AN INTERN THREW COFFEE ON ΜΕ THEN PROCLAIMED THE CEO WAS HER HUSBAND. SO I CALMLY CALLED THE BOSS: “YOU NEED TO COME DOWN HERE. I HAVE A SURPRISE FOR YOU!”

AN INTERN THREW COFFEE ON ΜΕ THEN PROCLAIMED THE CEO WAS HER HUSBAND. SO I CALMLY CALLED THE BOSS: “YOU NEED TO COME DOWN HERE. I HAVE A SURPRISE FOR YOU!”

 

 

 

 

I felt the scalding, sticky weight of the liquid  before I even heard the cup hit the floor. Dark,   bitter espresso bloomed across my white silk  blazer like a spreading ink blot, the heat seeping   through to my skin. In the sudden vacuum-like  silence of the hospital lobby, the only sound was   the rhythmic drip drip drip of coffee hitting the  polished marble. I didn’t move. I didn’t scream.

 I   just looked down at the ruin of a suit that had  been the last birthday gift my father ever gave   me. Behind me, a shrill, rehearsed so broke the  silence. Oh my god, look what you did. You pushed   me. You ruined my custom dress. I turned slowly.  Standing there was a girl who looked like she’d   wandered off a reality TV set and accidentally  ended up in a place of healing.

 She was barely 22,   caked in contour, and wearing a hot pink dress so  tight it looked painful. She wasn’t looking at me.   She was looking at her iPhone, which was mounted  on a gimbal, the screen glowing with a cascade of   scrolling emojis and live heart icons. Everyone,  you saw that, right? She wailed to her followers,   her eyes dry and calculating.

 This crazy woman  just assaulted a healthare worker. I’m literally   shaking. She looked at me then, her eyes narrowing  into a venomous slits. She leaned in, whispering   so only I could hear, the scent of cheap perfume  and arrogance rolling off her. You’re dead,   Karen. Do you have any idea who my husband is?  Mark Thompson, the CEO. He owns this place.

 He   owns you. You’ll never get a doctor to look at  you in this city ever again. I felt a cold, sharp   tremor of irony go through me. Mark Thompson, my  husband, the man I had spent 10 years building,   polishing, and protecting. I reached into  my pocket, my fingers brushing against the   cool glass of my own phone.

 I looked at the coffee  stain, then at the girl’s name tag. Tiffany Henry,   intern. “You want the CEO?” I asked, my voice  coming out as a low, dangerous hum. Let’s get   the CEO. But to understand how we got to this  marble floor, we have to go back 12 hours. The   Boeing 787 had touched down at JFK with a heavy  thud that rattled my teeth.

 I’d spent 30 days in   Frankfurt navigating the cold clinical boardrooms  of German medical manufacturers. I was the chief   strategy officer of Apex Medical Group. But  that was just the title on the door. In reality,   I owned 60% of the company. I was the legacy. My  father had built this empire from a single clinic.   And since his passing, his weight had settled  permanently onto my shoulders.

 Mark, my husband,   was the face. He was handsome, charming, and  spoken the kind of silver tongue platitudes that   investors loved. But he couldn’t negotiate a paper  bag out of a corner. I had gone to Germany to   secure a fleet of state-of-the-art MRI machines, a  job he should have done because I knew if he went,   we’d overpay by millions.

 I didn’t tell him I  was coming home early. I wanted to surprise him.   I wanted to see the hospital through the eyes of  a stranger to see if the culture of care my father   died for was still alive. I stepped into the lobby  of Apex University Hospital at 9:15 a.m. It was   a cathedral of blue tinted glass and antiseptic.  Usually I use the private executive entrance, but   today I pulled my own suitcase through the front  doors. The first thing I saw wasn’t a doctor. It  

was David Chen. David was the head of cardiology,  my oldest friend from medical school, and the only   man in this building who didn’t care about the  stock price. He was on his knees in the center   of the lobby, his white scrub soaked with sweat,  performing rhythmic, bone cracking CPR on an   elderly man who had collapsed.

 Nurse glucose now,”  David barked. His focus was absolute. He didn’t   see the crowd. He didn’t see me. He was a man  holding back death with his bare hands. That was   the apex I knew. But then the contrast hit like  a slap. Not 10 ft away from David’s life or death   struggle. Tiffany was berating Henry, our head  valet.

 

 

 

 

 Henry was a Vietnam veteran who had worked   for my father for 30 years. He was 70 years old,  bowing his white head as this girl screamed at   him because his slow walking had left her Mercedes  in the sun for 5 minutes. You move like a turtle,   she shrieked before turning to her live stream to  pucker her lips for the camera. Gh. The help here   is so incompetent, guys. Stay positive, though. 

Tap that heart. The rage began as a slow simmer in   my chest. This was what Mark had allowed while I  was away. This was the professional standard he’d   promised to uphold. I walked over to Henry, placed  a hand on his trembling shoulder, and silenced him   with a look when he tried to say my name.

 I turned  to the girl. The workday started over an hour ago,  I said, my voice like a scalpel. You are late. You  are out of uniform and you are harassing a senior   staff member. Put the phone away. That’s when it  happened. The dismissive sneer, the bitter old hag   comment to her camera, and then the deliberate  lunge. She didn’t trip.

 She turned, checked   her camera angle, and slammed her iced coffee  directly into my chest. And now here we were.   The crowd was growing. People were filming. David  had finished with his patient and was standing up,   his eyes widening as he recognized me. He started  toward us, his face darkening with a protective   fury I hadn’t seen in years.

 Catherine, are  you hurt? David’s voice was a low rumble.   Tiffany laughed. A sharp grading sound. Oh, you’re .