
Ex-Fiancé's Greed vs. Doctor's Justice
Chapter 2
I was still picking debris from my research notes when the sound of heels echoed through the parking garage. I didn't look up—couldn't bear to see another colleague pretending they hadn't witnessed my humiliation.
"Dr. Powell?"
The voice was unfamiliar, warm but authoritative. I glanced up to find a woman in her fifties approaching, her silver hair pulled back in an elegant chignon. Her tailored navy suit spoke of success, but her eyes held genuine concern.
"I'm Rhea Sterling," she said, extending her hand. "Sterling Medical."
I knew the name. Everyone in Manhattan medicine did. Sterling Medical had been quietly building a reputation as Meyer Medical's most formidable competitor, poaching top talent with promises of better resources and ethical leadership.
"I witnessed what happened upstairs," Rhea continued, her voice gentle but firm. "What they did to you—throwing your life's work in the garbage—it's unconscionable."
I straightened, clutching my salvaged journals against my chest like armor. "I'm not sure what you're implying."
"I'm not implying anything. I'm stating facts." Her eyes flashed with controlled anger. "Bridger Meyer is a fool if he thinks treating you like this will go unnoticed. Your pediatric heart transplant innovations have saved dozens of lives. Your research on valve reconstruction techniques is groundbreaking."
Heat crept up my neck. Someone had been paying attention to my work—my actual work, not just my relationship with Bridger.
"What do you want, Ms. Sterling?"
"I want to offer you what you deserve. A position at Sterling Medical with full research support, your own department, and complete ownership of your innovations." She paused, letting the words sink in. "No politics. No power games. Just medicine."
The offer hung between us like a lifeline I was afraid to grasp. "I'm engaged to Bridger. I can't just—"
"Can't you?" Rhea's voice was quiet but penetrating. "When was the last time he supported your research? When did he last treat you as an equal partner rather than a convenient asset?"
The questions cut deeper than I wanted to admit. When had Bridger last asked about my patients rather than my productivity numbers? When had he celebrated my breakthroughs instead of claiming credit for them?
"I need time to think," I said finally.
Rhea nodded, pulling a business card from her jacket. "Forty-eight hours. That's all I can hold the position open. But Kimber—" She used my first name deliberately, and somehow it didn't feel presumptuous. "Don't let fear of change keep you trapped in a situation that's slowly destroying everything you've worked for."
She walked away, leaving me alone with her words echoing in the concrete silence.
Twenty-four hours later, I sat across from Marcus Chen in a cramped downtown café, my hands wrapped around a coffee cup that had long since gone cold. The lunch crowd provided perfect cover for our conversation—no chance of hospital gossip reaching Bridger's ears.
"You're serious about this," Marcus said, studying my face with the same intensity he brought to reading surgical scans.
I nodded. "Sterling Medical wants the entire cardiac team. Full research funding, patent protection, and complete autonomy over our procedures."
Marcus leaned back, processing. "And Bridger?"
"What about him?" The bitterness in my voice surprised even me. "He threw my research in the garbage, Marcus. Six years of work, and he treated it like trash."
"The engagement—"
"Is over." The words came out steadier than I felt. "I just haven't told him yet."
Marcus was quiet for a long moment. "Sarah and David will follow you," he said finally, referring to our other team members. "They've been frustrated with the politics too. Sarah's been waiting two years for approval on her congenital defect research."
"And you?"
His smile was grim. "I became a surgeon to save lives, not to play games. If Sterling Medical will let us do that without interference, I'm in."
Relief flooded through me. "Thank you."
"Don't thank me yet. Bridger won't take this lying down."
I thought of Violet's satisfied smile as she watched me dig through garbage. "Let him try."
That evening, I sat in my apartment with Sterling Medical's contract spread across my dining table. My lawyer had already filed the patent protection documents—my pediatric techniques were now legally mine, regardless of where I practiced.
I picked up my phone and dialed Rhea Sterling's number.
"Dr. Powell," she answered on the first ring.
"I accept," I said simply.
"Excellent. When can you start?"
I looked at my resignation letter, already sealed and ready for delivery. "Monday morning."
"Welcome to Sterling Medical, Kimber. You won't regret this."
As I hung up, I felt something I hadn't experienced in months: hope. Tomorrow, I would walk into Meyer Medical for the last time. Tomorrow, I would take back control of my life.
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