New Amsterdam (2018) s01e12 Episode Script
Anima Sola
1 Previously, on "New Amsterdam" - Dr.
Bloom.
- Dr.
Bloom? The last few weeks, I've been taking a little bit more Adderall than prescribed.
- I think you may need help.
- I'm just tired Mr.
Powell could have died.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC.]
Run the Cardiac Surgical Department.
There is no Cardiac Surgical Department.
Then build one.
When we aim high-energy external beam radiation at the cancer in your throat, if you move then, you die.
I don't want everyone to see me so weak.
The answer's yes, Max.
I'll be your deputy.
[MELLOW MUSIC.]
[SIREN WAILING IN THE DISTANCE.]
[BLOWS RASPBERRY.]
I don't even know what some of this stuff is.
Babe, I-I didn't know we had so many friends.
This is a return, right? - No way.
- No? Cloth diapers are way better for the environment.
Yeah, but disposable diapers are way better for sleeping in on Sunday.
- Fine, maybe pile.
- Maybe pile.
It's very cute that you think you're sleeping in on Sundays.
Yeah.
Electric snot sucker? Return.
How do you suggest we remove snot from our baby's nasal passages? The old-fashioned way.
You put your mouth on that nose and you [SUCKING.]
- That's disgusting! - Keeping.
- Babe, I'm just saying What about a baby a baby blender? That's a maybe.
I mean, we don't have an adult blender.
All right, well, the Swedish here says, uh [SPEAKING BROKEN SWEDISH.]
Oh, well, in that case - Mm.
- Return.
Return.
Yeah.
[GROANS.]
- Oh, babe, more nausea? Mm.
Mm-hmm.
Hey, I thought Helen said that you wouldn't experience chemo nausea so soon.
Well, maybe I'm, uh Maybe I'm special.
Maybe you should stay home.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-mm.
I'm good.
I'm already over it.
It's fine.
I'm raring to go.
I'm not gonna let a little cancer slow me down.
I'm fine.
[KATRINA AND THE WAVES' "WALKING ON SUNSHINE".]
Ow! Yeah How can I help? Figured out why the old Cardio Department lost its way: Our conflict of interest policy.
- What's wrong with it? - Well, we don't have one.
Big pharma could buy me an island, - and no one would know.
- Could be fun.
We should mandate total transparency.
Uh, how many other hospitals do this? - Zero.
- I guess we'll be the first.
In clinical trials, do you know what you want in ideal candidates? Ooh, I know this one.
Sick people? - Diversity.
- Yeah.
Our candidates need to be as diverse as the country we're aiming to treat.
Yeah, so what's the problem? The country I'm trying to treat isn't Finland.
Hmm.
I can see that.
Yeah.
I'll make some calls.
More glitter, right? Okay, yes.
So New York has seen a spike in Polynesian refugees because their countries are, you know, - sinking into the Pacific Ocean.
- Right.
Not a lot of them speak English like these little cuties right here from Tuvalu, aren't you? Imagine I just said "how can I help?" in Tuvaluan.
I wish I could, but I can't, because nobody speaks Tuvaluan in New York literally, like, less than 20 people.
I need a translator.
- [SPEAKING TUVALUAN.]
- Oh, okay.
So I just learned the word for "potty.
" - Oh, did you? - But I'm gonna take off.
Okay.
Oh, oh.
Gladys! My department was just flagged by HCC for "disproportionately providing coverage to patients ineligible for Medicaid and for" Solved.
Thought that was gonna go in.
Still solved.
Pretend it went in.
But they said they would cap my budget It doesn't matter.
We treat everybody here, and if they're not covered, if they're covered, it doesn't matter.
The price [GROANS.]
- [MUSIC FADES.]
- We treat everyone.
That's the power of New Amsterdam.
Excuse me.
[GAGS.]
- [RETCHES.]
- [DOOR CLOSES.]
- Max, are you okay? - Yeah.
[RETCHING.]
- Ooh.
Max, you want us to wait for you? [RETCHING.]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER.]
Oh, God, what is the medical term for "barfed my face off"? This isn't a great time.
You don't even know what just came out of me.
I'm not just talking quantity, I'm talking quality.
I mean, what the heck could I have possibly eaten - Max.
- What? This is a consortium of top oncologists being hosted by a WHO facility in Haiti.
Everyone, this is Dr.
Goodwin, our Medical Director.
[POPS LIPS.]
How you doing? - Hello.
- Hello.
Let's pick this up in 15, shall we? [BEEPS.]
- Sorry about that.
- It's fine.
I'm consulting on a very challenging case.
A digression about the texture of your vomit was just the mood-lightener that we needed.
I'm happy to help.
And you need anti-nausea meds.
Mm-hmm.
This is harder than I thought.
Silver lining? When we start radiation tonight, your throat's gonna be too sore to eat anything.
Mm.
Less nausea.
[BITTERSWEET MUSIC.]
So you'd walk by, and you'd see all this smoke seeping out from under the door.
But it wasn't a fire.
It was the cardiologists' smoking lounge.
In the hospital? Yes, Building C.
- [LAUGHING.]
- Third floor.
They had the fire department called on them at least twice a month.
I can't believe you've never told me that one before.
It was a different time.
It's just a wonder more patients didn't die.
Yeah, no kidding oh.
No, it's okay.
It's okay, I got it.
No, no, no, I got it.
Henry, it's cool.
- Thanks.
- I've been trained for such situations.
Just got to get the big chunks, right? - Yeah - Thanks.
Kick the rest under the table.
[BOTH CHUCKLE.]
Clumsy.
You know, my, uh my intern days were totally tame.
I-I don't have any crazy stories, you know.
Oh, don't be so sure.
Those memories will come flooding back once you're my age.
For example, I have a temporal bone surgery scheduled tomorrow.
Now, back in the day, we wouldn't even consider operating until we could see discoloration in the neck and the jawline.
Oh.
[CHUCKLES.]
That's crazy.
[UPBEAT PERCUSSION MUSIC.]
[INDISTINCT ANNOUNCEMENTS OVER PA.]
[INDISTINCT CONVERSATION.]
- Okay.
- Thank you so much.
- Lauren.
- I'm late.
Lauren I am deeply sorry.
If you would just hear me out You rooted through my bag for drugs after I explicitly told you that I was clean.
You just couldn't trust me, could you? It's not that simple, and you know it.
I was concerned.
I overstepped.
What I wanted We were friends.
- We still are.
- How? You asked for help.
You admitted you needed help.
Let me help you.
