LOGINPOV: Maya Castellano
She told him about the cancer on the fourth day.
It came out the way true things sometimes did, sideways, in the middle of something else entirely.
They were on a roof.
Kofi’s project was a community arts center in a neighborhood called Jamestown and the roof had a view that made you understand immediately why someone would choose to build something beautiful in this exact spot. The city spread below them in every direction, not the sanitized version of a city but the real one, layered and complicated and full of itself.
She’d been quiet for a few minutes just looking.
“You go somewhere when you’re quiet,” Kofi said, not as complaint butt as an observation.
“I’m looking at the city.”
“You’re doing that and something else.”
She turned to look at him.
“I had cancer,” she said. “Eighteen months of treatment and it’s been in remission for eight months.”
He didn’t say anything immediately, didn’t reach for I’m sorry or that must have been so hard or any of the other responses she’d learned to brace for. The ones that were kind and genuine and made her feel immediately like a patient rather than a person.
“Is that where you go?” he said finally. “When you’re quiet?”
“Sometimes,” she said. “Sometimes I go there and sometimes I’m just looking at a city.”
“How do you tell the difference?”
She thought about it honestly. “The looking at the city feels like having room while the other one feels like I’m taking inventory.”
“Of what?”
“Whether everything is still okay.” She looked back at the view. “You do it without meaning to after. You just check. All the time. You check.”
Kofi was quiet.“My mother did that,” he said.
She looked at him.
“Not cancer but something serious. When I was fourteen.” He looked at the city below. “She checked constantly for years after and when I catch her doing it and she’d pretend she was doing something else.”
“Did she ever stop?”
“Eventually.” He paused. “She said she stopped when she realized the checking wasn’t keeping her safe. It was just keeping her afraid.”
Maya sat with that.
“You know I haven’t told many people about the cancer, the full version,” she said.
“Why tell me?”
She considered deflecting. The habit was right there, ready and familiar.
“Because you asked whether I ever get tired,” she said. “And I made a joke and changed the subject and you let me and then I kept thinking about the letting.” She looked at him. “It made me want to try the other thing.”
“The not joking.”
“The not joking.”
He looked at her for a long moment.
Then he said: “Are you tired?”
The question she’d avoided the first time sitting there again without pressure.
“Yes,” she said. “Sometimes, not of being alive just of the vigilance.” She paused. “Of being the person who survived something and is supposed to know what to do with that.”
He nodded slowly like that made complete sense to him.
“You don’t have to know what to do with it,” he said.
“That’s easy to say.”
“I know. I’m saying it anyway.” He looked at the city. “Some things you just carry. They don’t require a conclusion.”
She didn’t respond immediately.
She thought about the novel in her bag. Of the woman who kept almost doing the brave things. The minutes she’d spent packing a hypothetical bag. The way she’d got in his car without knowing who she’d be when she came back.
She was starting to understand that not knowing was part of it.
Maybe the important part.
That evening they ate at a place his colleague had recommended, outside again, the city doing its nighttime thing around them.
She was more comfortable than she’d planned to be.
That was the thing about Kofi that she kept encountering. Comfort arrived before she’d given it permission even before she decided it was safe.
“Tell me about the buildings you’ve designed,” she said.
He talked for forty minutes about work, schools mostly, community spaces, buildings designed and how people actually moved through them rather than how an architect imagined they should.
She listened properly.
“You think about the people before the building ?”
“The building is for the people, it’s only right it should start there.”
“Most architects start with the building.”
“Most buildings feel like it.” He picked up his water. “I’m interested in spaces that make people feel like themselves.”
Maya looked at him across the table.
He’d been doing this from the beginning.
Designing spaces where people felt like themselves.
Including the space of a conversation.
“That’s what you do with people too,” she said.
He looked at her.
“The spaces you create in a conversation,” she said. “The way you leave room. The letting.” She paused. “You design that deliberately.”
He was quiet for a moment.
“I try to,” he said simply.
She looked at him.
She called Selene at midnight.
Selene answered on the second ring.
“Hey,” Selene said.
“Hey.”
“You okay?” Selene asked.
“I told him about the cancer,” Maya said.
Silence on the other end.
“How did it feel?” Selene asked.
Maya looked at the ceiling of her hotel room, then at the tree visible through the window and at the Accra night outside.
“Like setting something down,” she said. “Something I’d been carrying so long I forgot it had weight.”
Selene was quiet for a moment.
“Maya.”
“I know.”
“That’s—”
“I know, Lena.” She smiled at the ceiling. “I know.”
She picked up the novel before she slept.
Read until 2 AM.
The woman in the book did the brave thing on page 247.
Maya put the novel down.
Turned off the lamp.
Lay in the Accra dark thinking about catching up to yourself.
About how long it took an about how it was never too late when you finally did.
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
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POV: Selene CastellanoThe press conference was scheduled for two PM at Pierce Holdings’ main conference room.By noon, the building was swarming with reporters.Selene stood in Avalon’s office watching the circus unfold forty-five floors below. News vans lined the street. Cameras set up on the sid
POV: Avalon PierceThe article dropped at 6:47 AM on a Thursday.Avalon saw it before his first coffee, before the sun had fully burned through the fog, before he’d had time to fortify himself against whatever fresh chaos the universe had decided to throw at him.TECH BILLIONAIRE’S SECRET MARR
POV: Selene CastellanoUCSF Medical Center had always felt like a liminal space to Selene.Not quite hopeful, not quite hopeless. Just waiting. Endless waiting for results, for treatments, for doctors to tell you whether your sister would live or die.But today felt different.Today, Dr. Sarah Chen
POV: Avalon PierceDr Morrison’s office feels different when you are alone in it.Avalon sat on the singles chair in the room, but without Selene beside him, the space felt larger. More exposed.“Tell me how you’re feeling,” Dr Morrison said, settling into her own chair with practised ease.“Exhaus







