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Previously on Energy Saga[]

After a second use of Aang's most powerful energybending move, the Avatar Legion emerges victorious over the Phoenix Army, the last of the four hostile factions assaulting the Earth Kingdom city of Omashu. This time, the Avatar uses the bodily energy of his former pupil Air Lord Icarus to power the force for Shuten Shogai against Fire Nation Princess Azula. With her and her army vanquished, there is nothing separating Aang from going to find a way to make Katara better again. However, Aang's remaining friends and family notice something different about him. Since he corrupted himself by willfully using Shuten Shogai again, despite what it did last time, he has warmed up more to destructive power of energybending. Tenzin, Kaddo and Vameira can only listen horrified as he announces his new intentions.

Reversion: Part Two[]

Throne Room, 121 AG[]

With the day won, and the threat from each of the opposing armies exterminated, the victorious Avatar congregated in the throne room with Queen Toph and Chief Sokka. The Avatar and the blind monarch of Omashu tread carefully around Sokka. Since the chief lost his eldest son in the battle, he had not been very talkative and the last thing that his oldest friends wanted to do was make matters worse for him. Nevertheless, there were things that could not wait.

"Well, at least we are all safe again for the time being," Sokka finally said, clearing the awkward silence that had previously lingered over the trio. "Unless those Sages Bane people come back at us again, of course." The chief caught glimpse of Toph cringing in her throne, as she clearly had not forgotten her encounter with them when they exploited her blindness. "What are you going to do to help my sister?" he asked the Avatar.

Aang was relieved to not have to linger on the subject of the fallen. "I have full mastery and control over my energybending now," he said. "All that I need to do is figure out how to use it to bend Katara's energy back into her body."

"How are you going to do that?" Queen Toph interrupted, still clinging to her throne. "Once the energy has left their body, it could be anywhere in the world, all scattered about. Bending her energy back doesn't seem any more plausible than bending Icarus' energy back. And besides, I thought that you hated energybending and didn't want anything to do with it anymore."

"That was before," said Aang. "When I didn't have control over energybending, the energies could easily work against me and I would find myself in a bind. Now that I have full mastery over it, I have nothing to fear. The sky is the limit, and I can do anything I want with the energies."

"That's some strong talk, Twinkle Toes," Toph replied, scowling. "You can still call me skeptical. While I've always been one to talk up my earthbending, that attitude never looked as good on you I'm afraid. Plus, you clearly can't do anything if you don't know how to heal Katara."

"I'm sure that it's possible," said Aang. "But I just need to find out how to perform the counter-move. It's no easy feat."

"So what are you going to do to figure that out?" asked Sokka, arms crossed.

"Yue won't tell me anything, so I'll have to find someone who will," said Aang. "Someone who knows of energies and energybending."

"Good luck," Toph said sarcastically. "People like that are few and far between."

"The guru mentioned something about a spirit," said Sokka. "Is that what you mean, Aang?"

"Yes," confirmed the Avatar. "I will find the spirit that I need – the one that told Yue to stay away from me – it clearly knows something of the nature of energybending as well. Otherwise it would have no reason to try to warn me away."

"I see," said Sokka. "So what does that have to do with Neinei?" Aang had sent for the Princess of the Fire Nation just before his present meeting with Sokka and Toph.

"I need to use her to communicate with Yue," answered Aang. "Some of Yue's spirit is inside of her, so I can reach out to the moon spirit and ask her that one final question – to refer me to the one who forbade her from teaching me anymore."

Moments later, the Fire Lady emerged into the chamber unaccompanied. Mai was not wearing her traditional royal robes, but the same brown garments that she had fought in during the battle for Omashu. As for her eldest daughter, she was nowhere to be seen. "Hello, Avatar," she said dryly. "Sokka, Toph," she added in bored acknowledgement.

"Hello," Aang reciprocated the greeting, stepping toward the end of the chamber where Mai stood. "Why are you alone, Fire Lady? Where is Neinei?"

"She's not coming," Mai clarified. "This communication that you want to do with her body...I don't think it's a good idea."

"Don't be ridiculous," said Aang, growing impatient. "I need to help my wife and I need to speak through Neinei to Yue in order to do that. It's perfectly safe."

"I'm not going to trust you just because you're the Avatar," Mai told him, raising her voice. Her posture resembled that of a rabid mother saber tooth moose-lion. "Look what you did to Katara when you energybent with her. Did you know that was going to happen? Its clear that you never know what you're doing when you play around with energies and I won't allow you to do the same with my daughter!"

