Then the double doors of the boardroom burst open and a young assistant screamed for help. Mr. Kendrick, the founder, had collapsed at the head of the table. Vivian froze. The men in suits froze. Someone shouted for security, someone else fumbled with a phone. I dropped the file and moved. I was through the doors before Vivian finished turning her head. Mr. Kendrick was on the carpet, gray, lips going blue, no pulse under my fingers. I called it out clean and fast. Airway clear, no pulse, starting compressions, someone get the AED from the wall by reception, someone else call a code and tell them cardiac arrest, sixty eight year old male, witnessed collapse. Vivian stammered that I could not just, and I cut her off without looking up. I told her to sit down and stop talking. I ran the code on that boardroom floor for four minutes, compressions, breaths, one shock, compressions again, until the paramedics rolled in and I handed over with a full report in under twenty seconds. They looked at me differently after that. In the ambulance bay, the chief of medicine arrived, saw me, and stopped cold. He turned to Vivian and the frozen suits and said, this is Dr. Elena Marsh, our new Chief of Cardiac Emergency Response, she starts Monday, and she just kept your founder alive. Vivian’s mouth opened and closed. Mr. Kendrick’s daughter grabbed my hand and would not let go. The next morning Vivian was called into HR. I did not ask for it. I did not have to. The board had already watched the security footage of a VP telling their new department chief to use the service elevator while their father was ninety seconds from dying. Effective by lunch, Vivian Cross was no longer with Kendrick Health Group. I kept the navy cardigan. It still smells faintly of coffee and the moment nobody in that hallway will ever forget.
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