By the time the sun dipped low, orange and defiant, Calliste was covered in blue paint, her hair a wild mess, and for the first time in decades, she wasn't waiting for anyone’s permission to exist.
She found a spot where the cliffs crumbled into the Atlantic. The wind was cold, biting through her expensive wool coat, but she didn't care. She set up the canvas. Her hands trembled—not from the cold, but from the terrifying realization that she was allowed to be a beginner again.
That afternoon, instead of returning to her drafting table, Calliste drove toward the coast. She didn't have a plan, only a sudden, itching memory of herself at nineteen, covered in charcoal dust and smelling of turpentine. In her trunk was a set of oil paints she’d bought three years ago and never opened.