New Amsterdam (2018) s01e10 Episode Script
Six or Seven Minutes
1 Previously, on "New Amsterdam" You have cancer.
Squamous cell carcinoma.
I want to try precision targeted therapy.
Chemo's gonna take the life out of me and I I want - to keep running this hospital.
- It's too big a risk.
Doctor Bloom asked me to consult on the hematology patient.
Her file says that she received her heart from a Luna Goodwin.
Your sister she gave me a beautiful life.
She had me arrange this.
Max? [SHAKY BREATHING.]
Baby! Oh, my help! Help! [SIRENS WAILING.]
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC.]
[TIRES SQUEALING.]
[SIRENS WAILING.]
We've got Marina Latimer, mid 60s.
Been down for three minutes.
It's her third time here this week.
She went back into V-fib right after I shocked her.
Charge to 200.
Clear.
[ELECTRICAL ZAP.]
Okay, I've got a pulse.
Her heart's a ticking time bomb.
Let's put V-fib pads on her and find Reynolds.
He needs to put in an ICD, today.
Yo, Dora.
Where's Max? Out of pocket for a few hours.
Oh, okay.
Well, I have a patient who needs an ICD surgery.
Her insurance won't cover it so I'm just gonna charge it to the Community Care Fund.
Max is the only one who can approve surgeries from the Community Care Fund.
He's out of pocket for a few hours.
Can this wait until it doesn't get me fired? Um, look, whenever there's a surgery that needs to be done I just give Max a heads-up and I do it, all right? He dots the "I's" and crosses the "T's" later.
We we got a whole system.
He's been here for like three weeks.
Yeah, that's how efficient we are.
[MISCHIEVOUS MUSIC.]
Dora, hi.
Just on my way to Max's office right now.
Yeah, he was out of pocket for a few hours.
He's what? Oh, shoot.
No, really? Uh, as the nurses' union liaison, I need to tell him that the hospital-wide walkout was authorized just now for today.
"Walkout"? No, no, no.
It's a good it's a good thing.
Max gave them the idea.
[CHUCKLES.]
- Of course he did.
- Yeah, I probably should have led with that.
Did you know that insurance has covered over-the-counter emergency contraception since 1996, and now all of a sudden, out of the blue, they're like, "No, uh-uh.
Not without a prescription"? That's not fair, right? There's there's no way we're gonna let that slide.
And yes, for the record, "Norma Rae" is my favorite movie.
[CLICKS TONGUE.]
Go, girl.
Dora, uh, I've been texting Max, but he's not responding.
He's out of pocket for a few hours.
But I need to talk to him.
[LAUGHS.]
I've basically authorized a surgery that's not covered by insurance, and I'm about to endure a walkout from the nurses, so whatever you need right now, I'm sure I can handle.
- It's private.
- Dora.
Dora, I've been looking for Max.
Okay, I'm only gonna say this once more: Max is out of pocket for a few hours.
Please, save your news, questions, mysterious personal requests, or whatever it is that you need, for his return.
Thank you.
[RADIO CHATTER.]
Dr.
Panthaki.
Thank you for picking up Max's samples in person.
But to be clear, this cooler is full of Miller Lites, right? Yes.
Yes, because I'm the type who drinks domestic.
So tell me, will this be your first time seeing Lauryn Hill in concert? Actually, no.
I've seen her several times.
But never on a date.
So in your head, this is a date, huh? That's interesting.
Just just give me my ticket.
Actually, let's do this properly.
Get dressed up.
Dinner.
Okay.
Great.
Well, I I should go now.
Me, too.
Oh, and we're going Dutch on dinner, so make sure you bring some cash.
[PHONE RINGING.]
[PHONE BEEPS.]
Max, are you on your way back? [INDISTINCT WHIMPERING.]
Helen! Helen, can you hear me? Georgia? What's wrong? It's Max.
He he collapsed.
He's not moving.
- Does he have a pulse? - Okay.
- Yes.
- Did you call 911? They're coming but, um, the call dropped and I just didn't know what to do.
Put your cheek over his mouth.
Do you feel air moving? [MOANS.]
There is, uh, like, a whistling a raspy sound.
Put the phone next to his throat.
[RASPY, LABORED BREATHING.]
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC.]
- Georgia? - Yes? Georgia, Max's throat is blocked.
- What? - You need to make a new path so that he can breathe.
- Okay.
- You're gonna cut a small hole - in his throat - What? No.
No, I can't.
Yes, yes.
Yes, you can.
You can, because I'm gonna help you.
Find something that can cut a hole in his throat and a tube to slide through it.
Find something.
Okay.
[SNIFFLES.]
[HEAVY BREATHING.]
Uh Oh, uh, I have a I have a pocket knife.
Oh, God.
And a and a plastic straw.
Use the knife to cut, um, three inches.
It doesn't have to be exact.
[WHIMPERS.]
- Here we go, Georgia.
- Okay.
[DEEP BREATHS.]
Use your index finger.
Find Max's Adam's apple.
Okay, I found it.
Feel down from there until you come to a little indentation.
Make a half-inch, horizontal cut through that indentation.
[DEEP BREATH.]
[WHIMPERS.]
What if it's what if it's not clean? What if I give him an infection? Georgia Georgia, Max can't breathe.
You need to help him breathe.
[SIGHS.]
You can do this.
[BREATHES DEEPLY.]
Okay.
[SOBBING.]
Oh, God.
I did it.
I did it.
- Good girl.
Good girl.
- Oh Now, pinch the far edges together.
Use your finger to keep the hole open and slide the tube halfway in.
Oh, God.
Oh, God.
- [GROANS.]
- Air should be coming out of that tube.
[HEAVY BREATHING.]
It's it's not it's not working.
God, it's not working! It didn't work! It didn't work! You you might just need to help his lungs expand.
Blow into the tube.
[BLOWING GENTLY.]
[GASPS.]
Come on, come on.
Oh, come on, come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on, come on, come on.
[AIR WHISTLING THROUGH STRAW.]
Oh! Oh, he [BREATHING THROUGH STRAW.]
He's breathing.
He's breathing.
- [SIGHS.]
- [WEEPING.]
Oh, my God.
Oh, God.
[SOBBING.]
[HELICOPTER BLADES WHIRRING.]
Oh, God.
[HELICOPTER BLADES WHIRRING.]
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC.]
How long was his airway obstructed? How long was he not breathing, ma'am? Uh, six or seven minutes, maybe.
We got a possible cerebral hypoxia! Let's pick up speed! What does that mean? Means there's a big difference between six and seven minutes.
[ROMANTIC ACCORDION MUSIC.]
- Mr.
Mokrani? - Yes.
