Pacing restlessly around his workspace. Oliver was feeling the stress of his upcoming midterm critique, staring at the monitor, the half-finished shots he'd been working on seemed dull and lifeless.
Quinn hadn't been around much lately, and he felt it. Her presence had become a strange sort of anchor -- one that kept him balanced even when he felt like his creative momentum was slipping.
Frustrated, Oliver grabbed his camera and left the gallery. He walked aimlessly for a while, weaving through campus streets until he ended up in front of a tiny corner cafe. He didn't even know what had drawn him there until he spotted Quinn through the window.
She was sitting alone, a notebook open in front of her, scrawling words across the page. Her fingers tapped her pen against her cheek in thought. She looked different -- her usual sharp-edged confidence softened by whatever thoughts she was lost in.
Before he could overthink it, Oliver stepped inside.
"Hey," he said awkwardly as he reached her table. "Mind if I join you?"
Quinn glanced up, surprised. "You're stalking me now, freshman?"
"I prefer 'casual coincidence,'" Oliver shot back, grinning as he slid into the chair across from her. "What are you working on?"
Quinn closed the notebook a little too quickly. "Nothing important. Just... ideas."
"Ideas for what?"
"Art stuff," she said vaguely. "Doesn't matter. What about you? Why are you wandering around campus like a lost puppy?"
Oliver sighed. "I can't seem to make anything... work. My shots just feel empty lately."
Quinn raised an eyebrow. "Empty? You're the guy who shoots reflections on puddles like they're museum pieces."
"That's different," Oliver muttered. "It's like... I'm trying too hard to make it all mean something. But nothing I do feels real."
Quinn was quiet for a moment. Debating letting him see this part of her. The small notebook was a thing she did when she was feeling lost, when the ideas scattered across brain started to overwhelm her. The ideas, and emotions that she could fully form. Then she slid her notebook across the table. "Here," she said. "Pick a page. Any page."
"What?"
"Trust me," Quinn said with a grin. "Come on."
Oliver flipped the notebook open to a random page.
The words scrawled across it caught him off guard -- raw sketches of thoughts and phrases. Some were sharp descriptions of emotions -- restless hands, fading light, unspoken apologies. Others were half-poems, messy yet beautiful.
"You wrote all this?" Oliver asked.