When His Injured Daughter Pointed At The ER Doctor’s Belly-congtien

Dr. Celeste Rowan had trained herself to hear panic before anyone said the word.

It was in the uneven footsteps that came through the ER doors.

It was in the parent who spoke too loudly.

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It was in the parent who could not speak at all.

Most nights, panic smelled like wet pavement, old coffee, latex gloves, and the sting of disinfectant wiped over plastic chairs too many times.

That Friday night, it came in with rainwater dripping from an expensive charcoal coat and a terrified little girl wrapped around her father’s neck.

The automatic doors at St. Gabriel Children’s Hospital slid open at 10:38 p.m., and the sound cut through the pediatric ER like a warning.

Celeste was at the nurses’ station reviewing a discharge note when Nurse Daniels looked up from the desk.

“Head injury coming in,” Daniels said.

Celeste pushed herself away from the counter before the sentence was done.

Her lower back throbbed immediately.

She pressed her palm against the curve beneath her pale blue scrub jacket, breathed once, and let go.

Seven months pregnant did not make the ER slower.

It only made her body louder.

The man came through the doors carrying the child with both arms, his coat soaked dark, his shoes squeaking against the polished floor.

“Please,” he said. “She hit her head. She’s dizzy. She keeps saying she feels funny.”

Celeste heard the fear first.

Then she saw his face.

Holden Vale.

For one suspended second, the ER around her seemed to dim without the lights changing at all.

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