56. Legacy of Fire

Chapter 56: Legacy of Fire

"Long ago," Zuko began, voice steady against the crackle of the flames, "before our grandfather Roku… before Avatar Szeto helped the Fire Lord stabilize the warring noble clans of the Fire Nation, there was Fire Lord Turo."

The room was silent except for the slow churn of heat from the throne's firepit. All eyes were on him.

Azula tilted her head, brow furrowed. "Who was somehow also the Avatar?"

Iroh nodded slowly. "The universe can choose the Avatar from anywhere. From the lowest peasant… to the highest of royalty. Kyoshi was a peasant. Szeto rose from humble beginnings as a scribe. Even he became a high-ranking official before being chosen."

"But Turo," Ozai said darkly, "was the opposite of Szeto."

Iroh's gaze shifted. "How so?"

"Szeto was a patriot," Ozai replied with controlled pride. "He cared for the Fire Nation above all. His rule was firm, balanced, and decisive, even if it made him unpopular in other nations."

Zuko nodded. "Which is exactly why he was accused of being too biased. The other nations resented him, and in many parts of the world, Szeto's name is tarnished."

He paused.

"Turo… was the opposite."

Azula's eyes narrowed. "You're saying he… didn't care about the Fire Nation?"

"He cared more for his role as the Avatar," Zuko explained. "He believed the Avatar and the Fire Lord should not be separate duties. So he began combining them, linking his responsibilities as Avatar to his rule. But in doing so, he neglected the Fire Nation. Ignored its political fractures. Let the noble clans drift into discontent."

Iroh was listening intently now, his usual calmness laced with caution.

"There was unrest," Zuko continued. "The clans were near rebellion. Some even whispered about civil war. Coup."

"And so," he said, turning his eyes to Azula, "he came up with a plan. A solution to gain the support of the nobles and to unite the nation."

He held her gaze, unwavering.

"This plan… is why I did what I did last night."

Iroh's brows dipped. "What… did you do?"

Before Zuko could answer, Ozai's voice cut in like a blade through silk:

"He kissed her."

Iroh's eyes widened. His mouth opened. Then…

"WHAT!!!"

His roar echoed through the throne room, more intense than any flame.

"You kissed your sister!?"

"Uncle," Zuko began quickly, holding up a hand.

"I can explain."

"You better, nephew!"

"You knew of this!?" Iroh snapped toward Ozai.

"I was just informed," Ozai said coldly.

Azula looked between them, fuming. "But you and Zuko… you talked about this before!"

Zuko turned toward her. "I brought up Turo and Xu Ping An to Father. That was all."

Iroh's eyes narrowed. "So Turo somehow… convinced you to kiss your own sister?"

Azula looked equally disturbed. "What exactly did he do?"

Zuko took a breath, folding his arms behind his back.

"A long time ago," he said, "to preserve the purity of certain bloodlines, noble clans, especially those descended from dragons, used inbreeding."

Azula recoiled slightly, disgusted.

"Fire Lord Turo revived this tradition," Zuko continued, "by marrying his own sister. It was recorded in hidden scrolls, sealed, locked away from common history."

Ozai stepped in then, voice low, almost reverent.

"Their union produced offspring of unmatched bending potential. Among them, eventually… came Xu Ping An. One of the most gifted firebenders ever born."

"But that's not even the full truth," Zuko said.

He turned back to face Ozai, then Iroh, then Azula.

"You remember what the ancient scrolls said, Father."

Ozai nodded grimly.

"Xu Ping An was said to be the weakest of his bloodline."

Azula paled. "That… can't be right."

"It is," Zuko said. "You've felt it, haven't you? Wondered why our bloodline produces prodigies almost every generation."

He began pacing slowly.

"For us, it was you, Azula," he said, voice quieter now. "The greatest firebender of your generation. For you, Father, it was Uncle Iroh, your older brother, whose flames could shake the heavens. For Grandfather Azulon, it was his younger brother, Kuzan, who fought an army of a hundred earthbenders and waterbenders for three days before falling."

He turned to Iroh. "For Fire Lord Sozin, it was his sister. A master strategist and flame-tamer, lost to time."

"In every generation," Zuko said, voice now filled with calm certainty, "there is always one, one who stands above all others. Not by accident. Not by destiny. But by design."

He stepped closer to the flame, staring into it.

"What Fire Lord Turo began all those centuries ago… was a lineage. A bloodline forged in power, fire, and taboo. The perfect weapon of the Fire Nation."

