sooo.... anyone else ever wondered how different ATLA would have been if aang had been frozen at age 16 instead of age 12?
yeah... me too đ my new fanfic "the teenager in the iceberg" follows the events of the show, but with only aang aged up, while everyone else remains their canon age.
also...cmon....how funny is it to switch zuko and aang's iconic dialogue to "you're just a teenager!" "...so are you?"
this idea was originally inspired by the talented @allgremlinart's aged up aang drawings, so please go show them some love!!:)<3
enjoy the excerpts from chapters one and two!
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Aang chuckled, pushing himself up with his hands on his knees. He was⊠taller than Katara had realised, taller than Sokka. He rubbed a hand on the back of his neck, turning to look over his shoulder at the remains of the boulder-sized chunk of ice he had just been blasted out of. âAang. My nameâs Aang.â He hesitated, momentarily seeming to puzzle something over. âAnd honestly? No clue. Donât remember how me andâŠAppa!â He yelped, suddenly scrambling back over the hill of ice and snow. Katara followed him without thinking, and Sokka, grumbling under his breath, followed moments later.Â
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âSo, youâve brought a monster to invade the village, then? Youâre some incognito Fire Nation soldier sent in as an undercover scout? Well, Iâll have you know that Iâm the villageâs strongest warrior, a-â
âThe only warrior,â Katara chimed in, lightly elbowing Sokkaâs side, earning herself a responding glare.Â
âThe strongest warrior.â Sokka reiterated. âAnd I donât much like firebenders.â He added the words pointedly.
âAh.â Aang titled his head. âThatâs a shame. Some of my closest friends are Fire Nation.â
âOf course they are,â Sokka glared, hunching over into a defensive position and adjusting his fishing spear until it pointed directly at Aang.
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Katara still wasnât quite sure what to make of Aang. The Water Tribe boys had always been all flashy muscles, seal-jerky breath, and overconfidence, so Katara had never seen someone move, carry themself, the way Aang did.Â
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Katara had admittedly forgotten how much fun penguin sledding was. âSpirits, I havenât done this since I was a kid!â she called to Aang as he raced past her, surprisingly skilled considering that heâd never even seen a penguin until half an hour before.Â
âYou still are a kid!â He called back over his shoulder. âA kid whoâs losing this race, badly !â
Kataraâs competitive streak reared its head, her eyes narrowing as Aang stuck out his tongue. She sat up slightly, no longer gripping the penguinâs fur as tightly. âYou wish!â She shouted back the words as she raised her hands, breathing deeply. Her hands moved through the positions she had practised from the few bending scrolls the tribe still held on to, and before Aang knew it, the snow in front of Katara turned to ice, and she shot past him as his own ice trail suddenly became dry snow with too much friction to slide on.Â
She made it to the bottom of the hill, beaming, breathing heavily. The wind had whipped her hair out of her bun, and she knew without checking that her hair must have looked like a lion-turtleâs mane. She watched as Aang made a show of drying himself off with a gust of wind that he then redirected at her, messing up her curls even more.Â
âYouâre a cheater !â Aang gasped, mockingly clutching imaginary pearls at his throat. âI demand a rematch.â
Katara strode past him, only turning her head to cast him a smug smirk. âMaybe youâre just not as good of a penguin sledder as you thought .â
âOh, not so fast!â Aang grabbed her wrist, tugging her back towards him, and she internally questioned why the momentary brush of their skin made her heart flip. He tried to trip her, she tried to flip him, and they both ended up on their backs in the snow, giggling, cheeks and noses bright pink from the cold.Â
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âTrouble sleeping too, huh?â Aang cocked a grin, tilting his head to Katara. She kept her eyes fixed upwards, trained on the moon and the stars, worried that if she looked away, sheâd end up staring into his eyes like a weirdo.Â
âI always feel so awake with the moonâs light on me. Sleeping under the stars has never really been a thing that works. Itâs too energising, too⊠too much. Itâs hard to explain.â
âNo, no⊠I get it. I feel the same way in a windstorm, all those breezes and gusts of wind, it feels⊠exhilarating.â She watched through her peripheral vision as he looked up at the moon. âIn times of war, I think we all tend to forget how spiritual bending is at its core. Iâd say itâs a good thing that youâre in touch enough with the origins of your abilities to feel the moonâs pull tug at you just as much as it does on the ocean.âÂ
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Aang smiled back. âNow is our time to try to make up for that. I canât bring back everyone who was hurt in this war, and you canât bring back your mother, but together, the two-, three of us can make sure it doesnât happen to anyone else.â
âIâd like that,â Katara exhaled, her breath calming down and tears dissipating. The two spent hours talking back and forth, exchanging the stories of their respective childhoods. Katara learned that Aang had invented several new bending moves and had been a big fan of fruit pies, while Aang learned that Katara had always been the bossier one between her and Sokka and that she had almost chipped a tooth on seal jerky when she was six. They continued talking back and forth in increasingly hushed tones until the world faded away under the cover of clouds and sleep.
Katara awoke to the loud shout of her brother.Â
âWakey wakey, lovebirds!â he yelped, chucking a rock-hard stick of seal jerky at both of them.Â
âOuch, Sokka !â Katara snapped at him, rubbing her head at the spot where she had been hit, before realising that she was leaning against Aang and immediately jumping away, blushing furiously.Â
âPsht,â Aang rolled his eyes, sending a breeze to blow back Sokkaâs sandy hair. âKataraâs a friend, Sokka. Dependable, just like Appa, or Momo.â
âThanks.â Katara said flatly, pretending to suddenly be interested in observing the sand at her feet. Dependable. He sure did know what a girl wanted to hear.
