Sign the resignation letter, sweetheart, or I’ll make sure no hospital in this state

Richard repeated it. Louder this time, for the cheap seats. “You’ll quit that little doctor hobby, raise my grandson properly, or I’ll bury your career. I have friends on every hospital board from here to Boston.” The men laughed again. My husband, Ethan, finally spoke — a whisper. “Dad, maybe not tonight.” Richard waved him off like a fly.

I reached into my purse and set my phone face-up on the table. The red recording dot pulsed like a tiny heartbeat. Richard’s smile cracked at the edges.

“Funny thing about hospital boards, Richard,” I said. “I sit on two of them. The pediatric wing at St. Jude’s? The one with your name on the plaque? I’m the medical director. I approved that plaque.” I slid a second paper across the table — the one I’d brought myself. “This is a cease-and-desist from my attorney. And this,” I placed a third, “is a letter from the state medical board. Turns out threatening a physician’s license during pregnancy is coercion. They were very interested.”

Richard’s bourbon glass trembled. His country club friends suddenly found their napkins fascinating.

I turned to Ethan. “You knew he was going to do this tonight. You picked the restaurant. You told him what I was afraid of.” His silence was the loudest thing in the room. I slid one final envelope toward him. Divorce papers. Already filed that morning. “I named the baby after my father, not yours. He signs off on the surname change Monday.”

I stood, smoothed my dress, and picked up the resignation letter Richard had written. I tore it neatly in half, then in quarters, and let the pieces flutter into his untouched steak.

“Enjoy dinner, gentlemen. It’s the last one you’ll expense to a hospital I run.”

Six months later, Richard’s name came off the plaque. Ethan’s trust fund got audited. And I delivered a healthy baby girl in the wing I rebuilt — with my own last name on her wristband, and no one’s permission but mine.

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