The city creeps towards midnight becoming a raw, unfettered place, a dark and dangerous place. My footsteps echo, hurried over cobblestones — pounding to the rhythm of my too-fast beating heart. I watch for the shadows of strangers in the dim, orangey glow of flickering streetlamps and passing headlights. The city at midnight slips sideways into strangeness, becomes a place only half-way real, becomes a place in which the mouldering and abandoned spaces— now marked only for demolition— resuscitate under the moon's cold scrutiny. In the city at midnight my footsteps tap dance to the hum of the ghost-fiddler's tempo floating past my eardrums on a breeze echoing from a dark and dusty window. In the city at midnight I walk alone.