Lighthouse Drift Park -
The fog didn't roll into Lighthouse Drift Park; it exhaled. To the locals, the park was a graveyard of neon and saltwater. Situated on a jagged peninsula where a decommissioned 19th-century lighthouse stood watch, the "Drift" was a labyrinth of asphalt ribbons carved into the cliffside. By day, it was a scenic overlook. By night, it belonged to the ghosts of the slipstream.
The run at Lighthouse Drift was legendary for the "Siren’s Hook"—a 180-degree hairpin that dangled precariously over the Atlantic. If you overshot the angle, you weren't just hitting a guardrail; you were joining the shipwrecks below. Lighthouse Drift Park
(of the cars and the drifting maneuvers) The fog didn't roll into Lighthouse Drift Park; it exhaled
Elias sat in his battered 1994 coupe, the engine ticking like a cooling heart. He looked up at the lighthouse. Its lantern hadn't spun in decades, but tonight, a different kind of light bathed the concrete: the rhythmic, strobing flashes of amber turn signals and blue underglow. "You ready, Kid?" a voice crackled over the radio. By day, it was a scenic overlook
To help me expand this into a longer piece, let me know if you'd like to: (for a high-stakes midnight race)
(connected to the lighthouse's history)