didnât either. For a moment, the argument stalled, not because it was finished, but because it had nowhere else to go without breaking something completely. A small, familiar chirp broke through the tension.
Katara blinked, her focus breaking just enough to glance past Zukoâs shoulder.
âMomo?â
The lemur sat perched along a carved beam near the edge of the room, his wide eyes fixed on them, his posture unusually still, as if he understood something was wrong. The shift was immediate. Not gone, but fractured. Zuko stepped back first this time, the movement controlled but deliberate.
âI brought him here,â he said.
Katara looked at him, something in her expression changing, not softening, but⌠recalibrating. âWhat?â
âIâve been in contact with Aang,â Zuko continued. âTrying to find a way to resolve this without it escalating further.â
He hesitated, just briefly. âThe palace can be⌠isolating,â he added. âI thought something familiar might help.â
Katara stared at him. The anger didnât disappear. But it shifted, forced to make room for something more complicated. âYou thought I needed comfort?â she asked.
âI thought you deserved something that wasnât this,â he said. The words landed with a force nothing else had managed. âI am trying to fix this,â Zuko continued, quieter now, but no less intense. âBut I canât do that if you keep pushing against everything Iâm trying to hold together.â
Kataraâs jaw tightened. âI wasnât thinking about your position,â she said.
âI know,â he replied.
That was the problem. Silence settled again, but this time it felt different. It felt heavy. âI need you to be patient,â Zuko said. âJust long enough for me to make this right.â
Katara didnât answer right away. She studied him, really studied him this time, without the shield of anger, without reducing him to the title he carried or the system he stood inside. She let herself look at Zuko.
Even if he no longer seemed to see himself that way.
Katara noticed him differently when he wasnât speaking to her. Not in the way he stood or the shape of him in stillness, but in what he did when he thought he was unobserved. Momo changed that. The lemur landed on him without hesitation, as if it had already decided he was safe enough to interrupt. Zuko didnât correct it. He didnât even react in the way someone in power usually would. Instead, he adjusted slightly, just enough to give the creature balance as it climbed his arm. There was a practiced ease in it, but not a performative one. It felt familiar like something he allowed himself in private moments, when no one was asking anything of him.
Momoâs small hands tugged at his hair, exploring without care for protocol or title. A few strands fell forward across Zukoâs face, and for a brief moment he let them. He didnât brush them away immediately. He just stood there, letting something small and alive move around him without control. Katara had never associated him with that kind of stillness. Not absence of motion, absence of resistance.
It was brief, but it stayed with her. Because when Momo finally settled, curling lightly against his shoulder, Zukoâs attention shifted back outward almost automatically, like something in him remembered where he was supposed to be. That was what struck her most. Not who he was when he was holding everything together, but how quickly he returned to it.
She understood him in a way she didnât want to fully name. He didnât belong to himself in the way she remembered him once fighting for. Whatever softness existed in him now had been negotiated into margins, small moments allowed, never sustained. Even his presence in the room felt divided, as if part of him remained elsewhere, continuously accounting for things no one else could see.
Katara felt it settle in her chest, heavy and unwelcome. She didnât agree with him, not fully. A part of her resisted everything he stood for in this moment. She wanted to believe that if a system failed its people, then it could be rebuiltâsomething new, something better, something that did not repeat the same fractures dressed up as stability. But instead, she found herself surrounded by people she trusted, people she loved, choosing to restore something that had already broken once before. As if history could be reshaped simply by willing it to be different. As if the past had not already proven what happened when power went unchecked, when systems were allowed to decide who mattered and who did not. It unsettled her more than she wanted to admit. It felt like watching everyone hold onto something that had already slipped through their hands. And yetâ
She understood him. She understood why he held the line. Why he chose structure over rupture. Why he carried it the way he did, even when it cost him and that understanding did not soften her stance. It made it worse. Her gaze shifted briefly to Momo, still perched on his shoulder, watching them both with an almost uncanny awareness, before returning to Zuko.
âI wonât stop doing what I think is right,â she said.
Her voice was steady. Not defiant for the sake of it, but certain. She would not shift her stance.
âI donât expect you to,â he replied.
There was no argument in it. No attempt to change her mind, just truth. A quiet pause followed, stretching just long enough to feel intentional. âBut you will stay,â he added.
Katara held his gaze. This time, she didnât argue, not because she accepted it, but because she finally understood exactly what he was asking of her, and what it was costing him to ask it. The distance between them remained. It was no longer empty. It was filled with everything they had been, everything they had chosen, and everything they still could not reconcile.
If Only It Were So
Words: 10,060
Summary: Post-war AU. Katara intervenes in a Fire NationâWater Tribe political incident and is placed under diplomatic protection in the Fire Nation royal palace. What is framed as a resolution becomes something far more complicated when Fire Lord Zukoâs decision protects her, but also contains her. In a world built on fragile peace, the cost of stability begins to blur the line between justice, duty, and personal loyalty.
Chapter Warnings: There is a fight, but I wouldn't say it is graphic.
This work has multiple chapters 1 of ?
The world was quiet now in a way it had never been before the war.
Not peaceful, people kept calling it peaceful, in reports and council meetings and letters written in careful ink, but Katara thought that word had always been too clean for what this actually was.
Peace did not feel like air after a storm. It felt like rebuilding after one. Everywhere she went, something was being repaired.
In the North, the ice walls had been reshaped into harbors, carved down and reformed so ships could come and go where once there had only been defense. In the Earth Kingdom, roads cut through places that had once been battlefields, new lines drawn over old scars as if geography itself could forget. In the Fire Nation, towns rose again with names people still hesitated to say out loud, as though speaking them might summon what had been buried.
And everywhere she went, people thanked her. Katara of the Southern Water Tribe. Healer. Diplomat. Survivor. They said it like it explained her. Like it made sense of the way she moved between nations as if she belonged to all of them and none at all.Â
It didnât.
What they did not say, what they never seemed to see, was that Katara did not feel like someone who had survived into peace. She felt like someone who had survived into responsibility.
Aang was somewhere in the South, and then somewhere in the East, and then somewhere in between, because rebuilding the Air Nomads did not happen in one place. It happened in fragments, temples restored where ruins had stood, teachings relearned from memory and instinct, children gathering in circles to learn airbending forms they had only ever seen in stories.
He was always smiling when she saw him, but it had started to look like something he wore, rather than something he felt.
Still, when he spoke about the Air Nomads returningânot as ghosts, not as memory, but as something living againâthere was light in his voice that no war had managed to take from him.
It just came more quietly now.
Toph had built something she called a school, though it looked more like a controlled disaster given structure and purpose.
