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

I clicked the pen open, then closed. “Before I sign anything, Dr. Whitman, I’d like to introduce someone.” I walked to the boardroom door and opened it. In walked a small woman in a gray cardigan — Eunice Park, the hospital’s overnight medical records archivist. Nobody on that board had ever bothered to learn her name. Bryce’s smirk twitched. “Eunice has worked the basement archives for twenty-six years,” I said. “She’s the one who scans every paper chart into the system. Every original. Every edit. Every deletion request signed by a physician.” Eunice set a thick manila folder on the table. “Forty-three charts,” she said softly. “All altered by Dr. Whitman over the last four years. All to cover medication errors, missed diagnoses, and one fatality the family was told was ‘natural causes.'” The CEO’s face went the color of hospital linen. Bryce shot up. “Those archives are confidential property of —” “They’re federal evidence now,” I said. I pulled out my phone and turned the screen toward him. An email thread. “The Department of Health and Human Services received the full file at 6 a.m. this morning. The state nursing board received a copy at 6:15. The Dallas Morning News at 6:30. And the family of Mrs. Coretta James — the patient you let die in room 412 — was notified at 7.” The room went silent except for the hum of the AC. Bryce sank back into his leather chair like the air had left his lungs. I slid the resignation letter back across the table, the blank signature line still empty. “I’m not resigning, Dr. Whitman. You are. And so is every board member who signed off on burying those reports.” I looked at the CEO. “Your daughter married a man who killed a patient to protect his bonus. I suggest you call your lawyer before you call her.” I walked out in my faded scrubs and cheap sneakers. Six weeks later, I was named Interim Chief Nursing Officer. Eunice got her name on a real office door. And Bryce Whitman lost his license in three states.

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