- How are you? - Not great.
Yeah, let's have a look.
- Does that hurt, right there? - Yes.
Yeah.
Fell during a show? No.
- At the after-party.
- Ah.
I challenged another dancer to a fouetté competition.
- Mm-hmm.
- I can fouetté in my sleep, but in my sleep, I'm neither wasted - nor on a pool table.
- Oh, please.
I was just as drunk and on-a-pool-table as you were.
Know that you did not out-dance me.
Basem, I out-danced you so bad, - you're in a hospital.
- Yeah, well, I don't know if it counts as out-dancing if he fell off a pool table.
[NOSTALGIC MUSIC.]
Yeah, but I didn't.
So, I out-danced him.
Dancing is the art of not falling? [LAUGHS.]
I'm sorry, who are you? [LAUGHS.]
Uh, yeah, I'm [STAMMERS.]
Just a guy challenging you to a, uh fouetté rematch.
Don't worry, I took dance all through uh, never.
- Hello? - Yeah.
Don't you have some medicine to practice? Mm-hmm.
Uh, so, uh, you have a dislocated elbow.
Go ahead and take this pen with your left hand.
Now, grab it tight.
Hang on.
- Ow! Oh! - Okay? - Oof.
- Better? [SIGHS IN RELIEF.]
Yeah.
Yeah, good.
Okay, he's okay.
I was thinking loser buys dinner.
[STAMMERS.]
Really? I mean, yeah.
I'm not scared if you're not scared.
Looks good.
- Looks pretty pretty good.
- Okay, you go.
- My turn? - Yep.
This is embarrassing, 'cause I actually thought "fouetté" was a French dessert, so I didn't know that it was that spin-y thing.
That was way better than what I thought it was.
But, uh excuse me.
Uh, you're gonna go ahead and ice that elbow and you're gonna be fine.
Are you coming? Um it's 2:00 in the morning.
Yeah, but I gotta be back here in three hours anyway and full disclosure, I can't afford a real restaurant, so we were just headed to the cafeteria regardless, but the Jell-O is phenomenal.
You in? [RADIO CHATTER.]
[ROUSING PERCUSSION MUSIC.]
Hey.
What's with the T-shirts? You said you were gonna take time off to take care of yourself.
I am, and I will.
I tried to talk to Max this morning, but he's not here.
He's always here.
Well, right now he's not, and I can't just stop running the ED, can I? I feel so bad, all the work you do on me.
I've become this burden to everyone.
No, no, you're not a burden.
It's just that you have mediocre insurance, and I think you should be treated like you have Cadillac insurance, so we're gonna cover you for an ICD implant.
- Today.
- For the whole surgery? What about the anesthesiologist? Sometimes they get you with the anesthesiologist.
For the whole surgery.
So glad Gertie is doing better.
Bye.
- BOTH: Hello.
- Oh, nice T-shirt.
Thank you.
Power to the people, Vijay.
Ella was telling me that I helped her save her crazy Chihuahua.
Oh.
All right, Ka-pooch.
I didn't know you did work on canines.
- That's cool.
- I don't.
I gave her a little money for the vet.
- How much? - $2,000.
American? [PAGERS BEEPING.]
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC.]
Oh, I gotta go, but I'll see you in prep.
Sharpe! What's the code? - It's Max.
- I'm sorry, what? What happened? I don't have all the details, but he's collapsed.
He's in a medevac on his way here now.
- Is it serious? - I should get the trauma team.
They'll be here in two minutes.
There's something else, something that you all need to know in order to treat him properly when he arrives.
All right, Sharpe, what's what's going on? Max has squamous cell carcinoma.
Advanced stages.
The trauma team's gonna meet us here.
No whoa, hold on a second.
How long have you known about this? Since his first day.
- Since his first day? - Look, I I know that this is shocking, but whatever we're feeling, we're gonna have to put it aside because we need to focus.
[APPROACHING HELICOPTER WHIRRING.]
[MAN SPEAKING INDISTINCTLY.]
Hey, clear a path! [MONITORS BEEPING.]
- O2 stat's dropping.
- Okay, let's up oxygen - to 100%.
- Push more fluid.
Does anybody know how long he was out for? Okay, everybody out of my ED, now! [DRAMATIC MUSIC.]
[INDISTINCT DIRECTIONS.]
- Should I page Dr.
Candelario? - No.
Yes, yeah.
Page her, please.
On three.
One, two, three.
Monitor for ischemic cascade.
Why hasn't he started chemo? In two weeks he starts, uh, - an immunotherapy trial.
- What? - Huh? - Well, that's that's what he wanted.
- That's what he wanted? - Yes, Floyd.
- He's the patient.
- Yeah, but he's also the medical director of this entire hospital.
Am I the only one who's wondering what happens next? What what are you doing out here? Candelario is working on him.
Why? Because I just got off of back-to-back doubles, and Candelario is an excellent doctor.
You pull doubles all the time.
Max deserves to have a doctor with fresh eyes.
Do you disagree? How is he? We don't know yet.
Might be hypoxia.
So, like most of you, Doctor Sharpe told me about Max's condition, and needless to say, I was a bit shocked, but we don't have time to be shocked, or angry, or upset.
We all have a hospital to run, and while Max is in there, we need a leader out here, and that's gonna be me.
Until further notice, I am the new Medical Director of New Amsterdam.
I need surgery schedules, staff rotation.
I need the minutes from the last department chair meeting.
That that's gonna take a little while - to put together.
- Okay, then let's start with what Max was overseeing today.
- His hot list.
- Yeah.
- What's the hot list? - It's his to-do list, but with a cooler name.
Ah.
- I'll call it something else.
- Thank you.
Don't worry, I'm only temporary.
I have several calls out for more permanent replacements.
Dean Fulton, all this is incredibly premature.
- When Max wakes up - If Max wakes up, he will still have cancer.
He certainly didn't expect to continue this job while undergoing chemo.
Ah-hah.
Of course he did.
So all you care about is business.
Let me tell you something every single day, 10,000 patients walk into this hospital and its clinics.
Our annual budget is $1.
5 billion, and the governor is demanding that we cut it by 10%, which is really tough, because our expenses come in well over $1.
8 billion.
Our infrastructure report after Hurricane Sandy told us that we were sinking into the East River, and will need $100 million infused within the next two years so that we don't end up like Bangladesh after a monsoon! And the one guy who's in charge of this whole show is lying in Trauma One with a tube down his throat.
And what about a succession plan? He knew he was sick.
You knew he was sick.
Someone should have had a plan in place.
Right? What? [TENSE MUSIC.]
[PHONE RINGING.]
I just made us the greatest Max has had a set-back.
