Sophia Chen POV
The document slides across the mahogany table like a death sentence.
Sophia's eyes catch on the words before her brain can process them. Patient negligence. Surgical complications. Gross misconduct.
Her throat tightens.
Dr. Robert Hanson sits across from her with his hands folded. He won't meet her eyes. He knows the truth. During yesterday's surgery, his hand slipped during the delicate part of the procedure. She saw it happen. She was standing right there assisting him when his scalpel moved wrong and the patient's artery nicked. He froze. She moved. She controlled the bleeding while he stood frozen.
But he's senior attending. He has twenty years of credentials and a reputation built on perfection.
She's a junior resident. Twenty-six years old. Invisible.
Dr. Marcus Rothschild sits at the head of the table in his chair the size of a throne. Her mentor. The man who recruited her to Manhattan General two years ago with promises about the best neurology training in the country. The man she trusted completely.
He looks at her with cold clinical distance and her stomach drops.
"The board has made their decision," he says, adjusting his glasses. "Dr. Chen, your residency is terminated effective immediately. Your medical license is suspended pending investigation. There will be a formal hearing, but based on the evidence we have, the outcome is unlikely to change."
The words hit like bullets. Each one lands separately. Terminated. Suspended. Investigation. Unlikely to change.
Sophia can't breathe properly.
A hospital administrator drones on about procedure and protocols and patient safety. The patient's family is considering legal action. The hospital needs to demonstrate immediate accountability. Standard protocol in cases of surgical negligence. Her suspension protects both the hospital and the patient.
Her suspension. Not Hanson's suspension. Not the senior attending's investigation.
Hers.
Marcus speaks again and his words cut the deepest because she believed in him. She worked eighty-hour weeks in his department. She studied every case he presented. She told people he was the best mentor a resident could ask for.
"I'm disappointed, Sophia." He uses her first name like they're having a personal conversation instead of destroying her career. "I saw real potential in you. Truly. But you made a critical error in judgment during a complex procedure. The hospital has to protect itself. I'm sure you understand."
She understands perfectly.
He's protecting himself. She's the scapegoat that saves his career.
The administrator slides a folder across the table. Severance details. Non-disclosure agreements. A timeline for her to vacate her staff housing. Everything she needs to disappear quietly.
Sophia doesn't open the folder.
The meeting ends. She stands because everyone else is standing. Her legs feel disconnected from her body. She moves toward the door like someone's puppet, pulled by strings she can't see.
That's when Marcus catches her arm.
His grip is gentle but firm. He guides her into the hallway, away from the conference room. Away from witnesses. He leans close enough that she smells his cologne. Expensive. Controlled.
"Don't try to fight this, Sophia."
His voice is a whisper, but the words are a knife.
"I'm on the disciplinary board. I can make this go away or I can make sure you never practice medicine again. You understand that, don't you? Your career, your license, your entire future. All of it depends on my goodwill."
She stares at him. At the man she admired. At the mentor she thought believed in her.
His eyes are cold.
"Accept what's happened," he continues. "Move on quietly. Don't fight the hospital. Don't talk to lawyers. Don't contact the media. If you're smart, you'll disappear and maybe in a few years, when people forget what happened, you can start over somewhere else. Quietly."
It's not a suggestion. It's a threat wrapped in paternal concern.
"But if you fight this, if you make trouble for the hospital or for me, I'll make sure that every medical institution in this country knows that you're unreliable. Careless. A danger to patients. You won't just lose your license in New York. You'll never practice medicine anywhere."
Sophia's hands shake.
Marcus releases her arm and straightens his jacket. He looks almost sad. Almost sympathetic. But she sees what's underneath now. She sees the calculation. The predator protecting his territory.
"You were promising, Sophia. But you're not worth protecting. Not against institutional pressure. Not against a lawsuit from a wealthy family. You're expendable. Remember that."
He walks back into the conference room. The door closes behind him.
Sophia stands alone in the hallway.
Her vision blurs. The fluorescent lights overhead feel too bright, too clinical, too familiar. She's been a doctor for two years. Two years of sixteen-hour shifts and studying for boards and living on coffee and adrenaline. Two years of believing she was building something important.
Two years of believing in a man who just destroyed her.
She walks toward the elevator on autopilot. Past colleagues who suddenly become very interested in their phones when they see her. Past residents who whisper when they think she can't hear. Past the walls decorated with plaques of achievement and photos of successful surgeons.
The elevator doors close around her.
She watches her reflection in the polished metal. Her white coat. Her ID badge. Her face that looks shattered.
By tomorrow, the hospital will assign someone to pack up her locker. By next week, they'll remove her name from the employee directory. By next month, no one will remember she was ever here.
She walks out of Manhattan General into the bright afternoon sun. The streets smell like hot concrete and exhaust and possibility. New York doesn't care that her career just ended. The city moves around her like she's invisible.
Her phone buzzes in her pocket.
One hundred thousand dollars per month.
Housing provided.
Discrete work. No questions asked.
She stares at the message on the unknown number. Stares at it like it's a lifeline thrown to a drowning woman.
She doesn't know who sent it.
She doesn't care anymore.
She calls back the number without reading the rest of the message. Without asking what the job is. Without thinking about consequences.
"I'm in," she says when someone picks up. Her voice sounds like it belongs to someone else. Someone harder. Someone more broken.
"Whatever you need. I'm in."
There's a pause on the other end. Then a voice, neutral and professional, gives her an address. A time. Instructions to pack only essentials.
"Your ride will be there at midnight, Dr. Chen. Don't be late."
The line goes dead.
Sophia stands on the corner of East 74th Street with Manhattan stretching out in every direction. She has twelve hours to pack up her life. She has twelve hours before she becomes someone else entirely.
She doesn't know who she's working for.
She doesn't know what she's agreed to.
But she knows Marcus Rothschild just signed something in blood. He just threatened to destroy her if she didn't accept her own annihilation. He just showed her what predators look like when they're wearing expensive suits and using gentle voices.
And she knows that whatever comes next has to be better than this.
Her phone buzzes again. A text from a number labeled only as SECURITY: "Pack light. Bring documents. You'll disappear tonight."
Sophia starts walking toward her apartment.
She doesn't look back at the hospital.
She doesn't know that the man she's about to work for controls half the underworld.
She doesn't know that his secret will become her burden.
She doesn't know that everything she's about to lose is nothing compared to what she's about to find.
All she knows is that at midnight, a car is coming.
And she's about to become a ghost.
