#my first rendition of finding a certain Space Sword
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Matching Heartbeats: Sokkla Saturdays 2020
Day 4: Lost in a Forest and Feelings
On FF.net//On AO3
Trudging through the thick trees, staring at that broad, strong back, Azula couldn't quite keep at bay her suspicions that, regardless of her stubborn companion's claims of the opposite, they were lost in the woods, with no salvation in sight.
He wasn't a woodlands savage, she'd told him, he was a snow savage: she'd believe him if he said they weren't lost while they traversed a large, frozen continent, but she wouldn't quite be so lenient if he said the same while in a forest, of all places. And of course, there was no chance they'd find his missing sword in a large, frozen continent unless someone had already retrieved it from these woods and taken it there, for whatever reason.
Not for the first time, she asked herself why she had bothered coming along for what everyone, even her brother, had deemed a pointless, doomed enterprise. Guilty as she appeared to feel about the matter, Toph had been far too busy with her budding police department in Republic City to join Sokka's quest. Aang was ever ferried from one end of the world to the next by his Avatar duties, and Katara had to cover for him in the city while he was gone: Zuko, of course, was the Fire Lord, and there was no chance he'd take any sorts of flights of fancy and disregard his duty to his nation just on a personal trip that might yield no resultsā¦ well, that is, if the trip was for a friend's sake rather than his own, Azula had interjected, and her reminder of how he had been perfectly willing to leave their nation in their uncle's most undependable hands while they searched for their mother had been as unwelcome as she could have expected.
All in all, she had meant to offer some moral support to the tall Water Tribe man by cutting down Zuko's excuses and dismissive attitude towards Sokka's plightā¦ but nothing she said seemed to work. Sokka kept looking at her with those dead-like eyes that only convinced her that she wanted to be dead, too. She wondered, truly, if he was different while she wasn't around. If he was happier, cheerful, relaxedā¦ rather than miserable, awkward and tense. If soā¦ why had she even bothered coming along for this trip? Was it merely pity over how he'd sworn he'd go alone if no one wanted to give him a hand? If so, it was no true wonder he had been so aloof and irritated so far, for no man as proud as him would ever accept pity and charity without consequence.
Yet she had decided to come along indeed. And now, it seemed, she reaped what she had sowed, in more ways than she had expected to: it wasn't merely that she was uncomfortable about hiking through nature this far from civilization ā she found herself missing the train-tank, with which she had traversed large territories of the Earth Kingdom in the past without the slightest inconvenience ā, but Sokka wouldn't travel on the vehicle, not when their mission was explicitly about rummaging throughout Wulong Forest until they finally came across his beloved Space Sword.
Her strained muscles had seen plenty of exercise over the ten years that had passed since the end of the war, but not quite in this manner: she forced herself to walk behind him, keeping up with his pace as best she could, until at last that strong back, that at this point was nearly a beacon in the darkening forest, slowed to a halt as Sokka assessed his surroundings in a clearing within the woods. Azula damn near bumped into him, but she managed to stop right behind him anyway.
"Seems like a good place to camp for the night," he announced. "It's getting too dark to keep going anyhow."
"Just how much further are we supposed to go, anyway?" Azula asked, as Sokka approached the larger tree in the clearing, setting down his bags at its foot. "Have you narrowed down the searching area at all, or are we merely going blind all across Wulong Forestā¦?"
"I've narrowed some of it down, yeah," Sokka huffed, opening his pack to show her a map he had brought with him. "We'll search thoroughly throughout the area once we get there. But we're still too far north to be near Space Sword's location."
"Of course," Azula sighed, setting down her own bags next to his. "You do realize this might be a longer venture than you hoped?"
"Why would it be? Your brains and mine, together? Who's ever going to stop us, huh?" Sokka said, though there was no humor in his tone upon uttering those questions.
Azula tensed up beside him as he rose fully to his feet, rubbing the back of his neck with one hand. What was he thinking? Why had he spoken as he had just now? Yes, it was a certainty that they were smarter than most people, and joining forces might just be enough for them to find his swordā¦ but it didn't seem he was all that pleased for it anyway. She let herself wonder, briefly, if he wished they wouldn't find the sword all that fast so they could spend more time togetherā¦ did he begrudge their intelligence for such a fickle reason?
Oh, what nonsense. Of course that wasn't it. She was a fool to so much as indulge in such a possibility.
"I think I see some water beyond these trees," Sokka said, gesturing at the cluster of vegetation behind the tree they had stopped at. "Could be we can wash up there. It's one of the reasons I thought we should slow down here for the nightā¦"
"Ah. So, we truly aren't lost in this forest, are we?" Azula asked. Sokka tensed up. "You knew there was a river up there?"
"Uhā¦ well, I didn't know, I just decided we'd stop at the first place with water we came across once it was sunset," he said. Azula huffed.
"So we are lost."
"I didn't say that!" he squeaked.
Despite herself, Azula smiled. Eliciting such silly reactions from him was strange, but very welcome. It almost felt as though she hadn't pushed him away when she hadā¦ as though things could go back to the way they once had been.
"Ugh, anyway, you can go clean up if you want, I know all that dirt and sweat must make you uncomfortable," Sokka said, waving a hand towards her. "I'll set up my tent in the meantime. If you need help with yours, I can give you a hand after I clean up tooā¦"
"Why would I need help?" Azula said, raising her eyebrows dismissively. "I'm perfectly capable of assembling a tent by myself."
"I didn't say you weren't," Sokka raised his hands defensively before starting to rummage through his bag for the implements he'd need for his tent.
His tone was disappointingly non-confrontational. Just after giving her hope, he took it away: she had expected a whole throwdown about how there was nothing wrong with asking people for help, or how he was sure she was a pampered princess who had never had to do anything mundane for herselfā¦ but nothing. He had shut down yet another possible conversation, and she was left high and dry, waiting for nothing.
"If that's how it is, thenā¦ yes, I'll go clean up," Azula declared, attempting to hide how disappointing his response had been. "Make sure not to peek, alright?"
"Nothing new under the sun there, is there?" Sokka said. Azula froze. "You have nothing to worry about, I won't do that, I'll only go after you're finished. Ten minutes will probably be enough."
"You know just how long I spend bathing, then?" Azula nearly hissed by now. Sokka shrugged.
"I remember, is all," he said. "Ten minutes might even be too much in these circumstances, I'd sayā¦"
"I'll take as long as I please, thank you very much," Azula scowled, searching her own bags for a change of clothes. Suddenly, the last thing she wanted was to hold a conversation despite having spent the whole day fishing for one.
"I'll go after I'm finished setting up my tent, then," Sokka said. "And if you're not out yet, don't worry. I'm not going to look anyway."
She snapped her tongue before storming off without another word. Well, that was his loss, if so.
The words rang hollow in her mind as she walked thoughtlessly towards the water sourceā¦ a lake, not a river, as she discovered upon reaching it. She wasted little time disrobing, despite she was far from accustomed to loosening her clothing in the middle of nature as she just had. But with a mind as troubled as hers, sometimes even the notions of dignity and pride went forgotten once she had something else to worry about.
No, truthfully, it wasn't his loss. It never had been his loss. He was as good as the perfect guy, without embodying some impossible, unreasonable ideal: Sokka had been kind, thoughtful, intelligent, unyieldingā¦ he was the perfect rival for her many instincts and impulses. Just so, each of those factors drew her to him in ways they shouldn't haveā¦ but the one thing that drew her most was his honesty. So many people were capable of lying to her face, they'd done it for years, without her awarenessā¦ others lied far less effectively, pretending to care about her, but she could tell, by their actions, by their behavior, that they were merely telling themselves as much, to chase away their own guilt about having abandoned her when she had needed them most. She couldn't trust anyone, that was what she'd told herselfā¦
And yet, against all common sense, she had grown to trust him. Upon scheming a mischievous prank to torment her brother ā her special kind of birthday present, as she'd thought of it at the time ā, she found her plan had overlapped with his: in the end, they joined forces and Zuko had quite an unforgettable day chasing off turtle ducks in the Palace, and tripping over the droppings they had left all over the place while panicking while attempting to find their way out of the building. From that day forward, they had been allies, messing with their friends and family whenever the chance arose, not realizing they were drifting together in more ways than they'd originally plannedā¦
She never did expect to wake up in his bed one day, and she suspected he never expected that, either. She kept her distance for a few days afterwards, and he didn't complainā¦ which bothered her, of course. Upon cornering him for answers, he admitted he wouldn't push her for more than they'd had, considering she ran away from his bedroom even before he woke up. He had assumed it was a one-night-stand for herā¦ and he had teasingly remarked that he wouldn't mind if she decided to make it a two-night-stand instead.
That number, of course, only continued to increase upon each of their encounters. Every time he paid a visit to the Fire Nation, on any official business, she'd find a chance to sneak into his room, or to drag him into hers, and they would both be in the highest spirits on the next day, trading silent smirks whenever they crossed paths again. For a time, Azula had thought this was the greatest of all pranks they had pulled so far, for her whole family, and his, would be so appalled to discover what they'd been up to in secretā¦
ā¦ Until one night, as he laid in bed behind her, arms wrapped around her waist, he had uttered words that shattered her whole world in a single instant:
"I love you."
She thought to pretend she was asleep, though her eyes were still open, and she knew he could see it. He sensed her breath hitching too, her heartbeats picking up speedā¦ there was no way she could pretend she hadn't heard him. And yet, as he nestled behind her, fingers caressing her hair, she couldn't bring herself to answer. She couldn't say the words that were crossing her mindā¦ because there was only one word, truthfully. And that word was simply: why?
Why would he love her? Why would he admit that he loved her? Why would he even think it was a good idea to say such words to her? Why on earth had he decided to say it right then and there? Why, why, whyā¦?
And yet she knew she couldn't say any of what she was thinking. She didn't dare. She didn't truly want to hear his answers to those questions.