Metal bending frameworks rose from stone foundations like they had been waiting centuries to exist. Training yards cracked and reshaped themselves under demonstration after demonstration, as if the earth itself had finally been given permission to change its mind.
People argued about it constantly. They called it too aggressive, too unrefined, too dangerous. Toph called it progress and kept walking. She did not ask for permission from the world that had spent years telling her what she could not do.
Sokka had stopped laughing as often.
Not entirely, never entirely. That would have meant something had been lost beyond repair, and Sokka did not allow that kind of ending. But there were longer silences between his jokes now. Pauses that stretched just a little too long before he filled them. Meetings where he listened more than he spoke, and when he did speak, people listened in a different way than they used to.
Like they were trying to decide if he had changed or if he had simply become what he always would have been, if the world had asked sooner. Leadership suited him.
And Zukoâ
Katara did not finish that thought. She rarely did, anymore.
Zuko was everywhere and nowhere at once, the Fire Lord who had chosen diplomacy over fear and still somehow carried both like they were the same weight pressing into his spine. There were days when his name appeared in letters stamped with Fire Nation authority, outlining treaties, rebuilding efforts, border negotiations. There were days when travelers spoke of him as if they had seen him themselves, walking burned coastlines, standing in council chambers, speaking to people who did not know whether to bow or argue.
And there were days when Katara remembered what it had been like to know him before all of this. Before crowns and councils and nations that looked at him and saw either salvation or threat. She had not seen him in months which had become a normal routine.
That was the point.
Katara did not stay in one place long enough for any of them to call it home. That is how it started before everything became a mess. At first, it had been necessity, traveling between nations as agreements were drafted, as injured coastlines needed healing, as broken water systems in Earth Kingdom villages required someone who understood how to make something living flow again. She had been useful in ways that made sense to people who were still learning how to trust one another after war and Katara had always known how to be useful.
It was what she had done in the South when she was younger, when survival meant boiling water over firelight and pretending not to notice how many empty houses lined the snow. It was what she had done when the war was still moving, still hungry, still taking more than it gave back. Being useful had once felt like purpose, now it felt like momentum.
There were days she arrived somewhere and people recognized her before she spoke. Not as Katara, not really, but as something larger and flatter than a person. She was recognized as one of the ones who helped end it. They would thank her before she had done anything. Before she had even understood what they needed. Katara would smile because it was easier than correcting them. Correcting them would require explaining that she did not feel like someone who had ended anything at all.
Only someone who had kept moving through what remained.
In the North, they called her âhonored guestâ and gave her rooms carved from ice that reflected candlelight in soft, shifting patterns. In the Earth Kingdom, they called her âresourceful advisorâ and asked for her opinion on systems she had never been allowed to help design. In the Fire Nation, they called her âtrusted liaison,â carefully, as if the words themselves had to be negotiated before they could be spoken.
Everywhere she went, she was given a place and everywhere she went, it lasted only as long as she stayed. Katara had begun to notice something strange in the way people looked at her when she left. Not sadness or gratitude, something closer to relief. As if they could exhale properly again once she was gone. As if her presence meant things were still unstable, still in need of correction, still unfinished and maybe that was true.
She told herself it did not matter, that she was helping. That this was what it meant to be part of something larger than a single nation, a single home, a single life that could be neatly defined by walls and family and return points on a map. She told herself that often, sometimes she even believed it. But belief did not stop the quiet awareness that followed her in moments when she was alone.
The awareness that she had become something like water itself, always moving, always reshaping herself to fit whatever vessel she was poured into.
There were still places that remembered her as a girl from the Southern Water Tribe which she felt made it worse. Those places looked at her with something softer in their eyes, something that suggested she had once been simple, that she had once belonged to a single story. Katara did not correct them either. She let them keep that version of her. It felt cruel to take it away.
At night, when she was aloneâtruly alone, not simply unobservedâthere were moments where she could not immediately name where she was. Not because she was lost, but because there was no single answer that felt correct enough to settle into. The North was too distant to be home. The South was too changed to return to unchanged. The Air Temples belonged to Aang in a way they never would to her. The Earth Kingdom belonged to everyone and no one at once. And the Fire Nationâ
Katara stopped that thought before it formed fully. Not because it was dangerous, it was unfinished in a way she did not yet know how to hold.
She was not lonely. That was not the word for it. Loneliness implied absence. Katara was not absent from anything. She was everywhere she was needed. What she felt was something quieter. A sense of being slightly out of alignment with every place she entered, as if she had been rotated a few degrees off from where she was meant to stand. She could function like this. She had been functioning like this for years, but function was not the same as belonging.
Still, she moved forward. There was always another place that needed healing. Another treaty that needed balance. Another coastline that had not yet decided whether it trusted the future. Katara was good at being necessary. She had always been good at it. It was only recently that she had started to wonder what would remain of her if she stopped.
------------
The message arrived on a windless morning.
Katara noticed the stillness first. The ocean beyond the window lay flat and unmoving, its surface unusually calm for that stretch of coast. It gave the impression that something had paused rather than settled, as though the world itself was waiting for something to shift.
The letter had been delivered without ceremony, passed into her hands by a courier who did not linger long enough to answer questions. That alone told her it was not meant for her directly. Messages like this rarely were. Over the past few years, Katara had learned that information had a way of reaching her regardless of whether she was officially included in the chain of communication.
She broke the seal and unfolded the paper, her eyes scanning the first lines quickly before slowing as the language began to take shape.
It was written in formal script, precise and deliberate, the kind of tone meant to reassure its reader that everything described within it was already under control.
To the Southern Water Tribe Councilâ
Katara read more carefully after that.
The letter referenced âcontinued concerns regarding coastal complianceâ between Fire Nation ports and Water Tribe travelers. That phrasing was familiar. In the years since the war, agreements between the two nations had been carefully constructed to allow shared use of certain coastal territories. Trade routes had reopened, and movement between regions had increased, but the balance remained fragile. Authority in those shared spaces was often unclear, and local leaders were left to interpret treaties in ways that best suited their interests.
She continued reading.
There were mentions of âroutine inspection protocolsâ being enacted in response to suspected sabotage. Katara frowned slightly at that. Sabotage had become a convenient accusation in recent months, difficult to prove, but effective at justifying increased control. A damaged shipment or a delayed vessel could be explained in many ways, but once labeled as sabotage, it shifted responsibility onto a specific group, often without evidence strong enough to support the claim.
Her attention sharpened as she moved further down the page.
