Summer Apples

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After supper Sokka had taken to going for walks in the palace gardens. The late summer, air redolent with the scents of jasmine and wisteria, tuberose and moonflower,offered respite from thick heat which clung to the furniture and curtains indoors. Another week and he would return to Republic City. Usually that would make him happy. Since breaking up with Suki trips to the Palace were fraught with awkwardness.

This last month he found his return to Republic City less and less desirable, and kept manufacturing reasons to stay, and it was only recently that he admitted what those reasons were.
Or more correctly who.

“Sokka.” Azula stepped out from behind a tree. “How pleasant to find you here.” She was, according to Zuko, turning over a new leaf, trying hard to be accepted, though most people weren’t receptive. Polite but cold was how Zuko put it. The way he and Suki were now. “So maybe if you could be a little friendly with her when you meet her. I know it is a lot to ask.“
And it was. At first.
“As you told me yesterday, a stroll after a meal is good for digestion.”
“It is. In fact I was about to go for a stroll in the apple orchard.”
Sokka approached her. “I didn’t even know you had an apple orchard. Would you show it to me?”
Azula shrugged.smiled. “If you would like.you may,“ she condescended.  She turned and waved  her hand at the tree she just came from behind. “It is a bit far from the Palace.”
“I’m strong,” he assured her. Coming closer to her he saw that indeed, there was a dirt path through a copse of wood. “It’s around that stone outcrop.”  He could barely make out the stone outcrop in the gathering twilight.
“A large orchard I expect.”
“Not so large.” Azula told him. “Just 100 trees,“ she said, and stepped onto the path.
Sokka followed. Neither said a word until they came to the orchard. ”
“The apple orchard was begun seven years ago.” They walked through the orchard, and Azula pointed out all the different types of trees, their growing season, what they were best meant for. “And these,” she came to a stop before seven trees, whose limbs were heavy with fruit. “This is the reason we have apples at all. It started,“ she leaned against one tree. “With this tree. And the six trees on either side of this one. This was the first apple tree planted. The sweetest apples you could ever hope to taste.”
Sokka came to stand beside her. “Oh? I thought apple trees were grafted.“
Azula frowned a bit then went on. “Of course.However, these seven trees came from elsewhere. These seven trees had been in the garden of the daughter of a Warlord. The warlord who lived here,” she circled her arms to indicate the island. “Married a rival’s daughter. ”
“Oh? A rival’s daughter.” Sokka stepped closer to her, so he could more easily see her face. It was growing dark, especially there among the trees.
“Yes.” Azula bit her lip. “And as a gift, to help his daughter feel more at home, he planted these trees right here.”
“Far from the palace?”
“It wasn’t so far then. The warlord lived just over there…” she pointed to a plain nearby. There were ruins, though whether a wall or a former palace Sokka couldn’t tell.
“Did they love each other? The warlord and his bride?“ Sokka reached an arm over her shoulder, and touched the tree, stroking it.
“Very much. They often picnicked here.”
“Oh?”
Azula nodded“These are the sweetest apples in the orchard. In the world. And of all the trees, this one bears the sweetest fruit.”  Sokka looked upward. A branch hung low. Azula lay one hand on his shoulder and with her other hand reached upward. Sokka looked up. A apple hung from a branch above their head, just out of reach of her fingers. “It’s too high. Or I’d pick one and let you taste.” Sokka reached up, his hand alongside of hers.
“Too high for me as well. Perhaps I could…“
“Lift me?” She rested her other hand on his other shoulder while his hands slipped down to her waist. She pressed down with her hands and he lifted her up, one arm stretched above her head and came down with the apple. Sokka lowered her to the ground.
Azula held the apple between their lips. “Would like to taste?” she asked?
Sokka lifted one hand from her waist and pressed the apple away.
“I thought you would never ask,” he said.
And Azula leaned forward to meet his lips.

School Days

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“… and keep your lines straight,“ Azula instructed. “Make certain that all your tools remain in their proper order as I have displayed here.” She spread her hands, indicating the items on the table in front of her.  "Do not, at any time…”

“Lady Azula,” began one of the teachers.”

“Let me handle it,” Sokka said, having come to the weekly Mother Present’s Day" for this very purpose.  

Azula frowned.“You are interupting my presentation,” she hissed at her husband.
“The presentees are three. It is probably considered a successful day if no one picks their nose while pasting on the pom-poms.”
The teacher and her aide nodded.
Azula’s eyes went wide.
“And on no account,” she went on sternly “must anyone pick their noses. Is that clear!”
Several more children began to cry. “At ease.”
The children didn’t move, but stood straight and tall as they had been ordered.
“You can sit down,“ Sokka told them.
The children, save for Cami, who had learned “at ease” when she was two, still didn’t move.
“Tell them to sit down Azula,” he begged.
“They aren’t yet at ease!”
“They are three!”
Sokka slapped his face with his palm.
“Please tell them to sit.”
Azula sighed, “Sit down and begin your work,“ she told them.
While the work the children produced was exceptional, the teachers agreed never to have Azula back again for Mommy’s day.

