Seven paintings. Seven stories. All by artists who vanished after their opening nights. Their signatures bleed slowly toward the floor.
Behind the gallery's single counter sits a woman who calls herself Kestrel. She never blinks. She offers you tea that tastes like low tide and memory. She asks:
Welcome. You’ve found the threshold.
Port Haven Gallery doesn't exist on any public map. There's no website, no social media presence. If you're reading this, you either received a black-bordered envelope with a pressed gull feather inside… or you walked past a certain rain-streaked doorway on Wharf Street, smelled salt and turpentine, and turned the handle when you shouldn't have.
The current exhibition is called
The gallery opens only when the tide is exactly halfway out. Not before. Not after.