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

“Before I sign, Marcus,” I said, my voice steady, “can you confirm for me which version of the Whitfield Pediatric Protocol you submitted to the New England Journal last Thursday? The draft from March, or the one from June?” His smirk twitched. “What are you talking about?” I set the pen down. From my coat pocket, I pulled a thin manila envelope and placed it beside the resignation letter. “Because the March draft has my name on every page. Timestamped. Notarized. Filed with the hospital’s research compliance office the day I wrote it.” His face went gray. “And the June version, the one you submitted under your name alone, removed three critical contraindications. The ones that would’ve killed the Hendricks boy last week if I hadn’t ignored your revised protocol in the OR.” Marcus stood up so fast his chair slammed the wall. “You can’t prove—” “I already did.” I slid my phone across the desk. On the screen: an email thread with the journal’s editor-in-chief, the hospital’s legal counsel, and the chairman of the board. Sent forty minutes ago. “Dr. Patel is waiting in conference room B. So is the board. So is a reporter from the Globe who’s been investigating research fraud at three major hospitals. I told them I’d bring you down personally.” His mouth opened. Nothing came out. I picked up the resignation letter, tore it neatly in half, and let the pieces flutter onto his desk. “You were right about one thing, Marcus. Someone in this hospital is finishing their career today.” I walked to the door, then paused. “Oh, and the pediatric wing? The board voted twenty minutes ago. They’re naming the new cardiac unit after my mother. She cleaned offices in this building for twenty-two years. She used to mop this floor.” I closed the door softly behind me. Three weeks later, I sat in his chair. The first thing I did was hire the resident he’d fired for reporting him. The second thing I did was frame my mother’s old employee badge and hang it above the desk.

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