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CHAPTER 70: Front Page

Author: Mystique
last update publish date: 2026-05-21 22:54:55

POV: Selene Castellano

She read it at 6 AM before Avalon woke up.

The Financial Times piece ran to four thousand words and she read every one of them sitting at the kitchen counter in the early quiet with coffee she kept forgetting to drink.

The journalist had done the work properly, not sensationalized, or the breathless celebrity adjacent coverage that had followed them through depositions and board battles and federal arrests. This was carefully documented and treated Nene with the seriousness of someone who understood they were writing about a woman who had done something significant.

**Lorraine Pierce, matriarch of Pierce Holdings and one of San Francisco’s most enduring business figures, spent nearly three decades in possession of evidence that implicated California State Senator Gerald Whitmore in the death of her son, Jonathan Pierce. The documents, surfaced during federal discovery proceedings related to Whitmore’s ongoing prosecution, reveal a private investigation commissioned by Ms. Pierce eighteen months after her son’s death in what authorities at the time ruled an accident.**

Selene put down her coffee and read it again.

The piece went on to detail the investigation, the private investigator’s findings, the letters between Nene and her lawyer discussing what to do with the evidence. The decision, documented in Nene’s own handwriting, to bury it.

I have a grandson, Nene had written. He is eight years old, so, whatever I do next, I do with him in mind.

Selene sat with that for a long moment.

Eight years old.

Avalon at eight years old, recently fatherless, being the reason a woman buried the truth that could have given him justice.

The math of impossible choices.

Avalon read it at seven.

She watched him the way she’d watched him read the Pierce Foundation proposal. Looking for the tells. He read the whole piece without stopping.

When he finished he put the phone face down on the counter and said nothing for a moment.

“She wrote that she had a grandson,” he said. “That’s why she buried it.”

“Yes.”

“She was protecting me.”

“Yes.”

“By not protecting my father.”

Selene didn’t try to fix that. It wasn’t fixable, it was just the truth and the truest things sometimes didn’t have a resolution, just a shape you learned to carry.

He stood at the counter and she stood beside him. 

“The comments,” he said.

“Don’t.”

“Selene—”

“Avalon, do not read the comments.”

He looked at her.

“I read the comments on the Elena article,” she said. “Every single one at three in the morning for a week straight.” She held his gaze. “Don’t do that to yourself.”

He was quiet.

“Okay,” he said.

Margaret called at eight.

Then Robert Chen, then Thomas who said very little but said it with more weight than most people managed with full sentences. Then Diana who shouldn’t have called but did anyway because this was bigger than their arrangement and she understood that.

Selene handled most of them not because Avalon couldn’t but because she watched him moving through the morning with the quality she’d come to recognize as him processing something large and private while the world kept requiring things from him and she understood that the most useful thing she could do was take the phone calls.

By nine thirty she’d spoken to seven people and drunk three cups of coffee on an empty tummy.

Avalon appeared with toast and placed it beside her without saying anything.

She ate it without comment.

That was its own kind of love language.

The press camped outside by ten. They understood this wasn’t that kind of story, there was no villain to photograph arriving at a courthouse. The villain was already in federal custody. This was something else, a story about a dead woman’s choices and the love expressed through thirty years of strategic patience.

You couldn’t photograph that.

Selene watched them from the window.

“We should make a statement,” she said.

“Margaret’s drafting something.”

“Not Margaret’s statement.” She turned from the window. “Ours, our own words.”

Avalon looked at her.

“What would you say?” he said.

She thought about it honestly before saying….

“That she did what she could with what she had, that protecting someone is sometimes quiet and long and looks nothing like what protection is supposed to look like. That she built something that outlasted everything they threw at it.” She paused. “And that the best thing we can do now is make sure it becomes what she always intended it to be.”

Avalon was quiet.

“The foundation,” he said.

“The foundation.”

He looked at her for a long moment.

Then he picked up his phone.

“I’ll call Amara,” he said.

Amara arrived at noon.

She’d read the piece, she was the kind of person who had read it before most people had their first coffee.

She sat down at the dining table and opened her laptop and looked at Selene’s fourteen pages of notes.

“This is what you want to build,” Amara said.

“Yes.”

“Inside Pierce Holdings.”

“Yes.”

“Not as a PR exercise.”

“No.”

Amara looked at the proposal and saw Nene’s name at the bottom.

“She would have built this herself,” Amara said quietly. “If she’d had the space.”

“She didn’t have the space,” Selene said. “We do.”

Amara looked up at her.

“I have conditions,” Amara said.

“Tell me,” and for the next two hours they worked.

Avalon sat at the end of the table and contributed when he had something useful to say and stayed quiet when he didn't, which was its own form of wisdom that she’d learned to appreciate.

By two in the afternoon they had the beginnings of something real.

Selene sat back and looked at the pages on the table, at Amara across from her already thinking three steps ahead and at  Avalon, her husband who sat beside her with his sleeves rolled up and his handwriting in the margins of her notes.

This, she thought.

This is what it was all for.

Her phone lit the table.

Maya.

She answered immediately.

“Lena.” Maya’s voice was different. “I read the article.”

“I know.”

“She knew about Elena.”

“Yes.”

They took a long pause.

“She brought you back to fix it,” Maya said. “Nene brought you back because she knew what had been broken and she wanted to fix it.”

Selene felt her throat tighten.

“Yes,” she said.

“Are you okay?”

“I think so.” She looked at her surroundings.

Maya was quiet for a moment.

Then: “I kissed Kofi.”

Selene closed her eyes and smiled.

“Maya.”

“I know.”

“How was it.”

“Lena.”

“How was it?”

A pause that lasted long enough to be its own answer.

“Come on,” Maya said. “You know how it was.”

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