For he was honest, yes, that was the first thing she had known she liked about him. He wasn't the type to lie, whether to spare her feelings or his own. He hadn't said those words on a whim: he had likely carried them inside him for ages, blurting them out as he had, unthinking, because he couldn't contain the emotions anymore. And yetā¦ she couldn't accept it. She simply couldn't accept it.
Instead of lying quietly there, of staying put in his bed, silently enduring the panic attack his words had triggered in her, she sat up and left. She avoided him for the rest of his visit, pointedlyā¦ and she didn't even say goodbye, when he finally left.
She needed time. That was it, she guessed: time to process his affections, time to understand how on earth he had ever reached such levels of devotion towards her. And she should have simply told him that, right? And yet how on earth does someone answer an "I love you" with "Give me time to think about it"? She didn't dare do that. And yet perhaps, if she had dared, he wouldn't have been hurt. It was almost a whole year before he returned to the Fire Nation again, and when he did, he scarcely spared her a few glances. She had sent him no letters while he was away, and he had sent her none either. Was he confused? Was he angry? Was he depressed? She couldn't tell anymore. All she could tell, however, was that he seemed to have decided he wouldn't dwell on the past anymore, and he wouldn't indulge in any hopes that something genuine could come from their casual relationship.
She had tried to interpret that as a sign to move on and forget about him. Perhaps he truly hadn't loved her at all ā not that she had truly believed he could have loved her, she believed he THOUGHT he did, but she was quite certain that was, all in all, implausible on every possible level. So she had decided to shake it all off, to continue with her lifeā¦ and yet it wasn't easy to do so. They had met a few more times since then, and every cold shoulder, every dismissive word, every plain interaction between them, with no hint of the old affection he used to line his words with, had felt like a frozen dagger digging deeper through her heart.
And that was, ultimately, why she had offered to travel with him to retrieve his sword. It was a strange way to attempt to mend fences, she knewā¦ but she hadn't known what else to do to stop the pain she felt when she saw him. She hadn't known how else to tear down the walls that he had built between themā¦ walls she had as good as asked him to build, in the first place.
Suffice to say, it wasn't going as she had planned, not in the least. She had hoped to entice him, perhapsā¦ but he seemed to be completely invulnerable to her charms by now. He knew all her tricks, and was utterly unwilling to fall for any of them. Had she really pushed him away that hard, that violentlyā¦? Or was it, perhaps, that he had already found someone else? Maybe that was it, and she was wasting her time hereā¦
"If so, why isn't he here with his new girlfriend instead of me?" Azula reasoned out loud, just before dipping one toe in what turned out to be a near-freezing lake. She snarled before raising her hands, quickly warming the water with her bending.
She managed to warm the water she would use, spreading the heat through the small lake until she found a comfortable enough spot, with her torso still above water. He wasn't wrong, she didn't quite enjoy all the dirt that clung to her after their whole day of hiking in this forest from the city of Garsaiā¦ but that he dared even comment on how long she usually bathed had surprised her. It was the first time he had acknowledged their relationship in any way, if just by admitting he knew Azula a little more intimately than anyone else was aware. Fool that she was, she had wistfully wondered if perhaps it meant he wasn't that unwilling to return to what they'd hadā¦ then he had shut everything down all the same, no thanks to her foolish responses.
She had no patience for these matters. She was far from the most sociable person there was, to begin with, and she was more than a bit tired of chasing after him, when every passing day further convinced her that he wanted nothing from her anymore. It was outrageous, though, wasn't it? If he truly had loved her at all, which no, she didn't think he had, why would he begrudge her for not saying the daft words right back at him? She was far from a connoisseur on the matter, but conditioned love didn't appear to be true love at all. Her relationship with her father was supposed to be the clearest example of that, or so every damn expert at that wretched asylum had insisted on drilling into her head until she had begrudgingly accepted it as a reality.
So, as far as she could tell, he was a selfish hypocrite, and he was trying to guilt her into loving him. Ha! That was utterly stupid, and he was playing a losing game, if so. He prized honesty as much as he did, didn't he? Why would she bother lying to his face to make him feel better? He would know it was a lie immediately, so he'd only grow more frustrated with her if she played the mild-mannered, sweet girl who could become a housewife and live happily that way, if only to spare his thrice-accursed feelingsā¦
Caught in her thoughts, she often forgot to warm the water again, and in the process of overthinking and warming the water, she had damn near forgotten, too, what she was supposed to be doing in this damn lake in the first place. She returned to shore, gathered some soap, and traversed the lake to the spot she had liked once againā¦ only to hear rustling of tree leaves that indicated someone was approaching.
She almost wished it were a wild animal, then she could have merely set it ablaze and been done with itā¦ but upon quickly turning her head around, she found, of course, that it was him. Sokka glanced at her but raised his hands defensively before turning around. Azula gritted her teeth and tore her eyes away from him too, knowing he was disrobingā¦ knowing she wanted to see it happen, too. Curse him for being such a sensitive idiotā¦
Or was she the sensitive idiot, instead? She hadn't known for sure who was at fault back then, and she didn't have any clarity on the matter now, either.
She heard him slipping inside the water, and she only endeavored to continue rubbing the soap over her arms and torso, pointedly ignoring the urge to glance at the body she had grown used to caressing and gazing upon for as long as their dalliance had lastedā¦ just how long had it been, really? She barely knew anymore. A little more than a year, maybe? Who the hell said "I love you" within less than a year of secretly dating someone, if what they were doing could amount to dating?
Ugh, well, how was she supposed to know that, truly? Mai had outright spat to her face that she loved Zuko more than she feared Azula, and those two had only been together for months at the timeā¦ had she told Zuko she loved him, directly, by then? Maybe she had. Such nonsenseā¦
"You sure take your time bathing out in nature, huh?" he said suddenly, startling her. "Didn't take you for the type to be that bold when the whole world could see youā¦"
"Bold? Hardly," Azula rebuffed, and she chided her own heart for beating that fast upon being addressed by him again. What nonsense was that, too? "I'm taking my time because we were quite filthy after a whole day of hiking, don't you think?"
"Fair enoughā¦ though the water's colder than I'd think you'd be comfortable with," he said. "Thoughā¦ heh. You're warming it up, aren't you?"
"Sharp as ever, I see," Azula said, rinsing off the soap already. Sokka chuckled.
"And you're either being sarcastic, which is just like you, or you're being flattering, whichā¦ is new. Just as taking baths that last longer than ten minutes would be new for you."
"You're awfully hung on that matter, aren't you?" Azula asked, rolling her eyes. "I'm pretty sure I've taken longer baths than thatā¦"
"Sure you did. When you took them with me."
His words froze her anew. Again, that stupid, weaseling hope, needling through her body like a snake, seeking to dig its fangs into her damn heartā¦ poisoned fangs, as far as she could tell. He had to stop it. He really did. At this rate they'd end up having the argument of the century, and she wasn't sure she cared to endure that, not when she was miles away from civilization with only him for companyā¦
She'd tell him not to do that anymore, then. She would. She wasn't sure their conversation wouldn't escalate into an argument even if she said so, but if she spoke earnestly, surely he'd back offā¦?
She turned her head towards him, finding he stood about fifteen feet away from her. Again, that strong, muscular back was the sight that greeted her, and oh, what a sight it wasā¦
But before she could utter a single word, a most unwanted, unfamiliar and distressing sensation on her arm stopped her from speaking.
She had no idea what it was at first, but it was uncomfortable from the first instant: something had latched onto her skin, tugging at it, as though sucking itā¦ and her immediate instinct was to trash the affected arm into the water, instinctively panicking and seeking to get rid of whatever this strange offender was.
Only upon shaking her arm did she identify whatever clung to her arm as a purple, round beingā¦ a living being: there was an animal stuck to her arm.
"What'sļæ½ļæ½ļæ½?! Oh, no, no, get off me!"
She pushed it, smacked it, attempted to force it to loosen its grip on her skin, and yet it seemed her every violent reaction only compelled it to cling tighter. Curses, was it some sort of leech? Was it clinging to her now, only to stick some poisonous, murderous sting into her bodyā¦? Her eyes widened at the possibility, and she slammed it harder into the water, to no results.
"Go away, go away, you stupid, damnedā¦!"
"Woah, Azula, what's going on?" Sokka called to her. Her first shouts had been alarming enough, but he had briefly taken her silence to mean she had dealt with the problemā¦ apparently not, though.
"It's nothing, it'sā¦! Shit, what is this?! Get off me, damn it, go away already!"
"Ugh, okay, you know what? I'm sorry. I don't know what's going on, and I think I need to," Sokka sighed, turning towards her. "I promise I'm not doing this to peek, just to helpā¦!"
"W-well then, help! Find your damn sword and slice this wretched thing off me!" Azula almost shrieked, turning towards him and gesturing at him with her afflicted arm.
Yet to her surprise, there was no sign of urgency in Sokka's face when he identified the creature on Azula's arm. She damn near snapped at him for being so nonchalant when, for all she knew, her very life could be in dangerā¦ yet he surprised her by wading towards her and reaching for the creature.
"What are youā¦?" she asked, nervously, until her nervousness was replaced by sheer outrageā¦ when Sokka scratched the strange, purple being's head. "Are you kidding me?! What are you doing?! Do you hate me so much you're congratulating the damn thing forā¦?!"
Sokka's deadpan stare didn't change in the least when the creature's five, flat tentacles released Azula suddenly. Her eyes widened as she stared at it, and Sokka snatched the creature off her body, showing it to her deliberately.
"This, Princess, is a pentapus," he stated. "And that's how you get rid of them. It's as simple as that."
Oh, to hell with it. Her outburst had been more than unwarranted, if the solution was truly that easyā¦ and now she felt utterly idiotic for it, which she had no doubt her blush was transmitting to Sokka. She didn't even dare meet his eyesā¦ hence, she was surprised upon hearing him laugh softly.
"Don't feel that bad, Azula. I reacted the same way when they stuck to me the first time, too," he said. "And it was way worse than this, if I mayā¦"
"Worse?" Azula repeated. Sokka nodded solemnly.
