LOGINPOV: Selene Castellano
She found the note at 7 AM.
An actual handwritten note, folded once, sitting against her coffee cup like it had always lived there.
She picked it up.
Wear something you love not something appropriate. I’ll be back at six. — A
She read it twice.
Looked around the kitchen like he might still be there.
He wasn’t and his keys were gone. The apartment had the specific quiet of someone who’d left early on purpose.
She looked at his handwriting — slightly cramped, leaning right, and felt something warm and uncomplicated move through her.
One year.
She hadn’t forgotten. She’d just assumed they’d acknowledge it quietly the way they acknowledged most things — without ceremony or performance. A recognition between two people who’d stopped needing occasions to say what they meant.
Apparently Avalon had other ideas.
Maya called at nine.
“He texted me,” she said, without preamble.
“Good morning to you too.”
“Avalon. He texted asking about your favourite restaurant, the one near the Ferry Building.”
“He did not.”
“He absolutely did. He also asked whether you preferred flowers or something else and I told him you’d never admit to preferring flowers but you do, so he should get flowers.”
Selene sat down on the couch.
“You two have been texting?”
“Apparently we have now.” A pause. “He asked three follow-up questions. Very thorough, like he was preparing a legal brief.”
Selene didn’t respond for a moment.
“He’s never done anything like this,” she said quietly more to herself.
“I know,” Maya said, gentler now. “That’s kind of the point.”
After she hung up, Selene sat with the note in her hand and thought about the man who’d married her as a contractual obligation and had spent his morning texting her sister about flower preferences.
The distance between that person and the one who’d stood in a deposition room admitting love under oath.
It wasn’t small.
She wore the green dress she’d bought eighteen months ago with Maya — dark green cotton, small gold details at the collar that Maya had insisted on and she’d been glad of ever since.
She looked at herself in the mirror and felt loved.
He came back at six exactly.
She heard his key in the lock, gave herself five seconds, then walked into the hallway and found him standing there in a dark jacket, no tie, holding flowers.
Peonies.
Her absolute favorite, which she had never once mentioned to him.
“Maya,” she said.
“Maya,” he confirmed.
She took them. Looked at him.
“You wrote me a note,” she said.
“On paper. Yes.”
“You’ve never done that before.”
“I’ve done a lot of things this year I’d never done before.” He said it simply.
“Ready?”
The restaurant was small and entirely wrong for a billionaire anniversary dinner.
A corner table near the water with a candle and a view of the bay. The owner greeted Avalon by name and nothing about the evening was performative.
“You come here alone,” Selene said.
“Used to.”
“What changed?”
“I stopped wanting to be somewhere nice by myself.” He picked up the menu. “It loses something.”
She looked at him across the table. In the candlelight, he looked younger. The version of himself that existed when he forgot to be observed.
“A year,” she said.
“A year.”
“We should say something meaningful.”
“I don’t have a speech,” he said. “I’ve been thinking about what to say since this morning and everything sounds either insufficient or excessive.”
“Then say the small true thing.”
He set down the menu.
“I didn’t know what this would be,” he said. “When the will was read or when I called you. I thought I was solving a problem, fulfilling a requirement, it was completely mapped.” A pause. “I had no idea.”
“About what?”
“Any of it. About you and what it would be like to actually let someone—” He stopped. “I’d been alone in for a long time, not lonely. There’s a difference, although I made my peace with it.” His voice was quiet. “And then you came back and I had to unmake that peace entirely. It was the most inconvenient thing that’s ever happened to me.”
Selene felt her throat tighten.
“That’s the most romantic thing you’ve ever said to me,” she said.
He looked uncertain.
“Inconvenient,” she repeated. “Like I disrupted something you’d decided was fine. As if you’d made a perfectly good arrangement with loneliness and I came back and ruined it.” She reached across the table. “That’s exactly what love is, Avalon.”
He looked at her hand on his.
“Happy anniversary,” he said.
“Happy anniversary.”
They walked home along the water afterwards.
The city doing its nighttime thing — lights on the bay, distant music, the particular smell of San Francisco after dark that she’d grown up with and left and returned to find entirely unchanged.
“Tonight we just walk,” she said.
“Walk,” he agreed.
They did.
Her phone buzzed at ten PM.
Maya.
How was your date? I also have something to share with you….
I met someone, his name is Kofi and I need to tell you something about him that’s either very funny or very complicated
Selene smiled.
Then the fourth message arrived and the smile disappeared.
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 PierceThomas Reeves opened his door before Avalon knocked.The second time it happened, Avalon began to think the man had cameras.“Maya Castellano called me this morning,” Thomas said, stepping aside to let him in. “Directly. On my personal number, which I’d like to know how she obtai
POV: Maya CastellanoShe’d dozed somewhere around 2 AM and woken forty minutes later with Kofi’s face in her mind and the text she’d sent Selene sitting in her chest like something she couldn’t digest.His name is Kofi and he works for Thomas Reeves.Selene had called immediately. Maya had let it r
POV: Avalon PierceHe 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
POV: Maya CastellanoNobody told you that surviving cancer was its own kind of grief.Everyone celebrated the remission and clear scans. The doctor’s face when he said the treatment worked like he was announcing something miraculous, which she supposed he was. Maya had cried in that office and laug







