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pairings: Doctor Strange x reader
genre/warnings; hurt/comfort, soft angst, domestic, established relationship, mild injury mentions, medical themes, emotional vulnerability, fluff
Summary: Y/N brings every tiny injury to Stephen because she knows tending to her makes him feel like the doctor he thought he lost forever, so she gives him little pieces of it—one papercut, bruise, or band aid at a time.
Stephen Strange prides himself on two things: an iron-clad sense of control and a brain sharp enough to carve through any problem the universe can throw at him.
Y/N is the only thing in this world capable of unraveling both with a single knock on his door.
You never meant to make a habit out of it.
The first time—months ago—when you’d sliced your finger open as carelessly as someone flipping a page, you hadn’t been thinking about anything except the sting, the line of red beading along your skin, A paper-thin line of red on her thumb, the sting bright and immediate, and her voice floating through the Sanctum like she owns the place.
“Stephen? I hurt myself.”
He’s in the library when she finds him, floating books circling like restless planets. He turns, ready to give her that long-suffering look he wears when she interrupts something important, but it drops the instant he sees her thumb.
It’s barely a cut.
Barely anything at all.
But her eyes are wide—on purpose, dramatically so—and she lifts her hand like she expects him to gasp, diagnose, and perform miraculous surgery right there beside the dusty tomes.
He plays along.
He always plays along.
“Let me see,” he murmurs, taking her hand in his.
And there it is—the soft relaxation in his shoulders, the ease in his breath, the tug of something bittersweet in his chest he refuses to name. He examines her with the focus he once reserved for life-or-death trauma bays.
It’s ridiculous.
Utterly ridiculous.
But it’s also her.
And that changes everything.
She watches him carefully, like she’s tracking every tiny shift in his face. She always does that—like she’s piecing him back together slowly, quietly, in ways he doesn’t deserve.
“Serious laceration,” he intones gravely. “Might need amputation.”
She snorts. “Just fix it, nerd.”
He cleans it with conjured water, seals it with a warm brush of golden magic, and presses a kiss to her thumb—her favorite part, though she pretends to hate when he does it.
And something deep inside him unclenches.
You remembered the look in his eyes then—focused, precise, alive in a way that had nothing to do with portals or spells.
It happens again two days later.
Then three days after that.
A bruise on her shin when she bumps into the coffee table.
A mild burn from touching a hot mug because she “forgot heat is a thing.”
A twisted wrist she insists is definitely fractured even though she can still move it.
He always looked up from whatever he was doing.
He should catch on.
He really should.
But he doesn’t—not fully. Not yet.
Because every time she whispers, “Stephen, I need you,” something warm blooms beneath his ribs, something painfully close to the man he once was.
The world took his surgical career away.
The mystic arts gave him something else.
And you always watched the way his shoulders settled, how the tension in his jaw softened when his hands were occupied with something gentle, something practical, something very much Stephen.
Today’s excuse was… well. It wasn’t your best.
You stared at the cardboard box sitting half-open on the coffee table, glaring at the offending flap like it had personally betrayed you.
A shallow slice curved across the side of your thumb from where the edge had caught you. Barely a scratch. It stung, sure, but it wasn’t anything more than annoying.
Still—your heart fluttered.
You’d been watching Stephen drift all week. Long pauses mid-sentence. Staring at his hands. Spending longer than usual cleaning the same pair of gloves he didn’t actually need anymore. A man aching for a life he couldn’t return to—and one he wasn’t fully sure he wanted back.
He wouldn’t ask for help. And you wouldn’t make him.
But you could give him this.
You sucked in a breath that was way too dramatic for a tiny cut and called out:
His footsteps sounded from the library, steady and calm—a rhythm you’d grown to adore.
He appeared in the doorway a second later, arms crossed, brow raised with that unimpressed sorcerer look he did so well. “What happened?”
He blinked once. Slowly. “A cardboard cut?”
“Yes,” you said, offended on principle.
He stared. “And… you need me for this?”
“I need medical attention,” you insisted, even though the sting was basically gone. “Serious medical attention.”
He sighed the sigh of a man who absolutely knew what you were doing, and absolutely refused to stop you.
The turning point comes on a rainy afternoon when you show up dripping wet, hair plastered to your forehead, holding your elbow with an exaggerated pout.
He storms toward you instantly.
“What happened? Are you hurt? Did something—”
“I slipped on the stairs,” you say, brushing past him like a wounded little cat. “It hurts.”
He gestures, and towels streak from the air toward you, wrapping around your shoulders like mother hens. You let out a little shiver, playing it up beautifully. He bites the inside of his cheek to stop himself from smiling.
“Come sit,” he orders, already in doctor mode.
