I picked up the pen. Preston smirked. Then I clicked it closed and slid the paper back. “I don’t think I will, Dr. Vance.” His jaw tightened. “Excuse me?” I reached into the chest pocket of my scrubs and pulled out a small black recorder, the kind we use for patient dictation. I set it on the counter between us. “This is the seventh conversation we’ve had this month. The other six are already with the State Board of Medicine, the hospital’s outside counsel, and a reporter at the Tribune who’s been waiting eleven months for someone to go on the record.” The color drained from his face in real time, like watching IV fluid run backward. “You’re bluffing.” “Mr. Donovan’s family is also waiting,” I said quietly. “The valve patient. I scanned the original chart before you changed it. Time-stamped. Cloud-backed. His daughter is an attorney in Chicago. She landed two hours ago.” The elevator dinged behind him. Three people stepped out: the hospital CEO, a woman in a charcoal suit holding a briefcase, and a uniformed officer. Preston turned slowly, and I watched a decade of untouchable arrogance collapse into something small and gray. The CEO didn’t even look at him. He looked at me. “Maya, do you have a moment?” I nodded. As they walked Preston toward the conference room, he glanced back once, mouth open like he wanted to say something cruel, something that would put me back in my place. Nothing came out. The two young nurses at the station were still frozen. I picked up the resignation letter, folded it neatly, and dropped it in the shred bin. “Ladies,” I said, “let’s finish rounds.” One of them, barely twenty-three, whispered, “How long have you been recording him?” I smiled for the first time in months. “Since the day he told me nobody would ever believe a nurse over a surgeon.” Three weeks later, I was named interim Director of Patient Safety. Preston’s medical license was suspended pending trial. And Mr. Donovan’s family settled for an amount that bought his widow a house by the ocean she’d been dreaming about for forty years. Quiet women remember everything. We just wait for the right moment to press play.
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