The flames flickered, rising again in response to his words.

And for once, no one spoke.

Zuko's eyes were fixed on the flames as he continued.

"The tradition was lost nearly three hundred years ago," he said. "After the final descendants of Turo's direct line vanished during the volcanic wars. The nobles rejected it, called it impure. Dangerous. But what they failed to see was that it worked."

Ozai's tone was cold. "And now you want to bring it back?"

Zuko turned slowly, locking eyes with Azula. "Yes."

Azula scoffed, stepping back as if his gaze physically repulsed her. "You cannot be serious, Zuko."

Iroh's voice cracked the silence like thunder. "You are speaking of inbreeding, of violating sacred blood and honor! This… This is madness!"

"I am not mating with my own brother," Azula snapped, eyes narrowed and full of disgust. "Least of all someone like you."

Zuko's expression didn't falter. Calm. Focused. Calculated.

"I will not allow such a thing to happen," Ozai said, and for once, his voice held no fire, only finality.

"That tradition is long dead," Iroh added. "Buried, and rightly so."

"Brother is right," Ozai echoed. "The Fire Nation is stronger than it has ever been. We are united. We have the Avatar. We are winning the war. We don't need such ancient barbarism to secure the future."

Zuko stood there for a long moment, saying nothing.

His face showed disappointment. Resignation.

But inside?

Inside he smiled.

Of course they would reject it. Of course they would react this way. They still think the world is the same. That it bends to their logic. Their pride. Their rules.

But Victor Crane had already seen behind the curtain. There were other forces at play in this capital, ones even Ozai didn't understand.

Factions that whispered from the shadows.

Eyes that watched the throne room from unseen corners.

They think they are kings and dragons, Zuko thought, but they don't even know who's setting fire to the map.

Even Iroh, for all his wisdom, played for a secret side, The White Lotus, a collective that transcended borders and blood. A brotherhood that would burn down empires if they believed it kept "balance."

Zuko had no illusions.

He didn't care about bloodlines.

Not really.

Not yet.

What he cared about now, what had driven him to move early, was something far more primal.

Azula.

He wanted her.

He wanted her fury. Her fire. Her resistance. Her submission.

He wanted her lips silenced under his. Her body squirming in his grip. Her arrogant smirks broken by the heat of his hands. Her pride reduced to breathless defiance.

This so-called "lineage", this whole policy, was just the veil.

A well-woven excuse to take what he'd wanted since the moment he saw her again, in this world. In this body.

And now, standing mere meters away, with no guards, no court, no distractions?

He ached to reach out and pull her to him. To kiss her again, not in a flash of calculated shock, but hungrily. Slowly. Completely.

But he didn't.

Not yet.

Because the game wasn't over.

And power? Real power… demanded patience.

The flames around the Fire Lord's throne lowered slowly, but the heat in the room did not ease.

Ozai's eyes, sharp as obsidian blades, locked onto Zuko's with the weight of a final warning.

"This will be the last time I hear of this, Zuko," he said coldly. "One more incident, one more step out of line, and there will be dire consequences. Do you understand me?"

The air grew still.

Zuko didn't blink. "Yes, Father. I understand."

Iroh exhaled beside the flames, stepping forward slightly. "We must keep this… incident under wraps. If the court were to hear rumors of this, it would spark whispers we cannot afford."

"This must not leave this room," Iroh said, more firmly now, looking between the three of them. "Whatever ideas were shared here, must stay here."

Zuko nodded solemnly.

"Of course, Uncle. It won't happen again."

His voice was steady, calm, obedient.

Exactly what they wanted to hear.

Azula glanced at him out of the corner of her eye, that smirk once again curling across her lips, condescending, victorious. She believed she had the upper hand now. That the Fire Lord and the Dragon of the West had crushed Zuko's ambitions before they had a chance to ignite.

Zuko met her gaze.

And then…

He winked.

Subtle. Fast. Gone in a heartbeat.

Azula's smirk froze.

Zuko turned and walked toward the massive doors, the firelight casting his long shadow over the stone floor.

Behind him, Iroh followed, quiet and thoughtful.

Azula remained still for a moment longer, her posture tense, before she turned sharply on her heel and followed as well, but took a different hall.

No words were spoken.

No fire danced now.

Just the memory of heat, and the threat of what still burned beneath.

Each of them left the chamber through separate paths.

But not one of them left unchanged.

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