The letter described the âtemporary detainment of individuals pending formal review.â The wording was careful, but it left too much undefined. There was no mention of how long the detainment would last or what conditions would justify release. Katara had seen enough of these reports to recognize what that kind of ambiguity allowed. Time could stretch in ways that were difficult to challenge once a process had been set in motion.
She kept reading.
The justification followed: âin accordance with Fire Nation jurisdictional authority within designated port boundaries.â
And that was the point of tension.
While the treaties allowed for shared access, jurisdiction had never been cleanly resolved. In practice, it meant that Fire Nation officials stationed at these ports often acted with a level of autonomy that blurred the line between enforcement and overreach. Most disputes were handled quietly, resolved through negotiation before they escalated. This did not read like one of those situations.
Kataraâs gaze moved to the list of names included in the report. Most of them meant nothing to her. Travelers, traders, and laborers who had been moving between regions as rebuilding efforts expanded. But then she reached the line that made her stop.
Water Tribe civilians. Detained.
She read the following lines more slowly.
No trial scheduled. No formal charges listed.
The room seemed to close in around her as she took in the full meaning of it. The letter recommended ânon-interference pending reviewâ and noted that a formal response from the Southern Water Tribe Council was expected.
Katara lowered the paper slightly, her thoughts settling into place with a clarity that was almost immediate.
She understood what this was.
It was not a temporary situation waiting to be resolved. It was a structure already in motion, one that relied on procedure to delay action and on distance to reduce urgency. The council would respond, of course. They would draft a formal reply, request clarification, and push for transparency. It would take time, and it would be handled carefully.
By the time anything changed, the people being held might already have been forgotten by everyone except those directly affected.
Katara had seen versions of this before. During the war, and even after it, systems had a way of justifying themselves once they were set in motion. If no one interrupted them early, they became harder to stop later. She read the letter one more time, not searching for new information but confirming what she already knew. This was not an isolated mistake. This was something that had been allowed to happen.
Katara folded the paper slowly and set it down on the table in front of her. For a brief moment, she remained where she was, giving herself the chance to consider the expected response.
She could wait. She could allow the council to handle it through the proper channels, trust that the agreements in place would eventually correct the situation. That was how this new world was supposed to function. Problems were meant to be addressed through discussion and structure, not immediate intervention. But the longer she stood there, the less that option felt like a real choice. Because there were still some things that had not changed, no matter how many treaties had been signed or how carefully the language had been constructed. People still got hurt and she still knew how to stop it.
Katara did not ask for permission to leave. She did not send a request for passage or authorization, and she did not wait for a formal response to be drafted in her absence. She gathered what she needed, informed no one who might try to delay her, and stepped out into the still morning air.
---------------
The coast was colder than it should have been.
Katara felt it the moment she stepped onto the shoreline, before she saw anything, before anyone noticed her presence. The air carried a sharp, unnatural chill that clung to her skin, thin and persistent, as though the water itself had been held too long in one place.
She moved forward at a steady pace, her attention already sharpening as she took in the details around her. The sand was marked with overlapping tracks, boots, dragged weight, repeated movement in tight patterns. This was not a place that had been left alone.
When she reached the rise overlooking the dock, she saw them.
The cages had been placed in open view, constructed from thick metal bars reinforced at the joints, anchored deep enough into the ground to suggest they were not meant to be temporary. Inside, Water Tribe civilians sat or stood in tense stillness, their movements small and measured in the way of people who had learned that sudden motion invited consequence.
Katara did not react immediately.
Instead, she observed.
There were more guards than necessary for routine detainment. They were not standing idly, either. Their formation was deliberate, spread wide enough to surround the area, close enough to close ranks quickly if needed. Each of them carried a standard-issue dao blade at their side, and several held metal spheres attached to weighted chains, the kind designed to entangle limbs and disrupt bending forms before they could be completed.
These were not passive enforcers.
They were prepared for resistance.
She did not rush forward.
That would have been a mistake.
A few turned as she approached, their expressions shifting from mild curiosity to alert recognition.
One of them stepped forward.
âYouâre not authorized to be here,â he said, his voice firm but not yet aggressive.
Katara stopped a few paces away. âNeither are they,â she replied, her gaze flicking briefly toward the cages.
The guard followed her line of sight, his posture tightening almost imperceptibly. âTheyâre being held pending review. Youâll need to take any concerns through proper channels.â
Proper channels. Katara had expected that. âWhat charges?â she asked.
âThatâs not information Iâm required to provide.â
âThen youâre holding them without cause.â
The guardâs expression hardened. âI said pending review.â
Katara exhaled slowly, steadying herself as she let the words settle. She could feel it now, the structure of the situation, the way it had been built to withstand exactly this kind of questioning. Every answer led nowhere. Every statement redirected responsibility. Behind the guard, one of the prisoners shifted, gripping the bars as if testing their strength out of habit rather than hope.
That was enough.
The first movement came from the guards, not her.
A flick of the wrist, a signal too small to notice if she hadnât been watching for it. Two of them advanced at once, chains already spinning, metal spheres cutting through the air with a low, controlled hum. Another circled to her flank, blade drawn but held low, waiting for an opening rather than rushing into one.
They were disciplined and coordinated.
Katara moved.
Water surged from the shoreline at her call, rising in a smooth, controlled arc that split midair into multiple streams. One struck the first incoming chain, freezing over the metal mid-swing and locking its motion just enough to throw off its trajectory. The second guard adjusted instantly, redirecting his weapon toward her legs, aiming to bind rather than strike.
Katara stepped into the movement instead of away from it.
She caught the chain just before it could wrap fully, her hand closing around the length of it with precise timing. The force traveled through her arm, but she shifted her weight with it, turning the momentum rather than resisting it. The guardâs balance broke as she pulled sharply, sending him forward and down onto the ice that had already begun to spread beneath their feet.
The third guard closed the distance.
Katara pivoted, her stance low and grounded, and met him before his blade could fully rise. Her forearm struck his wrist, redirecting the arc of the weapon just enough to miss her shoulder. She followed the motion through, stepping inside his reach and driving her palm into his chest with controlled force. Not enough to injure. Enough to send him back.
She did not pause.
The temperature dropped further as she moved.
Water answered her without hesitation, forming and reforming around her in precise, deliberate patterns. It did not lash out wildly. It responded to intention, to structure, to control honed over years of use in far worse conditions than this.
Another chain came toward her, faster this time.
Katara raised her hand, and the air itself seemed to tighten. Moisture condensed instantly, freezing along the length of the weapon as it traveled. The added weight dragged it down mid-swing, pulling it off course before it could reach her. She stepped forward again, closing the distance before they could reset. That was the mistake most people made.
