Beyond the Sea by Curse Crazy
Summary:

Years have passed since Moana inspired her people to sail the ocean again. While adventuring alone, a wild storm washes her away, abandoning her in a future world that she towers over. To return home, Moana will need the help of the lighthouse attendant Sophie to navigate through a war between France and Britain. A Moana fanfiction, and a pledge reward for a patron.

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Categories: Giantess, Adventure, Breasts, Destruction, Fantasy, Feet, Gentle, Unaware Characters: None
Growth: Titan (101 ft. to 500 ft.)
Shrink: None
Size Roles: F/f
Warnings: Following story may contain inappropriate material for certain audiences
Challenges: None
Series: None
Chapters: 2 Completed: No Word count: 10859 Read: 9412 Published: May 30 2020 Updated: June 27 2020

1. Chapter One by Curse Crazy

2. Chapter Two by Curse Crazy

Chapter One by Curse Crazy
Author's Notes:

If you enjoy my writing, consider pledging to my Patreon~ patreon.com/cursecrazy For just $2/month you get early access to these stories and more!

Commissions are also open~ https://twitter.com/cursecrazy/status/1266850239408988161?s=20

Or, consider just buying me a coffee~ ko-fi.com/cursecrazy

 

 


 

 

She was in the air -- her, and her ship. It was thrown there by the ocean, and it was reclaimed by it just as quickly. Waves rolled against the hull like punches, winds pierced the sail in all directions, and a torrent of rain wished to flood the deck. The storm ravaged the open sea as though it had been poisoned once again, a possibility that terrified Moana.

There was never a second for rest. Moana bounded from one side of the camakau to the next with a mixture of grace and rushed panic. Her fists coiled around the ropes, and she coiled the ropes around her fists. Beneath her feet, she felt the tossing of her inventory below deck, a scattered mess of food and equipment, as well as grand treasures to share with her people. Above her head, lightning cracked and split the sky with an illumination that unveiled the nothingness of night. All around her, the waves rose and fell, hills and dips that dwarfed her boat. She grunted with all her effort, vain and stubborn attempts to keep the ship steady.

A word burned her salted tongue. “Help!” she wanted to scream, to someone on board. When the skies turned dark and the waters were unsettled, that was how her and her people survived. But the chief sailed alone now, on this adventure with nothing but her wits and her connection to the ocean. That was to be enough, she had thought before setting out. Days had passed consisting only of sunny skies and gentle tides. With none of its usual warnings, that had all changed.

Moana recalled how familiar this was. Her first attempt at sailing flashed to her mind vividly, remembering how the water stung her skin, how the night sky spread darkness all around her. She was nothing like that now; the years had flowed, she was a veteran at the art of sailing. A wayfinder. She was intelligent, fast, and most importantly, brave. The ocean, as it roared against her, was wicked and unfair. The raw power of nature challenged the ego she had developed, and was making a mockery of it.

Another hard fall. The splintering of wood was confused for lightning. Moana thought nothing of it, as before her eyes was a more immediate threat. A wall of water, a titan reminiscent of Te Kā, rose against her path. The front of her ship impaled the wave, and Moana held her breath.

The ocean’s end is all that is beyond here, elders had told her. There are no islands. There are no ships that come from such islands. Barren. Why else do our people return from the ocean with nothing discovered?

There must be more, Moana argued. I’ll find it myself, then. The world is more than just a few rocks in the water.

Bubbles of air escaped her in a gasp. Her lips had moved to those words. All around her, the black-blue of the ocean consumed her. The surface beckoned to her, with a streak of light that stretched far into the distance.

“Towards the port! The oars, you fools, the oars!” Commands cracked just like the distant lightning, sparking just as much fear into the hearts of sailors. Rain and feet trampled the deck of the barque, all hands active and alert so that the ship could reach land. The sails were useless against the violent gusts, and so dozens of men huddled beneath the deck, gripping mighty oars that extended out into the crashing waves.

The chanting of row began. It was a steady rhythm in complete contrast to the reckless nature of the storm, the likes of which the captain had never seen. But like the chant, his gaze was fierce and unphased. Golden eyes were crusted with the salt of age, experience, and ocean air. The rain drenched his attire beneath his rain cloak, yet still he stood strong against the railing of his beloved ship, greeting the far away lighthouse with a confident grin. Like all storms before this, he would best it.

Ahead of the ship, however, was an anomaly that quickly caught the captain’s eye. The currents had been jagged and rough, but a pool before him was shifting. The chaos of the waters was being dragged to a calm, obeying the force of something else, something beyond nature. A shipmate addressed the captain, but he stared forward still. The water was lifting into the air, more and more, and soon its reach was extended to his barque.

An eruption, a geyser of water burst forth, carrying with it a thousand gallons up into the storming air. Something mighty had suddenly risen from the depths, casting aside a torrent of water that rushed down the slope of whatever it was. Wave after wave rolled down the shape, and barreled towards the up-slanted barque.

The captain lost his heart. When it returned to him, he shielded himself with his arms. “Hold--!!” Then, the crashing of water, a wave that passed over the heavy ship. The screams of men were washed underneath it; the barque and all of its glory had been overpowered.

The barque rocked hard back and forth in the wake of what had risen. The most experienced sailors were thrown off their feet from such a critical impact, and any lesser souls fainted from being rammed into walls. Those on deck, few as there had been, survived only with their arms tangled into the railings and ropes of their ship, submerged for entire seconds before they were allowed to breathe again.

Thunder boomed, and the captain was the first to rise, spitting aside the ocean’s taste. He was driven to know what had unfolded, to know what surreality had beaten him and his crew so vastly. The ship was all off course, but the beam of the lighthouse oriented him towards shore. And there, he gawked at what had been summoned by this storm. A silhouette of something massive, a shape that emerged from the ocean as tall as the mast, yet its posture was merely a crawl.

Lightning flashed, and the captain was the first to see, just a flicker, of what -- of who had risen. “In all of the Atlantic…” was the most he could mutter. A woman, the size of a whale. Black hair, the curls of which clung tightly to her broad shoulders. A moan, her breath like a howl of the winds. He had no doubt in his mind that this behemoth was the storm itself, a manifestation of nature’s fury.

Moana had surfaced with desperate gasps for air. Her arms beside her smacked into the surface, searching for the mercy of still ground. To her left and right, her head whipped in search of her boat, an important instinct. No where could it be found, not for as far as the water went on all around her. She persisted, she had to find it, but the truth of it being consumed was very real.

Despite the lack of oxygen, she still managed a fierce growl and a harsh slap against an incoming wave. “Caught in a storm… No boat…” Moana looked again, hoping so much that the boat would just be there, that it had been overlooked. “Ocean?! Are you serious?! I need my boat…! Or are you just going to carry me around again…?”

