The ER Doctor He Abandoned Was Pregnant With His Child All Along-Tep

The night Mason came through the emergency entrance carrying his daughter, the rain had already turned the sidewalk outside Harborview Medical Center black and shiny.

Inside, the ER smelled like disinfectant, coffee, damp coats, and the faint metallic edge of fear that always followed people through those doors.

I was standing outside Trauma Bay Two with a chart in my hand, my stethoscope around my neck, and one palm resting over my stomach because the baby had been moving since the start of my shift.

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Seven months pregnant.

Six months gone.

That was the math I carried quietly under my scrubs.

I had learned to work around it, breathe around it, sleep around it, and show up every day like my heart had not been split open in a kitchen by a man who refused to be brave.

Then the automatic doors flew open.

Mason rushed in with Lily in his arms.

For one hard second, I did not move.

He looked nothing like the man I remembered from polished dinner tables, clean suits, and rooms where he always seemed to know exactly how much emotion to allow.

His jacket was twisted.

His tie was loose.

His face had gone pale with a kind of terror money could not manage and pride could not hide.

Lily was tucked against him, crying into his shoulder, her small left wrist pressed carefully against her chest.

“Daddy, it hurts,” she whimpered.

The nurse beside me stepped forward, but I was already moving.

That is what training does to you.

It gives your body a job before your heart can make a scene.

“I’m Dr. Elise,” I said.

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