Mag-log inPOV: Selene Castellano
Three point eight million dollars.
She kept coming back to the number.
Not because of what it meant for the foundation practically, though it meant a great deal but because of what it meant that Nene had set it aside twelve years ago with a single instruction.
For the foundation when it’s ready.
Not if but when.
She’d known it would be ready and had also strongly believed that enough to set aside nearly four million dollars and wait.
Selene sat in the foundation office on Thursday morning with Margaret’s email on her screen and the number sitting in her chest like something she hadn’t figured out how to hold yet.
Maya came in at nine, just a look at Selene’s face. She asked
“What happened?”
Selene turned the screen.
Maya read it.
Then sat down slowly the way you sat when something required sitting.
“Twelve years ago?” Maya asked.
“Yes.”
“Before the will.”
Maya looked at the screen.
“She never told anyone?” she asked.
“Nop, she just set it aside and waited.”
They sat with it together.
Amara arrived at ten, read the email without expression.
Then she looked at Selene.
“This changes the timeline,” she said.
“Yes.”
“We can move the community partner program to year one instead of year two.”
“I know.”
“The infrastructure fund Susan Park talked about. We can build it now rather than in phase two.”
“I know.”
Amara looked at the number again.
“She understood the gap,” Amara said. “Twelve years ago she already understood the gap between what the foundation would want to do and what it could afford to do in the beginning.” She looked at Selene. “This is seed money specifically sized to close that gap.”
“She was very precised about it,” Selene said.
“She was extraordinary about it,” Amara said.
She opened her laptop and started recalculating.
James arrived at eleven and read the email then set the phone down.
He looked at the window for a moment.
“The load path problem,” he said.
Selene looked at him.
“The structure she built around the foundation,” he said. “The money, the will, Selene, the timing. All of it.” He turned from the window. “She didn’t just build the foundation, she built the conditions that made the foundation inevitable.” He paused. “That’s not strategy, a really grounded architecture.”
Selene thought about Nene’s notes.
Architecture is everything.
She’d written that about the company and about herself.
They worked through the afternoon.
Amara rebuilding the timeline with the new resources.
James working through the structural implications.
Maya at the whiteboard adding something to the visual language that she’d apparently been waiting to add and the money had clarified.
Selene moved between them.
Contributing where useful and staying out of the way where not.
At three pm, she stepped out to call Avalon.
“Amara is rebuilding the entire timeline,” she said.
“How fast?”
“Year one now includes what we had in year two. Susan Park’s infrastructure fund is moving up. The community partner program starts in January.”
“That’s three months away.”
“I know, Amara doesn’t seem concerned.”
“Amara is never concerned about timelines she’s building herself.”
“Fair point.”
She stood in the corridor outside the office looking through the glass at the three of them inside.
Amara typing with the focused urgency of someone doing what they did best.
James on the phone with someone, making notes, his other company’s failure becoming this foundation’s wisdom.
Maya at the whiteboard, marker moving, the visual language growing.
“Avalon,” she said.
“Yes.”
“She set this aside twelve years ago and waited for us to be ready.”
“I know.”
“She never met me then, we weren’t even together. There was no us.”
“I know.”
“She set it aside for people who didn’t exist yet.”
He was quiet for a moment.
“She set it aside for work,” he said. “The people were secondary and she trusted that the right people would find the work.”
Selene leaned against the corridor wall thinking about a woman writing letters she couldn’t send yet.
Setting aside money for a foundation that didn’t exist yet and writing a question in her board notes that nobody answered for fifteen years.
Waiting.
“I want to do something,” Selene said.
“Tell me.”
“I want to name the infrastructure fund.” She paused. “The Lorraine Pierce Infrastructure Fund. Her name specifically, not the family name.”
He was quiet.
“Yes,” he said.
“Just yes?”
“Just yes,” he said. “She earned her name on it.”
She told the others when she went back in.
Amara looked up from her laptop.
“The Lorraine Pierce Infrastructure Fund,” she said slowly.
“Yes.”
She turned back to her screen adding it without further discussion, which was its own form of agreement.
James nodded once.
Maya put down her marker.
“Can I add something to the identity?” she said.
“Show me,” Selene said.
Maya went to the whiteboard and added something small to the visual language. To the corner of the system where the question lived.
A mark that was barely visible unless you were looking but once you saw it you couldn’t unsee it.
“What is that?” James said.
“Her handwriting,” Maya said. “One letter from her handwriting. Built into the system.” She stepped back. “So it’s always there, underneath everything. Like it actually is.”
The office was quiet.
Selene looked at the mark.
Like it actually was.
“Yes,” she said.
She stayed late that evening after the others had gone.
