In mid-February 1779, as Mark Twain would later learn, three Hawaiian children discovered what they thought was a dog’s heart hanging in a hut and ate it. But they were mistaken; this was no dog’s heart. It belonged to a man whom Indigenous Hawaiians had deified as their god—Lono. In a swift and shocking turn, reverence soon gave way to violence, and a native warrior plunged a dagger into Lono’s neck. That’s how Captain James Cook—the renowned British naval officer, explorer, and cartographer—met his end, tragically concluding his third and final voyage.