They assumed waterbenders needed space.
Katara moved through them with a precision that made the fight look shorter than it was. A sweep of her leg knocked one guard off balance, the ice beneath him shifting just enough to send him down. She redirected another strike with her elbow, turning the blade away from her side before following through with a controlled strike to his shoulder that forced him to drop it.
Water coiled low around two more soldiers as they advanced, freezing around their feet and anchoring them in place without breaking bone or drawing blood. When one of them tried to force his way free, the ice tightened just enough to remind him that struggling would only make it worse. She was not overwhelming them. She was outmaneuvering them.
There was a momentâbrief, but unmistakableâwhere the fight could have changed. One of the guards broke formation, abandoning restraint in favor of force. His strike came faster, sharper, aimed not to disable but to cut. Katara saw it and for the smallest fraction of a second, something in her shifted. The water behind her surged higher, its shape losing some of its clean precision as it responded to something deeper, something less controlled. The air around them dropped several degrees at once, frost forming along the edges of metal and fabric alike. It would have been easy to end it there. To freeze everything in place. To stop the movement completely.
She didnât.
Katara exhaled, and the surge steadied, she redirected instead. The water snapped forward, not as a wave, but as a focused strike that knocked the weapon from his hand and sent him back hard against the ground. Ice spread instantly beneath him, holding him there without harm but without the possibility of rejoining the fight. The moment passed. The restraint held. Within seconds, it was over. Not because the guards had been defeated in strength, but because they had been outpaced, outmaneuvered, and contained before they could escalate further. No one was dead. No one was seriously injured.
Every one of them was aware that it could have gone differently.
Katara turned toward the cages.
Up close, they were heavier than they had appeared from a distance. The metal bars were thick, reinforced at the joints with riveted plates that had been hammered into place. The doors were fitted with locking mechanisms that had been designed to resist force from the outside, solid, compact, and carefully constructed to prevent tampering.
They were not meant to be opened quickly.
Katara stepped closer, her gaze tracing the structure with quiet precision. She could see where the metal had been treated, where it had been reinforced, where the weak points had been disguised beneath careful craftsmanship. Whoever had built them had expected resistance.
They had not expected her.
She lifted her hand slightly, drawing in a slow breath as she centered herself. The fight behind her still echoed faintly in her body - the controlled exertion, the sharp awarenessâbut she did not let it carry into this moment. This required less force, less movement, and more control.
Water answered her call, not from the shoreline this time, but from the air itself.
It gathered gradually, almost imperceptibly at first, condensing from the thin moisture suspended in the cold atmosphere. Droplets formed along the edges of the bars, along the surface of the lock, along the space between them. They trembled for a moment, then pulled together into a narrow, deliberate stream that hovered just beyond her fingertips.
Katara guided it forward.
The water slipped between the bars with ease, threading through the narrow gaps and into the internal structure of the lock. She did not rush it. Every movement was measured, every shift controlled, as she navigated the unseen interior of the mechanism by feel alone. Then she closed her hand. The temperature dropped instantly. The water froze where it sat, expanding within the confined space of the lock with quiet, relentless pressure. Metal resisted for only a second before it gave way with a sharp, splitting crack that echoed louder than the fight had.
The door shuddered, then swung open on its hinges. For a moment, no one moved. The prisoners inside the cage stared at her, their expressions caught somewhere between disbelief and hesitation. They had learned, in however many hours or days they had been held there, that sudden changes rarely came without consequence. Even now, with the path open in front of them, their bodies seemed unwilling to trust it.
Katara met their gaze, steady and unyielding.
âYouâre not staying here,â she said, her voice calm but leaving no room for doubt. âGo.â
The words seemed to break whatever hesitation remained.
The first of them stepped forward slowly, testing the ground as if expecting resistance. When none came, the others followed, their movements gaining urgency as they passed through the open door and into the space beyond. Some kept their heads down, focused only on putting distance between themselves and the cages. Others glanced back at her as they moved past, their expressions searching for something they did not have time to name.
Katara did not stop them. She did not speak again.
She simply stood where she was, her attention shifting back toward the guards as the last of the prisoners cleared the immediate area. Behind her, she could hear movement returning, boots against ice, the strained sound of metal shifting as the guards began to free themselves from the restraints she had placed on them. The initial shock of the confrontation was wearing off, replaced by something more calculated. Awareness. They understood now what they were dealing with.
Katara turned slightly, positioning herself between them and the direction the prisoners had fled. Her stance remained steady, her breathing even, but there was no mistaking the readiness in the way she held herself. The water at her sides had not fully settled; it lingered there, quiet and responsive, as if waiting for her to decide whether it would be needed again.
The guards did not advance, not immediately. They watched her instead, reassessing the situation with a clarity they had not possessed when the fight had begun. They had tested her already. They had felt the precision of her control, the restraint in her strikes, the way she had ended the conflict without escalating it beyond necessity. They knew, now, that restraint had been a choice and that it could be withdrawn.
By the time Fire Nation officials arrived, the moment had already shifted.
What had been immediate conflict settled into something colder, more structured, shaped not by movement but by interpretation. Voices carried across the dock, sharp and controlled, issuing orders that came too late to change what had already happened. Katara did not move from where she stood. The last traces of water lowered slowly at her sides, not disappearing entirely but returning to stillness, as if mirroring the quiet that had fallen over the scene. The air remained colder than it should have been, the temperature lingering as a reminder of what had just taken place.
She listened as the language around her began to change.
At first, it was subtle. Questions framed too carefully. Statements that avoided direct accusation while circling it closely enough to make the intent clear. Then, gradually, the shift became more defined. They were no longer speaking to her as they had before. The titles she had carried into the spaceâhealer, diplomat, allyâfell away without being directly dismissed. In their place came something narrower, more precise, and far less human.
They spoke of jurisdiction, of violation, escalation. Katara could hear the structure forming in their words, the careful reshaping of what had just occurred into something that could be documented, categorized, and responded to within the boundaries of law and treaty. An incident. A breach. A risk. She did not interrupt them, because beneath the language, beneath the controlled outrage and the measured authority, she understood exactly what she had done.
There had been no fight to stop. No battle to win. What she had intervened in had already been decided long before she arrived. It had been structured, justified, and set into motion with the expectation that no one would disrupt it in time for it to matter. She had changed that, not by destroying it, by interrupting it. And systems, she knew, did not forget when they were interrupted.
The first accusations were not shouted.