âHah, maybe you should go into the jewellery business, instead of doing your whole world-saving thing!â Sokka exclaimed from the waterâs edge, seemingly unaware of the tension that had been crackling between the two benders only moments before.Â
 âI donât see why I canât do both!â Aang ambled over to him, leaving Katara thoroughly confused and more than a little hurt. âI would say that you should start a business too, but it looks like you donât have too much of a chance of breaking into the fishing industry.â
âMmm, care to help? I donât see you doing much more than watching from the sidelines.â Sokka shot him with the daggers in his eyes.
âA vegetarian fisher?â Aang raised an eyebrow, but walked into the water alongside Sokka regardless.
âMaybe you can do the bookkeeping for the business. I think you have the potential to have a real head for numbers.â The fish shot up beside Sokka, splashing teasingly, and Sokka lunged, only to come up with empty hands yet again.
Aang doubled over, weak with laughter, which was made worse when the fish came up yet again, just to splash Sokka with a small wave of water. âI think to have a bookkeeper, you need to be able to catch fish to sell,â he managed through his chuckling.
âYeah, alright, Air-Boy.â Sokka fixed him with another glare, and before Aang could dart out of the water, Sokka tackled him, managing to submerge him for only a couple seconds before Aang erupted from the water in a burst of wind, using the waterbending heâd already learned to combat Sokkaâs overeager splashing.Â
Katara giggled, settling back onto one of the larger rocks, but her smile faded as she watched the way Aangâs eyes shone in merriment, the way he grinned playfully. Kataraâs a friend.
She couldnât stop replaying the words over and over again, even as Sokka finally caught and roasted his fish, even as she and Aang foraged for the nuts and berries that would make up his dinner, even as she extinguished that nightâs cooking fire.
Kataraâs a friend.
She wasnât sure if that was fully true. Not after the way she felt when she looked up at him, not after the way heâd jumped to protect her from Jet, not after the way her heart leapt into her throat at every accidental touch.Â
Was this only friendship, to him?
She cast a sidelong glance to Aang, curled up with Momo under woven orange-and-yellow sleeping sheets. Moonlight danced across the planes of his cheekbones, his skin sparkling as if cast from mica.Â
It was as if the moon spirits themselves were marking him as hers.Â
Wordlessly, she leaned over him, quietly adjusting the branches to his right until the moon caught on the leaves above him, until his face was no longer illuminated.Â
He wasnât hers. She wasnât sure why she had to keep reminding herself of that.Â
we don't talk enough about how often katara saves aang. like she fully figured out how to pull water from somebody's LUNGS for him. ugh i love her!!!!
the following is an excerpt from my kataang multichapter fic called "the teenager in the iceberg", where aang is aged up to 16 in order to flip him and katara's dynamic into she falls first, he falls harder. this is from chapter four, which JUST DROPPED TODAY!!:D <3
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 She watched in horror as dark fins began to rise from the water, and Aang looked back at her with fear in his eyes. He rose from the water, struggling to hold on to the shiny scales of the Unagi. The beastâs head rose out of the water alongside its torso, and it tipped its head curiously at the sight of Aang on its back, baring its teeth as it did. Aang jumped, swinging on the creatureâs whiskers, trying to evade its sword-sized teeth. Without notice, it snapped its jaws open, unnaturally wide to the point of unhinging, and a concentrated jet of water shot out of its throat, sending Aang flying across the bay towards Katara. Even from the distance she was at, she could see that his body had landed wrong, unnatural, crumpled.
âAANG!â She shouted, wading into the water as quickly as she could, hoping with all her will that she could somehow outrun this ancient serpent hell bent on getting to Aang before she could. Aang didnât stir. Against her own pessimistic judgement of their odds of survival, Katara somehow managed to scoop Aang against her, holding him tight. He was unconscious, and she couldnât see if he was breathing. Another bolt of fear struck through her. Through blurry vision made hazy by fear and anger, Katara watched the Unagi rear its head again, but instead of holding Aang against her and waiting for their inevitable end, she struck back.
It happened so quickly, the wave of water that mirrored the rising tide of anger crashing through Kataraâs own body. Her hand moved as if she wasnât in complete control, and perhaps she wasnât. Perhaps the spirits of water had looked kindly upon the two kindred souls. Or perhaps, Katara had simply moved in accordance with what the pure adrenaline that seemed to replace her very blood demanded.Â
The two of them were thrown backwards, Kataraâs wave of water pushing them to the safety of the shore. She allowed herself only a second to catch her breath before rolling over to check on Aang.
Still, the Airbender did not stir.
âAang. Please , wake up.â
He did not breathe.
She closed her eyes, running her hand along his chest, the heat that normally radiated from him snuffed out entirely. She could feel water there, in his lungs, weighing them down. The wrongness of it . She could feel the liquid tugging at her, the molecules themselves wishing to return to the ocean from whence they came.
She obliged them.
Katara coaxed out a thin tendril of the seawater, watching nervously as Aang shuddered involuntarily as the stream of liquid flowed through his lips. He coughed. Coughed again.
Another cough, and his eyes opened, and she was met with the comforting vibrance of his storm-cloud eyes.Â
âK-Katara,â He managed, the words strained by salt and sea. âDonât ride the Unagi. Not fun .â
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to everybody who suggested "16-year old aang" as a prompt on this year's kataang week submissions, i actually am currently writing a multichapter AU where aang was frozen at 16, and it is kataang!!! it's called "the teenager in the iceberg":)<3
if 16-year-old aang doesn't get chosen as a prompt for kataang week, but it's something you'd love to see in a fic, feel free to check out the first four chapters!!!
You can vote for your seven favorite prompts HERE.
Thank you to everyone who submitted prompt ideas and shared the announcement post! Â And please do not be discouraged if prompts you submitted or voted for get cut - as always, there will be a free day in addition to the seven main prompts. Â This means you can use any of the prompts that were initially listed - or come up with your own ideas! Â
This round of voting will close at the end of the day on Tuesday, May 7th!
Please reblog and spread the word!
We are using a new system this year and no longer using SurveyMonkey or SurveyPlanet. We have switched to Google Forms. Please note the different interfaces.
