“Before I sign anything,” I said quietly, “I’d like the board to hear something.” I reached into my coat pocket and placed a small recorder on the table. Marcus laughed. “Eleanor, please. Theatrics?” I pressed play. His voice filled the room: “Just bill the Medicare patients for the robotic-assist code. Nobody audits cardiac. We split the overage through the consulting LLC.” The color drained from his face. Then a second clip: him instructing a resident to falsify post-op notes on Mrs. Halloway, the patient who’d coded last March, the patient whose family still sent me Christmas cards because they thought I’d done everything I could. I hadn’t. Marcus had pulled me off the case at the last minute and assigned his roommate from residency. Margaret Chen, the board chair, set down her pen. “Where did you get these?” “Dr. Whitfield’s own dictation software,” I said. “It auto-uploads to the hospital server. I’ve had IT pulling files for four months. There are ninety-three more recordings. The FBI received copies this morning at nine a.m., along with the billing spreadsheets from the LLC registered to his wife.” Marcus stood up so fast his chair toppled. “You can’tâ” “I already did.” I slid the unsigned resignation letter back across the table. “I believe this is yours now.” Two men in dark suits stepped into the boardroom. They didn’t introduce themselves; they didn’t need to. As they walked Marcus out, his father’s name dying on his lips, Margaret turned to me. “Eleanor. The Chief position is yours, effective immediately. Whatever you need.” I picked up my recorder, slipped it back into my pocket, and finally let myself smile. “What I need,” I said, “is for someone to call the Halloway family. They deserve to know the truth before the news does.”
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