His throat closed up.
Where is he? In the trauma unit.
- Well, uh, is he responsive? - Still unconscious, but at least he's breathing again.
How long was he down? Six or seven minutes.
I need to ask a favor.
- Anything.
- I need you to move up Max's start date.
To when? To tomorrow.
Helen, I just got the cells.
I know, I know I'm asking a lot, but if Max is gonna keep running this hospital, then he needs to be in your trial.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC.]
Let me see what I can do.
[SIGHS.]
[SOMBER MUSIC.]
[SIGHS.]
- [MONITORS BEEPING.]
- [AIR HISSING.]
Monitoring.
Decompression.
Dr.
Candelario is suctioning Max's lungs.
He's really lucky you were there.
Stand by.
Hey, you want to step outside? Get some fresh air? What's the difference between six and seven minutes? "Six and seven minutes"? EMT said he might have hypoxia.
I don't know how to pray.
I'm not religious, but I wish I knew how to pray.
Got blood.
[ALARMS BEEPING.]
What's happening? What's happening? Could be ARDS.
Oh, God! [MELLOW PIANO MUSIC.]
[OVERLAPPING CHATTER.]
Hey.
Ooh, you're seriously taking me to the theater - in your scrubs.
- I'm on call, but when I put this jacket on, like so [LAUGHS.]
You're looking at me like you can't quite believe you're dating somebody so stylish.
Just like looking at you.
Hmm.
[LAUGHS.]
So, are you excited to see Pina Bausch's company? My God, I can't stop saying it.
Pina Bausch.
Pina Bausch.
- Pina Bausch.
- [LAUGHS.]
Hey, you wanna know an interesting thing - about Pina Bausch? - Pina Bausch.
It's super rare for her company to be - performing on a Monday.
- Oh, is it? - Mm-hmm.
- Weir-sch.
- Theaters are dark on Monday.
- Did not know that.
- You wanna know another thing? - I sure do.
Her company performed just last night at the Kansallisooppera.
And that's even more fun to say.
- It's also in Finland.
- Really? Mm-hmm.
Now, it sounds like you don't think we're going to see Pina Bausch.
What is this? What's that what? Oh.
[PLAYING SLOW TUNE.]
[LAUGHS.]
Uh Yeah, you got me.
There's no show.
Just a guy who can't quite believe his luck.
Really? [LAUGHS.]
Really.
[LAUGHS.]
[GASPS.]
Will you marry me? [PAGER BEEPING.]
Not even gonna check that.
I'm not even gonna look until you say something.
No rush.
- Someone could be dying - [LAUGHS.]
Right now.
Yes, I'll marry you.
- Yes? - Yes.
[TENDER MUSIC.]
[SNIFFLES.]
[LAUGHS.]
Oh, my God, it's beautiful.
[SNIFFLES.]
So beautiful.
[PAGER BEEPING.]
Hey, I gotta go.
I gotta go.
- Go, go, go.
Jacket.
- Yeah, but I yeah.
I'll make it quick, I promise.
- She said yes! - [LAUGHS.]
[APPLAUSE.]
[MONITOR BEEPING.]
[TENSE MUSIC.]
You know hey, hey, I've been thinking about this.
This kind of explains a lot, don't you think? - What? - The all the crazy changes he made around here.
That explains a lot of it.
Yeah, I mean, like, who who forms a cardio unit that doesn't care about money, or who who puts fruits and vegetables in vending machines? Who encourages their own staff to stage a walkout? Do you know what I mean? It's a it's a dying man saying "screw you" to the system, that's who.
What do you want me to say? I don't anything.
Just join the conversation, man.
Or are you just gonna stand there staring at me like the old Kapoor? I was not aware there was a new Kapoor.
Oh, yes.
No, there are two very distinct Kapoors.
The old Kapoor was this solemn fellow who rarely spoke to people, and then Max comes on the scene and bam, all of a sudden you're smiley-face guy who randomly lends $2,000 to the coffee girl for her quote-unquote "dog.
" You have no right to talk about Ella's character.
Except I do, because she took $2,000 from you.
I gave it to her, and for the records, there is no old or new Kapoor.
There is only Kapoor.
[LIGHTHEARTED MUSIC.]
Doctor So I see that your patient, Marina Latimer, is scheduled for an ICD.
Yes.
Why is it being charged to the Community Care Fund? Because her insurance is garbage.
Oh.
I don't see Max's signature anywhere on the document.
Right, yeah, he would have approved that - had he not collapsed.
- Right.
Is she stable? Yes.
This is not a necessary surgery.
Okay, Mrs.
Latimer has been in and out of this hospital more than her own home.
This ICD will completely change her life.
Doctor, a public hospital's job is not to change people's lives.
It's to save people's lives.
[TENSE MUSIC.]
We will not be paying for this surgery.
Oh, Dean.
Hey, Dean, hi.
- You wanted to see me? - Yeah.
Hi.
What's up? How you holding up, kiddo? Uh uh, you know.
Terribly.
We go way back, don't we? Mm-hmm.
Am I fired? Ignatius, come on.
Well, usually when people say "we go way back," it's because you're not going way forward.
This is about the nurses and the walkout.
Oh, good, right.
Yes.
Um, HCC needs to come back to the table so we can make some progress.
They're not coming back to the table.
Well, if the nurses stand together, we have a shot.
They're not coming back to the table.
HCC wouldn't tell Max, but they told me.
If the nurses walk, then I have no choice.
- I just have to replace them.
- You can't.
You can't replace 1,600 nurses.
So I'll have to close the wards that we can't staff.
I'm gonna have to send the doctors home, send custodial home.
People are gonna lose their jobs, and for what? We work in healthcare, and we can't provide our own people with comprehensive healthcare.
I want you to listen to me now.
With Max down, this is not the right time.
Convince the nurses to stand down, or else everyone patients included everyone is gonna pay the price.
Fine.
All right, fine.
[TENSE MUSIC.]
- [MONITORS BEEPING.]
- [AIR HISSING.]
Hey, uh, can I get an update? For, uh, Georgia? He's still unresponsive.
We're having a hard time getting his heart rate up.
Well, maybe I can help.
He's not your patient.
He's my friend.
Can I talk to you, please? [CLEARS THROAT.]
Then why did you pass him off? Max Max needed fresh eyes.
[LAUGHS.]
I've known you six years and I have never once heard you refer to your eyes as not fresh.
My shift was over.
Lauren.
Why did you pass Max off? I- I've been working at Bronx General a lot and working here a lot.
I don't know, the last last few weeks it was it was too much.
I hit a wall.
Okay.
And, um I've been taking a little bit more Adderall than prescribed.