Prompts that were similar to each other have been combined, just separated with a slash. For example: Glow/Glowing. Some submissions were longer than the one to two words/short phrases limit, so those longer phrases were not accepted.
In total, we had 142 prompts submitted and then consolidated into 115 prompts this year. Thanks again to everyone who submitted!
- The Mods
actually crying over this interaction katara has in my fic on kyoshi island where she realizes how nice it is to have girlfriends
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âGuess what your brotherâs up toâŠâ Ayiti was beaming, barely holding back her laughter now.
âSpirits, Iâm not sure I even want to know.â Katara rolled her eyes, carefully curling up the centuries old paper in front of her and tucking it alongside the others in her cloth satchell. âWhat, did he accidentally get a sword stuck in some important monument after bragging to some poor unassuming villager about his swordsmanship?â
âBetter.â Ayitiâs eyes flashed with amusement as she settled into the plush stool opposite Katara. She reached forward, hands resting on the varnished wooden table as her elegantly almond shaped nails drummed rhythmically in anticipation. âI missed his grand entrance, but apparently, heâs been set on helping us poor, untrained Kyoshi warriors! He pranced his way in, going on and on about how heâs the best warrior in his tribe. I got there just in time to see Suki wipe the floor with him.â
Katara groaned in embarrassment, burying her head in her hands as she slumped against the table.Â
âNo, no, you donât need to be too embarrassed for him.â Ayiti rested a comforting hand on Kataraâs arm as the Water tribe girl looked up, her scepticism apparent in her expression. âHe was actually pretty sweet after Suki humbled him. He said he was ready to learn, that he had been overly cocky when he came in.â
Katara wrinkled her nose. âThat doesnât sound like the Sokka I know.â
âWe were surprised too! He let us paint his face in the traditional style of Kyoshi warriors, even put on the armoured gown too!â Ayiti giggled again, remembering. âAlthough he was a little embarrassed when Aang saw him in it. I think Sokka interpreted Aangâs attempt to compliment him as Aang poking a little fun at him.â
âWhatâs Aang been up to, anyways?â Katara tried to make the question seem thoughtless, throwing in a shrug to accompany her words, but Ayitiâs shrewd expression saw right through her.Â
âWouldnât you like to know!â She crooned, a teasing grin on her face. âCâmon, youâve gotta get your mind off of the Avatar, and youâve had your nose buried in scrolls the whole day. Let me show the future Waterbending master around my little old village.â
Ayiti helped Katara gather the rest of the scrolls and drop them off in the guesthouse, then dragged her between the different stalls, chattering animatedly. Katara had never really gotten to have a girlfriend her age, and she couldnât believe all that sheâd missed out on. For once, she felt her age. Back home, she took care of so many of the village kids whose parents had been lost to fire nation raids. She felt like it was her responsibility, that it was the least she could do, and she did enjoy it.
But perhaps she hadnât quite grasped what it had taken out of her.
For every hour Sokka spent hunting for food and training to be a warrior, Katara spent parenting children, washing laundry, cooking, cleaning, repairing homes and weapons. She wished for maybe the millionth time that she and her brother had been able to have proper childhoods, present parents to lift that burden from them. She remembered Aang reminding her that she still was a kid.Â
Here, walking around the market with Ayiti, she slipped into conversation excitedly, the twoâs conversation oscillating between mentions of what the war had taken from them and more lighthearted teasing, and she was beyond grateful for the simplicity of a friend who saw her.Â
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sooo.... anyone else ever wondered how different ATLA would have been if aang had been frozen at age 16 instead of age 12?
yeah... me too đ my new fanfic "the teenager in the iceberg" follows the events of the show, but with only aang aged up, while everyone else remains their canon age.
also...cmon....how funny is it to switch zuko and aang's iconic dialogue to "you're just a teenager!" "...so are you?"
this idea was originally inspired by the talented @allgremlinart's aged up aang drawings, so please go show them some love!!:)<3
enjoy the excerpts from chapter three, that just dropped this morning!
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Katara watched Aang take one last, painful look at the temple, then turn to the sky ahead, lit up in shades of orange, pink, and gold. She swore she could see arrows in every cloud, arrows like the ones inked across Aangâs body, and the gentle breeze that carried the crisp night air towards them seemed to wrap around them like a loving spirit.
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â...You have no idea where weâre going, do you?â Sokka sighed, turning the map that was held against Appaâs saddle with a couple of rocks toward himself. âIâve been charting our progress, and itâs starting to look more like a scrap of paper a toddler is practising circles on than a navigational tool.â
âCâmon Sokka, Iâm an Air nomad, travel is in my blood. I have a very strong internal compass. Besides, youâll find that as a nomad, Iâm a master of evasive manoeuvring.â Katara raised an eyebrow, looking up from her spot near the back of the saddle as she stitched a rip in Sokkaâs pants. âBesides,â Aang continued, typical teenage boy overconfidence emitting from his tone of voice. âI know itâs near water.â
Sokka leaned over the edge of the saddle, eyes scanning the blue expanse below them that stretched as far as the eye could see. âWe must be getting close then,â he scoffed, his tone dripping in sarcasm as he slouched back into his spot across from Katara.
