An apartment in the very heart of Paris stood empty for almost 70 years No one knew what was hidden behind this door or who owned this home When, after so much time, people finally entered the apartment, they were shocked by what they saw
They expected an ordinary house with old furniture and a thick layer of dust, but reality turned out to be more interesting The continuation is in the first comment

Imagine: in the very heart of Paris, in a busy neighborhood, there is a mysterious apartment. No footsteps had been heard behind its door since 1939.
When the auctioneer first turned the old key in the rusty lock, he expected to see a typical scene of the time: a thick layer of dust, dried spiders, peeling walls.
But he could never have imagined witnessing one of the most astonishing discoveries of his life.
This apartment belonged to Madame de Florian. She left it young — she was only 23 when the war began.

In 1939, fleeing the advancing German troops, she hastily closed the door, took only the bare essentials, and fled south.
But the most surprising thing was that Madame continued to pay the rent regularly. For decades. And none of her relatives knew about the apartment’s existence.
She died in 2010, aged 91, never having told anyone about the apartment.

Only after her death did her heirs come across a mention of the property in documents and turned to auctioneers. And when the door was finally opened, everyone froze.
Furniture from the early 20th century, polished but covered in dust. A kitchen neatly arranged with porcelain featuring delicate patterns.
A small table with perfume bottles, dried-up lipsticks, and hairbrushes. On the walls — marks from paintings that seemed to have been hastily removed.

And it was among those paintings that the auctioneers found the gem — a portrait of a young woman in a pink dress. It turned out to be Madame de Florian’s grandmother, depicted on canvas at the age of 24.
The portrait was the work of Giovanni Boldini, a famous Italian painter.
After expert examination, it was confirmed: the painting was created in 1888 and is remarkably well preserved. When auctioned, bids soared to the sky. The final amount — over 3 million dollars.

What made Madame de Florian keep paying the rent? Why did she never return? That remains a mystery.