
Ex-Fiancé's Greed vs. Doctor's Justice
Chapter 1
Fourteen hours. My back ached, my fingers cramped, but little Elena Rodriguez had a new heart and a future ahead of her. I rolled my shoulders as I stepped away from the operating table, allowing myself a small smile of satisfaction as the monitors showed strong, steady beats.
"Excellent work as always, Dr. Powell," Marcus Chen said, his eyes crinkling above his surgical mask. "That valve reconstruction was nothing short of miraculous."
I nodded, too exhausted for false modesty. "The new technique is proving more effective than I'd hoped. Once we publish the results—"
The OR door swung open, and Nurse Patel poked her head in. Her expression made my stomach drop.
"Dr. Powell, Mr. Meyer has been looking for you. The quarterly meeting started two hours ago."
The meeting. I closed my eyes briefly. "Tell him I'm still in surgery with Elena. Her parents have been waiting since dawn."
"He knows. He said to remind you that attendance was mandatory."
I glanced at the clock: 2:17 PM. The meeting had started at noon, but Elena's transplant had taken longer than anticipated. What was I supposed to do—abandon a child on the operating table for a budget review?
"I'll speak with him as soon as I talk to Elena's family," I said, stripping off my gloves. "Marcus, can you handle the post-op notes?"
He nodded, understanding in his eyes. We both knew what Bridger was like when his authority was challenged.
Elena's parents embraced me in the waiting room, their gratitude a temporary shield against what awaited me. I explained the procedure, the recovery process, the promising prognosis. Their tears of relief almost made me forget the storm brewing elsewhere in the hospital.
Almost.
I was halfway to Bridger's office when I spotted the security guard approaching, his face uncomfortably rigid.
"Dr. Powell," he said, extending an envelope. "I've been instructed to deliver this to you personally."
The paper was heavy, expensive—Bridger's preferred stationery. I tore it open right there in the hallway, aware of curious eyes watching.
*Dr. Kimber Powell is hereby suspended for three days without pay for insubordination and failure to attend mandatory hospital functions. All surgical procedures will be reassigned during this period.*
Heat rushed to my face. Six years I'd given to this hospital. Six years of groundbreaking surgeries, research that had put Meyer Medical on the map. And this was how he responded to my saving a child's life?
"I need to speak with Mr. Meyer," I said, already moving toward the elevator.
The guard stepped in front of me. "I'm sorry, Dr. Powell. Mr. Meyer instructed that you're to leave the premises immediately."
In the stunned silence that followed, I became acutely aware of the whispers, the stares. Nurses I'd worked alongside for years, doctors who'd consulted on my cases—all witnessing my public humiliation.
"Fine," I said, my voice steady despite the rage building inside me. "I'll return when my suspension is complete."
Three days. Three days to cool off, to remember why I'd fallen in love with Bridger in the first place. Three days to convince myself this was just another of his power plays, not a fundamental crack in our relationship.
I was wrong.
When I returned to the hospital, something felt off immediately. The receptionist wouldn't meet my eyes. Colleagues hurried past with tight smiles. By the time I reached my office floor, dread had settled in my stomach like a stone.
My name was gone from the door. Instead, a freshly printed placard read "Violet Salazar, Executive Assistant to the CEO."
I pushed the door open without knocking. Violet looked up from my desk—my desk—with a smile that didn't reach her eyes.
"Kimber! You're back. I was just getting settled in."
My office had been transformed. My medical journals replaced with fashion magazines. My framed diplomas and awards removed to make space for abstract art pieces. And my research—
"Where are my things?" My voice sounded distant, hollow.
Violet gestured vaguely. "Maintenance cleared everything out. Bridger thought it was time for... a fresh start in this space."
I spotted a maintenance worker passing with a dolly stacked with boxes. My boxes.
"Where are you taking those?" I demanded, rushing after him.
"Dumpsters out back, ma'am. Just following orders."
I ran, ignoring the elevator in favor of the stairs, taking them two at a time. By the time I burst through the rear exit, they were already emptying the contents. Six years of research notes, patient cases, personal mementos—cascading into industrial dumpsters like so much garbage.
"Stop!" I screamed, diving toward the nearest bag. "Those are my research journals!"
I tore through plastic bags, frantically retrieving sodden notebooks and crumpled papers. My hands trembled as I rescued a leather-bound journal containing my pediatric valve replacement technique—the one I'd perfected during Elena's surgery just days ago.
From the window above, I felt eyes on me. Looking up, I saw Violet watching, her perfectly manicured hand resting on the glass, a smile playing at the corners of her mouth.
In that moment, as I knelt among the discarded remnants of my career, something inside me hardened. This wasn't just about an office or a suspension. This was war.
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