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Chapter 2 - Chapter 02: The Girl Who No Longer Smiled

Chapter Two: The Girl Who No Longer Smiled

"Every artist needs a canvas,

and every canvas deserves a touch of pain."

— From the memoirs of Edgar Wilmore

The night was quieter than safe.

The fog clung to the ground like a wet shawl, suffocating sounds and swallowing footsteps.

In one of the narrow alleys behind the market, a young girl was selling the last flowers of her cold day.

I first saw her three weeks ago, laughing despite her poverty, giving passersby wilting flowers with a smile more alive than the petals themselves.

There was something about that smile that unsettled me—it wasn't pure as it seemed, but false, hiding what deserved punishment.

I approached her slowly, my footsteps fading into the fog.

When she saw me, she lifted her head and shyly said:

"Evening flowers, sir? One flower brings luck."

I smiled—or at least she thought I did.

Then I answered: "No… I seek a flower that does not wither."

That last sentence was the beginning of the end.

I do not remember the blood clearly, the fog mixed with it as if washing away my sin.

All I remember is a beautiful silence, as if the world had paused out of respect for my little art.

The next day, I published a short line in my memoirs:

"True flowers are not sold, they are plucked from the heart of darkness."

People loved the line, wrote about it in newspapers,

and one critic said I possessed "a tragic, enchanting imagination."

How kind they are… and how grateful I am for their foolishness.

I did not know that the journalist Eliza Morgan had read that line and kept it.

She would later say it was not a line of literature, but the beginning of a message from a killer to his city.

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