Celia Moore did not come to the launch expecting gratitude.
She came because Derek had asked her to.
That mattered to her, even after everything.
The rooftop venue was all glass and polished metal, with soft light washing over the cocktail tables and a giant screen behind the stage looping his company logo in clean white letters.
He had spent weeks calling her Aunt Celia again.
Weeks telling her she was family.
Weeks saying that once the launch happened, everyone would finally understand what she had built with him.
She believed him just enough to show up.
And she brought Ivy because Derek had specifically said children should see hard work pay off.
Ivy was eight, small enough that her hand disappeared inside Celia’s, old enough to notice every false smile in the room.
By the time the speeches started, Celia had already seen the problem.
Her name was nowhere on the founder wall.
Nowhere on the investor board.
Nowhere in the thank-you video.
Derek stood at the front with Vanessa tucked into his side like she belonged there more than anyone else did.
We.
Celia knew exactly who had built the first version.
She knew because she had signed the checks, sold her jewelry, and sent money when the supplier calls started getting ugly.
She knew because there were bank records in her folder and a private loan agreement in a drawer at home.
So she asked Derek, quietly, why her investment was missing.
He did not apologize.
He sighed.
Then he told her not to start tonight because she had helped him years ago and this was bigger than that.
That sentence hit harder than people think it should.
It was the kind of sentence that turns years of sacrifice into a footnote.
Vanessa heard the argument and stepped in with a smile that never reached her eyes.
She told Celia that old family support was not the same as being relevant to the brand.
The nearby tables went quiet.
A few people pretended not to listen.
More people absolutely listened.
Celia told her not to talk to her like she was a hanger-on at a party she had paid for.
Derek looked around and saw the room beginning to notice.
That was the real reason he got ugly.
Not because he was strong.
Because he was cornered.
He said, in front of everybody, that if she wanted public credit that badly, she should have invested enough to matter.
Ivy squeezed Celia’s hand.
Mrs. Waller, an older woman from church who had known the family for years, shifted in her chair and frowned.
One cousin muttered under his breath.
Even the business partner near the back stopped smiling.
Then Vanessa laughed and called the whole thing a professional event, not a family rescue center.
That was when Celia finally stopped hoping this would be handled with shame alone.
She answered back.
She told them to keep her sacrifice out of their mouths.
And Derek, in front of his launch guests, in front of a little girl, in front of the woman who had raised him when his mother disappeared and his father drank away everything, turned and slapped her.
The room went silent so fast it felt like the air had been cut.
Celia tasted blood immediately.
Ivy screamed.
Mrs. Waller half rose with her cane shaking.
Vanessa stepped back like she had not expected the violence to splash back on her.
Derek’s business partner froze with a drink in his hand, the kind of frozen that comes from realizing a bad night may have just become a legal one.
And old Mr. Baines, sitting near the second row with the patient expression of a man who had seen too many family businesses survive on lies, leaned forward and asked whether that money was documented.
That was the moment the room changed.
Not because everyone suddenly became brave.
Because papers have a way of making cowards nervous.
Celia had brought her folder with her, not because she wanted revenge, but because she had learned long ago that love without records gets rewritten by people who think the loudest voice wins.
Inside were the signed investment agreement, the bank transfer confirmation, and the repayment schedule Derek had asked her to let him “adjust later.”
She had also kept the email where he asked for her name to be left off the launch materials because it would complicate the brand story.
That phrase would haunt him later.
But right then, it was enough that Mr. Baines asked for proof and Celia had it.
The first page made the front row go still.
The second page took the color out of Vanessa’s face.
The third page made Derek blink like a man trying to remember a lie he had practiced too long.
Celia handed the top sheet to Mr. Baines.
He read it once.
Then again.
Then he looked up and said, loud enough for half the venue to hear, that Derek had left her name off on purpose.
That was the first real crack.
The second came when the business partner stepped closer to the screen and asked why the deck said sole founder.
Derek tried to smile.
It failed.
His mouth opened, but the room had already moved past him.
People who had spent the night clapping began looking at each other instead.
A woman near the bar lowered her phone like she was embarrassed to be recording the truth.
A man by the window whispered, “She was the investor?”
And Ivy, still crying against her grandmother’s side, looked up at Derek with the kind of confusion children only show when the person they trusted turns into someone they cannot recognize.
Celia did not raise her voice.
She did not need to.
She told him he had slapped her because he thought the room would protect him.
Nobody answered.
Vanessa did not answer.
The business partner did not answer.
Mrs. Waller did not answer.
The launch had stopped being a celebration and started becoming a witness stand.
And in that silence, Derek understood something he had been too proud to see all night.
The woman he had tried to humiliate was the reason his company existed at all.
He had not just slapped his aunt.
He had slapped the source of the money, the receipts, the history, and the patience that had carried him far enough to put his name on a branded wall.
By the time the first person began asking for the legal folder again, the room was already turning away from him.
That is how fast a fake success starts to crack when the truth finally walks in wearing blood on its lip.