How about this? From now on, you stay on your side of the hospital.
I'll stay on mine.
Oh, hi.
[MAN RETCHING.]
Max? Hey, Dora told me I could find you in here.
- Yeah.
[VOMITS.]
- Oh, okay.
- [GROANS.]
- Uh that's all right.
I can wait.
- Oh - [BLOWS RASPBERRY, SIGHS.]
[EXHALES DEEPLY.]
[TOILET FLUSHES.]
[EXHALES SHARPLY.]
- Hey.
- How can I Yeah, okay.
Yeah, I got it.
So, um, let's say, hypothetically, I have a friend here at the hospital.
Let's call him, uh, Dr.
Dre.
Mm.
And, uh, what if he kind of, sort of maybe shouldn't probably be performing surgeries anymore? We're not having an unofficial conversation about an impaired physician, Iggy.
We have a system.
I know.
I just don't want to ruin anyone's career, you know? Well, if you're concerned enough to bring it to me here, then it has to be official.
All right? No half reports, no pseudonyms.
By the way, maybe pick a better one.
- I know.
- Just tell me what's going on so I can investigate the doctor properly.
Come on, man.
Can't we just hypothesize about it for a little while longer? Iggy, your name will be kept confidential, I swear.
[SIGHS.]
It's Dr.
Maravich.
What's going on? Ayúdennos, por favor! El está enfermo! - Do do you speak English? - Yes, yes, yes! Please, you have to help him! He needs help! Severe dehydration.
Okay, let's get him over to Bay 27 for a workup.
- What's your name? - Ivan Velez.
- Ivan, how do you know him? - Uh, Miguel, we are brothers.
- You must help him, please! - He feels hot.
Ivan, look at me.
How long has he been sick like this? Uh, about a week.
He started shivering, and he he couldn't, uh, drink or eat anything.
We thought he needed sleep, but it only got worse.
- Does it hurt to swallow? - [SPEAKING SPANISH.]
- You have to help him! - I'll do everything I can.
Bloom, lymphs are swollen.
Okay, open for me? [DRAMATIC MUSIC.]
What? What do you see? He needs an FNA, ASAP.
- Who's on call for oncology? - Dr.
Sharpe.
Daddy, who is that man? Shh.
My name is Dr.
Kapoor.
I'm going to help your mom.
She can't see.
Her eyes are broken.
Then I'll try to fix them.
Let's find a healthy snack, kiddo.
Yeah.
We'll be just outside.
[DOOR OPENS, CLOSES.]
I see from your records, Maren - you've had a rough time.
- Yeah.
My organs, they shut down during Violet's birth.
I couldn't stop bleeding.
I was in the ICU for, uh, nine months.
Ian had to make arrangements.
Just in case.
[LAUGHS.]
- But you survived.
- Mm-hmm.
Well, most of me.
So you developed an adenoma at the base of your brain.
It's pressing on the optic chiasm and causing your blindness.
Yeah, and everyone says they can't remove it because I can't have anesthesia 'cause of my liver.
That's right.
But there is a new treatment non-surgical.
I won't even need to break the skin.
How? It's MRI-guided focused ultrasound noninvasive, no anesthesia.
Just one catch.
Yeah.
There's always a catch.
Before I can address your brain tumor, we need to replace one of your heart valves also weakened by Violet's birth.
But I'm sure my colleague, Dr.
Reynolds, can do that without anesthesia as well.
[HOPEFUL MUSIC.]
Wow.
[LAUGHS.]
I would love to see my daughter's face.
I would love to see her eyes.
I would.
[SIGHS.]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER, TELEPHONE RINGING.]
Hi.
I got your page.
Yeah.
Mr.
Velez? This is Dr.
Sharpe.
She's gonna biopsy your brother's throat so we can figure out what's making him so sick.
Open up for me, Mr.
Velez.
Arroyo.
His name is Miguel Arroyo.
I thought you guys were brothers.
We're like brothers.
You know, we are Boricua.
We grew up a town apart on La Isla, but we never knew each other until we came to New York.
When did you move here? Hurricane Maria took everything.
My home was washed away, and no one was coming to help.
So I left to find work so I could rebuild one day.
Took any job I could get construction, picking apples.
And that's where I met Miguel on a farm upstate.
- El destino.
- SÃ.
We both lost everything but fate.
She brought us together to protect each other.
You see? So we are more than friends.
Hermano.
[MELANCHOLY MUSIC.]
Ah specimen cup.
Here.
[INDISTINCT ANNOUNCEMENT OVER PA.]
Admin sent me about a nameplate? Oh, yes.
Great.
Thank you.
I've been calling for a month.
Just tell me what you need, Dr.
Merritt.
No, actually, I'm, uh, Dr.
Reynolds.
Oh.
Nameplate says "Merritt.
" Right, and I want it replaced with "Reynolds.
" - "Dr.
Reynolds"? - Correct.
Okay, gonna have to get the Chair or Cardiothoracic Surgery to sign off on a request like that.
Not a problem.
I'm the Chair of Cardiothoracic Surgery.
Dr.
Merritt.
No, Dr.
Reynolds.
Well, it says Dr.
Merritt's the Chair.
Well, he's not.
I'm the Chair.
Well, then why are you in his office? This is my [SIGHS.]
Um you see how confusing this is? Well, I have this same conversation with every patient that comes in here, which doesn't help them to be confident in the doctor they chose to cut them open because he can't even get his name on the door.
Yeah, I'm thinking you might need a new nameplate.
Yeah.
Henry.
Chemo stomach.
It's no joke.
[MOUTH FULL.]
You're telling me.
- Thanks for coming.
- Sure.
You know what this room used to be? Mm, I think legal had it? Well, the fun part is who had it before legal.
Hmm.
In '67, we'd call this the "Nookie Closet.
" Did you? Now it's a stone's throw from HR, so why don't we let that one sail right by? You mind if we get right to it? Not at all.
I'd like to schedule you for a medical evaluation.
Nothing wrong with my health, Dr.
Goodwin.
Just consider it a formality.
Okay? This hospital requires a medical eval every two years.
I passed my last exam less than a year ago with flying colors, I might add.
I don't like it any more than you do, but it is my job.
I've been in practice for more than 40 years all of them here.
I can do my surgeries blindfolded.
I appreciate that, Henry.
I do, but I would still like to schedule you for a routine eval.
[TENSE MUSIC.]
Tomorrow.
Of course.
You got to do your job.
[DOOR OPENS, CLOSES.]
