“Today was only the beginning,” he said. “We are confident the court will recognize that my father’s true wishes are being subverted. No son should be disinherited for missing part of a funeral because of prior family commitments.”

When Eleanor emerged, Walter advised silence.

But something in her could not permit Thomas’s sentence to stand alone.

She stepped to the microphones.

“I have only one statement,” she said. “This case is not about a missed funeral. It is about honoring Richard Mitchell’s carefully considered wishes for the company he built and the people who depend on it. Richard loved his son. He also understood that love and trust are not the same thing.”

She turned and walked away.

The public fight began to affect the company almost immediately.

By the following week, Mitchell Shipping faced a crisis with Maris International, a European logistics client representing one hundred forty million dollars in annual business. James Woodson called Eleanor at 7:30 a.m.

“They’re threatening to pull,” he said. “They cited leadership instability and conflicting messages.”

“Conflicting messages from whom?”

A pause.

“Thomas contacted them directly.”