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âAang,â she said distractedly, âcould you hold this for me?â She handed him the mirror.Â
âY-yeah, no problem.â
She tugged out her hair ties, flipping her head upside down for a moment to make sure that it had all gotten loose, then she gingerly tugged a few tendrils of water from the nearby ocean and wrapped tiny streams around her hair, tugging out the crimped braid pattern and reviving her curls. Then, she carefully bent the remaining liquid back out.Â
She couldnât see his face through her thick hair as she stood back up, but from his voice, Aang seemed impressed. âI get that you havenât been able to learn any big combat moves, but for someone whose bending is self- taught, you sure have a pretty good handle on these smaller things.â
She properly flipped her head up now, curls and waves bouncing around her face. Her dark brown locks shone with honey-toned highlights, all different shades of caramel and chocolate sparkling as they framed her face. She reached up, gently twisting and clipping a few strands out of the way, but a few wayward pieces still fell forward, gently brushing against soft, full lips and smooth skin. Aang awkwardly froze for a moment, caught off guard by how different she looked when her hair was loose and free. He had a weird urge to tell her so, but bit his tongue, instead focusing on her answer.Â
âI learned most of the smaller things from helping Gran-Gran.â Kataraâs eyes sparkled, clearly caught up in a vision of home as she reached up to brush up her hair. â As sheâs gotten older, her range of mobility has started leaving her. Itâs not really comfortable or safe for her to stoop over to wash her hair, so I learned how to bring the water to her and wash it while she was sitting up, then I learned how to dry it for her fast.â
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Sokka yelped, his voice defensive and offensive all at once. âThere is no way a bunch of girls in cutesy makeup and dresses managed to tie me up.â
âAwe, you think our makeup is cutesy? How sweet .â The girl's voice was crooning at first, sweet and gentle, but Katara could see from the way her muscles flexed as she held Sokka by the collar that there was venom hiding behind those words. She was right. âThrow him to the Unagi.â
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âKatara, câmon, weâre supposed to be sticking together, where are you going?â Aang tugged at her arm until she was facing him, looking at her earnestly as if he hadnât basically been flirting with all of those girls back there.
The words came out before she could stop them. âI thought monks werenât supposed to go around flirting with any random girl, and theyâre definitely not supposed to go around catering to a village full of fangirls.â
Aang raised an eyebrow, his expression teasing in a way that made Katara want to splash the smirk off of his face in a wave of water. âYou sure have a lot of opinions on what you think monks are supposed to do, considering that Iâm the only one youâve ever met.â He shifted his weight, leaning in a bit closer. âMatter of fact, maybe it's just that you have a lot of opinions on what you think Iâm supposed to be doing.â
Katara stiffened at the memory of the words that Sokka had just said minutes before. âWhy would I care what youâre doing? I donât. â
Aang shrugged, reaching past her to grab a papaya and biting into it. After swallowing, he reached into Kataraâs satchel, his hand brushing her waist as he pulled out some coins and quietly thanked the vendor. âKeep telling yourself that, Katara.â Hearing her name from his lips did something to her, but she kept her gaze level, eyes blazing with flame until Aang backed off.
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"why are you so quiet, what's on your mind?"
"oh, nothing, just aang admiring katara without realizing he's in love with her"
guys, i am SO excited for tomorrow's new chapter of "the teenager in the iceberg" there's gonna be some great moment & generally im excited to start progressing past the first few episodes
here's a teaser excerpt!
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Sokka immediately jumped off, almost kissing the sand in relief, and Aang followed close behind. Katara moved to stand up and join them, but a combination of that nerve-sick feeling and a bit of light-headedness had her slipping a little, stumbling off the saddle. She wouldâve landed face-first in the sand, but Aang smoothly caught her with a current of air, then offered a hand.Â
Once she was safe on the ground, Katara blushed, embarrassed that sheâd lost her balance that easily. She moved to tell Aang, only to have Sokka take one look at her and burst out laughing.Â
âWhat?!â She snapped, suddenly overly self-conscious.
âYour hair!â He cackled, a shaking finger pointing at her. Confused, Katara reached out her hand to draw a tendril of water from the cold morning sea. She concentrated, forming it first into a sphere and then a flat oval, then stilled the water so that she could see her reflectionâŠ
Only to drop the water in surprise when she finally saw what Sokka was talking about. Her carefully done hair was snarled around in its braids, bits of it loose and bits of it still intact. She huffed in annoyance, then fished out a small glass mirror and her hairbrush.Â
âAang,â she said distractedly, âcould you hold this for me?â She handed him the mirror.Â
âY-yeah, no problem.â
She tugged out her hair ties, flipping her head upside down for a moment to make sure that it had all gotten loose, then she gingerly tugged a few tendrils of water from the nearby ocean and wrapped tiny streams around her hair, tugging out the crimped braid pattern and reviving her curls. Then, she carefully bent the remaining liquid back out.Â
She couldnât see his face through her thick hair as she stood back up, but from his voice, Aang seemed impressed. âI get that you havenât been able to learn any big combat moves, but for someone whose bending is self- taught, you sure have a pretty good handle on these smaller things.â
She properly flipped her head up now, curls and waves bouncing around her face. Her dark brown locks shone with honey-toned highlights, all different shades of caramel and chocolate sparkling as they framed her face. She reached up, gently twisting and clipping a few strands out of the way, but a few wayward pieces still fell forward, gently brushing against soft, full lips and smooth skin. Aang awkwardly froze for a moment, caught off guard by how different she looked when her hair was loose and free. He had a weird urge to tell her so, but bit his tongue, instead focusing on her answer.Â
ââșËł â§àŒ ËËË âĄ ËËËàŽŻ â©
sooo.... anyone else ever wondered how different ATLA would have been if aang had been frozen at age 16 instead of age 12?
yeah... me too đ my new fanfic "the teenager in the iceberg" follows the events of the show, but with only aang aged up, while everyone else remains their canon age.
also...cmon....how funny is it to switch zuko and aang's iconic dialogue to "you're just a teenager!" "...so are you?"
enjoy the excerpt from (the upcoming) third chapter!! updates every wednesday!!
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Aang led the way through the temple, and Katara winced at every single skeleton that lined the halls of the stone pathways carved through the sacred building. Aang couldnât look at them, didnât let himself look at them. Katara didnât blame him for it. She hadnât been able to look at the handful of bodies left after every Fire Nation raid, and yet, here were the bodies of all of his people, his entire culture.Â
She was snapped out of her spiralling train of thought by the screech of stone against stone as Aang funnelled air through a complex looking lock system, the gears driving it creaking from disuse. Sokka and Katara flinched, but Aang stayed still.Â
The door opened to hundreds, if not thousands, of stone statues, gazing unflinchingly back at them.
