I clicked the pen twice. Then I set it down. “Preston,” I said softly, “before I sign anything, you should know I recorded our last four conversations. Including the one where you told me women shouldn’t operate past forty.” His smile cracked at the edges. I pulled my phone from my pocket and placed it screen-up on the table. “I also kept every email where you ordered me to falsify Mr. Henderson’s surgical notes to cover your nicked artery. The one where you blamed the anesthesiologist? That’s a felony in this state.” The lounge went silent. Even the vending machine seemed to hold its breath. Preston lunged for the phone. I slid it back into my coat. “Don’t bother. Everything’s already with my attorney and with Dr. Marsh, the Chief of Staff, who, by the way, is your father’s oldest rival on the board.” Preston’s face drained to the color of surgical gauze. “You wouldn’t.” “I already did. Forty minutes ago.” The door swung open. Dr. Marsh stepped inside flanked by two members of hospital legal and a woman from the state medical board I recognized from a conference. “Dr. Vance,” Marsh said, “please come with us. Your privileges are suspended pending investigation.” Preston turned to me, eyes wild. “Eleanor, please. My career.” I picked up the resignation letter he’d written for me, tore it neatly in half, and dropped the pieces into his untouched espresso. “You should’ve let me correct you quietly the first time,” I said. “Instead you tried to humiliate a surgeon who’s done three thousand more procedures than you.” Six months later, I was named interim Chief of Surgery. Preston lost his license and his father’s seat on the board. Mr. Henderson, the patient he almost killed, sent me a card every Christmas signed, *Still beating, thanks to you.* And every time a new resident asks me how I survived the Vance era, I tell them the same thing: never raise your voice in a room full of witnesses. Just press record.
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