Framed Poster — Dark Portrait with Neon Green Eyes & Gold Chain
Beneath the glass of the Framed Poster, the portrait seemed motionless, yet no one who looked at it ever felt it was just an image.
They say he was created by the divine on a moonless night, when the gods hesitated between giving the world a guardian or a punishment. Thus Akar was born—half man, half panther. His face was human, carved with the solemnity of an ancient king, but in his eyes burned a neon green light that did not belong to this world. They were the eyes of the eternal panther: they saw guilt, desire, and fear before they ever took shape.
The gold chain around his neck was no ornament. Forged at the dawn of time, it symbolized the pact: absolute power in exchange for eternal vigilance. Akar did not sleep. He watched. He guarded the invisible boundaries between light and shadow, between the human and the wild.
When he walked among men, his human half spoke with a calm, deep voice, offering justice. But when night claimed its dominion, the panther awakened. His steps made no sound, his shadow stretched like an omen, and those who had betrayed the truth felt his presence before they ever saw him.
He did not hunt from hunger. He hunted for balance.
The portrait was created centuries later, when Akar chose to disappear from the physical world. He sealed his essence within the image so he could continue watching from another plane. That is why anyone who lingers too long before the poster feels a chill, as if something ancient were measuring them.