I lowered my hand. I didn’t argue. I just walked calmly to the wall phone and made one internal call. “Code Situation, Bay 4. I need Administration and Security. Now.” Vivian laughed. “Oh, you’re calling security on me? On ME?” Then the double doors hissed open. Dr. Marcus Hale — Chief of Staff — walked in flanked by two hospital security officers and the head of the cardiology board. Behind them, a woman in a charcoal suit carrying a black folder with the hospital seal. Vivian’s smile cracked. “Marcus, thank God, this nurse is interfering with—” He didn’t even look at her. He looked at me. “Dr. Vega. Your assessment.” The room went silent. Vivian’s hands started shaking. “Dr… Vega?” I stepped back to the patient, calm as glass. “Wrong dosage, wrong rhythm protocol, and she’s about to push a drug he’s allergic to. Chart’s flagged in red. She didn’t read it.” Marcus turned to Vivian with the kind of quiet that ends careers. “Dr. Cross. This is Dr. Elena Vega. Board-certified cardiothoracic surgeon. New Director of Emergency Cardiac Response. Starting today. Your supervisor. Starting today.” Vivian’s mouth opened. Nothing came out. The woman in the suit stepped forward and opened the folder. “Dr. Cross, we’ve also received seventeen complaints matching a pattern of misconduct. Effective immediately, you are suspended pending review. Please hand your badge and lanyard to security.” Vivian looked at me — really looked — for the first time. At the ID she never read. At the small silver pin on my collar she’d mistaken for decoration. Her voice came out like paper. “You… you were undercover?” I picked up the correct syringe, saved the patient in ninety seconds, then finally turned to her. “No. I was just doing my job. You were the one pretending.”
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