The ocean couldn’t be bargained with. It didn’t respond, and Moana felt ignored. It made her flinch, still bobbing in the water, how it struck her to be ignored. “Ocean?” She was searching over the tides again, not for her boat, but for communication. “... Ocean…?”

A line of gold scanned the horizon, and Moana’s eyes widened. She ducked partially into the water, expecting the light to cut her. It was nothing she had seen before, like a star was reaching out for her, but as it passed right over her and continued on its path, Moana felt no special effect or blessing. Silently expecting anything, all she felt was the mist of rain and the flow of the water.

But the light was all that was around. It was a signal to her, she thought, “... But a boat would have been better…” She panted, already finding herself drifting in its direction. Although it was dark, the glow of lightning among the clouds allowed her to see the silhouette that held the light. A mountain, or maybe just a tree. “... Land!!” Thunder cracked off in the ocean; she hurried towards this light, whatever it was.

Moana’s strokes were strong and diligent. Although the storm rumbled on, it had drastically weakened. The waves no longer rolled over, but their force still had to be fought against. Sooner than she expected, her hand had crashed into a bed of stone. She gripped it, and her swim turned to a crawl. Her legs gratefully had ground to be upon, but there was still a distance to the coast. The light passed her again, seemingly circling the same course without fail. It had to be a message for her.

It was from the light that she could start to understand the land. It was a peninsula, extended not far from the rest of the beach. Atop this slope was a tall structure that held the light proudly, its design still hidden behind a curtain of darkness and fog. At the base of the hill, Moana finally could claw at sand to pull herself onto a dry, solid surface. She wanted to collapse, but she dug her knees through the ground and trudged forward while the tides tickled her feet. The light’s source was just above her now, and hesitation slowed her just like the salt water.

Moana climbed the slope until she stood hunched in front of the structure, disregarding whatever twigs were snapping under each step. Had she not been weighed down by sea water, her height would surpass the pillar’s crown of which the beam of light streaked from just over her head. The details of the structure were now visible, that it stood tall with three segments stacked atop each other, with the base being the widest. With its magical light still circling and casting its beam far off into space, the suspicions Moana had seemed to be reality, that this was a ritual object of some sort filled with mystic energies.

“I’ve seen weirder,” she muttered. One of the weirdest creatures she met, in fact, would likely adore this shining item, whatever it was. Figuring what it was became her new curiosity, and she neared the structure even closer just as the beam passed over her hunched head.

One hand carried a lamp, and the other covered a yawn. Thunder rumbled alongside the crashing of waves against the coast, but the hard shell of the building muffled all the chaotic noise. The weather may have been eventful, but Sophie’s routine was unwavering. Whenever the rain was as bad as it was, it came down to her to maintain the lighthouse of Port de Désir, a responsibility that had proven consistently mundane.

The mechanisms had been reset, the tank was refueled, and a leak was plugged. Sophie wiped the sweat from her brow, the motion revealing a content, tired smile. Her red hair was damp from crossing the yard outside, and now her palms were blackened with oil. Her night gown had been spared from filth thanks to a work cloak and the skirt having been tucked and risen to above her knees. All that remained was blowing out the candles on her way out, “And then… it’s back to bed… for two more… hours…”

The final candle was about to be dismissed until she had heard a rustling -- crumbling, like rocks caving into the sea, followed shortly by the sound of snapping wood. It came from outside, a sound unlike the usual downpour. Sophie waited, wondering if it would happen again. Did something crash into the shore…? She hoped not; that was the whole point of her job.

The air felt tense as the wind outside picked up strength. Sophie fastened her cloak and ascended the stairs up to the lighthouse’s lamp, a chamber exposed to the open air. The trap door leaked water over her head as it was pushed open; the beam of light had just circled above her as she poked through from its floor.

But the only sounds she heard were the rain, the wind, and the whine of gears at work. Nothing seemed out of place, whether it was her own lamp or the lighthouse’s that illuminated it. Yet, it couldn’t be shaken off from her nerves that the air felt wrong. “I’ve seen worse storms,” Sophie told herself, “but… something still... isn’t right...”

Sophie’s heart slowed. She turned to her left, her lamp reserved to just herself before shedding its light to the open sky -- what should have been the open sky. The diligent beam of the lighthouse had shown nothing there a moment ago, but when her own lamp was cast in its direction, something stared back at her. Two eyes, lit by the lamp’s flame, peered into the caged chamber.

Moana lurked up the structure’s peak, peering into its thin opening to better understand how it functioned. The light and its pattern had continued to fascinate her, convinced that it had led her here intentionally. There had to be a message to decipher, or a hint as to what had happened in that storm. But she found that beneath the nest of the light was another wonder, another complexity in her twisted situation.

A giantess. A sprite. They discovered one another there in the lull of the storm’s ravaging. The wind quieted, giving them the peace to admire what wonders they were, to understand what impossible thing they were looking at.

“... Hello…?” Moana leaned closer to the opening. A row of fingers that wrapped over the edge twiddled up, a little wave to an equally little person.

Lightning flashed, and the image of the giant’s face became clear to Sophie for that spark of a second. It was not just a pair of eyes, but a nose, lips, and shambles of seaweed-like hair that traveled over the creature. A pair of hands, each finger thicker than her arms. A giant, like the myths from her books.

The word clogged her throat. She screeched suddenly and stumbled away in fright. The floor was slick, and so she tripped backwards into the lamp’s base. It was a graceless fall that paled to the immensity of the thing before her. She hoisted the lantern like a shield to defend herself, “A-A… giant!!

Sophie succumbed to fear under the pressure of the invasive finger, immediately scrambling up the base of the lamp to be back on her feet. The slick floor saw her slip as soon as she was standing, however, and she reached out for support in the midst of her fall. What her hands blindly found was a panel to the lamp’s machinery, which immediately sprung free from its screws and fell alongside her with a loud clang. Though this left the intricate gears and valves of the lighthouse exposed to the elements, Sophie was far from the headspace required to comprehend what damage she had caused.

All Sophie wanted to do was run. There were others that she needed to warn. Her family flashed to mind, but the whole town needed to be alerted. Her heart drummed as rapidly as her feet hit the ground, a wheel of footsteps rolling down the staircase and out of the lamp room.

“Hey, hey! I-I was talking to you!” Moana called back to her, unable to sneak much of her hand into the lamp room despite her attempts. “Don’t be scared, I’m not here to hurt you!”

Sophie screamed, a well-enough answer for Moana to know that she was, in fact, terrified. She couldn’t let the tiny figure get away from her, not when she still had so many questions to have answered. She sidestepped around the lighthouse, tracing the direction that the tiny person had dived away in.

