Surgeon Finds His Pregnant Ex On The Operating Table-Teptep

I never imagined the woman bleeding to death on my operating table would be the one I had loved more than anyone—and the one I had destroyed with my own hands.

For twelve years, I had trained myself to stay calm when everyone else was frightened.

A surgeon does not have the luxury of falling apart.

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You count the pulse.

You read the pressure.

You listen to the machines and trust your hands when your heart wants to interfere.

That was what I believed until the night Hannah Parker was rushed into my theatre.

The rain had been coming down hard since early evening, streaking the hospital windows and turning the ambulance bay into a wash of blue lights and grey water.

The corridor smelled of disinfectant, damp wool coats and the tired bitterness of coffee left too long on a hot plate.

I had just finished reviewing a chart when the emergency call came through the labour ward.

There was a certain tone to those calls that every doctor recognised.

Not urgent.

Beyond urgent.

The kind that made nurses lift their heads before the sentence was even finished.

I was already moving when the resident met me at the double doors.

‘Thirty-two weeks pregnant,’ she said, breathless but controlled. ‘Twins. Suspected placental abruption. Heavy bleeding. Pressure falling.’

‘How long since collapse?’ I asked.

‘Not clear. She was brought in from work. No family with her.’

I heard the words, filed them away, and did what training demanded.

‘Prepare theatre. Call neonatal. Emergency blood. Tell anaesthetics we are going now.’

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