pulsekeeper
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- Parts 18
Dr. Emilia Reyes is the sweet one in Pediatric Emergency, the doctor who crouches to eye level, who hands out stickers after sutures, who lowers her voice when the monitors start screaming and the world feels too big for the child in the bed.
People underestimate her because of that.
They see kindness and mistake it for weakness. They see patience and assume she will yield.
Dr. Jack Abbot doesn't.
An Emergency Medicine attending known for brutal competence and razor-sharp restraint, Abbot thrives in chaos. He does not soften the truth. He does not dilute hard decisions. And he does not step back when the room gets loud.
When disaster forces him into her department, their collision is not subtle.
He questions her restraint.
She questions his ruthlessness.
He pushes.
She pushes back harder.
Because beneath the calm pediatrician is steel, controlled and deliberate and more than capable of meeting him blow for blow. Abbot is simply the first man reckless enough to test it.
In a hospital where resources run thin and not every life makes it home, Emilia has mastered composure. She has learned how to carry grief quietly, how to hold steady when everything fractures.
What she has never learned is how to stand unmoved when someone sees straight through her.
In an Emergency Department built on control, the most dangerous thing is not chaos.
It is the moment you stop pretending you are immune to it.
And some fires do not ask permission before they burn.