Sophie stumbled off the last step and onto the next level of the lighthouse. She moved so recklessly that she slammed shoulder-first into a wall, yet she didn’t lose pace nor did she stop screaming. She spun around on her feet in a dance towards the next staircase, but a blotch of shadow covered a window as she neared it. Her run came to a slippery halt, her screaming momentarily stunned; a massive eye peered through the window, like a beast on the hunt.

“There you are!” Sophie heard the giant announce. And so she screamed again, dropping the lantern at her feet where the light rolled around the floor. Although unintended, this did free up both hands, which were put to good use by shutting the shudders hard on the window to close it. Of course, that didn’t ward off the giant, and so she still trembled backwards, reeling from how near she just was to that monster.

Sophie’s heart exploded when a door burst from behind her. It was a balcony exit, and forcing it open was a claw-like finger, a brutish tendril that wrapped around the doorframe in search of her. “I’m not trying to hurt you!” Moana beckoned aggressively. “I just want to know where I am--”

Another scream, as sharp as the first. “Giant!! Giant!!” she was mad with her yelling. She was spooked again when she felt a hard knock against her shoulder -- a broom that she had walked into, left out by one of her cousins. She grabbed the handle like she was equipping a weapon and, driven by instincts alone, she charged at the finger and struck it. Swat after swat, the dusty head of the broom relentlessly whipped into bone and knuckle.

But the animal-like hand hardly flinched in response. Moana only felt that her target was close, and so she forced her wrist into the lighthouse deeper. Twisting fingers eventually hooked around the broom and stole it from Sophie’s grip, unintentionally grinding the wood into two halves between them. Sophia screamed again, the only hindrance she could actually cause for the giant outside.

The annoyances piled up against Moana and her patience. Reaching in wasn’t working, and her hand’s girth was too much to just exit the door. She tugged it out, taking part of the door frame with her. She shook off the little debris, but while doing so, the lighthouse beamed into her face, as though taunting her with its blinding glare. In her frustration, Moana applied a firm handle on either side of the spire.

“Okay, that’s enough!” she warned. “Just step outside please!” And so she began to shake the building back and forth, mocking its supposed sturdiness. Its foundation into the ground weakened and threatened to be dug up, while a cacophony of items and supplies crashing about came from inside.

Sophie’s ceaseless scream continued on in a staggered pattern as the lighthouse around her rocked about hazardously. The giant was summoning an earthquake, so it felt like, and Sophie no longer had anything to defend herself. In an attempt to balance herself, her foot landed unexpectedly on the lantern she had dropped earlier. Her howl turned into a sharp gasp as she fell, blindly looking for something to catch. Something was in her hands, but it succumbed to her weight for a short drop, proving useless in stopping Sophie’s trip. She didn’t care or even realize that it was a kerosene valve that went up to the lamp above, its gas now brokenly set to dispense limitlessly. Before it even registered to her that the mechanics could be damaged, she was already off towards the next flight of stairs, racing down them towards ground level.

Moana stood back up to full height, whipping her wet hair behind her. She huffed, realizing that she wasn’t going to calm down someone so much smaller than her. She had to think of a better approach, but all that came to mind was the bitter smell of smoke burning her nostrils. She huffed, then huffed again, not realizing anything was wrong until she found herself bordering on a sneeze.

“Ha… haah…” Moana leaned back, and before she could resist any longer, a bullet of a sneeze escaped her. “Ha-choo!” She nearly blew herself off of her feet, the chemicals causing her to be quite dazed. The mystery of what purpose the pillar served only seemed to deepen, now that she had concluded that it not only produced blinding light, but toxic gasses as well.

The sneeze was a forgettable affliction for Moana, but the impact of such an incidental action did not happen unnoticed by others -- neither Sophie, nor her aunt from within the living quarters. The sound of the abrupt wind, like a low pop and a howl, stood out from the claps of thunder. The music of the storm had been a lullaby for the senior lightkeeper, but the noise of something so different was worthy of concern. The older woman curiously rose from her bed, her feet fitting into boots as she bundled a robe over herself. “What has Sophie done now?” she grumbled, imagining a nightmare of a scene unfolding at the lighthouse across the yard.

Yet not even that exaggerated idea came close to the reality outside the living quarters. The old woman saw from her window the sight of something massive, eclipsing her view of the lighthouse as though the building was gone. She massaged her eyes, she wiped the window clean of fog, but the image of a giant never washed away. She was stunned, and then she remembered, “Sophie!

The veteran lightkeeper hastily added a coat as an additional layer against the rain. She ran outside, leaving the door creaking open as her feet splashed through puddles. Following her heels only to the doorstep were children in a row by height, curious little heads that couldn’t sleep through the weather, and certainly not when they heard their mother barging outside. Neither they nor their mother had the wits to handle the scene beyond awing at it. It was undeniable, a dream come to life, that a giant was raiding their lighthouse.

Sophie kicked open the door to the outside, nearly tripping as she rushed out. She squeaked a few steps into the rain, huddling back when a gigantic foot kicked the path in front of her. She looked up, thinking that she was being hunted, but it was just the giant pacing about, waving away the plumes of smoke as she gagged on them. Sophie realized this was her opportunity, and so she darted ahead with a squeak. She dodged another footfall, then leaped over a muddy toe. The danger and its weight always lurked overhead, that the giant could misstep and completely flatten her.

The living quarters were no sanctuary, but it was where Sophie was headed. To her relief, she wasn’t experiencing this alone. “Aunt Clara!” she shouted. She stuttered to explain anything else, only able to spit out, “G-G-Giant!”

Aunt Clara bundled her robe tighter around her shoulders, bracing against the wind but fearing the massive person far more. She waved at Sophie, “Get inside! Get away from that thing!”

“We have to tell the town!” Sophie shouted. “We need to-- Guhh!” Suddenly, the puddles at her feet were disappearing; she was being lifted off the ground and into the misty air. Her feet kicked wildly as if they were still running, but she was claimed by the pinch of two fingers, caught by the back of her dress and lifted up like an animal plucked from its nature.

Moana, still coughing from the fumes of gas, had at last captured her target. “You’re fast,” she admitted, “but not fast enough.”

Sophie squealed, her legs still having not given up the run even while suspended in the air. Her hands remained crossed over her chest, believing still that she had her hands on the lantern from before. A long beat passed before she was turned towards  the creature’s face, finally forced to accept that she didn’t have a chance of running away. At first, she grimaced to the face of the giant holding her, but then she was flinching away from the height itself. Desperate, fast hands scurried up Moana’s fingertips, painfully wishing they would at least claim her more properly.

