Chapter 38: The Flames Within
The scent of ash and herbs lingered faintly in the air as Prince Zuko limped forward, his arm slung over Sergeant Rin's shoulder. Each step sent waves of dull pain through his ribs, but the fire in his chest burned hotter than ever. The base was quiet this morning, the kind of calm that comes only after a storm. Loose planks were still being replaced, crates reorganized, scorch marks scrubbed off stone. The air had a faint scent of oil and recovery.
Three soldiers passed along the corridor. One of them straightened quickly and bowed.
"Prince Zuko, sir," he said. "It's good to see you on your feet again."
Another chimed in. "We all saw the fight with the Mad King. What you did… it gave us time to survive. Thank you, sire."
Zuko gave them a tired glance, then a nod. "Get back to work. The war's not over."
They bowed again and left, leaving Zuko and Rin to continue through the halls.
"Your body isn't ready for this," Rin muttered, his voice gruff but not disrespectful. "You shouldn't be moving yet."
Zuko grunted, clutching at his side with his free hand. "And yet here I am."
Rin didn't answer, only adjusted his grip to ease the prince's weight as they rounded a corner and approached one of the quiet meditation rooms that had been converted into temporary quarters. Zuko paused outside the door and gestured.
"Wait here, Rin. I want to speak with him alone."
Rin hesitated, but after a beat, nodded and took a step back. "Try not to collapse again, sire."
Zuko smirked despite the pain, then lifted a hand and knocked.
"Come in," came Iroh's warm, gravelly voice.
Zuko pushed the door open and stepped inside. His uncle was seated cross-legged at a low table, steam rising gently from a clay teapot, his eyes closed as if he had been meditating. The moment he saw Zuko limp in, however, his eyes opened and his brow furrowed.
"You should be resting," Iroh said sternly. "Your ribs were fractured in four places. And that gash on your thigh could've gotten infected…"
"I'm not here to debate my recovery," Zuko interrupted as he shut the door behind him. He dragged a cushion over and slumped onto it with a wince. "I came to talk."
Iroh raised a brow. "About what? Whatever it could be, it isn't more important than your recovery."
"It is very important, more than anything. Firebending," Zuko said simply. "About… what you did. Against Bumi. I want to know how to reach that level."
There was a pause as Iroh poured them both tea, his movements slow, deliberate. He didn't answer right away. Instead, he handed Zuko a cup and gestured for him to sip.
Zuko looked down at the amber liquid and took a sip. Hot. Bitter. Comforting.
"The strength you saw," Iroh began at last, "is not something learned in a day… or even in a year. It is earned. Through discipline. Through pain. Through understanding."
Zuko was quiet. He looked down at his hands, his fingers twitching slightly as he remembered the flames, the shapes, the desperation of his last duel.
"I want that strength," he said again. "I need it."
"Why?" Iroh asked. Not harshly. Just… firmly.
Zuko looked up at him, golden eyes unwavering. "Because if I don't… I'll lose. All of it. The war. The throne. Everything I've built. I need to be stronger. That level, yours and Bumi's, I thought I was close. But now I see how far I still have to go."
Iroh studied him carefully, then leaned back with a nod.
"Then we begin not with power," he said, "but with understanding."
Zuko's brow furrowed.
"Fire," Iroh said, holding up one hand. A flame flickered to life above his palm. "It is the element of life and destruction. It is breath and rage. It is power, yes but also balance. Do you remember our conversation that day in the south pole, before you captured the avatar."
Zuko nodded as he watched the flame.
Iroh closed his hand. The flame vanished.
"As you know, the original firebenders," Iroh continued, "were dragons. Creatures of great wisdom and passion. They did not use fire to dominate. They used it to illuminate. To survive. To grow."
Zuko nodded slowly. "Roku said something like that in the scrolls. Fire was an extension of their bodies."
"Roku understood," Iroh agreed. "But firebending changed. During the war, it became a tool of conquest. A hammer. Your father… he teaches power without restraint. But that is not true strength."
Zuko was silent for a long moment. Then he asked, "What about ki?"
"Ah," Iroh said with a smile. "You have been experimenting. I see my lessons to you have not been wasted over the years."
Zuko gave a faint smirk. "Let's say I've… remembered some things."
"From our training of generating lightning, we used this mysterious energy," Iroh said. " Ki is the spirit within. Our energy. What drives us. For firebenders, the sun is our greatest ally, it fuels and enhances our ki. But without discipline, that energy burns uncontrolled."
He tapped his chest.
"Discipline and focus. You control the fire. Not the other way around."
Zuko took that in.
"And experience?" he asked.