They were spoken in controlled, measured tones, the kind that carried further than raised voices ever could.Â
A senior Fire Nation official stepped forward from the group that had gathered along the edge of the dock. His robes marked rank rather than labor, untouched by the cold that still lingered in the air. He took in the scene quicklyâthe restrained guards, the broken lock, the absence of the detaineesâand then let his attention settle fully on Katara.
âWhat you have done here,â he began, his voice even, âconstitutes a direct violation of Fire Nation jurisdiction.â
Katara did not respond immediately. She watched him instead, noting the careful choice of words, the way he spoke not to her but around her, as if already shaping the account that would be carried beyond this place.
âYou entered a controlled port under active inspection,â he continued, âinterfered with lawful detainment procedures, and used force against Fire Nation personnel. This is not a matter of misunderstanding. This is unauthorized foreign interference.â
The phrasing was deliberate. Each word placed with intention, narrowing the scope of what had happened until it fit cleanly within something that could be argued, documented, and punished. Katara held his gaze, her expression steady. âThey were being held without charges,â she said. âNo trial. No oversight. That isnât lawful detainment.â
âThat determination is not yours to make.â
âIt is when people are being taken and no one is held accountable for it.â
A flicker of tension moved through the surrounding officials, subtle but present. The guards had gone quiet now, their earlier aggression replaced with watchful stillness as they allowed the conversation to take its place where the fight had ended.
The official did not raise his voice. âThat is precisely why there are processes in place,â he replied. âProcesses that you have chosen to disregard.â
Katara almost said something then, something sharper, something that would have cut through the careful neutrality of his tone, but she stopped herself because she understood what he was doing. He was not arguing with her. He was positioning her. More officials began to arrive, drawn by the disruption, their presence shifting the shape of the space from conflict into something more structured. Orders were given quietly. Statements were repeated, refined, and passed between them with increasing precision.
By the time the first formal record was being drafted, the language had already begun to settle. Violation of treaty boundaries. Use of force within Fire Nation territory. Interference with established inspection protocols. Each phrase stripped the moment down further, removing context until only action remained, and even that was reduced to something that could be interpreted without the weight of what had led to it.
The response from the Water Tribe did not take long to surface. Not formally, not yet, but in the form of voices already present, traders and travelers who had witnessed enough to understand what had nearly happened before Katara intervened.
âThey were going to be moved,â one of them said, speaking to no one in particular and everyone at once. âThere wasnât any review happening. Weâve been waiting for days.â
âThey wouldnât tell us anything,â another added. âNo charges, no timeline. Just orders.â
The Fire Nation officials did not acknowledge them directly, but the shift in attention was noticeable. Their presence complicated the narrative, introduced variables that could not be dismissed as easily as Katara herself. Still, it was not enough to change the direction things were moving. It seemed as though direction had already been decided.
Katara stood at the center of it, listening as the two realities began to take shape around her. On one side, a violation. On the other, a justification. Fire Nation authority reframed her actions as disruption, as instability introduced into a system that had been functioning as intended. Water Tribe voices framed it as intervention, as prevention, as the only action that had stopped something worse from happening.
Neither side spoke to her directly anymore.They spoke about her. It happened gradually, almost imperceptibly at first. The shift from you to she. From what you did to her actions. From presence to distance. Katara felt it as it occurred, the subtle removal of her from the center of her own choices. She was no longer being engaged as a person making a decision in real time. She was being repositioned as something that could be discussed, evaluated, and ultimately decided upon. A situation. A complication. A risk.
One of the officials turned slightly, speaking to another just within Kataraâs hearing.
âThis will require a formal response from the Fire Lord,â he said. âWe cannot allow this precedent to stand without review.â
âAnd the Water Tribe?â
âThey will respond,â the first replied. âThey always do.â
Kataraâs gaze shifted briefly toward the horizon, where the ocean remained unnaturally still. She understood now what she had become in the space of a few minutes. She was a problem that needed to be resolved in a way that preserved the structure both sides were trying to maintain. A diplomatic crisis. For a moment, she considered speaking again - explaining, clarifying, forcing the conversation back into something that resembled truth instead of interpretation. But she knew it would not matter because this was no longer about what had happened, it was about what would be done with it.
So Katara said nothing. She stood where she was, steady and unmoving, as the language continued to build around her, shaping her into something smaller than what she had done and larger than what she had intended. In the space between those two things, the consequences began to take form.
---------------
They did not move Katara from the shoreline.
Instead of escorting her away or formally placing her under arrest, the Fire Nation officials reshaped the space around her. Within the hour, a temporary encampment had been established just beyond the dock, its structure rising with practiced efficiency. Canvas tents were erected in clean, deliberate rows, their placement forming a contained perimeter that subtly redefined the area without ever declaring it restricted. Tables were brought in and arranged beneath the largest tent, their surfaces quickly covered with documents, maps, and writing tools. Messengers moved in and out at a steady pace, carrying information between groups that spoke in low, controlled voices.
Guards were reassigned as well. Not to restrain her physically, but to remain present in a way that made movement feel observed rather than prevented. They stood at measured distances, never close enough to provoke confrontation, but never far enough to suggest she had been left alone. It was not imprisonment, not officially. It was oversight and the distinction mattered to them.
Katara stood just outside the main tent, positioned where she could see both the ocean behind her and the steady movement of officials in front of her. The breeze had begun to pick up slightly, carrying with it the sharp scent of salt and something metallic that lingered from the earlier conflict. It brushed against her skin, cool and steady, grounding her in a way that the rest of the moment did not.
No one had attempted to bind her. No one had told her she could leave. Time passed differently when no one spoke directly to you. Katara became aware of it gradually, in the small, repetitive details that marked its movement. The sound of boots against packed sand, returning again and again along the same paths. The quiet exchange of documents between officials who rarely raised their voices. The occasional glance in her direction, quickly redirected as though acknowledging her too openly would disrupt something they were trying to maintain.
Her presence altered the space. She could feel it in the way conversations shifted when she drew closer, in the way decisions seemed to pause just long enough for her to be considered and then deliberately excluded. She was watched, but not engaged. Observed, but not addressed. They were deliberately distancing themselves.Â
When the message arrived, it was delivered with the same careful neutrality that defined everything else.
A Fire Nation attendant approached her without urgency, stopping just within reach before offering the sealed letter. He did not meet her eyes for long, only long enough to confirm the exchange before stepping back again, returning to the rhythm of the encampment as if nothing of significance had occurred. Katara took the letter, her attention already fixed on the seal pressed into the wax. She recognized it immediately. Her father.
She broke the seal without hesitation and unfolded the paper, her eyes moving quickly across the lines before slowing as the tone became clear. It was formal.
