Only moments after the inquiry left her lips, Amara looked over behind the counter to see Ezra emerging from the back studio. The witch stood there and blinked at him, recognizing the wizard immediately. It had been years since she had seen him; they had been in the same year at Hogwarts. How distant of a dream Hogwarts seemed now, especially after the war. As she stood there wordlessly for a moment, she noted the bright paint splatters that covered his gray t-shirt, hands, bits of his hair... and face. Her blue-eyed gaze stopped at his face, and he greeted her directly by name.
"Hello Ezra." Amara greeted him, offering him a small, genuine smile. She didn't know why, but she was pleased to see him. The former Slytherin had never really interacted with him much in the past, but she had remembered him from being in many of the same classes. Looking at the dark haired wizard before her, she wondered why she never really took notice to him as much before. Perhaps it was because as Ezra had thought, Amara was deemed 'oogle-worthy', therefore was continually being pursued by her male classmates. He had somehow managed to slip through the cracks. To be honest, Amara never really cared much about houses and social order. This was mostly due to the fact that she had no idea who her mother was, so she wasn't sure if she was actually a pureblood. To this day she has no idea that her mother is in fact a Veela. Which explains a lot.
Before Amara knew it, she was being led back to the studio room where Ezra had previously been before she showed up. It was completely random, but she went with it. The situation did not seem odd to her, and she did not mind Ezra's forward and open nature. The tiny witch finally reached the work of art to be critiqued. She stood before a large canvas that was a little taller than she was while it was on it's easel.
"Hmmm..." the woman's eyes narrowed as she let her sight drift in and out of focus. The brush strokes were wide and impressionistic, yet there was a familiar form to it. The color pallete was a wide range of bright pastels to deep shades of blues and greens, which somehow managed to work perfectly. Amara tilted her head slightly to the right, her dark hair falling over her shoulder. Her freckled nose scrunched up a little as she looked at the painting, something was so familiar about it, as if she'd seen the subject before. She could not quite place her finger on it. The colors and texture suggested plant life and vines, yet the form seemed different than that of any plant Amara knew. Oh, wait...
"Forest nymph?" She guessed. She tore her gaze from the large work of art, back at the wizard who was flailing his arms wildly to various parts of the painting.