“Before I sign anything, Marcus,” I said softly, “you should probably check your email.” His smirk flickered. He didn’t move, so I pulled out my phone and slid it across the desk, screen up. It was a forwarded message from Dr. Patel, the editor-in-chief at NEJM, timestamped four hours earlier. Subject line: Authorship Verification Inquiry — Thorne Submission. Marcus’s face drained of color as he scrolled. What he didn’t know was that I had registered every draft of that paper on a timestamped academic preprint server back in January, complete with my raw data, my patient anonymization keys, and my advisor’s signed acknowledgment. I had also, on a hunch six months ago, started CC’ing my personal encrypted email on every revision Marcus had ever “reviewed” — fourteen versions, all in my handwriting, all in my voice, all predating his so-called contributions by months. “You can’t prove —” he started. “I already did,” I said. “Dr. Patel called me this morning. The journal is retracting your submission and opening a formal misconduct review with the medical board. Your dean has been notified. Your wife’s father, the hospital chairman? He got a copy too, because apparently he’s listed as a financial disclosure on your last three papers.” Marcus sank into his leather chair like the bones had gone out of him. I picked my phone back up, then the unsigned resignation letter. I tore it neatly in half and let the pieces flutter onto his desk. “I’m not resigning, Marcus. You are. I just came from Dr. Patel’s office — she offered me your chair after the review concludes.” I walked to the door, then turned. “Oh, and the pediatric cardiac unit? The kids you forgot existed while you were busy stealing my work? They’re going to be just fine. I made sure of that.” I left the door open behind me. Some things deserve an audience.
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