Title: The Bear and the Phoenix
Chapter: 1
Fandom: Avatar: The Last Airbender
Characters/Pairings: Ursa, Ozai; Ursa x Ozai
Rating: K+/PG
Warnings: An OC makes a prominent appearance in this chapter, but, c'mon, do I write Mary Sues?
Word Count: 3,595
Challenge:
33_proposals; #01: Witnessed by the ex
Summary: Before the royal intrigue, plots to gain power, and mysterious disappearances, there was an almost fairytale-like romance between the Crown Prince and the minor princess.
I
Witnessed
by the ExPrince
Ruoko, although not a bad man (not at all-very nice, very pleasant,
very well-mannered), was not quite the husband that Princess
Ursa was looking for. True, as a princess of only a minor
principality of the Fire Nation, she didn’t exactly have that much
choice, but-well, imagining a long and fruitful life with this man
was a bit like imagining getting hairs pulled out of her head, one by
one. It, to say the least, simply didn’t excite her. At best, it
was a horrifying thought.
“Oh,
Princess Ursa, I would pluck the stars from the heavens for you! I
would tame rivers and make them flow by your window so that you could
see the sun glittering off the rivers’ sweet waters when you wake;
I would plant hundreds of trees if you desired an orchard!” He
kneeled and kissed her hand. “Princess Ursa, I would call the moon
to serenade you; I would pull strands of gossamer thread from the
night sky and weave you a cloak; I would harness the sun and have the
most beautiful dress in all of the world to be made for you. Oh,
Princess Ursa, my love for you is undying, is timeless, is immortal,
is…”
Princess
Ursa sighed and looked away from the man. He wasn’t bad-looking,
and he was from a principality that was a bit more well-off than
hers; he had no history of mental or physical defects; he was
overflowing with passion for her… yet…
He
stood and twirled, spreading his arms out before her. “Princess
Ursa! Once we are married, I will have a palace made for you from
the finest wood of all the Earth Kingdom, decorated with paintings
and scrolls by only the most talented artists on this earth! Cities
will be constructed in your name; I will instate a Day for the
Celebration of Our Empress Ursa!”
Princess
Ursa sighed and massaged her temple. Well, at least he was better
than that Prince Aoko, who had been married off to her sister,
Princess Dae… That man had a head so bloated, so filled with
hot air, that she was (quite frankly) surprised that he hadn’t yet
lifted up and soared off into the sky. Poor Dae-cooped up in the
palace for twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, with that man…
It was a good thing that Dae was so patient; she herself would have
killed him by now (or at least put a hole through his head-maybe
all that ego would drain out that way).
“Oh,
Princess Ursa-”
Princess
Ursa frowned and drew back from Prince Ruoko. “I’m sorely sorry,
but I have some, err, matters to attend to… Please forgive me.”
She straightened her hair and brushed a wrinkle out of her dress.
“As you know-the annual ball is being held tonight at the Fire
Nation capital… You’re going, aren’t you? Anyway, I really
must begin to get ready.”
His
smile dropped and shattered on the floor. Her reached out for
Princess Ursa’s hand, and she sighed and let him grip it and caress
it.
“Darling!
But it’s only ten o’clock in the morning! The ball doesn’t
start until seven!”
She
sighed. “Yes, yes-but, well, it takes a long time for me to get
ready. I must look my best tonight.”
“But
darling, you are already the most beautiful woman on the face of this
earth! Your eyes shine like the scales of the jeweled fish swimming
in the clear waters by Kyoshi Island; your skin is white and flawless
like the finest Fire Nation porcelain; your hair is the deepest, most
luxurious ebony-black, darker than coal, yet brilliant like the sun
gleaming off silver; your-”
“Yes,
yes,” Princess Ursa said impatiently, then pried her hand away from
his touching fingers. “That’s what you say, at
least-Father and Mother, however, do not agree so readily. I
really must be off now. Father and Mother want me to look my
best to attract more suitors.” She saw the crestfallen look on
Prince Ruoko’s face and sighed again-how many times had she
sighed today, anyway? “Not that, of course, you’re not a
fantastic suitor-” She winced at the grin that spread itself
across his face. She needed to be less considerate. “-but
Mother and Father want me to, well, keep my opportunities open. We
are-after all-not yet engaged-” She rolled her eyes as the
grin was wiped off his face again. “-but I’m sure that Mother
and Father will have me marry you; after all, most of the Princes at
the ball will most likely already be betrothed.” The grin on this
man’s face could show itself and hide itself faster than the old
geezers playing mah-jong could show and hide their tiles; it
was rather unnerving.
