“Before I sign anything,” I said, sliding the folder to the center of the table, “I think the board should see what’s actually inside the Henderson case files.” Preston’s smirk flickered. The chairman, a silver-haired woman named Eleanor Boyd, opened the folder. Inside were timestamped surgical logs, anesthesia records, and seventeen incident reports — all in Preston’s handwriting, all quietly corrected by me before they reached compliance. Underneath those were emails. Emails where Preston instructed me to “clean up” minor pediatric complications off the record, in exchange for a recommendation letter he never wrote. “That’s privileged,” Preston snapped, half-rising. “It’s evidence,” I said softly. “And it’s already with the state medical board. They opened the investigation this morning.” The room went so quiet I could hear the AC hum. Eleanor turned one page, then another, her jaw tightening with every line. Preston tried to laugh. “She’s lying. She’s bitter because I passed her over for chief.” I slid a second envelope across the table. “This is from Mercy General. They offered me the Chief of Pediatric Surgery position last week. I was going to decline out of loyalty to this hospital. I’ve reconsidered.” Eleanor closed the folder slowly. “Dr. Vance,” she said, without looking at him, “security will escort you to your office to collect personal items. Your privileges are suspended pending review.” Preston’s face drained of color. “Eleanor, you can’t —” “I just did.” She turned to me, and for the first time in three years, someone in that building said my full title out loud. “Dr. Mara Okafor. Would you consider staying — as our new Chief of Surgery?” I stood, smoothed my blazer, and picked up my badge. “I’ll think about it,” I said. “I have a dinner reservation at Mercy first.” I walked out past Preston without looking back. The door clicked shut behind me like a verdict.
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