I set the pen down. “No,” I said quietly. Dr. Whitman’s smile flattened. “Excuse me?” “I said no. I won’t sign, and I won’t change Mr. Ashford’s chart. He needs the surgery. Hiding his arrhythmia so your donor can avoid a malpractice suit will kill him.” He stood up, towering. “You stupid little girl. You think anyone will believe you over me?” “No,” I said. “But they’ll believe this.” I reached into my coat pocket and placed my phone on his desk, screen up. A recording app was running. Forty-three minutes and counting. His face drained of color. “You recorded me?” “Every meeting since you first asked me to alter records. Six weeks of audio. Timestamped. Backed up to three drives and emailed to my attorney this morning.” I slid a second envelope toward him. “That’s a copy of the subpoena. The state medical board opened an investigation at 6 a.m. Mr. Ashford’s daughter is a federal prosecutor. Did you know that? You should’ve checked.” His knees actually buckled. He gripped the desk. “Elena, please, we can talk about this—” “We just did.” I picked up the resignation letter, tore it neatly in half, and let the pieces flutter onto his Persian rug. “I’m keeping my job. You won’t be keeping yours.” I walked to the door, then paused. “Oh, and the nurses you bullied into silence? They’re all giving statements this afternoon. Turns out, when someone finally listens, people remember everything.” I stepped into the hallway. The nurses were no longer pretending not to watch. One of them, Marisol, who’d cried in the break room after he’d screamed at her last month, started clapping. Then another. Then the whole floor. Six months later, I was named interim Chief of Cardiology. Mr. Ashford got his surgery. He walked his daughter down the aisle that spring. And Dr. Whitman? He’s selling timeshares in Boca. I hear he’s not very good at it.
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