Avatar Korra (
avatar_state) wrote in
deercountry2021-09-06 10:32 pm
Entry tags:
Avatar Arrival
Character Name: Korra log - OPEN
Who: Korra et al
What: What the characters are doing.
When: When the characters are interacting.
Where: Where the characters are interacting.
Content Warnings: None, will add if needed.
Washing Ashore - Closed to Team Avatar
She remembered floating in the water. Having been...herself, then something else, then herself again. But it all floated in front of her mind like leaves on the stream, there one moment and gone the next. Nothing she could focus on. She had, after a time, watched ashore. She had felt the water of a tide washing over her form, chill and...familiar. It felt like home, like the Pole; the cold water she had swam in when she was a child. It was not the sort of cold that bothered her, but it was strange. Where was the sun?
There had been greeters - or had supposed to be there - but their process was...interrupted. Because alongside Korra, the vast bulk of Naga had washed up. And while the mighty legs of the polar bear dog were still unsteady, her jaws were still powerful - and she drew herself with great effort over Korra, rearing back up as best she could, snarling at anybody who tried to approach. All the greeting committee were able to do was throw a cloak over her - and for a whole day, Naga kept up her watch.
And it was her face that Korra saw first as she smiled up into the strange sky. "Hey, girl," she said, reaching up to pet her face. "Thanks for taking care of me." She knew, instinctively, what had happened.
It took her some time to stand. More to get dressed. She looked through the pack, examined each object with a sigh. She'd been home. She'd been happy - she rolled the engagement rings she'd had made in her fingers, the key consideration of that - but something, and she had a sneaking idea what, had drawn her back in.
Finally, using a piece of driftwood until her legs were steady enough, she began to walk, her free hand holding onto Naga.
"Let's go find our family," she said.
Exploring - OPEN
In time, she rode Naga again. Once there had been food for both of them. She couldn't quite get her mind around this place - it was like Deerington but not...but she felt the same sense of the place. Like there was constantly something wrong. Something foreboding...
In the back of her mind, she felt it. The sense that she should...give up, accept the place. Face the future, turn from the past. It might even have worked, but she was still the Avatar - and the Avatar, even shorn from the direct memories of her predecessors, was a product of the past. To give it up would mean to...shed herself, in many ways.
And either out of stubbornness or will, Korra couldn't do that. Couldn't be that. She would not let this place lull her - she would find out what it was, what it was doing. If it was as malevolent as she had believed Deerington itself to be.
And thus, she explored. In the rest times, she worked on the driftwood she had found, out of some half-forgotten instinct. She could almost feel Aang smiling on her. She used fire, and water, and air to shape it, smooth it, add a shine. It was something to do while she thought, at first. But then it became something to finish.
She could be found many places, either on foot or riding astride Naga - the newly-made staff in her hand. She looked better than she had in Deerington - rested, fit, healed. In a word, ready.
Who: Korra et al
What: What the characters are doing.
When: When the characters are interacting.
Where: Where the characters are interacting.
Content Warnings: None, will add if needed.
Washing Ashore - Closed to Team Avatar
She remembered floating in the water. Having been...herself, then something else, then herself again. But it all floated in front of her mind like leaves on the stream, there one moment and gone the next. Nothing she could focus on. She had, after a time, watched ashore. She had felt the water of a tide washing over her form, chill and...familiar. It felt like home, like the Pole; the cold water she had swam in when she was a child. It was not the sort of cold that bothered her, but it was strange. Where was the sun?
There had been greeters - or had supposed to be there - but their process was...interrupted. Because alongside Korra, the vast bulk of Naga had washed up. And while the mighty legs of the polar bear dog were still unsteady, her jaws were still powerful - and she drew herself with great effort over Korra, rearing back up as best she could, snarling at anybody who tried to approach. All the greeting committee were able to do was throw a cloak over her - and for a whole day, Naga kept up her watch.
