What Marcus didn’t know was that for the last six months, the Department of Health had been quietly building a case against Brookline General’s surgical department. My husband, Ben, is a forensic medical auditor. He doesn’t talk about his clients. He didn’t have to. The morning I’d reported Marcus, I’d also forwarded every falsified chart, every altered timestamp, and every prescription anomaly to the investigator Ben worked under. I just hadn’t told Marcus that part. Two days later, I walked back into Brookline General wearing the same navy scrubs, except this time I had a state ID badge clipped to my chest as a clinical consultant for the investigation. Marcus was in the lobby barking at a junior resident when he saw me. The color drained from his face. “Diane,” he stammered, “about our conversation—” I held up a hand. “Save it for the deposition.” Behind me, two investigators and hospital legal counsel walked in carrying boxes. They headed straight for his office. By the end of the week, Marcus was suspended without pay. By the end of the month, his medical license was under formal review, and the 7-year-old boy’s family had filed a malpractice suit that named him personally. The board offered me his position. I turned it down. Instead, I accepted a role overseeing patient safety reform across the entire hospital network — a role created specifically because of what I’d exposed. On my first day, I walked past his old office. The nameplate was gone. A janitor was scraping his title off the glass door. He looked up at me and smiled. “New boss?” he asked. I smiled back. “Something like that.” I thought about the little boy recovering in pediatrics, about the nurses who’d been too scared to speak up, about every time Marcus had told me I was replaceable. Then I kept walking. Some men sign your resignation letter. Others hand you the keys to the whole building.
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