"You know, a story worthy of a savage like me, of the sorts you love to make fun of me for," Sokka grinned. She had dared gaze up at him, and that he'd smile genuinely at her wasā¦ well, not unpleasant. For once. "It happenedā¦ in a sewer, of all places."
"In aā¦ a sewer?" Azula asked, grimacing as Sokka chuckled, shaking his head.
"My dear sister and her beloved Avatarā¦ those two jerks took to diverting the waste off themselves with their bending. And who's the guy who couldn't possibly get away with doing the same thing? That's right, the stellar non-bender who took all thatā¦ literal shit, straight to the face, in many cases."
"That'sā¦ ugh, that's so gross, Sokka!" Azula exclaimed, horrified as he laughed carelessly.
"It's okay, I've cleaned up many times since then, you don't have to worry that the gross waste still clings to me somehowā¦" he smiled. "Took me about ten rounds of proper soap as soon as I had a chance to clean up to get rid of the stench, but it worked in the end. No need to be too grossed out anymore."
"I only hope now that your creepy story is no sign ofā¦ well, of this lake being less pure than we expected it to be," Azula said, eyeing the waters warily. Sokka chuckled and shook his head.
"It's a bit too dark already to tell, but hey, this place is in the middle of a forest and it doesn't reek of wasteā¦ so it might not be that bad, huh?"
Azula gazed at him wistfully, at that smileā¦ it was charming, she knew that from the start. She liked him well enough serious and brooding, there was more than enough charm in that tooā¦ but that smile. The chance to make him happy, even if just by being foolish, careless and clumsy, was a surprising blessingā¦ one that now soothed her heart despite she had been troubled and anguished mere moments before he entered the water too. To think such a small, simple creature could have served as a harbinger of harmony between themā¦ though, again, she shouldn't get her hopes up. That wouldn't be a good idea, no matter whatā¦
"You're all done washing now, though?" Sokka asked. Azula snapped back to her senses upon those words. "If soā¦"
"I'll go fix my tent, yeah," Azula said, though Sokka bit his lip.
"I was actually going to ask ifā¦ if you could do me a favor," he blurted out. Azula frowned.
"A favor?" she asked.
"Wellā¦ the water's kind of chilly," he smiled awkwardly. "Can you, maybe, warm it up a little further? I mean, I would've asked all along if I'd thought we could just bathe at the same time without consequence, but I figured you wouldn't want that, soā¦"
"I wouldn't want thatā¦?" she asked again. Sokka shrugged.
"You did tell me not to peek," he said. "I said there was likely nothing new for me to see, but if you didn't want me looking at you, I wasn't going to bother youā¦"
"That'sā¦ that's what you meant?" Azula asked, surprised. Sokka nodded.
"Why? What else did you think I meant?" he asked, raising an eyebrow.
Azula opened her mouth to speak, but said nothing. She was such an idiot when it came to this sort of thing, oh, she really was, and yetā¦ how to speak at all? How to tell him that she kept saying things she didn't mean only to elicit reactions from people? But where she had once been able to read him like a book, now he was undecipherable to herā¦
The silence between them continuedā¦ until suddenly Sokka flinched, turning his head, hopelessly glancing at his back.
"Uhā¦ crap. Oh crap. Azula? Is there a pentapus on my back too?" he asked, spinning in circles as he struggled to glimpse the creature. Azula blinked blankly before shaking her head rapidly.
"S-stop moving around, I can't get it if there is one!" she said, grabbing his flanks to stop himā¦ and trying not to think of the implications of touching him. No, that was best stashed on her mind for later.
The pentapus was on his lower back: she nudged it with her finger at first, sighing before settling for caressing it properly insteadā¦ and then she felt another set of such tentacles around her ankle. Startled, she fell into the water when she lost balance, and that could only be bad news for herā¦
Sokka clasped her wrist and pulled her to him: their bodies slapped together, not with the erotic intent with which they had been in contact in the past, especially while naked. And while the thought crossed Azula's mind, it was but a fleeting thought nonetheless: Sokka's hands relocated to her shoulders, though he kept her close all the same.
"Did another one get you?" he asked. Azula grimaced and nodded.
"It's on my ankle," she said. Sokka huffed.
"Maybe we should just get out of the water, get rid of them on land," he suggested, before flinching. "Ack, another on the back of my knee andā¦ woah, that's dirty! It's on my asscheek!"
Despite her own discomfort, that final claim of Sokka's caused Azula to burst into laughter as they stumbled towards the lake's shore together, squirming at the discomfort of the tentacles that stuck to their bodies, and wincing every time a new one caught either of their legs.
"Okay, okay! We're going to get rid of them all, one by one!" Sokka squeaked, once they reached the shore indeed: Azula had two more in one calf, and she grimaced while raising her leg, but Sokka pulled it towards him without even asking: he rubbed the two small pentapi until they detached, and then he cast them powerfully towards the lake, prompting Azula to chuckle at his powerful heave. "That's what you get! You can't touch a lady without permission, damn pentapus!"
"You didn't exactly ask for permission either, did you?" she smiled. Sokka blinked blankly and smiled guiltily at her.
"I figured, since it's an emergencyā¦?"
That Azula was amused by the situation seemed to have defused some of their lingering tension: she reached for the pentapus that clung to his rear, and Sokka grimaced as Azula succeeded at pulling it off his body. He continued working with hers too, ridding her of the pentapus on her ankle, and Azula did away with the one behind the knee he couldn't flex anymore because of it. It was a gradual process, and one that forced them to reacquaint with each other's body in a less intimate manner than intendedā¦ and yet it felt intimate in its own way too.
"Is that all of them?" Sokka asked her, after removing the final one that had latched to her upper thigh. "None got your ass, did they?"
"You'd rather they had?" Azula asked, amused.
"I didn't say that, butā¦ I wouldn't have minded too much, is all," Sokka smirked a little, more shameless than he had allowed himself to be for a long time.
"How about you?" Azula asked, biting her lip as she gazed upon his body, trying to focus on the task at hand, on the many strings of concentric red dots over his skin now, especially in his lower body's area. "Anything I missed?"
"I think not?" Sokka said, glancing about himself with uncertainty. "Though now we look like we've got pentapox, heh. Did I ever tell you about that? How we got all the people out of Omashuā¦?"
"Youā¦ didn't tell me, no," Azula said, staring at him keenly through narrow eyes. Sokka chuckled and shrugged.
"I got the idea of using a fake disease to pretend there was an outbreak in the city," he said. "It happened after the pentapi got me in the sewers, the Fire Nation soldiers thought who caught us in the city thought I was sick, Katara told them I had pentapox, and they panickedā¦ and then, when we met up with Bumi's resistance, they had no idea how to get out of the city and I suggested they used pentapox as an excuse: the soldiers panicked about the outbreak and let everyone go, and they were free from Fire Nation tyranny for it."
"Youā¦ are either an idiot or a genius," Azula said, smiling and shaking her head. Sokka huffed, raising his head haughtily.
"Wrong, Princess, for if other people's perception of me is to be accounted for, I'm actually both things at the same time," he declared, prompting her to laugh, despite herself.
"I gave Ukano such a hard time for that foolishness," Azula acknowledged. "Now I can see I was right to do so: pentapox, seriously?"
"Hey, fooled your people, even if it didn't fool you," Sokka smiled. "For an idiot, I'm not really that stupid, am I?"
"No, I guess you're not," Azula admitted.
Her smile was far more affectionate than she intended for it to be, and yet she didn't contain it. She didn't restrain herself. The very chance to swap stories with him, to talk at leisure, to smile and laughā¦ how she had missed that.
Oh, she had missed him, terribly so. It wasn't something she could deny to herself any longer.
"Don't feel bad, though, Princess," Sokka smiled. "The suction dots fade away after a while. Kind of like a hickey does."
"Heh. Those didn't fade away all that quickly, as far as I recall," Azula said, raising her eyebrows. Sokka chuckled and shrugged.
"Guess not all of them would, no," he admitted. "But you know, these are way smaller, and most are on our lower bodies, so it's not like there's going to be much to worry about. Unless, I don't know, you had a gig modeling naked for some sculptor within the next, what, ten-to-twelve hoursā¦?"
"If I did have one, and you'd pulled this on me, I'd make you pay for this humiliation for as long as we lived," Azula assured him. Sokka grinned too honestly, closing his eyes and shaking his head.
"Fine, then. No trips to weird lakes with Azula right before she has an appointment with the royal sculptor," he decided.
It was so natural, so easyā¦ she almost felt like sitting at the edge of the lake with him, and merely talking for as many hours as they'd had failed to talk throughout their journey so far. Though she also felt like doing something else, as she allowed her eyes to gaze at his still-glistening skinā¦ at the body she had grown so accustomed to once, and that she had deprived herself from, by her own foolish mistakes. Suddenly, all the bad blood seemed to be irrelevant, and she wanted nothing but to touch him, and not merely just to rid him of another pentapus anymoreā¦
"Here I thought I wasn't allowed to peekā¦ yet you're checking me out, Princess?"
She froze, shooting a glare at him as he smirked in her direction. Azula rolled her eyes at his reaction, though she smiled before long.
"Fine. What's fair is fair. You're free to ogle me if you so wish."
"Ah, thanks for allowing it. I mean, I already had looked at everything I wanted to look at, but knowing you allow it does lighten my heart's loadā¦"
"You're the worst," Azula smiled, glancing at him again as Sokka chuckled. "Here I thought you weren't stealing any glances at me, that all this pentapus business was very professionalā¦"
"It was, Princess, of course it was. If I'd broken protocol, you'd be moaning your lungs out by now," he said, nonchalantly. Azula gasped, and he smirked proudly.
"And what makes you think I would've allowed you to get away with that?" she asked.
"That you were checking me out just now, of course," he determined.
"Heh. And what convinces you that it'd be me moaning instead of you?" Azula huffed. Sokka raised his eyebrows and smiled at her, biting his lip playfully.