"That was Shuten Shogai," said Aang, now furious. "Something entirely different. This isn't even energybending."

"Perhaps not," said Mai. "But ever since you used your move again with the Air Lord, you've been even more stubborn than before. It makes me know for sure that I can't trust you."

"I'm not trying to be difficult, Aang, but she has a point," said Sokka. "The guru saw it, too. He said there was a darker cloud over you since you bent out Icarus' energy."

"The guru never fully understood energybending," said Aang. "Neither do you, but at last I finally do."

"You're contradicting yourself," said Mai. "If you're so all-knowing now, there would be no need to use my daughter to find out more information."

"Where is your daughter now?" Aang demanded, his eyes narrowing.

"Forget it," said Mai, turning to leave herself. "She's been sent somewhere away from all of you. Goodbye, Avatar Aang."

"So what are you going to do now?" Toph asked the Avatar as the Fire Lady was leaving.

"I still have to speak with Yue," said Aang, just having been stopped by Sokka from following Mai. "But I suppose I'll have to go the long way. Toph, loan me an airship."

Toph grimaced. "You know, you could at least do me the courtesy of asking for one first."

"Don't you want to see Katara well again, also?"

"Of course," she said. "But I'm a little uneasy about the way you're going about it now. Maybe Sokka and Mai have a point."

"I'm starting to regret asking you to use Shuten Shogai again," said Sokka.

"Why?" asked Aang. "It won us the battle, didn't it?"

"Didn't do Hinko much good, though."

"Sorry," said Aang. He was ashamed at having almost forgotten, but in truth, he had lost a nephew while Sokka and Suki lost their eldest son. Peace always came at a high price, and unfortunately a hefty price often had to be paid in a time of great change. No one knew that better than the Avatar.

After a tense silence, Queen Toph spoke up again. "I do indeed want to see Katara her old annoying self once more. Avatar, I will grant you one of Omashu's airships. They are the fastest in the world, and your best chance to reach Yue in a speedy fashion. No matter how deep into this energybending stuff you get, I merely hope that you will never forget yourself."

"Thanks Toph," Aang said with genuine gratitude this time. "And don't worry," he added. "I never will."

"It'll be a long journey there and back again," Sokka remarked. "Who do you intend to take with you?"

"With me?" the Avatar raised an eyebrow quizzically. "I was not really planning on taking anybody with me, to be honest. This is an Avatar journey," Aang then added. "I really ought to go about this myself."

"This is making me more uneasy now, Twinkle Toes," Queen Toph added from her throne, her voice trailing gradually off. "You're acting very odd and unlike yourself. Don't forget who your friends are. What are we all supposed to do while you're going to the North Pole, sit here and knit?"

"Yeah," concurred the Southern Chief. "And what about your family?" Sokka added.

"They can remain here in Omashu while I go up to the Northern Water Tribe," Aang said simply.

"I don't think that is a very good idea," said Toph. "My palace is already like a hotel, as I said before. Now that the battle is over, it's time to get things back to normal. These people can't all just camp out in my city forever."

"Like you don't have the space," Aang retorted. "And there are more important things now to getting your precious palace back in order, Toph. I am going to bring back Katara and reshape the world. It is my duty and prerogative as the Avatar. You don't get it."

"All the more reason for you to have some company," said Toph. "Fly there yourself if you really want to go it alone, but I'll be right behind you in an Omashu airship."

"And so will I," Sokka added. "As well as Migo, your children, Suki and my surviving children as well." Hardened, the chief tried to hide how hard Hinko's loss still was for him."

"Fine," Aang conceded. "If you're all so determined to tag along, then be my guest. But I have to attend to my business in my own time and I can't have anybody slowing it down. Is that clear?"

"Crystal," the smirking Queen of Omashu replied, right before taking a bite out of jennamite.

Northern Water Tribe[]

The Avatar finally landed in the capital city of the Northern Water Tribe following a long journey with his family and friends accompanying him. Moods were dry, particularly among Migo and Trinley, who spoke to one another in hushed voices most of the trip. However, even though he was surrounded by others, Aang became increasingly isolated, as all of those on the airship had taken notice of. Since he was being curt with everyone lately, most were obliged to give him space. Even his pet lemur Momo was avoiding him. Aang had not needed to send any more messages to his comrades in other parts of the world, since he was focused on achieving his task unilaterally now. The ones who could help him – Zuko and Neinei – were no longer around, due to the intervention of Fire Lady Mai. After this setback, Aang was determined not to allow anyone else to set him back in his quest.

