“Any suggestions, oh great artist?”Yutaka snorted in a way that was both derisive and in no way sexy which he immediately covered with a smile.
"Uh...let's see..." Yutaka looked around momentarily before attaching one of his posters to the building wall he walked aside.
"Perfect place. The surface is flat and it's near the park. Actually, I've been setting up posters all week. I've, uh, been kind of excited for this. Maybe there will be a crowd gathering to see you..." He paused lightly bumped his shoulder against Ren'ai's.
"Oh, most combustible of firebenders."The way his girlfriend said that she was glad Yutaka had beaten his rival in a single game didn't sound like the off-handed compliment he usually received. Yutaka assumed it was because Ren'ai knew what it was like to compete with someone and that while she didn't care for a poetry memory game she actually cared about this most minor of victories.
To his own surprise Yutaka found himself less interested in touting his own achievement than he was hearing Ren'ai talk about bending. He knew he couldn't appreciat the sport on the same level as Ren'ai but the look she had while speaking of it made Yutaka happy...as well as a tiny bit jealous.
As she spoke Yutaka handed out fliers while trying to keep his eyes on Ren'ai but it wasn't working. Advertising was important but he wasn't about to waste a chance to look at Ren'ai when she was at her most radiant. Idly, he wondered if she glowed like that when she talked about him to other people.
"Not a clue where we should start. One of us should, um, you know, address the crowd. Say you're looking for a waterbender. I'm not sure I'm the right guy to..." Yutaka sighed, a little frustrated at how wishy-washy he sounded. Foisting the burden of firing up the crowd onto Ren'ai seemed cowardly since she would have to test the difficult benders and judge them to be worthy or not while he only had to show enough bending skill to weed out only the most terrible.
Yutaka took a deep breath and lightly slapped at his face with both hands then ran his palms over his head and took yet another breath.
"G-good people, of...of Republic City!" he started with a semi-confident but much too quiet voice.
"People of Republic City! Lend me your ears," he said with greater volume and confidence, although he kept his eyes shut the entire time.
"The mightiest of earth and fire benders have heeded the call of the Dragon Hawks but water remains sorely missing from this...trinity of elements." Aside from a minor pause Yutaka felt fine or at least not like passing out.
"Is there a waterbender among you who hears the call of the Dragon Hawk? Do you wish to test your skills against a pro-bender? Can you even best a novice such as myself? Prove yourself worthy of the Dragon Hawks, water benders and make a poem of your life!"By then a small group had formed around the practice area with its' streams of water, bending disks and painted lines for pro-bending and Yutaka was utterly terrified.
Like a bashful child Yutaka found himself burying his face in Ren'ai's shoulder.
"Ugh. 'Make a poem of your life'? I should have gotten somebody else to do this. Hired an actor or something."With more than a slight sense of agitation, Yutaka tested the bending disks provided in the park for texture and hardness. It was his first match without full armor, only a face shield and the torso of his black and gray uniform.
"It's just a try out. It'll be fine. You can do this. Stop muttering to yourself, Ren'ai is watching."Trying to look more confident than he truly was Yutaka gestured for the first waterbender to approach. To his dismay, it was a large and intimidating man who wasted no time in attacking Yutaka with a stream of water.
In a way it was scarier than the fireballs his girlfriend would lob at him during practice. After all, he had no idea of there was any malice behind the watery attack.
As it turned out there was no power behind the attack. Yutaka turned to take the attack on his shoulder but was not moved.
The grimace the large man exhibited made him look smaller and much less intimidating. When Yutaka launched his first disk at him the poor man instinctively covered his head which made Yutaka feel guilty for aiming his attack at his body.
The man fell back into the second zone looking more than a little embarassed.
One barrage of disks later the man was out of bounds and had lost the right to challenge Ren'ai. Yutaka felt like he had just kicked a baby badger mole.
Yutaka's second opponent was teenaged girl with her brown hair tied into a single braid and sporting glasses that couldn't hide a look in her eye that made Yutaka nervous. He bended a series of disks at the young woman who casually dodged them at Ren'ai often did and hit him with a water attack that sent him tumbling back two zones.
By the time the three minute timer sounded ending the round Yutaka had not been defeated but the bespectacled woman showed enough skill to warrant a match with Ren'ai.
********
Once Ren'ai had done away with the glasses-sporting teen the other waterbenders that were once eager to show of their skills now shuffled around timidly. Only one raised their hand but Yutaka noticed that as she warmed up in her black pants common among martial artists and black shirt advertising Flame-O Instant Noodles that the woman looked completely past Yutaka at at Ren'ai.
The woman looked an inch taller than Yutaka and seemed so non-chalant that Yutaka wasn't sure he was being taken seriously. When his future opponent lit a black cigarette and gestured with one finger for him to start it was obivious that he was barely regarded at all.
Yutaka's pallette of attacks was small but he'd manage to move Ren'ai every so often and felt confident enough in them to move back someone inferior to his firebending girlfriend.
When his first set of disks were bended upwards Yutaka swung at them with his fist but that was only a cover for hitting them with his elbow giving them more momentum and throwing off the timing.
It didn't work. His opponent just sighed and shook her head before picking up her cigarette. By then Yutaka was annoyed enough to forget his sense of chivalry and attack while his taller enemy looked smugly casual while smoking.
Nothing hit. Yutaka felt like he was throwing rocks at a mirage. It wasn't until several disks later that he noticed the short-haired woman was dodging just enough like some sort of self-imposed handicap.
When the brown-haired woman started swaying side to side Yutaka had no idea what he was seeing. He saw her throw a punch but the timing of the gesture and the crash of the water to his chest was so amazingly off that it seemed like they didn't even happen on the same day. It was the one trick he knew writ large. Water curved in odd directions and hit Yutaka with enough force to move him...but not back. He was being moved to the side into the very corner of his zone. When the woman across from him threw another punch Yutaka stepped back out of reflex. He moved back and zone and her up one. Not only could she overpower him, she had enough finesse to move him into certain parts of the field at will.
Once in the second zone and with thirty seconds to go Yutaka was bombarded with a series of small but fast attacks until a larger one knocked him out of the final zone just as the buzzer sounded.
"I hope he isn't your earthbender," She said to Ren'ai. While thrusing her thumb at her own chest the water bending victor introduced herself, mumbling slightly with a cigarette in her mouth.
"Kiat. Kiat Igaluk. No need to introduce yourself, I know who you are. You're good but I'm still going to beat you down. "
Kiat strolled to her side of the arena and tied on a blue headband and took a sideways fighting stance.
"A Watery grave
Awaits those who would challenge
Kiat Igulak."
Yutaka decided he couldn't totally hate someone who began a bending match with a haiku.