"Thenā¦ you want to make me moan as badly as I want to make you moan?" he asked. Her cheeks flushed violently. "Are we going to play it fair that way, too? A glance for a glance, a touch for a touch, a kiss for a kissā¦?"
"Who said anything about kisses?" Azula whispered, though her eyes didn't leave Sokka's: she offered him a challenge, and the Sokka she had always known had been unable to resist oneā¦ she only hoped he'd be just as unwilling to hold back this time as he ever had been in the past.
"I just did, didn't you hear me?" He smiled as he leaned closer to her: Azula's heart raced gaster still. "Because something tells me you wouldn't mind it if I kissed your pentapox marks betterā¦"
"There's no such thing as pentapox," Azula retorted. Sokka smirked.
"Funny thing to focus on, when I just said I wanted to kiss your legs all over," he said. Azula shivered visibly, breaking their eye contact by drawing her eyes down, almost bashfully.
It was not too surprising that she'd be that flustered, though it disappointed Sokka to a fault, all the same. Back in the day, she would have merely responded with her own crude remarks until they wound up in bed, thrusting wildly at each other. Now, thoughā¦ she hesitated. Just as she had run away that night. It was no surprise, not reallyā¦
"Just the legs?"
Her question threw him off, just as he had been about to make up his mind to stand up and return to their campsite, once he told her not to make much of their flirty teasing. He blinked blankly, as Azula raised her face again, with fierce determination.
"You just saidā¦ what, now?" he blurted out.
"Didn't you hear me?" Azula said, despite her voice trembled. "Is it just the legs you'd kissā¦ snow savage?"
A title that had started as a mere jest at his expenses had eventually gained another meaning, after their third opportunity to sleep together: she had determined the true reason Water Tribe people were thought to be savages wasn't that their civilization was underdevelopedā¦ but rather, that their erotic inclinations were so wild and unrestrained they stood out from the rest. She couldn't speak for a whole culture, of course notā¦ but she could certainly speak for Sokka's skills. And after making such surprisingly flattering claims, Sokka had pinned her to the bed and proven himself a savage more proudly than ever before ā and Azula had some trouble walking the next day because of it.
She had called him a snow savage before in their journey: had it been to evoke that night, or had it been, again, just a jest? All possibilities were on the table when it came to Azula. Yet right now he couldn't possibly doubt what she was suggestingā¦ he couldn't second-guess it. He knew he wasn't getting a better deal than this one, and he had been too selfless as it was: he couldn't resist her, let alone her striking, gorgeous body, for another moment.
Sokka's hand shot to the back of her head, and when he pulled her closer to press his lips to hers, he found her own hands had clasped his neck: so violently they joined that their teeth crashed, and yet they didn't stop because of it. They had wasted too much time, worried about too much nonsenseā¦ it was enough by now. There was but one solution for their predicament, and the best prelude for it was heated, savage sex of the sort they had enjoyed before their relationship had fallen to shambles.
His arms surrounded her waist, compelling her to wrap her legs around his body: he rose to his feet, fearing he'd lose balance, but he remained determined to kiss her deeper and longer. Azula's heart raced ferociously, her fingers tight around his smooth hair locks as every familiar, blissful sensation he elicited in her body tore through her very soul. He wasn't kissing her halfheartedly, as he might have if he no longer caredā¦ as he might have, if he no longer loved her. Thenā¦ he had distanced himself from her because he had believed, again, that that was what she had wanted? He hadn't chased after herā¦ because he had taken her behavior as rejection, rather than an invitation to try harder? He had given her space, assuming she needed it, taking for granted that she didn't love him backā¦
He was kissing her wildly, walking naked through a forest with her, despite he probably thought she didn't love him back.
And now her heart ached, even if she didn't know why. She couldn't understand it, try as though she might. He interrupted their kiss briefly, only to ensure he was on the right track towards the tent he had pitched, and he stole a few more kisses from her lips before reaching their destination: tugging the flap aside, he knelt before the entrance, setting Azula down atop the sleeping bag. He kicked the tent's flap closed clumsily, and quickly returned to worshipping her body, his full weight crushing her delightfully.
He certainly hadn't expected her to return his passion as she did: even now her legs seemed unwilling to let go of him, and her long nails dug into his skin, proving she had wanted this desperately. He had found it odd that she would tag along for a trip with him, eventually he took for granted that she only wanted to torment him, and relish in a rare chance to leave the Fire Nation Palace, seeing as Zuko scarcely ever let her set foot outside it, let alone outside her nationā¦ but if she had merely wanted to escape, using him as a stepping stone for it, she wouldn't have stayed with him once they reached the Earth Kingdom. He had half-expected to wake up and discover his traveling companion was gone, on the previous night, which they'd spent in a modest inn at Garsaiā¦ but she was still there. Then, he had expected her to take off through the forest, leaving him to his own devicesā¦ and again, she didn't do that. She seemed to genuinely want to come with himā¦ though why, he didn't know for sure, not until now. He had pondered that she might have wanted to make amends for breaking his heart, but he hadn't thought she'd wish to rekindle their affair at allā¦
Now, as she thrusted upwards at him, one of her hands dashing between their bodies to pump his manhood, he realized the most wishful of all possibilities was, despite his rational mind had constantly claimed otherwise, the true explanation for Azula's actions.
He didn't hold back, not in the least: he drilled into her fiercely once they joined their bodies, thrusting with as much strength as he could muster while still kissing her as often as he could. She was breathless, her body strained, her heart still racingā¦ and yet she wanted more, as she proved by rolling them over on the sleeping bag once he was finished, straddling him as she strived to make him hers for the thousandth time. More savage thrusting, and this time her head nearly crashed with the tent's ceiling as she sat up, riding his shaft recklessly: the tent truly could have fallen down upon her, she wouldn't have cared one bit. Then it was him who took over yet again, and they spent hours taking turns to lead their savage coupling, decorating each other's bodies with as many hickeys and bite marks as they could lavish each other withā¦ and it would make quite the spectacle come morning, once they saw in full daylight the full score of reddened marks their bodies would sport, paired with the many dots the pentapi had left upon them.
The final round found them lying together on their sides, face to face, thrusting slowly into each other while they shared countless kisses after their last climaxes. Sokka closed his eyes, overwhelmed by pleasure: they hadn't eaten dinner yet, and his body appeared to resent him for it, seeing as they'd exercised rather extensively just now. They had also left their clothes behind by the lake, and he certainly hoped they'd still be there by morningā¦ but he didn't dare let go of Azula to deal with any such matters, not just yet. Not while her body was wound so tightly around his own, not when it might be one of the last times it ever wasā¦ for he had no foolish hopes that this rekindling would last longer than this trip to find Space Sword. Not when Azula had already ran away from him beforeā¦ when she might just do it again if he ever overwhelmed her ever againā¦
"You'reā¦ not going to say anything?" her voice broke through the darkness and silence, and Sokka damn near wished she hadn't spoken at all. Silence, uncertainty, were better than the mistakes he was likely to make while attempting to read her once again.
"Didn't think you'd want me to," he whispered, simply. He had thought that would be enough for Azula to understand how scared he was, how unwilling to let go of herā¦ but naturally, the proud princess couldn't make anything easy for him.
"Since when do you do whatever I want you to?" she said. He huffed: he should know better than to fall for her verbal traps and tricksā¦ and yet he plunged headfirst into this one, hating himself for it as he uttered his response.
"Since always," he said, bluntly. Azula frowned, but fell silent again. "Since the first night we spent together. For every minute and every moment of my life since then."
"That'sā¦ not true," Azula said, though her voice trembled lightly. "Howā¦ how could you even know what I wanted without asking me, anyway? If you didn't knowā¦"
"I fucked you when you wanted me to. I walked away when you wanted me to," Sokka said, simply. "And I shut up now, because I know that if I dare say what I'm really thinking, you'll take off again and I don't think my stupid heart will be able to take that anymore."
Azula tensed up next to him. He didn't attempt to soften his words, which he had spoken far more bitterly than he had intended toā¦ but it was true enough that he had seen more than his share of heartbreak throughout his life. There was only so much he could take before he came crashing down for good, unwilling to love ever againā¦ frankly, he had thought he was there already, after she had ran off on him that night. He had been so anguished for the next months, doing his best to stay out of her way, to never inconvenience herā¦ and in the process, he had nearly self-destructed. He was dead sure the reason no one wanted to take a road trip with him wasn't because everyone was too busyā¦ but rather, because none of his friends thought it was a good idea to spend long stretches of time with the moodiest, least fun Sokka they had ever known. To this day, none of them understood why he had changed so much, so suddenlyā¦ and to this day, he refused to explain, too. How to explain he had finally found the right person to spend his life with, only to discover he didn't embody the same thing for herā¦?
"S-Sokkaā¦" she called for him suddenly, bringing him out of his thoughts. Sokka breathed deeply and rubbed his face with a hand, as though trying to shake off the emotional words that had tumbled out of him. What a foolā¦ he wasn't supposed to tell her any of that. He wasn't supposed to guilt her into a damn thing, what was wrong with him?
"Don't mind me, Azula, don'tā¦ don't worry. I'm okay," he said, simply.
She seemed rather determined to prove him wrong, however: her hand reached for his chest, touching his heart, feeling its powerful, yet fragile beats. He gritted his teeth, trying to find something to say, anything to defuse the charged situation, far more tense now than in the rest of their awkward days on the road, combinedā¦
"You said you loved me," she whispered. His breath caught. "You said soā¦ and I left. But it wasn't because Iā¦ b-because I didn't want to see you anymore."
"What?" Sokka said, and the confusion did nothing to help his current discomfort.
"Sokka, Iā¦ I'm sorry. I know you believe you loved me, and because you did, I ruined everything, but the truth isā¦"
"Woah, what's that supposed to mean, 'I believe I loved you'?" Sokka snapped, eyeing her dark silhouette with a scowl. "There's no 'believe' about it, Azula. I loved you: I still do."
