I was driving around with someone looking for a specific village. They were lost and I had to point out the small turn-off they had missed. It was a narrow, steep, and pot-holed road, but it led us to a very beautiful little town.
In the town we stayed in someone’s house on the main street. That night after dark I went outside and was amazed by the most incredible starry sky I had ever seen. What made it so amazing was not just the amount of stars, but the fact that I could somehow see every constellation traced put in the sky. I could see a bear, a ballerina, And many others. When I looked straight up, I could also see all the phases of the moon at once in a circle.
The next day I went to the beach with Alex Byrne, and it was here that she handed over to me the responsibility of taking care of the kids and teenagers on the beach. She first offered it to someone else, but they refused it and told her to give it to me. It seemed like a really serious thing, and she gave me her fancy high-tech swimming goggles to show I was now in charge. I had to take off my glasses I had on to wear them (which is weird because I don’t even wear glasses in real life). I then had to dive down to go fetch some sign underwater for the rescue boats to see and stick it onto the jetty. I then dived for a while looking for fish before going to the top of the steps at the beach.
The beach had these wide and very high set of steps that went down to the beach almost like an amphitheatre. I was watching the sunset, and I was just telling my friend Matt Fox that it was the most beautiful sunset I had ever seen (it was), when beyond the horizon there was an explosion that caused the water to come up in massive jets like fireworks and explode towards the sky. It looked cool, but I instinctively knew this was bad and I ran down and tried to get everyone up the steps to the top and away from the beach. At first we just had slightly bigger waves, but suddenly there was a wave so massive it towered high over everything. I had to crane my neck up very high to see the top. I had gotten most people off the beach except for a few who wouldn’t listen, but I couldn’t help them anymore. We had to get to the top of the steps and then as far away as possible. The wave crashed and everyone at the top of the steps was safe, but I then ran down to find survivors.
There were some survivors, but strangely enough they were all children, who came up from the beach one-by-one or in pairs. They were now orphans, and they were entrusted to my care until we could find them new homes. Some of the families were re-united at the top of the steps, and some other families took some of the children as their own, and the rest came with me to a house where I did my best to take care of them all until they got new homes.
There was a bit more after this, but I can’t remember it clearly and it didn’t seem important.