I picked up the pen. Vincent’s shoulders dropped in relief, that smug little exhale he did when things went his way. I clicked the pen twice. Then I set it down beside the paper, untouched. “Before I sign anything,” I said, “you should probably meet my study group.” His forehead creased. That’s when the double doors behind him swung open. Dr. Priya Anand from Risk Management walked in first, tablet in hand. Behind her came Marcus from hospital legal, then two members of the State Nursing Board who’d driven in from the capital that morning. And behind them, wheeling a small cart with a laptop, was Eleanor Reyes, the daughter of the grandmother in room 412, who happened to be a malpractice attorney in Boston. Vincent’s face went the color of hospital linen. “Nora, what is this?” I reached into my scrub pocket and pulled out a slim recorder. “Eight months of medication overrides you signed under my name. Eleven falsified charts. Three verbal orders you denied giving after patients coded. And tonight’s little speech, in front of witnesses.” I slid the recorder across the counter, right next to his resignation letter. “I already filed with the board Tuesday. The letter you wanted me to sign? That was your last chance to leave quietly.” Priya cleared her throat. “Dr. Halloway, your privileges are suspended pending review. Please surrender your badge.” He reached for the counter to steady himself, knocking over his own coffee. It bled across the resignation letter, smearing his signature line into nothing. Eleanor stepped forward, her voice soft as silk. “My mother woke up this morning, Doctor. She remembered everything you said when you thought she was sedated.” I unclipped my ID and pinned it back on straight. Then I picked up my clipboard and walked past him toward room 412, because my patient was waiting, and for the first time in six years, so was my future.
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