Katara,
I have received word of the situation at the coastal port. While I regret the circumstances that led to your involvement, I trust that the matter will be resolved through the proper channels. I will be in direct communication with the Fire Lord to ensure that a just and balanced outcome is reached.
For now, I ask that you remain where you are and allow the process to unfold. Your safety remains a priority.
âChief Hakoda
Katara read the letter twice. The meaning of the letter was clear enough. There was no question in it. No request for her account, no attempt to understand what had actually happened beyond what had already been reported through official channels. There was only acknowledgment.
Her grip tightened slightly on the edge of the paper before she forced herself to relax it. The breeze caught the corner of the letter, lifting it just enough to remind her that she was still standing in the open, still part of a moment that had not yet settled into anything final.
Remain where you are. Allow the process to unfold.
Katara let out a slow, controlled breath, steadying the brief surge of frustration that rose in her chest before it could reach the surface. Of course he would say that. Of course he would choose the structure over her. He had to, that was what leadership required now. She folded the letter with deliberate care, pressing the crease flat with her fingers as though the precision of the action might settle something unsettled within her. It didnât, but it gave her something to hold onto.
Katara lifted her gaze toward the horizon again, her expression composed despite the tension that lingered beneath it. The ocean remained unnaturally still, its surface reflecting light without movement, as if it, too, had been caught in a moment of waiting. She would not give them the satisfaction of seeing what she felt. Not like this. If this was how the situation would be handled, then she would stand within it the same way she had stood through everything else that had tried to define her. She would not argue with the structure they had built around her. She would not break under it either.
She remained where she was, steady and unmoving, as the encampment continued to shift and organize itself around her, as messages were sent and responses awaited, as decisions began to form somewhere far beyond the shoreline and she waited.
---------------
Far from the coast, the atmosphere in the Fire Nation capital could not have been more different.
Where the shoreline had held a tense, suspended stillness, the capital moved with relentless purpose. Corridors remained in constant motion, filled with messengers carrying sealed documents, officials speaking in low, urgent tones, and guards maintaining a presence that was both visible and unobtrusive. The palace itself seemed to breathe with activity, its polished floors echoing with footsteps that rarely slowed and never stopped for long. Decisions were made in one chamber, revised in another, and carried across the structure before they had fully settled into certainty.
At the center of it all stood Zuko.
He had not left the council chamber since the reports began arriving.
They had come in layers, each one adding weight rather than clarity.
The first was the official account, delivered with the Fire Nation seal and written in the kind of language that sought to define the situation before it could be questioned. It was structured, controlled, and precise in a way that emphasized disruption over cause. It described Kataraâs actions in terms of violationâof jurisdiction, of protocol, of authorityâwhile offering only the barest acknowledgment of the conditions that had led to her intervention.
The second set of reports followed soon after, less refined and far less consistent. These came from stationed officers, local witnesses, and secondary observers whose accounts did not align cleanly with the official narrative. There were discrepancies in timing, in tone, in the sequence of events. Mentions of prolonged detainment without formal charge appeared more than once, though never in the same words. It was not enough to overturn the first report, but it was enough to complicate it.
The final layer came from Zukoâs advisors and political analysts. These documents did not attempt to describe what had happened so much as they outlined what it meant. Each one presented carefully constructed assessments of potential outcomes, risks, and responses, framing the situation as a matter of stability rather than truth. They spoke of precedent, of perception, of the delicate balance that had been maintained between nations since the warâs end.
Zuko read all of them.
Then he read them again.
And then a third time.
He did not reread them because he lacked understanding. The facts were clear enough, even through the distortions of official language. What he was weighing was not the event itself, but the cost of acknowledging it in any particular way.
When he finally lowered the last report, the room around him remained quiet.
It was not silence. The chamber was never truly silent. There was always the faint shift of fabric, the controlled movement of breath, the subtle presence of others waiting for something to break the stillness. But the tension in the room was contained, held in place by expectation rather than ease.
His advisors stood at a measured distance from the table, their attention fixed on him with careful restraint. They did not interrupt. They did not press. They waited.
âShe used force against Fire Nation personnel,â one of them said at last, his voice cutting through the quiet with controlled certainty. âRegardless of the circumstances, that cannot go unanswered.â
Another spoke before the statement could settle fully. âDetainment without charge is also a violation,â he said, though his tone carried more caution. âIf the claims in the secondary reports are accurate, then the governorâs actions may complicateââ
âThey do not excuse this,â the first interrupted, his voice tightening slightly. âIf we allow external figures to intervene within our jurisdiction whenever they deem it necessary, then we undermine the authority we are trying to rebuild.â
Zuko did not look up.
He had already heard every version of this argument before it was spoken.
âShe is not just any individual,â a third voice added, stepping carefully into the space between the others. âHer position, her affiliationsâthis will not be viewed in isolation. It will be interpreted as a reflection of broader alliances. If this is not addressed decisively, it may signal weakness.â
There it was. The part that mattered most to them. Not Katara, but what she represented. Zukoâs gaze lifted slowly, but instead of meeting the eyes of those speaking, it settled on the reports spread across the table in front of him. Katara. Not a diplomat. Not an ally. Katara.
The name existed in his mind separate from everything being said around it, untouched by the circumstances that sought to contain her within something manageable, something impersonal. It made this impossible to treat as only a matter of policy.
There was no clean option.
He could see that clearly, laid out in the arguments that surrounded him, in the potential outcomes that had been carefully mapped out in ink and expectation. If he allowed her to be punished as a criminal, it would satisfy those within the Fire Nation who demanded visible authority. It would reinforce the idea that his rule was governed by law rather than personal connection, that no individual stood outside the structure he was trying to rebuild. But it would fracture trust with the Water Tribe. Not immediately, not in a way that would be publicly acknowledged. It was inevitable. The kind of fracture that began quietly did not remain that way.
If he dismissed the incident entirely, if he framed her actions as justified intervention and allowed her to walk free without consequence, it would preserve that external trust. But it would undermine his authority at home. It would suggest that Fire Nation law could be bypassed when it became inconvenient, that his leadership could be influenced by personal ties rather than principle. That perception, once formed, would not remain contained within a single incident. It would spread and it would be used.
Every path led somewhere unstable. Every choice carried a cost that could not be avoided, only selected. Zuko closed his eyes briefly. The movement was small enough that no one in the room remarked on it, but it was deliberate. He allowed himself that moment, not to hesitate, but to separate the voices around him from the decision that had already begun to take shape beneath them.
