When Theo and I moved in together, we agreed to get rid of things that didnโt fit in our shared space. Old furniture, mismatched dishes, even a set of ugly curtains he loved but I couldnโt standโeverything was fair game for donation.
Everything, that is, except her.
The oil painting.
It was massive, nearly four feet tall, framed in dark mahogany. The subject was a woman with deep auburn hair, wearing a blue silk dress, her lips painted a shade of red that almost glowed. She had this knowing expression, as if she was keeping a secret.
“She stays,” Theo said when I suggested we put it in storage. “Non-negotiable.”
“Where did you even get this?” I asked.
“Rummage sale,” he said casually, but something in his voice was off.
I let it go. A painting wasnโt worth an argument.
Weeks passed, and life carried on. The painting hung in his office, and though it was strange, I didnโt give it much thought. Until one evening.
I had made dinnerโpasta, garlic bread, the works. But Theo never came downstairs.
I found him in his office, sitting in the dim glow of his desk lamp, staring at the painting.
โAre you just sitting here, staring at her?โ I asked, half-joking, half-concerned.
His dark eyes locked onto mine, unreadable. Then, in a voice so soft it sent a chill down my spine, he murmured, โYouโre jealous of her.โ
I blinked. โWhat?โ
โYou shouldnโt be, Alissa. The painting makes her prettier than she was.โ
Something in his words made my stomach twist.
I didnโt ask anything else. I backed out of the room and told myself he was just tired.
But that night, when he was asleep, I crept back into his office. I took out my phone, snapped a picture of the painting, and did a reverse image search.
When the results loaded, I gasped.
My hands trembled as I clicked the first link.
The article was oldโat least a decade. It told the story of a woman named Claudia Moreau. She had gone missing in 2012. Last seen in a blue silk dress at a charity gala.
And the kicker?
Her body was never found.
I scrolled further. The article had a black-and-white photo of her from the event.
Same auburn hair. Same haunting eyes.
Same exact dress.
I felt sick.
I turned to Theo, fast asleep beside me, his face peaceful, unaware of the storm in my mind.
I needed answers.
The next morning, I waited until he was sipping his coffee to casually drop the question.
“Hey, did you ever hear about Claudia Moreau?”
Theo froze. Just for a second, but I saw it.
“No,” he said, too quickly.
I swallowed. “Weird, because she looks exactly like the woman in your painting.”
He lowered his mug.
“You went digging?”
My heart pounded. “Should I have?”
For a long time, he said nothing. Then he sighed and rubbed his jaw.
“I was hoping you wouldnโt ask.”
My stomach clenched.
“Then tell me the truth, Theo.”
And he did.
Theo wasnโt just some guy who stumbled on the painting at a rummage sale.
He had painted it.
Years ago, before we met, he had been in love with Claudia Moreau. She was older than him, mysterious, way out of his league. They had an intense, short-lived affair. But one night, she vanished.
The police investigated but found nothing. There were whispersโjealous lovers, unpaid debts, even theories that she faked her own disappearance.
Heartbroken and guilt-ridden, Theo painted her from memory.
“I thought if I could capture her, I wouldnโt forget,” he admitted. “But I got obsessed. I kept thinking, maybe if I paint her just right, Iโd see something I missed. A clue. A sign.”
I shuddered.
“But why lie?” I asked. “Why say you bought it?”
“Because I knew you’d think I was crazy.”
It was a lot to take in. But one thing still didnโt sit right.
“Why did you say she was ‘prettier in the painting’?”
He hesitated.
“Because when I painted her, I left something out.”
I frowned. “What?”
Theo exhaled slowly. “A scar. A small one, near her collarbone. She always covered it with makeup. She hated it.”
I swallowed. “What gave it to her?”
He looked away.
“The last time I saw her, she told me she was afraid. She said someone was following her. That she hadโฆ โupset the wrong man.โ”
I gripped the edge of the table.
“You think she was murdered?”
“I donโt know,” Theo admitted. “But I do know thisโshe was scared, and I didnโt take her seriously. And then she was gone.”
For a long moment, neither of us spoke.
I wanted to help. To do something. So I reached out to an investigative journalist. We gave him everythingโTheoโs memories, the painting, even old messages.
A few months later, the journalist published a report. And someoneโan anonymous tipsterโcame forward.
A real lead.
Authorities reopened the case. It turned out Claudia had been in danger. A man connected to her pastโan ex-business partnerโwas now under suspicion.
And one day, Theo got a call.
“They found her,” he told me, voice thick with emotion.
Not alive. But found.
The closure he never thought heโd get.
We donated the painting to a memorial exhibit in her honor.
It wasnโt just a mystery anymore. It was a story that mattered.
And thatโs why Iโm sharing it. Because sometimes, the past lingers in ways we donโt expect. And sometimes, looking closerโasking the questions that scare usโcan change everything.
๐ฌ What would you have done in my place? Let me know in the comments, and donโt forget to like and share!




