She spent the morning arranging old canvases in the corners of her studio. Each one held memories of the past—sunlit landscapes from childhood, portraits of dear friends, abstractions born in a burst of nocturnal inspiration. But today her brush trembled: she was preparing to paint a canvas that would change everything.

Once Karina had dreamed of exhibiting her work at the Tretyakov Gallery. Her husband, art historian Viktor, supported her ambitions, promising to help find patrons and gallery owners. Together they wandered through museum halls, discussing every stroke of the great masters. But after the birth of their daughter Alyona, Viktor became absorbed by something foreign: he disappeared for weeks in university lecture rooms, and in the evenings he would cast only a weary glance at her before retreating to his study to bury himself in books and reports.
One day Karina found a letter on his desk: an invitation to a private auction of artworks hidden from the public. Instead of jointly choosing frames for their upcoming exhibition, Viktor was deciding to whom he could resell her paintings at double price. By extorting “thank‑you” payments from friends and acquaintances, he betrayed not only their family ideals but also his own words: “Your creativity is our shared treasure.”

That very night Karina woke at the sound of her daughter’s soft snore and decided it was time to stop this farce. She gathered the portraits Viktor had deemed “unsellable” and drove to the nearest craft fair. There her works sold out almost instantly: people were captivated by the sincerity of each stroke and the depth of emotion on display. By midday she had assembled a small circle of regular buyers and even received an invitation from a local gallery to hold a solo show.
When Viktor returned home that evening and saw the studio’s bare walls, he turned pale. In the corner stood only one canvas—the very one Karina had worked on that night: a majestic woman with outstretched arms in which one could discern her daughter, herself, and the possible future. Viktor realized that artistry lies not in profit but in trust, in offering people a piece of your soul.

The next morning he entered the studio quietly, knelt before the painting without a word, and laid a bouquet of wildflowers at its base—a symbol of a new path begun side by side, but no longer together. And for the first time in a long while, their silence did not sound like a rupture, but like a promise of rebirth.