LOGINPOV: Selene Castellano
Before she could process what had just happened, he did something that left her breathless.
He stopped.
Then positioned his shaft at the entrance of her core, looked into her eyes and said,“ I see you Selene and I love you so much”, and then penetrated in full as she screams out his name, clawing at his back while adjusting to his length, in less than 10minutes she came undone countless times.
They continued their intimate relationship going on for hours, calling each others name, moaning and groaning until Avalon exploded out of pleasure and emptied himself into her.
Afterward, the room was very quiet.
She lay with her head on his chest, listening to his heartbeat find its way back to normal. His hand moved through her hair.
“Are you okay?” he asked.
“Better than okay.”
“Your side—”
“Avalon.” She lifted her head. “If you ask about my side one more time tonight I’m sleeping in the guest room.”
A pause.
“Fair,” he said.
She settled back against him.
His heartbeat had slowed to something easy and regular, and she matched her breathing to it without meaning to. The pain medication had worn off hours ago and there was a soft persistent ache in her abdomen but she had stopped minding it. “I’ve been thinking,” she said.
“Right now?”
“My brain doesn’t respect atmosphere.”
She felt him accept this. “What about?”
“What Diana said about Hale building a position in the company for two years.” She stared at the ceiling, organizing her thoughts. “That means before Nene died, before the will was even read. ”
“Yes.”
“Which means he knew about the will’s contents before it was public.”
Avalon was quiet for a moment. “Someone told him.”
“Someone with access to Nene’s legal affairs. Someone close enough to know what was coming before it arrived.” She paused. “That’s a very short list.”
“Nene’s lawyers, her financial advisors.” Another pause. “Margaret.”
The name sat between them.
Not as an accusation. Just as a possibility that neither of them wanted and couldn’t afford to ignore.
“I’m not saying Margaret,” Selene said carefully. “I’m saying we don’t know and not knowing is what got us blindsided by Diana.”
“I know.”
“We can’t assume anyone’s safe just because they feel safe.”
“I know that too.” His voice was tired.
“It is.” She reached for his hand in the dark. “But we trust each other that's not nothing.”
“That’s everything,” he said.
She squeezed his hand.
They lay in silence for a while.
She was close to sleep — genuinely close, the warm heaviness of it pulling her down — when he spoke again.
“Your laugh,” he said.
She opened her eyes.
“After you left, years later, I couldn’t remember what it sounded like.” His voice was quiet. “That bothered me more than anything else, more than the anger of not understanding why you’d gone. I used to try to reconstruct it and I couldn’t. It was the one thing I couldn’t hold onto and I never told anyone that because—” He stopped.
“Because?” she said softly.
“Because saying it meant admitting how much I’d actually lost and I wasn’t ready to admit that for a long time.”
She turned her face and pressed her lips to his chest, just briefly. “I’m not going anywhere,” she said.
“I know.”
“So you don’t have to remember it anymore. You can just listen.”
He turned his palm up, laced her fingers through his.
The room was completely still.
She closed her eyes.
Let it be.
Her phone lit the ceiling at 2 AM.
A news alert.
She read the headline once.
Read it again.
Sat up slowly, careful of her side, her heart doing something irregular.
Avalon was awake before she touched him — that immediate alertness he’d developed, sleep never fully claiming him since the warehouse.
“What?” His voice was already clear.
She handed him the phone without speaking.
She watched his face in the blue light of the screen and watched him go completely still.
He read it twice.
“When did this happen?” he said.
“The alert just came through. It could have been hours ago.”
He sat up. Read it a third time like reading it again might change what it said.
BREAKING: Edward Hale, CEO of Hale Capital, arrested by federal authorities on charges of securities fraud, wire fraud and conspiracy. Sources indicate a multi-year FBI investigation. More to follow.
Avalon lowered the phone slowly.
The room was very quiet.
“He’s been under investigation,” Selene said. Thinking out loud. “The FBI has been building a case. Possibly for years.”
“Which means—”
“Which means we weren’t the only ones watching him.” She looked at Avalon. “Someone knew and they must have connections with federal resources.” She checked the timestamp on the alert. “At eleven forty-three PM on a Wednesday.”
“Not a coincidence.”
“Nothing about this has ever been coincidence.” She took the phone back. Read the headline again. “The anonymous helper. The files on Patricia. Carol Sung at Davidson and Park.” She looked at him. “What if it wasn’t about helping us? What if we were just — useful? What if someone needed us to expose Patricia, to draw Hale out, to make him move faster than he’d planned—”
“So they could catch him in the act,” Avalon finished.