But there was no denying that it was her, the giant herself, that frightened Sophie more than anything. When Moana inhaled just to begin speaking, that alone tickled Sophie into yet another yelp. Moana scoffed that same breath, “For someone so small, you sure manage to be very loud…”

I’m only loud! When I think! That I might die!” Sophie shouted. She would defend herself even in these final moments, so she predicted, even against such a minor taunt. She scanned the sea-soaked titan again, struggling to comprehend the size of such a being. Nothing like this had ever happened to her average life; it was something spawned right from her books, a fantasy come to life with all of its startling implications. The scenario was whimsical and exciting, she had to admit, but not at all as romantic as her novels.

Moana huffed, then relaxed her expression. She blinked, allowing her emotions to cool before continuing. “Why do you think you’re going to die?”

B-B-Because--!

“No yelling!” she urged. “I can-- I can hear you.”

“... B-Because… y-you’re a m-monster?” Sophie waited, wondering if that was enough of an answer. “And… you’re g-going to eat me…?”

“That’s what you…?” Moana broke into a giggle. She shook her head, “I’m not eating anybody. Do I look like I’d eat people?”

Lightning crashed into the pitch black waters. A streak of white light illuminated the sky, and Sophie saw a flash of her massive keeper; long black hair drenched like deep sea salvage, eyes of cunning and boldness, shoulders as broad as a house, and a smile of teeth, a rack of weapons each bigger than Sophie’s head. The rip of thunder shook the air around Sophie, but when Moana readied for a scream, there was a limp silence.

Sophie had fainted. Moana groaned, “Now who do I ask…?”

From below, the uneasy cry of an animal lured her attention towards a foggy glow of light. It was another person, Moana was relieved to see, juggling a lantern with one hand while attempting to settle a riled horse. It was Aunt Clara, bundled into a robe and fighting with the animal so that she could mount it, a task near impossible due to the monster just behind her. Moana smiled, her hope weakly revived.

“E-Excuse me!” Moana said, starting towards the stable. Each step slammed into the earth with tall splashes of mud. “I just want to talk, I-I just want to know where I am. And,” she hesitated, then held the unconscious Sophie up forward, “is this... yours?”

Both Clara and the horse roared with fear at the sight approaching them. The horse, as though finally understanding, allowed Clara to hop on and was immediately in a rush towards the fence, onto the road towards town. The murky light of the lantern barely illuminated the path, but it made it especially easy for Moana to track. After a beat of delay, Moana was after them, “Why are you running? Why is everyone running?! Please!”

Clara shivered and yelped to the same rhythm of Moana’s footsteps. The giant was getting closer and closer; Clara fastened her hood and focused ahead of her, only thinking to outspeed the invader. Suddenly, her plans had to change; Moana had lunged her leg right over her and stomped in her path, blocking off the gate and its exit. Clara froze, but the horse cried out -- it jumped over the foot in a single bound, not from bravery but sheer reaction. The horse slid along the mud, but its legs kicked back into gear and were off in a sprint. Clara couldn’t believe it herself, but she wouldn’t question it either, still in shock that she had nearly been stepped on.

Moana’s frustration peaked again upon being dodged. She saw the fleeing lantern light as a symbol of her answers running away from her, like a bizarre game of chase. Resorting to pleaing, she called out to Clara, “Please don’t go! I-I’m just as confused as you are!” But Clara kept running steadfast down the peninsula. Moana scoffed, “Am I being unreasonable?! I just want to know where I am! And why everything is so small! And I want to know what that thing is!” She pointed back towards the lighthouse, accidentally using Sophie’s body to do so. She whipped the motionless body back towards her, quietly apologized, but something more concerning flared in her vision.

Atop the lighthouse, a fire burned. Moana was bewildered, intimidated by the tower and its head of flames. The rotating light was chugging to an unintended stop until it eventually froze, aimed opposite of the sea and shining in Moana’s direction. “That’s supposed to work like that,” she chuckled, “because... magic. Right?” She looked at Sophie. No response from her, but a loud pop from the fire and the sudden dismissal of the light beam was answer enough.

Moana dashed towards the lighthouse, but she was torn back to where the rider had run off to. Decisions had to be made quickly, and so she chose first to try and contest with the fire. The rain was keeping the flames only tamed to an extent, but it refused to die, even when Moana tried blowing into the lightroom. She gagged again, remembering that salty chemical scent. She deduced there had to be some kind of a fuel source, and that this -- whatever it is -- was too complex for her.

Lest the flames were allowed to swallow the entire plot of land and its housings, Moana made the fire her priority. The rain fought down the flares, but neither the wind nor gusts of her own breaths were enough to kill it entirely. Worse yet, the toxic gas leaking from within burned Moana’s throat and eyes, regardless of how big she was. Something unique must have been burning, she realized, but it couldn’t burn if it was smothered.

Moana raced down the rocky incline she had scaled earlier, her feet reaching the shore with a mudslide behind her. She would need both hands to continue, and so while Sophie was still out cold, Moana pocketed her between her breasts, up against the low collar of her dress. A sway to the sides checked to see if Sophie would ragdoll out of position, but once confirmed she would be situated well at her bosom, Moana immediately shoveled two huge handfuls of sand. With that in her grasp, she trudged back up to the lighthouse and cascaded the load over top of the fire. Sand poured down within the lighthouse from the lamp room, swallowing the fires wherever they burned into a dying hiss.

Smoke and ash spiraled into the air while Moana sat crouched before the pillar. The glow of embers was a faint memory of the proud beam of light it once projected, the very streak through the sky that had guided Moana out of the waters that had abandoned her. She blamed herself for its destruction, and was now left without answers in a land strangely foreign to her. There was much to be confused about, but Moana knew what she was; a hunter, a survivor, an explorer, and a chieftain. Where she was and how she came to be there were mysteries she would have resolved, and that adventure began with the woman that eluded her, whoever these keepers of light were.

End Notes:

 


 

If you enjoy my writing, consider pledging to my Patreon~ patreon.com/cursecrazy For just $2/month you get early access to these stories and more!

Commissions are also open~ https://twitter.com/cursecrazy/status/1266850239408988161?s=20

Or, consider just buying me a coffee~ ko-fi.com/cursecrazy

Chapter Two by Curse Crazy
Author's Notes:

If you enjoy my writing, consider pledging to my Patreon~ patreon.com/cursecrazy For just $2/month you get early access to these stories and more!

