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CHAPTER 72: Load Bearing

Author: Mystique
last update publish date: 2026-05-22 22:58:04

POV: Selene Castellano

Amara came back on Monday with thirty seven pages.

Selene had sent fourteen pages but Amara returned thirty seven which meant she’d spent the weekend not just reviewing but building and adding the structural framework that Selene’s instincts had correctly identified as necessary but hadn’t yet known how to construct.

She sat across from Selene at the dining table and opened her laptop with the focused energy of someone who had been waiting for exactly this kind of problem.

“Your instincts are right,” Amara said. “The foundation has to live inside the company, not beside it. If it does live beside it, it becomes a PR exercise within eighteen months. Inside it has teeth.”

“The board will push back on the resource allocation.”

“Some will but Robert won’t. Thomas Reeves won’t also because it serves his interests to be associated with something legitimate and he’s smart enough to know it.” She paused. “Daniel Frost will need convincing.”

“What convinces Daniel Frost?”

“Numbers, Daniel speaks exclusively in numbers.” Amara turned her laptop. “Which is why I built the financial model first.”

Selene looked at the screen.

The model was thorough 

“You’ve done this before,” Selene said.

“Three times, I succeeded at two and one failed because the CEO lost his nerve six months in when the returns weren’t immediate.” Amara looked at her directly. “Will Avalon lose his nerve?”

“No.”

“You’re certain.”

“I’ve watched him hold the company together through things that would have broken most people. He doesn’t lose his nerve, he loses sleep.” Amara said. 

Amara looked at her for a moment.

“You know him well,” she said.

“I’m learning him,” Selene said. “There’s a difference.”

Something shifted in Amara’s expression and she said. “That’s the right answer,” 

They worked for three hours.

Avalon appeared at noon with sandwiches, he set them on the table without comment and looked at the screen briefly.

“The governance structure,” he said. Pointing at one section.

“What about it,” Amara said.

“It’s missing an accountability mechanism for the foundation’s own leadership. You’ve built accountability into everything external but nothing internal.”

Amara looked at the screen and said

“He’s right,” she said to Selene.

“I know,” Selene said.

“You saw it too?”

“I was going to bring it up after the sandwiches.”

Avalon joined them by sitting and picked up a sandwich.

They worked for another two hours.

By three in the afternoon they had something that felt different from a proposal.

It felt like a thing that existed.

Not finished but real in the way of something that had found its own weight. The kind of structure that held things up rather than just described how things might be held up.

Selene sat back and looked at it.

Amara was already typing notes for the next version.

Avalon was reading the governance section he’d identified the gap in, one ankle crossed over his knee, the focused quiet of a man doing what he did best which was find the thing other people missed.

She looked at him.

He’d rolled his sleeves up at some point. His handwriting was in the margins of her printed pages, he’d eaten half a sandwich and left the other half.

He caught her looking.

“What?” he said.

“Nothing.” She looked back at the screen. “Just filing.”

Amara left at 4pm.

They stood at the door and Selene thought about how different this was from the board dinner three weeks ago. Then she’d been cautious, holding the Thomas connection at arm’s length and watching for the angle.

Now she trusted the work between them. 

“Same time Thursday?” Amara said.

“Thursday,” Selene agreed.

After the door closed Avalon stood behind her with his hands in his pockets looking at the dining table covered in papers.

“She’s extraordinary,” he said.

“Yes.”

“You found her through a footnote.”

“She left the footnote to be found.”

He laughed.

She turned around.

“What?” she said.

“I’m thinking about Nene,” he said. “About what she would have done with Amara Osei.”

“She would have hired her immediately.”

“Probably poached her from whoever she was working for.”

“Without guilt.”

“None whatsoever.” He picked up his half eaten sandwich. “She would have liked you too, the real you not just the idea of you.”

Selene looked at him.

“She brought me back,” Selene said. “I think she already knew.”

“She knew everything eventually.” He looked at the table. “I used to find that infuriating.”

“And now?”

“Now I find it comforting in a way I didn’t expect.”

Selene moved to start gathering the papers.

He helped without being asked.

They worked side by side in the quiet apartment stacking pages and closing laptops and returning the dining table to the thing it was when it wasn’t a foundation being built on it.

Her phone buzzed.

Maya. A photo this time.

Selene opened it.

Two hands.

That was all. 

Just two hands, side by side, on what looked like a rooftop railing just beside each other close enough to touch.

No caption.

No words.

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