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CHAPTER 81: James

Author: Mystique
last update publish date: 2026-05-26 23:39:40

POV: Selene Castellano

James Okonkwo called on a Thursday.

She almost didn’t recognize the number. He’d given her his card after the board presentation and she’d filed it without expecting to use it.

“Ms. Castellano Pierce,” he said. “I hope I’m not interrupting.”

“You’re not.”

“I’ll be brief.” He had the quality of a man who meant that. “I voted yes on the foundation and I want you to know my reasons weren’t the same as the others.”

She sat down. “Tell me.”

“Robert voted yes because he’s loyal to Avalon, Thomas voted yes because it serves his position, Daniel voted yes because Amara’s numbers were airtight and I voted yes because of the question.”

“Nene’s question.”

“Yes, I’ve been to a lot of board presentations. People open with mission statements, market analysis, and projected returns.” Another pause. “Nobody has ever opened with a dead woman asking what they were actually building toward.” He stopped. “That’s the only question that matters. Everything else is just the answer.”

“Why are you telling me this?” she said.

“Because I want to be useful to the foundation. Not as a board member but as someone with experiences you don’t have yet.”

“What experience?”

“I’ve built three companies. Failed two of them.” He said it without apparent difficulty. “The two that failed had the right principles and the wrong structures. The principles were real but the structures couldn’t hold them.” A pause. “Your foundation has the right principles and I’d like to help make sure the structures can hold them.”

Selene looked at the whiteboard across the room.

Maya’s visual language is still on it and that is the beginning of something.

“Come to the office on Monday,” she said. “Come meet Amara and my sister.”

A brief pause.

“Your sister is involved?”

“She’s building our visual identity.”

“Good,” he said simply. “Visual language is where most foundations lose the thread. They look like what they think they should look like instead of what they actually are.”

Selene thought about Maya saying exactly that in different words.

“Nine AM on Monday,” she said.

“I’ll be there.”

She told Avalon that evening.

He was in the study with Nene’s notes again. He’d been working through them steadily, one evening at a time, like he was having a conversation that couldn’t be rushed.

“James Okonkwo called,” she said.

He looked up.

She told him what James had said.

He was quiet for a moment.

“He said he failed two companies,” Avalon said.

“Without flinching.”

“That’s interesting.”

“I thought so.”

He leaned back. “Most people in his position lead with the successes. The failure gets buried in the biography, mentioned briefly and contextualized until it becomes a story about resilience rather than a story about what actually went wrong.”

“He said the principles were real and the structures couldn’t hold them.”

“That’s specific.”

“Very.”

Avalon looked at the notes in front of him.

“Nene wrote something about structural failure once,” he said. He found the page and read aloud. A company can have the right values and the wrong architecture. The values don’t save it and architecture is everything.

Selene looked at the page.

“She would have liked him,” she said.

“Probably.” He set down the notes. “Do you trust him?”

Selene thought about it honestly.

“Not yet,” she said. “But I trust the way he talks about failing most people who are honest about failure are usually honest about other things too.”

Avalon looked at her.

“When did you become this good at reading people?” he said.

She almost said slowly and then all at once again.

Instead she said: “I’ve been practicing on you.”

He smiled.

James arrived at the office at nine exactly.

He was shorter than she’d registered in the boardroom. Mid-fifties, gray at his temples and a jacket that was good without announcing it.

He looked around the corner office.

“Good room,” he said.

“It’s modest,” Selene said.

“Good rooms usually are. Impressive rooms are for impressing people. Working rooms are for working.”

Amara looked up from her laptop.

She and James looked at each other across the room with the look of two people taking rapid inventory.

“Amara Osei,” Amara said.

“James Okonkwo,” he said.

A pause that lasted just long enough.

“I read your governance paper,” he said. “The one on accountability gaps.”

“Which edition.”

“The revised one, 2019.”

“What did you think of the third section.”

“The implementation framework is theoretically sound and practically optimistic.”

Amara’s expression didn’t change. “Explain.”

“It assumes board members will act against their own financial interests when the governance structure requires it. Some will, most won’t. The framework needs a mechanism that removes the assumption entirely.”

A pause.

“I’ve been working on that problem for two years,” Amara said.

“I know because I’ve  read your subsequent papers.” He sat down across from her. “I have some thoughts.”

Selene watched them.

Maya arrived at ten with coffee and the slightly wind-burned look of someone who had walked rather than taken a car because she was thinking.

She stopped in the doorway.

Looked at James and Amara deep in conversation at the table.

Looked at Selene.

Selene gave her the small nod that meant I’ll explain later but it’s good.

Maya accepted this and went to the whiteboard adding something to the visual language she’d been developing.

Maya’s hand moved with the confidence of someone who had found the thing they were supposed to be doing after a long time of doing adjacent things.

The foundation was four people in a corner office on a Monday morning.

A governance expert and a failed company builder arguing productively about implementation frameworks.

A graphic designer filling a whiteboard with the visual language of asking the right question.

And Selene standing in the middle of it watching the architecture take shape.

Nene’s question on the wall.

What are we actually building toward?

This, Selene thought.

Exactly this.

She stepped out at noon to call Avalon.

He answered on the second ring.

“How is it?” he said.

“James and Amara have been arguing for three hours and it’s the most productive thing I’ve watched in months.”

“What are they arguing about?”

“Whether human nature is a structural problem or an architectural one.”

A pause.

“That’s a good argument,” he said.

“They think so.” She looked through the glass at the three of them inside. “Avalon.”

“Yes.”

“I think this is actually going to work.”

“I know,” he said.

“You sound certain.”

“I’ve been certain since five in the morning when you came back to bed with fourteen pages and cold coffee and slightly shaking hands.” A pause. “I just waited for you to be certain too.”

She stood in the corridor outside the corner office.

The foundation on one side of the glass.

Avalon’s voice in her ear.

“Come by at six,” she said. “I’ll show you what Maya’s built.”

“I’ll be there.”

She hung up.

Went back in.

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