Commissions are also open~ https://twitter.com/cursecrazy/status/1266850239408988161?s=20

Or, consider just buying me a coffee~ ko-fi.com/cursecrazy

 


 

 

The fire sparked and danced in front of its audience, a quartet of patrons looking to dry themselves by the hearth. They laughed as they spoke, their conversations as lively as the flame that warmed the tavern. Over their heads, the hum of rain patting against the roof drummed alongside the lute player, making the most of the rhythm as he sat at one corner of the bar where others had gathered. The final rounds of ale were being poured by the bartender, but the regular faces intended to stay seated for a couple more hours into the night.

Thunder rattled the walls, but the chef was unphased as he served a bowl of soup, last from the pot. “This is one mother of a storm,” he joked to the bartender, as well as to the sailors seated there. “I bet you boys are glad to be out of that weather. I can’t imagine sailing like this, the sea sounds like it’s being ripped apart.”

“We can ask Durok what it’s like when he washes in here,” one sailor joked. “If you smell a salty, wet dog, you’ll know he’s made it to Port de Désir after all!”

“Captain Durok is still out there?” the chef questioned, relieving the group of dirty plates and bowls. “God’s glory, even a man like him should know when to stay ashore.”

“He couldn’t,” another sailor belched. “Ya’ heard, haven’t ya’? The Queen is gatherin’ every privateer for the war.”

“Says enough about our navy,” another sailor scoffed, a sideways glance keeping an eye on the other corner of the tavern. Men in navy uniforms drank messily, complaining about the sea as they watched water cascade down the window pane.

“We’ll be in good hands if Captain Durok is here,” the bartender added, watching the same group of navy sailors. “He evaded three British ships, I heard -- all at once. And he’s braved storms even worse than this.”

“But can he find his way to shore?” a sailor teased. His fellows joined him in a laugh, “Apparently not so easily!”

A white flash of lightning flooded through the windows, and the howl of wind escaped into the tavern from the illuminated entrance. The activity of the tavern ceased as everyone turned to the door where a soggy silhouette greeted them, dripping rainwater onto the wooden floor where she stood against the frame. Her eyes surveyed the tavern, a hand hastily wiping back the mess of wet hair that had fallen in front of her vision. The rush she came in was blatant, what with the muddied boots and sleep attire, but now she was fatigued and in need of a rest she couldn’t afford yet to take.

Although she stumbled in looking like a mess of a stranger, the tavern staff and regulars identified the lightkeeper quickly. “Clara?” the chef said, his foot halfway back into the kitchen. He spun back out, putting down the dirty dishes and replacing them with a rag. “We haven’t seen you in months.”

“You must be thirsty,” the bartender said, a partial joke. “C’mon, I can still pour you something, no need to break the door down--”

“No! N-No, I’m not here for a drink,” Clara said, entering just one pace further into the tavern. If any pairs of eyes hadn’t been on her, they were now after hearing the shrill, aged voice in such a fluster. “Y-You haven’t seen it? None of you know?!”

“Know what?” the chef asked, offering the towel to Clara, but she ignored it. She passed him right by, dragging her way to the tavern’s middle. The chef exchanged worried looks with the bartender. “Uh, Clara, i-is something amiss?”

Clara looked around, her gaze bouncing from one judgemental patron to the next. She straightened out her hunch, preemptive anger biting her lips. She stuttered, “A giant is attacking the lighthouse.” The patrons were puzzled, and they didn’t respond -- “A giant monster! A-As tall as the lighthouse itself!” She stood on her toes, her hand raised high to vaguely represent the unreal height. “It must have come from the sea, during the storm! If we don’t do something then it will surely come for town next!”

An uneasy silence swept the tavern, moved by the rainy breeze of the open doors. Clara panted, binding her cloak tighter to her chest; nobody responded, only nervous and strange glances at her.

Then, laughter rolled in. A loud chuckle from the sailors at the bar, and then the navy men joined in. Clara whipped a glare at each person laughing, but when the whole tavern lit up with amusement, she hadn’t enough eyes to sternly look anyone down. The chef, the only one not amused, insisted the towel onto her, but she continued to ignore it in her distraught.

“Why?” she asked plainly, though her question was weak underneath the revived life of the tavern. “Do you think I’m joking?! Th-There was a monster, as tall as a building!”

“Oh, Clara,” the bartender chortled, shaking his head and waving her over to a stool. “The fumes have gotten to you again. What did you see out at sea this time? It was probably a ship coming too close to the plateau.”

“It was not a ship,” Clara scoffed, standing her ground in the center of the room. “Do I look like a ship?! Do you?! Because what I saw looked… human! I-It was a giant! It picked up Sophie--” Her head plunged down, weighed by anguish until she lifted it in a mad hurry. “Sophie is still there, sh-she was picked up by it!”

“Are you sure?” the chef asked timidly. “Perhaps it was just a dream, Clara. Monsters, err, don’t exist. It had to be something else.”

“It wasn’t!”

“The lightkeeper’s lost it again,” a sailor snorted. “She’s dreamin’ up monsters now. Must have seen somethin’ flash from the lightning and the coot runs all the way to town to tell us ‘bout it. Poor Durok is out there right now, crashing into rocks, probably!”

Clara stomped up to the sailor, ambushing him at his side. “I did not run my horse through mud-covered streets just to be laughed at by a boy like you!” She jabbed a finger into his muscular chest, almost making him spill his drink. “I know what I saw, and I saw a giant!”

“You rode a horse here, madam?” From the window, Clara was called over by a navy marine. He pointed outside while his companion gawked in that direction, “Is that your...?” Outside the window, a horse galloped and whinnied in distress, until eventually it circled around and was on the loose to anywhere else. Underneath all the commotion, it went unnoticed how the silverware shivered on the tables and the bar, or how the floorboards rattled -- it was just the thunder, they assumed, or the rain rolling in harder.

Clara’s shoulders slumped in dismay, but the tavern patrons responded with amused hollering at her misfortune. One sailor, jolly but restraining a laugh, stood up and moved to the exit, assuring Clara he would fetch the horse before it got too far. Clara grimaced, backing away towards the bar in embarrassed frustration. “I-I know… what I saw…” she muttered aloud.

But then, there was a bang at the door. It was slammed shut, and the sailor was there, rushed back in before the rain could wet him, his back pressed against the double doors while his chest puffed in and out. His teeth jittered, too much to speak coherently. “C-C-Clara… C-Clara was… Th-Th-There’s a… a…”

His fellow sailors looked to each other before standing up as a group and taking to the exit as well, one of them grabbing a wall-mounted torch to be thorough. A few other patrons followed them to the door where they waited beside the first sailor, watching from a distance as the others went out in the dreary weather. They looked up and down the street, each of them holding a palm over their brows to keep their vision cleared. Their suspicions remained unconfirmed, only deepening the question of what spooked their companion so badly.

