Called It Nothing

Contemporary Drama Fiction

Written in response to: "Set your story in a place that has lost all color." as part of Better in Color.

“Eight,” Philip said.

He felt it immediately—too fast.

The class laughed.

“There is no eight,” said the teacher, too quickly for it to be kind.

“Look again.”

He did. Brown dots. Gray dots.

“Still eight.”

Luc De Smet, front row, a face arranged by God for betrayal. “Maybe he’s blind.”

“I am not blind,” Philip snapped.

“You are not blind,” said the teacher. “Some people see colors differently.”

Luc smirked. “So he’s half-blind.”

It was his mother that evening, slicing carrots into a pan.

“You’re not missing much.”

“Apparently I am.”

She did not look at him. “What color was it?”

He handed her the paper from school. She squinted. “Magenta.”

“What’s magenta?”

“A nuisance,” she said.

“Purple trying to be important.”

But magenta kept returning in small humiliations.

A chemistry teacher marked a practical half wrong because Philip misread a pH strip.

At nineteen, working in a home-and-garden center for summer money, he packed the wrong labels on pesticide containers.

“You’re educated,” the man said.

“Use your brain. If your eyes are defective, use your brain twice.”

Philip did what people did when a flaw was too specific to become dramatic. He adapted quietly.

By thirty-seven he worked in the restoration laboratory of the Royal Museum of Modern Art in Antwerp, where caution looked less like fear and more like professionalism. He logged, measured, tested, documented.

His color-blindness lived in an occupational file no one read. It mattered less than people imagined. He trusted instruments, cross-checks, written analyses. He trusted everything except instinct.

Then Evening Orchard arrived.

It came in a narrow crate on a wet Thursday in March, rain skating down the conservation windows. Elise from registration signed it over.

“Secondary archive,” she said. “Small show coming up. Forgotten modernists. The phrase alone should sell tickets by the dozens.”

Philip glanced at the file. “De Wilde.”

“Exactly. You sound thrilled.”

“I’m conserving my enthusiasm.”

He lifted the canvas from the crate and set it on the easel. An orchard at dusk. Apple trees. Farm roof in the distance.

It was the sky that did it: a horizontal band above the trees, laid on with unusual force.

To Philip it looked muddy.

Yet the brushwork said otherwise. The painter had dragged that color across the horizon as if trying to mark the world permanently.

Philip checked the note clipped to the reverse.

Dominant upper-band pigment: quinacridone magenta.

He stared at the paper a second too long.

“Elise,” he said, “was there any prior interpretive note on this?”

She leaned in. “Something about emotional instability in the late landscapes. Or early instability. I forget.

Dead men with difficult skies.”

She looked at the painting. “God, that’s ugly.”

“What is?”

“That stripe. It’s like the orchard has been insulted.”

He looked back at the same band of color.

“Really.”

“Yes, really. Don’t ‘really’ me. It’s vile.”

After she left, Philip remained standing in front of the painting.

That afternoon, someone tapped the open lab door.

A woman stood there with a notebook tucked under one arm. Mid-thirties perhaps.

Dark coat, dark hair, face that looked composed until one paid attention to the eyes.

“Sorry,” she said. “I was told the De Wilde was here.”

“It is.”

She stepped closer, then stopped.

“You’re from curatorial?” Philip asked.

“Research.” She kept looking at the sky.

“Lotte Michiels.”

“Philip.”

She gave a brief nod. “That color is awful.”

He almost laughed. “That seems to be the consensus.”

“You say that like you disagree.”

“I say that like I don’t trust consensus.”

Now she looked at him. “And what do you trust?”

“Documentation.”

“That must make life exciting.”

“It keeps varnish from becoming philosophy.”

To his surprise, she smiled. “Fair.”

Then she turned back to the painting and pointed at the horizon.

“That’s the whole thing, though. Without that band, this would be nostalgic. Rural. Mildly mournful. With it…”

She hesitated.

“With it, the orchard feels threatened.”

“What color is it to you?”

“Magenta.”

“Describe it without using another color.”

She gave him a sharper look now. “Why?”

“Because I’m asking.”

She considered the sky.

“It looks synthetic. Not like dusk. Like something industrial has entered the air and doesn’t belong there.”

He folded his arms.

“That’s specific.”

“It’s not a nice painting,” she said.

“People always want painters to be symbolic when sometimes they’re simply observant.”

“And what is he observing here?”

