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Chapter 5 - The Patriarch’s Verdict

The Ravencroft Tower's private elevator opened directly into the executive suite on the seventy-eighth floor, a space designed for decisions that moved markets rather than families.

Everett Ravencroft stepped out first, cane tapping once against the polished onyx floor like a punctuation mark.

Marcus followed a half-step behind, still in the same suit from the night before, sleeves rolled now, the faint shadow of exhaustion carving lines around his eyes that no amount of coffee could erase.

Everett didn't sit. He walked straight to the floor-to-ceiling window overlooking Midtown, back to his son, the city a glittering indifferent audience below.

"Where is she?" he asked without turning.

Marcus exhaled, the sound heavy. He crossed to the desk, leaned against its edge rather than sit, arms folded like armor.

"I tried," he said.

"Called her phone half a dozen times this morning. Texts. Voicemail. Security pinged the last known location, some boutique hotel in Williamsburg. 

By the time they got there, the suite was empty. Sheets still warm. Friends cleared out with her. No forwarding address, no flight manifests under her name. She's gone dark."

Everett's reflection in the glass showed no surprise, only the slow tightening of a jaw that had once intimidated presidents.

"You tried," he repeated, the words flat and mocking. "That's the best you have? You tried?"

Marcus's voice stayed level, but the strain showed in the way his knuckles whitened against his forearms.

"She's seventeen, Father. She doesn't answer to summons anymore. Not mine, not anyone's. The overdose was real this time. Bellevue had her on a gurney less than twelve hours ago. She signed out AMA, refused every referral, every detox program. What exactly was I supposed to do? Chain her to the bed?"

Everett turned then, slowly, eyes locking onto Marcus with the cold precision of a man who had never once accepted excuses.

"You were supposed to be her father," he said.

"Not her accountant. Not her PR handler. Her father. You locked the empire to her blood because you believed, foolishly, that blood meant something. That it would bind her to responsibility. Instead it's given her a license to destroy herself and drag the name with her. And you stand there telling me you tried."

Marcus pushed off the desk, took one step forward before stopping himself.

"I froze her cards. Again. Cut the private jet access. Had the drivers report every move. She finds workarounds. Always does. Dealers on Venmo, friends with black cards, fake names on charters. She's not stupid. She's just..."

"Uncontrolled," Everett finished.

"Because you never learned to control her. You never learned to say no when it mattered. You gave her everything and asked for nothing in return. Now she takes everything and gives you nothing but headlines."

The silence stretched, thick with decades of unspoken recriminations.

Everett tapped his cane once, decisive.

"Enough."

He lifted the receiver from the desk phone, old-fashioned landline, the only one in the building still wired directly to the security command center, and pressed a single button.

"Grayson," he said when the line connected.

"It's Everett. Find the girl. Isadora. Last seen Williamsburg, Wythe Hotel, this morning. She's traveling with at least two companions, female, early twenties, male same age. No commercial flights, no Ravencroft vehicles. Use every asset: private investigators, facial recognition on street cams, bank traces on secondary accounts, whatever it takes. I want her location within the hour. And when you have it, bring her to me. Directly. No detours. No family intermediaries. Understood?"

A muffled affirmation came through the speaker.

Everett replaced the receiver with care, then looked back at his son.

"She'll hate it," Marcus said quietly.

"She already hates everything," Everett replied.

"Including you. Including me. The difference is, I don't care if she hates me. I care if she lives long enough to inherit what I built. And right now, she's running out of time faster than you're running out of excuses."

He turned back to the window, cane planted firm.

"Find her," he said again, softer this time, almost to himself. "Before she finds a way to make sure no one ever has to look for her again."

Marcus said nothing.

He only stared at the back of his father's head, the city sprawling endless and uncaring below them, while somewhere out there, Isadora kept running, toward freedom, toward ruin, toward whatever edge she could reach before someone finally dragged her back.

The security teams were already mobilizing. The net was tightening.

And in the Ravencroft world, no one stayed lost for long.

The yacht sliced through the Atlantic like a blade through silk, 120 feet of gleaming white and obsidian, named Eclipse because Isadora had once said the name sounded expensive enough to piss off her father.

The sun hung low and merciless, turning the deck into a furnace of polished teak and chrome.

Salt air whipped through her hair as she stood at the railing aft, black bikini top and high-waisted shorts clinging to her athletic frame, abs flexing with every furious breath.

A half-empty bottle of chilled Dom Pérignon dangled from her fingers; she'd already poured most of it over the side as an offering to whatever god watched spoiled heiresses self-destruct.

"Fuck them," she spat into the wind, voice raw from shouting over the engines and the crash of waves.

"Fuck Marcus and his frozen accounts. Fuck Bianca and her fake-concerned texts. Fuck Ryan and Mia and their little inheritance schemes. Fuck Grandfather and his cane and his 'legacy' bullshit. Fuck all of them straight to hell."

She hurled the bottle after the words. It arced high, glittering, then shattered against the wake in a spray of foam and glass. The deck crew didn't flinch, they'd seen worse.