Tenzin, Kaddo and Vameira played together solemnly and spoke in hushed voices. All three of the Avatar's kids were concerned about their father's change in behavior since he used Shuten Shogai for the second time. Moreover, Vameira was now mad at Tenzin for triggering this new change by encouraging Avatar Aang to return to the most powerful move in energybending, the same move that had taken their mother from them. Kaddo, likewise, was uneasy uneasy and silent. Nevertheless, he had taken a half a leaf out of Tenzin's book, and would like to see their mother restored to her former self by any means necessary. While he would not have adopted that position for the battle like Tenzin had, he would not hold Aang back from using all the energybending he needed in order to fix and save Katara.

As soon as the airship landed, Aang stood at the departure ramp and marched down it with great haste. He did not look back, neither toward the airship nor those who were still on it. In short, there were nothing he concerned himself with behind him. Only what was in front.

"Hey!" Sokka called. "Excuse me? Aang."

"I don't think he heard you," said Tenzin.

"No," Toph said with a scowl. "He heard alright. He just doesn't want to say so."

"This is disturbing," Migo muttered from behind the others.

"Dad!" Kaddo called out. When Aang did not answer him, either, the young waterbender erected a small frozen barrier in front of his father from the snow beneath all of their feet.

Enraged by the interruption, Aang turned around to face his middle child, among all the others. "What do you think you're doing?" he yelled, lifting up his glider stick. "You all stay back and leave me alone."

Immediately regretting his actions, Kaddo trembled. "S-sorry, Father. I didn't know that I was doing something wrong."

"You weren't," said Toph. In a rare stroke of tenderness, the Queen of Omashu wrapped one of her arms around the young waterbending son of the Avatar. "It's your father who has the problem now. Not you."

"I thought that I made it clear that I was not to be held up here," Aang said just loudly enough for all to listen.

"And I thought that I made it clear to you that we're not staying behind," Sokka countered back, raising his own voice as his feet touched the snows of his sister tribe. "We came here with you and we intend to follow your journey until the end."

"I know what I have to do," Aang said coldly. "I don't require anyone else for this."

"Maybe you do," said Sokka. "The way you're going about it is making the rest of us uncomfortable. We just want to make sure you're doing what you need to do the right way."

"I am doing it the right way," said Aang. "And I need to go see Yue now, so I can't have anyone holding me up any longer."

"Slow down, then," said Sokka. "And if you don't slow down, we'll just have to speed up."

"What do you mean?" the Avatar asked, raising an eyebrow. "You're not coming to see Yue with me. All my lessons in energybending were just me and her." In fact, Yue had made this clear herself when Aang and Sokka came to the North Pole during the wedding planning.

"Well," Sokka continued, shrugging. "Now you'll just have to have us along as well."

"Fine," Aang said, relenting. "Just don't get in my way."

Spirit Oasis in the Northern Water Tribe[]

Avatar Aang stormed into the heated enclosure with the circling koy fish with even greater furvor than he had the last time – just after he had used Shuten Shogai the first time. Time had assisted him well with healing mentally following Katara's new tragic condition, but recent events where he had used Shuten Shogai yet again had given him renewed energy and determination that came with a feeling unlike any that had pulsated through his every vein and artery ever before. Also, there was another key difference staring him in the face.

Unlike last time, he had no intention of holding back or quitting energybending altogether once his task was accomplished.

"Yue," the Avatar called out, stepping up to the pond with the koy fish alone as his companions – Toph, Sokka, Migo, Tenzin, Kaddo, Vameira, Suki and Sakema among them – remained several feet behind. "Yue, I need to speak with you again."

"She's not coming out," Kaddo said after several long moments of tense silence.

"I didn't expect that she would," said Sokka. "The last time that your dad talked to the moon spirit, she told him not to come seeking energybending knowledge from her anymore."

"We should go, then," Vameira whispered half under her breath, so that no one but the children could hear. "If she said that last time, she might bring repercussions for Dad defying her mandate and coming back again." She was trying to show maturity for her age.

