Pregnant ER Doctor Faces the Ex Who Abandoned Her Family-rosocute

The night Julian carried Chloe into my emergency room, Boston had gone slick and black from rain.

It clung to his suit shoulders, darkened his hair, and followed him through the automatic doors in cold gusts that smelled like pavement, panic, and wet wool.

I was finishing a chart at the nurses’ station when the call came over the trauma line.

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Child fall.

Possible wrist fracture.

No reported loss of consciousness.

I had heard that cluster of words hundreds of times, but the sound that followed it was not routine.

A little girl was crying with that broken, frightened rhythm children have when pain has outrun their ability to be brave.

Then I looked up and saw Julian.

For one second, my body forgot the professional person I had spent years becoming.

My hands went cold.

My throat tightened.

Then the baby shifted beneath my scrubs, a small press of life against my palm, and I remembered who needed me most in that room.

“Trauma Bay Two,” the charge nurse said.

I stepped forward before anyone else could.

Julian did not see me at first.

His whole focus was on Chloe, who lay curled on the stretcher in her school uniform, one arm guarded close to her chest.

“Daddy, it hurts,” she sobbed.

“I know, baby,” he said, and his voice cracked in a way I had never heard from him.

That was the first cruelty of the night.

Not that he was frightened.

Not that he loved his daughter.

The cruelty was discovering he did know how to sound helpless for someone he loved.

He simply had never allowed himself to sound that way for me.

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