The Painter of Shadows
He painted what light could never touch.

Lucien could not see color. The world to him was a study in silver and shade — but his art was alive. He painted shadows that told stories.
In every portrait, the darkness whispered truths the light refused to show. A smiling noble with a sorrowful silhouette. A happy bride with her back turned toward a grave.
His fame spread until the queen summoned him. “Paint me,” she demanded, “as I truly am.”
He did — and when the portrait was unveiled, the room went silent. Her shadow was that of a small girl, crying beside an empty cradle.
The climax: the queen banished him, but not before asking quietly, “How did you know?”
He replied, “Your shadow remembered.”
Years later, when Lucien died, no one found his body — only canvases, each painted black, but glowing faintly when the moonlight touched them.


Comments
There are no comments for this story
Be the first to respond and start the conversation.