LOGINPOV: Avalon Pierce
He woke up before she did.
That had become its own kind of ritual — waking first, lying still, listening to her breathe. Not from anxiety the way it used to be, that vigilant monitoring of whether she was okay, whether her wound was healing, whether the night had been kind to her.
Just because she was there and the morning was quiet and some part of him still hadn’t fully accepted that this was his life now — this woman, this bed, this particular quality of early light through the curtains without needing a moment to verify it.
She was lying on her side facing away from him. Her breathing was slow and even and the scar on her abdomen was hidden but he knew it was there, paler now than it had been, doing what the doctors said it would do.
He got up without waking her.
The kitchen at 6 AM was its own country.
He made coffee badly — ground too coarse, water slightly too hot — and it tasted exactly like the effort involved, which was not much, but was fine. He stood at the counter and drank it and looked at the city beginning its day below and thought about nothing in particular.
That was new.
Six months ago his mind had never been quiet. Every morning had arrived with a running inventory — the company, the board, the lawsuit, the next threat. His brain had treated stillness as a problem to solve.
Now he just stood in his kitchen in the early light and drank bad coffee and listened to the city.
The news about Hale had moved fast. Federal charges formally filed, assets frozenand his position in Pierce Holdings legally encumbered pending trial. Margaret and their securities team had moved on the twelve percent within the hour and secured a significant portion before the market fully processed what was available.
Thomas had been useful. Infuriatingly, honestly useful.
Diana had taken the deal. He hadn’t heard from her since the call and he didn’t expect to.
The board was restructuring, and new members were being vetted. The company was not just stable — it was, according to the latest financial reports Margaret had sent, performing better than it had in three years.
By any measure, they’d won.
He was still figuring out what to do with winning.
Selene appeared in the kitchen doorway at seven, wearing his sweater, her hair entirely unsettled from sleep.
“That coffee smells wrong,” she said.
“It tastes wrong too.”
“Why did you make it?”
“It was early. My judgment was compromised.”
She went to the machine, emptied what he’d made, started again with the competence of someone who took coffee seriously. He watched her do it and felt something simple and uncomplicated move through his chest.
“How’s the side?” he asked.
She turned and looked at him.
“You said you’d stop asking that.”
“I said I’d stop asking it at night. It’s morning.”
“That’s a technicality.”
“I’m a CEO. Technicalities are my native language.”
She almost smiled then back to the coffee before he could see that.
“It’s fine,” she said. “Better than fine, I actually keep forgetting it’s there.”
“Good.”
She made two cups properly and brought them to the counter and they stood side by side looking out at the city the way they’d started doing — without planning it, without declaring it a thing they did, just both ending up at the same window.
“Maya texted me this morning,” Selene said.
“How is she?”
“Strange.” A pause. “Happy strange, like something shifted.” She wrapped both hands around her cup. “She wouldn’t say what.”
Avalon thought about Maya.
“Good,” he said. “She deserves something of her own.”
Selene looked at him sideways. “When did you start having feelings about my sister?”
“I’ve always had feelings about your sister. She’s funny and terrifying in equal measure.”
“She’d like that you said that.”
“Don’t tell her. She doesn’t need the encouragement.”
Selene laughed — the real one.
They didn’t have anywhere to be until eleven.
That was unusual enough that neither of them quite knew what to do with it. The last several months had been structured entirely around urgency — depositions, board meetings, police stations and hospital rooms. The absence of urgency felt unfamiliar, like a quiet that might be hiding something.
“We should do something normal,” Selene said.
“Define normal.”
“Something people do when nobody is trying to steal their company or shoot them.”
“That’s a low bar.”
“It’s our bar. Work with it.”
They ended up walking. No destination, no agenda, just out into the city on a morning that had decided to be unexpectedly kind — cool but clear, the kind of San Francisco day that made you understand why people stayed despite everything it cost them.
