She stopped, her hand gripping the cool marble of a balustrade to keep from collapsing. She turned her head, her neck stiff, her heart hammering a frantic rhythm against her ribs.
Three pairs of eyes were locked on her from across the ballroom. A rival matriarch. A gossip columnist. And him.
A low vibration of unease moved through the crowd, felt more in the soles of her feet than heard with her ears.
She fled.
She didn't think. She just moved. The instinct to escape overrode the exhaustion, overrode the years of training that demanded she stand and smile. She scrambled down a service corridor, slipping on the slick, polished marble.
Something hit her from the side. A heavy, muscular weight.
She screamed as fingers sank into the delicate silk of her gown, grazing the skin of her forearm. She flailed, her hand closing around nothing but air. She was spun around and slammed against a cold, metal door.
Cole. She knew his face from a thousand silent moments of surveillance. Head of Security.
He said nothing, his expression impassive. He simply opened the door behind her and propelled her through it.
This was it. She was going to die here, not on the edge of the Sargent estate, but in its very heart, a trespasser in her own life, about to be erased.
Then the world was reduced to a single, blinding light.
A sterile, white-hot spotlight pinned her in the center of the room. It was Adrien's private study, a place she was never allowed to enter. The gala noise was gone, replaced by an oppressive silence.
The mechanical beast was not a helicopter, but a man descending the spiral staircase from the library above.
Adrien Sargent.
He moved with practiced ease, his tuxedo tailored to his frame like a second skin. He didn't look at her. Not at first.
She tried to stand, to run, to do something, but the adrenaline crash hit her like a physical blow. Her vision tunneled. The last thing she saw before the darkness took her completely was the gleam of his polished Oxford shoes stopping inches from her face, and from the shadows behind him, a pair of eyes colder than any blizzard.
The light was different here. Sterile. Sharp.
She gasped, sitting up, her body jerking against resistance. Leather straps bound her wrists to the metal rails of a plush, medical-style recliner.
Panic, hot and immediate, flooded her veins.
"Calm down," a voice said. Not a request. An order.
The mahogany doors slid open with a soft hiss. Adrien Sargent walked in. He looked exactly like his photos, only more terrifying. He was wearing a charcoal suit that cost more than her childhood home, tailored to hide nothing of the power beneath it.
He didn't look at her. He picked up a clipboard from the end of the table, flipping a page.
"The Sargent Family Trust, Article 7, Clause 4," he said, his voice a smooth baritone devoid of humanity. "Any beneficiary deemed mentally or emotionally unstable forfeits all administrative rights. You're lucky my security team is more discreet than you are."
"I was having a panic attack," she rasped. Her throat felt like sandpaper. "The crowd... I needed air."
"About your inheritance." He finally looked up. His eyes were a startling shade of grey, like storm clouds. "Clarice, isn't it? The perfect orphan we polished into a diamond."
"The trust activates on my 25th birthday," she said, pulling at the restraints. "Your control ends. You can't stop it."
"Assets and liabilities, Clarice. Your public breakdown just made you a liability."
He dropped the clipboard on the side table. The clatter was deafening in the quiet room. He walked over to her, his fingers closing around her chin, forcing her head up. His skin was cool.
"However," he said softly, "my legal team tells me you were the real asset behind your foster father's last three acquisitions. The one who saw the patterns everyone else missed."
He let go of her face and reached into his jacket, pulling out a folded tablet. He tossed it onto her lap.
"Read it."
She looked down. It was a preliminary injunction. Complex. Messy. As she scanned the legal jargon, her breath hitched. This wasn't just a delay; it was a legal cage.
"This is..." She looked up at him. "This is impossible to fight without a significant legal fund."
"Sign," Adrien said. He leaned in, his hands bracing on the chair's arms, trapping her. "Sign over your voting shares to me, and the injunction disappears."
"This is you," she whispered, realizing the secret he was guarding. "You're leveraging my shares for the hostile takeover of Chen Industries."
"Careful," he warned.
"That deal will bankrupt thousands. It's unethical."
"Then you better get used to it."
"No," she said. "I won't be your prisoner."
Adrien didn't blink. He reached for a remote on the wall and pressed a button. A screen flickered to life. It showed an old, kind-faced man in a nursing home. Alfred. The butler who had raised her. A hand was hovering over the call button next to his bed, a syringe filled with a clear liquid in the other.
"No!" she screamed, thrashing against the straps.
"The choice is yours, Clarice," Adrien said, watching her with the detached curiosity of a scientist observing a lab rat. "Sign the proxy, or your only friend has a tragic, late-night heart failure. Right now."