The silence that followed had a different quality now.
“We were used,” Selene said.
“Maybe or maybe someone wanted two things at once — Hale arrested and us protected. Those aren’t mutually exclusive.”
“But we don’t know which.”
“No.” He leaned his head back against the headboard. “We don’t.”
She put the phone face down on the nightstand.
Selene thought about Edward Hale in a federal holding cell somewhere, the Patient, calculating Edward Hale who’d been playing a years-long game and had apparently been playing it under the nose of the FBI the entire time.
She thought about who benefits when a man like Hale is arrested.
“The twelve percent,” she said suddenly.
Avalon turned his head. “What?”
“Hale’s twelve percent stake in Pierce Holdings. If he’s arrested and convicted, his assets get frozen. Possibly seized.” She looked at Avalon. “Twelve percent of Pierce Holdings becomes available. Someone will move to acquire it.”
“Who?”
“That’s what we need to find out before morning.” She was fully awake now. “Because whoever moves first on that stake controls a significant portion of the company. And whoever our anonymous helper really is — I’d bet everything they already know this, most likely been planning for it.”
Avalon looked at her in the dark.
“You think the anonymous helper is after the company.”
“I think the anonymous helper has been three steps ahead of everyone this entire time,” she said. “Including us, and I think Edward Hale’s arrest isn’t the end of anything.”
She picked the phone back up.
“I think it’s an opening move.”
Avalon called Margaret at 2:17 AM.
She answered on the second ring, which meant she’d been awake, which meant she already knew.
“I’ve seen it,” Margaret said before he could speak.
“The twelve percent—”
“I know. I’ve already called our securities lawyers. We have a narrow window to make a pre-emptive move before the market opens and everyone else reads the same headline.”
“How narrow?”
“Three, maybe four hours.”
“Can we do it?”
A pause that was not quite long enough to be reassuring. “We can try.”
Avalon looked at Selene.
She was already on her laptop, pulling up financial databases in the blue light of 2 AM, her hair still undone from earlier, wearing his shirt because hers had been — misplaced, somewhere in the events of the evening — and she looked like someone completely at home in the middle of a crisis, which she was, which was one of the many things he’d filed away tonight without realizing.
“Do it,” he said into the phone. “Whatever it takes.”
He hung up.
“Margaret’s moving on it,” he told Selene.
“Good.” She didn’t look up from the screen. “Come look at this.”
He moved to sit beside her.
She turned the laptop toward him.
A corporate filing dated three weeks ago. A shell company he didn’t recognize registering a small position in Pierce Holdings. Except the registered agent on the filing.
He leaned closer.
Looked at the name.
Looked at Selene.
“That’s—” he started.
“I know,” she said.
“That’s impossible.”
“And yet.” She closed the laptop. “There it is.”
They sat in the blue-lit quiet of 2 AM.
Outside, three hours before the market opened and the rest of the world caught up to the headline, someone had already begun to move.
Someone they knew.
Someone who’d been in this story longer than either of them had realized.
And the game, Selene understood, was nowhere near finished.
It had simply changed hands.
POV: Avalon PierceHe woke up and knew immediately what Today was.The morning sunlight was just beginning to peek through the edges of the curtains, and Selene was still fast asleep beside him. He lay there, completely still, and watched as her chest rose and fell with each gentle breath.Day fourteen.She had marked it down on the kitchen calendar three weeks before, and it was the only thing written on the whole page for December.He got up quietly.Made coffee and waited .She walked into the kitchen at 7, her hair a mess, still figuring out who she wanted to be that day.She looked at the calendar on the wall.Looked at him.“Today,” she said.“Today,” he agreed."I'm not going to do it right away," she said. "First, I need a cup of coffee. I want to be fully awake and alert. I don't want to find out something important when I'm still half asleep, that's just not a good idea. I need to be sharp and focused, and a cup of coffee will help me get there."“Okay,” he said.He made her
POV: Selene CastellanoShe wore the green dress.She had no idea why, but that morning she just knew what she wanted to wear. She opened her wardrobe and there it was, waiting for her. Avalon saw it and said nothing.He caught her eye for just a moment, and in that instant, he got it - no words were needed, he just understood.They left at nine.Dr Okafor's office was warm.December outside, warm inside, the contrast of a room that had been designed to feel like a pause from everything else.Dr Okafor gave a nod as we settled in, "You look ready.""I am," Selene said."Any questions before we begin?""No," Selene said. " You've answered them all."Dr Okafor looked at Avalon."You?""No," he said."Then let's go," Dr Okafor said.The procedure itself was straightforward.Selene had prepared herself for, the task of separating the hope from the mechanics of the thing carrying the hope.Avalon held her hand.As she gazed up at the ceiling, her breath slowed, and her mind began to wander
