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This wouldn’t be art, though. This would be research. A step towards finishing the painting that was beginning to languish in the temporary studio. Sometimes the artist has to step into his work, after all. Perhaps it is that process that provides the solution in which events float.

He went indoors, colliding with the doorframe on the way, and made the remainder of the wine last as he worked.

* * *

As he walked up the street the next morning, David realised that he’d unintentionally added extra touches to his work in progress.

Doesn’t matter how long you brush your teeth, when you’ve consumed two bottles of wine you’re going to be exuding it the next morning one way or another. It seeps out of your pores. His head hurt, causing him to squint against the shafts of sunlight that made it down through the trees on his way toward the centre of the village. He’d slept terribly, too—it turned out the floor of the garage was just as uncomfortable as it looked—which conferred valuable extra detail. Often when you create something it’s the unintentional or unconscious touches that make all the difference—so long, of course, as the chain is operating.

He got his first sideways glance just as he made it onto the main street. A man wearing immaculate blue shorts, a blue shirt, and a blue cap looked at him, then away, and then back again. He seemed like he wanted to say something.

David looked back and grinned.

The man stayed silent, but walked quickly away.

Score, David thought.

He continued up the street, concentrating on shambling. It wasn’t hard, given how rough he felt. Just before he turned down the alley toward Bonnie’s, he coughed. It was supposed to be merely a throat-clearer, but the vast number of cigarettes he’d smoked the night before elevated it into a consumptive cacophony that lasted twenty seconds, and culminated in hawking a mouthful of beige phlegm into a flowerbed.

Looking up, head swirling, David saw that a middle-aged couple had stopped in their tracks and were staring at him with identical looks on their faces. It was hard to describe their expressions, though if you came home to find the dog had shat in the middle of your bed, you’d probably make something similar.

David waved, and lurched off up the alley.

The girl behind the counter watched his approach. He knew this was going to be an interesting test. She’d seen him the day before. They’d even had a conversation.

He stepped up to the counter, swaying slightly as he peered up at the board.

“Just a coffee,” he said. “Twelve ounce.”

She reached behind for a cup, not taking her eyes off him. He pulled out the motley handful of loose coins he’d put in his pocket in preparation. It took him quite a while to count out the correct amount. The girl watched, holding back on handing over the cup until he was done.

He filled the cup, added milk and a lot of sugar. Smiled crookedly at the girl as he left. She was still watching, and had not said a single word.

Out in the courtyard he sat at the table in front of the white wall. Had she really not recognised David? Hard to tell. Could be that she’d been left speechless by the transformation. He didn’t think so, though. He was pretty good at his job. He thought she had no idea who he was, and her reaction had been to what he appeared to be.

It’d taken him five hours. First thing he’d tackled were his clothes. At first he’d thought he might be able to get away with using some of his painting gear, but one glance told him that—to his eye—they were too obviously what they were: clothes someone had used to paint in. The balance and distribution of the colours weren’t right.

So he’d gone into the bedroom and found his second pair of jeans and an old-ish shirt. The jeans had always been kind of long in the leg and so the bottoms were ragged and a little dirty, a good start. The shirt was white and in good condition, but he’d worn it on the drive down from San Francisco and it had lain crumpled at the bottom of the linen basket ever since.

Working slowly and methodically—within the confines of the fact that he’d been well on the way to shit-faced drunk by then—he’d tested colours and textures, and then, when satisfied, got to work, layer by layer.

He was a firm believer in the maxim that you can always add but never take away, and so when he was almost done he set the clothes aside and got to work on his face and arms. After a while he hit on a combination of paint, water and dust from the garage floor that seemed to hit the mark. He ran his hands through his hair occasionally, ensuring some of all this got lodged there too.

He finally went back to the clothes and layered in over the creases, then bent and rubbed them against the wall for ten minutes, perfecting the shiny look that comes from dirt and filth that’s been lived in for so long it becomes ingrained, part of the garment itself.

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