Pregnant A&E Doctor Faces Ex Who Arrives With Injured Daughter-heuh

The rain had been falling all evening, steady and cold, the sort of rain that made every coat smell damp and every hospital floor shine under fluorescent light.

By the time Dr Celeste Rowan reached the paediatric A&E desk for the third time in twenty minutes, her back ached so sharply she had to stop beside the counter and pretend she was checking a chart.

Seven months pregnant, two hours past the end of her shift, and still she kept her face composed.

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That was what people expected of doctors.

Especially doctors in children’s emergency care.

No trembling hands.

No tired eyes.

No private life spilling through the cracks when a frightened parent needed certainty more than truth.

Celeste had spent years learning that kind of calm.

She could lower her voice when a child was screaming.

She could speak clearly while a parent fell apart.

She could move quickly without looking rushed, because panic spread faster than infection in a room where a child was hurt.

Tonight, though, the baby beneath her scrub jacket seemed determined to remind her she was not made of steel.

A firm kick pressed against her ribs as she signed off one set of notes, and she placed her palm lightly over the curve before she could stop herself.

The nurse beside her noticed but said nothing.

People had been kind about it for weeks, offering chairs, cups of tea gone lukewarm before she could drink them, and gentle comments about finishing early.

Celeste smiled at all of it and ignored most of it.

She had not built her life by being fragile.

She had certainly not survived Holden Vale by being fragile.

His name came less often now, which she considered progress.

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