"Youā¦ no, Sokka, no," Azula said, shaking her head promptly. Yet her tone, the nervousness with which she spokeā¦ it gave him pause, where he'd had none before. While he certainly didn't appreciate being told by anyone that his feelings couldn't be what he knew they were, he also knew Azula well enough by now to understand there was more going on underneath the surface than she wanted to admit right now.
"No what?" he said, softening his voice. "What are you trying to tell me, Azula?"
"You can't love me. And if you truly did, t-thenā¦ you shouldn't," she said, shivering against him. "I can't beā¦ I can't be loved, not like other people can. I can't love, either, so maybe justā¦"
"What the hell? What's that supposed to mean?" Sokka asked, and Azula shook her head.
"That's what they said. In that damn asylum," she swallowed hard. "They diagnosed me, and tested me, and decided I wasā¦ incapable of I don't know how many emotions. They said I couldn't feel them, that I only pretended to, that Iā¦ that I copied what I saw in others, but was incapable of truly feeling those emotions myself."
"What sort ofā¦? That's bullshit!" Sokka exclaimed, frowning. Azula shrank in her spot beside him, pressing her head to his chest. "What the hell's that supposed to mean?! You're capable of emotions alright, of so many of them, for crying out loudā¦ who the hell paid those pieces of shit to say that about you? I'll go gut them as soon as we find Space Swordā¦"
"My mother thought I was a monster," Azula spoke against his chest. Sokka's wild rant stopped cold suddenly. "Why would she love Zuko but not me? Why would she say something was wrong with me if nothing had been wrong at all? Even now, she looks at me funny, no matter if Zuko's taken me back. Like she thinks any moment I'm just going to snap, and set the whole damn Palace on fire. Somedaysā¦ somedays I actually do want to do that, Sokka. Whenever I'm too frustrated, I justā¦"
"Then you can be frustrated? Isn't that an emotion?" Sokka huffed. "Azulaā¦ I can't say I know anything for sure, but it sounds like those damn assholes at that institution weren't trying to help you at all. If anythingā¦ they tried to convince you that you weren't human. They made you think emotions were worthless, and well, your damn family doesn't help one bit eitherā¦"
"But emotions areā¦ they're not good, Sokka," Azula said, shaking her head.
"Says who? Ozai's far from a reliable source of information, you knowā¦"
"It's not just him. It'sā¦ I've let myself be swayed by stupid impulses so many times now," Azula said, gritting her teeth. "I meanā¦ if that's what emotions are, they justā¦ they make you do things you shouldn't. They make you lose sight of your rational mind, and thenā¦"
"The more you fight them, the worse it gets," Sokka finished for her. Azula flinched beside him. "Whichā¦ sounds like you understand and know emotions pretty well, for someone who allegedly can't feel them."
Azula breathed with difficulty against him, and to her surprise, his arms wrapped warmly around her, pulling her as close as she could be to him. He pressed his lips to the top of her head.
"What did you feelā¦ when you heard I was visiting again, the first time I visited the Fire Nation after all those months without seeing you?" he asked. Azula tensed around him. "Nothing wrong will come from telling me, Azula. I'm not going to hurt you. I justā¦ need to know. And I think you need to say it even more than I need to hear it."
She swallowed hard before making up her mind. There was no trace of joking in his voiceā¦ no hint of mockery, of forcefulness, of bullheaded stubbornness. He wasn't trying to make her accept his feelingsā¦ he was trying to help her understand her own. Tears surged in her eyes, and with her face pressed to his bare chest as it was, she knew he would feel them directly on his skin.
"Iā¦ wanted to see you," she whispered. "I hoped you'd want to see me too. But when we crossed paths, you simplyā¦ walked past me. You barely even glanced at me. Iā¦ I thought I disgusted you. And itā¦ it hurt. It did."
"I thought I was the one who disgusted you," Sokka said with a trembling voice, tightening his embrace further. "When you ran off, and avoided seeing me, Iā¦ I was sure it meant you'd never wanted things to go as far as they did. So Iā¦ decided to leave you be. Because I figured you didn't love me back. I thoughtā¦ you'd be better off without me."
"I wasn't. I'm not," Azula admitted with far more honesty than she ever thought she'd muster, shaking her head against his chest.
"I'm sorry," Sokka whispered, and she gasped. "I should'veā¦ guessed I couldn't understand what was going through your head. Doesn't matter how smart I think I am, you're always much more complicated than I can figure outā¦"
"Youā¦ you're not the one who should apologize," Azula said, shaking her head again, and by now the tears did stream down her face. "I'm the one whoā¦ who left, and I hurt you, because I didn't know how to tell you thatā¦ t-that you shouldn't have loved someone like meā¦"
"I'm afraid that's never going to stop me," Sokka smiled sadly, raising a hand to her cheek, wiping the tears away as best he could with his thumb. "Love isn't that easily given and taken away."
"But Iā¦" she gasped, shaking her head. "You can'tā¦ y-you shouldn't love me, Sokka. No one has everā¦"
"I don't know if no one has ever loved you, Azula," Sokka whispered, raising her chin delicately: despite how dark it was, she could see his shape looming closer, so close he found her lips with his own, but far more softly than earlier. Her breath hitched as he pulled away, and she remained desperate, eager for more. "But if no one did before, I'm proud to be the first person who ever did. Whatever mistakes you madeā¦ we'll fix them, if they can be fixed. We'll move past them, if they can't be. And you know what's the best part? You don't have to love me back. I didn't tell you how I felt becauseā¦ because I thought you'd respond with the same thing. I said it becauseā¦ because I couldn't hold back anymore. Because you made me so happy, you still do, andā¦ I needed you to know that. If you never feel the same way towards me, I'll accept itā¦ but that won't change my feelings for you. It won't erase my truth. And that's still my truth, to this day: I love you, Azula. And as far as I can tell, I always will."
She couldn't hold back anymore: a torrent of tears streamed down her cheeks as she embraced him tightly, just as tight, if not even more so, as she had earlier that day. He held her the same way, pressing gentle kisses around her face, on the top of her head, on her templesā¦ and she only cried further, overwhelmed, overcome by the onslaught of emotions she was supposedly unable to experience.
Had she truly been incapable of those emotions at allā¦ or had she merely locked them away, in all the trauma of her childhood and teenage years, until they finally had broken free upon hearing Sokka's words tonight? Had his sincere, selfless feelings given wing to hersā¦? Or was she truly just emulating feelings she had seen someplace elseā¦?
Ha. She was sure she had never seen anyone crying this pathetically over a love confession, so copying such an emotional outburst was ruled out.
Which meantā¦ they were wrong. The diagnosis had been wrong. Maybe she was capable of much more than those damn mental experts had decided she wasā¦
Those thoughts calmed her, despite they were anything but tranquilizing, as they would mean she had been living her life halfway for years now, abiding by that damn assessment as though it owned her, attempting to trick herself into believing her inability to feel emotions was a good thing somehowā¦ but there was a lot she needed to do right now instead of crying, in the wake of such a revelation.
"H-howā¦ how do you know you love me?" Azula asked, her voice fragile and unsteady. Her question took Sokka by surprise. "How does anyone knowā¦ that they're feeling love for someone else? Iā¦ I'm not trying to copy it, I just want to know ifā¦"
"I didn't think you'd be copying anything in the first place," Sokka whispered, rubbing her back gently. "But if you're worriedā¦ how about you tell me how you feel, and I'll tell you if that sounds like love or not?"
"Thenā¦" she said, breathing deeply. "I wasā¦ happy to see you, but then you didn't seem to want anything to do with me. M-my chest felt hollow, somehowā¦ and when I talked to defend you when Zuko was being an ass about your quest for your sword, I thought you might be grateful, but you looked unaffected, as though it didn't matterā¦ it hurt, too. I felt like an idiot, because Iā¦ I thought maybe you were happier whenever I wasn't around. That I'd messed up so badly that now you were better off without me, but I was so hung up on you, I couldn't stop thinking about you, and I wanted to fix things between usā¦ because I wanted you to smile the way you always did before. It hurt that you wouldn't, but I hopedā¦ and then the damn pentapus thing stuck to me and you were back to your old self for a moment, and we were laughing, and helping each other, and my damn stupid hollow chest felt full againā¦"
Sokka's hands didn't stop rubbing against her back gently. Azula gritted her teeth, clinging to him, to her every word, as she spoke with far more honesty than she remembered doing in her whole life. It seemed she had learned that from him, somehowā¦
"I never wanted to lose you," she said. "I never wanted to push you so far away you'd never want to come back. I thoughtā¦ I thought you'd come back and fight to stay by my side becauseā¦ isn't that how love works? I never thoughtā¦ I never thought you were walking away because you loved me. B-because you thought that was what I wantedā¦ I'm sorry. I'm sorry, I didn'tā¦ I didn't want to push you away, Sokkaā¦"
"I get it," he whispered, kissing the top of her head. "I understand now. Iā¦ I'm relieved, you know? I thought I'd spend the rest of my life aloneā¦"
"Youā¦?" Azula said, puzzled. Sokka chuckled.
"No one knew I was with youā¦ so my damn sister kept trying to set me up with people. I always said no, she'd always find a way to throw them at me, I'd always make myself scarce as soon as I knew there was yet another girl waiting to meet the great hero Sokkaā¦"
"Pfftā¦ great hero?" Azula smiled, amused.
"See? I don't want or need a girl who worships me" Sokka chuckled, kissing her brow. "I'd rather have one who thinks all that stuff is nonsenseā¦ because she sees right through me, and knows deep down I'm just a dork who wants to spend time with his friends, talk nonsense, joke around, pull pranks on peopleā¦"
"We need to do it againā¦ pulling pranks on everyone," Azula smiled, pressing her own lips to his chest. "I miss that."
"Wellā¦ I don't know what this really means for us, going forward," Sokka whispered. "Maybe you're not ready for anything too demanding anywayā¦ but what you said you felt for me did sound quite a lot like love, you know?"