"Experience teaches pain. Pain teaches humility. And humility opens the path to wisdom," Iroh said. "You are learning. But you must not rush. You have come so far in such a long time. That time you fought against Zhao. The way your fire moved like an extension of your movements. Channeling it into your movements."
"I don't have time, Uncle," Zuko said. "The war is moving faster now. Kuvak is watching me. Azula is plotting. Fong will strike again. And the Avatar is still out there."
Iroh nodded solemnly.
"Then we begin tomorrow at sunrise," he said. "Outside the barracks. Bring no guards. Just you… and the flame. We will teach your finer control."
Zuko stood, wobbling slightly.
"You'll teach me everything?"
Iroh smiled faintly. "No. But I will teach you enough that the rest becomes clear."
Zuko smirked. "Good."
And with that, the prince limped to the door.
Behind him, Iroh looked down at his teacup and whispered quietly.
"Let the dragons hear your fire."
The hall outside Iroh's chamber was quieter than before. Zuko limped down it slowly, each step a small war against the pain that coiled in his ribs and throbbed through his shoulder. The battered muscles in his legs screamed every time he put weight on them, and he winced sharply as he turned a corner, one hand dragging across the wall for support.
"Prince Zuko?" a familiar voice called out.
He looked up just barely and found Hinaro standing down the hallway. Her eyes widened as she stepped toward him. "You're awake? I mean, I knew you were but you're walking?"
Zuko kept moving, his breath low and tight. "It's going to take more than a few broken bones to put me down."
"That's not... encouraging," she said dryly, stepping beside him. She didn't offer her arm, but she slowed her pace to match his limp. "You really shouldn't be on your feet. They say it's a miracle your ribs didn't puncture your lungs."
Zuko grunted, not looking at her. "I will live."
They passed a few soldiers at the end of the hall, who nodded quickly and stepped aside without a word. Hinaro glanced at them, then at the prince beside her.
"You're lucky, you know. If the Admiral hadn't arrived when he did..."
"I'm aware," Zuko cut her off, voice like steel. "I was there."
Hinaro didn't respond, and the two of them walked the next few paces in silence. As they reached the stairwell that led back to the officers' wing, Zuko paused, bracing himself against the wooden frame of the doorway.
The burn of his ribs flared like molten iron pressed against his bones. Still, he didn't groan. Didn't stumble. He simply closed his eyes for a moment, drawing in a breath.
"You must not rush," his uncle had said.
But his thoughts raced too fast for meditation now.
It had been over a month since he'd arrived in this world, since Victor Krane died on Earth and woke up in the body of a banished prince. From day one, he had thrown himself into training. Every hour. Every day. And his firebending… it had become more than skill. More than muscle memory. It had become his breath.
From the first time he manipulated his flames in this new body, he could tell something was different. Something deeper.
The flames came easier. Larger. Hotter.
He hadn't paid much attention at first, but over time he realized: his ki reserves, the very energy that powered his bending, were significantly greater than they ever had been. Greater than the Zuko of this world, too. That, combined with his knowledge of physics and movement, allowed him to build a bending style far different than what Zuko used in the show.
Gone were the high flips, the narrow dodges, the sharp, staccato bursts of flame.
Now his firebending was fluid, wide, and devastating. Walls of flame. Cascading arcs. He bent fire like a war machine, not a dancer.
He had thought that was enough, better than the raw style the original Zuko used.
The blue flames, the scale, the devastating crescendos of heat. He thought he had reached the pinnacle, close to Iroh. Maybe even close to Ozai.
But watching his uncle battle King Bumi had shattered that illusion like ice under a hammer.
There were tiers to this. Tiers that went beyond raw heat. Beyond control. Beyond size.
It was about unity of body and breath, of mind and fire. His bending lacked that.
He opened his eyes.
"Hinaro," he said, not turning to her. "How would you describe my bending?"
She blinked, confused by the sudden question. "Your... bending?"
He turned to face her, sweat beading lightly across his forehead from the exertion. "Tell me. Be honest."
"Well," she said, brow furrowed, "it's… loud. Powerful. Bigger than anyone else I've seen. Like a siege engine wrapped in a human. I've never seen a firebender push like you do."
"But?"
She didn't answer.
Zuko narrowed his eyes. "But?"
"But it's… rigid," she admitted. "Predictable. You don't feint. You don't play. You burn until the problem goes away."
Zuko exhaled slowly. "Thank you."
"Is that… good?"
He shook his head. "No. It's true."
The walk back to his quarters was slower now, more thoughtful. He leaned less on the wall, more on his own feet.
Original Zuko's style, that agile, reactive, counter-heavy dancing of flame and footwork, it wasn't weak. It was fast. Opportunistic. Acrobatic.