So you need me to perform a valve replacement so that you can do an MRI-focused ultrasound.
- It shouldn't be a problem.
- Keep scrolling.
Oh, your patient can't withstand anesthesia.
That's right, but if I can perform a procedure on the brain without anesthesia, you can certainly do the same thing for the heart.
Yeah, the only noninvasive surgery is catheter aortic replacement therapy.
Yes, do that.
Which requires a C-ART device, which New Amsterdam does not have.
So we'll get one.
[CHUCKLES.]
Yeah, sure.
"So we'll get one.
" A C-ART device costs $3 million.
I made Maren Thompson a promise that I would help her see her daughter.
I'll get you this device.
Okay, Vijay, look, I can't even get my name on my own door, all right? They're not gonna just buy you a $3 million device.
We will see about that.
[UPBEAT PERCUSSION MUSIC.]
[SIGHS.]
Uh, remember when you told me we'll treat everyone here no matter the price? That's the power of New Amsterdam.
Yes, well, we need a C-ART device.
Okay, I'll call ACC.
Done.
Do you know what a C-ART device is? Will it help your patient? It's the only thing that will help.
- Good enough for me.
- Thank you.
- Yeah? - Hey, hey, hey.
I thought you were gonna handle that whole Dr.
M situation? Yeah, handled.
Medical eval scheduled for tomorrow.
Well, he moved his temporal bone surgery up to today.
[SIGHS.]
[MONITOR BEEPING RAPIDLY.]
Help! Help! He needs help! - What's happening to him? - [BEEPING STOPS.]
Push two milligrams of Ativan.
Biopsy results? They just came back.
It's not cancer.
Must be an infection.
Given the ulcers, it's got to be viral.
I'll start Acyclovir.
I saw polys on the biopsy.
Bacteria's much more likely.
Or the polys are due to a secondary infection on top of the viral infection and irrelevant.
It's my ED, my call.
And if I disagree with your call? Bloom, we got four more! Similar symptoms to Mr.
Arroyo! Visible ulcers in the back of the mouth.
Four more? - Where did they come from? - Watch out.
We all work together.
They were all sick, too! [DRAMATIC MUSIC.]
Mind if I scrub in? What are you trying to prove? Nothing, just here to observe.
I've done this surgery hundreds of times, Dr.
Goodwin.
I don't need the hospital's Medical Director standing over my shoulder evaluating my every incision.
Then pretend I'm not here.
You trying to throw me off my game, is that it? I expect all the surgeons in my hospital to perform at their best whether I'm here watching or not.
Anyone's not performing at their best, it's you.
Running a hospital while undergoing chemo? You have no right to judge me.
This isn't about me.
I've helped thousands of patients at this hospital.
Thousands.
My record is sterling.
My reputation impeccable.
Henry, you're a legacy here.
Damn right I am.
But what story do you want told in the end? That you were a titan in your field, or that you were a doctor who didn't know when to lay down the scalpel? There'll come a day, Max when you won't be able to perform as well as you once could.
Maybe sooner than you think.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC.]
[DOOR CLOSES.]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER, TELEPHONE RINGING.]
Well, they all work together out at some vineyard out in Long Island.
And they're all exhibiting the same symptoms? To a T.
What at a vineyard could have made them all so sick? Let's find out.
The owners made us sleep in this old, rundown barn.
All crowded together, cramped.
How many of you? 17, sometimes 18.
At night, I just tried to think of my family back home.
Las ratas.
Yes, there were so many rats.
I've been picking since Hurricane Georges.
Been 20 years since I've seen Puerto Rico.
Have you harvested at this vineyard before? No.
And I will not go back.
I will starve first.
The owner treat us like animals.
Pay us nothing.
And everything was damp and wet all the time mold everywhere.
I'm thinking pesticides led to an autoimmune reaction erythema multiforme.
EM would explain everything.
Their kidney function's fine.
The rats and the close quarters are the perfect breeding ground for the hantavirus.
Something's off.
- We're missing something.
- Really? I think Sharpe may have nailed it hanta.
- No, it's not hantavirus.
- Okay.
Because? Because I have a gut feeling.
Or you're just disagreeing with me because it's my diagnosis.
Everything okay here? - Yes.
- It's fine.
Okay, at the risk of stepping into something, I'm gonna make the call.
Treat for hantavirus.
[DRILL WHIRRING.]
- Suction.
- Suction.
[MONITOR BEEPING.]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER.]
I dropped a bottle, Iggy.
One stupid bottle.
[SIGHS.]
I was, um - I was worried.
- [SCOFFS.]
You moved the surgery up because you knew you wouldn't pass the medical evaluation.
I moved up my surgery to prove the evaluation wasn't necessary.
No, Henry, come on I may not be a young man anymore, Iggy but I am a surgeon with over 40 years experience.
And that counts for something.
At least it should count for something.
[SOMBER MUSIC.]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER.]
You really buried the lede on the whole C-ART device, didn't you? Three $3 million.
To be fair, you did say, "No matter the price.
" No, you're right.
I really should have asked more prudent follow-up questions.
Like, "Does it cost $3 million?" To be clear, New Amsterdam will never get a C-ART device.
See, what'd I tell you? The system can't handle the small things.
Why in the hell should we be surprised when it can't handle the big ones? You didn't let me finish.
New Amsterdam will never get a C-ART device, so you should do the surgery at a hospital that does have one.
What are you saying? University has a C-ART device.
We have a patient.
Peanut butter, jelly.
So, as our sister hospital, they'll let us do the surgery there? Not exactly and definitely not for free.
But her insurance won't cover University.
Yeah, and then I can't do the surgery.
No, you can't.
But Dr.
Merritt can.
Last I checked, he's still credentialed at Uni.
[UPBEAT PERCUSSION MUSIC.]
Okay, wait, wait.
Impersonating another doctor is grounds for malpractice.
I can lose my license.
I can go to prison.
Nobody's suggesting impersonating anyone, all right? You are the Chair of Cardiothoracic Surgery at New Amsterdam.
- Just say that.
- This is crazy.
- Even for you.
- You want to help the patient? This is how.
[STAMMERING.]
Are you really talking about this? Sneaking a patient across the city into University Hospital? If the system can't handle the little things then it certainly won't notice the big ones.
Sure.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER OVER RADIO.]
University Hospital.
[SIRENS WAILING.]
[INDISTINCT ANNOUNCEMENTS OVER PA.]
[TENSE MUSIC.]
Can I help you? Dr.
Nottingham.
I'm here to observe a C-ART procedure as part of my residency.
