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CHAPTER 82: Six O’Clock

Author: Mystique
last update publish date: 2026-05-27 22:57:53

POV: Avalon Pierce

He arrived at six pm to find the whiteboard had taken over the room.

Not just the whiteboard, there were papers on both desks, printed pages with notes in three different handwritings, coffee cups at various stages of abandonment and productive disorder of people who had stopped managing the space and started working in it.

Maya was still there.

He hadn’t expected that. He’d expected to see just Selene and maybe Amara but Mata was sitting cross legged on the floor with her laptop and a marker behind her ear.

She looked up when he came in.

“You’re the six o’clock,” she said.

“Apparently.”

She went back to her screen.

Selene appeared from the small room adjacent to the office. She’d taken her jacket off at some point, pulled her hair down and looked like someone who had been working hard without noticing.

She looked good.

“You came,” she said.

“You asked me to.”

“I wasn’t sure you’d leave the notes.”

“Nene will still be right about everything tomorrow,” he said. “So, what did you want to show me?”

She crossed to the whiteboard.

He followed.

What Maya had built wasn’t a logo.

He’d expected a logo. Maybe a clean mark, a typeface, a color palette. The vocabulary of branding presented for approval.

This was something else.

A visual language was the only phrase that fit. It was a set of principles expressed through shape and line and the weight of certain marks on paper. The way the question was present in every element without being stated. The feeling of something being worked toward rather than something arrived at.

He stood in front of it for a long time.

“It doesn’t look finished,” he said.

“It’s not,” Maya said from the floor. “It’s never finished and that's the point.”

He looked at her.

“The foundation is always working toward something,” she said. “The identity should look like working toward. Not like it arrived.” She uncrossed her legs. “A finished logo says we know what we are. This says we know what we’re asking.”

He looked back at the whiteboard.

Thought about Nene’s question written in a board slide.

What are we actually building toward?

“It’s right,” he said.

Maya looked at Selene.

Selene looked at Maya.

James had gone at five.

Amara stayed until six thirty, packing up with the efficient purposefulness of someone who had already started thinking about tomorrow.

She paused at the door.

“James Okonkwo,” she said to Selene. “Keep him.”

“He’s a board member.”

“He’s more useful than a board member.” She looked at Avalon briefly. “Your grandmother would have known what to do with him.”

“What would she have done?” he said.

“Given him a problem nobody else had solved and watched what happened.” She left.

He stood in the doorway watching her go.

“She’s right,” Selene said beside him.

“I know.”

“About Nene too.”

“I found something last night,” he said.

“In the notes?”

“A name she mentioned repeatedly in the early years. Someone she describes as the person who understood what she was trying to build before she’d finished building it.” He paused. “She never says who it is. Just the name.”

“What name?”

“Robert,” he said. “Not Robert Chen, someone from before the company was what it is now.”

Selene looked at him.

“Margaret would know,” she said.

“Yes.”

“Are you going to ask her?”

He thought about it.

“Tomorrow,” he said. “Tonight I want to see what you’ve built.”

They stayed until seven thirty.

Maya ordered food from somewhere. They ate sitting on the floor because the desks were covered and the floor was available and it had become a pattern without anyone deciding it would be.

He sat with his back against the wall and his food in his lap and looked at the whiteboard while he ate.

Maya talked about the school in Accra.

The desk by the window and why it mattered and what it meant to design for where people actually looked rather than where you wanted them to look.

He listened.

“You’re applying that here,” he said when she finished.

“Trying to.”

“That is not  trying.” He gestured at the board. “That’s what this is, designing for where people actually look.”

Maya looked at the board.

Then at him.

“You sound like Kofi,” she said.

“Is that good.”

“Yes,” she said. Like it surprised her slightly.

Walking home, Selene slipped her hand into his.

“James said something today,” she said.

“Tell me.”

“He said the two companies that failed had the right principles and the wrong structures. That the principles were real but the structures couldn’t hold them.” She paused. “He said architecture is everything.”

“Nene said the same thing.”

“I know. You told me that.” She looked at the street ahead. “I keep thinking about it in relation to us.”

He looked at her.

“Not us failing,” she said quickly. “The opposite. I keep thinking about what our structure is. What actually holds us up.” She paused. “Not the love, that is the principle. What’s the architecture?”

He thought about it.

They walked for half a block.

“Honesty,” he said finally. “Even when it’s inconvenient, especially then.”

She nodded slowly. “And?”

“Showing up.” He paused. “And you telling me when I’m doing the management thing instead of the partnership thing.”

She smiled.

“That’s the accountability mechanism,” she said.

“Is it working?”

“Ask me in ten years.”

He squeezed her hand.

They walked home through the San Francisco evening.

The architecture holding.

His phone buzzed.

Margaret.

He answered.

“I’ve been going through some things,” Margaret said. “Old things from before the company was public.” she paused. “Avalon, I found letters between Nene and someone named Robert Laine.”

He stopped walking.

Selene looked at him.

“Who is Robert Laine?” he said.

“That’s what I’m trying to understand,” Margaret said. “But Avalon, the letters go back forty years and the last one is dated three weeks before your father died.”

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