Imagery: AI-directed. Story and world: original creative work.

The forbidden stars and the false map

The First Crossing

The ocean-bound island slept beneath a blanket of stars.

They burnt bright over the island. Shimmering generously over things uncovered, yet distant enough to remain untouchable; just to be viewed and admired. The dainty lights spoke mysteries that had never been heard of —provided answers undecipherable, yet free for all to gaze upon. The sailors swore the answers were there and would be received if only one listens long enough. In the midst of the divine illumination, the wind whistled life to weary bones; prancing through the fabric of the men who chose adventure over idleness; who preferred the storm to stillness, because they believed stillness left too much room for fear.

Beneath the feet of brave men, the docks let out sounds of obedience and loyalty. Lanterns swung to the rhythm of heavy waves. Their amber glow trembling against the dark night. But the men batted not an eyelid. Their gazes were fixed on their prize; unique to each man on the ship.

Men moved steadily despite the hour. Despite the strictness of the night. Some carried crates of ironwood onto the ship’s belly. Others moved their feet while praying with their mouths. But on the upper deck of the ship sat an elderly man. Not carrying any cargo. Not moving a single thing; not even a part of his body. He simply watched the sky. Like he was waiting for some sort of sign from the heavens. And no one dared to bother him.

At the edge of the pier stood Trevyn. Young. Barely nineteen. Braver than those who had seen the forbidden constellations for longer than most men had sailed. Though sea-thin, with hands not yet experienced for the ocean, Trevyn had a heart ready for just about anything. He was taking a breather after hours of loading barrels and crates with the other crewmen. When everything was calm and settled, he chose a secluded spot on the ship to just…be. The wind dashed through his dark coat as he gazed upwards. The thick blanket of stars shining above him.

Astonishing.

He couldn’t take his eyes off the wonder above him. He had heard about it. Dreamed of it. Even tasted it. And now, he was gazing upon it the whole night. A dream made real. One he once barely believed would happen. Now at the tip of his once-thirsty fingers. The navigators always spoke of the constellations. They claimed the sky shifted the currents, hiding ships across waters no map could survive. Trevyn stood in utter amazement—admiring the lights above him. The delicate ink markings, the curves, the loops, and symbols etched in the clouds—but he couldn’t understand a single thing he saw. Beauty and nothingness. That would leave a certain void in your heart that only answers, whole as a globe, could fill.

“You keep staring at the stars like you wish to be among them.” A voice startled him.

“Captain Constantine.”

“Do you plan to stare at the stars all night, son?” The captain asked, expressionless.

“Well…I..”

“I wouldn’t blame you,” he said, a smirk prancing around the corners of his left cheek. “I was just like you when I was your age. I hated the ocean back then, but I would come to the docks with my father just to gaze upon the sheer elegance that is the stars. The constellations were what drew me to the ocean. I didn’t even realize when it eventually became my home; I can tell you that for free.”

“They are the most beautiful things to ever exist, Captain, I agree.” Trevyn said, all straightened up from his formerly relaxed pose.

He wanted to stand still and say nothing. But his silence was louder than the crushing waves; so loud the Captain questioned, “What else is on your mind, Trevyn?”.

“The charts, Sir. I was just wondering how long it would take to learn it. I really want to.”

“Ha!” The Captain laughed. “You remind me so much of my younger self, son. The charts are not something to be learned quickly. More than skill, it requires heart. More than speed, it requires precision. If you have those two, then you’re well on your way. But one more thing you’ll need is patience. Just as the ship is to the waves, as it gently carries it to its destination. You can’t rush beauty; you let it unfold. And gracefully so.”

“Hmm…” Trevyn sighed and returned his gaze to the sky.

They watched the familiar constellation thin out and stretch far apart. Trails of faint silver spanned where bright clusters should have been. The Northern Lantern flickered quickly behind passing clouds and Trevyn could hardly remember which star stood where they were just moments ago. Unease crawled beneath his chest, and he couldn’t help but ponder;

“Do you ever feel like the sky changes when we’re not looking, Captain?”

Constantine went silent. The wind picked up where they stood, whistling louder than his voice. He gazed at the stars a little more intently. Then a smile played around his cheek like he remembered something interesting. Then he finally spoke.

