“Before I go,” I said quietly, “I’d like the board to hear something.” Halbrook rolled his eyes. “Iris, spare us the tears.” I placed a small recorder on the table and pressed play. His own voice filled the room, crisp and unmistakable: “Let the Chen woman handle Room 12. If the kid codes, it’s on her license, not mine. I’m not tanking my numbers for a charity case.” The color drained from his face. I pressed play again. Another clip. Then another — six years of hallway conversations, whispered orders, patients he’d refused because their insurance was ‘inconvenient.’ The board chair, Mrs. Alvarez, slowly set down her pen. “Where did you get these?” she asked. “Every surgeon at this hospital wears a badge mic during procedures,” I said. “Dr. Halbrook signed the policy himself in 2019. I simply requested my own archived audio through legal channels last month — after I noticed he was preparing to fire me for ‘insubordination’ the same week I reported him to the state medical board.” I slid a thick folder across the table. “Forty-seven cases. Patients he refused or delayed. Twelve deaths that shouldn’t have happened. The Attorney General’s office received the same file this morning at nine.” Halbrook stood up so fast his chair toppled. “This is a witch hunt —” “Sit down, Marcus,” Mrs. Alvarez said, without looking at him. She turned to me. “Dr. Chen. The termination letter is void. Effective immediately, Dr. Halbrook is placed on administrative leave pending investigation. And the position of Chief of Cardiothoracic Surgery is yours, if you’ll accept it.” I picked up the folded letter, walked around the table, and dropped it gently into Halbrook’s lap. “Sign these papers,” I said softly, “and get out of my sight.” Then I walked back to Room 12, where my nineteen-year-old patient was waking up, alive, and asking for the doctor who refused to give up on her.
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