"Yeah. I hope they get the plumbing mostly handled promptly or it will be harder for waterbenders to help with disaster relief. I wonder how far those shocks spread, if it got the suburbs much..."
"If it doesn't you can crash with me for a few days, if nothing else I can ask Shifu Hayaka to teach me to separate salt from seawater, it doesn't look too hard."
"I'll have to tell the guy not to build on this lot, at least not anything heavy," says Beila. "Or it'll just re-open."
"You could sit a house on this," says the earthbender. "Not an office building, I'd have to sink it deeper to give it that."
"Thank you very much for your help," Beila tells him.
"No thanks necessary, that earthquake was the spookiest thing I ever felt," says the earthbender, shaking his head. "If you say this'll stop it, I'm satisfied."
"It should," says Beila. She wafts up to a standing position. "Dao, d'you want to come along to talk to the owner?"
"Have you ever - interacted at all with spirits in any way, shape, or form? I'm trying to come up with a hypothesis about why you could've been dragged along with me," Beila wonders aloud as they walk.
"Um... not that I recall? Maybe something knew you'd need me to carry you," Dao suggests.
"Maybe," muses Beila. "I don't think Avatar transitions into the spirit world are mediated by anything that knows stuff, though."
"...Possible. Maybe I should work a little harder at learning to get into the Avatar State and ask them."
She laughs. "What would you say to somebody a hundred years from now who was using your soul?"
Beila takes his hand and squeezes it. "You live a pretty ordinary life, plus, you just helped prevent an angry supervolcano spirit from going unappeased," she points out. "I don't think that adds up bad."