In a modern city, encounters with wildlife are rarely expected.
Urban life follows its own rhythm — light, noise, constant motion.
Yet at times, the boundary between the human world and the natural one becomes almost invisible.
On a rooftop above the lights of Boston, a domestic cat and a snow leopard pause, facing one another.
This is not a moment of pursuit or dominance.
It is a brief suspension — where instinct remains present, but aggression does not take control.
Such encounters serve as a reminder: the natural world is not the opposite of civilization.
It exists alongside it, observing, adapting, and occasionally entering our space as quietly as we enter its own.




