May 15, 2019 4:36 pm
The investigators wake up and leave the Inn in the morning.
They find themselves in the streets of the downtown area. The day is sunny and the air is cold. Leaving the town center and going towards the harbor, the houses of the local fishermen appear. This area looks like a settlement of improvised housing, mostly made by the cheapest kind of wood material. Some parts lack a formal street grid, house numbers, or named streets. Houses are mostly shoddy, neglected, poorly constructed and degraded by time. The buildings closest to the shore express the most visible decay.
As the group passes the fishermen houses and head towards the sea, they recognize the landscape depicted in Timothy´s drawings. The boy must have copied a picture of this place. The beach is about two miles long and goes from the harbor at South to the rocks at North, where the long breakwater begins.
At the harbor fisherman are preparing to leave with their boat to face the sea. The beach is deserted. Silence and tranquility reign. Beyond the beach is a moor of sandy soil, dotted with yellowed grass and shrubs. The moor continues internally for about five hundred yards. After that, a few wooden fishermen houses appear.
Walking along the beach towards the South end, just before the breakwater, the sandy ground ends, and begins a stretch of about fifty yards, formed by the rock mantle. Large rocks have been chaotically placed above the mantle. The same kind of rocks make the breakwater, which goes towards the sea and has a lighthouse at its edge.
The sea waters begin relatively far from the beach and from the rocks, indicating a low tide. The water level would probably reach and cover most of the rocks, were it not for the low tide.
The lighthouse stands tall on the rocky edge of the breakwater. The structure is ninety feet tall and nearly twenty feet in diameter and can be accessed through the trail covering the breakwater. The structure is painted red and white, as if it were a prisoner there, standing alone in its jailhouse clothes.
The breakwater´s trail end at the lighthouse door. Apart from the entrance, the perimeter of the lighthouse is in contact with the sea rocks. Due to the low tide, the break water has no contact with the sea, whose wave are extinguishing far from the shore.
The door is closed with a chain and a lock. It is white painted like the wall is, but the paint already began to detach at various points.
Near the door there are some shoe prints. They are footprint of a person walking away from the lighthouse. They lead to the nearby rocks of the breakwater. Then, they continue on the wet sand below. Here, they are much more evident and marked. They go towards the city and seem to disappear at some point between the rocks.
They find themselves in the streets of the downtown area. The day is sunny and the air is cold. Leaving the town center and going towards the harbor, the houses of the local fishermen appear. This area looks like a settlement of improvised housing, mostly made by the cheapest kind of wood material. Some parts lack a formal street grid, house numbers, or named streets. Houses are mostly shoddy, neglected, poorly constructed and degraded by time. The buildings closest to the shore express the most visible decay.
As the group passes the fishermen houses and head towards the sea, they recognize the landscape depicted in Timothy´s drawings. The boy must have copied a picture of this place. The beach is about two miles long and goes from the harbor at South to the rocks at North, where the long breakwater begins.
At the harbor fisherman are preparing to leave with their boat to face the sea. The beach is deserted. Silence and tranquility reign. Beyond the beach is a moor of sandy soil, dotted with yellowed grass and shrubs. The moor continues internally for about five hundred yards. After that, a few wooden fishermen houses appear.
Walking along the beach towards the South end, just before the breakwater, the sandy ground ends, and begins a stretch of about fifty yards, formed by the rock mantle. Large rocks have been chaotically placed above the mantle. The same kind of rocks make the breakwater, which goes towards the sea and has a lighthouse at its edge.
The sea waters begin relatively far from the beach and from the rocks, indicating a low tide. The water level would probably reach and cover most of the rocks, were it not for the low tide.
The lighthouse stands tall on the rocky edge of the breakwater. The structure is ninety feet tall and nearly twenty feet in diameter and can be accessed through the trail covering the breakwater. The structure is painted red and white, as if it were a prisoner there, standing alone in its jailhouse clothes.
The breakwater´s trail end at the lighthouse door. Apart from the entrance, the perimeter of the lighthouse is in contact with the sea rocks. Due to the low tide, the break water has no contact with the sea, whose wave are extinguishing far from the shore.
The door is closed with a chain and a lock. It is white painted like the wall is, but the paint already began to detach at various points.
Near the door there are some shoe prints. They are footprint of a person walking away from the lighthouse. They lead to the nearby rocks of the breakwater. Then, they continue on the wet sand below. Here, they are much more evident and marked. They go towards the city and seem to disappear at some point between the rocks.