Sokka dropped into a defensive position out of habit, as if the statues would lunge toward them at any minute, and Katara just rolled her eyes and giggled at her brother, pushing past him as she stepped towards the statues in awe. Weaving between them, she stopped at one of a woman with traditional water tribe clothing that made her heart twist with homesickness. She felt Aang standing behind her, his exposed chest through his one-shoulder robes radiating heat in a way that made her face flush with colour.
He reached up over her to brush a finger against the statueâs delicately carved hair. âShe has your littleâŠhair thingies.â
Somewhat unconsciously, she reached up to brush her own loops of hair, grazing the white bone-beads with her ring finger. âI didnât realise the great Avatar paid attention to things like that.â
A teasing smile spread across Aangâs lips. âI think youâll find that Iâm a very attentive person.â He said the words innocently enough, but the way honey seemed to wrap around every syllable caught Katara off guard, sending warmth spreading down her spine as she momentarily forgot how to speak.
Aang grinned again, looking as though he was about to add something, before a chittery, squeaking noise echoed through the room, bouncing between statues. âWhat was that?â Sokka yelped, jumping away from the statue whose armour and sword he had been examining. The screech of metal against stone sounded from somewhere on Sokkaâs side of the room, and both Katara and Aang quickly wove between statues to join him, all three tensing.
From between the statues, the sound got louder, and a helmet dragged between the sculptures, moving haphazardly as it scraped against the floor.
âGHOSTIE!â Sokka yelped, jumping backwards as he pointed an accusatory finger at the helmet. Katara stayed silent, visibly pale. Aang looked back at the two of them, then faced the helmet again. He stepped through those same strange airbending forms, his movement ending with the sharp expulsion of wind from his fist. The helmet blew away, clattering against the stone, revealingâŠ.
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it's that time again...next ch of "the teenager in the iceberg" sneak peak!!!!!
kinda CW??: discussions of the air nomad genocide, loss of loved ones
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When he opened them again, all Katara could see were glowing eyes, blazing bright. Blazing with anger.Â
She barely had time to think before the wind began to whip around her and Sokka, sending leaves swirling. Sokka ducked under a couple larger branches that had broken off of the nearby fruit trees, dead and unused. Trees that had probably supplied the fruit for the Air Nomadâs traditional pies over a century ago. Aangâs tattoos and eyes were blazing blue now, glowing so brightly that it hurt to look over at him. Sokka ducked behind a stone, hoping it would provide cover as he beckoned to Katara to do the same.
But Katara refused.
Aang needs my help, she told herself as she pushed against the winds Aang sent in every direction. Aang needs my help. She repeated the mantra over and over, until sheâd finally pushed past the grassy, bone lined field and gotten within what she hoped was Aangâs hearing distance.Â
âAANG!â She shouted up at him as he began to levitate, a sphere of air and rock encircling him. She barely even recognized him this way, anger distorting his features, his muscle defined by the light emulating from him. All she could see was that rage and anger and pain, and all she wanted was to get close enough to pull him out of it. With the winds picking up the way they were, Katara struggled to stay on the ground. Still, she had to. Aang needs my help. She felt a hand at her back, and Sokka was there, trying to help get through to Aang.
She cleared her throat, calling out to him again. âAANG! Please, I know that you must be feeling grief, and guilt, right now beyond anything anyone could imagine." She coughed, the winds stirring up dust that caught in her throat. "You may be the last Airbender, but your people, their love and teachings, live on through you. They wouldnât want this for you!â
Sokka joined her. âThey wouldnât want you to succumb to grief and rage!â He shouted. âBelieve me, I get why that would be tempting, but⊠they would want you to work with those who care about you make sure no one has to experience this again.â
Katara nodded frantically, looking back to Aang. âPlease, Aang, come back to us. We care about you!â She exhaled shakily, looking away for a moment before looking back. âPlease, come back to me.â
For a second longer, Aang stayed there, hovering in the air, until the light coursing through him abruptly shut off, and he began to fall to the Earth like a shooting star.
ââșËł â§àŒ ËËË âĄ ËËËàŽŻ â©
ââșËł â§àŒ ËËË âĄ ËËËàŽŻ â©
not sure if you want to check it out? check out the lovely reader's comments!! (i love all of u comment ppl<3) đ€
sooo.... anyone else ever wondered how different ATLA would have been if aang had been frozen at age 16 instead of age 12?
yeah... me too đ my new fanfic "the teenager in the iceberg" follows the events of the show, but with only aang aged up, while everyone else remains their canon age.
also...cmon....how funny is it to switch zuko and aang's iconic dialogue to "you're just a teenager!" "...so are you?"
this idea was originally inspired by the talented @allgremlinart's aged up aang drawings, so please go show them some love!!:)<3
enjoy the excerpts from chapters one and two!
ââșËł â§àŒ ËËË âĄ ËËËàŽŻ â©
Aang chuckled, pushing himself up with his hands on his knees. He was⊠taller than Katara had realised, taller than Sokka. He rubbed a hand on the back of his neck, turning to look over his shoulder at the remains of the boulder-sized chunk of ice he had just been blasted out of. âAang. My nameâs Aang.â He hesitated, momentarily seeming to puzzle something over. âAnd honestly? No clue. Donât remember how me andâŠAppa!â He yelped, suddenly scrambling back over the hill of ice and snow. Katara followed him without thinking, and Sokka, grumbling under his breath, followed moments later.Â
ââșËł â§àŒ ËËË âĄ ËËËàŽŻ â©
âSo, youâve brought a monster to invade the village, then? Youâre some incognito Fire Nation soldier sent in as an undercover scout? Well, Iâll have you know that Iâm the villageâs strongest warrior, a-â
âThe only warrior,â Katara chimed in, lightly elbowing Sokkaâs side, earning herself a responding glare.Â
âThe strongest warrior.â Sokka reiterated. âAnd I donât much like firebenders.â He added the words pointedly.