- How much more? - I don't know.
Just more.
But I'm handling it, okay? I'm gonna I'm gonna take some time off, I'm gonna figure it out.
I was gonna talk to Max this morning, but [SOLEMN MUSIC.]
Anyway that's why I passed him off.
[OVERLAPPING CHATTER.]
So, do you really think Ella doesn't have a dog? [SIGHS.]
Are you serious right now? Is that is that a serious question? New Amsterdam is upside-down right now.
Max is in the ICU, the dean wants me to tank the walkout, and you're focused on some woman's Chihuahua? - Come on, man.
- So you do think - she has a dog.
- I don't care.
Dog, no dog, it doesn't matter.
It matters to me.
Why? Why does it matter? Because there is a new Kapoor.
I think there's a new Iggy, too.
So what do you think this new Iggy and new Kapoor should do? [MELLOW MUSIC.]
Are you Dr.
Goodwin's wife? Yes.
I I just want to say that your husband is the first man in his position [SIGHS.]
To care about the janitors.
We wait for good news.
Hey, hey, hey! I come bearing the sweetest cantaloupe you have ever had.
I know your, uh, cravings haven't started yet, but when they do, I feel like they're gonna be really melon-heavy.
I don't know why, I just get that vibe.
[LAUGHS.]
You okay? What's wrong? Is it the baby? When I came home there was a FedEx waiting with contracts from New Amsterdam Medical Center.
Good news.
You got the job that I didn't know you'd even applied for.
I didn't I didn't apply, it just happened.
- When was the interview? - [STAMMERS.]
- A week ago - A week ago.
But, uh, look, the dean of medicine called me out of nowhere and he said, "I need an answer right away.
" - And I figure why tell you - "Why tell me"? - If I don't know - We made a promise, Max.
Remember? We were going to raise this child together.
We were going to put our careers second.
[SHAKY LAUGH.]
I gave up everything.
This job is the opposite of that.
I'm gonna make it work.
Really? It is the largest public hospital in the country.
And I'm gonna figure out how to squeeze everything in.
Oh, great.
Will you, Max? Will you figure out how you can squeeze me in and and your child? That's not what I meant.
Well, that's what's gonna happen.
By the time this baby gets here, I'm gonna have this place running smoothly.
I can come home early.
I can take weekends.
You won't.
Not unless I'm sick, not unless the baby's sick.
That is the only way you will stop, and just be.
And just be what, Georgia? This is this is the life of a doctor.
This is my life.
No, it's not.
It's not.
We know doctors we know dozens of doctors and this is not their life.
You're obsessed, Max.
You are.
It's not healthy.
It's like an addiction.
I know you love me.
[SNIFFLES.]
But when the hospital calls it always wins.
[SNIFFLES.]
I can't let my daughter grow up feeling like she's not the most important thing in her father's life.
I can't do this anymore, Max.
[SNIFFLES.]
[SNIFFLING.]
[DOOR OPENS, CLOSES.]
[MELLOW MUSIC.]
[SIRENS WAILING.]
Georgia with your permission, I would like to provide Max with a small prayer.
[SPEAKING FOREIGN LANGUAGE.]
[SNIFFLES.]
What is that? Did I hurt him? No.
I think you might have just saved his life.
It's called a paraneoplastic syndrome.
The way his skin got red and swollen where you kissed him? That's happening everywhere in his body.
Everything's becoming red and swollen, and shutting down.
From the cancer? Yes.
But now that we know what it is, we can treat it.
And he'll be okay, right? [SOMBER MUSIC.]
Uh, we'll have to wait and see.
Let's let the HCC know what we want! ALL: We'll march all day! We'll march all night! 'Cause birth control is our right! We'll march all day! We'll march all night! Louder! All right, come on! This one's for the one and only True Medical Director of New Amsterdam: Max Goodwin! Let's make it bigger! ALL: March all day! March all night! You know, I just I think Max would have hated to see a bunch of clever homemade protest signs go to waste, you know? You look like you're a small.
Right, sir? There.
For you.
ALL: March all night! 'Cause birth control Forceps.
Suture.
[ELECTROCARDIOGRAPH BEEPING.]
[THROUGH MICROPHONE.]
Reynolds? Is that Marina Latimer? It is.
So you're willing to risk your job for one surgery.
I'm willing to risk my job for one patient.
Now, the ICD is implanted, and I'm using a 4-0 nylon suture for closure.
When I am done she'll spend 24 hours in recovery.
Then I am sending her home without a bill.
If the hospital won't pay, bill me.
What if I'm wrong What if I've lied What if I've dragged you here [WOLF LARSEN'S "IF I BE WRONG" PLAYING.]
To my own dark night And what if I know What if I see There is a crack Run right down I'll give you a moment.
The front of me So that's my wife.
What do you think? Not bad, right? I did okay.
She would have loved you.
Thing is, I I almost blew it with Georgia a few months ago.
She, uh, saw right through me.
She figured out that everything I do is because of you.
I just keep trying to save you.
What if we're wrong Over and over, that's all I do.
And I never never will.
So now I got a wife and a daughter on the way, and I'm always gonna love you.
Always Tonight Always But I need to start living for them, too.
[SNIFFLES.]
[SNIFFLES.]
[SNIFFLING.]
Georgia.
Ten thousand cars Oh, my God There are ten thousand - It's okay.
- [SOBBING.]
To run Away [SOBBING.]
Not Cohen's hound What if I be wrong If I be right Let me be here With you tonight [PAGER BEEPING.]
[KNOCKING ON DOOR.]
Dr.
Reynolds.
Is the dean looking for me? [LAUGHS.]
I'm sorry, I can't seem to stop.
Max is awake.
[SIGHS.]
I should have told [SIGHS.]
Everybody from the beginning.
Um but I've been wrong before.
Sharpe.
I want to start chemo.
No clinical trials, no risk.
I don't want to risk losing you again.
That's my priority.
But if I can't - Which means - No.
No, you're not resigning.
I have no choice.
You will if we help you.
I mean, if you're willing to delegate, we'll all have your back.
Like you had ours.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, count me in.
Me, too.
I don't mind putting in the extra time if it means keeping you around.
Guys you're not hearing me.
I think they're hearing you just fine, Max.
These are your people.
This is your hospital.
For better or worse, there's no going back, Max.
Georgia, help me out.
[SIGHS.]
Max is about to start the most intense fight of his life.
I will escape And above everything For sure He has to take care of himself.
I am David Blaine But if I be wrong Which is why he's not quitting.
Let me be here With you If I be wrong This job this job is who you are.
In some ways it's who you've always been.
I've been wrong I honestly believe that by staying here working, helping So if I be wrong Will keep you alive.
