Chapter 53: Worth the Risk
The corridor was still warm from Azula's lingering flames, but the night air creeping in from the high palace windows had begun to cool it. Iroh stood silently for a moment longer, his gaze fixed on the ornate door that Zuko had disappeared behind minutes earlier.
He sighed, soft, heavy, and tired.
Then, he lifted a hand and knocked.
Three sharp raps.
For a heartbeat, there was silence.
Then the door flung open, violently.
A surge of blue fire burst out in a cone, screeching across the hallway like a lightning storm.
Iroh didn't flinch.
He raised a single palm, his stance calm, and with a flick of his wrist, the blue inferno dispersed, scattering into harmless sparks that vanished into the night.
"Azula," he said gently. "That is no way to greet family."
Her face twisted with a mix of embarrassment and fury. "Uncle?"
She straightened, arms crossed over her silk robe. Her hair was still slightly wild, the heat of her temper radiating off her skin. "What are you doing here?"
"I heard shouting," Iroh said. "And then I saw Zuko leaving your room. I was… concerned."
Azula's jaw tightened.
She hated that she'd reacted so reflexively. She hated even more how easily he'd stopped her.
No one should be able to redirect her flames like that. Especially not someone who spent more time drinking tea than fighting.
And yet, here he stood. As unbothered by her fire as by a breeze.
A flicker of resentment flared in her mind. 'Why was a man with such power so… spineless? Why did he let his little brother, Ozai, take what should have been his? A true firebender didn't bow. They took.'
Azula's eyes narrowed. "If you're so curious, why don't you ask Zuko what he was doing in my room? It's all his fault anyway."
Iroh didn't reply immediately. He simply watched her, his gaze unreadable behind the softness of his expression.
She didn't like that either.
"Uncle," she said stiffly, "it's very late. I have to go to bed. So if you don't mind…" She trailed off, already moving to close the door.
"Azula…"
"Pick this up with Zuko," she snapped, and shut the door with a solid click.
For a long moment, she stood there, hand on the knob.
Then she stepped back and leaned against the door, her arms folded tightly across her chest.
The room behind her still crackled faintly with residual heat, the blue flames now softened to a slow pulse within the lanterns.
Her breathing slowed.
But her thoughts did not.
What the fuck was he thinking?
Her fingers twitched.
They were siblings.
Her mind replayed the kiss, unwanted, shocking, the look in his eyes like he knew exactly what she would do and didn't care.
It was Zuko… but not.
He'd changed. Not just stronger, different. Like he didn't need anyone's approval anymore.
Not Father's.
Not hers.
Azula's brow furrowed.
She didn't like being surprised. She didn't like being cornered. She especially didn't like being seen.
And tonight, for a moment, she had felt all three.
She straightened, brushing her hair behind her ear and smoothing out her robe.
'Fine,' she thought. 'You want to play this game, Zuko? Let's play.'
—
The hallway stretched behind him like a tunnel of flickering torchlight. Zuko walked in silence, his footsteps slower now, the stiffness in his body more pronounced with every step. His hand clutched at his side, ribs aching fiercely where Azula's last shove had slammed him against the door.
'Worth it,' he reminded himself. 'She's off-balance now. Distracted.'
He reached his chamber and slid open the door.
The scent of lavender oil and freshly snuffed candles met him. The room was dim, lit only by a single low lantern on the bedside table. The flickering light played gently over soft shadows, casting a warm glow across the silk-covered bed.
By the dressing table, Katara stood quietly, her back to the door. Her hair was down now, long, thick, and free of the decorative clasps and pins the Fire Nation maids had forced on her. She was dressed in a simple shift, brushing out the tangles from her hair with slow, tired strokes.
As soon as she saw him enter, her eyes locked on the way he moved, his limp more pronounced, his winces sharper.
"Zuko…"
She was at his side in an instant, concern overriding caution. Her hands moved instinctively to his arm, steadying him.
"What happened?" she asked sharply, guiding him toward the bed. "You're worse than earlier. Did you fall? Did someone…."
"I'm fine," he muttered, but he didn't resist her help.
She sat him down on the edge of the mattress, kneeling beside him as she checked his side. His robe had come partially undone, revealing bruises already darkening like storm clouds across his ribs.
Katara's touch lingered. "You're not fine. What happened?"
He let out a breath, not quite a laugh, not quite a sigh.
"It was worth the risk," he said.
Her brows furrowed. "What risk? Why?"
"The next few days are too important."
Katara stood, arms folded, blocking his view of the dressing table. "Zuko… what exactly are you working on that makes getting hurt over and over again 'worth it'?"
His eyes met hers in the flickering lantern light. He didn't smile this time, nor soften his voice.
"Unfortunately for you, Katara," he said quietly, "you'll be finding that out very soon."
Her breath caught in her throat.
She didn't reply.
And for a long moment, there was only the sound of the lantern flame, whispering gently in the silence between them.
—
The night air in the palace was cooler now, though the heat of lingering embers still clung to the walls like old breath. Iroh walked slowly down the long corridor, his hands clasped behind his back, slippers silent against polished stone. The torches along the hallway flickered in respectful silence, casting long shadows behind him.
He didn't rush. He rarely did.
But his thoughts moved faster than his feet.
Something was wrong.
Zuko had changed. That much was obvious. It wasn't just strength or discipline, he had always had the potential for those things. No, this was deeper. Sharper. The boy he had once guided, once protected, was now a young man cloaked in calculation. His eyes carried a weight Iroh couldn't yet place. And tonight… there had been something else in them. Not pain. Not ambition.
Something darker.
And then there was Azula.
Iroh had never feared her, but he had always respected the dangerous edge she walked, an edge sharpened by perfectionism, pride, and a hunger for power nurtured far too young. Yet tonight… she had lashed out like someone startled, not superior. That was new.
He stopped at an arched window overlooking the moonlit gardens.
'Two dragons circling each other,' he thought. But one of them has changed their fire.'
He resumed walking, his pace slower now, more thoughtful. The palace itself felt… wrong. The walls whispered too much. The guards rotated too often. The rumors flew too quietly. And the eyes that watched him, that watched everyone, were too well trained to be mere servants.
'Something is happening,' Iroh mused. 'Something I am not being told.'
He reached his chambers and paused at the door.
A long breath.
His gaze swept the empty hallway once more before he turned the knob.
'It's time I reached out to some old friends,' he thought. 'It's time to see what's really happening inside this palace.'
He stepped inside and shut the door behind him, the sound echoing softly through the corridor.
[A/N: Can't wait to see what happens next? Get exclusive early access on patreon.com/saiyanprincenovels. If you enjoyed this chapter and want to see more, don't forget to drop a power stone! Your support helps this story reach more readers!]