Selene was in the office alone with the whiteboard and the emails and the rebuilt timeline and the number that meant a woman had believed in this twelve years before it existed.
She wrote in her journal.
One line.
She built for people she’d never meet. That’s what love looks like when it has patience.
She closed the journal.
Sat in the quietness of her office where something that had started as a question was becoming an answer.
Slowly which was worth every year of the waiting.
POV: Maya CastellanoKofi’s family arrived on Thursday.Kofi had decided that the airport was not the right place for Maya to meet his family. He thought it would be too overwhelming, with all the noise and crowds, and the hassle of dealing with luggage and jet lag. He wanted their first meeting to be more low-key, so he had made it clear that the airport was off limits. Maya, it seemed, had respected his wishes and was not there to greet them.She had agreed, mainly because fear was holding her back and she needed someone to tell her it was okay to wait a little longer.Instead she cleaned her apartment for three hours and then sat on the couch and stared at the wall.Kofi called at noon."He told me they're all at the hotel now, just taking it easy. We're having dinner together tonight at 7, just a family thing."“Just family,” Maya repeated.“You’re family,” he said.“I meant just your family, without me.”A pause.“Maya.”“I’m fine,” she said. “ I’m completely fine.”“You cleaned
POV: Maya CastellanoThe dress fitting took place in a tiny studio nestled in Hayes Valley, a space that was steeped in the scent of fabric and the sweet hint of flowers. It was clear that this was a place where attention to detail was paramount, where every stitch and every fold was taken seriously.Selene settled into the corner chair, the one where people usually sat to share their thoughts and opinions.Kofi wasn't there, and Maya had made it pretty clear that she didn't want him to be. Apparently, it was bad luck for him to see the dress before the big day, a tradition that Kofi didn't really believe in, but Maya did, and that was all that mattered. He had tried to argue that it wasn't something he personally observed, but Maya had shut him down, saying that she did observe it, and that was enough for him to respect her wishes.Maya loved him for that.She stepped onto the small platform and looked at herself in the three-way mirror while the seamstress worked at the hem.“Well,”
POV: Selene CastellanoThe advisory board meeting had gone exactly as Selene hoped.Everything was out in the open and clearly recorded. But the two members who had been compromised decided to step down before things got ugly, opting for a quiet exit instead of a public showdown. James took it upon himself to apologize to the entire board for the mistake in their vetting process. Meanwhile, Amara had already put a new screening process in place, which was making waves in the nonprofit sector - it was even featured in two newsletters as a model for how to be transparent and accountable.A week after that, Henderson Capital made a quiet move to shut down its philanthropic division. The SEC investigation was gaining speed, and Richard Henderson decided to step down from his own company instead of waiting to see what the results would be.Diana's name was finally in the clear, it turned out she had never actually been implicated - the calls made using her phone number had been tracked and
POV: Avalon PierceThey sat at the kitchen table with a blank document open between them, the cursor blinking, neither of them writing anything yet.“I don’t know where to start,” Selene said.“Start with what’s true,” Avalon said. “Not what sounds right.”She nodded slowly, then began typing.My name is Selene Castellano Pierce. Thirty years ago, a man decided that protecting his own interests mattered more than a young father’s life. I never met Jonathan Pierce. But I married his son, and I have spent the last year learning what his absence cost this family.She looked at Avalon.“Your turn,” she said.He took the laptop.My father died when I was eight years old. I grew up believing it was an accident. I built walls around that loss because grief without explanation has nowhere to go. This year, I learned the truth— he died because he refused to look away from something wrong, and that my grandmother spent thirty years protecting me from a danger she couldn’t eliminate but only del
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POV: Selene Castellano“No,” Avalon said immediately. “ Absolutely not.”“Avalon—”"She’s not going to be having a one-on-one conversation with him, not after what happened last night."Nunez raised her hand, signaling for attention. "This is a federal facility we're talking about," she said. "There are cameras everywhere, and agents are always present in the room. I would be there myself, overseeing everything."“Why me,” Selene said, looking at Nunez. “ Did he say why?”"Nunez spoke up, saying 'He told us you'd get it once you heard the story,' but that's all he was willing to share."“What’s his name?” Selene asked."Daniel Ross," Nunez explained, "A former private investigator who spent nearly fifteen years working with Whitmore's network, and he was actually Reeves' go-to guy for fieldwork."The name meant nothing to her.Avalon didn't agree at first, but then Nunez made a deal with him - he could watch everything that was happening from another room, see and hear every single wo
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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
The morning light didn’t feel gentle. It felt intrusive.It slipped through the glass walls of the penthouse without permission, stretching across the floor like it owned the place. Like nothing important had happened last night.But everything had.Selene stood by the window, one hand resting light







