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Lighthouse Drift Park ◆

There were no other drivers there. No radios. Just the wind whistling through the lantern room and the rhythmic thump-hiss of the waves. He realized then why they called it Drift Park. It wasn't just about the cars. It was a place where time itself seemed to slide sideways, leaving you suspended between the land and the deep, dark sea.

(of the cars and the drifting maneuvers)

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. Lighthouse Drift Park

(connected to the lighthouse's history)

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. There were no other drivers there

Elias didn't brake. He initiated the slide early, the car pitched sideways, facing the dark expanse of the ocean. For a second, he felt weightless. The lighthouse tower loomed above, a silent titan. He balanced the throttle, the tires screaming for purchase on the salt-slicked road. The rear bumper kissed the concrete barrier—a spark in the dark—and then he was out, straightening the car as the road leveled toward the cliff’s edge.

He pulled into the turnaround at the base of the tower. The lighthouse was peeling and grey, but in the moonlight, it looked like bone. He stepped out of the car, his legs shaking. He realized then why they called it Drift Park

He took off. The world narrowed to the twin beams of his headlights cutting through the mist. As he hit the first transition, he flicked the wheel. The back end stepped out, dancing on the edge of physics. The smell of scorched rubber and brine filled the cabin.

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