Faith Cadogan has spent years mastering the art of holding it all together.
For her patients. For her colleagues. For her family.
But this week, as cracks start to appear in every part of her carefully maintained life, Faith faces a terrifying question:
How do you save everyone else when you can’t even save yourself?
Burdened Beyond Breaking
Faith has always been the rock — the one who smiles through the chaos, who picks up the pieces others leave behind.
But lately, the burdens she carries have grown heavier.
At work, the pressure is relentless. The emergency department is overstretched, under-resourced, and simmering with tensions. Faith feels it all, absorbing the pain and trauma of others until it settles like a weight across her chest.
At home, the struggle is just as intense. Juggling single motherhood, financial pressures, and the haunting memory of her son Luka’s health battles, Faith barely has time to breathe.
Everywhere she turns, someone needs her.
And she’s starting to realize — maybe she’s running on empty.
Stevie’s Crisis Hits Close to Home
When her best friend Stevie Nash collapses mid-shift, Faith’s world tilts.
Stevie — the brilliant, headstrong force of nature Faith has leaned on so many times — is suddenly the one who needs saving.
The news is devastating: cancer. Surgery. Chemo.
Faith tries to be strong, to be the steady presence Stevie needs. She cracks jokes at Stevie’s bedside. She makes endless cups of tea. She promises, again and again, that everything will be fine.
But deep down, Faith is terrified.
Because if someone as fierce as Stevie can fall, what chance does anyone else have?
The Mask Slips
In the quiet moments, when no one is looking, Faith feels the truth clawing at her.
She’s exhausted.
She’s scared.
And she’s so, so lonely.
She scrolls through her phone late at night, resisting the urge to text old friends, old flames — anyone who might remind her that she’s not completely alone in the world.
But pride stops her.
Faith Cadogan doesn’t ask for help. She gives it.
That’s who she is.
Isn’t it?
The Breaking Point
The dam finally bursts during a routine shift, when a young mother and her baby are rushed into the ED after a car crash.
The mother, bloodied but conscious, clutches her child with frantic desperation. She sobs, begging the staff to save her little girl.
Something inside Faith shatters.
She’s back there — back in the nightmare she thought she’d left behind — watching helplessly as Luka fought for his life, remembering the suffocating terror of almost losing her child.
Her hands shake. Her vision blurs.
For the first time in her career, Faith freezes.
Dylan Keogh steps in, taking control of the situation. No one says anything. No one has to.
Faith feels the burn of shame hotter than any wound.
Later, hidden in the staff toilets, she slides down the wall and lets the tears come — messy, broken sobs she can’t hold back anymore.
Picking Up the Pieces
It’s Jan Jenning who finds her — tough, no-nonsense Jan, who has seen her fair share of broken hearts behind hospital walls.
Jan doesn’t lecture. She doesn’t judge.
She simply sits beside Faith in silence, offering the simplest gift: her presence.
Eventually, Faith speaks — haltingly, painfully — about the fear, the exhaustion, the unbearable loneliness.
And in doing so, she realizes something she’s refused to admit for months:
She can’t do this alone.
And she doesn’t have to.
A Flicker of Hope
Later, as the sun sets over Holby, Faith stands outside the hospital, feeling the cool breeze on her face.
The road ahead isn’t easy. The burdens haven’t disappeared.
But for the first time in a long while, she isn’t pretending anymore.
She’s not fine. And that’s okay.
She’ll ask for help when she needs it. She’ll lean on her friends, her colleagues, her community.
And slowly, painfully, she’ll heal.
Because being strong isn’t about never breaking.
It’s about putting yourself back together — piece by piece, day by day — with the help of those who love you.
Faith Cadogan’s Fight Is Just Beginning
Faith Cadogan may be battered.
She may be bruised.
But she’s not broken.
She’s still standing.
And in the end, that’s what makes her a true hero — not her ability to save others, but her courage to save herself.
No matter how long the road is, Faith will keep walking it.
Because giving up has never been an option.
And it never will be.