“Hah… We’re all goin’ a little crazy,” one sailor chuckled, his nervousness hidden. He shrugged towards his other sailors, turned around, then stopped-- paralyzed. The next second, while the others studied him, his hand jetted towards the sky with a shaky point and no words to say.

The others rushed to where he stood in the rain, but the weather was the least of their concerns as their heads tilted up and up, looking to where he still yet pointed. Each at a time, their color drained upon seeing a shadowy stretch of a figure, just up the road behind the tavern. The peak of the creature, a silhouette that only vaguely resembled a human in the darkness, was a height beyond any of the buildings -- even the bell tower atop the church, just one block away, failed to truly rival such tallness. The giant swayed and twisted where it stood, its process slow and calculated, unflinching to its audience until it took notice of the small flame held by the group.

The structure of the tavern creaked threateningly, and dust trickled from the ceiling down onto the dining floor. The patrons inside didn’t know why, that the creature lurking overhead was leaning over their building, applying weight to its roof. The sailors stumbled backwards until they were on the opposite side of the street, gawking and babbling over the monstrous thing that had neared them in a hurry, a size that dwarfed the tavern and a weight that promised to crumble it.

The torchbearer couldn’t move, so two of his companions grabbed him by the wrist and forced the fire forward. Its light shined to the tavern roof, where the giant’s huge and curious eyes greeted them, her form halfway spilling over the building. The rain froze in midair during the seconds it took to comprehend the massive thing; dark flesh and a swamp of dripping wet hair, a heavy upper body lifted by two muscular arms each thicker than the four sailors combined.

No one had the courage to say anything, except Moana. “Hey!” she spoke -- a bark, fast and surprising, for she was alert and hurried. The sparse crowd hopped and the sailors huddled into each other. “Did any of you see one of you run by here?! On a-- uh, an animal thing?!”

Fear flustered the four, and the center sailor squeezed most away from Moana; his torch slipped between his wet fingers, and the torch immediately fizzled into a muddy puddle. With the light gone, so was Moana, shrouded again by the night. The reaction was hectic, with all the witnesses startled out of their wits. Some dashed back inside while others scrambled away from the tavern. Even the sailors, the toughest and saltiest of those there, were left cowering in the place they stood, until one was pushed forward into a terrified sprint back into the building.

Clara!” he shouted over the patrons. The woman, her hands tightly held together in prayer, urged backwards towards the bar upon being called. The roof creaked again. “I think it wants you!”

“No!” Clara gasped. “Why?!”

Moana leaned in closer; without that light, she had only the nearby lamps to spot people on the street. She sat down behind the tavern, her hips and legs flooding the road she occupied; there was restlnesses there, of course, where townsfolk awed at the spectacle from the sidewalks or their windows. Moana focused only on the group in front of her, expecting one of them to eventually aid her.

But, like the others she met along the way, the sailors tried to escape. They split off in opposite directions, but Moana cut off their paths with both her palms. Like walls, her hands squared the remaining tavern patrons into one spot, slimming their chances of fleeing. Moana smiled nervously, realizing just how easy it was to corral these people how she needed -- but there wasn’t time to be concerned over that.

“D-Don’t h-hurt us, e-easy now!” a shaking sailor pleaded. Another whined, shivering as much, “Wh-What do ya’ w-want with us?!”

“I don’t want you! I want that-- that lady!” Moana replied, but she doubted the sailors were comprehending her. “From the light… tower… the tower with the-- the light! Back there, s-somewhere! Urgh!” Cornering them was easy, but explaining this weird world was another task. She leaned forward more, puffing her chest outward and pointing to it. Sophie, a ragdoll in her unconscious state, ungracefully stretched out from the cleavage upside-down. “Her! Err, she was there! Does anyone know her?!”

The sailors, befuddled at first, eventually stuttered the name, “Sophie!”

And from the tavern’s entrance, the sailor there repeated them, “Sophie?”

And from the bar, Clara gasped, her hands to her mouth, “Sophie?!”

Clara spun to the navy men, who had stayed passive the entire time at their booth. She slammed on their table, spooking them worse than the giant did. “That’s my niece! My niece! For goodness sake,” she shook the table, “put that uniform to use! Help her! Help her!” Both soldiers followed the command, bumbling to their feet but skeptical of what they could do. One was grabbed by Clara, caught by the collar, “Help me too!” she stressed. “Help Sophie b-but help me too!”

“Err, r-right, right!” the soldier panted, shuffling himself and Clara towards the back. “P-Perhaps, this way…?”

The sailors in the front bickered instead of answering Moana, arguing whether to give up Clara or not. Moana hurried them for an answer, unaware that her target was slipping away from under her. Using the back exit, Clara and the soldier made their getaway, but not without basking at what loomed right over them. The giant’s body was like a bridge, built spontaneously to arch over the tavern, supported by two knees that cracked into the cobblestone road. It was the soldier awestruck the most, hesitant to sneak past the legs, while Clara hustled both of them ahead.

Moana groaned, and so did the structure under her. “Listen, I promise I won’t hurt anyone!” she tried to speak to them, but her volume wasn’t helping. “Her tower thing is on fire, and this one just fainted! I don’t know what to do, so please, can you just--”

Snap. The roof caved in, its weight limit surpassed. Moana’s torso breached into the tavern, the ceiling breaking inwards. Debris formed a dust cloud, and those sheltered inside broke into screams and shouts, expecting the worst to be upon them. The bartender bunkered under the bar and the chef under a table, but the giant did not break into the building any further. She flinched back the moment she realized, risen up and away from the tavern as far back as her seat allowed.

Moana’s face was stiff in shock, her mouth ajar. “... That’s fixable,” she nodded, her lip bitten hard, “I will definitely fix this, I can totally fix this, I used to make fales all the time, this is so fixable.”

She examined the damage, and so too did Clara. The crash and crack of the roof giving in had brought her and the soldier to a standstill, not far past the giant’s immediate reach. While Moana surveyed the destruction from above, it was then that she noticed the citizens around her, and then the lightkeeper -- “You!” she popped.

Clara dashed forward, spooked into speed. The soldier stumbled but followed behind her, ripping his gaze off of Moana just as the giant took a stand. Feet larger than wagons broke into the cobblestone pathways, splattering gravel and mud as immense weight pressed into the ground. With the mass of several houses, the huge figure kicked off into a jog up the road, giving chase to the two ankle-tall people.

Due to her extensive legs, Moana was fast to catch up. Footfalls bombarded the street, delivering a personal earthquake to each shop and household she rushed past. Clara had no need to look back, not when she could hear the pounding grow increasingly nearer, a heavy but unstoppable pace that threatened to overcome her. When the opportunity was there, she seized it; she leaped into an alley, hoping to throw her pursuer off. The navy soldier had gawked back at Moana when Clara changed course, and so he nearly tripped over himself when hurrying down the same alley a second later.

