“You know what, Preston? I’ll sign it.” I picked up his gold-plated pen and watched his smug grin widen. “But before I do — you should probably check your email.” His grin faltered. I nodded toward his computer. “Go on. The one from the Joint Commission. Timestamp 6:47 a.m.” He clicked, and I watched the color drain from his face in real time. For eleven months, I’d been quietly documenting every falsified surgical log, every altered patient outcome, every research paper where he’d inserted his name above mine. I’d cross-referenced his operating room hours with the parking garage records — because a surgeon can’t perform a valve replacement from a golf course in Scottsdale. My cousin Miguel, a compliance auditor, had helped me package it. Two hundred and thirty-one pages. “You’re being investigated for Medicare fraud, credential misrepresentation, and research misconduct,” I said softly. “The board convened an emergency session at six. Your access badge was deactivated eight minutes ago. Try the door.” He didn’t move. “Also — Mrs. Chen? The patient you billed for a triple bypass last March? I performed that surgery. Alone. She’s prepared to testify.” His phone started ringing. Then his desk phone. Then a knock at the door — security, with a hospital attorney and a very pale Chief of Staff. I slid the resignation letter back across the desk. “I brought you a pen,” I said. “You’ll need it.” As I walked out, the Chief of Staff caught my arm. “Dr. Cortez — the board would like to offer you interim department head. Effective immediately.” I straightened my badge. In the hallway, my patients were waiting. Mrs. Chen waved from room 402. I waved back. Preston Wexler spent six months trying to erase my name from my own work. He forgot that surgeons are trained to cut precisely — and I’d been holding the scalpel the whole time.
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