One day this building will become old and shabby with peeling wallpaper, ratty carpeting, and cracking plaster. One day the only option besides the wrecking ball will be to sit and wait to die. To crumble and decay, to rust and fall to pieces. Termites will find homes in the banisters, moths will eat at the books left behin by the pillaging teenagers that steal the furniture. Chesterfields and repaired ottomans will show up in the neighbourhood, refurbished and reupholstered, saved for mother’s day. No one was going to use them otherwise. Better they don’t go to waste. The old piano with the cracked keys will slouch alone in the empty sitting room, savouring what little memories weren’t scraped from this carcass like the last of the peanut butter from it’s jar. One day this building will disappear, making a grave of it’s foundations.