She shrugged.

“Poison. Premonition. A man losing his mind. Take your pick.”

After she left, Philip closed the lab door and stood in front of the painting again.

That evening he took the file home. By midnight he had read reviews of De Wilde’s late work.

One critic in 1934 called the skies “chemically distressed.”

One line, from a local paper, made Philip sit up.

In his final orchard paintings, De Wilde insists on an intrusive magenta at the horizon line, as though warning the viewer of contamination.

Warning.

Philip closed the file.

The next morning the museum director summoned him.

Willem Van Acker had the polished calm of a man who had spent decades speaking to donors as though they were both fragile and indispensable.

The De Wilde file lay open on his desk.

“I’m told you’ve become interested,” Van Acker said.

Philip remained standing. “Interested is a strong word.”

“In museums, all words are strong. Sit.”

Philip sat.

Van Acker tapped the file. “You flagged an interpretive concern.”

“I flagged a perceptual issue.”

“Meaning?”

Philip inhaled once. “I don’t read color reliably.”

Van Acker’s fingers went still. “This painting depends on magenta.”

“Yes.”

“And you are the conservator assigned to assess it.”

“Yes.”

“And this is only now arising because…?”

“Because it rarely matters.”

“That is not an answer.”

“It’s the answer you have.”

Van Acker watched him for a moment, then leaned back.

“Do you believe you have misjudged works before?”

“No.”

“Do you know that, or do you hope it?”

Philip held his gaze.

“I know I’ve never relied on unsupported visual instinct.”

“Yet here we are.”

The sentence landed harder than it should have.

Van Acker steepled his fingers.

“I need to know whether this is a contained issue or a professional one.”

Philip felt the heat rise in his neck.

“A contained issue.”

“Good. Then contain it.”

The meeting might have ended there.

Lotte entered without knocking.

“Sorry,” she said. “You wanted the archive references.”

Van Acker took the folder from her, then looked between them.

“You’ve seen the painting?”

“Yes.”

“And?”

Lotte didn’t sit.

“It’s stronger than the archive image suggested.”

“Stronger how?”

“It provokes.”

Van Acker smiled faintly.

“Provokes is useful.”

“It also unsettles.”

“That is still useful.”

She hesitated.

“Philip is right, though.”

Van Acker glanced at him.

“About?”

“The meaning changes depending on whether that sky reads as decorative or invasive.”

He lifted one shoulder.

“Art often depends on perception.”

“This is narrower than that,” she said.

“It’s not taste. It’s recognition.”

The room grew quieter.

Van Acker closed the folder.

“Fine. Put it in the wall text. Viewers enjoy complexity.

And Philip —document your limitation and secondary verification procedures on this one.

I don’t want surprises later.”

On the way out, Lotte slowed beside him in the corridor.

“He thinks in liability.”

“He thinks in funding.”

“Same animal.”

The exhibition opened ten days later under the bleak title Fault Lines: Overlooked Modernists Between the Wars.

Philip hated openings.

He attended this one because De Wilde had become less painting than accusation.

The orchard hung in the second room.

At first the reactions were soft.

Then the room began to split.

“It’s ghastly.”

“No, it’s daring.”

“It looks toxic.”

“It’s a sunset.”

“Since when does sunset look like that?”

“Since painters got bored.”

A student in an oversized scarf argued with an older man in a navy suit.

Philip stood at the edge of the room, watching other people be moved by a color he still could not see.

Then two men stopped directly in front of the painting.

One was broad-shouldered, maybe in his sixties, with the contained stiffness of someone raised to distrust softness.

The older man pointed to the sky.

“There. That. That is exactly the sort of nonsense I mean.”

The younger man sighed.

“It’s a painting, Hugo.”

“It’s propaganda.”

“For what?”

“For panic. For modern hysteria. They see one ugly pigment and suddenly the countryside is dying.”

The younger man rubbed his face.

“Please not tonight.”

But Hugo stepped closer.

“No. Look at the roofline. Look at the path. That is the Vermeulen orchard.”

A woman nearby turned.

“You know it?”

“My family leased neighboring land.”

“That farmhouse burned.”

Philip moved before he thought about it.

“Excuse me. Burned when?”

Hugo looked him up and down, deciding whether a museum badge made him useful.

“Nineteen thirty-three.”

“And the cause?”

The younger man cut in.

“My uncle likes local disasters.”

Hugo ignored him.

