“Before I sign anything, Preston,” I said quietly, “you should know something about Mr. Avalon in room 412.” His jaw twitched. Mr. Avalon was the patient he’d skipped the check on. “His daughter came in yesterday. Sweet woman. Lawyer. She asked me a lot of questions about her father’s care.” Preston’s smirk flickered. “I told her everything was textbook. Because I assumed it was.” I set the pen down. “Then I pulled the medication logs. And the door-badge timestamps. And the vitals chart you signed off on at 11:47 p.m. — which is interesting, because the badge system says you didn’t enter that room until 12:09.” The color drained out of his face like someone had unplugged him. “That’s twenty-two minutes of falsified documentation, Preston. On a post-op cardiac patient. Whose daughter,” I added, “is currently in the parking lot waiting for me to email her a copy.” His mouth opened. Nothing came out. From behind him, a calm voice said, “Dr. Hale. My office. Now.” Dr. Ramirez, Chief of Medicine. She’d been standing in the supply alcove the entire time. I hadn’t called her. The charge nurse had — the moment Preston slid that letter across my counter. Turns out twenty-six years on a floor earns you friends. Preston tried to laugh. “Eleanor’s confused, she —” “I have the badge logs on my phone, Preston,” Dr. Ramirez said. “Eleanor forwarded them an hour ago. Walk.” He walked. He didn’t look at me. He couldn’t. I picked the resignation letter back up, folded it neatly into a paper crane the way my granddaughter taught me, and set it on top of the trash. Mr. Avalon recovered. His daughter sent flowers — and a sworn affidavit. Preston lost his license six weeks later. They offered me his office. I said no. I asked for two more chairs at the nurses’ station instead. Because that’s where the real doctors of this floor have always been standing.
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