If I be right Let me be here With you Tonight
Squamous cell carcinoma.
I want to try precision targeted therapy.
Chemo's gonna take the life out of me and I I want - to keep running this hospital.
- It's too big a risk.
Doctor Bloom asked me to consult on the hematology patient.
Her file says that she received her heart from a Luna Goodwin.
Your sister she gave me a beautiful life.
She had me arrange this.
Max? [SHAKY BREATHING.]
Baby! Oh, my help! Help! [SIRENS WAILING.]
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC.]
[TIRES SQUEALING.]
[SIRENS WAILING.]
We've got Marina Latimer, mid 60s.
Been down for three minutes.
It's her third time here this week.
She went back into V-fib right after I shocked her.
Charge to 200.
Clear.
[ELECTRICAL ZAP.]
Okay, I've got a pulse.
Her heart's a ticking time bomb.
Let's put V-fib pads on her and find Reynolds.
He needs to put in an ICD, today.
Yo, Dora.
Where's Max? Out of pocket for a few hours.
Oh, okay.
Well, I have a patient who needs an ICD surgery.
Her insurance won't cover it so I'm just gonna charge it to the Community Care Fund.
Max is the only one who can approve surgeries from the Community Care Fund.
He's out of pocket for a few hours.
Can this wait until it doesn't get me fired? Um, look, whenever there's a surgery that needs to be done I just give Max a heads-up and I do it, all right? He dots the "I's" and crosses the "T's" later.
We we got a whole system.
He's been here for like three weeks.
Yeah, that's how efficient we are.
[MISCHIEVOUS MUSIC.]
Dora, hi.
Just on my way to Max's office right now.
Yeah, he was out of pocket for a few hours.
He's what? Oh, shoot.
No, really? Uh, as the nurses' union liaison, I need to tell him that the hospital-wide walkout was authorized just now for today.
"Walkout"? No, no, no.
It's a good it's a good thing.
Max gave them the idea.
[CHUCKLES.]
- Of course he did.
- Yeah, I probably should have led with that.
Did you know that insurance has covered over-the-counter emergency contraception since 1996, and now all of a sudden, out of the blue, they're like, "No, uh-uh.
Not without a prescription"? That's not fair, right? There's there's no way we're gonna let that slide.
And yes, for the record, "Norma Rae" is my favorite movie.
[CLICKS TONGUE.]
Go, girl.
Dora, uh, I've been texting Max, but he's not responding.
He's out of pocket for a few hours.
But I need to talk to him.
[LAUGHS.]
I've basically authorized a surgery that's not covered by insurance, and I'm about to endure a walkout from the nurses, so whatever you need right now, I'm sure I can handle.
- It's private.
- Dora.
Dora, I've been looking for Max.
Okay, I'm only gonna say this once more: Max is out of pocket for a few hours.
Please, save your news, questions, mysterious personal requests, or whatever it is that you need, for his return.
Thank you.
[RADIO CHATTER.]
Dr.
Panthaki.
Thank you for picking up Max's samples in person.
But to be clear, this cooler is full of Miller Lites, right? Yes.
Yes, because I'm the type who drinks domestic.
So tell me, will this be your first time seeing Lauryn Hill in concert? Actually, no.
I've seen her several times.
But never on a date.
So in your head, this is a date, huh? That's interesting.
Just just give me my ticket.
Actually, let's do this properly.
Get dressed up.
Dinner.
Okay.
Great.
Well, I I should go now.
Me, too.
Oh, and we're going Dutch on dinner, so make sure you bring some cash.
[PHONE RINGING.]
[PHONE BEEPS.]
Max, are you on your way back? [INDISTINCT WHIMPERING.]
Helen! Helen, can you hear me? Georgia? What's wrong? It's Max.
He he collapsed.
He's not moving.
- Does he have a pulse? - Okay.
- Yes.
- Did you call 911? They're coming but, um, the call dropped and I just didn't know what to do.
Put your cheek over his mouth.
Do you feel air moving? [MOANS.]
There is, uh, like, a whistling a raspy sound.
Put the phone next to his throat.
[RASPY, LABORED BREATHING.]
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC.]
- Georgia? - Yes? Georgia, Max's throat is blocked.
- What? - You need to make a new path so that he can breathe.
- Okay.
- You're gonna cut a small hole - in his throat - What? No.
No, I can't.
Yes, yes.
Yes, you can.
You can, because I'm gonna help you.
Find something that can cut a hole in his throat and a tube to slide through it.
Find something.
Okay.
[SNIFFLES.]
[HEAVY BREATHING.]
Uh Oh, uh, I have a I have a pocket knife.
Oh, God.
And a and a plastic straw.
Use the knife to cut, um, three inches.
It doesn't have to be exact.
[WHIMPERS.]
- Here we go, Georgia.
- Okay.
[DEEP BREATHS.]
Use your index finger.
Find Max's Adam's apple.
Okay, I found it.
Feel down from there until you come to a little indentation.
Make a half-inch, horizontal cut through that indentation.
[DEEP BREATH.]
[WHIMPERS.]
What if it's what if it's not clean? What if I give him an infection? Georgia Georgia, Max can't breathe.
You need to help him breathe.
[SIGHS.]
You can do this.
[BREATHES DEEPLY.]
Okay.
[SOBBING.]
Oh, God.
I did it.
I did it.
- Good girl.
Good girl.
- Oh Now, pinch the far edges together.
Use your finger to keep the hole open and slide the tube halfway in.
Oh, God.
Oh, God.
- [GROANS.]
- Air should be coming out of that tube.
[HEAVY BREATHING.]
It's it's not it's not working.
God, it's not working! It didn't work! It didn't work! You you might just need to help his lungs expand.
Blow into the tube.
[BLOWING GENTLY.]
[GASPS.]
Come on, come on.
Oh, come on, come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on, come on, come on.
[AIR WHISTLING THROUGH STRAW.]
Oh! Oh, he [BREATHING THROUGH STRAW.]
He's breathing.
He's breathing.
- [SIGHS.]
- [WEEPING.]
Oh, my God.
Oh, God.
[SOBBING.]
[HELICOPTER BLADES WHIRRING.]
Oh, God.
[HELICOPTER BLADES WHIRRING.]
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC.]
How long was his airway obstructed? How long was he not breathing, ma'am? Uh, six or seven minutes, maybe.
We got a possible cerebral hypoxia! Let's pick up speed! What does that mean? Means there's a big difference between six and seven minutes.
[ROMANTIC ACCORDION MUSIC.]
- Mr.
Mokrani? - Yes.
- How are you? - Not great.
Yeah, let's have a look.
