Salt stung Fionn’s eyes as he hauled another hexagonal stone into the surf, the Atlantic answering with a white roar. Each column landed with a dull thud, a small island of steady geometry against a sea that wanted to take it back.
He had set himself to a task that pulled at more than muscle: it tugged at a pride that had always kept him watchful for his people. The cliffs behind him were green with sheep and wildflowers, but their color meant nothing when the wind smelled of challenge and the horizon seemed to promise confrontation.
At first he had refused to be baited by loud words. Still, across the water a voice began to thunder: a rival’s laughter that turned into a call Fionn could not ignore. That voice—Benandonner’s—carried accusation and dare all at once.
Fionn closed his jaw and pushed on. He measured each stone by hand, fit each hexagon to its neighbor, and kept the rhythm that made the bridge feel less like a defiance and more like a promise. Night after night he worked, the salt crusting on his skin, the sea sending spray that tasted of iron and challenge.
He built not for glory alone, but because retreat felt like a concession to an insult he could not bear.
The work was relentless. The basalt columns rose like a crafted spine into the gray air, their edges catching the light in hard lines. Fionn’s arms cramped and his breath came in even pulls; he learned the mood of each stone as if they could tell him how to stand.
The task drew the attention of the shore. From his small cottage on a nearby hill, Oonagh watched with a worry she softened into strategy. She had lived with Fionn long enough to know when steadiness was stubbornness and when cunning might spare unnecessary danger.
“Pride will make you reckless,” she warned once, but pride and caution were not opponents she could remove with words. He only smiled, because the idea of a bridge to Scotland had settled into him like a second heartbeat.
He labored until the Scottish coast blurred on the edge of sight. Benandonner, seeing the causeway approach his land, prepared as any giant would—by growing larger in rumor and sharpening a temper that sounded like thunder itself.
When at last the path reached far enough that stepping stones met foreign air, Fionn marched across with the steady gait of someone who had made a decision and could not unmake it. He had imagined the meet as proof; instead, he found a figure so vast that the ground seemed to tilt beneath it. Benandonner’s silhouette swallowed the sky.
Fear, not from shame but from sudden scale, tightened in Fionn’s chest. He slipped away and left the confrontation for night and counsel, returning to the cottage where the hearth was small enough to hold the plan.
Oonagh moved through the kitchen with the certainty of someone shaping an answer. She wrapped wool and linen into mighty bands, drew a cradle that looked like a small hill, and set a trap inside a batch of cakes that would test more than appetite.
When Benandonner came across the causeway and found hospitality where he had expected a challenge, he met a scene that bent the assumptions he had made about size and fear. The cradle held what looked like a giant infant; the house smelled of baking and the air felt grand and domestic in a way that made the giant hesitate.
Oonagh’s quiet smile never broke. She offered Benandonner the steaming cakes, and when he bit, iron griddles hidden within the dough told a different story to his teeth. Pain and startled doubt turned his bravado brittle. Looking from the cradle to the woman who greeted him, he guessed that the father of such a child would be monstrous.
The guess demolished him. Benandonner fled, and the causeway he had crossed tore under his retreating weight as he sought to make his exit swift and irreversible. The sea closed over the ruined spans in a rumble that sounded like the ocean swallowing a boast.
The broken columns remained, their hexagonal faces lifting like the teeth of a shoreline forged and then cleaved. To those who walked the rocks, the Causeway carried the memory of a contest solved not by force alone but by a woman’s cunning and a man’s humility.


















