It was a drizzly morning in Brilda, with a bustle of traffic outside the Kalchi Art Gallery at 84 Charing Cross Street.
The three-story building, built in the sixteenth century of the Solar Calendar, is quaint and elegant, with ivory-white walls adorned with intricate reliefs, and a brick-red roof wrapped in ivy looming through the mist.
The gallery's heavy doors were firmly shut, and the "Open for Business" sign swayed under the dim streetlights, casting a cold gleam that made the surrounding streets seem especially serene.
This private art gallery, founded by Professor Harrison Kalchi from the Cerryti Empire Royal Academy of Arts, has a history of nearly a century. It has changed hands several times but still maintains the gallery's business.
But today's Kalchi Art Gallery was not hosting any art salon but was waiting for a special visitor.
Eleven o'clock sharp.
"This is the place."