Victor had thrown that away early on, in favor of force and dominance. And it had worked up to a point. He could overpower. He could raze. But now?
He remembered Iroh, walking through Bumi's barrage as if the fire danced with him.
He remembered Bumi himself, flinging the earth as if it were silk in his hands.
Zuko stopped outside his door, standing still in the corridor.
'Whatever Uncle teaches me tomorrow…' he thought, 'it won't be enough on its own. I need to go beyond. I need to take everything I've built and everything I've ignored and build something new."
His own path.
A hybrid of strength and motion. Raw power and unpredictability. Something worthy of the Fire Nation Crown Prince… and the foreign soul buried within him.
"You going in?" Hinaro asked behind him.
Zuko blinked, pulled from his thoughts.
"Yeah," he said. "Eventually."
He gave her a nod, then stepped through the door, leaving her to her confusion.
He closed it behind him and leaned against the wooden frame.
Tomorrow would be the beginning.
The real beginning.
The door shut behind him with a soft click, sealing Zuko once again in the quiet of his quarters. The fire within the small brazier had gone low, just a dim orange glow now, the kind of flicker that danced like a memory, not a threat. He winced as he reached the edge of his bed and sat down, gingerly turning to lay back on the bed. Every muscle in his torso protested. His ribs felt like glass held together by sheer will.
Tomorrow, he told himself. Tomorrow I begin.
He was just easing down, fingers unlacing the front of his tunic when the door creaked open behind him again.
"I didn't say come in," he muttered through gritted teeth.
"It's just me," Hinaro's voice said coolly.
She slipped inside like a shadow in the torchlight, arms folded beneath her chest. She didn't wear armor, just a red cotton tunic tucked into simple trousers but she carried herself like she was always a breath from unsheathing a blade.
Zuko lay still, watching her from where he rested against the pillow. His golden eyes narrowed slightly.
"You and Lee," he said flatly. "It's been more than seventy-two hours."
Hinaro blinked once, then narrowed her eyes at him. "I beg your pardon?"
"I gave you three days," he repeated, voice calm but edged. "You're married now. You are both part of this. And yet, here we are."
She exhaled sharply, her arms still folded. "You were bleeding out in a healer's tent forty-eight hours ago. Maybe forgive us for not focusing on the honeymoon."
Zuko ignored the sarcasm. "It wasn't a suggestion. I gave that order for a reason."
"You mean your grand plan?" she asked. "The one that makes pawns out of everyone? Breeding heirs like livestock for your new Kyoshi-ruled dynasty?"
Zuko sat up slowly, his ribs screaming with each movement. He didn't flinch.
"Yes," he said. "Be careful of what you speak in this walls."
They locked eyes for a long moment. Her stance didn't waver, but something in her gaze flickered. A hesitation.
"You don't understand," Zuko said, voice quieter now. "You think this is about tradition or obedience. It's not. This is about control. Control of bloodlines, of loyalty, of future claims. Your role, his role, is part of a design larger than any one of you realise."
"And what about love?" she asked, bitterly. "Or does that not factor into your calculations?"
Zuko's face barely changed.
"Love," he said, almost like testing the word. "Is a luxury in wartime. Most of our ancestors married for alliance. Legacy. Power. And they ruled entire kingdoms. Love came later. Sometimes."
Hinaro stared at him. Her arms dropped to her sides, but her fists clenched.
"You're unbelievable," she whispered.
He looked her over then, eyes dragging slowly across her face, her posture, the tension in her limbs. He wasn't ogling, he was assessing. Measuring. Gauging.
She felt it and hated that part of her bristled under that gaze.
"What?" she asked, irritation blooming.
Zuko leaned slightly forward, his voice low and unreadable. "You're angry… but not afraid. Not of me. Not of any of this."
"You're not nearly as scary as you think," she said.
He almost smiled at that. Almost.
Whatever he had been about to say next was cut short by a firm knock on the door.
They both turned.
Zuko exhaled, annoyed. "Who is it?"
"Prince Zuko," came a gravelly voice from beyond the wood. "It's Admiral Kuvak. Requesting a word."
Zuko froze. The warmth in his face vanished. The humor. The mild flirtation. It all evaporated like steam beneath a sudden cold.
Hinaro caught the shift and stepped back automatically.
"Of course," Zuko called, his voice even again but only just.
He turned to look at the door like it was the edge of a blade, both a challenge and a test. The moment he'd been expecting since the storm had split the fleet. Since he fled the capital. Since he abandoned his orders and played the game like it was already his board.
Kuvak had arrived.
And the reckoning would begin.
[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!]