Her Brother Sold Five Paintings For $250. Then The Gallery Called-iwachan

Marcus texted me at 3:17 on a rainy Tuesday, right as the radiator in my studio apartment started knocking like someone was trapped in the wall.

Sold your amateur paintings for $50 each. You’re welcome.

I was barefoot on a paint-spotted towel, holding a brush loaded with a line of white so pale it almost vanished against the canvas.

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The room smelled like cold coffee, turpentine, and rain soaked into the hoodie I had worn down to the mailbox that morning.

Outside my window, delivery trucks hissed over wet asphalt, and a woman in a yellow raincoat dragged a grocery cart through a puddle.

Everything looked ordinary.

My hand did not shake.

That surprised me more than the text did.

A second message came from Marcus.

Found them in Mom’s garage. Finally cleared out some space.

Then he sent the thumbs-up he used whenever he wanted credit for doing something cruel politely.

I set the brush down on the tray.

I wiped my fingers on an old dish towel.

Then I read the messages again.

Amateur paintings.

Fifty dollars each.

Mom’s garage.

Five canvases had been stored there, wrapped in brown paper, sealed with blue painter’s tape, and marked with inventory numbers nobody in my family had ever bothered to ask about.

They were not my prettiest works.

They were not framed, varnished, or ready to be photographed for a magazine.

They were the first five finished pieces from a private series I had painted under a name my family did not know.

That was not an accident.

Marcus had spent my entire adult life treating my work like a personality flaw.

When I was nineteen, he said art school was where people went when they were scared of real jobs.

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