- Does that hurt, right there? - Yes.
Yeah.
Fell during a show? No.
- At the after-party.
- Ah.
I challenged another dancer to a fouetté competition.
- Mm-hmm.
- I can fouetté in my sleep, but in my sleep, I'm neither wasted - nor on a pool table.
- Oh, please.
I was just as drunk and on-a-pool-table as you were.
Know that you did not out-dance me.
Basem, I out-danced you so bad, - you're in a hospital.
- Yeah, well, I don't know if it counts as out-dancing if he fell off a pool table.
[NOSTALGIC MUSIC.]
Yeah, but I didn't.
So, I out-danced him.
Dancing is the art of not falling? [LAUGHS.]
I'm sorry, who are you? [LAUGHS.]
Uh, yeah, I'm [STAMMERS.]
Just a guy challenging you to a, uh fouetté rematch.
Don't worry, I took dance all through uh, never.
- Hello? - Yeah.
Don't you have some medicine to practice? Mm-hmm.
Uh, so, uh, you have a dislocated elbow.
Go ahead and take this pen with your left hand.
Now, grab it tight.
Hang on.
- Ow! Oh! - Okay? - Oof.
- Better? [SIGHS IN RELIEF.]
Yeah.
Yeah, good.
Okay, he's okay.
I was thinking loser buys dinner.
[STAMMERS.]
Really? I mean, yeah.
I'm not scared if you're not scared.
Looks good.
- Looks pretty pretty good.
- Okay, you go.
- My turn? - Yep.
This is embarrassing, 'cause I actually thought "fouetté" was a French dessert, so I didn't know that it was that spin-y thing.
That was way better than what I thought it was.
But, uh excuse me.
Uh, you're gonna go ahead and ice that elbow and you're gonna be fine.
Are you coming? Um it's 2:00 in the morning.
Yeah, but I gotta be back here in three hours anyway and full disclosure, I can't afford a real restaurant, so we were just headed to the cafeteria regardless, but the Jell-O is phenomenal.
You in? [RADIO CHATTER.]
[ROUSING PERCUSSION MUSIC.]
Hey.
What's with the T-shirts? You said you were gonna take time off to take care of yourself.
I am, and I will.
I tried to talk to Max this morning, but he's not here.
He's always here.
Well, right now he's not, and I can't just stop running the ED, can I? I feel so bad, all the work you do on me.
I've become this burden to everyone.
No, no, you're not a burden.
It's just that you have mediocre insurance, and I think you should be treated like you have Cadillac insurance, so we're gonna cover you for an ICD implant.
- Today.
- For the whole surgery? What about the anesthesiologist? Sometimes they get you with the anesthesiologist.
For the whole surgery.
So glad Gertie is doing better.
Bye.
- BOTH: Hello.
- Oh, nice T-shirt.
Thank you.
Power to the people, Vijay.
Ella was telling me that I helped her save her crazy Chihuahua.
Oh.
All right, Ka-pooch.
I didn't know you did work on canines.
- That's cool.
- I don't.
I gave her a little money for the vet.
- How much? - $2,000.
American? [PAGERS BEEPING.]
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC.]
Oh, I gotta go, but I'll see you in prep.
Sharpe! What's the code? - It's Max.
- I'm sorry, what? What happened? I don't have all the details, but he's collapsed.
He's in a medevac on his way here now.
- Is it serious? - I should get the trauma team.
They'll be here in two minutes.
There's something else, something that you all need to know in order to treat him properly when he arrives.
All right, Sharpe, what's what's going on? Max has squamous cell carcinoma.
Advanced stages.
The trauma team's gonna meet us here.
No whoa, hold on a second.
How long have you known about this? Since his first day.
- Since his first day? - Look, I I know that this is shocking, but whatever we're feeling, we're gonna have to put it aside because we need to focus.
[APPROACHING HELICOPTER WHIRRING.]
[MAN SPEAKING INDISTINCTLY.]
Hey, clear a path! [MONITORS BEEPING.]
- O2 stat's dropping.
- Okay, let's up oxygen - to 100%.
- Push more fluid.
Does anybody know how long he was out for? Okay, everybody out of my ED, now! [DRAMATIC MUSIC.]
[INDISTINCT DIRECTIONS.]
- Should I page Dr.
Candelario? - No.
Yes, yeah.
Page her, please.
On three.
One, two, three.
Monitor for ischemic cascade.
Why hasn't he started chemo? In two weeks he starts, uh, - an immunotherapy trial.
- What? - Huh? - Well, that's that's what he wanted.
- That's what he wanted? - Yes, Floyd.
- He's the patient.
- Yeah, but he's also the medical director of this entire hospital.
Am I the only one who's wondering what happens next? What what are you doing out here? Candelario is working on him.
Why? Because I just got off of back-to-back doubles, and Candelario is an excellent doctor.
You pull doubles all the time.
Max deserves to have a doctor with fresh eyes.
Do you disagree? How is he? We don't know yet.
Might be hypoxia.
So, like most of you, Doctor Sharpe told me about Max's condition, and needless to say, I was a bit shocked, but we don't have time to be shocked, or angry, or upset.
We all have a hospital to run, and while Max is in there, we need a leader out here, and that's gonna be me.
Until further notice, I am the new Medical Director of New Amsterdam.
I need surgery schedules, staff rotation.
I need the minutes from the last department chair meeting.
That that's gonna take a little while - to put together.
- Okay, then let's start with what Max was overseeing today.
- His hot list.
- Yeah.
- What's the hot list? - It's his to-do list, but with a cooler name.
Ah.
- I'll call it something else.
- Thank you.
Don't worry, I'm only temporary.
I have several calls out for more permanent replacements.
Dean Fulton, all this is incredibly premature.
- When Max wakes up - If Max wakes up, he will still have cancer.
He certainly didn't expect to continue this job while undergoing chemo.
Ah-hah.
Of course he did.
So all you care about is business.
Let me tell you something every single day, 10,000 patients walk into this hospital and its clinics.
Our annual budget is $1.
5 billion, and the governor is demanding that we cut it by 10%, which is really tough, because our expenses come in well over $1.
8 billion.
Our infrastructure report after Hurricane Sandy told us that we were sinking into the East River, and will need $100 million infused within the next two years so that we don't end up like Bangladesh after a monsoon! And the one guy who's in charge of this whole show is lying in Trauma One with a tube down his throat.
And what about a succession plan? He knew he was sick.
You knew he was sick.
Someone should have had a plan in place.
Right? What? [TENSE MUSIC.]
[PHONE RINGING.]
I just made us the greatest Max has had a set-back.
His throat closed up.
Where is he? In the trauma unit.