"Itā¦ did?" Azula said, the hopeful inflection of her voice brought a gentle grin to Sokka's face.
"That's right," he said, pressing his brow to hers. "Soā¦ going back to civilization, and telling everyone we're together now? Sounds like the culmination of the greatest prank of all time to me."
"Though it's not just a prank," Azula smiled, closing her eyes. "We are together. Or at least, we should be."
"If we both agree on thatā¦ then I guess it means we are," Sokka sighed.
She hadn't known what to make of his tone with the last words he spokeā¦ until a soft laugh shook him, and then he was squeezing her so tight she lost her breath: tears fell upon her skin, just as her own had fallen on his. Azula gritted her teeth but hugged him back, burying her face in his shoulder as he sobbed quietly against her.
Just one silly development, one chaotic afternoon spent battling against strange but harmless invertebrates, had turned into a wild evening of relentless trysts until they had released their everything togetherā¦ and then it had become an emotional night, where they had finally talked thoroughly, finally understanding each other's fears, weakness, insecurities and thought processes. It hadn't needed to come this far, they both knew itā¦ and yet they were so grateful to recover what they'd lost that they didn't stop to reason with how much time they had wasted: instead, their lips met in a tearful kiss, and their bodies joined anew for one more time that night, but in a warmer, loving manner, slow and gradual, until they both reached their final culmination and fell asleep soundly in each other's arms. Just as there had been no violent solution to fend off the pentapi, there had been no such solution for their relationship either: a gentler approach, far more sincere, where they had opened their hearts, regardless of the painful risk it represented, was the only true way to resolve their conflict.
The long-standing tension between them was gone, completely, by the next morning: they couldn't seem to stop smiling together, not when they made love again by dawn, not when they ate a hefty breakfast to make up for the dinner they had missed, not when they rushed back to the lake to find the clothes that they had left lying about by the shore. Once they packed the tent and took off, following Sokka's map, they did as much with hands linked, casting countless teasing comments at each other with every new step they took together.
After a week and a half of long, heartfelt nights and blissful, bright days, their journey appeared to be one that should have lasted a lifetime insteadā¦ and yet Azula's luck dictated otherwise.
She spotted it amidst bushes while she foraged for food, as their reserves were near depleted by then: it didn't glow as brightly as it had long ago, but that golden pommel still caught her eye. She pushed the plants out of the way, slowing by the weapon to find it sunken to the hilt in the soil. She breathed deeply and wrapped her hand around the handle's leather, and without much struggle, the weapon came looseā¦ and that black blade nearly glistened under the sunlight once she had withdrawn it completely.
It was over, then. Their long trip, their chance to reconnect and make amendsā¦ Azula gritted her teeth as she gazed at the weapon, almost begrudging it for not having taken a little longer to show up, despite she had practically found it by sheer chance as it was. She briefly pondered stashing it away someplace safe, to make sure she and Sokka would continue to travel together for a little longerā¦ but his words, his many decisions and sacrifices for her sake, convinced her otherwise. He had taught her what love looked like: selfishness wasn't part of it. He had come here to find his sword, and she had no right to deprive him from it for a moment longer.
"Sokka?" she called for him, and he raised his head from the small venison he'd been able to catch earlier, thanks to his boomerang.
"What is it?" he asked. "Found anything that looks too bright and funny? It's probably poisonous, if that's itā¦"
"Well, that sure explains why it was that dangerous all along, huh?" Azula smiled, returning to the clearing they were resting at that morning. She raised her right hand, showing the weapon she held to Sokka, who froze in place immediately. "Didn't think you'd play so underhandedly back in those days, coating your weapon in poison, butā¦"
"AZULA! YOU FOUND IT?!"
Azula laughed as she offered the sword at her lover, who clumsily jumped to his feet and rushed towards her. He took Space Sword in his hands, smiling brightly enough to cry yet againā¦ and then he dropped the weapon, to her utter astonishment, and embraced her so tightly he raised her from the ground.
"S-Sokka!" she gasped, embracing him right back in fear of fallingā¦ especially in fear of falling on his insanely sharp sword.
"You're the greatest, smartest, cleverest, most amazing woman in the entire planet!" he squealed. Despite her previous apprehension, Azula couldn't hold back a trickle of laughter as she pressed her face to his neck. "Oh, hellā¦! I was starting to think we'd never find it! Which, to be fair, I didn't mind too much? I was having so much fun being on the road with you as it was, that Iā¦!"
"You forgot you were looking for a sword?" Azula smiled, as he set her down at last. "I think I could tell. Seeing as you kept making plans about what we'd eat for our next meal, or what position we'd try for the next nightā¦"
Sokka snorted and laughed, pressing his brow to hers. Azula grinned, breathing out slowly: that was the face she had relished in. That expression of pure, undoubtable blissā¦ the genuine smiles she had never been deemed worthy of until Sokka had decided otherwise. Her heart ached pleasantly at the sight of it, at the gentle bliss that permeated them both right now.
"Thank you, Azulaā¦ thank you so much," he said, pressing many quick, enthusiastic kisses to her lips. Azula's smile only widened further. "Goodness, I owe you so much more than you can imagineā¦"
"No, you don'tā¦" Azula whispered, caressing his chest. "Whatever debts we owed each otherā¦ I think they're settled after this trip. I'd hurt youā¦ now I've made up for it, somehow, I hopeā¦"
"You've more than made up for every bit of pain, Azulaā¦ you didn't even have to, but you have," Sokka smiled, caressing her face kindly.
"I did have toā¦" she said, as another of those impulses she couldn't repress bubbled to the surface: "Because I love you, too."
He had never expected her to return his feelingsā¦ let alone for her to say it aloud, if she did. He was sure he'd spend his life with her, regardless of whether she ever said those three words to him at allā¦ and yet now that she had, it was as though his entire world had expanded, exploded, becoming greater, larger and better in a single moment. Tears surged in his eyes, as did in hersā¦ and the next thing she knew, they were back in the tent, reprising every blissful night and morning they had spent making love relentlessly together. After so long of fearing she'd always be alone, fearing she had alienated the only person who genuinely had cared for her, now she knew she'd live every day ahead with the bright awareness that she would have him by her sideā¦
No one had truly expected Sokka to return with his sword. Zuko, personally, hadn't expected him to return with Azula, to begin with, having even set up a whole squad to track down his sister once she inevitably escapedā¦
Yet what no one could have ever anticipated was for Sokka and Azula to not only have found Space Sword, but to have found their way to each other just as well: Zuko spent months convinced their engagement announcement was but another of their joint pranksā¦ even up until the very wedding ceremony. Teasing him further, after first kissing her new husband, Azula had promised Zuko that their first child would be called 'Prank', in his honorā¦ and only then did the reality of the situation hit him, despite he was still quite far from being able to process it fully. Katara, of course, wasn't in much better shapeā¦ and yet, to everyone's surprise, she eased up on them faster if only because of Sokka's genuine happiness. Seeing him back in good spirits, even if they mostly were related to the woman he couldn't seem to stop holding in his arms ever since they returned from their long journey, was enough of a relief that she managed to overlook, at least most times, that her new sister-in-law was none other than who she wasā¦
And as fun as their reactions were, nothing pleased either the princess or her new consort as much as their relationship itself did. Opening their hearts to each other fully, thoroughly understanding what their feelings were, had changed their worlds for the better. It had started as a quest for a swordā¦ and instead it had shaped into the reforging of a love and the beginning a blissful journey that would span for a lifetime.
#sokkla#sokklasaturday#sokkla saturdays#sokka#azula#if you people ever thought#I'd already exercised all my ability to give them angst in a forest#... well you were wrong#this story has actually been on the back burner since like... my earliest fandom days#I always got to writing other things instead and eventually this dropped off the list of priorities#welp#it got right back to it once I saw that prompt#and now here we are#something like 7 years later but#it is done#my first rendition of finding a certain Space Sword#(sorta smutty though I'm still tryin' to save up the best for Yakuza AU)
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Colonel: But maybe we werenāt meant to meddle... with that ultimate power.
Doctor: You mean... the power of a God?
- Akira (1988)
Anime has always played an influential role in popular culture. Akira (1988) introduced a barrage of recurring visual themes that to this day makes its way into pop culture mediums. Every time you see a rendition of the side view of a motorcycle sliding to a screeching to a halt, thatās from Akira. Kanye Westās Stronger music video is a retelling of the Akira movie released 2 decades earlier. I could go on and on naming anime references in the mainstream but that deserves its own article that Iām sure someone else already wrote. My focus is on the anime sub genre called Isekai. Isekai is when the main character travels to another world and plays a role in shaping a major event. Popular Isekai include Inuyasha, Sword Art Online, Digimon Adventure, That Time I Got Reincarnated As A Slime, Re: Zero and Is it wrong to try and pick up girls in a dungeon. The amount of world building that these Isekai do is truly astounding. From rethinking that worldās financial system to mapping out complex political allegiances to defining power scaling schemes and having our modern world as a backdrop for comparison. Japanese Isekai lays the groundwork on how to build interesting and complex worlds in the metaverse.
Isekai is important to consider because many brands will represent themselves in the metaverse the same as on a website. They will post static images and text as the bare minimum. That strategy misses the point. The metaverse is more than upgrading a website to a 3D space. Similar to an Isekai, a brandās metaverse needs to provide roles, activities, environments and incentive structures that create intrigue and excitement around interacting in that world. Similar to Subaru Natsuki arriving to the world of Re:Zero and failing his way throughout a world full of magic, assassins and witch cults. A brandās metaverse should represent a unique interaction between the user and the brand.
When a user arrives to a brandās metaverse, there needs to be a sense of adventure and discovery. Hidden mechanics the user discovers by exploring that world. If the brandās metaverse sells products then create a merchant NPC with an interesting backstory. Feature an area where consumers of the product are rewarded with a greater rank for the more products they own. Have a location where high rank users can converse. Donāt just have a metaverse that exist simply to say that brand has a presence in the metaverse but go the extra mile and provide those engaging experiences similar to the ones you can find in an Isekai.
