Fatale Gallery - Princess

Elara rose from the velvet stool and approached the canvas. Her breath caught. The woman in the painting was more than her—more beautiful, more tragic, more lethal. Her gaze seemed to move, to follow Elara around the candlelit room. In the background, barely discernible, was the ghost of a crumbling castle and a man’s shadow falling from a high tower.

The artist was a woman named Seraphine Dusk. No one remembered her origins, only that she had once been a princess herself, betrayed and left for dead. Now, she painted with oils rendered from midnight roses and the tears of discarded lovers. Her price was never coin. It was a single strand of hair and the name of the person who had broken you. princess fatale gallery

Seraphine nodded, already reaching for her brush. She never asked the price of cruelty. She only knew that every princess who walked into her gallery left a little of her soul behind, and that the portraits on her walls—now numbering in the hundreds—whispered to each other on moonless nights. Elara rose from the velvet stool and approached the canvas

One autumn evening, a woman named Elara stumbled through the gallery’s creaking door. She was beautiful in a ruined way—her emerald gown torn at the hem, her dark eyes swollen from weeping. Around her neck hung a locket containing the miniature of Prince Aldric, the man who had promised her a throne and given her a public scandal instead. Her gaze seemed to move, to follow Elara

In the heart of the city’s forgotten quarter, where gas lamps flickered like dying fireflies, stood the . To the passerby, it was merely a boarded-up storefront with a tarnished brass sign. But to those who knew—the heartbroken, the vengeful, the desperately ambitious—it was the only place in the world where one could commission a portrait that didn't just capture a likeness, but a fate .

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