“Officially?

Improper storage. Experimental compounds. Agricultural treatment nonsense.

They were trying new sprays back then.”

Philip felt the room sharpen around him.

“What kind of compounds?”

Hugo frowned.

“I was a child. I remember barrels, talk of infestation, and a sky that looked wrong the evening before.

Everybody said it meant storm. There was no storm.”

His son let out a breath through his nose.

“Please stop turning memory into folklore.”

But Hugo was still staring at the horizon line.

“That painter saw it.”

“Or invented it,” the son said.

“No,” Hugo said softly, almost to himself.

“He saw it.”

Lotte appeared at Philip’s side.

“What’s happening?”

Before he could answer, a young woman across the room said,

“Sorry, but if there was chemical contamination, why isn’t that in the text?”

Van Acker, who had materialized with donor instincts fully activated, smiled.

“Because interpretation must remain responsibly sourced.”

Hugo turned.

“Responsibly sourced? My father lost a season’s crop.”

The son muttered,

“Here we go.”

Van Acker spread his hands.

“Sir, if you have archival material, the museum would be pleased to review it.”

“I don’t have archival material,” Hugo snapped.

“I have memory.”

“Memory,” said Van Acker gently, “is important, but not always verifiable.”

Instead Hugo took one step closer and said, in a voice loud enough for the room,

“Verifiable enough to know your painter wasn’t mad.”

The room went still.

Van Acker’s smile thinned. “No one has called him mad.”

“Your wall text practically does.”

“It notes contested reception.”

“By cowards.”

The son touched his father’s arm.

“Enough.”

Hugo shook him off, eyes still on the painting.

"That color meant something.”

Philip heard his own voice before he had chosen it.

“What did it mean?”

Hugo looked at him directly.

“That whatever they had sprayed, stored, mixed, or buried out there had entered the air.”

The son laughed once, without humor.

“Wonderful. Now we’re doing airborne doom.”

“You weren’t there.”

“Neither were you, not really.”

“I saw the sky.”

The son’s face hardened.

“And grandfather saw communists in wallpaper. Memory is not evidence.”

Van Acker intervened, smooth again.

“Thank you both. If you’d like to leave contact details…”

“I have no interest in your details,” Hugo said, and walked out.

His son remained one second longer, staring at the painting, then followed him.

Lotte murmured,

“Well. Fault lines indeed.”

Philip kept looking at the sky.

Dull to him.

Explosive to everyone else.

That night he did not go home.

He sat in the museum archive room until nearly one in the morning, requesting agricultural records, local newspapers, estate maps, insurance notices. Fragments surfaced. A barn loss outside Ghent. Orchard blight. A legal dispute involving experimental treatments. No direct link. Only enough to make ignorance feel lazy.

At ten the next morning he was in an ophthalmology clinic on the outskirts of the city. The specialist, a tired woman with the efficient kindness of someone who had long ago stopped promising miracles, fitted him with contrast-enhancing lenses.

“These won’t cure anything,” she said.

“I didn’t ask for cure.”

“They may sharpen certain differences.”

“I only need one.”

She gave him a test card.

Most of it remained familiar.

Then one square surfaced from the page with such strange force that he instinctively recoiled.

Not red. Not purple. Not either, and somehow too much of both.

No wonder people make a fuss.

“What is that?”

The doctor looked at the square.

“Magenta.”

He said nothing.

“Some patients find newly separated hues emotional at first.”

“Emotional is not the word.”

“What is?”

Philip kept staring.

“Accusatory.”

He returned to the museum wearing the glasses in a hard case in his coat pocket.

Then he stood in front of Evening Orchard and put them on.

The horizon ignited.

For one clean, humiliating second, everything else in the painting rearranged itself around the sky.

The leaves turned subtly sick.

The shadows bruised.

The path no longer invited.

It led inward like a decision one would regret.

What he had mistaken for mood was event.

What he had mistaken for expression was record.

Lotte found him there.

“Well?” she asked quietly.

He didn’t turn. “It’s hideous.”

“That sounds closer to the truth.”

He took off the glasses.

The violence drained from the canvas at once.

Put them back on.

There it was again: intrusion, warning, contamination.

Lotte came to stand beside him.

“You’ve got something.”

He told her about the clinic, the records, Hugo, the legal dispute.

She listened without interrupting.

When he finished, she said,

“Van Acker will hate this.”

“That isn’t an argument.”

