We haunt these places because they are the only mirrors that don’t lie. The city doesn’t care if you’re lonely, and there is a strange, cold comfort in that indifference. You can lean against a damp limestone wall and feel the heartbeat of a thousand other people who stood there before you, all of them looking for the same thing: a reason to go home, or a reason to never go back.
The fog rolls in from the river, thick and smelling of wet iron, turning the skyline into a smudge of charcoal. We move through it like smoke, passing other figures whose faces are blurred by the mist. We don’t speak. You don’t interview a fellow apparition. You just nod, a silent acknowledgement that you’re both tethered to the same concrete graveyard. These Streets We Haunt
We call them "our" streets, but that’s a lie we tell to feel less like ghosts. We don’t own the asphalt or the brick; we just occupy the silence between the streetlights. To walk here at 3:00 AM is to participate in a shared haunting—a slow-motion collision between who we were and the shadows we’re becoming. We haunt these places because they are the
The neon here doesn’t light the way; it just stains the puddles. The fog rolls in from the river, thick
Every corner has a memory that refuses to be evicted. There’s the diner where the coffee always tasted like copper and bad news, its windows now boarded up like tired eyes. There’s the alleyway where the wind whistles a low, sharp note, sounding suspiciously like a name you promised to forget.
By dawn, the magic—if you can call this grim heavy thing magic—evaporates. The sun bleaches the grit and brings the noise of the living. But we know the truth. We know that under the commute and the coffee runs, the streets are still waiting. They are patient. They know we’ll be back tonight to claim our ghosts again.
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