Preston leaned back, swirling his bourbon. “Smart girl. I knew you’d see reason.” I folded the letter, tucked it into my coat pocket, and stood. “Before I go, Preston, you should know the seven-year-old you operated on last Tuesday? The Hollings boy?” His smile flickered. “What about him?” “You billed for a full valve replacement. The kid only needed a balloon procedure. His mother is a paralegal. She got curious when her copay didn’t match the surgical report. She came to me.” The bourbon stopped swirling. I pulled out my phone and pressed play. His own voice filled the room: *”Nobody audits pediatric cardiology, Iris. The parents are too scared to ask questions. It’s free money.”* His face went the color of hospital linen. “That’s — that’s illegally recorded —” “Single-party consent state, Preston. You should’ve checked.” The door opened behind me. Two FBI agents stepped in, followed by Marcy Hollings herself, arms crossed, eyes burning. “Dr. Vale,” the lead agent said, “we have warrants for your office, your home, and your offshore accounts in the Caymans.” I walked out past him, past the nurses who’d whispered for years that something wasn’t right, past the residents he’d bullied into silence. In the parking lot, the hospital board chair was waiting with a contract. “Iris. We want you as interim Chief of Staff. Effective immediately.” I thought about the resignation letter still folded in my pocket. I took it out, tore it in half, and let the pieces flutter into the evening breeze. Six months later, Vale Memorial was renamed Hollings Children’s Hospital. Preston got eleven years. And every Tuesday, I do free clinic hours in the wing named after a little boy whose mother refused to stay quiet. Some men think a woman with a pen is harmless. Those are the men who never learn to read what she’s writing.
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