Aang (
savedtheworld) wrote2012-11-12 04:40 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Book 9: Refreshed Air [Action/Video]
[Action]
[This morning, Aang did not wake up in his bed. No, he woke up some ways outside of the village, with an old friend. It took soe time for Aang and Suki to come to grips, but eventually the facts became clear. Suki had come back to Luceti without memories. At the same time, Aang had spent an overnight trip home. He lived out several days at home, where he saw the Yu Dao conflict through to its end and founded the air acolytes.
And now he was back. In Luceti. He knew who Ikki was again. One of the first things he did upon realizing what happened was scribbling a journal message for everyone at home - assuring them he was still around. It might be hard to tell he was gone if anyone was awake that early. After all, he didn't have many possessions, and his room was shared with Roku who was keeping a more irregular sleeping schedule during the draft. The only visible evidence would be the absence of the prayer beads which he had given to Ikki.
So Aang spent most of the morning helping Suki to adjust, hoping that her memories of her previous stay would be awakened. He wasn't really so familiar to people returning without memories. But eventually they parted ways so that Suki could be reunited with Sokka. Once he saw that only a night had passed during his absence, he had guessed that he might have been the only one to go home. The others might still be there. The same as he left them. So he headed to House 56 to check in with everyone next and give the physical proof of his presence. He came fully clothed in his air nomad robes, wielding a set of prayer beads that were notably missing a Fire Nation emblem.
Once all the bases are touched, Aang tries to go about his daily schedule as usual, probably being late for school and skipping out on the Welcome Center to instead explore the forest. Now that he remembers, he looks around carefully for any sign of Moro's presence.]
[Video]
[And this video message is recorded before dinner, when he stops back at the house between forest treks.]
Hey, everyone. It's me, Aang. This place is really weird sometimes. I used to think when people went home, they stayed home, at least for a long time. But sometimes people have been gone for just a few weeks, and me... I was just gone for one night. I doubt anyone noticed, but I'm still sorry if I worried anyone. And my friend Suki came back too. Really unpredictable, right?
Still, some of you might be pleased to know that at home, only a few days passed, but things are really turning out for the better. Things are even more at peace, and I feel more connected with my people than ever. I hope everyone's having a great autumn, while it lasts.
[This morning, Aang did not wake up in his bed. No, he woke up some ways outside of the village, with an old friend. It took soe time for Aang and Suki to come to grips, but eventually the facts became clear. Suki had come back to Luceti without memories. At the same time, Aang had spent an overnight trip home. He lived out several days at home, where he saw the Yu Dao conflict through to its end and founded the air acolytes.
And now he was back. In Luceti. He knew who Ikki was again. One of the first things he did upon realizing what happened was scribbling a journal message for everyone at home - assuring them he was still around. It might be hard to tell he was gone if anyone was awake that early. After all, he didn't have many possessions, and his room was shared with Roku who was keeping a more irregular sleeping schedule during the draft. The only visible evidence would be the absence of the prayer beads which he had given to Ikki.
So Aang spent most of the morning helping Suki to adjust, hoping that her memories of her previous stay would be awakened. He wasn't really so familiar to people returning without memories. But eventually they parted ways so that Suki could be reunited with Sokka. Once he saw that only a night had passed during his absence, he had guessed that he might have been the only one to go home. The others might still be there. The same as he left them. So he headed to House 56 to check in with everyone next and give the physical proof of his presence. He came fully clothed in his air nomad robes, wielding a set of prayer beads that were notably missing a Fire Nation emblem.
Once all the bases are touched, Aang tries to go about his daily schedule as usual, probably being late for school and skipping out on the Welcome Center to instead explore the forest. Now that he remembers, he looks around carefully for any sign of Moro's presence.]
[Video]
[And this video message is recorded before dinner, when he stops back at the house between forest treks.]
Hey, everyone. It's me, Aang. This place is really weird sometimes. I used to think when people went home, they stayed home, at least for a long time. But sometimes people have been gone for just a few weeks, and me... I was just gone for one night. I doubt anyone noticed, but I'm still sorry if I worried anyone. And my friend Suki came back too. Really unpredictable, right?
Still, some of you might be pleased to know that at home, only a few days passed, but things are really turning out for the better. Things are even more at peace, and I feel more connected with my people than ever. I hope everyone's having a great autumn, while it lasts.
[video]
Great. What would be a good place to meet up?
[video]
She just hadn't felt very hungry. An unusual feeling for her. But maybe if there's food in front of her, her appetite will get the better of her.]
Seventh Heaven?
[video]
[video]
[She tries a weak smile before closing the book. A little while, at least, means she has time for a quick shower before heading over to the restaurant.
Moving back to the town had been the right, if not more convenient, decision.]
[ooc: switch to action?]
[action]
[action]
When she sees the boy from the journals sitting at a table, she walks straight over. There's a small, almost shy, grin on her face as she takes a seat.]
Hi.
[action]
[action]
She picks up the menu and then glances towards his fries. A food she's only had a few times before, all since arriving in Luceti. But the sight, and smell, of the plate makes her stomach grumble.] We don't have food like that back home.
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
You can't eat meat?
[Vegetarianism, in a place where so many suffered so many days Hollow Days, so many days of unending starvation, was practically unheard of.]
[action]
[action]
But to not eat meat?]
You're lucky. [She finally concludes.] We didn't really have an option about what we ate. When we even had enough food for a full meal.
[action]
[action]
Not all the time. My district was the poorest. Especially the people who lived where I grew up, in the Seam.
[action]
I see. What was it like, there?
[action]
If she ever returned, she wondered if it would be the same home she grew up in.]
I lived in the Seam. That's the poorest part of the District, where all the coal miners and their families lived. We'd have blackouts and brownouts often. People died young of illness or injury or malnutrition. Being old was considered a sign of dignity because you had somehow survived it all.
And then there were the Hollow Days. The days where you could eat and eat but never seem to fill your subject. There wasn't a lot of money, or a lot of food, to go around. It's why my dad hunted. And why I eventually continued after his death.
[action]
I see. You... you did what you had to.
[action]
Anything to survive.
[action]
[action]
It might be different now. The districts won the uprising. There's a new government in place. Maybe - no. It will be better now.
[There won't, at least, be any more Hunger Games.]
[action]
[action]
What about your world? What's that like?
[action]
Well... there's different nations, for each of the four elements, that all are set up kind of differently. But they're all supposed to live in balance. The Earth Kingdom and the Fire Nation are both really big and on their own landmasses, and they both live differently. Then there's two Water Tribes, at the North and South Poles. The North Pole has a big and beautiful city, and it's kind of prosperous, but they don't let women do all the things they let men do. And the South Pole... when I was there, it was just one small village, and they were suffering, but the North Pole's helping them to rebuild now.
And the last nation wasn't really a nation at all. It was my people, the air nomads, and we lived in four different temples throughout the world. We lived lives of freedom, but the Fire Nation wiped all the others out. Because they decided to be like an empire with how prosperous they were, and started a war to take control of the other nations, which lasted a hundred years.
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]
[action]