A haunting image reminiscent of an album cover depicting a deserted small American town in daylight. The scene takes place outdoors on an empty residential street or quiet main road, with a liminality–inspired atmosphere of isolation and unease. The town should feel real and lived-in but strangely abandoned: faded storefronts, old houses, utility poles with tangled wires, cracked pavement with weeds growing through it, a distant church steeple, dark windows, and the subtle feeling that everyone left moments ago. At the center of the composition, far down the street, stands a solitary human figure that is difficult to identify. The figure should appear haunting, mournful, and ambiguous rather than threatening. The person should appear almost like a memory or a ghost caught in an old photograph. Their face must be impossible to make out; use distance, haze, shadow, obscured features, or turned posture to prevent identification. The viewer should wonder whether the figure is waiting, lost, or simply part of the landscape. The mood should be melancholy and unsettling rather than violent. No monsters, gore, or obvious horror imagery. The fear should come from absence, silence, and the feeling that something is subtly wrong. Lighting: pale overcast daylight with a strange washed-out quality, like a damaged 1970s photograph. Soft haze in the distance, muted colors, slightly faded film grain, long quiet shadows, and a sense of oppressive stillness. The image should feel like a See more