The Greeks called me Selene and the Romans named me Luna. I am the eye of the night and shining beacon of light. I am the Moon, the great rock that orbits the Earth. For as long as I can remember, humans have done me no wrong. They cast their naked eyes upon me and ponder my secrets; they are fascinated by my dark side. Many years they sent up a spaceship and caused a great ruckus on my surface. How their little feet tickled! As soon as they came, they left, staying no longer than I had completed my full rotation around the Earth. They passed me every now and again on their way to explore the depths of the universe I call home, yet never again did they bother me
I have many brothers and sisters in the galaxy who orbit other planets, and every once and a while the Sun and I play a wonderful game of hide and seek. But the planets and the stars and the asteroids bore me. The planets are too busy racing one another around the Sun and asteroids are constantly colliding with everything in sight. (Do not get me started on the stars. They are too bright for my liking and have quite the affinity for being seen. The word vain hardly does them any justice.) Earth and I are friends enough but there is another entity whose company I much more enjoy.
The Ocean is different. She is vast and perplexing with her body full of life; the beginning of life on Earth blossomed from her depths. Without her, the humans would be nothing-- nothing more than dried-out bags of bones. For as long as I have known the Ocean she has always had quite the temper. Quick to anger does not begin to cover her irrationality. She felt too much and she felt too hard. Whenever she gets the inkling, she will send a flurry of hurricanes upon the humans simply because she can. Near the Earth's center, it is an all-out battle between her and the Sun. (The Sun is truly full of himself. He has eight planets revolving around him and it all just goes to his head. Not to mention that he provides the warmth that made Earth habitable in the first place. Trying to deflate the Sun's ego is left solely to Polaris because the humans look for her as their North Star. She is much bigger than the Sun.)
At the equator, the Sun and the Ocean are the closest. It is pandemonium. The Ocean will coax the Wind to join her cause and together they send mighty waves with a mixture of rapid air to chase the Sun. They never catch him, but that does not deter the Ocean. She is stubborn-- and that is what I love about her. Once the Ocean has made her mind up about something no force in the universe can change it. Her newest declaration is her hatred for humans.
"They used to worship me!" the Ocean exclaimed. She was thrashing her waves against a rocky cliff somewhere in North America. "Now, they are taking more and more. And where is my respect? Gone! Just like my reefs."
"Do not act rashly. Perhaps... a warning? That would surely scare them straight."
"A warning... hah! I have given them warning after warning and they know that, yet they continue to treat me so horribly. You do not know what it is like to see your animals and plants dying off. I have an island of garbage! All this oil, plastic, trash, and chemicals-- and there is nothing I can do about it! I sit here and watch."
Her surf reached the cliff's plateau and the humans perched there looked upon us in awe. The Ocean sent a furious wave against the rocks and the spray slapped them in the face. Still, they stayed. What poor little fools they were.
"It is all their fault!"
"Please," I begged, "take pity on them. They know not the depth of their actions."
"They most certainly do! They do not care and that is what hurts most. You do not understand."
I was closer to the Ocean now and the closer I came the higher her tides rose. They reached towards me as they always did, beckoning me to caress them just this once. I stopped. She gave a disapproving grunt. We were already too close. "You know we must stay separated."
"Why?" she questioned. "There used to be a time when you and I had it all."
"You know why." Sighing, I watched the Ocean lap against the shore.
Her words churned in my head as I thought back to us before mankind. It was a love unlike any other with no consequences. The Ocean would follow me on my orbit around the Earth and together we would chase the Sun beyond the horizon. (We never caught him but the game was fun nonetheless.) She would extend past her boundaries and wash over the frozen lands just to grasp me. That was then, but now our love has consequences.
"That was a long time ago. It is different now. We have the humans to think about. You know what would happen if we came any closer."
The Ocean slammed against the rocks in another fit of anger. Still conscious of the humans on the cliff, I retreated further into the night sky and her tide receded with me. Raging, the Ocean created a whirlpool within herself. "Why do you deny what we have? Forget the humans. Forget the consequences. Let me love you!"
The Wind decided to join us then and together they brewed a tempest on the coast. An alarm sounded and the humans on the cliff began to scatter.
"Please, please, you are scaring them! Stop it!"
The Wind chuckled in delight as if they were enjoying themselves. "What a lovely little storm we have created. What fun! What mischief!"
"Get out of here!" Turning to the Ocean, I pleaded, "Please! Listen to me-"
The Wind interrupted me with their song as they whipped around the Ocean. "Here comes the Moon to keep the Ocean at bay. Here she comes to stop the Ocean's spray. Here comes the Moon to ruin our little play. "
Ignoring the Wind, I urged the Ocean, "Be rational!"
"I am the Ocean! I am the life force of this planet. How could I be more rational? It is you who should be rational. You want me to take pity on the humans? Well, how about you take pity on me first!"
It was all too much. Luckily for me, the Sun was peeking his head over the horizon. My time on the Pacific Coast was up.
The Ocean sent a surge to the shore in anger when she saw the Sun. "This is not over!" she stormed.
I withdrew into the sky and with me, the Ocean's tides fell. The Wind-- who had exhausted themself in the flurry-- trailed underneath me. They cackled and whistled a wistful tune.
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YOU ARE READING
I Love You, Miss Moon
General FictionIn which the Moon loves the Ocean and the Ocean loves the Moon. Once again, humans ruin everything.