âAh.â Aang titled his head. âThatâs a shame. Some of my closest friends are Fire Nation.â
âOf course they are,â Sokka glared, hunching over into a defensive position and adjusting his fishing spear until it pointed directly at Aang.
ââșËł â§àŒ ËËË âĄ ËËËàŽŻ â©
Katara still wasnât quite sure what to make of Aang. The Water Tribe boys had always been all flashy muscles, seal-jerky breath, and overconfidence, so Katara had never seen someone move, carry themself, the way Aang did.Â
ââșËł â§àŒ ËËË âĄ ËËËàŽŻ â©
Katara had admittedly forgotten how much fun penguin sledding was. âSpirits, I havenât done this since I was a kid!â she called to Aang as he raced past her, surprisingly skilled considering that heâd never even seen a penguin until half an hour before.Â
âYou still are a kid!â He called back over his shoulder. âA kid whoâs losing this race, badly !â
Kataraâs competitive streak reared its head, her eyes narrowing as Aang stuck out his tongue. She sat up slightly, no longer gripping the penguinâs fur as tightly. âYou wish!â She shouted back the words as she raised her hands, breathing deeply. Her hands moved through the positions she had practised from the few bending scrolls the tribe still held on to, and before Aang knew it, the snow in front of Katara turned to ice, and she shot past him as his own ice trail suddenly became dry snow with too much friction to slide on.Â
She made it to the bottom of the hill, beaming, breathing heavily. The wind had whipped her hair out of her bun, and she knew without checking that her hair must have looked like a lion-turtleâs mane. She watched as Aang made a show of drying himself off with a gust of wind that he then redirected at her, messing up her curls even more.Â
âYouâre a cheater !â Aang gasped, mockingly clutching imaginary pearls at his throat. âI demand a rematch.â
Katara strode past him, only turning her head to cast him a smug smirk. âMaybe youâre just not as good of a penguin sledder as you thought .â
âOh, not so fast!â Aang grabbed her wrist, tugging her back towards him, and she internally questioned why the momentary brush of their skin made her heart flip. He tried to trip her, she tried to flip him, and they both ended up on their backs in the snow, giggling, cheeks and noses bright pink from the cold.Â
ââșËł â§àŒ ËËË âĄ ËËËàŽŻ â©
âTrouble sleeping too, huh?â Aang cocked a grin, tilting his head to Katara. She kept her eyes fixed upwards, trained on the moon and the stars, worried that if she looked away, sheâd end up staring into his eyes like a weirdo.Â
âI always feel so awake with the moonâs light on me. Sleeping under the stars has never really been a thing that works. Itâs too energising, too⊠too much. Itâs hard to explain.â
âNo, no⊠I get it. I feel the same way in a windstorm, all those breezes and gusts of wind, it feels⊠exhilarating.â She watched through her peripheral vision as he looked up at the moon. âIn times of war, I think we all tend to forget how spiritual bending is at its core. Iâd say itâs a good thing that youâre in touch enough with the origins of your abilities to feel the moonâs pull tug at you just as much as it does on the ocean.âÂ
ââșËł â§àŒ ËËË âĄ ËËËàŽŻ â©
Aang smiled back. âNow is our time to try to make up for that. I canât bring back everyone who was hurt in this war, and you canât bring back your mother, but together, the two-, three of us can make sure it doesnât happen to anyone else.â
âIâd like that,â Katara exhaled, her breath calming down and tears dissipating. The two spent hours talking back and forth, exchanging the stories of their respective childhoods. Katara learned that Aang had invented several new bending moves and had been a big fan of fruit pies, while Aang learned that Katara had always been the bossier one between her and Sokka and that she had almost chipped a tooth on seal jerky when she was six. They continued talking back and forth in increasingly hushed tones until the world faded away under the cover of clouds and sleep.
Katara awoke to the loud shout of her brother.Â
âWakey wakey, lovebirds!â he yelped, chucking a rock-hard stick of seal jerky at both of them.Â
âOuch, Sokka !â Katara snapped at him, rubbing her head at the spot where she had been hit, before realising that she was leaning against Aang and immediately jumping away, blushing furiously.Â
the following is an excerpt from my new ATLA aang is aaged up AU fanfic!! (or at least, a teaser from the upcoming update on wednesday) (!!!!) (so excited bc u guys seemed to really like the first ch and left so many lovely comments!!
i present to you, a little sample of ch2 of "the teenager in the iceberg"!!!
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The trio flew on through the sunset, until Tui rose above them, pulling the colour out of the sky as if she were weaving onyx black strands of soft wool into the most beautiful of tapestries. Katara settled on her back, tugging her fur lined overcoat closer, huddled against Sokka, who was in turn huddled against Aang for warmth. Moonlight and starlight bathed the three in enough light that neither Katara nor Aang could sleep, although Sokka seemed to be snoring away just fine. After a few hours of fruitless attempts to slip into dreamland, both Katara and Aang rose from their respective spots beside Sokka and moved to sit in the driverâs bench.