- I called earlier.
- Observe who? The Chair of Cardiothoracic Surgery at New Amsterdam.
It's nice to meet you.
Dr.
Merritt? That's what it says on my door.
[COUGHS.]
Pushing the delivery system up to the aortic valve.
- You're nearly there.
- How much longer? Ah, ah, ah.
Don't rush me, and I won't rush you.
If we get caught, it's my name on the schedule.
Well, Dr.
Merritt will cover for you.
I didn't see anything.
Thank you, Maren.
- Sheath's in place.
- Got it.
Inflating the balloon.
Leaflets are moving.
Maren, you'll feel some pressure.
Nice and easy.
Almost got it.
All right, new aortic valve's in place.
- Deflating the balloon.
- Wonderful.
Let's get her back to our hospital now.
- Dr.
Reynolds.
- I see it.
What? A bleed at the cath insertion site.
It's a common side effect, but Maren's gonna have to remain flat with a sandbag on her hip to keep the pressure on.
For how long? It looks like you're gonna have to do your procedure here as well.
But I'm not Dr.
Merritt either.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER.]
Got them all on a cocktail of antivirals, and we're doing active fluid replacement.
Thanks.
You don't think it's hanta? No.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC.]
What do I know? You know, Henry was shattered just standing there watching the surgery go on without him.
It's like looking at a broken man.
You did the right thing.
- [SIGHS.]
Did I? - Yeah.
Then why do I find myself trying to recall Judas' good traits? Iggy, I know he's a good friend, but so are you, okay? You didn't betray him because somebody could have gotten hurt or worse.
Well, his body is going.
His mind is not.
Very few doctors have that kind of expertise.
I mean, if if we send him on his way, all that knowledge, all that expertise goes out the door with him.
You know, we might as well be saying, "Hey, Doc, thank you.
You're ancient.
Don't need you anymore.
" Don't let the door hit you on the wrinkly old ass on the way out.
" - [CLEARS THROAT.]
- Hi.
Oh.
Hello.
- How are you? - ALL: Hello.
Good-bye, Iggy.
- Huh? - Leave.
Yes, I'm sorry.
Bye.
Um, I'll be back in ten.
I just need to fire a few people.
[GIGGLES.]
You know you can't, uh, fire me, right? I was referring to Iggy.
Yeah, you can't fire him either.
Yes, I know, Max.
But it makes me look in charge, and right now I could use a little bit of that.
How are things with you and Bloom? Fine.
Um, h-how are you feeling? Good, yeah.
Aside from Iggy starting an international rumor that we traffic in ageism, pretty [CLICKS TONGUE.]
Good.
- Your nausea? - Chemo tried to slow this man down, - but you know what? - It failed? No, it succeeded, big-time.
But, uh, the drugs you gave me are helping.
Good.
Well, it sounds like you're in the right frame of mind to start radiation.
Aren't you glad you swung by? [SIGHS.]
So glad.
[DRAWN OUT.]
Okay.
Everyone just act normal, like you belong here.
Like we're doctors in a hospital? MRI lab is down this way.
How are we gonna get in? You might have to schedule us again.
I'm starting to miss the real Dr.
Merritt.
- How are you doing, Maren? - Nervous.
[SIGHS.]
I haven't let myself be hopeful in a very, very long time.
I know this whole process has been rather unorthodox, but I made you a promise, and promise I will keep.
Dr.
Kapoor, what are you doing here? [CHUCKLES.]
Funny story, actually.
Dr.
Carlebach was one of my best interns back in the day.
And now he's this big-time neurologist here in University.
[LAUGHS.]
Yeah, Dr.
Kapoor tried to recruit me to New Amsterdam.
I wanted to go I really did, Vijay but my med school loans were out of control.
I had to go private.
- It's nice to meet you.
- Likewise.
I got to admit, I still miss my days at The Dam.
Making the most out of nothing, thinking outside the box.
Always such an adventure.
[INDISTINCT ANNOUNCEMENTS OVER PA.]
Funny you should say that, Dr.
Carlebach.
[SIGHS.]
[DRAMATIC MUSIC.]
[MRI MACHINE WHIRRING.]
[THROUGH SPEAKER.]
Initiating sonication pulse.
And going again.
[THROUGH SPEAKER.]
Mrs.
Thompson, we're using high-intensity focused ultrasound to pinpoint the tumor at the base of your brain.
[THROUGH SPEAKER.]
Oh, okay.
Maren, how are you feeling? [MUTTERS.]
Honestly, I don't know.
I thought I was doing this so that I could see my daughter's face, but [SIGHS.]
I don't think I am.
I think I wanted her to see mine.
I want I want her to see me seeing her, being [SIGHS.]
Proud and growing up and falling down, being scared.
I want her to know all her life that she's seen.
[HOPEFUL MUSIC.]
The tumor is responding.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER, SIREN WAILING.]
Hey.
Is, uh, this seat taken? You know, we're, uh, doing everything we can for Miguel and the others.
Thank you.
What's that? A santo.
After Maria, our house was just mud and water and the trunk of a huge tree where my bedroom once stood.
I went to a santero in town and asked him to carve this from the wood of that tree.
- As a reminder? - No, no.
There are many a santo on the island.
This one is Anima Sola the Lonely Soul.
She is in Purgatory, bound to the flames forever.
And I pray to her for strength and patience and redemption.
Why redemption? I, um I liked to drink too much.
And I could not stop.
And I would be dead if not for her.
She helps me to say no.
She reminds me to always think of tomorrow.
She keeps me alive.
And yet you work on a vineyard [CHUCKLES.]
Surrounded by temptation every day.
Miguel helps me with that.
Never lets the others tempt me with the angel's share.
"Angel's share"? In the barrels, the top layer of wine? It evaporates.
They call that the angel's share.
I like that.
So do all my friends, believe me, and all the other workers.
At the end of a shift, they would dip into the crush and drink.
After the way they treated us, they felt like they deserved a little taste.
[SOMBER MUSIC.]
Well, I'm sure the angels would agree.
[PAGER VIBRATING.]
[TENSE MUSIC.]
Blood pressure 60 over palp.
- Then he's fading fast.
- Add Dobutamine.
Ten micrograms per minute.
It's odd that his heart rate is 78.
It should be 178.
The antivirals aren't working.
Mariana! Mariana, hang a bag of streptomycin! Wait, no, no, no, no, no! The hantavirus is affecting his heart! He needs a pacing wire.
No, He needs streptomycin, okay? I-I don't have time to explain.