“No. It’s a forecast.”

They spent the rest of the afternoon in archives.

Lotte found the letter.

De Wilde to an unnamed recipient, 1934:

They told me it was evening and I told them evening has no business looking like that. I painted the line because no one believed the smell, the residue, the taste in the air after rain. They said it was storm-light. Then the trees blackened and the outbuilding caught. If memory survives where evidence rots, let the painting be read as memory.

Philip read it twice.

Lotte leaned back in her chair.

“There it is.”

“Almost.”

“You sound disappointed.”

“It still isn’t proof.”

“No,” she said. “It’s worse.

It’s testimony.”

Van Acker’s office was dark except for the desk lamp when they entered.

When Philip finished, the director set the page down carefully.

“We cannot present this as fact.”

“No one said fact,” Lotte replied.

“Context.”

“We can present it as newly surfaced correspondence suggesting a historical reading.”

Van Acker looked at Philip.

“And on what basis do you feel qualified to advance that reading?”

The question was aimed with precision.

“On the basis,” Philip said evenly, “that the painting’s contested response is not random.

That response correlates with the perception of a specific pigment.

That a witness associated the sky with a pre-fire event.

That archival material now supports the painter’s own account of environmental abnormality.”

Van Acker tapped the desk once.

“And your visual limitation?”

Philip held his gaze.

“Is exactly why I know the difference between projection and omission.”

Silence.

Then Lotte said,

“If you bury this because it complicates your clean little show, say that.

But don’t hide behind standards.

Standards are supposed to protect truth, not donor comfort.”

Van Acker’s face changed very slightly.

At last he said,

“Draft me two versions of the amended wall text.

One cautious.

One braver.

I’ll decide in the morning.”

When they left the office, Lotte exhaled hard.

“He’ll choose the cowardly one.”

“Probably.”

“Then why do I suddenly feel cheerful?”

Philip glanced at the glasses case in his hand.

“Because now it’s on record.”

The next afternoon the new text went up.

Not the brave version.

But not the cowardly one either.

It mentioned a newly surfaced letter suggesting the magenta horizon may reflect agricultural contamination preceding the orchard fire.

Visitors stood longer in front of it.

The arguments sharpened.

At closing time Philip remained alone in the gallery.

He put the glasses on.

Took them off.

Put them on again.

With them, the painting accused.

Without them, it forgave.

For most of his life he had believed his missing color had spared him only embarrassment.

Now he understood something harsher.

A missing color does not merely alter beauty.

It alters warning.

It edits danger into décor.

From the doorway, Lotte said,

“You coming?”

“In a minute.”

She hesitated.

“For what it’s worth, I don’t think the problem is that you didn’t see it.”

Philip looked at the horizon burning under the lenses.

“No?”

“The problem,” she said, “is how many people saw it and still called it nothing.”

After she left, he stayed one minute longer.

Then he slid the glasses back on, picked up his coat, and walked out under the museum lights, where advertisements, pharmacy signs, and cosmetic displays had begun to look less decorative than they used to.

Not beautiful.

Not symbolic.

Not dramatic.

Just warnings he had once mistaken for background.

And now that he could see them, he was not calmer.

But he was harder to fool.

Thank you for having read this story. If it resonated, a 👍 helps it travel a bit further.

Posted Apr 26, 2026
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53 likes 85 comments

Marty B
23:34 Apr 30, 2026

These lines stood out- “What’s magenta?” / “A nuisance,” she said./ “Purple trying to be important.”

Great story about how color has many more implications, than just 'color'.
Thanks!

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Marjolein Greebe
10:46 May 03, 2026

Thank you so much for reading/liking and commenting. It means a lot.

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The Old Izbushka
17:11 Apr 28, 2026

Reading your stories each week has genuinely made me a better writer. Your precision really shows here, and this piece hits on multiple levels. It’s a creative take on the prompt, as always :) The story naturally raises an unsettling question: what if danger exists because perception is incomplete—and institutions prefer it that way?

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Marjolein Greebe
11:27 Apr 30, 2026

That’s incredibly kind of you to say—thank you. Truly.
I’m really glad the piece landed on that level. That question you pull out… that’s exactly the unease I was circling: not just that perception can fail, but that sometimes it’s more convenient if it does.
And thank you for mentioning precision—that’s always the part I’m quietly wrestling with, so it means a lot that it comes through.
If you have a moment to leave a like, it helps the story travel a bit further—but comments like yours mean more to me than any metric.

