I watched Andi dig her teeth into her lips, like she was biting back what she wanted to say. I wished she wouldn't. Hearing her say something, give me some sort of indication, would be better than this.
"You're all a bunch of liars," she said finally. "I can't believe any of this. My dad? A criminal?" She let out a bitter laugh. "And here I thought I had the worse childhood. You win, Tomi."
"It's not like that," I began. Even though I was hoping to not have to explain all this, I had secretly been working on this speech for a while. "Doesn't everything make just a little more sense now? All of Dad's secrets? Why Mom never even mentioned him? Why Dad couldn't tell me I was a waterbender? In some strange way, doesn't it make everything just a little better?"
Andi, though, saw none of what I said. "You never even tried to tell me! Why? Why would you--" Anger turned suddenly to realization. I felt myself rise to my feet, knowing what she just realized.
"Andi, I swear--"
"What am I to you?!" she shouted. "Was this just a place to hid out until the next full moon? Were you just using me because of circumstance?"
"I'm not a bloodbender!" I yelled at her. Heat boils inside of me, threatening to break out. A burning pain in my chest that I recognize as pure rage leaks out of me no matter how hard I try to swallow it down. "I'm sick of being mistaken for one! That's not who I am, for one reason or another! I can't change it, but I need you to believe me!"
My hands turned to shaking fists, but I felt better almost instantly. Letting out all my anger made me feel unexplainably better.
"I've been waiting for you to flip shit," Andi said. There was no sarcasm in her voice, only vague amusement at my full out tantrum.
I must've looked utterly lost, because she let out a snort. "Aparently bringing up your relationship won't do it. And you didn't seem to have bad enough of a childhood yo piss you off. But this, this was just great."
"It was not great," I shoot back. Yet somewhere deep inside me, I was glad I hadn't just lost my sister.
"It kind of is. Look, I don't know why that makes you so mad, but I believe you. It doesn't change anything about us coming with you."
"Damn, that's really what I was going for," I said jokingly. I slumped back into one of the kitchen chairs, suddenly exhausted. My whole outbreak felt sort of pointless now. It had done nothing to change anything. Maybe all I had to do was recognize that pain, though, for it to go away.
"Now that we have the full story, it won't be as much of a surprise when we get to the city," Andi seemed to be talking her way through. She glanced up Lina, with a slight caution. "Are you a bloodbender? Because, you know, you're dad."
Lina hesitated to answer. I knew the reason why. If she told Andi no, it could very well be a lie. Lina had never tried to bloodbend before. Unlike me, she had a fear of it. Maybe living with the bloodbenders made me realize they're not all bad. I knew if Lina really was one, she wouldn't let it change her.
"Ya know what, forget it. One way or another, it doesn't matter for this mission."
Lina sighed, knowing Andi wouldn't believe her if she said she wasn't now, and nodded.

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Don't Stop Now [Finding My Path Sequel]
FanfictionAfter two years, Tomi makes the bold decision to leave the illegal bloodbending camp he has come to call home. After discovering he can't bloodbend, Tomi makes it his mission to hunt down his mom and figure out why. Before he can find her, Tomi will...