“Look-I’d
love to stay longer-but I truly must get going. It takes
hours to do my hair correctly, you know.” (Total lie-well, all
right, the longest it ever took was two and a half hours, but that
was only because the hairdresser was incompetent and couldn’t find
the brushes and hairpins, and when she did manage to find the
hairpins, she always put them into her hair incorrectly, so that
sections would fall right after they were elaborately twisted and
pinned up again. Needless to say, Princess Ursa never saw her
again.)
With
that, she pulled herself away from Prince Ruoko (breathing a sigh of
relief once she was well out of earshot) and strode down the hall,
breaking into a run once she got around the corner. She leaned her
back against a wall and breathed heavily. There was no way
that she would be able to stand years and years of royal life with
that man… Let’s see, she was twenty-two now, and he was
twenty-one… Her maternal grandmother was sixty-one years old and
her maternal grandfather was seventy-five… and her paternal
grandmother was an amazing eighty-six years old, while her paternal
grandfather had died when he was eighty-two… Well, it looked like
she would be living for another sixty years, at least, judging by
those figures. Sixty years with that man? She let the back
of her head hit the wall. Sixty years! She shuddered.
No,
she needed to find a new man at this ball… All right, so
about ninety-nine percent of the princes had already been betrothed,
but it wasn’t too late, right? Okay, so she was a bit older
than most of the other girls (Dae had gotten married when she was
seventeen), but she still had a chance, right? She had to! There
must be at least one prince there who wasn’t married… All
right, admittedly, he’d be a nobody, but a nobody was better than
Prince Ruoko. She shuddered again and made her way to the dressing
room. What she told Prince Ruoko wasn’t a complete lie; she
did have to get ready-although it wouldn’t take nine
hours. She could read a book for the rest of the time, maybe.
Anything to get away from that prince.
She
slipped into the dressing room and found the maids busy powdering her
mother. She sighed and took a seat, picking at a few stray threads
on her sleeve. How did her robes always manage to have
threads sticking out of them?
“Ursa,
darling, is that you?” her mother called out, eyes closed as the
puffs dabbed at her face.
“Yes,
mother.”
“Where
have you been? The seamstress, silly girl, managed to lose your
measurements halfway through making your dress, so you’ll need to
be remeasured as quickly as possible.” She cracked open an eyelid
and glanced at her. “And your hair! You haven’t had it washed,
have you? Well, you’ll need to do that, too.” She sighed.
“Where have you been all morning? I tried sending out some maids
to tell you about the seamstress, but they never managed to find
you.”
Ursa
sighed. “Sorry, Mother-Prince Ruoko dropped by to visit.”
Her
mother laughed, then coughed after she inhaled some of the powder.
“That boy? Ursa, I don’t know why you continue to indulge him.”
Ursa
stiffened. “Mother, he’s the one always coming to our
palace! It’s not like I want to see him, you know.”
“Then
tell him off!”
“I
can’t do that, Mother!” Ursa said, exasperated. “It’s-well,
it’s not nice. And I don’t want to make myself-or you, or
Father, or any of us-look bad.”
Her
mother rolled her eyes. “That boy… Trust me, Ursa, I bet he’s
tiny. Or, even worse, that he can’t even get it up.”
“Mother!”
Ursa squeezed her eyes shut. “I don’t really want to think
about that right now. Especially not when it concerns Prince Ruoko,
of all people.” She reached over and poured herself a cup of
steaming tea, then took a sip.
The
maids stepped back from her mother’s face and let her sit up and
examine herself in the mirror. She turned her head from side to side
and checked that the coverage was even and that no blemishes were
showing. “If you marry him, trust me, you two won’t have any
kids at all. Do you realize how sad that would be? Your father, on
the other hand-well, there’s a reason why you have five brothers
and sisters, darling.” She grinned slyly.
Ursa
choked on her sip of tea, then coughed. One of the maids rushed over
to pat Ursa on the back; she sputtered, then choked out, “Mother!”
“I’m
only telling you the truth.” Her mother touched a spot on her
cheek, then said, “A little more here-I can still see that
hideous spot.”
Ursa
frowned as the seamstress walked in with a handful of tape measures.
“You don’t need to tell me, you know.” She took off her
robes and stood in her underclothes as the maid began to re-measure
her.
“It’s
for your own good, sweetie.” The maids put down the puffs and
reached for the makeup box, pulling out tins of rouge and smaller
brushes.
Ursa
spread her arms and let the seamstress measure around her bust. She
rolled her eyes as the maids began to apply the rouge to her mother’s
cheeks. “Mother knows best, huh?”
“You
got it.”