And it was her face that Korra saw first as she smiled up into the strange sky. "Hey, girl," she said, reaching up to pet her face. "Thanks for taking care of me." She knew, instinctively, what had happened.
It took her some time to stand. More to get dressed. She looked through the pack, examined each object with a sigh. She'd been home. She'd been happy - she rolled the engagement rings she'd had made in her fingers, the key consideration of that - but something, and she had a sneaking idea what, had drawn her back in.
Finally, using a piece of driftwood until her legs were steady enough, she began to walk, her free hand holding onto Naga.
"Let's go find our family," she said.
Exploring - OPEN
In time, she rode Naga again. Once there had been food for both of them. She couldn't quite get her mind around this place - it was like Deerington but not...but she felt the same sense of the place. Like there was constantly something wrong. Something foreboding...
In the back of her mind, she felt it. The sense that she should...give up, accept the place. Face the future, turn from the past. It might even have worked, but she was still the Avatar - and the Avatar, even shorn from the direct memories of her predecessors, was a product of the past. To give it up would mean to...shed herself, in many ways.
And either out of stubbornness or will, Korra couldn't do that. Couldn't be that. She would not let this place lull her - she would find out what it was, what it was doing. If it was as malevolent as she had believed Deerington itself to be.
And thus, she explored. In the rest times, she worked on the driftwood she had found, out of some half-forgotten instinct. She could almost feel Aang smiling on her. She used fire, and water, and air to shape it, smooth it, add a shine. It was something to do while she thought, at first. But then it became something to finish.
She could be found many places, either on foot or riding astride Naga - the newly-made staff in her hand. She looked better than she had in Deerington - rested, fit, healed. In a word, ready.

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She shakes her head at him, letting out a brief gust of flame from a hand to at least get the worst of that ice away.
"Well, at least we know I'll be getting you an umbrella for your birthday," she begins.
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"That... would actually be nice," he says, and shakes off the rest of the cold. "I don't know where to buy basic stuff here. You know money is just rocks? That you can... find?"
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"Get in here before you freeze," she adds.
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Since he so often won't do it himself.
"Sounds like it wasn't great even before it got all...monster-iffic," she replied, pointing at the living room.
"You, go warm up. I'll make some tea."
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He really hopes so, because Mako is really starting to have to ration the tea he found in his bag. A little bit of jasmine doesn't last very long when you're brewing it for yourself and Wu and Bolin.
It's strange to sink down, still steaming from the rain, onto a sofa in a strange place, thinking it belongs to Korra. Naga is sprawled in there, lifts her head in something like greeting, and Mako diverts to go pet her first, pressing his fingers into her familiar fur with a quiet smile.
"Hey, girl," he murmurs, just for her. "Glad you made it. This place should give you more room to run, huh?"
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Meanwhile, Korra's working on the tea, calling from the other room. "This one's supposed to be made from leaves," she said, using her hands to spark some fire beneath the pot.
"It doesn't smell like a mushroom, at least."
A minute or two later, she was coming into the other room, carrying a tray with two cups, some biscuits, and a steaming pot of tea.
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It smells like home, warm and familiar, and that makes Mako smile faintly as he sits up to take the tray from her with a soft murmur of thanks.
Almost normal, to sit across from her like this, to dole out cups for them both and avoid Naga's thumping tail and settle in the warmth, watching Korra's face. When everything is poured and tea is steaming fragrant up from small cups—smelling of leaves, and not like mushrooms—Mako shifts just a little, trying to find the words he wants to say from the swirling maelstrom in his head. He could so easily mess all of this up again. Anxiety knotted in his belly makes everything a lot harder, reminds him of the consequences of saying the wrong thing. He almost let Korra go, once, and that was awful.
Mako doesn't want to repeat that, no matter what.
Sucking in a breath, he lifts his cup to her. "I'm really glad you made it in one piece, Korra. Don't know what this place would be like without you."
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"And without you, the town's staunch protector." She takes a first sip. "Though I think the place would be just fine without me."