I canāt hide my excitement of living in a time period where it is possible to interact with some of my favorite anime as metaverse worlds. Obviously I have a list of all the anime worlds I canāt wait to visit and interact in. The first is of course my favorite anime of all time, Rurouni Kenshin or Samurai X to western audiences. Experiencing the Meiji Reconstruction Era where participants role play as Emperors, masterless Samurai, Ninjas and outlaws is such an interesting concept. This concept will also lead to more metaverse worlds that tell the history of particular countries in a certain time period. The second anime world I would love to visit in the metaverse is Gundam UC timeline. Just imagine being a Federation pilot climbing into a Gundam suit then facing off against the Red Comet himself Char Aznabel as he insults you as only he can. I can go on and on but I prefer to just introduce the concept of living in your favorite anime world in an attempt to expand our expectations of the metaverse.
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#anime #isekai #rezero #blockchain #VR #metaverse
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For the first time in a long time I went to the movies in forever and then to Target. At Target I see some Godiva bars on discount yellow tags and I was ecstatic until I read 70% Cacao, Dark, Salted Caramel and was deflated.
Anyway that's how I felt about seeing The Green Knight. What you thought this was about chocolate?
No see since the pandemic I've been back on my perennial King Arthur kick. I've for a long time since I was a young preteen thought, someday I too will write my own King Arthur epic and it'll be gay, magical, gangster and culty too, but for now I'll make up my own stories for practice and then with every story I got attached too, it got too involved and convoluted to the point that when it came down to actually writing a novel, I threw it all away and made a space opera I only planned in two weeks and wrote in a month. Anyway...so now I've been writing this very gay, magical, gangster and culty take on Final Fantasy XV with my boyfriend and just fell in love with Somnus Lucis Caelum who nobody has any insight about him than to make him the Mordred to Ardyn's Arthur, which is a strange flex, but okay, I thought about what if I wrote a Dark Age prequel about Ardyn and Somnus, but Ardyn becomes king and Somnus his shogun and they play games of seduction and power because I'm twisted like that. Anyway...I was like I'm never going to write this and I have to keep making up characters based on FFXV characters and King Arthur tropes because there's not a lot of stories that take place during the Dark Ages, it's always some Roman Empire story, or High Middle Ages and FFXV gave no room for either society to happen after the fall of Solheim and the rise of King Somnus...so we left with Dark Ages, y'all, the King Arthur comparisons are obvious, but Ardyn is no Arthur and Somnus is no Mordred, Aera is only Guenevere if you make up an affair with Somnus, Gilgamesh is no Bedwyr/Bedivere, but uh...they both amputees and the oldest companions to their respective kings so...I guess. Anyway making an ancestor of Cor Leonis and deciding well he's Owain/Yvain, or am Ignis type as idk Sir Cai/Kay I guess, they both cook, but Cai's more like Seifer Almasy than any FF character... Anyway I'm losing people.
My plan was to just scrap the FFXV prequel, leave my Somnus ideas into Overtime (a gangster and gods story) and just plan an actual King Arthur adaptation. I'd have King Arthur the treasure hunter, leader of a warband turned founder of Camelot who fights giants, giant cats and dogheads, but also fights King Claudas of the Franks and King Aelle of the Saxons and Cerdic a Briton who puts in his lot with the Saxons, etc. It'd been a a glorified turf war, meanwhile Arthur's gotta make alliances with King Pelles, The Fisher King and his strange cult he's founded because, why yes I find the ends justifies the means prophecy of the Holy Grail Quest very culty because Christianity then does not resemble it now. Meanwhile you got the secondary plots of Mordred, Gawain, Lancelot, Percival, Tristam and other's going on because they matter and too many modern King Arthur stories sideline the knights.
So many have always sidelined Mordred as a final boss eldritch abomination in mortal flesh conceived of sin and give him no personality, or complex motives, or even just a relationship with Arthur. I also have noticed the general sidelining of Lancelot, or give him a chad villain upgrade if you must include him at all, and the villainizing of Gawain to the point that you don't even have to have Mordred, or Agravain as a catalyst shit stirrer in court, just slap Gawain's name on Liam Neeson in a top knot and you're good. Mordred can just be a child offscreen until last act...fuck that, while Morgan Le Fay can either be a villainess plotting her cabal through men, or a well-intentioned, ineffectual idiot. Fuck that.
Now Hollywood just be doing King Arthur first acts that suck ass, only for said director to get rewarded failing upwards by giving this same jerk the Aladdin remake. The tonally shitty, crammed in blockbuster mess of a cliche heroe's journey that sucks.
With that background I was excited for The Green Knight. I read an illustrative version as a kid, I read Tolkien's translation as a teenager, I read Simon Armitage's superior, but with liberties taken translation. I was prepped to go knowing that indie, or not they were going to make changes to weave the disjointed poem together.Ā I'm excited that because this movie exists Project Guternberg's finally thrown Jessie Weston's prose rendition up on their website. I'll be reading that at some point when this blows over.
The movie adaptation makes a lot of...choices, many I wouldn't love, but would forgive had their been a payoff. There was none.
The journey was fine, the cinematography was a breath of fresh air after crappy slo mo, glossy action scenes ruined another. Guys, I don't think I want to see a Zack Snyder Excalibur, it'll marginally be better than Guy Ritchie, but that ain't saying anything. Leave Excalibur to the post-Star Wars 80s where it is impeccable for it's time. I liked Green Knight's breathable pacing, it's color palette's in the forests and mountains made up for the muddy grey of every Ridley Scott send up in the castles and villages in every other Dark Ages/Medieval story in the last I donāt know since the shitty 00ā²s. For all the dark tones when there was blues, greens, yellows or reds, they were vibrant in this movie to contrast the gloom of Britain. The soundtrack was good. This isn't all what makes a movie, but it enhances it so let's get to the story and what I did and didn't like.
Things I Liked: Gawain is still a novice in his career The Costume Dressing Everyone pronounces Gawain's name different. I pronounce it like Gwayne, or Guh Wayne, but here you got Gowen (like Owen), Gowan (like Rowan), or even Garlon who I'm pretty sure is the Fisher King's heir in some versions of that Arthurian story, so uh... The reference to Arthur slaying 960 men with his bare hands (Nennius for the win!) The Waste Land that is implied to be a site of a battle (an important aspect of the Arthurian landscape) The Fox companion No long grisly, drawn out hunting scenes. The Fox lives! No misogynist speeches
Things I'm Mixed: This being a dream, is the magic real? Are the giants? Is the Green Knight a figment of Gawain's imagination from a spell Morgan casted in him to hallucinate? Is Lord and Lady also figments? It's...a way to interpret the poem, but lazy and I don't see why it's got to all fantasy, or all dream...this movie makes it too vague you're stuck picking one camp than to accept it's a fantasy with dream and hallucinatory sequences.
Things I'm Meh: Morgan Le Fay as Gawain's mom. Look I fucking hate Morgause as a character and these two get merged and steal each other's aspects so much at this point the difference is who did they marry, King Urien or King Lot? Both are attributed to being Mordred's mom, Mordred is Gawain's brother...both practice magic depending on certain incarnations, both love and hate Arthur their brother and are in conflict with him. Saint Winifred. I actually liked this sequence, but I don't appreciate her as the tacked on wife in the later dream sequence as like...a contrast between the wife you should marry than the whore next door you don't respect anyway? I don't even know what lesson I'm supposed to get out of the damn dream sequence, or any of it? That Gawain should've married his girlfriend and then he'd be a just ruler? That he shouldn't be king? That he'd never have to make the same heartless, impartial choices? I don't know, he seemed like a king doing king shit because guess what? It never gets easier. Wars will be waged. The world didn't become better because he married the right woman, respected her and lived in obscurity. The world didn't become better because he made her his queen. We certainly don't know the world would be better Gawain had his head chopped off and dead XP They never reveal the Lord and the Green Knight as one and the same because of this shit.
