I tapped the mic twice. The room hushed, expecting my resignation. Instead, I smiled. “Before I step down, I’d like to thank the Whitaker family for their twenty-year legacy here. Especially Diane, who insisted I personally audit the surgical donations made in her late husband’s name.” Diane’s glass froze mid-air. See, what Diane didn’t know was that three months ago, the board had quietly asked me — not Mark — to investigate why pediatric trauma funds kept vanishing. I’d said nothing. I’d just watched. And documented. I clicked the projector remote I’d hidden in my coat pocket. The screen behind me lit up with wire transfers — six figures routed from the children’s wing into a shell company registered to Mark’s name, co-signed by Diane. Gasps rippled through the donors. “The good news,” I continued, voice steady, “is that every cent has been recovered. The bad news — for some of you — is that the state attorney’s office received the full file this morning.” Mark stood up so fast his chair tipped. Diane lunged for the microphone, hissing, “You ungrateful little nobody —” Security stepped between us before she could touch me. The board chair, pale as paper, took the mic from my hand and announced that the Whitakers were, effective immediately, removed from every position at St. Mara’s. Then he turned to me. “Dr. Elena Reyes will be assuming the role of Chief of Surgery.” The applause was slow at first, then thunderous. Mark mouthed, “Please.” I slid my wedding ring off and placed it gently on the podium beside my untouched champagne. “Keep it,” I said. “Consider it a donation.” I walked out past Diane, who was being quietly escorted by two officers who’d been waiting by the coat check the whole time. Outside, the night air smelled like rain and freedom. My phone buzzed — the teenager from surgery was awake, asking for the doctor who saved him. I smiled, pulled my coat tighter, and went back to the only family that ever mattered: my patients.
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