"No way," said Kaddo. "Dad says that this is the only way to get Mom back. If we leave now, we may never see her truly as herself again." Kaddo had tried visiting their mother in her room not long before, but the experience was unfulfilling.

"Then we will have to try something else," Vameira said, raising her voice. "This is all wrong. I can tell."

"Be quiet, you two!" snapped their Aunt Suki.

"Maybe your dad knows what he's doing," said their cousin Sakema. It was one of the few times that she had spoken to them since her brother had fell in battle.

"There is no 'maybe' about it," said Tenzin, the Avatar's eldest child. "Of course he knows what he is doing." Aang drew out his glider staff and held it in front of himself. "Yue, I don't want to have to say it again and you'd better not make me. I have to speak with you."

In response to Avatar Aang's repeated calling, the same misty-looking image appeared slowly over the two koy fish, emerging from the side of yin and yang which had represented Tui twenty-two years prior. "I told you, Aang," Yue spoke sternly once her form fully materialized. "I am not going to teach you anything more about energybending and you are not to come here anymore. If you insist on coming back despite my ban, there will be consequences for your violation."

"You see," Vameira uttered in an I-told-you-so tone which temporarily masked the rising tension in her own stomach. The Avatar, however, was not like his daughter. He was still unfazed by her words. "Regardless of what proclamations you make, I will have my wife back. Nothing you say will intimidate me."

"I sympathize with your journey, Avatar," Yue said with genuine empathy. "But as I told you before, there was another spirit who has coerced me into keeping silent. It will not do any good for you to persist with me as you are." The moon spirit and former Princess of the Northern Water Tribe surveyed her determined visitor carefully. "There is also something else unsettling about you this time around. I sense that you want to do more with your destructive power after fixing your wife."

"Of course," Aang responded curtly. "After Katara is right again, I will begin using energybending to build a better world for all of humanity. There will be a great new world to be enjoyed under a new order enabled by energybending."

"I don't like the sound of that," said Vamiera. She was reminded of Air Lord Icarus' rhetoric of a great new nation of airbenders under his new order. His coup had occurred around the time that she had been captured from Nola in Ba Sing Se.

"I see," said Yue. "What changed things for you, Aang?"

"Everything became clear after I used Shuten Shogai for the second time," he replied. "I need not run from the power of energybending anymore. Instead, I will embrace it."

Yue gasped. "Oh, Avatar Aang. I should never have led you down this path. It's all my fault. Now I realize that I never ought to have taught you how to perform Shuten Shogai to begin with. Or anything with energybending."

"Nonsense," the Avatar stated as he took a step forward, even closer to the moon spirit than he already was. "You opened up my eyes to a whole new world of possibilities." Aang narrowed his eyes. "And now I really do need you to give me the information that I need to heal Katara."

"I told you last time that I don't have it!" Yue retorted. "Even if I did, I've been forbidden to tell you any more by directive of another powerful spirit."

"Now listen to my directive," Aang uttered firmly. "You will tell me whatever it is you're hiding from me. I can use force if I need to, Yue."

"What are you doing, Twinkle Toes?" Toph asked in alarm.

"Aang, don't threaten Yue," said a shocked Sokka.

"She's a spirit," Tenzin whispered under his breath. "How could Dad intend to fight her and win? She doesn't have a physical body." With energies, however, all was possible. Or at least, a lot more was possible, but to Tenzin's eyes this seemed a stretch.

"I'm hiding nothing from you, Aang," said Yue. "There is nothing I can do to help you anymore and it does you no good to speak to me in such a manner."

"Don't think of retreating to the Spirit World, if that's what you're planning," said Aang. "As the Avatar, I am the bridge between the two worlds and I can follow you wherever you go."

"Dad's really determined, isn't he?" Tenzin voiced aloud. Though he had yet to show it, he was becoming more troubled by his father's present attitude, like the others around him. The young airbender now wished for nothing more than to spend some time with his beloved Neinei again.

"There is something you must understand," Yue pleaded to Aang, a definite nervousness entering her voice unheard since he sacrificed her earthly self to transform into the moon spirit. "The Spirit of Aether threatened more than just you or me when he came to me. If you delve further into energybending – even with noble purposes – there could be dire consequences greater than either of us or even your companions with you here today."

But Aang had chosen to only hear a selective portion of what Yue divulged to him. "So, you're telling me the Spirit of Aether is the one responsible for my current block?"

"Yes."

