How A Gala Slap Exposed A Socialite’s Stolen Masterpiece Lie-myhoa

By the time I stepped into the Chicago gallery that night, my shoes had already started to come apart again.

I had glued the left sole before work, pressing it under a stack of Noah’s schoolbooks while he ate cereal at the kitchen counter.

He watched me do it without saying anything.

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At eight years old, Noah had already learned the quiet manners of a child who knows money is a sore place in the house.

He did not ask why my coat came from a thrift store.

He did not ask why I had spent twenty minutes smoothing the collar with my hands like that could make it look new.

He only asked, “Is this the place where your paintings are?”

I told him yes.

I should have told him the whole truth.

The gallery smelled like lemon polish, cold wine, and flowers arranged by someone who had never had to check a grocery receipt before putting milk in the cart.

White walls rose around us.

Track lights glowed over canvases I knew better than I knew my own face.

Every brushstroke had a memory attached to it.

The narrow blue line near the top of the first painting had been made at 2:14 a.m. during a thunderstorm, when Noah was asleep on the couch because rain scared him and our bedroom window leaked.

The black underlayer in the second had dried while I sat beside a laundromat dryer and answered messages from parents about an after-school art program I could barely afford to keep attending.

The largest canvas, Blue Mercy, had taken me eleven months.

It had taken more than paint.

It had taken grocery money, skipped lunches, two coats of primer, three rejected versions, and the little hours after midnight when working mothers either sleep or become someone nobody in daylight believes they can be.

Now it hung in the center of the room under another woman’s name.

OLIVIA HAYES.

I saw it on the wall label before I saw her.

My stomach dropped so sharply that I had to reach for Noah’s shoulder.

He looked up at me, confused.

“Mom?”

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