The lighthouse looms far off-shore, its blinding Cyclops eye circling like a hawk closing in on weary prey.
The beam blips to infinity, signaling wayward ships to slow their progress through the choppy sea.
From here, on land, the house rears up like a medieval tower, a defense against dragons menacing murky depths unknown.
I blink back, trying my best to reach infinity on my own. The sea is no substitute. Its vastness sweeps to a pinnacled caesura on the Western islands.
Ask Melville whether the spiny reefs held infinity at bay. Only for a fleeting moment. Only until a colossal crash on the firmament sounded. Paradise lost.
We have no paradise here, save the spectacular Oregon coast after sunset, when flat sand lights up like a neon walkway and purple streaks paint the sky.
Star fish, in puerile pink, cling to black boulders. Waves dive deep. The lighthouse keeps signaling to no one. No shred of infinity to be found.