False Accusations Jacobson, Alan (books successful people read .TXT) đ
Book online «False Accusations Jacobson, Alan (books successful people read .TXT) đ». Author Jacobson, Alan
âStiff upper lip, my friend. Meantime, let me make that call and get those people dispersed.â
By the time Madison had returned a few calls, the police had arrived and informed the crowd that if they wanted to protest, they had the rightâbut they could not obstruct business, accost people, or prevent them from entering or exiting the building. The shouting continued for another hour, but the pouring rain helped to discourage them from maintaining their onslaught.
A few of the morningâs patients were rescheduled for the afternoon; Madisonâs referrals had dropped off dramatically since the murder charges were brought, so any additional loss of patients was eating away at an already crumbling dam. Problem was, each time he plugged a hole, another two seemed to pop open. Unfortunately, as he was soon to find out, there were more weak spots lurking beneath the surface.
And the dam was about to burst.
CHAPTER 41
UPON RETURNING FROM LUNCH, Madison noticed a message on his voicemail: it was John Stevens at the hospital. He had something very important to discuss and could not do it over the phone. He needed him to come by tonight if possible. Heâd wait there for him if necessary.
Madison phoned Stevens and informed his secretary that seven was the earliest he could be there; then he called Leeza to apologize. Since he had been home often lately, the time away from the house this evening did not seem to loom as significantly as it had in the past.
Stevensâs office was the only one of the entire administrative suite that was still aglow by the time Madison walked in at 7:05 P.M. Stevens was sitting at his desk, his room lit by a single desk lamp that cast a warm, orange hue. Judging by the look on his friendâs face, however, there was nothing cozy or comfortable on his mind.
âPhil, please sit down,â he said, motioning Madison to the seat in front of his desk. Usually, when Madison had come to speak with Stevens in his office; he would direct him to the sofa against the far wall, where they would sit next to each other while chatting. This meeting had a very formal air to it. This was all business.
âWhatâs on your mind, John? Somethingâs bugging you.â
Stevens nodded, his gaze lost somewhere amongst the papers on his blotter. He placed his tremulous right hand on the desk and covered it with his left. âYou know Iâve always hated administrators because of what their focus wasâmoney. The bottom line. Income and expenses. Risks and exposure.â He paused on this last sentence, then looked up at Madison. âRisks and exposure are what the board is most concerned with at the moment. With increased risk comes greater exposure, and with greater exposure comes increased risk.â
âYouâre talking in circles, John. What the hell are you saying?â
Stevens wiggled a bit uncomfortably in his seat. âIâm talking about increased risk of lawsuits. Of risking this hospitalâs stellar reputation. Of risking the loss of research grants which are vital to the operation of this institution.â
âWhy are we discussing this? What could I possibly do to help you lower the risk the hospital faces?â
Stevens scratched the back of his head, âPhil, thereâs been talk.â He looked at Madison. âTalk of a loss of research funds if we donât relieve you of your privileges.â
âRelieve me?â Madison swallowed hard. âOf my privileges?â
âYouâre going to make me spell it out, huh?â
Madison sat there, staring at him.
Stevens heaved a big sigh. âYouâve become too great a risk to the hospital. The board doesnât want you to be associated with us right now. Theyâre concerned that your presence here will result in our loss of fundsâgrants that we canât afford to lose.â
Madison stood up. âThis is absolutely ridiculous.â
âPhil, please sit down.â
âNo, I wonât sit down. I demand a better answer than that. How dare you? Weâve worked together how many years? How can you do this to me?â
Stevens remained in his seat. âItâs not my doing. I think you know that. I fought them on this. I fought them hard. They wanted you off the list. Gone, good-bye, never to return, regardless of how your trial turns out.â
âGuilty no matter what, huh?â Madison said, beginning to pace.
âI was able to push something through. They didnât like it, but I was able to push hard enough to get it through.â
âGuilty. I canât believe they would do this to me...â he said, his voice trailing off.
âI was able to get them to suspend your privileges temporarily.â
âWhat a deal. Suspended privileges. How long is âtemporarilyâ?â
âIndefinitely.â
âIndefinitely,â he said. âThatâs utter bullshit, John, and you know it.â
âIt is. But I did the best I could.â
Madison looked up at the ceiling. Tears welled in his eyes. Finally, he composed himself enough to speak. âWhen this hospital was on the brink of financial ruin, who stepped in and got us the grants to keep our research staff intact? Who was the one who was able to bring our reputation up a notch by performing the first knee replacement surgery in California?
âWho was the one who got the investor group together when we needed to take the hospital public so we could raise the five hundred million cash to purchase all that new equipment down in the OR suites?â He stood and leaned across the desk, two feet from Stevensâs face. âI was. I was the one who saved this hospital several times over. And this is how they repay me? I get falsely accused of a crime and they want to give me the boot out of here?â
âItâs not just a crime youâre accused of. Itâs murder,â he said in a near whisper. âDouble murder.â
âI know what it is! I live it, I breathe it, I canât get away from it.â Madison sat back down and his gaze again found the ceiling. âYou think Iâm guilty, John?â
âWhat I think isnât important, Phil. Itâs what the big boys think that matters.â
âAnswer my question.â
âAbsolutely not.â
âI had to ask. I need
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