Sign the resignation letter, sweetheart, or I’ll make sure no hospital in this state

“Before I sign anything, Marcus,” I said quietly, “I think the board should see what I brought.” I reached into my leather bag and pulled out a slim black folder. Marcus laughed — a sharp, ugly bark. “More of your little charts? Nobody cares.” I slid the folder to Dr. Harrington, the chairman. Inside were timestamped lab notebooks, email threads, and surgical footage — every one proving that the “Vance Valve Technique” he’d just published in the New England Journal was mine. Every measurement. Every diagram. Even the typo in figure 4B that he’d copied without noticing. The room went silent except for the sound of pages turning. Then I placed a second document on the table. “This is a letter from Johns Hopkins,” I said. “They’ve been quietly funding my research for eighteen months. They know exactly whose work this is. As of Monday morning, I’ll be leading their new pediatric cardiac institute. The grant I brought with me? Forty-two million dollars. It was supposed to come here, Marcus. To this hospital. Under my name.” Dr. Harrington’s head snapped up. “Forty-two million?” Marcus’s face drained of color. “Elena — wait — we can talk about this —” “You wanted my resignation,” I said, standing up and smoothing my coat. “You’ll have it. Effective immediately.” I picked up his pen, signed the letter he’d shoved at me, and slid it back. “Enjoy explaining to the board why you just cost them a children’s wing.” As I walked to the door, Dr. Harrington called after me. “Elena — please. Whatever he offered, we’ll double it.” I paused with my hand on the handle. “He offered me silence,” I said. “You should ask him what else he’s been hiding.” I glanced back once at Marcus, who was staring at his own published paper like it had turned into a snake. “Oh, and Marcus? The retraction notice goes live at midnight. I’d call your wife before the press does.” Then I walked out, and for the first time in six months, I could breathe.

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