"Well, I'm getting nowhere with you," Aang conceded. "Tell me how to find the Spirit of Aether so that I can go directly to them."

"The Spirit of Aether is called Shihang Shi," said Yue. "But Shihang Shi has given me another directive since then," she continued. "The other day he told me that he would not speak to you, either."

"What?" asked Aang. "Why not?"

"He said that the process of the world's demise is already underway, and that you are part of it," said Yue. "In fact, I must inform you now that this place is no longer safe for you."

"I think that she has a point," said Sokka, now beginning to sweat. "Something is wrong. The air around us is burning up gradually. The Spirit Oasis is even warmer than it usually is."

Vameira freaked out. "I knew that something was going wrong. This is pretty frightening."

"What is going on, Yue?" Aang demanded to know. "What sort of imbalance is coming?"

"It is not imbalance itself but a reaction to the imbalance," said Yue. "This place, this is not merely a landmark of the Northern Water Tribe. It was the place where the first benders came to be and the earliest of spirits crossed the threshold. Soon it will be gone, and I, along with my partner La, will return to the Spirit World. The moon and ocean spirits took these forms so that humanity might learn care and humility. It lasted for a great while, but now under your charge humanity has finally failed the test."

"What do you mean?" said Aang. "I fought the Fire Nation up here to ensure your continued presence."

"And now you have destroyed what you fought so hard for before," Yue countered. If the Air Nomad Avatar had any hair, he would have begun tearing at it at that point. "Enough! Spirit of the Moon, if there is some sort of spiritual problem on your end, fix it." He narrowed his eyes. "Now."

"I'm afraid that I can't, Aang," said Yue. "Shihang Shi is one of the most powerful spirits in existence; he doesn't answer to me."

"Then he will answer to me," Aang declared boldly and without flinching. "I am the Avatar."

If Yue had still been in the flesh, tears would have flowed down her face. "Av-Avatar...I mean, Aang." She met anger not with more anger, but with genuine pity, even if it was too little too late. "I'm really sorry. I should never have taught you about energybending in the first place. I should have let your descent into darkness end while there was still a chance, but I so desperately wanted to do something for you after what you did for the Moon and for my people. Maybe I'm still too new a spirit and I'm still too attached to my former self. Now, the world will suffer for your mistakes and for mine."

"There are no mistakes," Aang scoffed briskly. "We have been advancing the world forward, Yue, but it turns out you're just too weak to carry on. Well, I'm sorry to hear that, but I am not. Fine. I'll carry on alone. I am done with you."

At long last, someone else stepped up to the Moon Spirit, right beside the Avatar. "Aang, are you really listening to yourself?" asked Migo. "You're saying that now, after coming all this way to see her?"

In a rage, Aang punched the air in front of him and a blast of air blew Migo back ten feet. The earthbender would have continued his flight and collided with the icy wall surrounding the oasis had Toph not kicked the ground and erected an earthen pillar which caught him and allowed him to slide back to the grassy floor, dazed but relatively unscathed.

"It's still getting warmer!" Tenzin yelled, shedding the top of his Air Nomad tunic. Meanwhile, right beside him, Kaddo and Vameira also sweat heavily.

"We have to leave," Sokka said just loud enough for everyone to hear. "Right now!"

"Soon the world's will lose the connection that you bridged for so long," Yue said to Aang. "Two great threats will inevitably battle and tear the world apart. One of them is in the place where you found the memorial to your past life."

Aang was taken aback by the sudden changes in environment and in tone. "And the second?" he asked.

"You." With that, the former Princess of the Northern Water Tribe disappeared for good, never to shine her presence in the mortal world again.

While the Avatar stood there dumbfounded, Sokka and Suki rounded up his kids with their own and ran toward the entrance to the Spirit Oasis. The ice around the enclosure melted and fell with rapid, thundering force and the water began to boil. All had left the scene, save for the Avatar and his earthbending instructor.

"What are you doing Twinkle Toes?" Toph shouted at Aang as she tugged at his arm. "We have to get out of here fast!"

Everything seemed a blur as the Avatar was jerked from his spot and dragged out from the Spirit Oasis by his strong, blind earthbending friend. The very air in the atmosphere caught fire and the isolated enclosure that was home to the Moon Spirit and Ocean Spirit was lit ablaze with purple fire. On the way out of the palace, Toph and Aang ran into Chief Arnook, his heiress Princess Hasida and the Minister of Justice who had all been having a private discussion on unrelated matters. Luckily, Toph managed to erect a dirt pillar through the block of ice and all three of them were outside the palace with the Avatar, near the airship.

