
Betrayal in White Coats
Chapter 3
The surgical debrief room felt colder than usual as I presented the case review. Charts and monitors surrounded us, clinical and detached—much like how I was forcing myself to be after discovering Marcus's marriage to Chloe. Three days had passed since that revelation, and I'd thrown myself into work with renewed focus, determined not to let my personal devastation affect my patients.
"The patient presented with acute aortic dissection," I explained, gesturing to the imaging displayed on the screen. "Dr. Rivers initiated the procedure, but there were several critical decision points where the approach should have been adjusted."
I kept my voice steady and professional as I highlighted the technical errors in Chloe's surgical technique. Not to humiliate her, but because patient safety demanded accuracy. Lives depended on our precision.
Chloe sat across from me, her wedding ring catching the fluorescent light with every dramatic gesture. She slumped in her chair, making a show of exhaustion, though I knew she'd taken the afternoon off yesterday for a spa appointment.
"The graft placement here," I continued, pointing to the scan, "should have been repositioned to account for the tissue friability. The current positioning risks post-operative complications."
I felt rather than saw Marcus tense beside me. He'd been hovering protectively near Chloe since their "contractual" marriage became public knowledge.
"Are we done with this witch hunt?" Chloe suddenly snapped, pushing her chair back with a screech that echoed through the room. "Some of us were actually performing surgery instead of hiding in our offices."
The room fell silent. Several colleagues exchanged uncomfortable glances. Sarah Jenkins, our veteran nurse who had assisted in the procedure, straightened her spine, clearly offended by Chloe's dismissal of a legitimate medical critique.
"This isn't personal, Dr. Rivers," I replied evenly. "It's standard procedure to review complex cases for educational purposes."
"Everything is personal with you," she hissed, gathering her things. "Just because Marcus chose me doesn't give you the right to nitpick my work."
She stormed out, leaving a wake of murmurs and awkward silence. Marcus hesitated, caught between following her and maintaining professional decorum. Ultimately, he chose her, as he always did now.
"Meeting adjourned," I said quietly, turning off the display. "Please review the updated protocol in your emails."
As the room cleared, I caught several sympathetic glances from colleagues who understood exactly what was happening. Their silent support meant more than they knew.
---
The emergency alert blared through the hallways two hours later. I was reviewing patient files when the overhead announcement called for all available surgical staff to OR 2.
I ran, my white coat flapping behind me. The scene that greeted me was chaos—monitors blaring, nurses scrambling, and a patient on the table in clear distress. Chloe was nowhere to be seen, though surgical tools lay scattered, the procedure clearly interrupted mid-operation.
"What happened?" I demanded, already moving to scrub in.
"Dr. Rivers just... left," a nurse explained, her voice tight with disbelief. "The patient's pressure dropped, and she just walked out saying she needed a break."
There was no time for shock or anger. The patient—a middle-aged man with three children, according to his chart—was coding. His aortic repair was incomplete, blood pooling where it shouldn't.
"Get me gowned," I ordered, my hands already under the sterilizing water. Despite everything—the betrayal, the humiliation, the heartbreak—my hands were perfectly steady. In surgery, I was still myself. Here, at least, I knew exactly who I was and what I was capable of.
The next forty minutes were a blur of focused intensity. I repaired what Chloe had abandoned, my movements precise and efficient. When the final stitch was placed and the patient stabilized, a collective sigh of relief filled the room.
"Beautiful work, Dr. Chen," Sarah said quietly as we stepped away from the table. "As always."
---
"You saved that man's life today," Sarah cornered me later as I updated the patient's chart. Her eyes were fierce with a protective anger I hadn't expected. "What Dr. Rivers did was beyond unprofessional—it was criminal negligence."
I glanced around, ensuring we were alone. "Sarah—"
"No," she interrupted. "I've been quiet too long. We all have. This isn't the first time she's endangered patients, and Marcus keeps covering for her. It has to stop."
Something shifted inside me as I listened to Sarah's words. The weight of responsibility—not just for my own broken heart, but for our patients, for the integrity of the center we'd built—settled on my shoulders.
"Document everything," I said quietly. "Every incident, every deviation from protocol."
That night, I lay in bed staring at the ceiling, sleep eluding me. But for the first time since discovering Marcus's betrayal, it wasn't grief keeping me awake. It was determination. The woman who had waited seven years for a man who would marry someone else after mere months was gone.
In her place was someone stronger, someone who would no longer stand by while patients were endangered and her life's work was dismantled.
Tomorrow would be different. Tomorrow, I would fight back.
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