Moana smirked, figuring she finally had them cornered. The alley was too thin for her to walk through, or even squeeze through, and so her arm wedged between the two houses like a narrow crevice to be reached into. Her muscles may have cost the roof gutters, but it was a successful grab. She retrieved her finding quickly, bringing the little body into the rainy air.

But in her hand wasn’t Clara, but instead the soldier that had been escorting her. The uniformed man was a trembling mess, babbling prayers while pushing hard against Moana’s web of fingers. Moana flinched at this squirming, unsettling feeling in her hand, but more than that, she was disappointed that she had failed. She hurriedly looked to the alley again; there was Clara, slipping out the other side and to the other road.

“Wait! Please don’t-- urgh!” Moana grunted, tossing her arm to the side and tightening her fist. A coughed-up groan had her remember that the soldier was still in her grasp, and so she looked frantically to release him. She deposited the man atop one of the roofs, which he grappled onto vigorously. Moana raised a warning finger at him, “Don’t-- Uh. Don’t… do anything.” She nodded, already hopping back towards Clara’s direction.

The rain-slick alley opened into a new road for Clara to find herself in. All the chaos had stirred more than a few slumbering folks to wander outside and inspect the noise. Clara studied their gazes, all tilted high to where the giant loomed. She kept running -- it was all she imagined she could try.

Moana wasn’t distracted for long. Peering over the buildings, she immediately spotted Clara a short distance up the other road and hurried to meet her. A row of houses separated the two, but Moana had an answer for the obstacle. With her ordinary, unbound agility, Moana sprinted forward and leaped over the homes. For a solid and hard second, there was a titanic weight hovering over unknowing roofs, more than enough power for gravity alone to leave the structures smashed to pieces.

Clara froze, as though the rain had flashed to frost on her. There was no breathing while watching Moana fly through the night air, not until the huge gasp that came with the devastating landing. Clara’s vision was filled with Moana’s shape falling into view, overtaking the view of the church up ahead. Geysers splashed up from the puddles where the giant appeared, and a rumble ripped through the ground and shook Clara right off of her feet and into the mud.

Moana smirked confidently when she lifted her head to see Clara fumbled on the road. Her tactic to cut off her path had worked, and all that was left was plucking her prize. Before Clara could recover from tripping, Moana had knelt down and picked her up in her hand. The woman immediately sprung into kicks and twists, but Moana affirmed her grasp with both hands, lifting Clara up to her face.

“D-Don’t hurt me! Be c-careful!” Clara whined, guarding herself with one arm.

“I’m not-- Why does everyone think I’m gonna hurt them…?!” Moana groaned. She began walking forward, allowing herself precious time to catch her breath and gather her thoughts. “I just want to know why I’m here! And, maybe, why all of you people are so small, b-but, other things first.”

“Let go! Release me!” Clara continued to protest, even over Moana’s light explanation. Her yelling ended in a gasp while looking down the titan’s large frame, her shock pointed at the rain slick chest. Seen between the heavy weights of flesh was a sprawl of arms and an unconscious head rolled onto the skin -- her niece, Sophie, held hostage in a precarious position, donned not unlike the decorative necklace adorned by the giant. “No no no-- Wh-What have you done?! Y-You monster! You savage beast...!”

Moana rolled her eyes. “I get that I may have startled you all,” she admitted, “but I’m-- I’m nice! I love animals, and the ocean, a-and people too! I am not a beast!”

Moana put a jump to her step to hurry forward, but she was slowed by an obstacle up ahead. Around the bend of the road, a gathering of torches and lanterns illuminated a mess of people, some in uniforms and some without. They congested the path, armed with weapons and their outrage. There was no easy way to step around the crowd for Moana, so she was forced to a begrudged halt.

One man stepped forward from the mob, his uniform cloaked under a robe against the weather -- a captain. Behind him was a fine row of soldiers, but after that, it was an uncertain crew that was on edge looking up at the giant and using each other as a shield. The captain raised a lantern high towards Moana, “Beast! This mayhem must cease! Surrender yourself to God’s land of France at once!”

Moana sighed, glancing at Clara as though she would sympathize. “I don’t know what a France is, and I don’t surrender,” Moana explained to the people below. She waved to them, not thinking of how she was waving with Clara’s body. “Besides, I’m on my way out! So if you’ll excuse me--”

“Aim!” the captain barked, and at his command did those behind him raise their muskets towards Moana. A crack of lightning -- “Fire!” Bullets launched from clouds of smoke all at once, whistling through the air at their target. Civilians and soldiers alike watched with wonder as the pellets hit their mark.

Moana flinched away, spooked by the noise and the sparks, but ultimately didn’t feel anything. On her exposed legs and arms did she feel a few pinches, but the bullets could barely break the fabric, let alone pierce her skin. She paused, checking if there was any more to that attack. Her onlookers, including the captain himself, were speechless.

Likewise, Moana didn’t have anything to say to these little people and their little assault. She shrugged and began treading forward again, her first footfall stirring the crowd into dispersing. Her next step hovered over the mob, and those beneath it quickly cleared out, giving her space to land between them. Only the captain’s rank was unbroken, stewing in his astonishment even as two legs passed over him.

But the crowd was not content with this conclusion. Some furious among them went beyond watching their navy defenders waste ammunition on a giant, and they took matters to their own tools. As Moana’s foot was still while the other went forward, a group yelled and charged at her with shovels and pitchforks as weapons. Some of the tools snapped upon being swung into Moana’s toes or heel, but anything sharp proved effective in injuring her. Where the muskets failed with their bullets, their bayonetts made due, piercing into most sensitive areas of the stomping feet.

“Yow!! Wh-What are you--?!” Moana gasped, stomping her other foot down so that she could lift up the one that was struck. It was as if several bugs all at once had viciously bitten into her, enough of a pain that she wasn’t confident continuing that way. “Do you all want to be stepped on?! Because this is how you make me step on you! … Accidentally!”

The successful strike inspired others to do the same, and so where Moana’s other foot had landed, a part of the mob was there to attack. Torches were raised towards her anklet wreath of flowers, the embers catching the petals and threatening to be stroked into a fire. Every time Moana lifted a scratched-up foot away from the mob, the other foot would be attacked, and then the other again. Moana had to dance away defensively, hopping onto each foot while always wary of what was underneath her. Water troughs were shattered and wagons slammed aside by her feet, but one greater misstep could see a carriage obliterated, or a street lamp busted, or a townsperson--

Stop!” Moana fearfully demanded, her backpedal suddenly paused. Glaring down behind her, she could see emboldened navy officers already awaiting the next footfall, their weapons ready to lunge. There was no easy place to put her foot, and so she urged them again, “M-Move! Get out of here, get out!” She winced; her one standing foot was still under attack, and the violence against it increased steadily the longer it lingered.