She was, however, called to come to every field trip that the children of the school participated in.
No child dared to step out of line, shout out a question, fail to bring the required items, fought on the bus to or from wherever they were going or dared touch anything they hadn’t been given explicit permission to touch, as long as she was along on the trip.
Not only were the teaches less stressed, but they received glowing notes of thanks from every place that they went.
It was with a great deal of sorrow that the schools watched the last of Azula’s children don graduation hats and sail off to their next phase of life.
Their only hope was that soon, soon, the oldest would have children of her own.
It was said she was quite a bit like her mother.

salixj:

Within five minutes it was over. The bunny-mouse disappeared into its den, the falcon-rat took off to the skies.
Sokka sat back into the swing, and flung his arm over Azula’s shoulder. “One hungry falcon-rat tonight!” he said with a laugh. He turned to Azula. She wasn’t smiling.
“What? You wanted the falcon-rat to win against that poor bunny-mouse?”
Azula frowned. “Why do people always do that? Root for bunny-mouse over the falcon-rat.
“Well because, because …” Sokka drew his eyebrows together. “Usually they don’t win, and so when they do, well celebrate!”
“They win more than you think Sokka and …” She leaned forward, hands pressed together, held between her knees. “Bunny-mice win, falcon-rats lose, and vice versa. If bunny-mice lose too much they will cease to exist.  If the falcon-rats lose too much they will cease to exist. And then the bunny-mice will become pests, attacking gardens, crops.

“So you did want the falcon-rat to win then?”
Azula shook her head. “No. I wanted whoever was stronger, smarter, more fleet, fitter for the situation to win. I wanted the winner to win.

“It’s like this.” She took his hand between hers, interlocking their fingers. “When things work well they work together. Enough bunnies-mice are left to that they can grow and produce more bunny-mice. Enough falcon-rats catch bunny-mice so that they continue.”

“Falcon-rats also catch trouts you know. Maybe our falcon-rat has gotten itself a nice fat trout instead,” Sokka said, as he lifted Azula’s hand to his mouth and gave it a kiss. 

“I know it did,“ she said, sighing softly as Sokka wrapped his arm about her. 

Contest

salixj:

Just fluff, and a quick write. Not really that good but I had fun.
For Sokkal day, but I can’t post because it is Shabbat.


Zuko peeked into the training room. Azula and Sokka were heads down feet up, arms locked behind their heads.  Sokka began to totter, righted himself, lost control again and then BANG! down on his derriere.  Sokka began to protest his loss. “You’re lighter!” he complained. 

Keep reading

Every Thirty Years

salixj:

(Sorry, mixed up my weeks)

Close to midnight,
as had become their custom, Azula and Sokka took the lift up to the
Cave of Doors and walked about, wishing a silent “goodnight” to
all their children, each of whom had decided to remain on the island
after they had wed.

“Midnight,”
Sokka said, after they had finished their rounds. He sat down on the
sill of the window facing out over the ocean. “Happy 30th
anniversary.”

“Happy anniversary.” Azula settled her
crutches against the wall and sat down beside him.

“Well?” he
asked.

“Well
what?/”

“Aren’t you going to ask me?”

“Ask
you what?”

Sokka grinned; “What
was the first question you asked me after we were married?” He lay
his forehead against Azula’s. “As we are on our way to our
honeymoon”

Azula laughed. “I was so afraid you’d
regret it. I still couldn’t believe you wanted me.”

“Well?” he
prompted again.

“Oh, that’s
right!” Azula put on a serious face. “Sokka, are you certain you
made the right decision marrying me?”

Sokka smiled.“Ask
me in thirty years. I should know by then.”

As she had
done that day, thirty years before, Azula returned his smile, then
lay her head against his chest.  “Ask me in forever.”

Sweet Reality

salixj:

Sokkla Drabble Challenge: WORD: Dream

Sokka went silent, just as Azula predicted, the moment they rounded the bend. Azula crossed the small stream, stepping from one rock to the other to the large stone table, then headed to the boulder near the pools edge.

“Well?” she asked as she  tossed down her knapsack and bedroll down and turned to look back at her husband. Husband. “Have a chosen a good honeymoon spot?”

He hadn’t moved, his mouth gaped as he twisted to see the chartreuse, violet, scarlet and gold leaves reflected in the pools water, the tiered waterfall to the distant right, sparkling in the afternoon sun, the smaller waterfall that emptied just across from them creating a curtain of water that flowed over a rocky overhang. 

“I’m asleep,” he told her.

Azula smiled back at him. “I pray not,” she told him. “Because then I’d be asleep as well.” She held her hand out towards  him and he was soon beside her.

“Well wife,” he said, cupping her chin with his hand. “Considering that we are all alone here on this island, there are things I’d much rather do than sleep.”
Azula couldn’t help but to concur.

Life-write

salixj:

Sokkla Drabble Challenge

How she’d sit beside him at the head of the table, state “No politics at dinner” then deftly tune the chords of the conversation so when politics were discussed, never in her presence, the song was his. Pacts made, treaties signed, deals brokered.

How with a glance she’d encourage their children to try again, but never made them fear.

How beside the window, fresh from her bath, the morning sun created sparks of red and gold in her hair.

How she exercised till sweat beaded on her brow never ceding the belief that someday she’d walk again.

“You inspire me Azula,” Sokka said once, kneeling beside her wheelchair. “Every poem, every novel I write, from you.

“You inspire my writing as well,” she told him.

He stood, laughing. “You write math, science, history, logic. Am I as dull as that?" 

Azula placed her hands on his shoulders, pulled him down onto the bed, facing her.
"It’s my life I write Sokka.  How I love you and our children, how I speak to the servants, host charity balls.  My life’s what I write.  Without you my book would be anger, hate, fear, lonliness. You inspire me Sokka. You’re my muse.”