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

I picked up the pen. Preston smiled — that slow, victorious smile I’d seen him give junior residents before he destroyed their careers. Then I set the pen down beside the unsigned letter and reached into my bag. “Before I sign anything, Preston, I’d like you to look at something.” I placed a thin folder on his desk. He opened it with a smirk that died on the second page. Inside were eighteen months of documentation: every altered surgical report where he’d inflated outcomes, every billing code he’d manipulated, every patient he’d misdiagnosed and blamed on residents. Behind that, signed affidavits from four nurses, two anesthesiologists, and his own former fellow. “I’ve already submitted copies,” I said quietly. “To the state medical board. To the federal attorney handling the Medicare fraud investigation your cousin somehow forgot to mention is currently active. And to the Beaumont Foundation — the actual donors, not the board your cousin sits on.” His face went the color of hospital linen. “You little—” “Dr. Reyes,” I corrected. “And one more thing.” I slid out a final document. “The Beaumont Foundation reviewed my pediatric cardiac program last month. They’ve offered me the directorship of the new children’s heart institute they’re funding. Independent of the hospital. Independent of you.” I stood, smoothing my scrubs. “I came in here today to give you the chance to resign quietly. Your cousin already took it twenty minutes ago. Security is waiting outside to escort you out.” Preston’s hand trembled as he reached for the phone that would never ring for him again. I picked up the resignation letter he’d written for me, tore it neatly in half, and let the pieces flutter onto his desk. “By the way,” I said at the door, “the little nurse who thinks she’s a doctor just became your boss’s boss. Try to look emotional about it.”

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