I slid the paper back across the table, untouched. ‘I’m not signing that, Preston.’ He laughed, looking around at the board like I was a child throwing a tantrum. ‘Then enjoy unemployment.’ I opened the manila folder I’d brought with me. ‘Before you fire me, I think the board should see what’s inside.’ The chairman, Mr. Aldridge, frowned. ‘Ms. Whitman, this is highly irregular—’ ‘So is a surgeon performing a valve replacement with a blood alcohol level of 0.14,’ I said quietly. The room went still. I laid out the timestamped pre-op photos I’d taken of Preston slurring in the scrub room. The anesthesiologist’s private text messages begging him to step away. The pharmacy logs showing him diverting fentanyl under a deceased patient’s chart number. And finally, the sealed letter from Mrs. Caraway, the widow of the man who’d died on his table in March, hiring her own attorney. Preston’s face drained. ‘Those records are confidential—’ ‘They’re mine. I’m the charge nurse. I countersigned every one.’ Mr. Aldridge picked up the pharmacy log with a shaking hand. ‘Preston. Is this accurate?’ Preston opened his mouth. Nothing came out. I stood up slowly, smoothing my scrubs. ‘I came here tonight thinking you’d ask me to resign. So I already accepted a position. Mercy General offered me Director of Cardiac Nursing this morning. Triple your hospital’s salary. They also asked who in your department they should recruit. I gave them a list.’ I slid one final page across the table — eleven names. Every good nurse and resident Preston had ever belittled. ‘They start interviews Monday.’ I turned to the board. ‘Gentlemen, you’ll have my formal resignation by email. Effective tonight. I’d suggest you call your malpractice carrier before Mrs. Caraway’s lawyer calls you first.’ Preston lunged for the folder. I lifted it out of reach. ‘Oh — and Preston? The board can believe a nurse over a surgeon. They just did.’ I walked out into the hallway, badge in my pocket, and for the first time in six years, my hands weren’t shaking.
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