I picked up the pen. Marcus smiled. Then I set it down beside the folder I’d brought with me. ‘Before I sign anything, Marcus, I think the board should see Exhibit A.’ I slid the folder to the chairman, Dr. Patterson, whose hands trembled slightly as he opened it. Inside were the original surgical logs, anesthesia records, and intraoperative photographs — each one timestamped, each one bearing my initials, not Marcus’s. Three hundred and sixty-two surgeries. Every single one performed by me while he golfed in Pebble Beach or ‘consulted’ in Aspen. ‘Exhibit B,’ I continued, sliding a second folder, ‘is the recording from last Tuesday, in which Dr. Halpern instructed me to falsify Mrs. Abernathy’s chart to hide his pre-op error. Exhibit C is the email chain where he billed Medicare for procedures he was demonstrably not present for.’ The room went silent. Marcus’s face drained from tan to chalk. ‘You little —’ ‘Doctor,’ I corrected gently. ‘Dr. Cho. And I’d choose the next word carefully, because the federal agent in the lobby is already holding a subpoena with your name on it.’ Dr. Patterson looked up from the folder, his voice hoarse. ‘Marcus. Step outside.’ I stood, smoothed my blazer, and turned to the board. ‘I’m not resigning. I’m accepting the Chief of Surgery position you offered me last spring — the one Dr. Halpern intercepted and declined on my behalf. That email is Exhibit D.’ As I walked past Marcus, he grabbed my sleeve. I looked down at his hand, then up at his eyes, the way I’d looked at a thousand failing hearts on my table. Calm. Certain. Unafraid. ‘Let go, Marcus. You’re shaking. That’s bad for the patients.’ I closed the boardroom door behind me. Outside, the morning sun hit the marble floor like a verdict.
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