Marcus smirked and flipped the folder open, expecting my signed resignation. Instead, he found forty-two pages of timestamped surgical logs, encrypted email exports, and a signed affidavit from Nurse Delgado. His smile cracked. ‘What is this?’ The board chairman, Mr. Halverson, leaned forward. I finally spoke. ‘That’s every case in the last eighteen months where Dr. Vance billed as lead surgeon while I performed the procedure. That’s the email where he told Dr. Kim to alter the Peterson child’s chart after the seizure incident. And that,’ I pointed to the last tab, ‘is the manuscript for the seizure protocol paper he published in the New England Journal last spring. My name is on the original draft, dated eleven months before his submission.’ The room went so quiet I could hear the AC hum. Marcus stood up too fast, his chair screeching. ‘She’s lying. She’s a disgruntled resident.’ I slid a second folder toward Halverson. ‘The federal Office of Research Integrity received identical copies this morning at nine a.m. Along with the state medical board. I wanted to give you the courtesy of seeing it first.’ Halverson’s face drained of color. He looked at Marcus like he was seeing him for the first time. ‘Marcus, don’t leave the building.’ Two hospital security guards appeared at the glass door — I’d asked them to wait. Marcus turned to me, voice cracking. ‘Nora, please. My family. My career.’ I stood up slowly, picked up the pen he’d slid toward me, and set it back down in front of him. ‘Sign the resignation letter, sweetie,’ I said softly. ‘Or I’ll make sure no hospital in this country ever hires you again.’ I walked out past the trembling interns, past the whispering board, past the wall where his portrait hung as ‘Surgeon of the Year.’ By Monday, my name was on the door of his old office. And the Peterson family finally got the apology letter they’d been waiting eleven months to receive.
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