Do you trust me or not? I am setting up a pacing wire.
Lauren, you open this door! Lauren! What are you doing? Don't do this! Call Dr.
Goodwin.
[MACHINE WHIRRING.]
[CELL PHONE VIBRATING.]
[BREATHES DEEPLY.]
- Ready? - [LAUGHS.]
Come here.
Here we go.
[HOPEFUL MUSIC.]
Mommy, will you be able to see me? - Oh, I hope so, honey.
- Almost there.
[CHUCKLES.]
[EXHALES DEEPLY.]
[CHUCKLES.]
What do you see, Mrs.
Thompson? Mommy? [MELANCHOLY MUSIC.]
[SNIFFLES.]
It's okay, baby.
Because in my head and my heart, I see you so clearly, okay? I see you perfectly.
I don't understand.
I thought you said it was gonna work? The tumors were destroyed.
Surgery should have worked.
There must be something we missed.
[INDISTINCT ANNOUNCEMENTS OVER PA.]
[TENSE MUSIC.]
Miguel Arroyo is stable.
Let's, um let's treat the others for oropharyngeal tularemia.
They got it from drinking partially fermented wine right out of the barrels.
That's why Ivan never showed signs of illness.
He's sober.
You know, you and I working together like this It's not gonna work.
You're right.
Oh, hey, how was your radiation treatment? Mm, like a relaxing vacation at Chernobyl.
Right.
Henry, hi.
Um if this is about the exit paperwork, I was about to get to it.
Yeah, good.
Great, okay.
Don't get to it.
Excuse me? Because you're not exiting.
[HOPEFUL MUSIC.]
Can I tell him because of your whole throat thing? Could I stop you if I wanted to? No.
Okay, I am, uh very happy to tell you that we here at New Amsterdam would officially like to offer you the brand-new position of Chair of Telemedicine.
- "Telemedicine"? - Video conferencing.
We can reach our sister hospitals in Latin American, disaster sites, war zones, all around the world.
Yeah, all in need of experienced doctors like you to help guide and consult them through complicated surgeries.
Surgeries that you've done hundreds of times.
I, uh Thank you.
It's your experience that's irreplaceable not your hands.
I just don't see anything.
May I touch your face to perform an examination? Yeah, that's fine.
- Please close your eyes.
- Mm.
I would like to try latanoprost.
That's Uh, what's wrong? Your eyes are harder than they should be.
This indicates glaucoma might have developed.
But there is no way you would have ever known about it.
There's always a catch, right? Please lean your head back for me.
Yeah.
Blink.
[SNIFFS.]
[UPBEAT MUSIC.]
[LAUGHS.]
[GASPS, LAUGHS.]
[LAUGHS.]
[LAUGHING.]
[SNIFFLES.]
Oh, that's a beautiful drawing, baby.
Yeah.
Oh.
Can you see us? Yes, my love, I can see you.
- Can you see me? - I can see you.
You can? [LAUGHS.]
[SIGHS.]
I can see.
It turns out being Dr.
Merritt does have its advantages.
[CRYING SOFTLY.]
Come here.
Oh [ALL LAUGHING.]
I see you.
Retractor.
Hey.
Oh, looks like someone's feeling better.
No, don't thank me.
Thank your brother and his santo.
She told me the answer.
- El Anima Sola? - Yes.
You two are really lucky to have each other.
I, uh don't really get along with my real sister.
But what you two have you're gonna rebuild.
[HOPEFUL MUSIC.]
I know it.
Here.
Please, for you.
- No, I-I can't - Yes, yes, yes.
I insist.
My brother, he will take care of me, and Anima Sola, she will take care of you.
Thank you.
[MELANCHOLY MUSIC.]
[CLEARS THROAT.]
Max? What's wrong? I've, um I've been round and round in my head, but I can't see that there's any other way.
Helen? This is harder than I thought.
I think that I need to report an impaired physician.
No, we already took care of it.
- There's no - Max I'm talking about Bloom.
Babe, is that you? Yep.
[HOPEFUL MUSIC.]
- Hey.
- Hi.
How is the guy who's not about to let cancer slow him down? [LAUGHS.]
Profoundly humbled.
I made dinner.
Steak, baked potato, and broccoli.
Wow.
[CHUCKLES.]
Chemo? Radiation.
- My throat, it's already - Oh, babe.
Helen said that I wouldn't even feel it for four to five days.
Well, you really are special.
- So special.
- [LAUGHS.]
It smells it smells amazing.
[CHUCKLES.]
- Sorry.
- Hey you have nothing to be sorry about.
Maybe you should put me in the return pile.
[CHUCKLES.]
Nope.
[SNIFFLES.]
You are a keeper.
[CHUCKLES.]
[SNIFFLES.]
Stay there.
[CHUCKLES.]
Bloom.
- Dr.
Bloom? The last few weeks, I've been taking a little bit more Adderall than prescribed.
- I think you may need help.
- I'm just tired Mr.
Powell could have died.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC.]
Run the Cardiac Surgical Department.
There is no Cardiac Surgical Department.
Then build one.
When we aim high-energy external beam radiation at the cancer in your throat, if you move then, you die.
I don't want everyone to see me so weak.
The answer's yes, Max.
I'll be your deputy.
[MELLOW MUSIC.]
[SIREN WAILING IN THE DISTANCE.]
[BLOWS RASPBERRY.]
I don't even know what some of this stuff is.
Babe, I-I didn't know we had so many friends.
This is a return, right? - No way.
- No? Cloth diapers are way better for the environment.
Yeah, but disposable diapers are way better for sleeping in on Sunday.
- Fine, maybe pile.
- Maybe pile.
It's very cute that you think you're sleeping in on Sundays.
Yeah.
Electric snot sucker? Return.
How do you suggest we remove snot from our baby's nasal passages? The old-fashioned way.
You put your mouth on that nose and you [SUCKING.]
- That's disgusting! - Keeping.
- Babe, I'm just saying What about a baby a baby blender? That's a maybe.
I mean, we don't have an adult blender.
All right, well, the Swedish here says, uh [SPEAKING BROKEN SWEDISH.]
Oh, well, in that case - Mm.
- Return.
Return.
Yeah.
[GROANS.]
- Oh, babe, more nausea? Mm.
Mm-hmm.
Hey, I thought Helen said that you wouldn't experience chemo nausea so soon.
Well, maybe I'm, uh Maybe I'm special.
Maybe you should stay home.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-mm.
I'm good.
I'm already over it.
It's fine.
I'm raring to go.
