I slid the laptop forward one inch, then stopped. ‘Before I hand it over, Uncle Phillip, I think the board should know something.’ Bryce rolled his eyes. ‘Here we go. Sob story time.’ I opened the laptop and turned the screen toward the projector. ‘This prototype Bryce wants? The predictive logistics algorithm that landed the Henderson contract last quarter? The one Bryce presented as his own work in March?’ Phillip’s smile froze. ‘I wrote it. Every line. Two years ago. In my studio apartment. The commit history is timestamped, signed, and hosted on a private server my lawyer has been mirroring monthly.’ I clicked. The screen filled with code commits dating back to 2022, my name on every single one. Bryce’s face drained. ‘That’s — that’s a lie, I — ‘ ‘I’m not finished.’ I clicked again. Emails appeared. ‘These are messages from Bryce to a competitor offering to sell our client database for two hundred thousand dollars. Sent from his corporate account last Tuesday.’ The room went silent. One investor stood up. Phillip’s hands were shaking. ‘Marcus, where did you — ‘ ‘I’m the loser cousin, remember? The nerd who built your fraud-detection system as my ‘little hobby project.’ It flagged him three weeks ago.’ I closed the laptop gently. ‘I came here today because Dad asked me to give the family one last chance. I came as the disappointment. I’m leaving as the founder of Vance Analytics — the company that just acquired forty-one percent of your shares this morning through my silent investors.’ I slid a contract across the table. ‘You can sign Bryce’s termination, or I can release the emails to the SEC by Monday. Your choice, Uncle.’ Bryce lunged for the laptop. Security, the same security he’d threatened to call, gently escorted him out. Phillip signed with a trembling hand. I walked out into the golden evening, finally tall, finally seen. My phone buzzed. Dad: ‘Proud of you, son. Always was.’
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