You sit.
He kneels—kneels—in front of you, gently rolling your sleeve up. Your elbow isn’t swollen. It’s hardly red. A bruise will bloom, but nothing more.
He touches it delicately, and you hiss.
“You’re sure you didn’t fracture anything?” he asks, scanning with a swirl of gold. “You fall pretty hard when you fall.”
“I know,” you sigh dramatically. “That’s why I have you.”
It’s so casual, so natural to you—like he’s always been the one you run to when you’re hurt.
He bandages your elbow anyway. It doesn’t need it. But you beam the moment he smooths the white cloth over your skin, and suddenly the pointless bandage feels like the most important thing he’s done all day.
“Thank you, Doctor Strange,” you tease, leaning forward to kiss his cheek, “Best doctor in the multiverse.”
He freezes—not physically, not magically, but somewhere deeper.
“Why do you always come to me for things like this?” he asks softly.
Your smile falters. Just a little.
Just enough for him to notice.
“I… figured you liked feeling useful,” you say lightly, brushing your damp hair behind your ear. “You told me once you miss it sometimes.”
He did. He remembers. He remembers every time he almost says it again when the ache hits—when he stares at his hands or hears the phantom echo of surgical steel or wakes up dreaming of a life that no longer belongs to him.
“You don’t need to hurt yourself for my sake,” he whispers.
Your eyes widen, full of immediate panic. “Stephen, I’m not hurting myself.” You grab both of his hands—carefully, tenderly, like you always do. “I just… go to you when it happens.”
“When they happen?” He raised a brow. “You’ve had six injuries in the last ten days.”
“Even when it’s nothing?”
“Yes,” she says simply, “because it’s not nothing to you.”
You smiled, but he didn’t.
You watched him, the crease in his forehead, the concentration, the way his heartbeat steadied. You loved him like this. Loved seeing the parts of him he thought no one needed anymore.
“I like when you take care of me,” you admitted.
You swallowed. “And I know you miss it. Being a doctor. Using your hands for… normal things. Good things.”
He didn’t look up. But his fingers tightened slightly around yours.
“I don’t want you to feel like you lost everything,” you said, voice barely above a whisper. “So if I get a bruise or a splinter or… yes… cardboard tries to assassinate me, I’m going to come to you. Because you’re still that man. And because it makes you feel like yourself again.”
“You don’t have to pretend with me,” you continue quietly. “I know you miss it. And I know you can’t go back. But when it’s my cuts, my bruises, my stupid little accidents… I get to give you pieces of that part of your life back. Even if they’re tiny.”
He looks at you, really looks at you—the soaked sweater clinging to you, the bruise forming gently on your arm, the sincerity in your eyes that hits him harder than any spell ever could.
“You don’t have to give me that,” he whispers.
“I want to,” you reply, softer than rain. “I want to be the person you take care of. The person you fix. The person you—”
You hesitate.
“—the person you choose to love.”
Not papercuts.
Not bruises.
Not excuses.
It’s devotion.
It’s love disguised as inconvenience.
He stands slowly, pulling you up with him, and cups your face like you’re the most fragile part of the universe.
“You are,” he murmurs, “the only thing I choose without hesitation.”
Your breath trembles. “Stephen…”
“I will always take care of you,” he continues. “Not because you’re hurt. Not because I miss my old life. But because it’s you. You’re the one thing—one person—who makes me feel like both parts of me still matter.”
Your eyes soften, glassy at the edges. “You matter to me.”
Then he kisses you—slow, deliberate, grounding. The kind of kiss that isn’t about passion or urgency but about reassurance, about gratitude, about the feeling of coming home.
When he pulls away, he rests his forehead against yours.
“No more dramatic injuries,” he murmurs.
You snort. “I never said they were dramatic.”
“Your paper cut was a millimeter long.”
“It was life-threatening.”
He pulls back just enough to raise an eyebrow. “Is that so?”
He grumbles, but his arms tighten around your waist in the softest, warmest admission imaginable.
“Yes,” he breathes. “I do.”
The next day you showed up with a bruise from bumping your hip into the table.
He treated it with a seriousness normally reserved for mystical wounds.
The day after, you came in with a splinter lodged under your nail.
He removed it with a precision so gentle you almost cried.
Two days later, you complained your shoulder felt “weird,” and he spent fifteen minutes checking your range of motion, palms firm and comforting against your skin.
Every time, he looked more like himself.
More grounded. More alive.
Every time, he sat a little closer afterward.
And every time, he held your hand a little longer.
Life with you becomes a quiet routine of gentle rituals.
When you bump your hip on a counter, you call his name even if he’s in another room.
(He smiles before he even gets to you.)
