One chilly night in Lo de Marcos, Nayarit, I found myself fixated on a strange spectacle that unfolded over the Pacific Ocean. At around 10 PM, two intense orange lights appeared in the dark sky, their brightness cutting through the surrounding gloom like twin beacons. At first, I wondered if this was merely a firework flare, but as the minutes passed, the lights behaved unlike anything I had seen before.
A subtle aura seemed to hover around the lights, casting a faint hazy glow, setting an eerie and almost otherworldly atmosphere. The two lights hovered, then vanished completely for about a minute, only to reappear in perfect parallel alignment. Their movements were deliberate, smooth, almost as if they were communicating silently in the vast sky.
For a full ten minutes, these lights danced softly and then suddenly disappeared, leaving me with more questions than answers. The experience was unsettling yet mesmerizing, a quiet reminder that some mysteries linger just beyond our everyday comprehension. It’s nights like these that fuel fascination for the unknown, inviting us to look up and wonder what else might be out there, just beyond the reach of the ordinary.