Sign the resignation letter, Margaret, or I’ll make sure every hospital in this state

Preston leaned back, gold cufflinks catching the light. “Make it quick, Margaret. Some of us still have careers.” I reached into my worn leather satchel, the one my late husband gave me in 1987, and pulled out a thin manila folder. “Before I sign, I’d like the board to know why Preston is so eager to see me gone this particular week.” I slid twelve copies down the table. “Tuesday morning, eight-year-old Eli Brennan died on Preston’s table during a routine valve repair. The official report blames equipment failure. The anesthesia logs, which Preston ordered deleted on Wednesday, tell a different story.” The room went silent. I continued, my voice steady as it had always been in the OR. “Preston was operating on less than three hours of sleep after a charity gala. He skipped the pre-op timeout. Nurse Patel filed an internal complaint that was buried in HR by Thursday, the same day Preston suddenly decided I needed to retire.” Preston shot up. “This is slander, she’s lost her mind, she’s—” “I’m the one who taught Nurse Patel to keep backup copies,” I said softly. “And I’m the one Eli’s mother called last night, because Eli was my patient first. She wanted me to know she’s filing suit Monday morning, and she wanted to thank me for being honest with her about what really happened.” The Chairman, a man I’d gone to medical school with, slowly picked up the resignation letter, tore it in half, and set it down. “Preston. Hand me your badge.” Preston’s face drained white. I stood, smoothed my blazer, and picked up my satchel. At the door I paused. “You wrote on my recommendation that I taught you everything you know about surgery, Preston. I’m sorry I didn’t also teach you everything I know about integrity.” I walked out, and three operating rooms full of nurses were waiting in the hallway, applauding.

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