Preston uncapped a dry-erase marker and started rewriting the day’s surgical assignments. “I’ll take the aortic dissection at ten,” he announced. “Whoever Vasquez is, bump them. I don’t share tables with residents.” The room went quiet. Dr. Chen, my anesthesiologist of six years, slowly lowered her muffin. I set my coffee down. “Actually,” I said, walking over, “Vasquez is doing the dissection. And the mitral valve at one. And your credentialing interview at three.” He turned, still smirking. “And you are?” I opened the folder and slid it across the counter. His onboarding packet. My signature on the top line, right under the title: Chief of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Hiring Supervisor. The color drained from his face like someone had pulled a plug. “I— I didn’t— Doctor, I assumed—” “You assumed a lot of things this morning,” I said. “Including that Mrs. Okafor in bed twelve wanted a male surgeon. She specifically requested me. She’s been my patient for two years.” I flipped to the second page. “Also, your Dallas clinic forwarded three pending complaints about bedside conduct. HR wants to discuss them at three-fifteen.” Preston opened his mouth. Nothing came out. Dr. Chen picked her muffin back up. “For the record,” I added, capping his marker, “the grown-up surgeon is scrubbing in now. You can observe from the gallery. Take notes. I hear the chief is very particular.” I walked out to a slow, unmistakable round of applause from two residents by the door. Six hours later, Mrs. Okafor’s new valve was humming like a clock, and Preston was on a plane back to Dallas by Friday. The staff bulletin got a small update the following Monday: a photo of me at the podium, and one quiet line underneath. “Read before you speak.”
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