“Before I sign anything,” I said, “you should probably look at your email.” Dr. Bennett laughed — that short, barking laugh he used on nurses. “My email? Sweetheart, I AM the email around here.” I slid my phone across the desk, screen up. His face changed the way ice changes when it cracks. On the screen was a forwarded message, time-stamped 4:14 that morning, sent to the hospital’s Chief of Staff, the Chair of the Board, and the state medical licensing board. Attached were seventeen patient charts — every single one a case where he’d ordered unnecessary procedures on elderly Medicare patients, then billed under MY name because I’d been the resident on rotation. I’d noticed the pattern eight months ago. I’d been quietly building the file ever since. “You see, Dr. Bennett, I didn’t just cover your Friday shifts. I read every chart you touched.” His mouth opened. Nothing came out. The office phone rang. We both looked at it. The caller ID read CHIEF OF STAFF. “You should probably answer that,” I said. I picked up the resignation letter he’d printed for me, tore it in half, and laid the two pieces neatly on his desk like a folded napkin. “I drafted a different one last night. It’s already in HR’s inbox. It’s yours.” Three weeks later, his parking spot had my name on it. Six weeks later, the patients he’d over-billed received settlement letters, and the residency program he used to terrorize got a new director — me. I still work the Friday shifts. I just don’t cover anyone else’s anymore. And every morning when I walk past what used to be his office, I click my pen once, gently, and keep walking. Some people mistake quiet for empty. They never hear the case being built against them until the verdict is already signed.
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