When he opened his eyes again, nothing in the room had changed. The advisors were still waiting. The reports were still spread before him. The tension remained exactly where it had been, but he had moved past the point of weighing. Before he spoke, another document was placed on the table. Zukoâs attention shifted to it immediately. The seal was unmistakable: The Southern Water Tribe. He did not reach for it right away. He did not need to read it to understand what it contained. The language would be formal, measured, focused on resolution rather than accusation. It would prioritize stability, emphasize cooperation, and defer to process in a way that mirrored everything he had just read. It would not change the reality of the situation.
-----------------
Back on the coast, Katara remained where she had been placed. The encampment had settled into a steady rhythm, its earlier urgency replaced by structured activity that suggested control rather than reaction. Officials moved with purpose, but without haste, as though the situation had already been contained simply by being organized. Katara did not interrupt that rhythm. She did not attempt to engage with it. She existed within it, separate and central at the same time.
When the decision finally began to move, it did not reach her directly. It traveled through the structure first, passing from one official to another, carried in tones that shifted slightly with each repetition. By the time it approached her, it had already been shaped into something formal, something that could be presented without revealing the weight behind it.
------------------------
Zuko read the final report once more before speaking. He did not do so because anything had changed. He did it because the room needed to believe that he had considered every possibility. When he finally spoke, his voice was steady, controlled, and measured in a way that left no room for interruption.
âI will not have her treated as a criminal.â
The words settled into the room immediately, their weight unmistakable. No one spoke. There was a pause, brief but significant, as the meaning of the statement took hold. âThis will be handled through joint review,â Zuko continued, his tone unchanged. âShe will remain under diplomatic protection until a formal resolution is reached.â
The report was precise. It framed the decision as procedural rather than personal, as a matter of structure rather than judgment. It sounded like control. It sounded like order. It sounded like peace. No one in the room argued. They could not. The decision had been constructed in a way that left no clear point of opposition. It addressed the demands of authority without fully conceding to them, while maintaining the appearance of neutrality that the situation required. That was the point.
When the chamber finally emptied and the doors closed behind the last of his advisors, the silence that followed was different from the one that had come before. It was no longer held in place by expectation. It was simply there. Zuko remained where he was, his posture unchanged, his gaze fixed on the reports still spread across the table in front of him. Because beneath the language he had used, beneath the structure he had built around the decision, the truth remained unchanged. He had not made a political calculation first. He had made a choice and now he would ensure that no one could separate the two, because if they did, it would not be seen as judgment or restraint or diplomacy. It would be seen as weakness and a Fire Lord could not afford to have one.
---------------------------
No one came to get her.
The realization settled slowly, not all at once, but in the way the afternoon continued without interruption. Officials moved between the tents with the same quiet efficiency they had maintained all day, stopping to confer in low voices, exchanging documents, giving instructions that carried just far enough to be heard and then faded. Nothing about their behavior suggested urgency anymore. Whatever decision had been made, it had already been absorbed into the rhythm of the camp.
Katara remained where she had been for most of the afternoon, near the edge of the encampment where the packed ground gave way to sand. From there, she could see the ocean stretching out in a long, steady line, its surface calmer now, the earlier tension in the air having settled into something quieter but no less heavy. She had expected to be called. Not formally, perhaps, but directly. A conversation. A statement delivered in person. Something that acknowledged her presence as more than a circumstance to be managed. Instead, time passed. No one approached her.
When the messenger finally did, it felt less like an arrival and more like a continuation of everything that had already been happening. He walked toward her with measured steps, holding a sealed document in both hands. His expression remained neutral, his gaze dipping briefly in acknowledgment before he stopped at a respectful distance. âThe Fire Lordâs directive,â he said.
Katara nodded once and took the letter. The seal was pressed cleanly into the wax, unbroken, unmistakable. She turned it over in her hands for a moment before opening it, her thumb tracing the edge of the fold as if delaying the inevitable would change what was written inside. It didnât. The paper unfolded smoothly, the ink precise and evenly spaced, each line composed with care.
By order of the Fire Lord,
The individual known as Katara of the Southern Water Tribe will not be charged with criminal conduct in relation to the events at the coastal port.
In recognition of the diplomatic implications of the incident, the matter will be addressed through a joint review between the Fire Nation and the Southern Water Tribe.
Until such time as a formal resolution is reached, Katara will remain under diplomatic protection and observation, with all actions subject to review under existing treaty frameworks.
This decision is made in the interest of maintaining inter-nation stability and preserving the integrity of ongoing peace efforts.
âFire Lord Zuko
Katara read the letter once, her eyes moving steadily from one line to the next. Then she read it again, more slowly this time, her attention catching on certain phrases as though they required more effort to pass over. Will not be charged. Her grip on the paper loosened slightly. That was what should have mattered. She kept reading. Diplomatic protection and observation. The words sat differently. They did not move past her as easily. Katara lowered the letter a fraction, the breeze shifting the edge of the page where it extended beyond her fingers. The air had warmed slightly as the day moved on, but the cold from earlier still lingered faintly against her skin, as if it had settled deeper than the surface. She looked back down at the page. Subject to review. Maintaining inter-nation stability. Preserving peace. Each line felt complete on its own.  Together, they left very little room for anything else.
She read the signature last. Her eyes rested there for a moment longer than the rest of the page, tracing the shape of the name without needing to. Zuko.
Katara let out a breath, slow and controlled, before folding the letter along its original crease. She pressed it flat with her palm, smoothing the paper with a care that felt more deliberate than necessary. He had made sure they could not charge her. That was clear. There would be no trial, no formal accusation, no punishment that reduced what she had done to something criminal. But she was not free to leave. Katara turned the letter slightly in her hands, her thumb brushing over the folded edge as she stared out at the water again. The ocean moved the same way it always had, steady and continuous, unaffected by decisions made far from its surface.
She tried to imagine how the conversation had gone. The reports laid out in front of him. The arguments. The expectations. The weight of what it meant to choose one outcome over another. It was not difficult. She had been in enough rooms like that to understand how those decisions were made. Of course he had chosen this. It was the kind of decision that held everything together. Katara closed her eyes briefly, the motion small enough to go unnoticed by anyone who might have been watching.
They had been friends.
The thought came without warning, settling into place before she could push it aside. Not always easily. Not without conflict. There had been something there that had belonged to them, separate from everything else they had been forced to become. She opened her eyes again. That had not been part of this decision. Her fatherâs letter surfaced in her mind, the same careful tone, the same distance, the same trust in a system that required her to step back and allow it to function as intended. He had not asked her what happened. Katara looked down at the folded letter in her hands. Not even him.