I'm not gonna let a little cancer slow me down.
I'm fine.
[KATRINA AND THE WAVES' "WALKING ON SUNSHINE".]
Ow! Yeah How can I help? Figured out why the old Cardio Department lost its way: Our conflict of interest policy.
- What's wrong with it? - Well, we don't have one.
Big pharma could buy me an island, - and no one would know.
- Could be fun.
We should mandate total transparency.
Uh, how many other hospitals do this? - Zero.
- I guess we'll be the first.
In clinical trials, do you know what you want in ideal candidates? Ooh, I know this one.
Sick people? - Diversity.
- Yeah.
Our candidates need to be as diverse as the country we're aiming to treat.
Yeah, so what's the problem? The country I'm trying to treat isn't Finland.
Hmm.
I can see that.
Yeah.
I'll make some calls.
More glitter, right? Okay, yes.
So New York has seen a spike in Polynesian refugees because their countries are, you know, - sinking into the Pacific Ocean.
- Right.
Not a lot of them speak English like these little cuties right here from Tuvalu, aren't you? Imagine I just said "how can I help?" in Tuvaluan.
I wish I could, but I can't, because nobody speaks Tuvaluan in New York literally, like, less than 20 people.
I need a translator.
- [SPEAKING TUVALUAN.]
- Oh, okay.
So I just learned the word for "potty.
" - Oh, did you? - But I'm gonna take off.
Okay.
Oh, oh.
Gladys! My department was just flagged by HCC for "disproportionately providing coverage to patients ineligible for Medicaid and for" Solved.
Thought that was gonna go in.
Still solved.
Pretend it went in.
But they said they would cap my budget It doesn't matter.
We treat everybody here, and if they're not covered, if they're covered, it doesn't matter.
The price [GROANS.]
- [MUSIC FADES.]
- We treat everyone.
That's the power of New Amsterdam.
Excuse me.
[GAGS.]
- [RETCHES.]
- [DOOR CLOSES.]
- Max, are you okay? - Yeah.
[RETCHING.]
- Ooh.
Max, you want us to wait for you? [RETCHING.]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER.]
Oh, God, what is the medical term for "barfed my face off"? This isn't a great time.
You don't even know what just came out of me.
I'm not just talking quantity, I'm talking quality.
I mean, what the heck could I have possibly eaten - Max.
- What? This is a consortium of top oncologists being hosted by a WHO facility in Haiti.
Everyone, this is Dr.
Goodwin, our Medical Director.
[POPS LIPS.]
How you doing? - Hello.
- Hello.
Let's pick this up in 15, shall we? [BEEPS.]
- Sorry about that.
- It's fine.
I'm consulting on a very challenging case.
A digression about the texture of your vomit was just the mood-lightener that we needed.
I'm happy to help.
And you need anti-nausea meds.
Mm-hmm.
This is harder than I thought.
Silver lining? When we start radiation tonight, your throat's gonna be too sore to eat anything.
Mm.
Less nausea.
[BITTERSWEET MUSIC.]
So you'd walk by, and you'd see all this smoke seeping out from under the door.
But it wasn't a fire.
It was the cardiologists' smoking lounge.
In the hospital? Yes, Building C.
- [LAUGHING.]
- Third floor.
They had the fire department called on them at least twice a month.
I can't believe you've never told me that one before.
It was a different time.
It's just a wonder more patients didn't die.
Yeah, no kidding oh.
No, it's okay.
It's okay, I got it.
No, no, no, I got it.
Henry, it's cool.
- Thanks.
- I've been trained for such situations.
Just got to get the big chunks, right? - Yeah - Thanks.
Kick the rest under the table.
[BOTH CHUCKLE.]
Clumsy.
You know, my, uh my intern days were totally tame.
I-I don't have any crazy stories, you know.
Oh, don't be so sure.
Those memories will come flooding back once you're my age.
For example, I have a temporal bone surgery scheduled tomorrow.
Now, back in the day, we wouldn't even consider operating until we could see discoloration in the neck and the jawline.
Oh.
[CHUCKLES.]
That's crazy.
[UPBEAT PERCUSSION MUSIC.]
[INDISTINCT ANNOUNCEMENTS OVER PA.]
[INDISTINCT CONVERSATION.]
- Okay.
- Thank you so much.
- Lauren.
- I'm late.
Lauren I am deeply sorry.
If you would just hear me out You rooted through my bag for drugs after I explicitly told you that I was clean.
You just couldn't trust me, could you? It's not that simple, and you know it.
I was concerned.
I overstepped.
What I wanted We were friends.
- We still are.
- How? You asked for help.
You admitted you needed help.
Let me help you.
How about this? From now on, you stay on your side of the hospital.
I'll stay on mine.
Oh, hi.
[MAN RETCHING.]
Max? Hey, Dora told me I could find you in here.
- Yeah.
[VOMITS.]
- Oh, okay.
- [GROANS.]
- Uh that's all right.
I can wait.
- Oh - [BLOWS RASPBERRY, SIGHS.]
[EXHALES DEEPLY.]
[TOILET FLUSHES.]
[EXHALES SHARPLY.]
- Hey.
- How can I Yeah, okay.
Yeah, I got it.
So, um, let's say, hypothetically, I have a friend here at the hospital.
Let's call him, uh, Dr.
Dre.
Mm.
And, uh, what if he kind of, sort of maybe shouldn't probably be performing surgeries anymore? We're not having an unofficial conversation about an impaired physician, Iggy.
We have a system.
I know.
I just don't want to ruin anyone's career, you know? Well, if you're concerned enough to bring it to me here, then it has to be official.
All right? No half reports, no pseudonyms.
By the way, maybe pick a better one.
- I know.
- Just tell me what's going on so I can investigate the doctor properly.
Come on, man.
Can't we just hypothesize about it for a little while longer? Iggy, your name will be kept confidential, I swear.
[SIGHS.]
It's Dr.
Maravich.
What's going on? Ayúdennos, por favor! El está enfermo! - Do do you speak English? - Yes, yes, yes! Please, you have to help him! He needs help! Severe dehydration.
Okay, let's get him over to Bay 27 for a workup.
- What's your name? - Ivan Velez.
- Ivan, how do you know him? - Uh, Miguel, we are brothers.
- You must help him, please! - He feels hot.
Ivan, look at me.
How long has he been sick like this? Uh, about a week.
He started shivering, and he he couldn't, uh, drink or eat anything.
We thought he needed sleep, but it only got worse.
- Does it hurt to swallow? - [SPEAKING SPANISH.]