- Well, uh, is he responsive? - Still unconscious, but at least he's breathing again.
How long was he down? Six or seven minutes.
I need to ask a favor.
- Anything.
- I need you to move up Max's start date.
To when? To tomorrow.
Helen, I just got the cells.
I know, I know I'm asking a lot, but if Max is gonna keep running this hospital, then he needs to be in your trial.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC.]
Let me see what I can do.
[SIGHS.]
[SOMBER MUSIC.]
[SIGHS.]
- [MONITORS BEEPING.]
- [AIR HISSING.]
Monitoring.
Decompression.
Dr.
Candelario is suctioning Max's lungs.
He's really lucky you were there.
Stand by.
Hey, you want to step outside? Get some fresh air? What's the difference between six and seven minutes? "Six and seven minutes"? EMT said he might have hypoxia.
I don't know how to pray.
I'm not religious, but I wish I knew how to pray.
Got blood.
[ALARMS BEEPING.]
What's happening? What's happening? Could be ARDS.
Oh, God! [MELLOW PIANO MUSIC.]
[OVERLAPPING CHATTER.]
Hey.
Ooh, you're seriously taking me to the theater - in your scrubs.
- I'm on call, but when I put this jacket on, like so [LAUGHS.]
You're looking at me like you can't quite believe you're dating somebody so stylish.
Just like looking at you.
Hmm.
[LAUGHS.]
So, are you excited to see Pina Bausch's company? My God, I can't stop saying it.
Pina Bausch.
Pina Bausch.
- Pina Bausch.
- [LAUGHS.]
Hey, you wanna know an interesting thing - about Pina Bausch? - Pina Bausch.
It's super rare for her company to be - performing on a Monday.
- Oh, is it? - Mm-hmm.
- Weir-sch.
- Theaters are dark on Monday.
- Did not know that.
- You wanna know another thing? - I sure do.
Her company performed just last night at the Kansallisooppera.
And that's even more fun to say.
- It's also in Finland.
- Really? Mm-hmm.
Now, it sounds like you don't think we're going to see Pina Bausch.
What is this? What's that what? Oh.
[PLAYING SLOW TUNE.]
[LAUGHS.]
Uh Yeah, you got me.
There's no show.
Just a guy who can't quite believe his luck.
Really? [LAUGHS.]
Really.
[LAUGHS.]
[GASPS.]
Will you marry me? [PAGER BEEPING.]
Not even gonna check that.
I'm not even gonna look until you say something.
No rush.
- Someone could be dying - [LAUGHS.]
Right now.
Yes, I'll marry you.
- Yes? - Yes.
[TENDER MUSIC.]
[SNIFFLES.]
[LAUGHS.]
Oh, my God, it's beautiful.
[SNIFFLES.]
So beautiful.
[PAGER BEEPING.]
Hey, I gotta go.
I gotta go.
- Go, go, go.
Jacket.
- Yeah, but I yeah.
I'll make it quick, I promise.
- She said yes! - [LAUGHS.]
[APPLAUSE.]
[MONITOR BEEPING.]
[TENSE MUSIC.]
You know hey, hey, I've been thinking about this.
This kind of explains a lot, don't you think? - What? - The all the crazy changes he made around here.
That explains a lot of it.
Yeah, I mean, like, who who forms a cardio unit that doesn't care about money, or who who puts fruits and vegetables in vending machines? Who encourages their own staff to stage a walkout? Do you know what I mean? It's a it's a dying man saying "screw you" to the system, that's who.
What do you want me to say? I don't anything.
Just join the conversation, man.
Or are you just gonna stand there staring at me like the old Kapoor? I was not aware there was a new Kapoor.
Oh, yes.
No, there are two very distinct Kapoors.
The old Kapoor was this solemn fellow who rarely spoke to people, and then Max comes on the scene and bam, all of a sudden you're smiley-face guy who randomly lends $2,000 to the coffee girl for her quote-unquote "dog.
" You have no right to talk about Ella's character.
Except I do, because she took $2,000 from you.
I gave it to her, and for the records, there is no old or new Kapoor.
There is only Kapoor.
[LIGHTHEARTED MUSIC.]
Doctor So I see that your patient, Marina Latimer, is scheduled for an ICD.
Yes.
Why is it being charged to the Community Care Fund? Because her insurance is garbage.
Oh.
I don't see Max's signature anywhere on the document.
Right, yeah, he would have approved that - had he not collapsed.
- Right.
Is she stable? Yes.
This is not a necessary surgery.
Okay, Mrs.
Latimer has been in and out of this hospital more than her own home.
This ICD will completely change her life.
Doctor, a public hospital's job is not to change people's lives.
It's to save people's lives.
[TENSE MUSIC.]
We will not be paying for this surgery.
Oh, Dean.
Hey, Dean, hi.
- You wanted to see me? - Yeah.
Hi.
What's up? How you holding up, kiddo? Uh uh, you know.
Terribly.
We go way back, don't we? Mm-hmm.
Am I fired? Ignatius, come on.
Well, usually when people say "we go way back," it's because you're not going way forward.
This is about the nurses and the walkout.
Oh, good, right.
Yes.
Um, HCC needs to come back to the table so we can make some progress.
They're not coming back to the table.
Well, if the nurses stand together, we have a shot.
They're not coming back to the table.
HCC wouldn't tell Max, but they told me.
If the nurses walk, then I have no choice.
- I just have to replace them.
- You can't.
You can't replace 1,600 nurses.
So I'll have to close the wards that we can't staff.
I'm gonna have to send the doctors home, send custodial home.
People are gonna lose their jobs, and for what? We work in healthcare, and we can't provide our own people with comprehensive healthcare.
I want you to listen to me now.
With Max down, this is not the right time.
Convince the nurses to stand down, or else everyone patients included everyone is gonna pay the price.
Fine.
All right, fine.
[TENSE MUSIC.]
- [MONITORS BEEPING.]
- [AIR HISSING.]
Hey, uh, can I get an update? For, uh, Georgia? He's still unresponsive.
We're having a hard time getting his heart rate up.
Well, maybe I can help.
He's not your patient.
He's my friend.
Can I talk to you, please? [CLEARS THROAT.]
Then why did you pass him off? Max Max needed fresh eyes.
[LAUGHS.]
I've known you six years and I have never once heard you refer to your eyes as not fresh.
My shift was over.
Lauren.
Why did you pass Max off? I- I've been working at Bronx General a lot and working here a lot.
I don't know, the last last few weeks it was it was too much.
I hit a wall.
Okay.
And, um I've been taking a little bit more Adderall than prescribed.
- How much more? - I don't know.
Just more.
