LOGINPOV: Avalon Pierce
He was reading Nene’s board notes when Selene came home.
Margaret had given them to Selene three months ago and Selene had given them to him last week without explanation, she just set them on the desk because she had decided the time was right.
He’d been reading them for four days.
They were extraordinary.
These were Nene’s personal handwritten notes. The thoughts she’d had before and after and sometimes during meetings that never made it into official records.
Her handwriting was small and precise and occasionally impatient. Question marks appearing beside decisions she’d gone along with but hadn’t agreed with. Stars beside ideas that never got traction and circled when someone had said something that mattered.
His name appeared more than he expected from when he was a child and she was building a company and simultaneously building a grandson.
A talked back to his teacher today. **Margaret thinks I should be firmer but I think he’s right and the teacher is wrong and there’s no point disciplining courage out of a child.**
He read that three times.
He’d forgotten that. The teacher and him talking back. He was only seven then.
Nene had thought he was right.
Selene came in at noon with Maya.
He heard them before he saw them, the sound of those two together which was a combination of overlapping sentences and laughter at things he never quite caught the beginning of.
He came out of the study.
Maya was dragging a suitcase that was objectively too large for a six day trip. She looked different in a way he couldn’t immediately name.
Like she’d put something down somewhere in Accra and hadn’t picked it back up.
“You look different,” he said.
“Selene said the same thing.” Maya left the suitcase in the hallway “I’m fine tho.”
“I didn’t say you weren’t fine.”
“You had that face.”
“I don’t have a face.”
“You have several faces.” She looked at Selene. “He has several faces.”
“He really does,” Selene agreed.
Maya walked past him into the kitchen and opened the fridge with the ease of someone in their own home.
“Do you have anything that isn’t leftover Thai?” she said.
“We have eggs,” Selene said.
Maya turned around and looked at Avalon.
“She said that like it means something.”
“It does,” Selene said.
He smirked.
Maya stayed for two hours.
She told them about the school, Kofi’s buildings and what they did to a person to walk through them, also about finishing the novel and what she wanted to do with the foundation.
He listened.
When she finished he said: “The visual identity.”
Maya looked at him.
“The foundation needs a visual identity,” he said. “Someone who understands how things feel rather than how they look. Someone who can make it legible without making it generic.” He paused. “That’s you.”
Maya was quiet for a moment.
“I was going to bring it up,” Maya said.
“I got there first.”
“You’re annoyingly perceptive sometimes.”
“Sometimes,” he agreed.
Maya left at two with her oversized suitcase and a list of things to think about that she was already clearly thinking about.
The apartment was quiet after.
Avalon went back to the study , picked up Nene’s notes, found the page he’d been reading before they arrived and continued.
**The company will outlast me. That’s the point. You build things so they outlast you. But what outlasts the company? What are we actually building toward?**
She’d written that fifteen years ago.
He looked at the Pierce Foundation proposal on the laptop screen with the three names at the top.
He thought about her at her desk writing that question.
Then about Selene at this desk at 5 AM fourteen pages deep into the beginning of an answer and about how long some questions waited for their answers.
How sometimes the answer was being built in a room the person who asked the question would never see.
He picked up a pen.
Turned to the back page of Nene’s notes where the pages were blank and wrote one line.
She knew what she was building toward. She just couldn’t finish it herself.
Then underneath it.
We will.
He heard Selene in the kitchen.
The sound of her moving through the apartment was familiar enough now that he registered its absence when she was gone and its presence as something like weather. Atmospheric. Constant. Necessary.
He’d told her once she was the most inconvenient thing that had ever happened to him.
He still meant it.
Differently now.
She appeared in the study doorway.
“Maya wants to start Monday,” she said.
“Good.”
“Amara said she has something for the financial model by Thursday.”
“Good.”
“You’re still reading Nene’s notes.”
“I’ll be reading them for a while.”
She leaned against the doorframe.
“She wrote about you,” Selene said. “When you were seven.”
“You read them.”
“Some of them, she said there was no point disciplining the courage out of a child.”
He looked at her.
“She was right,” Selene said simply.
He looked back at the notes.
Inside the study, the lamp burned and somewhere in those handwritten pages a woman who had been dead for over a year was still managing to be exactly right about everything.
Which was, he thought, exactly like 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: Selene CastellanoShe made the call on Sunday morning while Avalon was in the shower.Dr Okafor answered on the third ring.“I wondered when you’d call,” she said.“Is that unprofessional?” Selene said.“Probably,” Dr Okafor said. “But Dr Ruth told me enough that I’ve been thinking about you. How are you?”“Ready,” Selene said. “I think.”“Tell me what ready means to you.”“It means I’m not trying to outrun something,” she said. “I’m not trying to fix something or prove something. I want to try.”“That’s a good reason,” Dr Okafor said. “Come in this week. We’ll talk properly, run some baseline checks, and go from there.”“No guarantees,” Selene said.She told Avalon over breakfast.“This week?” he asked.“Maybe on Wednesday. It's just for consultation tho.”“I’m coming with you.”“I know you are,” she said.He picked up his coffee again and went back to his phone.Wednesday arrived fast.The clinic was on the UCSF campus, clean and calm.Dr Okafor was younger than Selene expecte
POV: Avalon PierceAvalon barely slept.He spent the entire night replaying yesterday’s deposition—every question, answers even moments his control had cracked. Sullivan had torn through his defenses like they were paper and today? Today would be worse.Diana had warned him that Sullivan would p
POV: Avalon PierceThe deposition room feels different when you are the one under interrogation.Avalon had built conference rooms, sat through countless negotiations where millions hung on a single word. He had faced down investors, competitors, board members who wanted him gone but none of it pr
POV: Selene Castellano Pierce“Yes.”The word settled into the room with quiet certainty.Not loud. Not defensive. Just true.Sullivan did not respond immediately. He simply watched her, the way a man studies something he intends to dismantle piece by piece.“When did you fall in love with him?”Se
POV: Selene Castellano PierceThe deposition room looked exactly like it had on the video feed.Worse, actually—because this time, Selene was sitting in it.The beige walls felt closer than they had on screen, pressing in like they had something to prove. The fluorescent lights hummed faintly overh







