The sun sets gentle as it is painted and painted over, a portrait of sliding sky. in gradients too slow for notice the painter erase the day's melodies brooding all the while the sky finishes its fall onto the rising night.
He is a quiet man, all calloused hands, stained forearms, more accustomed to solitude than the daylight of scrutiny.
With the precision of an almanac, the painter finishes, canvas cleaned of its light and sliding quiet beneath his blanket of tattered stars, the man waits in hope, that tender lunacy, to find the lady who resides in the corners of his dreams. He longs to touch her outside his mind's eye, but all too soon he is asleep and she is nowhere to be found.
His breathing evens out and rising unconscious from the bed, he shuffles towards the canvas. Sitting picturesque before the easel, he eases the woman into existence, champagne beneath his brush. She never stays longs, though, leaving with the drop of her mimosa glass, bleeding orange onto background and body; he rushes to catch her oils as she drips between his fingers. The painter sighs deep and begins to cover his work.
Every night his heart breaks as he paints and paints her over.
When he finally wakes, dropping the shredded sky from his frame, he finds the canvas inexplicably different than how it was left. It will be forever, it seems, until their two shadows will be allowed to meet, concrete as a realist's ache for resolution.