“Everything changes eventually, Trevyn.” He said, under his breath but audibly enough for Trevyn. “Especially the sea.”

The wind sharpened and so did the current of the waves. Trevyn was a little distracted by the currents. Veteran sailors had everything under control so the Captain didn’t flinch a muscle. For every sailor at their post, that was enough.

“You also admire them a lot, Captain.” Trevyn said.

“What? The charts?”

“The stars, Captain. You look at them like they’re sacred; holy.”

“Hmm.” The Captain scoffed. “Far from that, Trevyn. These particular set of stars are far from holy; they are hungry.”

A frown grew on Trevyn’s face. He had never heard that expression about stars before.

The docks of Iskarra had long since disappeared behind them. Out of nowhere, the wind became more boisterous, but instead of paying attention to the waves, the men paid more attention to the clouds. They had become even darker. The constellation burned dimly above it. The curves took a new form; one of a creepy beast beneath the waters.

Men gasped with fear and trembling. There was murmuring everywhere. The atmosphere became ice cold and tense. Every sailor aboard froze. Everyone except Captain Constantine. This was not the first time the sea had tested him. He had seen worse. Yet here he stood.

“The Drowning Beast.” He breathed.

“The what?” Trevyn asked.

“Did I stutter, lad? It’s the forbidden constellation. It shows up once before a catastrophe. Thank the gods we didn’t miss it.”

“Disaster is upon us, Captain!” Darius, one of the oldest crewmen yelled from a distance. “We should head back. As fast as possible!”

The wind roared in response to the chaos on the ship; slamming doors against each other.

“Hold your stations!” Constantine commanded. “We have to keep going!”

The roars of the waves increased and increased until there was nothing. Nothing but a sound, faint but audible for the deaf to hear. It came from the water underneath, sending chills down the spine of able-bodied men and all who heard.

“What is that?” Trevyn asked under his breath. 

The sound came the second time. Faint. Distant. Hungry.

The Leviathan was singing.

It’s been three cold nights since the Leviathan sang.

Yet the sting of its voice remained fresh in the hearts of the men on the ship. Some had given up hope. Some believed in a silver lining somewhere. Men no longer laughed during their shifts. Even the taste of food was completely different. Sleep evaded their eyes. Conversations had turned to silent whispers. Echoes of prayers were the order of the day.

Trevyn looked around at the men of the ship, and it was almost as if he felt the heaviness, both in their hearts and the one that hung in the air. Dread. Pain. The voice of chaos echoed loud and strong.  Trevyn caught a glimpse of the star-reader; the old man had grown quieter, paler, more withdrawn, making Trevyn wonder if there really was any hope left for them.

He sighed heavily. Then took his gaze back to the ocean.

“The sea has changed.” Trevyn said as he watched the foreign flow of the tides.

They were haphazard. Paralyzed with reverence but still in motion. He had never seen anything like it. The waves he used to know were proud and free. But not these ones. These ones moved like they were subject to the desires of something…stronger. Something more powerful. Something ancient and scary underneath the sea.

Navigator Ian stopped explaining the charts altogether. His heart seemed to have lost its strength and purpose. He could no longer understand a thing; every morning, the map looked different from what it was the night before. New stars. Missing stars. Incomplete constellations.

By the sixth night, the entire ship was covered in fog. Thick and white. Swallowing sound until even the crashing of the wave became distant.

The Captain stood against the helm. Teeth gritted together. Jaw tight as a rock.

“We’re off course!” He yelled.

“We’ve been off course for days, Captain.” The Navigator replied.

The situation was eating into their sanity and their peace. They spent the rest of the day trying to get back on course but to no avail. Day was turning to night. Hope was running low. But a slight intervention surfaced.

In the thick of the night, the star-reader came out of the chambers with a piece of clothing lying across both hands. He laid it on the floor to reveal a piece of paper. Ancient looking. Burnt around the sides and ragged in the middle. It was an old map hidden within the ship. It had strange symbols carved on its surface. Hard to read but worth the try.

Trevyn could hardly make anything out of it. At the center of the chart was the symbol of an eye. Watching. Waiting.

“It’s a new chart, Captain.” The star-reader said as the captain came close. “It looks real, doesn’t it?”

