D Art Gallery Guide

Leo didn’t run. “You’re… the art.”

Leo froze. The second hand moved. The woman in the painting blinked, then stepped forward— out of the frame —onto the creaking floorboards. She wore the same blue dress, now faded and damp. Her hair smelled of rain and turpentine.

On the 28th day, Delphine came downstairs with a gilded hammer. “Time,” she said. d art gallery

At 2:17 a.m., the watch ticked.

“For what?” Leo asked.

Here’s a short story for The Ghost in D’Art Gallery D’Art Gallery wasn’t like the white-cube spaces downtown. It was a crooked, three-story townhouse wedged between a laundromat and a failing bookstore, its façade painted a bruised plum. The owner, an old woman named Delphine, insisted the “D” stood for “Delphine,” but everyone knew it stood for something else: doubt, desire, or death —depending on who you asked.

“To free her.” Delphine smashed the frame of Portrait of a Woman in Blue . The woman gasped, then dissolved into a cloud of cobalt dust. The dust swirled once around Leo’s heart and slipped out through a crack in the window. Leo didn’t run

Every night after, she showed Leo the secret history of D’Art: the charcoal sketch that wept charcoal tears, the bronze hand that pointed toward a wall safe (empty, she said), the photograph of a drowned ballerina that changed poses when you weren’t looking.