Things I Hated: Arthur withdraws from the challenge because he's old. In poem he takes it on and Gawain takes it so he don't have to and he finds himself more disposable than the king. Gawain only takes the challenge because of arrogance. Arthur and Gawain had no prior personal relationship. I'd not have hated this so much if it wasn't compounded by it cancelling out the first two things. Gawain is portrayed as having no respect for his woman, or any woman, maybe his mother? He has to be pushed by Winifred to regain her head. Gawain is portrayed as arrogant, covetous and ready to pass the buck, or the bare minimum than have any honor or decency. It didn't matter the kid in the wasteland was shithead bandit, the way Gawain acted towards him, when he gets robbed, it almost feels like he deserved it and Gawain doesn't learn a damn lesson. I'll admit him taking the sword to cut his ropes and cutting his hands was a neat sequence, it shows him go from stupid, to almost clever and having will to survive...you know traits he had in the poem, but he stops showing these traits or growing. Basically Gawain has to be dragged kicking and screaming to help people and shows no fortitude when facing temptation, or when showing respect towards others, it's exhausting. You don't make this kind of journey story without character growth. Why are you skipping this? Also is it just me, or is this like when you take Frank Miller Batman and transport him onto a Bill Finger story? This is at best Thomas Malory Gawain (and this is charitable) transported on the earlier Pearl Poet's story. Stop it. It's not tonally correct and goes at odds with the story and the set up characterization you'd need to tell it. Speaking of which, you know how I get through the oof... of Liam Neeson Gawain in Excalibur? By pretending he Agravain instead. Here...I don't even think Gawain could pass as Mordred in spite of his covetous nature, lust and entitlement. Why? because I don't think even Mordred is this dumb to warrant this hubris. Essel being invented as a tacked on love interest just to be shit on utterly and for what? I don't think I have much commentary here as there is no Essel I'm aware of to compare, or stack up. I just notice this trope of like...usually if you include a sex worker in Hollywood she often has a heart of gold, she often has her own sense of values that goes at odds with society, but is more true and less hypocritical than a privileged ladyās. I thought that's what they would've done with the added trope of back at home sweetheart to contrast and pit her against the despicable femme fatale of Lady Bertilak and her adultery and her ladyship...and I'm glad they didn't...but you did nothing with Essel than to shit on her for existing when you made her exist, you know. Lady Bertilak being portrayed as the seductress devil incarnate. Look I know adultery is a touchy taboo, but uh her and Gawain hit it off in the poem, dammit! Her values and his values come to clash, but here it's played off as Gawain is stupid and covetous and Lady Bertilak wants to prove something because...? If my brother's theory that she's a figment of Morgan Le Fay's magic, then I'll take this as a lesson of Gawain is impulsive and covetous and his mom knows it, but he don't want to fuck his mom, but he wants her power, and Morgan wants to teach him a lesson... I guess. Hey we don't have misogynist speeches in this movie, but we'll make sure to have the movie drip with it with no point, or commentary. Pass. Lord guilting, extracting and initiating the same sex kiss and only once. Poem automatically better that Gawain don't have to keep being reminded to keep his part of the bargain and he does it willingly more than once. What he doesn't do is give up his belt...gods how did we get more homophobic as a society that the homoeroticism here is worse? Catholics of the middle ages officially had no issue doing same sex, passionate kissing until it lead to sex. The Ending: The gods damn ending. In the movie as is, Gawain waits to uphold his end of the bargain and get his head chopped off. He imagines, even though we don't get any fuzzy or distortion to indicate this is a dream, but I already knew this was coming, he runs away and comes home, is regarded a hero, he sees his lady, takes her from behind and if you saw Brokeback Mountain (I didn't, but DJ has) you know this is a sign of disrespect to women. He gets her knocked up, pays her off for the kid she wants to keep, he is crowned king, marries the ghostly saint lady he helped retrieve her head earlier from a lake in the movie (this right here is the damn tip off). There's no more dialogue by this point and everything is montaging, so you know by now it's a dream, though nothing is out of focus. He rules as a heartless king, his whore son dies from war he waged, he has a daughter, his wife dies. Gawain then takes off the belt that would've saved his life and his head falls off. This would've been the one good twist, except... In this sequence of events he never had his head cut off so uh... now we back in present day. He decides not to bitch out, Green Knight in a sexy way is like "now off with your head," movie cuts to credits with no resolve...uh what the fuck? What the fuck? This is not good. You wasted the one twist in your dream when idk, you could've...
How I'd fix it: No dream sequence at all. No Incident At Owl Creek twist. Gawain comes home a hero and survivor of this game and ordeal. He wears this belt of shame. He becomes a well-renowned knight, but he bears a shame. One day he goes to take off his belt and his head falls off because he cheated to get this belt and to survive this encounter. There. Done. Improved your high concept movie that couldn't play any of the lessons straight from the damn poem without making everyone an asshole for no reason! Ugh! But nope you had to end it on we donāt know if Gawain lives or dies...because...it's dream magic made from his momma's witchcraft...?
Last Thoughts So then post-credits scene because Marvel because Pirates Of The Caribbean existed. A white girl who looks nothing like Gawain's daughter we see who didnāt pay off, or any child I can remember through this whole movie picks up King Arthur's crown that dream Gawain inherited and puts it on her head. Who is this girl? Are we gonna have an indie equivalent of of the Marvel Movie Universe/Universal Horror Monsters thing with ancient British legends? We gonna get a Life Of Saint Patrick next that crosses over? I don't know. What is this?
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So I finished Age of Calamity
[spoilers]
Thanks to the beauty of holiday time off I have logged in 40 plus hours into this game and just beaten it, so naturally Iām gonna talk about it a bit. Iāll save the spoiler stuff for a little later though.
The game
This game might be my favorite game of 2020, or at least top three. Not just because of the world, but because everything is over the top! So far Iāve done 131 missions and 90% has the consistent energy of āwe are fucking under attackā and itās almost overwhelming in the best way possible. It really felt like you were on a battlefield field. Your map is just a sea of red and itās your job to clean it up. What kept me engaged in the fights was all of the characterās different uses runes. I found myself constantly ordering my teammates to face certain enemy types that match best with how they fight.
Originally, I really wanted to be fair and rotate between characters. That didnāt last long. Mipha and Link in my opinion donāt have a single bad move. The bias only got worse whenever the master sword is obtained. Before that, my Link had a spear most of the time but that sword is just handy. Especially with item drop rate and attack range on it. In the end, my strongest characters were Link 74, Mipha 70, Impa 60, and Zelda 60. Itās been awhile since I played the first hyrule warriors so I canāt remember if they had the level up system were you can pay for experience but or definitely came in handy. Combine that with how many guardians were in this game and I quickly found out I needed Link with a shield on a regular bases. I also learned I didnāt forget how to time a vase amount of blocks and dodges.
The amount of characters you get to play quickly became too massive for me to juggle, but they all had their own merits for the most part, though I did find a few of the gimmick characters a bit of a hassle. My opinion on who was viable was constantly changing as I unlocked more combos. Originally, wasnāt the biggest fan of Urbosa. That second and fifth combo modifier changed everything.
The real portion of the game that really kept me wanting to play more was not only the ability to order other people, but seeing them fight along side you. Iām a softie for things like this, but genuinely felt relieved or hyped whenever I was fighting something crazy and I can see Impa rushing over towards me while text from soldiers scream āJust keep pushing!!!!ā The AI wasnāt dumb either! Thereās plenty of moments that controllable and NPC characters will just go where theyāre supposed to, or kill targeted enemies. I remember not wanting to switch over to Link because he had low health, so as Iām running over to him as Mipha to heal him, the madman kills the Lynel. Ran all the way over there to watch him flex. That combined with elemental reactions you can cause in a fight, and the entire spectacle just felt elevated. The feeling of fighting three Lynelās at once becomes a little less scary when you have a lightning rod and puddles everywhere.
The only negative I found in a gameplay perspective is some of the resource gathering. Gaining the trophy notes for killing a type of enemy isnāt too much of a hassle, but I found getting the materials they drop to be a bit harder, even with increased drop rate statuses. Most of this I find irritating for two reasons. One, specialized enemies show up in relatively small groups in a majority of missions, so getting things from them could be a flop altogether. Number two, a fair amount of these missions take a decent chunk of time if youāre being thorough and killing as much as possible. So grinding is a pain. Fortunately most missions a majority of what you need . If the game wanted chu chu jelly, I knew one of the missions coming up had chu chu as an enemy. You could also keep track of what you needed with material sensor that told you when you had enough.
The story
Iāll be honest, I was upset with this game for a hot second. It was advertised as a prequel to BoTW and while sad, I was truly invested to playing the events that lead to the fall of the champions. What this game didnāt tell you is itās like most LoZ games, on its own separate part of the timeline. This isnāt the story of they lost. Itās the story of how they win, thanks to the little adorable robot mascot that has the ability to not only show the future, but bring people from the future; the championās descendants. At first I was upset with this. Mainly because Iām a little tired of time travel plots and it felt really out of place here. However, time travel gave way more to this game than what I expected this game to have in the first place. It allowed at least six more playable characters that wouldnāt have been possible in the other timeline, and a wellspring of interactions through missions. Every time Mipha was with Sidon, I smiled. Having Urbosa being this super encouraging role model to Riju was so nice since BoTW had expressed just how much those two admired and missed those people. Revali was nice to Teba! They were vibing. Even the soldier commentary on the new champions were a treat. So I got over the time travel issue pretty quick. It made things sad as well when the new generation leaves because theyāre going back to a time where they lost it all. There was no great union that took place across hyrule to fight Ganon and their beloved champions failed. I do appreciate that the diverge in the timeline really takes place on the day theyāre supposed to die, moments before the final blow. It still lets the player see the definitive moment where good was supposed to lose.
The ānewā villain is meh. I wouldnāt really say he stands out. His entire thing is thinking heās gonna win because he doesnāt realize that he isnāt seeing hyruleās future. Heās seeing another hyruleās future. What comes out of his character is cool though because it gives a different, yet same finale boss. I wasnāt expecting to basically fight a giant Ganondorf. Honestly, you can kinda say you fought Demise. At least aesthetically speaking. Or Yuga. This game has also made me care about robot. Something I havenāt done in awhile. A few scenes near the end felt hammy, but also amazingly realistic to how a lot of people would feel when someone breaks your favorite thing. The war was already personal, but now itās really personal. Quests open up after the game that plays on those emotions too. Itās very clever.
Overall, Age of Calamities story felt like a love letter to everyone who loves this rendition of hyrule and the characters in it. They even another one named Sooga, who just might be my favorite. That man has no choice but to be the brain and muscle of the Yiga. It kinda makes me sad heās introduced here because you can assume he didnāt make it in the other timeline, so he has no descendents. The amount of serotonin I felt just seeing all of these characters fighting together as the absolutely conquer the battlefield was more than satisfying. Definitely worth the money. I donāt know if they can, but Nintendo might wanna consider some sort of audio patch. The mixing is bad in certain parts. Voice lines get really quiet. Other than that, this game is real solid. Iād give it an 8.5/10
Side note
The music is really good. Especially the Zoeās demain track. Also, I never noticed frame rate dropping or lag, except on two occasions. Both of these happened to be me pushing the game to its limits. The first is being surrounded by enemies in a small space as Mipha. Creating the water vortex and raining down bombs makes the game wanna cry a little. The second one is a similar case. Sidonās fifth or sixth combo made the made the game drop frames because itās incredibly fast, involves timing, makes a vortex, and i was in a small space with tons of enemies. Other than that, not even Urbosaās or Rijuās lightning made the game freak out from what I noticed. That may have something to do with me never using them in a place where thereās constant rain. That might actually be the cause of the drop in combination of everything else.
#hyrule warriors age of calamity#age of calamity#legend of zelda breath of the wild#botw#nintendo#legend of zelda
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