“Where did you find it?” The Captain asked. Ignoring the question.

“My chambers. It found me, captain.” He said, and nobody questioned him.

Here—above the waters as old as time—nobody doubted anything was real. Or fake. Insanity was a route to survival.

“The route, Captain, it looks like a shorter one to our destination.”

“How do we know it’s not a shorter one to our doom?” Darius asked. “At this point, we don’t even know for sure where the stars are taking us. It could be right into the belly of the Leviathan for all we know!”

“I agree!” Another sailor spoke up. “I think we should turn back while we still can. Before we meet with our doom, Captain.”

“We seem to have been doomed the moment we set sail into these waters.” The star-reader mouthed.

Everyone heard. Including the Captain.

“He is right,” Constantine said, with his head bowed, eyes closed, and his hands in a fist so tight, his veins were more visible than the light of day. “We gave the end of our fate to the tides once we came aboard.” He sighed, then opened his eyes and looked straight into the eyes of his men on board. “The Leviathan is awakened and nothing—no one—can stop it if it decides to strike. We must make do with what we’ve got.” The Captain said, and every man stayed mute. Some had their heads bowed. Agony was everywhere. But at varying degrees.

Trevyn stood quietly in the background. Listening. Pondering. Analyzing it all. Yet saying nothing audible for natural ears to capture.

They follow the map all night. Men whispered prayers unsure of what laid in wait ahead of them. Trevyn stayed up deck and watched the stars as they aligned.

“Still here, aren’t you, boy?” The star-reader showed up behind him. But he was either too cold, too frozen to shiver, or used to being spoken to from behind him, out of nowhere.

 “Yes. Just watching the stars shift. The mapping is wrong again.”

“No, boy. It can never be.”

“How do you know that?”

“The oldest maps are written in the waves, not ink, not even the clouds. And they have never been wrong. The stars follow the waters, not the papers. If anything is wrong, it would be the mapping on the papers. What the stars do is correct the wrong mappings on the papers. The stars have never been mapped wrong; not in a hundred years, my boy.”

“Hmm…” Trevyn sighed as he returned his gaze to the clouds.

He doesn’t look down until he heard whimpering. Turning around, he was confused.

“What? What is the matter?” He asked.

“The warnings,” the star-reader starts.“The warnings from the constellations. They are clearer than ever.”

“What…what are they saying?” Trevyn asked, not sure whether to be worried or glad.

“They have been awakened. Thaloryn and his descendants. The stars were a lock. They have switched positions—they have released Thaloryn. And it is coming.”

“Thaloryn. As in Thaloryn, Keeper of the Deep Song?” Trevyn asks, and the star-reader nods in confirmation.

“Thaloryn. A name lost to myth and only known now as the Leviathan. It is the keeper. And sometimes, when the Deep Song rises, the stars forget their place.”

“I heard tales about it. How it’s claimed the life of many.”

“Hmm…the sea remembers every name it has taken. They aren’t just tales, son! Thaloryn is real! Deadly. It doesn’t punish; it withdraws permission. And it is…it’s…” The star-reader stutters.

His face has become pale. Fingers shivering though staying still. Before Trevyn could comprehend what was going on, the star-reader…gone. No falls. No warnings. Just…gone.

“What?!” Trevyn gasped in shock, almost forgetting how to breathe. “What just…happened?” He stuttered, cold in his hands and feet. The map that lay on the star-reader’s hands was now floating its way down to the deck where he stood. He managed to catch the map that threatened to be blown off the ship. He looked down at the map. The signs. The turns. He studied them with great intent. Like everything on it was speaking to him. After a while, he looked up at the stars, studying them. Then back at the map.

“I can see it.” He gasped as he watched the stars correct the map.

The truth settled over them like a death sentence; the map wasn’t guiding them home, far from it. It was leading them to the deep, where the Leviathan waits.

The storm came without warning. No thunder.No lightning.

One moment, the ship was sailing with no obvious sign of danger. The next, it seemed like the heavens split open with trouble. There were loud screams of men —young and old alike. The wave rose high like black mountains, claiming a few with it as it drew back to sea. Collapsing against the hull in explosions of foam.