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Tom Salas
12:19 May 10, 2026

I genuinely enjoyed the premise of your story. The idea of a color-blind man recognizing something others overlook is excellent. Your dialogue is well written, and the line “Purple trying to be important” genuinely made me laugh. You also do an excellent job with structure, and the descriptions are strong.

If I may offer a few points: I think some additional dialogue tags would help. I noticed I had to pause at times and reread to make sure I knew who was speaking. I also felt Philip’s inner world was a little underdeveloped. He is restrained by nature, which works for the character, but we still get very little of his internal experience during the discovery and even when he receives the new glasses.

One note on the ending: I felt the stronger beat was Lotte’s line, “The problem isn’t that you didn’t see it. The problem is how many people saw it and still called it nothing.” To me, that feels like the real shadow lurking in the story. Ending instead on “A missing color does not merely alter beauty. It alters warning. It edits danger into décor” risks suggesting that Philip’s color blindness means he really was missing some essential layer of reality, or that color-blind people inherently are.

Overall, the story works well. It is well written, and the dialogue and structure were the standouts for me.

I have a new story up as well. If you are interested.

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Marjolein Greebe
14:21 May 10, 2026

Hi Tom,

First, thank you for your extensive feedback!

I see what you mean. I tend to explain little because I trust my readers, even when things are left unsaid. For me, it’s also important that a story leaves enough space for readers to form their own interpretation. Maybe I push that a little too far sometimes. I’ll keep it in mind.

Lotte’s line is indeed the most important one. You picked up on that correctly.

As for Philip’s color blindness: it differs from person to person. This story unexpectedly sparked many conversations a.o. about how differently people experience color in daily life. Several readers shared personal experiences or stories about people close to them.

Of course, many others will experience it differently — or not at all. My stories are never meant to push an explicit social or personal opinion.

I really appreciate your thoughts, and of course I’ll keep an eye on your work as well.

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Danielle Heslep
03:12 May 10, 2026

This was such a great take on the prompt! I love the idea of a color the main character couldn't see and how he perceived the painting differently than the others. And the depth of the story and how they unraveled more information ans mystery surrounding the painting was great. Good job!

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Marjolein Greebe
09:06 May 10, 2026

Hi Danielle,

Good to hear that you liked it. I tried to imagine what it would be like not to see colors properly.

Some readers actually shared that they have a similar condition, which made me realize how challenging daily life can be — for example, being an electrician and having to distinguish electrical wires by color with great care.

One reader told me that he helped his colleague connect the right wires, and that they kept it their little secret all along. I thought that was both heartwarming and beautiful in its own way. A pretty wonderful compromise, don’t you think?

Thank you so much for reading and commenting.

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Danielle Heslep
17:13 May 10, 2026

You did such a good job! And that is awesome you got feedback from others that have a similar condition. Wow, that would be so difficult being an electrician and having their job and safety rely so much on needing to distinguish colors. What a kind friend to help him! Being an artist and graphic designer, I can't imagine how hard it must be for those that are colorblind.

Great job and story premise! I really enjoyed the adventure and turns you wove into it!

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Sarah Windels
19:01 May 07, 2026

Waauw!
Very nice story!

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Marjolein Greebe
09:03 May 08, 2026

Thanks, nice to hear!

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Marjolein Greebe
16:07 May 07, 2026

I didn’t expect this many thoughtful comments—really struck by the different perspectives people brought in. That kind of reading stays with me.

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15:29 May 07, 2026

An intriguing story with plenty to think about. I really enjoyed reading it.

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Marjolein Greebe
15:33 May 07, 2026

Thank you Sophie. It means a lot.

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Jane Davidson
14:48 May 07, 2026

Very interesting reading. The line that stands out for me is:
“The problem,” she said, “is how many people saw it and still called it nothing.”

I like that you chose magenta as the missing color. It is about as opposite to neutral as you can get. And Van Acker is a great character. I have been in his position in a very different context, so I sympathize with him, although he is not sympathetic!

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Marjolein Greebe
15:45 May 07, 2026

Thank you—glad that line stood out to you, especially since it ties into the title.

I’d be curious to hear in what way you relate to Van Acker. :-)

The choice of magenta is based on the fact that it isn’t part of the visible light spectrum. We do see it in nature, of course—flowers and such—but it doesn’t exist as a single wavelength of light. That contradiction gave me a certain unease, which felt right for the story—and, in a way, makes it just a little more unusual.”