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There's a certain kind of resignation in his voice, borne of years of chaos: where there are people, it just kind of happens, and here more often than not. Mako's a little too aware of the other reasons they might need her here (to remind Mako what's right, to provide an alternative) but he doesn't have the words for any of that yet.
But it does remind him the real reason he came her, the reason he meets her eyes a moment later. Mako's bad at small talk, blunt to a fault, and he lets it out more around Korra. "Are you feeling okay about staying here?"
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She pauses after that, picking up her tea.
"And I'm living with Asami from the get-go, so...I'm not missing her every day. So, for now, we're here. Then we'll undoubtedly be somewhere else."
She raises her cup.
"Here's to that next place being Republic City again."
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The hard words. Last time he said them, she'd crumpled, forced into a choice she never should have had to make, a choice that maybe forced them into the world they're in now. What does that mean? What did their choices do? Mako still doesn't know. He doesn't think anyone was right: it was a trap, with all bad answers, a way to set them up for failure like everything else in the dream, as far as he's concerned.
He can do it.
"I don't," he starts, quiet. "It doesn't seem like there's... a way. For that to happen."
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"I'm patient," she replied, with a half smile. Now, at least. "Hard lessons have helped with that, over the years. I'll do what's in front of me, help who I can...but this isn't home and I don't know if I could ever let it be that. If I could ever trust such a place, given to us by the hands of the cruel."
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She gestured with both hands.
"And here we are. This doesn't look like a reward for good behaviour to me."
She fell silent for a moment, sipping at her tea.
"There's nothing for me to fight. Not yet. Just the things we're told are monsters we can't bring back. I don't trust it. I don't trust them." He'd know full well who she meant by that. She shook her head, before running fingers through her hair.
"I don't like it. It's better, but...it's never going to be home. I've got Asami here, I've got you and Wu and everyone...but I'm not giving up. Maybe it'll be the hobby of a lifetime, figuring out how this place works. I don't know. But I can't accept this place as a permanent - I mean, why would I? Asami should be back in Republic City, making the future. And if I can find a way to get her back there..."
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It's a complicated thing, isn't it? Home has never meant anything more than the city and people for Mako: home was something of a luxury, a thing for other people. Even the few homes they did manage just kept getting destroyed.
More than that, he and Wu tried being at home, and...
"It's weird," Mako finally says with a shrug. "I should feel the same way. Like I need to get out of this place at any cost, but... you should've seen Wu's face when he found the old theater, Korra. I've never seen him like that."
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"Well, you've both got different ties back in Republic City than I do. And here there's none of the challenge you'd face back home. None of the challenge any of us would face."
"And you've found a purpose together here, which helps."
She also can't help but ask, a half-smile coming to her face.
"How did he look? I'm imagining him practically crying sparklers."
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Even if that was a little too squishy, and by the time Mako finishes talking his face is sort of blueish with embarrassment and he isn't meeting Korra's eyes.
"I can't take that from him."
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She nodded at the latter.
"Do you think it's like you said before - there's still some version of us back there?"
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Mako has a hard time with this part. He's a rational person, he trusts his own head over his heart or his gut most of the time, and his head says it should be impossible. It's the reason for his long, quiet pause, for reaching over to pet Naga again while he gets up the courage to say something that he would probably never have said, before.
"I don't know if I believe it." The words are soft. "I want to. Maybe it's just wishful thinking, but... before you even woke up in the dream, Wu had to deal with some other version of me from another world. It's definitely possible."
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"Yeah, that's officially too much weird for me. I'm ok with being pulled out of the universe, but the idea of a potentially unlimited number of me's running around creeps me right out."
She manages a half-smile.
"Well, clearly he learned from the experience how to do it right."
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"Because the squid thing? Was the absolute worst, and I just remember bits of it."
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"And it's the Pthumerians, so we couldn't trust the answers even if we found them.
She shook her head, taking a deep sip of tea.
"I'm at a loss for what to do. Like, the beasts. Part of me thinks I should be stopping them, but - what if they all used to be people?"
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