SummaryThe portrait's psychological assault deepens, moving beyond mockery to a cruel display of Elara's most profound heartbreak. It begins to physically change, its background morphing into the old oak tree from her childhood, the very tree from which her brother Thomas fell. The portrait's face then shifts to mirror Thomas's, young and freckled, his expression one of silent accusation. Confronted with this living, breathing manifestation of her deepest grief and guilt, Elara collapses, sobbing the truth she has never uttered aloud: her belief that Thomas died because she wasn't there to watch him. The portrait, having broken her, finally displays