But I'm handling it, okay? I'm gonna I'm gonna take some time off, I'm gonna figure it out.
I was gonna talk to Max this morning, but [SOLEMN MUSIC.]
Anyway that's why I passed him off.
[OVERLAPPING CHATTER.]
So, do you really think Ella doesn't have a dog? [SIGHS.]
Are you serious right now? Is that is that a serious question? New Amsterdam is upside-down right now.
Max is in the ICU, the dean wants me to tank the walkout, and you're focused on some woman's Chihuahua? - Come on, man.
- So you do think - she has a dog.
- I don't care.
Dog, no dog, it doesn't matter.
It matters to me.
Why? Why does it matter? Because there is a new Kapoor.
I think there's a new Iggy, too.
So what do you think this new Iggy and new Kapoor should do? [MELLOW MUSIC.]
Are you Dr.
Goodwin's wife? Yes.
I I just want to say that your husband is the first man in his position [SIGHS.]
To care about the janitors.
We wait for good news.
Hey, hey, hey! I come bearing the sweetest cantaloupe you have ever had.
I know your, uh, cravings haven't started yet, but when they do, I feel like they're gonna be really melon-heavy.
I don't know why, I just get that vibe.
[LAUGHS.]
You okay? What's wrong? Is it the baby? When I came home there was a FedEx waiting with contracts from New Amsterdam Medical Center.
Good news.
You got the job that I didn't know you'd even applied for.
I didn't I didn't apply, it just happened.
- When was the interview? - [STAMMERS.]
- A week ago - A week ago.
But, uh, look, the dean of medicine called me out of nowhere and he said, "I need an answer right away.
" - And I figure why tell you - "Why tell me"? - If I don't know - We made a promise, Max.
Remember? We were going to raise this child together.
We were going to put our careers second.
[SHAKY LAUGH.]
I gave up everything.
This job is the opposite of that.
I'm gonna make it work.
Really? It is the largest public hospital in the country.
And I'm gonna figure out how to squeeze everything in.
Oh, great.
Will you, Max? Will you figure out how you can squeeze me in and and your child? That's not what I meant.
Well, that's what's gonna happen.
By the time this baby gets here, I'm gonna have this place running smoothly.
I can come home early.
I can take weekends.
You won't.
Not unless I'm sick, not unless the baby's sick.
That is the only way you will stop, and just be.
And just be what, Georgia? This is this is the life of a doctor.
This is my life.
No, it's not.
It's not.
We know doctors we know dozens of doctors and this is not their life.
You're obsessed, Max.
You are.
It's not healthy.
It's like an addiction.
I know you love me.
[SNIFFLES.]
But when the hospital calls it always wins.
[SNIFFLES.]
I can't let my daughter grow up feeling like she's not the most important thing in her father's life.
I can't do this anymore, Max.
[SNIFFLES.]
[SNIFFLING.]
[DOOR OPENS, CLOSES.]
[MELLOW MUSIC.]
[SIRENS WAILING.]
Georgia with your permission, I would like to provide Max with a small prayer.
[SPEAKING FOREIGN LANGUAGE.]
[SNIFFLES.]
What is that? Did I hurt him? No.
I think you might have just saved his life.
It's called a paraneoplastic syndrome.
The way his skin got red and swollen where you kissed him? That's happening everywhere in his body.
Everything's becoming red and swollen, and shutting down.
From the cancer? Yes.
But now that we know what it is, we can treat it.
And he'll be okay, right? [SOMBER MUSIC.]
Uh, we'll have to wait and see.
Let's let the HCC know what we want! ALL: We'll march all day! We'll march all night! 'Cause birth control is our right! We'll march all day! We'll march all night! Louder! All right, come on! This one's for the one and only True Medical Director of New Amsterdam: Max Goodwin! Let's make it bigger! ALL: March all day! March all night! You know, I just I think Max would have hated to see a bunch of clever homemade protest signs go to waste, you know? You look like you're a small.
Right, sir? There.
For you.
ALL: March all night! 'Cause birth control Forceps.
Suture.
[ELECTROCARDIOGRAPH BEEPING.]
[THROUGH MICROPHONE.]
Reynolds? Is that Marina Latimer? It is.
So you're willing to risk your job for one surgery.
I'm willing to risk my job for one patient.
Now, the ICD is implanted, and I'm using a 4-0 nylon suture for closure.
When I am done she'll spend 24 hours in recovery.
Then I am sending her home without a bill.
If the hospital won't pay, bill me.
What if I'm wrong What if I've lied What if I've dragged you here [WOLF LARSEN'S "IF I BE WRONG" PLAYING.]
To my own dark night And what if I know What if I see There is a crack Run right down I'll give you a moment.
The front of me So that's my wife.
What do you think? Not bad, right? I did okay.
She would have loved you.
Thing is, I I almost blew it with Georgia a few months ago.
She, uh, saw right through me.
She figured out that everything I do is because of you.
I just keep trying to save you.
What if we're wrong Over and over, that's all I do.
And I never never will.
So now I got a wife and a daughter on the way, and I'm always gonna love you.
Always Tonight Always But I need to start living for them, too.
[SNIFFLES.]
[SNIFFLES.]
[SNIFFLING.]
Georgia.
Ten thousand cars Oh, my God There are ten thousand - It's okay.
- [SOBBING.]
To run Away [SOBBING.]
Not Cohen's hound What if I be wrong If I be right Let me be here With you tonight [PAGER BEEPING.]
[KNOCKING ON DOOR.]
Dr.
Reynolds.
Is the dean looking for me? [LAUGHS.]
I'm sorry, I can't seem to stop.
Max is awake.
[SIGHS.]
I should have told [SIGHS.]
Everybody from the beginning.
Um but I've been wrong before.
Sharpe.
I want to start chemo.
No clinical trials, no risk.
I don't want to risk losing you again.
That's my priority.
But if I can't - Which means - No.
No, you're not resigning.
I have no choice.
You will if we help you.
I mean, if you're willing to delegate, we'll all have your back.
Like you had ours.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, count me in.
Me, too.
I don't mind putting in the extra time if it means keeping you around.
Guys you're not hearing me.
I think they're hearing you just fine, Max.
These are your people.
This is your hospital.
For better or worse, there's no going back, Max.
Georgia, help me out.
[SIGHS.]
Max is about to start the most intense fight of his life.
I will escape And above everything For sure He has to take care of himself.
I am David Blaine But if I be wrong Which is why he's not quitting.
Let me be here With you If I be wrong This job this job is who you are.
In some ways it's who you've always been.
I've been wrong I honestly believe that by staying here working, helping So if I be wrong Will keep you alive.
If I be right Let me be here With you Tonight