VIIONCE OUTSIDE, AND OUR eyes became accustomed to bright light again, we saw a smallish graveled area directly outside the door, as if used for parking of a few vehicles. Two long wooden hitching posts had been installed into the ground to each side of the door, leaving a wide path between them, and also that far from the building itself. With the electricity inside, and equipped for horses and horse-drawn wagons or buggies, this didn't give us any clue to what kind of world we were in. I walked around to the north of the lighthouse to see if that was all their was to this. And it turned out we had overlooked something we should have seen inside. For there was an simple gable-roof addition, attached directly to the west, and opposite the main door. The corrugated metal sides held long,