Thank you again, your read/like and comment. It means a lot!

---MG

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Jane Davidson
16:27 May 07, 2026

He's management. He needs to be sure that the technicians He relies on do not have any weaknesses that affect their work. He needs to protect the reputation of the museum to keep it as a center of reliable unbiased truth. These things require him to be extra careful and to avoid emotional decision-making. As a result, everyone around him despises him a little!

The information about magenta surprised me, because it is one of the 3 colors of light used in transmitting color for TV, etc. But yes, it is a strange color.

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Marjolein Greebe
09:22 May 08, 2026

The way you describe him is even very insightful! Interesting thing about how magenta is being used. I'm curious.
I love the debating and thoughts around this story. It's great to experience. 🌹

Enjoy your weekend!

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Luna Moss
13:39 May 07, 2026

Loved reading this! I was so immersed in the mystery behind the painting! I also loved how well written all the characters are.

The line that stood out to me was when Lotte said "people saw it and still called it nothing." It really showed how Philip's experience with color blindness acted as a catalyst that led him to uncover a disaster that everyone was ignorant to.

The escalating tension once Philip realized something was amiss and his obsession with discovering the truth for himself was so well written! Truly great work!

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Marjolein Greebe
15:52 May 07, 2026

Thanks for such an accurate read—you really nailed it.
I appreciate you taking the time.

---MG

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Ella Nemjo
07:31 May 07, 2026

I must say I was truly stunned and moved by your story. Your truly exceptional use of imagery brings your story to life.

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Marjolein Greebe
07:38 May 07, 2026

Thank you very much for your kind words and welcome to Reedsy.

I happily read your story on your profile page.
Nice raw voice—there’s real energy in it.

A tiny note, given in good faith:

Tighten a bit and trust the reader more; you’ve got something here.
Well done!!

___MG

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Mark Schulze
15:46 May 06, 2026

Marjolein

I really enjoyed this story. The pacing felt extremely controlled, and I especially admired the dialogue — that’s something I personally find very difficult to write well, and you handled it naturally and confidently throughout.

I also really liked the use of the glasses. It gave me a quiet They Live resonance — not in a derivative way, but in the sense that perception itself becomes revelation. Once Philip can finally see the magenta, the whole world subtly changes around him.

Really strong work. The story stayed with me afterward, especially the idea that warning can become invisible simply because perception adapts around it.

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Marjolein Greebe
16:05 May 06, 2026

Mark, this is such a thoughtful comment. Thank you!

The algorithm here runs on likes—so if a story resonated, a 👍 helps it travel a bit further.

But again: thanks for your comment. Means a lot!

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Eric Manske
02:43 May 06, 2026

This is an incredible story. It's amazing how much you pull out of the prompt. At the beginning, I thought I was reading one story, and then it became something else, and much more interesting, entirely. I actually tried to look up some data from your story to see if it was based on an actual event; that's how well done this is. And the message that so many people noticed the feature in the painting and called it nothing stands out so well. Nice work!

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Marjolein Greebe
08:03 May 07, 2026

Your words mean a lot! Thanks!

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Daniel R. Mangru
02:12 May 06, 2026

Wonderful story.

Beyond the social commentary, you’re doing something with the structure that gives each beat more impact-- clipped dialogue, short sentences grouped almost like stanzas, and line breaks that feel deliberate rather than decorative.

There were a few regional phrasings I had to look up (American vs. Dutch, I’m guessing), but on the second read it flowed much better once I stopped “editing” in my head. I’m used to seeing scene breaks — a dinkus like *** or * * * centered — especially when shifting time or moving between places or characters, so I noticed their absence.

What I really appreciated was how you took a boy’s seemingly minor childhood colorblindness and showed how it shaped him across different stages of his life. You turned a personal quirk into a broader metaphor about what society tolerates, acclimates to, or simply goes blind to. It’s evergreen territory, and like the painting in the story, how we interpret warnings from the past ends up shaping the world we live in.

It was a long ride, and I enjoyed it.

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Marjolein Greebe
08:45 May 07, 2026

Thank you for taking the time to read, like, and comment so thoughtfully.
Your earlier comment certainly didn’t go unnoticed.
Looking forward to your next story.