"My-my home," the chief looked up in shock while also helping his sister to her feet.

"Did you do this?" Hasida demanded, looking at the significantly-damaged palace and the rest of the surrounding remains of the purple explosion.

"I'm sorry," Queen Toph told them both remorsefully, eying Aang, who was already boarding the airship again without a word. "He's sorry, too. He's just...not himself."

Arnook shook his head furiously. "Tell the Avatar he is no longer welcome in our city."

"Look at that explosion," Suki said, looking out the window of the airship. The rest of the Avatar's companions had been waiting on board by the time that Aang and Toph finally joined them.

"It's the color of Trinley's eyes," said Suki's daughter, Sakema. "How is that possible?"

"I don't know," said Sokka. "But we'd better get out of here."

"I think the airship should still be ready," said Trinley, whose violet orbs were identical in color to the carnage that had just taken place. "We weren't landed all that long so it should be relatively easy for us to get ourselves airborne once more."

"Good," Kaddo said, still panting from their rushed escape. "I hope we don't come back here anytime soon."

"Twinkle Toes won't be coming back again," Toph chimed in. "The chief ordered him to be exiled from the capital of the tribe."

"What?" said a shocked Vameira. "Dad, what are you going to do?"

"Doesn't matter," Aang said, not making eye contact with anyone else. "I have no reason to come back here now that Yue and the Spirit Oasis are gone. The mortal world has lost an essential connection to the Spirit World now and it's up to me to deal with that as the Avatar who bridges the worlds together."

"What will you do?" asked Tenzin.

"Do you still think energybending is a good idea?" asked Vameira.

"Of course!" snapped Aang. "None of what I've done or plan to do would be possible if it weren't for energybending. Yue realized that, too, when she first taught me. Now she has become a coward and retreated from the world altogether. There will be no more such cowardice in the world that I intend to construct. First I'll go deal with this supposed threat, then I'll fix your mother, and then the world."

"Where is this other threat, Avatar Aang?" asked Trinley.

"The Cave of the Ancients."

TO BE CONTINUED...

Trivia[]

  • The first part also had an explosion in the profile picture, so this makes two in a row.
  • Yue previously told Aang that he could not return to discuss energybending with her as another powerful spirit forbade her from doing so. That spirit was Shihang Shi, the Spirit of Aether, and in the actual ES timeline, he is the one who tells Aang of the threat at the Cave of the Ancients and also says that he will destroy the Spirit Oasis should Aang fail. When Aang reverted to his prior mindset with energybending, Shihang Shi would not see Aang and simply destroyed it right away.
  • I know that Aang is heavily out of character from his canon show version, but this change in his behavior is a symptom of his getting sucked further and further into the world of bending energies. Normally only spirits bend energies directly so there can be consequences when a human tries it.
v - e - dAvatar: Energy Saga Chapters
Book 1 - Beginnings
The Jasmine Dragon - Earth Kingdom Bandits - The Parting of Ways - Enemies of the Fire Lord - Seclusion and Kindred: Part 1, Part 2 - The Energybending Teacher - The Search for a Candidate - Azula's Release
Book 2 - Rise
The New Air Nomads - Changing Winds - The Calling Statue - Migo - Cave of the Ancients: Part 1, Part 2 - Mobilization - Reflections - Omashu - Fire Nation Pirates - The Phoenix Rises - Misfortune and Reproach - Gatherings and Struggles - Revelations - Battle at the Fire Nation Capital: Part 1, Part 2
Book 3 - Atonement
Hopes of Redemption - A New Journey - Shifting Gears - The Air Lord - Three Children, Three Journeys - Realignment - Infiltration - Friends and Traitors - The Lost Island - Legends - Reunion and Discovery - Ghost of an Avatar's Past - Fire Nation's Final Hope - The Avatar Legion - Battle of the Six Armies: Part 1, Part 2 - Shihang Shi - Return to the Cave of the Ancients: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4
Epilogue
Endings
Other
The Legend of Ong - The Legend of Ong 2 - The Legend of Morra - Live Another Day - Vortex - Dragons, Sieges and Volcanoes - AvatarRokusGhost's updates - Reversion: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 - Continuum



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