On the final night of the fundraiser, TeacupGhost revealed herself: she was the librarian in Nova Scotia. “I didn’t know how to ask for help,” she wrote. “Thank you for reminding me that Belinda Bely’s real quote is: ‘You are not a ghost. You are just quiet. And quiet things last.’”

The name should have been a clue. Belinda Bely was a fictional character from a cult graphic novel from the early 2000s: a melancholic ballerina who painted watercolors of imaginary galaxies. The forum had started as a fan space, but over the years, it had morphed into something stranger and softer. It was a haven for people who felt like their lives were secondary drafts.

Within a week, every single painting sold. A retired nurse in Sweden bought the one of the gray rain over a city that looked like sighing. A teenager in Ohio bought the smallest one—just a jar of moonlight-colored nothing. The forum raised $4,700. Enough for two more years.

Over the next few months, Belinda became a regular. She posted her ugly sketches, her half-finished canvases, her “bad art.” And the forum received them like gifts. They didn’t offer false praise—they offered witness . “I see what you’re trying to say here.” “The loneliness in this line is real.” “This reminds me of the inside of a forgotten pocket.”