Then a man in a gray cashmere coat clutched his chest three feet from the revolving door and dropped like a cut marionette. His wife screamed. Preston froze — actually froze, mouth open, hands floating uselessly at his sides like he’d never seen a body hit tile before. The code cart was thirty feet away. I was already moving. I hit my knees beside the man, cleared his airway, felt for a pulse that wasn’t there, and started compressions while barking orders at the frozen resident: “Crash cart, epi, get anesthesia down here NOW.” Ninety seconds. Two rounds of CPR, one shock, and Mr. Vale — because of course it was Preston’s father, the man whose photo hung in the board room — coughed back into the world under my hands. Preston was still standing there holding his stupid tablet when the Chief of Staff came sprinting through the doors, took one look at me covered in the older man’s coffee, and said the words loud enough for the whole lobby to hear: “Colonel. Thank God you were on the floor.” Preston’s tablet hit the tile. “Colonel?” The Chief didn’t even look at him. “Colonel Elena Reyes, U.S. Army Reserve, trauma-certified, twenty-two years, three deployments. She’s not staff, Preston. She’s the consulting director the board hired last month to audit YOU.” I finally stood up, wiped my hands on a towel someone handed me, and met Preston’s eyes over his own father’s stretcher. “You were saying something,” I said quietly, “about a bedpan technician?” His father, oxygen mask fogging, reached up and grabbed my wrist with the grip of a man who wasn’t done living. Then he turned his head, looked at his son, and in a voice like gravel said the only word Preston would remember for the rest of his career: “Apologize.” Security didn’t drag anyone out that night. They didn’t have to. Preston walked out on his own two feet, past the revolving door, past the ambulance bay, past twenty-two years he’d just tried to fire in ninety seconds.
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