Sea-Spirit II
Background
Lani Mahina Wren was born into waves and legends—half-lemurian, all heart, and with a smile brighter than a tropical sunrise. From her earliest days, she idolized her mother, the original Sea-Spirit, and soaked up every heroic tale of battling underwater villains, saboteurs, and kaiju-level sea monsters like fairy tales meant just for her.
Unlike her older sister Kaimana, Lani inherited more than just their father’s Lemurian gifts. She was born an Extra, the dormant metagene from her mother’s super-soldier transformation fully expressed in her hybrid DNA. By age ten, she was lifting boats, shrugging off coral scrapes like mosquito bites, and out-swimming dolphins on school field trips. Her mother’s response? “Well, that’s my girl.”
Kaimana tried to keep her safe. Lani insisted on helping. When her sister bonded with the Black-Coral armor, Lani grabbed their mom’s old super suit, tinkered with it (heavily), and proudly declared: “We’re a duo now!” She claimed the mantle Sea-Spirit II in honor of her mother, much to the delight of the original and the exasperation of her big sis.
Now Lani is a rising hero-in-training, still a little impulsive, still way too honest, but already making waves in her own right. Between training sessions, punching pirates, and blurting sea trivia at the worst moments, she’s proving that joy and weirdness can be part of heroism too.
Personality
Lani is a walking ray of sunshine with a side of salt. She’s warm, loud, compassionate, and unfiltered—but don’t mistake her for immature. She understands her powers come with responsibility, and while she’ll make jokes mid-battle or splash a villain just to annoy them, she’s dead serious when someone’s in danger. She looks up to her sister more than she lets on, though she constantly teases Kaimana about being too serious, too grumpy, or “a tragic Disney warrior queen.” She believes strongly in heroes being symbols—not just warriors, but beacons. And she takes that role seriously.
Her room is full of starfish plushies, she has an encyclopedic knowledge of reef ecosystems, and she once wrote a 40-page essay on why krill deserve more respect. She's chaotic, brilliant, and devoted to being a hero who feels like home to people who’ve never belonged.
Lani Mahina Wren was born into waves and legends—half-lemurian, all heart, and with a smile brighter than a tropical sunrise. From her earliest days, she idolized her mother, the original Sea-Spirit, and soaked up every heroic tale of battling underwater villains, saboteurs, and kaiju-level sea monsters like fairy tales meant just for her.
Unlike her older sister Kaimana, Lani inherited more than just their father’s Lemurian gifts. She was born an Extra, the dormant metagene from her mother’s super-soldier transformation fully expressed in her hybrid DNA. By age ten, she was lifting boats, shrugging off coral scrapes like mosquito bites, and out-swimming dolphins on school field trips. Her mother’s response? “Well, that’s my girl.”
Kaimana tried to keep her safe. Lani insisted on helping. When her sister bonded with the Black-Coral armor, Lani grabbed their mom’s old super suit, tinkered with it (heavily), and proudly declared: “We’re a duo now!” She claimed the mantle Sea-Spirit II in honor of her mother, much to the delight of the original and the exasperation of her big sis.
Now Lani is a rising hero-in-training, still a little impulsive, still way too honest, but already making waves in her own right. Between training sessions, punching pirates, and blurting sea trivia at the worst moments, she’s proving that joy and weirdness can be part of heroism too.
Personality
Lani is a walking ray of sunshine with a side of salt. She’s warm, loud, compassionate, and unfiltered—but don’t mistake her for immature. She understands her powers come with responsibility, and while she’ll make jokes mid-battle or splash a villain just to annoy them, she’s dead serious when someone’s in danger. She looks up to her sister more than she lets on, though she constantly teases Kaimana about being too serious, too grumpy, or “a tragic Disney warrior queen.” She believes strongly in heroes being symbols—not just warriors, but beacons. And she takes that role seriously.
Her room is full of starfish plushies, she has an encyclopedic knowledge of reef ecosystems, and she once wrote a 40-page essay on why krill deserve more respect. She's chaotic, brilliant, and devoted to being a hero who feels like home to people who’ve never belonged.

Children
Comments