When you burn your tongue on hot chocolate, you stick it out at him for inspection.
(He cools it with a flick of magic, shaking his head but kissing you anyway.)
When you scrape your knee on the sidewalk, you show up at the Sanctum like a bedraggled little gremlin demanding medical attention.
(He carries you to the couch, pretends the scrape is dire, and you beam the entire time.)
And every time—every single time—something in him settles, quiets, heals.
You never say it again—never admit what you’re doing.
He notices when you collect little injuries like trinkets.
He notices when you bite back a wince until you’re in his arms.
He notices when your eyes flicker with relief the second he touches your skin.
And he gives you what you’re asking for—not just treatment, not just expertise, but care, presence, intention.
He becomes your doctor again, in the smallest, softest ways.
Not because you’re broken.
Not because you need fixing.
But because you trust him to hold every fragile piece of you without dropping a single one.
And because when you come to him like that—vulnerable, dramatic, full of quiet affection—it reminds him he’s still the man who can help.
Still the man who can heal.
Still Stephen Strange, in all the ways that matter.
It wasn’t until a week later, when you genuinely twisted your ankle on the stairs, that you realized maybe—just maybe—you’d created a monster.
You were sitting on the sofa, ice pressed to your swollen ankle, when Stephen stormed into the room, cloak trailing behind him like it had something to prove.
“What happened?” he demanded.
“I slipped,” you muttered.
“I wasn’t paying attention.”
He inhaled sharply. “I told you to be careful on those stairs.”
He knelt beside you anyway, hands already gentle, already assessing, already working.
“What hurts?” he asked, voice dipping into that deep, controlled, clinical tone that should not have been attractive but absolutely was.
“Everything,” you groaned.
“I learned from the best.”
He shot you a look. You stuck your tongue out. He ignored it, moving your ankle slowly, checking for ligament damage, his thumbs gliding with the confidence of a man who had done this a thousand times.
“Stephen, that’s my toe.”
You snorted. “Fine. Yes. My toe is in unbearable agony. Please save me.”
He sat back on his heels and gave you the flattest stare known to man.
But his next words were soft.
“You scared me,” he said quietly.
“I know. But you actually got hurt this time. And I realized—every time you come to me, no matter how small the injury is, I… I like feeling useful. I like being your person. The one you rely on. The one you trust.” His eyes softened. “But I don’t want you actually getting hurt just to give me that.”
You reached for him, threading your fingers through his.
“I’m not,” you said. “I never would. But I’ll always come to you when something happens. Because it makes you feel like the man you used to be—and the man you still are.”
He bowed his head, resting his forehead against your knee.
You stroked his hair gently.
“And my favorite person.”
That got a small huff of laughter out of him.
He lifted his head, eyes bright, mouth soft.
“I’ll always take care of you,” he said.
“You’re mine to look after.”
You lifted your hand, brushing his cheek.
He kissed you softly then—slow, lingering, warm—and you felt the weight leaving him, bit by bit, breath by breath.
When he pulled back, he touched your ankle again, gentler this time.
“Let’s wrap this properly,” he murmured. “And you are staying off it for at least two days.”
“Doctor,” he corrected, smirking.
You smirked back. “My doctor.”
One night, you crawl into bed beside him, curling into his chest with a content sigh.
“Stephen?” you murmur sleepily.
“If I ever get a real injury… like a real one… promise you won’t freak out?”
He strokes your back slowly. “I’ll handle it.”
He huffs. “Fine. I promise not to—”
You poke his ribs. “To what?”
He kisses the top of your head.
“—to lose my mind unless losing my mind is absolutely medically justified.”
You laugh softly. “Good enough.”
There’s a pause. A quiet one. A warm one.
“You know you’re my doctor, right?”
He pulls you closer, tucking your head under his chin.
“And you,” he murmurs into your hair, “are my favorite patient.”
Your smile is small, sleepy, and full of love.
“Only patient,” you correct.
You fall asleep like that—safe, held, and treasured.
And Stephen?
He stays awake a little longer just to memorize the feeling of your breathing against his chest.
Because this—this simple closeness, this quiet trust—is the life he never knew he wanted.
A life where he gets to care for someone again.
A life where you let him.
A life where every bruise, every cut, every tiny injury becomes a reminder:
He is still needed.
He is still capable.
He is still yours.
And you—
You are everything.
You didn’t stop coming to him with every papercut and bruise.
And he didn’t stop treating every single one like it mattered.
Because it did.
Because you did.
Because being needed made him feel whole again.
Because you loved him enough to see the pieces he missed—and hand them back one by one.
And because Stephen Strange, Sorcerer Supreme or not, would always be your doctor.
Today, tomorrow, and every time cardboard tried to murder you.