“Bryce,” I said softly, “do you remember the Hadley case from 2019?” His smirk flickered. Of course he remembered. A forty-year-old father, routine valve repair. Bryce had been the lead. The patient coded on the table. I had stepped in, restarted the heart, and saved a life that should have been lost to Bryce’s arrogance and a skipped pre-op protocol. “I have the original surgical logs,” I continued. “The unedited ones. Not the version you submitted to the board.” The color drained from his face. “You wouldn’t.” I slid open my bottom drawer and pulled out a slim manila folder. “I kept them because I believed in you. I believed people could grow.” I tapped the folder. “Inside are the timestamps, the nurse statements, and the anesthesiologist’s private notes. I also have an email — one you sent me at 2 a.m. that night — begging me to bury it.” His mouth opened, but nothing came out. Right then, my office door swung open. Margaret Holloway, the hospital president herself, walked in, followed by two members of the ethics board. “Eleanor called us this morning, Bryce,” Margaret said quietly. “She told us you’d be delivering a resignation letter today. We just didn’t realize it would be yours.” I stood, smoothed my coat, and slid the resignation paper back across the desk toward him. “Sign it, Bryce. Or I release the file.” His hand trembled as he picked up the pen. Margaret turned to me with tears in her eyes. “Nineteen years, Eleanor. And you protected this hospital even when it cost you sleep.” I smiled gently. “I protected my patients. The hospital was just lucky to be in the way.” Bryce signed. He walked out a smaller man than he’d walked in. And I sat back down, opened the next patient chart, and got back to the work that had always been mine.
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