As enduring as Moana could be, even she had her limits. A stab between her toes pushed her over the edge and she began stumbling backwards, hopping uncomfortably far as to avoid the people directly beneath her. The slick roads did not receive her awkward footstep well, and so she slipped into a greater imbalance, her feet kicking into the air as she tripped over herself and back the way she came.

Look out!” Moana shouted, a sentiment shared by her audience. Any onlooker behind her rushed to the sides of the street, clearing a path as Moana lost her battle against gravity. Like a titanic tree being felled, people watched with bated breath as the huge body tipped over, but where she would fall was their greatest wonder. Behind Moana and in her path was a significant building, a bell tower that was almost as tall as she was; the local church.

A great crash, but no thunder. Veiled in the darkness and the rain was the scene of Moana’s body plunging into the church, described to the townspeople only by the violent sounds of brick and wood walls being crushed to pieces, the structure crumbling in on itself as its integrity was unraveled. Somewhere lost in the cacophony was the church bell’s final ring, dropped somewhere in the wreckage under Moana’s fallen form. Glass continued to shatter as the giant groaned and moved in the wreckage, an image of despair that was illuminated to the crowds by flashes of lightning.

Torchlight flickered in Moana’s blurred vision. She winced as she moved in the rubble, feeling broken wood and stone jabbing into any exposed part of her. At her feet where she lay was an encroaching crowd of people, marveling at what she had destroyed from a distance that respected such tremendous strength. Moana was uncertain what to say, or what to do, as even standing up just seemed like it would cause more problems.

Moana did not stir alone. Bubbling up from the wreckage was another woman, far more dazed and confused than the giant. Clara, wet and battered, crawled out from a pile of cobbled stone, coughing up dust and pushing aside debris. During the crash, she had slipped out of Moana’s grip, something Moana herself hadn’t yet comprehended. When given the opportunity, Clara didn’t ask questions and she hurried to escape the disaster, as fast as her weary body could move. Two navy men were there to catch her as she stumbled out from the church, joining the dozens of others that gawked at the results.

The rumble of rainfall was gradually replaced with that of a murmuring, angry crowd. Many were in stunned disbelief, arguing that this wasn’t real, while others openly wept at the flattening of their holy place. Some grew restless, and it was up to navy officers to quell the outrage and prevent anyone from hurting themselves, but of their ranks, many of them were equally upset. Moana slowly awoke and heard these complaints, feeling their ire like an unpleasant humidity.

Moana stuttered to speak, but her apology failed upon looking at her hips and her feet, how they cratered into the church. She clenched her hand -- Clara was gone, and so all this really was for naught. Embarrassed and pressured to do so, Moana stood, a motion that saw the remains of the church tested once more as the tall body moved within it. Debris on her clothes was dusted off as she looked down at the unsettled crowd.

“I’m… s-so sorry,” Moana tried to explain, her voice more reserved than before. She kept her arms and legs close, afraid of what else she might step on and destroy. “L-Like I said… I can-- I will fix this, I just had nowhere to step, a-and you all--” Her excuses meant nothing to the people who hissed and barked back at her. There was no reasoning with all of them, but Moana was anchored by the pit growing in her heart for having caused so much trouble. She wished to stay and correct things, like she had wanted with the lighthouse, but--

Bang. A pop of smoke, another bullet fired. Someone with a loaded musket took fire again, but if he had hit his mark, not even Moana knew. It didn’t matter, for like the others in the mob, he was angry and did only what he felt he could possibly do. Moana flinched, and her fear was noticed. Less and less were concerned for their own safety, and so they began to approach Moana, threatening her with whatever weapons they could gather.

Moana trembled backwards, pushed back by the approaching people. She couldn’t fight them, and she couldn’t calm them -- ultimately, she was unwelcome here. Everything she had touched since arriving in this weird world had fallen to ruin, one way or another. People shrieked at the sight of her, they sprinted away in fear for their lives. Moana had lived a life of acceptance, surrounded by people who loved and respected her, her people. Here, among these tiny buildings and the strange technology their occupants boasted, she was an outsider, and her very presence there was tarnishing their simple lives.

Not one more apology was given by Moana before she turned down an empty road, a path that went opposite of where she entered from. Her heart was heavy, but she chose then to abandon the town all together, lest she did more harm to its community. She whipped her head away from them, looking to where she might leave the town’s borders, and then hurried in that direction. Away from the town, away from the lighthouse, away from anyone and everything -- that’s where Moana wanted to go, wherever that could be.

Where else could such a place be for Moana, if not close to the ocean? The night was still dark and foggy, but the washing sighs of the ocean lured Moana to the beach. She wandered aimlessly, her only reference being the lights of the town dwindling away as she continued forward, guided by the coastline. The rain had quieted into a drizzle, but still was her body drenched and heavy, every step wanting to be the one that collapses into slumber.

Dirt became sand under Moana’s feet as she neared closer to what could possibly be shelter. She had discovered a cove that the beach detoured into, a cave wide and tall enough for her to walk into, albeit with a slight hunch. Anything to escape the weather was fine enough for Moana, and she claimed the hole for herself, crawling into the deepest corner and huddling into the nook. There was no blanket and no mat, only her arms to warm herself and only jagged stones to rest upon.

 

Daylight reflected off the ocean. It sparkled against the fading night sky, like twinkling stars scattered across the water. The light gently seeped into the cavern as the morning barely began, but that wasn’t what caused Moana to stir. She was exhausted still, tired enough to sleep twice as long, but only a few hours into her slumber did she feel an itch -- more like a tickle.

“Rnngh…” Moana groggily rubbed at her cheek. As she awoke, her circumstance pieced together again, and she slowly remembered how she ended up here. Realizing that only encouraged her to roll over again and sleep, but the itch irritated her. She scratched at her chest and rolled onto her back, a long sigh venting out from her lips.

But there it was again, that itch. Moana swiped at it again, but it still persisted, much to her curiosity. As she awakened further, she understood that this was no stray itch, but something between her breasts -- something moving, kicking, and even making noise. Moana froze, but it struck her then what this could be, what it was she had forgotten of before falling asleep. What rustled from her cleavage had been the first lightkeeper, and only then did Moana realize that she had kidnapped someone.

 

End Notes:


This is the last chapter of Beyond the Sea that will be posted publicly! The rest of the series will be patreon-exclusive for the foreseeable future~

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