Lexi lounged on the sunpad nearby, sunglasses reflecting the glare, scrolling through gossip alerts like it was her job.

Jade emerged from the shadowed interior of the main salon, fresh shirt unbuttoned, phone in hand.

He moved with the easy swagger of someone who knew the yacht's Wi-Fi was better than most penthouses and the bar never ran dry.

"Dora," he said, voice low enough to cut through her rage without challenging it. "You might wanna hear this before you start throwing more vintage."

Isadora turned, eyes narrowed, still breathing hard. "If it's another 'concerned family member' trying to track me, tell them to choke on it."

Jade held up both hands in mock surrender. "Not family. Hospital. Last night. Bellevue discharge papers leaked to one of the trash blogs already, someone in the ER sold the story. They're saying you went full meltdown. Security had to hold you down while they Narcan'd you."

Isadora scoffed.

Jade continued.

"And get this: the attending doc who ran point on you? Some hotshot twenty-four-year-old named Rowan Blackwood. Female. Apparently walked in like she owned the trauma bay, took one look at you foaming at the mouth, and didn't even blink. Stabilized you in under ten minutes, then wrote in the chart you were 'non-compliant and verbally abusive on waking.'"

Isadora froze for half a second, then barked a laugh that sounded more like a snarl.

"A doctor. Of course. Another self-righteous white-coat thinking they can fix me with a fucking needle and a lecture."

She paced the deck, bare feet slapping teak. "I hate them. They all are so pathetic. Oh god, I hate doctors."

Lexi glanced up from her phone, smirking. "This one sounds different. No pity-party headlines about 'poor little rich girl.' Just cold, clinical facts. Like she didn't give a shit who you were."

"Even better," Isadora shot back, but something flickered in her eyes, curiosity, maybe, or the first spark of fixation.

"Means she didn't bow. Didn't beg for a Ravencroft donation. Didn't whisper 'please behave, Miss Ravencroft' while she stuck me. She just... did her job. And then wrote that I was abusive."

A slow, dangerous smile curled her lips. "I like that. I like that a lot."

Jade raised an eyebrow. "You like being called abusive in an official medical record?"

"I like being seen," Isadora corrected, voice dropping to something darker, hungrier.

"Not as the heiress. Not as the tragedy. Just as the problem in front of her. No filter. No fear. She looked at me like I was any other overdose case. Like I wasn't special."

She stopped pacing, leaned back against the railing, wind tugging at her hair. The rage hadn't left her, but it had shifted, sharpened into something pointed, obsessive.

"Find out more about her," she said suddenly, eyes on the horizon but not really seeing it.

"Rowan Blackwood. Where she works. Where she lives. Everything. I want to know who the fuck thinks she can write me off as 'verbally abusive' and walk away like it's nothing."

Lexi sat up straighter, grin widening. "You're not gonna let this go, are you?"

Isadora's smile turned feral, beautiful, terrifying.

"No," she said softly. "I'm not."

The yacht kept cutting forward, engines a low growl under their feet, carrying her farther from the family she despised and closer to the one person who'd treated her like a stranger worth saving, without ever asking for thanks.

Or permission.

The game had just found a new player. And Isadora Ravencroft never lost when she decided to play.

Then the horizon changed.

A sleek black speedboat appeared off the starboard quarter, low-slung, matte finish, no markings except the discreet Ravencroft crest on the bow.

It cut through the waves with predatory efficiency, closing the distance fast. Behind it, another identical vessel flanked wide, engines roaring white foam.

Lexi spotted them first. She sat up straight, joint paused halfway to her lips. "Shit. Your grandfather's dogs reached."

"Not fucking again," Isadora said, voice low and venomous. She set the rosé down with deliberate calm, then stood, bare feet planted on the warm teak.

The wind whipped her shirt open wider; she didn't bother closing it. "Every goddamn time. They think they can just chase me down like I'm some runaway pet."

Lexi stubbed the joint out on the armrest, already reaching for her phone. "We could outrun them. Push the engines to max, head for international waters. They can't board without cause."

"They can if Grandfather signed the papers," Isadora snapped.

"He owns half the coast guard contracts in the Northeast. One radio call and we're 'assisting a medical emergency.' They'll drag me back in cuffs if they have to."

Lexi came up beside her, voice softer than usual. "What's the play, then? We can't keep this up forever. Fuel, weather, whatever, they'll wear us down."

Isadora stared at the black boats slicing the water, engines a constant growl under the music still blasting from the speakers.

"We don't outrun them," she said quietly. "We make them regret catching up."

She pushed off the rail, turned toward the interior stairs. "Get the tender ready. The small one. We slip off the back at dusk. Let them board an empty yacht if they want. We'll be halfway to wherever the fuck we want to be by the time they realize."

The yacht powered forward, engines roaring defiance. Behind it, the security boats stayed locked in formation, silent, patient, inevitable.

But Isadora Ravencroft had already stopped looking back. She was looking forward.

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