In a city whose gates close every night, its streets are never the same. The alleyways change, the walls breathe, and the labyrinth its inhabitants call home remembers everything they forget.
No one knows who built it, or why. People disappear quietly, swallowed by darkness in dead-end alleys and passages, and the city itself explains their absence. Life unfolds according to rules no one set, rules enforced by the silent authority of the streets, alleys, and doors that move suddenly.
When one of the residents begins to notice these contradictions, he uncovers the city's most dangerous secret: it is not merely a labyrinth, but a record of memory, a repository of fear, and a judge of choice. The city will protect its inhabitants, but at the cost of their independence.
Now, the labyrinth watches more closely than ever before. And the protagonist must decide whether to surrender to its control or reclaim the freedom the city has denied him for generations.
"The City That Closes at Night" is a moving psychological journey through memory, obedience, and the terrifying beauty of a place that knows more about you than you know about yourself.