âTrouble sleeping too, huh?â Aang cocked a grin, tilting his head to Katara. She kept her eyes fixed upwards, trained on the moon and the stars, worried that if she looked away, sheâd end up staring into his eyes like a weirdo.Â
âI always feel so awake with the moonâs light on me. Sleeping under the stars has never really been a thing that works. Itâs too energising, too⊠too much. Itâs hard to explain.â
âNo, no⊠I get it. I feel the same way in a windstorm, all those breezes and gusts of wind, it feels⊠exhilarating.â She watched through her peripheral vision as he looked up at the moon. âIn times of war, I think we all tend to forget how spiritual bending is at its core. Iâd say itâs a good thing that youâre in touch enough with the origins of your abilities to feel the moonâs pull tug at you just as much as it does on the ocean.â Katara raised an eyebrow at the cheesy sincerity, and he chuckled in response. âIâm serious! Out of all the nations, Airbenders have the highest rate of benders, and Iâve always felt like itâs because of how much we connect to the spiritual aspect of all of this. We feel our element through our veins, we acknowledge its origins, we treat it as a sacred art.â
Katara nodded, puzzling it all over. âI wish Iâd gotten to learn bending as a child properly, the way you did, with the stories of its origins and the teaching of precise bending forms.â
Aangâs brows wrinkled at this. âYou- you didnât get a teacher? But⊠werenât you the one to break me out of the iceberg?â
âYouâre looking at the last Waterbender of the Southern Tribe.â She sighed, hanging her head. âEverything I know about my bending was either made up through trial and error, or scraped together by bits and pieces of the few bending scrolls my tribe held on to. Weâve never believed in building fortresses and kingdoms the way the Northern Tribe does, and so, when the Fire Nation raids began⊠our waterbending numbers just continued to dwindle as they were defeated and taken to Spirits know where.â She bit her lip, trying desperately to steady her voice.
âThat's⊠thatâs how my mother passed. I was there, in the tent, when she wasâŠkilled.â
---
just finished the draft!! 4,424 words baybeeee!!!! you guys are eating GOOD w this update. releasing wednesday morning:))) catch up on the first chapter before then here ->
wow, i am on a writing spree today! new chapter of my aged up aang au fanfic should be coming at all of you weekly on wednesdays or thursdays, and the following is an excerpt from my draft of ch2 of "the teenager in the iceberg"
without further ado, enjoy water tribe sibling chaos
for context, this immediately follows aang being hauled off by zuko and the rest of his ship.
---
Katara felt a little piece of something inside her break with the click of the shipâs hull closing.
There was something so unsettling about being given so much hope and having it all ripped away from her only over the course of one day. She watched the ship push off from the ice and turn away, moving toward the imprisonment of the boy Katara had just realised could save the world. Her gloved hand stayed clasped over her mouth, her body frozen in shock, as she watched the ship fade. After a few minutes, she became aware that Sokka was tugging at her coat. She blinked, shook her head, and turned to him.
âKatara,â Sokka said urgently, and Katara knew what he was going to tell her before he said a word.
âI know. We have to go after him, somehow.â Katara bit her lip, absent-mindedly playing with Aang's bracelet, still woven around her wrist.
Sokka nodded sharply. âHeâs our responsibility, no matter how much I berated him when we met earlier. We need to find that sky monster of his, itâs the only way weâll be able to catch up with the ship.â
âAang called it a sky bison.â
âHe also didnât tell us that he was the Avatar, so Iâm not sure if we can take everything he says at face value,â Sokka pointed out as Katara rolled her eyes. He cocked a grin. âCâmon, let's go get the little guy.â
âAangâs taller than you!â Katara called after him, rushing to keep up with Sokkaâs longer strides.
âSure, in his dreams!â The decidedly-shorter-than-Aang boy called back.
When they did manage to find Appa, he was sitting at the rear entrance to the village, peacefully napping and ignoring the flood of small children poking at his fur. When he raised his head to look up at Katara and Sokka as their footsteps approached, the sky bison looked less than amused.
âHereâs the deal, bucko.â Sokka said matter of factly, accompanying his words with sharp gestures and exaggerated syllables, as if Appa was deaf. âYour friend needs your help, and WE need YOUR help to get to him. You get the picture?â Without waiting for any kind of affirmation, Sokka nodded briskly then scrambled up to Appaâs back, settling into what appeared to be the driver's seat.Â
Appa did not move, didnât even blink.
Sokka blinked, utterly bewildered. âHow do we get him to, yâknow, go?â
Katara scoffed, stepping closer and resting a hand on the creatureâs nose. Appa huffed and leaned into her touch, then sniffed, making a sad rumbling noise. Kataraâs brow furrowed in confusion until she followed Appaâs line of sight to Aangâs wood and linen bracelet, clasped loosely around her wrist. She clumsily reached for it, sliding it off awkwardly to hold out to Appa.
âHe needs you.â Katara breathed, âAang needs you.â âHeâs not gonna-â Sokka started, but as Katara slid onto Appaâs back, they felt him begin to levitate. Sokka huffed, crossing his arms dramatically. âSpirits, I hate when youâre right and Iâm wrong.â
has anyone ever wondered just how different aang and zuko's first battle would be if aang had been frozen at age 16...?
the following is an excerpt from my draft of ch2 of my new fanfic, "the teenager in the iceberg" on ao3. happy reading!!!
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Because before she could speak, before Aang could speak, horns blared through the crisp air outside. Horns the entire village knew, horns that prompted screams from children.Â
Another Fire Nation raid.
Aang didnât pause, didnât let himself hesitate. Katara didnât blame him. She was sure that if he thought about it for more than a few moments, heâd crumble entirely, and considering the situation they were now in, they couldnât afford for Aang to sort through everything.
Katara didnât realise how dire a situation it was until the three of them had reached the gates to the village, and Katara watched as the hull broke through centuries old ice as if it were butter. Sokka ran ahead as the bow of the ship split open in a rush of steam and machinery. Katara felt the blood drain from her face as she saw who stepped out. The Fire Nation prince. The one who had been scarred by his own father. He was here, in her village. Terror began to set in.
Prince Zuko wrinkled his nose at Sokka as though he was nothing more than an inanimate obstacle in his way, and shoved him aside, his soldiers following suit.Â
âI have come here for the Avatar. For my honour,â Zuko snarled, his words a sharp, lethal weapon. âI know heâs here. I saw his beacon. He should be an older man? Master of all four elements?â His eyes swept through the crowd, passing right over Aang as his gaze narrowed on Gran and the other village elders. Katara felt Aang tense beside her.
