
Leaving the Toxic Love
Chapter 2
The complaint arrived on a Tuesday morning, delivered by our hospital's patient relations coordinator with the kind of apologetic expression that meant serious trouble. I was reviewing surgical schedules when she knocked on my office door, clutching a manila folder like it contained explosive material.
"Dr. Watson? We have a formal complaint from Linda Chen regarding her post-operative care last week."
My stomach dropped. Linda Chen—the sixty-two-year-old teacher who'd undergone what should have been a routine appendectomy. I remembered her case clearly because of what had gone wrong afterward.
"What specifically?" I asked, though I already knew.
"Severe allergic reaction to medication prescribed during recovery. She's claiming medical negligence." The coordinator set the folder on my desk with obvious reluctance. "The medication in question was prescribed by Dr. Young, but since you're listed as her supervising physician..."
I opened the file, scanning Linda's detailed account. Hives covering her entire body. Difficulty breathing. An emergency room visit that could have been fatal if her daughter hadn't acted quickly. All because Kenna had prescribed penicillin to a patient whose chart clearly marked a severe penicillin allergy.
"I need to review this with Dr. Ellis," I said, my voice steady despite the churning in my chest.
Twenty minutes later, I sat across from Frederick in his office, the complaint file open between us. He'd read through it twice, his expression growing darker with each page.
"This is serious, Alice," he said finally.
"I know. Kenna made a critical error, but we can address it through—"
"Kenna made an error?" Frederick's eyebrows shot up. "You're her supervising physician. This reflects on your mentorship."
I stared at him, certain I'd misheard. "Frederick, she prescribed penicillin to a patient with a documented penicillin allergy. The allergy was highlighted in red on the first page of the chart."
"And where were you when she was making these decisions? You're supposed to be guiding her, reviewing her work." He leaned back in his chair, his tone shifting to something coldly professional. "This complaint names you as the supervising physician. Legally, you're responsible for her actions."
"I can't review every single prescription she writes. She's a qualified doctor, not a medical student."
"Clearly she needs more oversight than you've been providing." Frederick closed the file with a sharp snap. "I'm canceling your performance review this quarter. And your year-end bonus."
The words hit me like a physical blow. "You're punishing me for her mistake?"
"I'm holding you accountable for inadequate supervision." His voice was ice-cold now, the tone he reserved for disciplinary meetings with problem employees. "Maybe if you spent less time micromanaging nail polish and more time actually mentoring—"
"This is insane." I stood up, my hands shaking. "You know she made that error. You know I couldn't have prevented it unless I was literally standing over her shoulder every second."
"What I know is that a patient nearly died under your supervision." Frederick didn't even look up from his computer screen. "And that Kenna has shown remarkable improvement since I started working more closely with her. In fact, I'm promoting her to senior resident effective immediately."
The room spun slightly. "You're promoting her? After she nearly killed a patient?"
"I'm recognizing her potential and giving her the support she clearly wasn't getting from you." Finally, he looked up, his eyes cold and distant. "Maybe you should focus on why your mentorship methods aren't working instead of looking for someone else to blame."
I walked out of his office in a daze, the injustice of it burning in my chest like acid. Nine years of partnership, of building this place together, and he was willing to sacrifice my career to protect his precious Kenna.
That evening, I went to Frederick's on-call room to retrieve a medical journal I'd left there the previous week. The room was small and sterile, containing only a narrow bed, a desk, and a small closet. As I reached under the bed for the journal, my fingers brushed against something soft.
I pulled out a hair tie—not just any hair tie, but one of Kenna's distinctive silk scrunchies in that particular shade of dusty rose she always wore. The same scrunchies I'd seen her twist around her finger during meetings, the same ones that perfectly matched her carefully coordinated outfits.
My hands trembled as I stared at the delicate fabric. There was no innocent explanation for this. No reason for Kenna's personal belongings to be under Frederick's bed unless...
I found Frederick in his office, the scrunchie clutched in my fist.
"What is this?" I demanded, dropping it on his desk.
He glanced at it, then back at his computer screen. "A hair tie."
"Kenna's hair tie. From under your bed."
Now he looked up, his expression shifting to something between annoyance and condescension. "And?"
"And what was it doing there, Frederick?"
He sighed heavily, like I was a particularly slow child. "Alice, you're being paranoid. It could have gotten there a dozen different ways."
"Name one."
"She was probably helping me organize files. Or maybe it fell out of her pocket during a consultation." His voice grew sharper. "I can't believe you're standing here accusing me based on a hair accessory."
"I'm not accusing you of anything. I'm asking for an explanation."
"The explanation is that you're letting jealousy cloud your judgment." Frederick stood up, his face flushing with anger. "You're so threatened by a younger, more talented colleague that you're literally planting evidence to frame her."
"Planting evidence?" The accusation hit me like a slap. "You think I put this there?"
"I think you're desperate to find fault with Kenna because she represents everything you're afraid of losing." His words were calculated to wound, delivered with surgical precision. "Youth. Potential. A future in medicine that doesn't depend on clinging to past achievements."
I stared at this man I'd loved for nine years, this stranger wearing Frederick's face, and felt something fundamental shift inside me. The last thread of trust, of hope, snapped clean in half.
"You really believe that," I said quietly. "You actually think I would sabotage an innocent colleague."
"I think you need to take a long, hard look at who you've become, Alice." Frederick sat back down, already dismissing me. "And decide if that's the person you want to be."
I left the scrunchie on his desk and walked out, knowing with crystalline clarity that I was walking away from more than just his office. I was walking away from everything I'd thought my life would be.
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