The ER Doctor He Left Was Pregnant When His Daughter Arrived-eirian

At 7:38 p.m., the automatic doors of the emergency room slammed open so hard every badge reel at the nurses’ station swung against its clip.

Rainwater blew in with the father carrying the child.

The floor smelled like antiseptic, wet coats, and burned coffee from the machine nobody ever cleaned right.

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Trauma Bay Two was already busy, monitors chirping in uneven rhythm, a respiratory cart parked crooked against the wall, two nurses moving with that quiet speed people mistake for calm.

I was standing at the desk finishing a discharge note when I heard the little girl cry.

“Daddy, it hurts.”

Then I turned.

For one second, the whole emergency room disappeared.

Not the beeping.

Not the overhead lights.

Not the rain running off his suit and spotting the tile beneath his shoes.

Only him.

Elias stood just inside the doors with a little girl pressed against his chest, one arm locked under her knees, the other braced behind her shoulders like he could hold her body together by force.

Her pink school jacket was bunched at the zipper.

Her left wrist was tucked tight against her stomach.

His navy suit was soaked through at the shoulders, and his hair clung damply to his forehead.

He had the pale, hollow look of a parent who had spent the entire drive imagining every version of the worst outcome.

Then his eyes found mine.

Recognition hit him before language did.

I felt it happen across the room.

His mouth parted slightly.

His gaze dropped.

Straight to the curve of my stomach under my scrub top.

I was seven months pregnant.

With his baby.

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