The glass and steel tower of Blackwood Enterprises pierced the Manhattan skyline like a monument to ambition. Fifty-two stories of wealth, power, and legacy-all of it built by one man's ruthless determination.
The glass and steel tower of Blackwood Enterprises pierced the Manhattan skyline like a monument to ambition. Fifty-two stories of wealth, power, and legacy-all of it built by one man's ruthless determination.
Richard Blackwood stood at the head of the mahogany conference table on the forty-eighth floor, his silver hair immaculate, his Armani suit sharp enough to cut. At sixty-seven, he still commanded a room with nothing more than his presence. The twelve board members seated around the table listened in attentive silence as he outlined the quarterly projections, their eyes tracking every gesture, every pause.
This was his empire. Every brick, every contract, every billion-dollar deal bore his fingerprints.
"Revenue is up eighteen percent," Richard said, his voice carrying the weight of decades in business. "Our expansion into Asian markets has exceeded expectations. Blackwood Enterprises is not just surviving in this economy-we're dominating it."
Murmurs of approval rippled around the table.
Richard allowed himself a small, satisfied smile. He'd built this company from nothing forty years ago-a single manufacturing plant that he'd leveraged into a multinational conglomerate. Real estate, technology, manufacturing, investments-the Blackwood name meant power in every sector that mattered.
And soon, very soon, he would pass it all to his sons.
The thought should have brought him comfort. Instead, it twisted something uncomfortable in his chest.
"Mr. Blackwood?" his CFO ventured carefully. "The recommendations for Q4?"
Richard blinked, refocusing on the present. "Yes. Damien will present those."
All eyes turned to the man seated at Richard's right hand. Damien Blackwood, thirty-four, looked like a younger version of his father-same sharp features, same commanding presence, same steel-gray eyes that missed nothing. He stood with fluid confidence, tablet in hand.
"Thank you, Father," Damien said, his voice smooth and professional. He began walking the board through detailed projections, his presentation flawless.
Richard watched his eldest son-eldest by four minutes-with a mixture of pride and something harder to name. Damien had always been the responsible one. The one who followed rules. The one groomed from birth to inherit everything.
But was responsibility enough?
Richard's gaze shifted to his other son, seated further down the table. Adrian Blackwood, identical to his brother in appearance but somehow completely different in energy. Where Damien was contained and precise, Adrian radiated a more casual confidence. He listened to his brother's presentation with a slight smile, occasionally jotting notes, his posture relaxed.
Adrian handled innovation and creative ventures-the parts of the business that required thinking outside the rigid structures Damien preferred. Different skillsets. Different temperaments.
Same bloodline. Same inheritance.
Richard's chest tightened again.
Only one of them could be CEO. Only one could inherit the majority. That's how empires survived-clear hierarchy, decisive leadership, no confusion about who commanded the ship.
But which one deserved it?
"The projections show aggressive growth," one board member commented as Damien concluded. "Are we confident in these numbers?"
"Completely," Damien replied without hesitation. "We've stress-tested every scenario. The strategy is sound."
"Adrian?" Richard asked, his voice cutting through the room. "Your assessment?"
Adrian looked up, meeting his father's gaze. "Damien's numbers are solid. Conservative, even. I'd push harder on the tech acquisitions, but the foundation is sound."
The two brothers exchanged a look-not hostile, but measuring. Always measuring.
Richard had raised them that way. Competition made men strong. It separated the worthy from the weak.
But lately, watching them, he wondered if he'd created something else entirely.
"Excellent work, both of you," Richard said, standing again. The board members straightened in their seats. When Richard Blackwood stood, meetings ended. "We'll reconvene next month. Damien, Adrian-stay behind."
The board filed out efficiently, knowing better than to linger. Within moments, only Richard and his two sons remained in the vast conference room, the floor-to-ceiling windows offering a god's-eye view of the city below.
"Sit," Richard commanded.
Both sons sat, flanking their father's position at the head of the table.
Richard looked at them-his legacy, his greatest achievement and his greatest uncertainty. Identical faces. Identical blood. Completely different men.
"The company is strong," Richard began, his voice lower now, more personal. "Stronger than it's ever been. But I won't live forever."
"Father-" Damien started.
Richard raised a hand, silencing him. "I've built something that will outlast me. But only if it passes to the right hands. One of you will lead this company into the next generation. One of you will become CEO and inherit the majority stake."
Adrian shifted slightly. Damien's expression remained neutral, but his jaw tightened almost imperceptibly.
"You're both capable," Richard continued. "You're both my sons. But capability isn't enough. I need to know which of you truly deserves to carry the Blackwood name forward."
"We've both proven ourselves," Adrian said carefully.
"Have you?" Richard's gaze was sharp. "Or have you both simply done what was expected? There's a difference between competence and worthiness."
Damien's hands clenched briefly on the armrests of his chair. "What are you saying?"
Richard opened his mouth to answer, to deliver the speech he'd been rehearsing for weeks-the one about legacy and proving oneself, about competition being the forge that made men into legends.
But the words wouldn't come.
His chest tightened again, harder this time. The room suddenly felt too warm. The air too thin.
"Father?" Adrian's voice sounded distant.
Richard tried to speak, but his breath caught. The pressure in his chest was building, crushing, like a vice closing around his heart. His vision blurred at the edges.
"Dad!" Damien was on his feet, moving toward him.
Richard gripped the edge of the conference table, his knuckles white. Something was wrong. Seriously wrong. The pressure wasn't easing-it was spreading, radiating down his left arm, up into his jaw.
"Call 911!" Damien shouted at Adrian.
Adrian already had his phone out, fingers flying across the screen.
Richard tried to stand, tried to maintain control the way he always had, but his legs wouldn't cooperate. The room tilted. His perfectly constructed world-fifty-two stories of power and legacy-suddenly felt as fragile as paper.
"Sit down!" Damien was beside him, supporting him, lowering him back into the chair. "Don't move. Help is coming."
Richard's breath came in short, painful gasps. Through the haze of pain and fear, one thought crystallized with terrible clarity:
He was dying. Maybe not today, maybe not this instant, but soon.
And he hadn't chosen.
He looked at his sons-both of them hovering, both concerned, both waiting for him to be strong and decisive the way he'd always been.
But for once in his ruthlessly successful life, Richard Blackwood had no idea what to do.
The pressure in his chest peaked, and the room went dark around the edges.
"Stay with us," Damien's voice commanded. "Stay with us!"
Richard's last conscious thought before the darkness took him was simple and terrible:
*I haven't decided. I haven't chosen my heir.*
And then there was nothing but black.
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