___MG

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Corey Sitkowski
22:14 May 05, 2026

Early in my working career I was an electrician and worked closely with another that was color blind. This story resonated with me because although not art and the perception or emotion it may invoke, an electrician needs to differentiate between wire colors for safety and code compliance. His color blindness was our secret and on occasion he would ask to help clarify a wire color for him.
I also laughed at the line "Purple trying to be important" describing magenta. :)

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Marjolein Greebe
23:40 May 05, 2026

First, I’m really glad you took the time to read and comment—it made me smile.

I’m amazed how many of you fellow writers and readers either have some form of colorblindness yourselves or know someone who does. I did quite a bit of research—otherwise it would have been impossible to portray Philip’s difficulty with perceiving color reliably.

Even then, it’s hard to truly imagine the impact on daily life.

I also loved how you supported your colleague. Another reader mentioned their father was colorblind—kids at school thought he was silly, but a teacher really helped him.

It’s good to see people still looking out for each other.

Thanks again. Your suppor means a lot.

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Katherine Howell
18:48 May 05, 2026

This was such a compelling and thoughtful story. I really loved how you took something as specific as color perception and turned it into a much larger idea about interpretation, truth, and even missed warnings. The premise itself was fascinating, and the way the mystery slowly unfolded—from a “strange” sky to something potentially real and dangerous—was handled really well. It built gradually in a quiet but very effective way.

I also really appreciated the humor throughout. Lines like “Purple trying to be important” and “I’m conserving my enthusiasm” added just the right amount of dry wit without undercutting the seriousness of the story. They made the characters feel grounded and human. The ending realization—that something Philip had been taught to simply adapt to his entire life was actually preventing him from seeing a warning—was especially well done. It reframed everything in a really impactful way.

Overall, an intelligent and layered piece that balances humor and depth while also giving the reader insight into color blindness. Well done!

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Shireen Zangana
10:09 May 05, 2026

I absaloutly love the professional setting your story has. And the way you described the color magneta was spot on.
Hugo's character is what interested me the most, he didn't know how to translate a warning into something the others recognized as credible.
And when philip realized a missing color edits danger into decor, he learned how to recognize warnings in the colors he can't see.
this was a great story, I can't wait to read more. 👏

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Jo Freitag
09:33 May 05, 2026

This is a great story, Marjolein. Philip is so restrained and cautious and therefore so methodical in his research. I appreciated the contrasts in the perceptions about the band of magenta in the sky and the reactions to it and the far reaching implications if the colour proved that there had been a disaster. The story unfolded and built in intensity so naturally!

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Marjolein Greebe
09:50 May 05, 2026

Thanks a lot Jo.... it's my lucky day: it wasn't too late for me. 😅😇👍🏼

Cheers for that!

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Greg Lang
01:27 May 05, 2026

Great angle for this prompt. I loved the line “It keeps varnish from becoming philosophy.” The idea that if you don't document it, over time the changes end up being misconstrued as the artist's intention. You had me after that.

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Marjolein Greebe
02:26 May 05, 2026

Hi Greg,
1. Welcome to Reedsy
2. Although I am from Europe I couldn't agree more with your bio.
3. Thank you so much for your careful reading+kind comment+like.

It means a lot!

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Mary A
23:54 May 04, 2026

Hey, I'm just reading this and i'm going to be completely honest, i've never read anything on color blindness before so i don't know much about it, but the way the story centers on the fact that perception matters resonated with me. I also liked the way you interpreted the prompt. Thanks for sharing a good story with us.🙂‍↕️🙂‍↕️

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Marjolein Greebe
00:36 May 05, 2026

Thank you for your read/like and kind comment, that means a lot.

I couldn’t have wished for a better takeaway—thank you again.

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Scott Speck
15:32 Apr 30, 2026

Marjolein, your story is fantastic. The writing is first rate, as always. The staccato-style dialog in many places is perfect, showing the rapid interplay of two minds debating a point. The impact of his color blindness is an important part of the story, especially when he puts on the "adjusting glasses" and suddenly sees what Hugo was talking about. But most of all, the IMPACT of art, and how it affects people -- the debates, arguments, strong feelings -- that moved me most of all. Great work, as always... And this is THE PERFECT TAKE on the prompt on the impact of a world with no color...

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Marjolein Greebe
11:53 May 03, 2026

Hi Scott, I'm happy you liked it.
Thanks for the generous read, like and thoughtful take.
It means a lot.

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RBE | Illustrated Short Stories | 2024-06

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