Selene walked beside him with her hands in the pockets of her jacket, her steps easy, nothing careful about the way she moved anymore. He noticed because he’d been watching her move carefully for months and the difference was significant.
She was healed.
Not metaphorically. Her body had done what bodies do when you give them time.
“You’re staring,” she said.
“You’re walking differently.”
“People generally do when they’re not recovering from a gunshot wound.”
“You look—” He stopped.
“What?”
“Like yourself before all of this.”
She was quiet for a moment.
“Not quite before,” she said. “Good different.”
They walked through Noe Valley as it woke up — coffee shops opening, a dog walker managing six dogs with varying enthusiasm, a small child on a scooter moving with terrifying confidence. He’d missed ordinary things.
He hadn’t realized how much until now.
They stopped at a bakery that Selene pointed at wordlessly and went in and came out with pastries neither of them needed and ate them on a bench in the weak morning sun like people with nothing pressing.
“I’ve been thinking about the company,” Selene said, pulling apart a croissant. “About what comes next. Not the crisis management, I mean the actual future.”
“What about it?”
“I want to do something with it. Not just protect it but actually build something.” She looked at the croissant. “Nene built Pierce Holdings around certain principles. The company has drifted from those, I want to bring them back.”
“What kind of principles?”
“The kind that care about more than return on investment.” She looked at him. “I have ideas and I have been writing them down.”
“Show me.”
“When they’re ready.” A pause. “Soon.”
He looked at her — this woman who’d arrived in his life as a contractual obligation and had quietly become the most interesting person in it — and thought about how strange it was that the inheritance had brought them here. That Nene’s manipulation from beyond the grave had produced, somehow, this.
“She knew,” he said.
Selene looked at him. “What?”
“Nene. She knew what she was doing. Not just forcing us together — she knew we’d find our way to this. To actually building something together.” He looked at the city spread below them. “She was always about the long game.”
Selene was quiet for a moment.
“I think she’d like us,” she said.
“She’d be insufferable about being right.”
“Absolutely.” A pause. “I think about her sometimes. Whether she’d recognize what the company is becoming.”
“She’d recognize it,” Avalon said. “She built the bones of it. We’re just—”
“Filling it in,” Selene finished.
They sat on the bench in the thin morning sun eating pastries they didn’t need in a city that had tried to destroy them and hadn’t managed it, and the morning was quiet and ordinary and entirely, completely enough.
His phone buzzed.
He looked at it.
A calendar reminder he’d set three months ago and forgotten about entirely.
Tomorrow was their one year anniversary.
One year since a lawyer had read a will aloud in a room and both their lives had changed entirely.
He looked at Selene.
She was watching a pigeon conduct an aggressive negotiation with someone’s abandoned coffee cup and hadn’t noticed him go still.
He put his phone away.
Started thinking.
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
POV: Avalon PierceThe hospital waiting room smelled like antiseptic and fear. Avalon sat on the floor with blood on his hands. Selene’s blood.Maya sat beside him, wrapped in a shock blanket, crying silently.Diana paced. Margaret made phone calls. Catherine—somehow Catherine had shown up—sat in t
POV: Selene CastellanoRichard Castellanos looked exactly like Selene remembered.Older, greyer, but the same sharp eyes, same crooked smile and the same presence that had once made her feel safe before he abandoned her.“Dad?” The word came out broken.“Hi, sweetheart. It’s been a while.”It's bee
POV: Avalon PierceThe boardroom had never felt so hostile.Avalon stood at the head of the table, looking at faces he’d known for years. People who’d worked with Nene, watched him grow up and supported his leadership. Now they looked at him like a stranger.Patricia Wong sat with her arms crossed,
POV: Selene CastellanoThe call came at 6 AM.Detective Sarah Shyn.Selene knew before she answered that it was bad news, nobody calls at 6 AM with good news.“Mrs. Pierce, this is Detective Shyn. I need you and your husband to come down to the station right away.”“What happened?”“Victoria Hartle







