Gwen was losing muse. It was fleeting, barely on the tip of her paintbrush, which didn't seem to be working as well with holding paints as it was before. Usually a visit to Amon would revitalize whatever inspiration she'd lost but this time, nothing had seemed to be helping. The canvases piled and leaning against the wall in her apartment hadn't had anything added to them in three weeks. Tegwen had an unfinished piece left on her easel, a painting of a woman with little details left to include.
In her painting, the woman was laying in bed, only a sheet covering her body. Her head and arms lay over the edge, limp. Her teachers had said that she ought to put more life into her paintings and give people something to really talk about, but Gwen laughed. She couldn't do that, she'd told them. Everyone was dead. This woman, who Gwen had named Meridith, had been murdered by her lover in the middle of the night. The lover, who remained nameless at this point, had a wife. Meridith had wanted to get married, and that didn't sit well with her lover. So he strangled her in the middle of the night. Everyone in her paintings had stories - they had lives and names and reasons they ended up where they were.
Maybe her paintings did have life. Take that, Modern Renaissance teachers.
Gwen couldn't bring herself to finish the painting. She could stare and stare and stare for hours but when it actually came to getting paint on the canvas, it was nothing.
It lead her to her short list of contacts. Her short list lead her to someone who wasn't really a contact at all, but rather someone she had briefly met a few times when she was younger. He was an artist, a great artist who Gwen was sure struggled from time to time. She would talk to him, and he would explain his muses and what inspired him and she would no longer be struggling. His name was Augustine Mohr, and Gwen had arranged a meeting with him a few weeks prior.
Gwen had made plans at a small, but high end bar, hoping that the tab wouldn't completely slaughter her bank account. After all, she still had to eat sometime.
The heels on the girl's feet made clicking sounds as she walked across the venue's floor, her skirt brushing against her legs. Augustine had beat her there - she hoped he wasn't waiting too long. She hated keeping people waiting, unless she knew them well enough. "Augustine, hello!" She said, to her dad's former trainee. "Thank you so much for meeting me here, it really is quite a pleasure to see you again." Gwen spoke as if the two had ever become close at all, as if the last time she'd seen him had been just the day before as opposed to over ten years ago. "Let me get you a drink." She was totally gonna kill her bank account.
@Augustine Mohr