What Marcus didn’t know was that two years earlier, after another doctor tried to pin a dosage error on a night nurse named Priya, our charge nurse Eleanor had quietly installed something in every Pyxis machine on the floor: a secondary audit log that mirrored to an external server she controlled. Eleanor was sixty-three, four months from retirement, and she did not play. I signed his little resignation letter. I even cried a bit for effect. Marcus patted my shoulder and told me I was “making the mature choice.” Then I walked straight to Eleanor’s office. By 6 a.m., she’d pulled the mirrored logs, the original unedited chart, and the keystroke history showing Marcus logging in under a borrowed resident’s credentials at 11:47 p.m. the night Toby coded. By 7 a.m., the hospital’s Chief Medical Officer was looking at timestamped proof that Marcus had ordered the dose, ignored my two written flags, and then doctored the record. By 9 a.m., the state medical board had been notified. By noon, Toby’s parents had a lawyer. Marcus strolled into the morning huddle at 10:15 in a fresh white coat, ready to announce my “voluntary departure.” Instead, security was waiting at the nurses’ station with his badge already deactivated. He turned to me, face the color of curdled milk, and hissed, “You little—” Eleanor stepped between us, calm as Sunday morning. “She’s not little, Marcus. She’s the nurse who saved that baby twice. Once in the room, and once on paper.” They walked him out past every staff member he’d ever belittled. Toby came off the vent the next week and asked for the “nurse with the star stickers.” I kept my job. I kept my license. And the resignation letter? Eleanor had it framed for my desk. Right next to a thank-you card from Toby, drawn in shaky crayon, that just said: “You listened.”
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