- You have to help him! - I'll do everything I can.
Bloom, lymphs are swollen.
Okay, open for me? [DRAMATIC MUSIC.]
What? What do you see? He needs an FNA, ASAP.
- Who's on call for oncology? - Dr.
Sharpe.
Daddy, who is that man? Shh.
My name is Dr.
Kapoor.
I'm going to help your mom.
She can't see.
Her eyes are broken.
Then I'll try to fix them.
Let's find a healthy snack, kiddo.
Yeah.
We'll be just outside.
[DOOR OPENS, CLOSES.]
I see from your records, Maren - you've had a rough time.
- Yeah.
My organs, they shut down during Violet's birth.
I couldn't stop bleeding.
I was in the ICU for, uh, nine months.
Ian had to make arrangements.
Just in case.
[LAUGHS.]
- But you survived.
- Mm-hmm.
Well, most of me.
So you developed an adenoma at the base of your brain.
It's pressing on the optic chiasm and causing your blindness.
Yeah, and everyone says they can't remove it because I can't have anesthesia 'cause of my liver.
That's right.
But there is a new treatment non-surgical.
I won't even need to break the skin.
How? It's MRI-guided focused ultrasound noninvasive, no anesthesia.
Just one catch.
Yeah.
There's always a catch.
Before I can address your brain tumor, we need to replace one of your heart valves also weakened by Violet's birth.
But I'm sure my colleague, Dr.
Reynolds, can do that without anesthesia as well.
[HOPEFUL MUSIC.]
Wow.
[LAUGHS.]
I would love to see my daughter's face.
I would love to see her eyes.
I would.
[SIGHS.]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER, TELEPHONE RINGING.]
Hi.
I got your page.
Yeah.
Mr.
Velez? This is Dr.
Sharpe.
She's gonna biopsy your brother's throat so we can figure out what's making him so sick.
Open up for me, Mr.
Velez.
Arroyo.
His name is Miguel Arroyo.
I thought you guys were brothers.
We're like brothers.
You know, we are Boricua.
We grew up a town apart on La Isla, but we never knew each other until we came to New York.
When did you move here? Hurricane Maria took everything.
My home was washed away, and no one was coming to help.
So I left to find work so I could rebuild one day.
Took any job I could get construction, picking apples.
And that's where I met Miguel on a farm upstate.
- El destino.
- SÃ.
We both lost everything but fate.
She brought us together to protect each other.
You see? So we are more than friends.
Hermano.
[MELANCHOLY MUSIC.]
Ah specimen cup.
Here.
[INDISTINCT ANNOUNCEMENT OVER PA.]
Admin sent me about a nameplate? Oh, yes.
Great.
Thank you.
I've been calling for a month.
Just tell me what you need, Dr.
Merritt.
No, actually, I'm, uh, Dr.
Reynolds.
Oh.
Nameplate says "Merritt.
" Right, and I want it replaced with "Reynolds.
" - "Dr.
Reynolds"? - Correct.
Okay, gonna have to get the Chair or Cardiothoracic Surgery to sign off on a request like that.
Not a problem.
I'm the Chair of Cardiothoracic Surgery.
Dr.
Merritt.
No, Dr.
Reynolds.
Well, it says Dr.
Merritt's the Chair.
Well, he's not.
I'm the Chair.
Well, then why are you in his office? This is my [SIGHS.]
Um you see how confusing this is? Well, I have this same conversation with every patient that comes in here, which doesn't help them to be confident in the doctor they chose to cut them open because he can't even get his name on the door.
Yeah, I'm thinking you might need a new nameplate.
Yeah.
Henry.
Chemo stomach.
It's no joke.
[MOUTH FULL.]
You're telling me.
- Thanks for coming.
- Sure.
You know what this room used to be? Mm, I think legal had it? Well, the fun part is who had it before legal.
Hmm.
In '67, we'd call this the "Nookie Closet.
" Did you? Now it's a stone's throw from HR, so why don't we let that one sail right by? You mind if we get right to it? Not at all.
I'd like to schedule you for a medical evaluation.
Nothing wrong with my health, Dr.
Goodwin.
Just consider it a formality.
Okay? This hospital requires a medical eval every two years.
I passed my last exam less than a year ago with flying colors, I might add.
I don't like it any more than you do, but it is my job.
I've been in practice for more than 40 years all of them here.
I can do my surgeries blindfolded.
I appreciate that, Henry.
I do, but I would still like to schedule you for a routine eval.
[TENSE MUSIC.]
Tomorrow.
Of course.
You got to do your job.
[DOOR OPENS, CLOSES.]
So you need me to perform a valve replacement so that you can do an MRI-focused ultrasound.
- It shouldn't be a problem.
- Keep scrolling.
Oh, your patient can't withstand anesthesia.
That's right, but if I can perform a procedure on the brain without anesthesia, you can certainly do the same thing for the heart.
Yeah, the only noninvasive surgery is catheter aortic replacement therapy.
Yes, do that.
Which requires a C-ART device, which New Amsterdam does not have.
So we'll get one.
[CHUCKLES.]
Yeah, sure.
"So we'll get one.
" A C-ART device costs $3 million.
I made Maren Thompson a promise that I would help her see her daughter.
I'll get you this device.
Okay, Vijay, look, I can't even get my name on my own door, all right? They're not gonna just buy you a $3 million device.
We will see about that.
[UPBEAT PERCUSSION MUSIC.]
[SIGHS.]
Uh, remember when you told me we'll treat everyone here no matter the price? That's the power of New Amsterdam.
Yes, well, we need a C-ART device.
Okay, I'll call ACC.
Done.
Do you know what a C-ART device is? Will it help your patient? It's the only thing that will help.
- Good enough for me.
- Thank you.
- Yeah? - Hey, hey, hey.
I thought you were gonna handle that whole Dr.
M situation? Yeah, handled.
Medical eval scheduled for tomorrow.
Well, he moved his temporal bone surgery up to today.
[SIGHS.]
[MONITOR BEEPING RAPIDLY.]
Help! Help! He needs help! - What's happening to him? - [BEEPING STOPS.]
Push two milligrams of Ativan.
Biopsy results? They just came back.
It's not cancer.
Must be an infection.
Given the ulcers, it's got to be viral.
I'll start Acyclovir.
I saw polys on the biopsy.
Bacteria's much more likely.
Or the polys are due to a secondary infection on top of the viral infection and irrelevant.
It's my ED, my call.