POV: Selene CastellanoDecember hit San Francisco like it always did.Cold that came in off the bay and didn’t apologize for it. Christmas lights appearing overnight on streets that had been ordinary the day before. The city somehow louder and quieter at the same time.Selene seemed to notice everything a lot more than she usually did this year.She wasn’t sure why.Maybe the trying made everything sharper.Maybe this was just what happened when you stopped waiting for the next disaster and started actually looking at where you were.The foundation has just wrapped up its first year, which came to a close on the fifth.Amara sent a summary document at seven AM.Selene got some time to herself before Avalon woke up, and she used it to catch up on some reading in bed.Kevin Walsh’s program had filled twelve additional beds.Susan Park’s infrastructure funding had allowed her team to take on thirty percent more cases.David Torres started a new way to help people get food, focusing on tr
POV: Avalon PierceNovember arrived cold and fast.The Lorraine Pierce Infrastructure Fund was officially launched by the foundation on the third of the month. It was a low-key affair, with no formal ceremony to mark the occasion. Instead, the foundation simply sent out an email to its community partners and created a new page on its website. The content for the page was written by Selene, while Maya handled the design. Amara, meanwhile, reviewed the page three times to make sure everything was just right.Kevin Walsh called that afternoon."I saw the announcement," he said."Applications are opening on Monday," Selene said, her voice coming through the speaker as Avalon busied himself making coffee in the kitchen. "You've got all the necessary stuff, so you're good to go.""Kevin said he's had the application ready to go for about six weeks now."She laughed.Avalon had never heard her laugh on a work call before.The Nexus board met on the seventh. It was a routine check, the number
POV: Selene CastellanoDr. Okafor’s office was on the fourth floor.Selene had been there three times now and still looked at the wrong door every time she got off the elevator.Avalon didn’t say anything about it.He stood there patiently, waiting for her to find what she was looking for.Dr. Okafor was running ten minutes late.They sat in the waiting room.Avalon was reading something on his phone while Selene looked at the other people in the room.A woman maybe thirty, alone, scrolling through her phone with the expression of someone waiting for something they’d been waiting for a long time.A couple, older, the man’s hand on the woman’s knee, both of them quiet.A younger woman with a book she wasn’t reading.Selene thought about how many held breaths existed in this one room.Dr. Okafor called her name.They went in together.She went over the results from the last couple of weeks, looking at blood work and hormone levels, stuff that Selene had been slowly getting familiar with
POV: Avalon PierceLife didn’t pause for the trying.That was the thing nobody told you.The organization still relied on him, and his role remained crucial. Both the foundation and Nexus continued to depend on his contributions. The board of directors maintained its regular schedule, convening every other Tuesday to discuss important matters. Meanwhile, Amara persisted in sending him documents that demanded his attention, often requiring him to review them before 9:00 AM.The trying just existed alongside everything else.Quietly and persistently.It was like you were holding your breath, waiting to see how long you could keep it in, the moment suspended in time.Friday’s bloodwork was fast.Selene was in and out in twenty minutes.As they made their way back, she gazed out the window.“You okay?” he said.“Yes,” she said. “ You?”“Yes,” he said.On their way back, they decided to make a quick stop at a cozy coffee shop.The organization's management team got together a week later fo
They remained like that for what felt like an eternity.Avalon holds her close, Selene’s tears soaking into his shirt. His hand traced slow, gentle circles on her back—a touch so familiar it stirred a deep ache in her chest. How many times had he been her comfort in those college days?He still rem
Selene had woken up with eyes swollen from tears and a throbbing headache pressing behind her temples.The morning sun poured gently through the windows. She had cried herself to sleep, and now the evidence was clear on her face. No makeup could mask the puffiness. She washed her face with cold wat
The penthouse was dark when they returned.Selene didn’t waste a second—she kicked off her heels right as soon as they stepped inside. Six hours on stilettos, six hours playing the part. The glow from the city outside seeped through the windows, casting long shadows over the smooth marble floors.Wi
The orchestra played something slow and haunting—perhaps Debussy or Satie.Avalon’s hand rested at her lower back while his other held hers firmly. Selene had no choice but to step closer, able to smell sandalwood mixed with something darker—definitely not the cheap college aftershave. This scent wa