Seven
hours later (three agonizing hours of makeup and four agonizing hours
of hairstyling-turned out that her hair needed to be much, much more
elaborate for this ball than she had ever had it, and she was now
carrying what felt like five tons of hair pins and ornaments on her
head), Princess Ursa, dressed in fine robes, with her face made up to
be absolutely flawless, her hair rising in delicate buns and curls on
her head, and her feet squeezed into small shoes, was sitting in the
courtyard with nothing to do. Her mother had forbidden her to read
(“You always rub your eyes when you read-you’re going to mess
up your makeup!”) and to feed the turtle-ducks (“You’re going
to get your robes wet!”). She had no choice but to sit in the
courtyard and watch the musicians play pieces that she’d already
heard hundreds of times already.
She
sighed and restrained herself from leaning her head back against the
tree (as her hair might get tangled in the bark), then idly picked at
her fingernails. The sun was beginning to set, casting a red-orange
glow across the sky, turning the clouds a brilliant pink color. The
sky was already darkening as the first stars twinkled out from the
blue-violet canvas.
“Ursa,
darling!”
Ursa
turned around and saw her mother waving at her.
“Ursa,
it’s time to go. Come on-the carriage is waiting!”
Ursa
nodded and picked up the hems of her robes, walking across the grass
to meet her mother. Finally-time to get out of the palace! The
palace was, admittedly, not a bad place to be, but it could get
boring after months of confinement… She walked briskly alongside
her mother, through the halls and to the front gate, where a fine
carriage being drawn by four horses was waiting. The two of them
climbed in and sat beside each other.
“Will
Father be there?” Ursa asked as the horses began their trot.
“Of
course. Hopefully, he will have successfully sealed that trade deal
with the capital… or else two weeks of negotiating will have been
for naught.” Her mother sighed. “I really hope that it went
well-we need that trade deal.”
Ursa
nodded. “And… Mother, do you think there will be princes there
that haven’t yet been betrothed? I honestly don’t think that I
can stand even another day with Prince Ruoko!”
Her
mother laughed. “Well, to tell you the truth, that boy isn’t
that bad. He is, after all, still a boy, and still immature.
Why, when I married your father, he was the same way-but he got
better over the years, and look where we are now. Maybe he’ll get
better, too-maybe you’ll fall in love.”
Ursa
scoffed. “Are you kidding me?”
Her
mother shrugged. “At least he loves you-better to have a man who
loves you than a man who doesn’t, right?”
Ursa
frowned. “But Prince Ruoko-”
Her
mother laughed and patted her on the shoulder. “Sweetie, don’t
worry-there are plenty of princes there. And besides-I heard the
Crown Prince is still single and looking, you know,” she said, then
winked. Ursa rolled her eyes.
“Like
he’ll pay any attention to me! He’ll probably have dozens of
richer and prettier princesses hanging off of him.”
Her
mother wagged a finger at her and shook her head. “Now, don’t
talk about yourself that way, darling. You’re pretty, you’re
smart, you’re charismatic, and, most of all, you’re Ursa. Now
get those silly thoughts out of your head. You have to be confident! Then he’ll notice you.”
“I
guess so…” She looked out the window and watched as the
countryside rolled past. Within ten or fifteen minutes, they were
passing through the village; people were craning their necks out from
their houses and watching as the carriage passed by. The clip-clop
of the horses’ hooves rang loud and clear on the cobblestone
streets of the village as people tried to gain a glimpse of the
princess or the empress-they had never seen them; they were usually
inside the palace (although they had heard that the two of
them were very beautiful-it was a shame that none of them would
even think about marrying peasants…).
Ursa
sighed and attempted to sleep, but it was difficult to do so, since
she was unable to lean her head against the window or against the
back of the chair; it was too much of a risk to have her hair messed
up now. Instead, she let her head hang at an uncomfortable angle and
closed her eyes. It would take perhaps two more hours to get to the
capital, and she would rather not spend the time staring off into
space. Eventually, the rocking of the carriage lulled her to a
shallow sleep.
Two
hours later, they were at the Fire Nation capital’s Royal Palace.
Ursa groggily shook herself awake and blinked her eyes a couple time.
She covered a yawn, then looked outside the window and gasped.
There were dozens and dozens of carriages-hundreds, maybe. It was
hard to believe that there were this many people coming. She
nervously got down from the carriage with her mother, then walked
beside her to the open gates.
Fifteen
minutes later, she found herself-once again-with Prince Ruoko.
It
was very difficult to resist the temptation to rub her temples (she
might smear her makeup). In fact, it was like trying to force the
sun not to rise.
“Princess!
We shall dance the night away, you and me, like two beautiful
cranes…”
She
looked at the ballroom floor. There were only a few couples dancing
at the moment, but more and more couples were beginning to join them.
