As Devon stepped inside the ward, he was greeted by the low murmur of voices, the faint hiss of oxygen lines, and the rhythmic blip of monitors tracking the fragile boundary between sickness and recovery.
Sunlight spilled through the high windows, glinting off metal rails and IV stands. A ward round was never a race. You did not skim over people whose lives you were holding in your hands.
To Devon, they were the day's heartbeat, each patient a story mid chapter, each bed a delicate balance between progress and setback. You walked the circuit with eyes open, hands steady, and the willingness to linger.
The nurses had already begun their work, moving between beds with efficient grace, but they slowed when they saw him. Devon had that effect, the quiet certainty of someone who did not just practice medicine but understood it at a depth that inspired complete trust. Conversations hushed as he passed. More than one nurse watched him with the faint, unspoken fascination reserved for those who made the complex look effortless.
He adjusted the cuff of his crisp white shirt, the fabric smooth against his skin, then moved toward the first patient of the day.
Patient One was an elderly woman recovering from bowel surgery. Devon did not simply glance at her chart, he pulled up a chair, lowering himself to her level.
"How was your night, Mrs Weller?"
Her voice was faint but warm. He listened to her abdomen, fingers gentle as he checked her incision, then looked to the nurse. "Pain well-controlled, yes? Good. I want her walking twice before lunch, once with assistance, once without. She'll resist. Persuade her anyway."
Patient Two, a lanky teenager with a fractured femur, greeted Devon with a grin that tried to hide discomfort. Devon studied the X-ray, then crouched to check the dressing himself.
"Alignment is perfect. We'll taper the antibiotics, stop after tomorrow unless there's a fever. Keep the leg elevated when he's not doing physio."
The nurse scribbled notes without needing to be told twice.
Patient Three was trickier, a middle-aged man whose post-op vitals refused to settle. Devon paused at the foot of the bed, eyes scanning the monitor, then bent low.
"You've been getting dizzy again, haven't you?" He said.
The man hesitated, then nodded. Devon adjusted the oxygen flow with a decisive flick, made a note for a cardiology review, and told the nurse, "Hourly observations. I want to hear about any change, even small ones."
Bed by bed, he moved through the ward with the same quiet precision he brought to the operating theater. He listened more than he spoke, asked questions others might not think to ask, and noticed details that slipped past tired eyes.
The nurses shadowed him, pens moving quickly, their admiration unspoken but visible in the way they leaned in when he spoke, eager to catch every instruction.
By the time he reached the last patient, the nurse was already handing him the tablet.
"Room 127, Mr Ellison," she said. "Post-op day three, coronary artery bypass. Vitals stable, but chest discomfort reported overnight."
Devon's fingers brushed the tablet, the System's hum pulsing faintly in his nerves as he scanned the data, heart rate 82, blood pressure 130/85, oxygen saturation 97 percent. Stable, but the discomfort was a whisper of trouble.
The System's procedural insight from the VR suite flickered in his mind. He stepped into the room, the team fanning out behind him like ripples in his wake.
Mr Ellison sat propped against pillows, his wiry frame dwarfed by the hospital bed, white hair stark against the sterile sheets. His eyes were sharp despite the fatigue carving lines into his face and they met Devon's with a mix of wariness and hope.
A vase of daisies on the bedside table, brought by his daughter, spilled a faint sweetness into the air.
"Good morning, Mr Ellison," Devon said, his voice warm, like sunlight breaking through fog. He pulled a stool to the bedside, ignoring the team's subtle glances.
Most surgeons stood, towering over patients, Devon sat close, leveling his gaze with theirs. It was a small act, but it shifted the room's gravity. "Tell me about this chest discomfort."
"Like a weight, Doc," Mr. Ellison said, his voice rough. "Better than yesterday, but it's still there."
Devon nodded, his expression steady but soft. He reached for the stethoscope around his neck, his movements fluid and precise. The cold bell pressed against Mr Ellison's chest with pinpoint accuracy, and Devon listened, eyes half-closed, sifting the steady lub dub for whispers of trouble.
No murmurs, no pericardial rub. A slight catch in the man's breath, though, told a story the chart hadn't. "Deep breath for me, please."
Mr Ellison inhaled, wincing faintly. Devon's mind cataloged the possibilities, the System's clarity amplifying each detail.
"Maria," he said, turning to the nurse, whose dark eyes watched him with quiet respect, "order a chest X-ray to rule out pleural effusion. Increase furosemide to forty milligrams daily, and monitor fluid intake closely. No NSAIDs until we're sure there's no bleeding risk." He paused, meeting Mr. Ellison's gaze.
"We're going to figure this out, okay? You're doing great."
As he spoke, he caught Maria's gaze, her eyes bright with something unspoken. She had seen surgeons rush through rounds, barking orders without a glance at the patient. Devon was different. He lingered, asking Mr Ellison in the next bed about his fifth grade class, his stories of chaotic science fairs drawing a chuckle from the nurses.
The team watched, almost spellbound, as he turned a routine check into a moment of connection. Maria's pen moved faster, but her glances lingered, a quiet fascination at how much he cared for the people in his charge.
Devon's tablet glowed with completed tasks, each care plan etched with his precision. He was about to dismiss the team when raised voices broke through the corridor's quiet.
It began low, a sharp edge in a man's tone, then rose quickly. The words blurred into anger, spilling faster, louder. A woman's voice tried to cut in, hers was firm, and professional but it was pushed over by the heat in his reply.
By the time Devon stepped toward the ward doors, he could see them, a man in his fifties, his face red with fury, standing nose to nose with one of the nurses.