I opened the folder slowly. Richard’s smile flickered. Inside were three things: a federal subpoena, an audit letter from the Attorney General’s office, and a printed email chain — his own — instructing the CFO to route pediatric donations through a shell company registered in his mistress’s name. “Before I sign anything, Richard,” I said quietly, “you should know the children’s wing was never yours to reassign. I incorporated it as an independent 501(c)(3) six years ago. You signed the paperwork yourself. You just never read it.” The room went still. I turned to the board. “Two weeks ago, a nurse brought me discrepancies in the pediatric oncology billing. Kids being charged for treatments they never received. I brought it to the FBI. They’ve been inside your servers for eleven days.” Richard’s face drained of color. Ethan finally looked up. “Dad… what did you do?” I stood, smoothing my blazer. “The board will be receiving a formal notice within the hour that Dr. Richard Vance is no longer authorized to represent Vance Memorial in any capacity. The children’s wing will be renamed after Nurse Diane Alvarez, who risked her career to tell the truth.” I slid one last document across the table — my resignation, effective immediately, along with an offer letter from Johns Hopkins to lead their new pediatric surgical institute. “You threatened to blacklist me, Richard. Instead, I’m taking forty-two of your best doctors with me. They signed last night.” Ethan reached for my hand as I passed. I paused. “You had twelve years to choose me over him,” I whispered. “You chose your coffee.” I walked out of that boardroom into a hallway lined with the parents of every child I’d ever operated on. Someone started clapping. Then everyone did. Behind me, I heard Richard’s chair scrape back — and the click of federal handcuffs closing around the wrists of a man who thought a signature could erase a woman he never bothered to see.
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