She saw some highly dissatisfied princesses and sympathized with
them-they looked as if they’d rather be anywhere but here, with
the idiot of a prince that they were betrothed to. Most likely, the
only reason why they were here were to pay their respects to the
Crown Prince and his family.
“Now,
Princess,” said Prince Ruoko, standing above her and breaking her
gaze, “shall we dance?”
Ursa
frowned and stood, giving her hand to Ruoko, who kissed it and smiled
at her.
“All
right.”
She
let herself be led to the floor, and sighed as she felt Prince
Ruoko’s clumsy hands come to a rest at her waist. They began to
dance as the music played in the background. She winced. This dance
was excruciating-when would it finally be over? All right, they
had just started dancing, but still… Not only was Prince Ruoko, to
put it gently, horrible at dancing, but this song was beginning to
get on her nerves, as well; that fiddle was just too high-pitched for
her tastes. She sighed and glanced at all the other couples on the
ballroom floor-they all seemed to be having a good time. Yet…
She sighed again, rolling her eyes at the fact that Prince Ruoko
didn’t seem to be paying any attention to her reactions and
frustrated sighs at all.
At
long last, the song ended with the wavering note of a flute, and
Princess Ursa parted from Prince Ruoko. Prince Ruoko grinned, then
gently kissed Princess Ursa’s hand.
“Wait
here, darling… I’ll get us some drinks.”
Princess
Ursa rolled her eyes. “I’m not thirsty,” she said, but he had
already walked off to the banquet table. She sighed and began to
walk back toward the tables, but she felt an unfamiliar hand seize
hers. She whirled around and found herself face-to-face with the
Crown Prince, who was looking straight into her eyes with a solemn
look on his face.
“May
I have this dance?” he asked in a soft voice as the first notes of
the next song began to play.
“I-”
she said, blushing, then recalled the words of her mother and
straightened up, attempting to put on a serious, confident
expression. “…Yes, please.”
The
Crown Prince raised her hand to his lips and placed a gentle kiss on
it, sending chills up her spine. This man-Prince Ruoko had kissed
her hand dozens of times, and she had never gotten this feeling
before. He put his hand on her waist-a firm but not rough grip-and
another shiver went up her spine. She was thankful for her robes; if
they didn’t have long sleeves, everyone would have been able to see
the goosebumps on her arms. And, to think, she was getting so worked
up and all he had done was kiss her hand and touch her waist… She
smiled and tentatively leaned into him as he began to lead her in a
dance.
A
few moments into the dance, he leaned down and murmured into her ear
(sending more chills throughout her-this guy was something, all
right), “Tell me, do you know my name?”
She
rolled her eyes and said (forgetting all the proper, correct ways to
talk to princes), “Of course-you’re Ozai, the Crown Prince.
Anyone who doesn’t know is an idiot.”
He
raised an eyebrow as he gazed into her eyes. “Looks like you’re
not an idiot, then.”
She
bit her lip and blushed. A smirk crossed his face.
“Tell
me… What’s your name?”
She
inhaled sharply, then looked straight back into his eyes and said,
“Ursa.”
“Ursa…”
he said, savoring the taste of her name on his tongue as he glanced
up at the ceiling, tilting his head back as if to swallow the
syllables. A moment of silence passed as they continued to dance,
him leading and her following. He finally looked back down at her
and smiled, a small smile that only touched the edges of his lips.
“I’ll remember that.”
She
smiled and leaned in closer to him. “You better.”
“Impertinent
wench,” he murmured, and she stiffened, but a soft, low laugh
escaped his lips and her smile widened as he brought her closer,
pressing her chest to his. All too soon, the song ended, and Ursa
let escape a small sigh, but Prince Ozai gave her hand a tiny
squeeze.
“May
I have this dance?”
Princess
Ursa looked up and saw Prince Ruoko (back with a furious and hurt
expression on his face, and without drinks) standing beside them.
The smile was wiped off her face and she frowned, preparing to part
from the Crown Prince-but the Crown Prince held on to her tight.
“No,”
the Crown Prince said, softly but firmly, a sharp glint in his eyes,
expression cold. Princess Ursa opened her mouth but found herself
unable to say anything. Did the Crown Prince…? She pinched
herself hard under her robes and winced, holding back a curse. This
was no dream, all right… Prince Ruoko slinked off, sulking, as
Crown Prince Ozai returned his gaze to her.
“Now…
May I have this dance?” he said. “And the following dance, and
the one following that?”
Ursa
blushed and nodded (a bit too eagerly than she should have, she
thought).
“Yes,”
she said breathlessly, and the smile returned to his face.
“Correct
answer,” he whispered, and brought her to him again.
The other chapters can be found
here.
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