The men on the ship were thrown down their feet but stood up again. There were ropes snapping. Lanterns bursting. Cargo drifting. There was no more pretense. The sea was merciless and it showed its true colors. It sent freezing water across the deck, forcing every man to hold on to whatever part of the ship they could. Else, they would be washed away.

Above them, the stars churned violently. Entire constellations twisted across the sky like living things turning in their sleep.

The sea groaned beneath them. Deep. Closer. Hungry.

And from below the waves, the Leviathan answered the storm with a song. A siren call felt in the bone, not heard. Through the black water, something vast began to glow. Constellations rippled across its back. Coral scars from ancient ships lay embedded in its skin. Fragments and brief flashes were all Trevyn could see. No one ever fully beheld the Thaloryn in its vastness.

Constantine grabbed the helm with both hands and yelled to his crewmen.

“Hold her steady!” he roared.

But the ship no longer obeyed.

The currents had gotten a mind of its own. The wind shifted without pattern. Even the compass spun wildly like a terrified thing trying to escape its casing until it did. It broke.

The crew looked to their captain for answers. For a way out. But for the first time since leaving Iskarra, Captain Constantine looked…. afraid. He looked down at the floor of the decking. His eyes closed shut. His hands trembling with fear.

Another massive wave crashed across the deck.

“We’re losing the route!” someone shouted.

“There is no route anymore!” Darius cried back.

There and then, Trevyn understood. “The stars are not lost. We are.” He whispered.

He staggered toward the navigator’s table near the center deck. The ancient chart still lay there beneath soaked lantern light. He stared upward. Then downward. The stars above no longer matched the map. Not because the heavens were wrong. But because the map had tried to imprison something that could never remain still.

Trevyn grabbed the parchment. Then, slowly, he tore it in half.

Several crewmen stared at him in horror.

“What are you doing?” Darius shouted.

The young sailor let the ruined pieces vanish into the storm.

“We stop following it.”

The words sounded insane even to him. Captain Constantine looked ready to argue. Then another wave struck the ship hard enough to split part of the mast. Wood screamed. Men stumbled. And beneath the chaos came the Leviathan’s song. Closer. Much closer.

Trevyn turned toward the captain.

“We survive by letting go”

Constantine’s expression hardened. For several terrible seconds, the old captain stood frozen between pride and fear. Then slowly. Reluctantly. He released the helm. The ship drifted. Not aimlessly. Freely. The sails loosened. The wheel turned untouched. Instead of forcing direction against the sea, the vessel moved with it. And almost immediately, the waters changed. Not calmer. But less hostile.

The towering waves no longer struck directly against the hull. The wind still screamed overhead, but it no longer felt like an enemy trying to tear them apart. It felt like guidance. The stars above shifted once more. Not violently this time. Patiently. As though the heavens themselves had been waiting for surrender.

Trevyn stood motionless. And for the first time in his life, he understood the sky. Not through charts. Not through symbols or measurements. But through memory.

Eventually, the ocean answered them again. The storm carried the ship for three days. And it was confirmed once again: no sailor fears the storm, they fear what calls beneath.

No man aboard could later explain where they traveled during that time. Sleep came in broken fragments. Hunger faded strangely. The sun never fully rose, yet darkness never completely settled.

The world existed in a state between waking and dreaming. Eventually, the Leviathan stopped singing.

On the morning of the fourth day, the storm ended. The sea fell still again. The sky cleared into pale silver dawn. And ahead of them lay Iskarra. The crew wept openly at the sight of the harbor. Some fell to their knees in prayer. Others kissed the deck itself.

But Trevyn remained silent. Trying hard to take in all that had transpired in the past days.

Word of the Seventh Lantern’s return spread quickly through the island. Merchants flooded the docks demanding answers about lost cargo and missing sailors. Scholars arrived carrying maps and celestial instruments, desperate to hear what the crew had witnessed beyond the trade routes.

Captain Constantine spoke little.

Most of the surviving crew refused to speak at all. Fear lingered behind their eyes like permanent shadows. But many sought out Trevyn specifically after hearing how he led the crew back to hope when there was seemingly nothing left to hold on to.

“What did you see out there? Are the tales of Thaloryn true? What really happened?” The merchants asked.

“The stars did not choose us.” Captain Constantine answered over his shoulder as he walked off the pier.

Not all knowledge is meant to be sold.