Pregnant ER Doctor Faces the Ex Who Left Her—and His Injured Daughter-olive

The night Elias Vale carried his daughter through the emergency room doors, rain was striking the glass in thin silver lines.

It was the kind of storm that made every hallway smell damp, even inside a hospital built to keep weather and panic outside.

Dr. Adelaide Maren had been twelve hours into her shift, her ankles swollen, her lower back aching, and one hand almost always finding the curve of her seven-month pregnant stomach when no one was watching.

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She had learned how to hide discomfort the way young doctors learn everything in a hospital: by doing it until the body stops asking for permission.

That night, the emergency department was running full.

A cyclist had come in with a collarbone injury at 5:56 p.m.

A teenager with food allergies had been stabilized just after 6:30.

At 7:18 p.m., the automatic doors opened again, and a man in a ruined charcoal suit stumbled inside carrying a little girl against his chest.

Adelaide turned at the sound of his voice before she saw his face.

“Somebody help her,” he said.

The sound hit her first.

Not because it was loud.

Because she knew it.

Six months had passed since she had last heard Elias speak in person, and somehow her body recognized him before her mind caught up.

For a second, the emergency room became too bright.

The fluorescent lights buzzed above her.

A monitor beeped steadily beside Trauma Bay Two.

The smell of antiseptic, rainwater, and coffee gone stale seemed to sharpen until every breath hurt.

Then she saw the child in his arms.

Small face streaked with tears.

Hair tangled from the storm.

One arm held tight against her body.

Adelaide moved because the patient mattered more than the past.

That was the rule.

That had always been the rule.

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