India, Feb. 11 -- As Ramzan approaches, Matia Mahal Bazar in Old Delhi is getting dressed up for the season. Fairy lights and decorative frills are being strung across the street. But these festive ornaments are inserting themselves into the street's permanent attire: the looping, sagging power cables that criss-cross overhead. Together, they are making the market feel denser and more claustrophobic than ever, as though the sky itself has been pulled down into the street. The queer thing about these perilously dangling cables is their invisibility. They are everywhere-more visible, in fact, than the monuments and landmark shops of the Walled City-yet they barely register. Instagram reels ignore them. Guidebooks remain silent. Tourists walk ...