The realization did not come with sharp anger. It settled more quietly than that, spreading through her in a way that left no clear point to push against. This was what it meant now. This was what remained after everything else had been resolved. She slipped the letter into the fold of her clothing, securing it there without thinking about the motion, and lifted her gaze back toward the encampment. Nothing had changed. The tents still stood in their ordered rows. The officials still moved between them. The guards still watched without staring. Life continued. Katara remained where she was for a moment longer, the wind brushing lightly against her arms, the sound of the ocean steady behind her. Then she turned and walked back toward the camp. No one stopped her. No one called out. She passed between the tents, her steps even, her posture unchanged. By the time she reached the center of the encampment again, the decision had already settled into place. Not as something that would pass, but as something she would have to carry.
Katara had just stepped back into the edge of the encampment when someone called her name. Not loudly, and not with urgency, but with enough intention to make her stop. She turned to see a Fire Nation officer approaching, his uniform marked with rank that placed him above the others who had kept their distance throughout the afternoon. His movements were measured, his posture composed, as though nothing about the day had required adjustment from him. When he reached her, he stopped at a respectful distance and inclined his head slightly.
âKatara,â he said. âCaptain Tuoni.â
It was not quite an introduction, not quite a greeting. More an acknowledgment of roles already understood. Katara nodded once in return. âCaptain.â
âI trust you have received the Fire Lordâs directive,â he continued.
Katara nodded once. âI have.â
There was a brief pause, not awkward, but measured, as if he were allowing space for a reaction he did not expect to receive.
There was a brief pause, not uncomfortable, but deliberate. He studied her for a moment, as if confirming something he had already expected to find.
âThen I will be direct,â he said. âYou are to be transported to the capital within the hour. Arrangements have been made for you to remain at the royal palace until the joint review is concluded.â
Katara held his gaze, her expression steady.
âRemain,â she repeated.
âYes,â Tuoni said evenly. âYour presence will be required for the duration of the review. Housing you within the palace ensures access to both Fire Nation and Southern Water Tribe representatives as discussions proceed.â
He spoke without hesitation, his tone smooth in the way of someone accustomed to delivering orders that were meant to sound reasonable.
Katara tilted her head slightly. âAccess,â she said. âOr supervision?â
If the question unsettled him, it did not show.
âBoth,â he replied.
The honesty of it landed more cleanly than the rest. Katara let out a quiet breath, her gaze drifting past him for a moment before returning. The encampment stretched behind him in its ordered stillness, everything in its place, everything functioning exactly as intended. âThis isnât optional,â she said. Again, not a question.
Tuoni met her eyes without shifting. âIt is part of the Fire Lordâs directive,â he answered.
Katara considered that for a moment. The capital. The palace. She had been there before, had walked its halls without being announced, had spoken freely in rooms where decisions were made. That version of the place felt distant now. âAnd if I refuse?â she asked.
Tuoniâs expression remained composed, but there was a slight tightening in the line of his shoulders when he responded. âRefusal would complicate the review,â he said. âAnd it may require a reassessment of the protections currently extended to you.â
Katara almost smiled at that. Not because it was amusing, but because of how clear he was being. No use of measured words to side-step discomforts or cause a disequilibrium in topics of peace. She nodded once. âI understand,â she said.
Tuoni inclined his head to the side again, studying her, then he nodded, the motion small but final. âTransport will be ready shortly,â he said. âYou will be escorted to the capital by nightfall.â
He paused, just long enough to add, âYour cooperation is appreciated.â
Katara did not respond to that. She did not need to. Tuoni stepped back, giving a brief, formal nod before turning and walking away, his attention already shifting to the next task waiting for him within the structure of the camp. Katara remained where she was. The wind moved lightly across the shoreline, carrying the steady rhythm of the ocean behind her. Around her, the encampment continued without interruption, every movement purposeful, every voice controlled. Nothing about it had changed. Only her place within it. She reached briefly toward her side, her fingers brushing against the folded letter where it rested against her clothing. Diplomatic protection. Observation. Katara lowered her hand. The words had sounded contained when she first read them. Reasonable even.They did not feel that way now. She turned her gaze toward the horizon one last time, the line between sea and sky steady in the distance. Then she exhaled and began to walk toward the center of the encampment.
It wasn't because she had been told to because she understood what would happen if she didnât, and because, for the first time since arriving, she knew exactly where she stood.
iâm starting a rumor
ZUTARA NATION, RISEEEEEEEE

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
hello, wondering if u guys can help me find this fic that i read a while ago, i forgot the title.
its a zutara PWP, where Katara feels like she is no longer needed, like she doesn't know where she belongs anymore after the war. so end up the Fire Nation. zuko is happy to see her but he keeps his distance from her because he still believes she is with aang.
*the fic used this art(above) as inspo/reference for a particular scene where katara does a water dance for zuko at the turtle duck pond at night, showing off her skills for him.
then as the story goes on, zuko continues to push her further away, katara then gets an offer to go to Ba Sing Se and she accepts becuz she feels he no longer wants her around. she tells him this, he panics, he finally kisses her and they have sex.
thats the most that i can remember from the fic. if anyone knows the name of this fic or has the link PLZ SHARE!! or plz let me know who the author is so i can search for it on ao3. i really want to read it again (& bookmark this time)
thnk u!
Hello. đ Thatâs my story.
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Nobody's Soldier | r. g.
Ryland Grace x fem!reader
"Well," he hums a bit, picking up the last bag of vodka that sits beside him. He holds it out to her. "Here's to a healthy dose of fear, doc."
Word Count: 7.7k
Warnings: Mentions of suicide. Canon compliant(ish)
Author's Note: I warned you. I did. Now this is what you get. Anyway, I might do a part two. Who knows?
Masterlist | Talk to Me!
The bar on the naval ship is too loud in a way that feels intentional. Like everyone is trying to have a good time, because if they don't, they'll suddenly remember that this mission is suicide. Ryland stands near the edge of it all with a drink he hasnât really touched, watching people try very hard to behave like this is normal. Like any of this is normal. Like you can just gather a group of brilliant, exhausted humans, tell them theyâre leaving Earth forever, and then expect a casual evening to follow.
Across the room, something pulls his attention without asking permission. DuBois and Shapiro, closer than most people in the room are. It takes him a second to register what heâs actually seeing, mostly because his brain refuses to prioritize it properly over everything else. Then it clicks into place: theyâre touching, hands lingering a little longer than they should, as they whisper to each other.
âWow,â Ryland mutters under his breath before he can stop himself as he blushes.
He looks away fast, not because it offends him, but because he feels like he's intruding on a private moment. He stares into his drink instead, as if it might explain why he feelsâŚenvious? It doesn't, though.
"You're turning pink," a voice says beside him.