She Ruined Lida’s Dress With Paint. Then The Varnish Turned Against Her-lbsuong

When Lida married Yura, she understood that his family would never quite know what to do with her. She came from Petersburg, restored antique furniture, spoke carefully, and wore a small brass key around her neck.

That key belonged to an eighteenth-century secretary she had been restoring for six months. To Lida, it was not jewelry. It was a promise that damaged things could still be saved if handled correctly.

Yura’s mother, Antonina Svet-Mikhailovna, treated Lida with polite suspicion. She complimented the table settings, corrected the soup temperature, and smiled whenever Ksenia made jokes about “Petersburg delicacy.”

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Ksenia, Yura’s sister, was different. She did not bother with delicate suspicion. She preferred open contempt wrapped in comedy, the kind that made everyone laugh because refusing to laugh would require courage.

Lida had tried to keep peace for years. She had brought gifts, shared contacts, let Ksenia wander past the workshop because Yura insisted family should not meet locked doors.

That was the trust signal Ksenia later used. She knew where Lida worked. She knew which shelf held jars. She knew Lida’s hands would protect objects before protecting pride.

The dinner was supposed to help Yura. Several colleagues from the port authority had come, including Boris Ivanovich, a man whose approval could move a contract forward or freeze it indefinitely.

The apartment smelled of roasted duck, waxed floorboards, hot sauce, and expensive perfume. Crystal glasses caught the chandelier light. Antonina Svet-Mikhailovna wore pearls and the expression of a woman supervising theater.

Lida wore pale silk. It was the most expensive dress she owned, bought at an auction in Helsinki before the borders became complicated and every beautiful thing had to travel through paperwork.

The first remark came before the soup cooled. Ksenia looked at the little brass key resting against Lida’s throat and asked whether restorers wore “props” so people would take them seriously.

Lida smiled because that was what she had learned to do. She had signed condition reports in colder rooms than this. She had watched cracked veneer survive worse pressure.

Then Antonina Svet-Mikhailovna mentioned the “Northern Riviera” sanatorium. She said she had been tired and wanted two weeks by herself, somewhere quiet, somewhere with doctors and clean air.

Ksenia immediately turned the request into accusation. She sighed loudly, looked at the guests, and implied Lida was trying to send her mother-in-law away so she could rule the apartment.

That was the first prepared lie. Lida recognized it by its polish. Real anger stumbles. Practiced cruelty arrives with neat phrasing and an audience already selected.

The second act came with the paint. Lida had left a working tin of titanium white on the hallway dresser after checking a color match. It contained linseed oil and siccative number forty-two.

Ksenia lifted it as if it were a party trick. Before anyone understood what she intended, she tipped it toward Lida’s chest and let the thick white paint pour down the pale silk.

“Idiot!” she shouted, so sharply that the crystal on the table seemed to stop ringing by itself. The paint spread cold at first, then heavy, smelling harsh and sweetly chemical.

For several seconds, nobody behaved like a person in a room. They behaved like witnesses waiting to discover whether silence would excuse them from choosing a side.

Forks froze halfway to mouths. Wineglasses hovered in the air. One guest wife stared at the duck as if poultry could testify. A candle flame leaned and straightened again.

Nobody moved.

Antonina Svet-Mikhailovna pressed her palm to her cheek. “Lidochka, how could this happen? Ksyushenka, surely it was an accident?” Her voice sounded tender. Her eyes did not.

Ksenia smiled and set the tin beside Yura’s plate. A drop fell from the rim and landed in the gravy boat with a small wet slap.

Lida moved her napkin from one hand to the other three times. The linen edge was rough. That roughness kept her anchored while the room waited for her humiliation to entertain them.

“It is titanium white in linseed oil,” Lida said. “With siccative number forty-two.”

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