With no warning, Zuko and his soldiers blasted a wave of fire straight for the grandmothers and grandfathers who had huddled together.Â
And their fire was met by a gust of wind so powerful that it sucked the very oxygen out of the air, extinguishing their flame before it got anywhere near their targets.Â
Zuko whirled around, his voice contorting in anger at the sight of Aang, standing tall and proud with his staff in one hand and a constantly spinning sphere of wind in the other.Â
âYou?â Zuko spat, seething. âIâve trained for years to face the Avatar. Youâre just a teenager.â
Aang, somewhat caught off guard, leaned back, raising an eyebrow in confusion, a teasing grin on his face once heâd realised that heâd managed to bother the Fire Prince himself.Â
â...S- so are you...?"
Zuko straightened, fire flaring in his eyes, his fists tightening as the air around them began to sizzle and steam. âA child. A child managed to outmanoeuvre me. A mere boy was running circles around the entire crew I command for years.â
âNo, a teenager. Câmon, give me my credit, I had a whole growth spurt and everything, do I really still look like a child to you?â Aang put on a falsely sincere tone, venom behind his words as he bent his knees and tensed his body into a defensive stance. âYou hurt this village, or its people, and youâll see just how much more than âjust a teenagerâ I am.â
Zuko scoffed, fire again lighting up his palm. âBig talk for a pacifist monk.â
âSure, as a monk, I wonât start a fight.â Aang grinned. âBut I can finish them.â
---
there are lots of people who've wondered what the gaang as a whole would have been like if they'd been older when they went on their world-altering quest, but... what if just aang was older? what if he had been frozen in his iceberg at age 16, instead of age 12?
for starters, i'm sure it'd change the dynamic between him and katara. maybe she'd look at him differently more quickly, maybe we'd get a bit of a reverse crush? he'd be taller than sokka much earlier on, and when zuko found him, he'd be "just a teenager," not "just a child."
essentially, to recap. ATLA aang aged up AU fic. kataang. where she falls first, and he falls harder.
i present to you... excepts from "the teenager in the iceberg", my newest ao3 fic đ€
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Shining blue eyes. Bright robes made up of strips of fabric coloured in shades of sunset they almost never saw down in the Southern tribes.Â
The most beautiful boy sheâd ever seen .
---
âW-Will-â he struggled, the words so hoarse that it was as though he hadnât used his voice in decades. He cleared his throat, eyes sparkling distractingly, grinning roguishly. âWill you go penguin sledding with me?â
Katara blanched, momentarily caught off guard. She looked back over at Sokka, who had been watching the exchange with narrowed eyes and a suspicious expression as he recrossed his arms over one another.Â
âI- um-... yes?â she answered, hesitantly, just as Sokkaâs voice overlapped hers, yelping the words âShe absolutely will not!â Katara shot him a scathing glare as the boy rose to his feet, shaking the snow off of his cloak like a polar-bear dog.Â
Sokka continued, his voice both indignant and commanding.âWe donât even know your name, Mr. Walking Ice Cube! What were you doing in there? Were you trying to mimic a snow-man and you got too carried away?âÂ
âAnd you arenât dressed for the cold,â Katara added appraisingly, giving him a once-over. âYou look-â
âDashingly handsome?â The boy smoothly interjected, accompanied by a grin that felt like it was just for her.
â...Cold.â she said flatly, hoping she wasnât furiously blushing as she shot him with what she hoped came across as a scathing glare.
---
Katara still wasnât quite sure what to make of Aang. The Water Tribe boys had always been all flashy muscles, seal-jerky breath, and overconfidence, so Katara had never seen someone move, carry themself, the way Aang did.
---
Katara had admittedly forgotten how much fun penguin sledding was. âSpirits, I havenât done this since I was a kid!â she called to Aang as he raced past her, surprisingly skilled considering that heâd never even seen a penguin until half an hour before.Â
âYou still are a kid!â He called back over his shoulder. âA kid whoâs losing this race, badly!â
Kataraâs competitive streak reared its head, her eyes narrowing as Aang stuck out his tongue. She sat up slightly, no longer gripping the penguinâs fur as tightly. âYou wish!â She shouted back the words as she raised her hands, breathing deeply. Her hands moved through the positions she had practised from the few bending scrolls the tribe still held on to, and before Aang knew it, the snow in front of Katara turned to ice, and she shot past him as his own ice trail suddenly became dry snow with too much friction to slide on.Â
She made it to the bottom of the hill, beaming, breathing heavily. The wind had whipped her hair out of her bun, and she knew without checking that her hair must have looked like a lion-turtleâs mane. She watched as Aang made a show of drying himself off with a gust of wind that he then redirected at her, messing up her curls even more.Â
âYouâre a cheater !â Aang gasped, mockingly clutching imaginary pearls at his throat. âI demand a rematch.â
Katara strode past him, only turning her head to cast him a smug smirk. âMaybe youâre just not as good of a penguin sledder as you thought.â
âOh, not so fast!â Aang grabbed her wrist, tugging her back towards him, and she internally questioned why the momentary brush of their skin made her heart flip. He tried to trip her, she tried to flip him, and they both ended up on their backs in the snow, giggling, cheeks and noses bright pink from the cold.Â
---
âGran, I want you to meet Aang, heâs-â
âAn airbender.â Her grandmother said the words with complete and utter awe. âThe last airbender.â
Aangâs nose wrinkled in confusion, his head tilting and mouth opening to ask for clarification, but Granâs next words stunned him and the rest of the room into silence.Â
âThe Avatar .â
Sokka and Kataraâs jaws dropped, both pivoting to face Aang. Katara looked up at him, expecting to see shock and confusion, but she was met with sheepishness as Aang rubbed the back of his neck with his hand.
âYou are .â Katara breathed. âSpirits, youâre the Avatar.â