Your "heading" is your direction. It can be as precise as a compass direction; the ship is heading north-northeast.
Prepositions used to with travel are quite mysterious and indefinite. Sometimes there are local traditions, sometimes not. I might perfectly well tell my wife "I'm going to drive down to Framingham," "I'm going to drive up to Framingham," "I'm going to drive out to Framingham," "I'm going to drive in to Framingham," or "I'm going to drive over to Framingham." I can't even explain how I would choose--it would somehow depend on my mental picture of the trip, how eager I was, how laborious it seemed.... I don't know.
Anyway, it is fairly natural to use the preposition "down" for a narrow passageway, with no exit, that someone are going deeper and deeper into.
So her "heading," or direction, is "down a blind alley."