And if I disagree with your call? Bloom, we got four more! Similar symptoms to Mr.
Arroyo! Visible ulcers in the back of the mouth.
Four more? - Where did they come from? - Watch out.
We all work together.
They were all sick, too! [DRAMATIC MUSIC.]
Mind if I scrub in? What are you trying to prove? Nothing, just here to observe.
I've done this surgery hundreds of times, Dr.
Goodwin.
I don't need the hospital's Medical Director standing over my shoulder evaluating my every incision.
Then pretend I'm not here.
You trying to throw me off my game, is that it? I expect all the surgeons in my hospital to perform at their best whether I'm here watching or not.
Anyone's not performing at their best, it's you.
Running a hospital while undergoing chemo? You have no right to judge me.
This isn't about me.
I've helped thousands of patients at this hospital.
Thousands.
My record is sterling.
My reputation impeccable.
Henry, you're a legacy here.
Damn right I am.
But what story do you want told in the end? That you were a titan in your field, or that you were a doctor who didn't know when to lay down the scalpel? There'll come a day, Max when you won't be able to perform as well as you once could.
Maybe sooner than you think.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC.]
[DOOR CLOSES.]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER, TELEPHONE RINGING.]
Well, they all work together out at some vineyard out in Long Island.
And they're all exhibiting the same symptoms? To a T.
What at a vineyard could have made them all so sick? Let's find out.
The owners made us sleep in this old, rundown barn.
All crowded together, cramped.
How many of you? 17, sometimes 18.
At night, I just tried to think of my family back home.
Las ratas.
Yes, there were so many rats.
I've been picking since Hurricane Georges.
Been 20 years since I've seen Puerto Rico.
Have you harvested at this vineyard before? No.
And I will not go back.
I will starve first.
The owner treat us like animals.
Pay us nothing.
And everything was damp and wet all the time mold everywhere.
I'm thinking pesticides led to an autoimmune reaction erythema multiforme.
EM would explain everything.
Their kidney function's fine.
The rats and the close quarters are the perfect breeding ground for the hantavirus.
Something's off.
- We're missing something.
- Really? I think Sharpe may have nailed it hanta.
- No, it's not hantavirus.
- Okay.
Because? Because I have a gut feeling.
Or you're just disagreeing with me because it's my diagnosis.
Everything okay here? - Yes.
- It's fine.
Okay, at the risk of stepping into something, I'm gonna make the call.
Treat for hantavirus.
[DRILL WHIRRING.]
- Suction.
- Suction.
[MONITOR BEEPING.]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER.]
I dropped a bottle, Iggy.
One stupid bottle.
[SIGHS.]
I was, um - I was worried.
- [SCOFFS.]
You moved the surgery up because you knew you wouldn't pass the medical evaluation.
I moved up my surgery to prove the evaluation wasn't necessary.
No, Henry, come on I may not be a young man anymore, Iggy but I am a surgeon with over 40 years experience.
And that counts for something.
At least it should count for something.
[SOMBER MUSIC.]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER.]
You really buried the lede on the whole C-ART device, didn't you? Three $3 million.
To be fair, you did say, "No matter the price.
" No, you're right.
I really should have asked more prudent follow-up questions.
Like, "Does it cost $3 million?" To be clear, New Amsterdam will never get a C-ART device.
See, what'd I tell you? The system can't handle the small things.
Why in the hell should we be surprised when it can't handle the big ones? You didn't let me finish.
New Amsterdam will never get a C-ART device, so you should do the surgery at a hospital that does have one.
What are you saying? University has a C-ART device.
We have a patient.
Peanut butter, jelly.
So, as our sister hospital, they'll let us do the surgery there? Not exactly and definitely not for free.
But her insurance won't cover University.
Yeah, and then I can't do the surgery.
No, you can't.
But Dr.
Merritt can.
Last I checked, he's still credentialed at Uni.
[UPBEAT PERCUSSION MUSIC.]
Okay, wait, wait.
Impersonating another doctor is grounds for malpractice.
I can lose my license.
I can go to prison.
Nobody's suggesting impersonating anyone, all right? You are the Chair of Cardiothoracic Surgery at New Amsterdam.
- Just say that.
- This is crazy.
- Even for you.
- You want to help the patient? This is how.
[STAMMERING.]
Are you really talking about this? Sneaking a patient across the city into University Hospital? If the system can't handle the little things then it certainly won't notice the big ones.
Sure.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER OVER RADIO.]
University Hospital.
[SIRENS WAILING.]
[INDISTINCT ANNOUNCEMENTS OVER PA.]
[TENSE MUSIC.]
Can I help you? Dr.
Nottingham.
I'm here to observe a C-ART procedure as part of my residency.
- I called earlier.
- Observe who? The Chair of Cardiothoracic Surgery at New Amsterdam.
It's nice to meet you.
Dr.
Merritt? That's what it says on my door.
[COUGHS.]
Pushing the delivery system up to the aortic valve.
- You're nearly there.
- How much longer? Ah, ah, ah.
Don't rush me, and I won't rush you.
If we get caught, it's my name on the schedule.
Well, Dr.
Merritt will cover for you.
I didn't see anything.
Thank you, Maren.
- Sheath's in place.
- Got it.
Inflating the balloon.
Leaflets are moving.
Maren, you'll feel some pressure.
Nice and easy.
Almost got it.
All right, new aortic valve's in place.
- Deflating the balloon.
- Wonderful.
Let's get her back to our hospital now.
- Dr.
Reynolds.
- I see it.
What? A bleed at the cath insertion site.
It's a common side effect, but Maren's gonna have to remain flat with a sandbag on her hip to keep the pressure on.
For how long? It looks like you're gonna have to do your procedure here as well.
But I'm not Dr.
Merritt either.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER.]
Got them all on a cocktail of antivirals, and we're doing active fluid replacement.
Thanks.
You don't think it's hanta? No.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC.]
What do I know? You know, Henry was shattered just standing there watching the surgery go on without him.
It's like looking at a broken man.
You did the right thing.
- [SIGHS.]
Did I? - Yeah.
Then why do I find myself trying to recall Judas' good traits? Iggy, I know he's a good friend, but so are you, okay? You didn't betray him because somebody could have gotten hurt or worse.
Well, his body is going.
His mind is not.
Very few doctors have that kind of expertise.
I mean, if if we send him on his way, all that knowledge, all that expertise goes out the door with him.
You know, we might as well be saying, "Hey, Doc, thank you.
You're ancient.
Don't need you anymore.
" Don't let the door hit you on the wrinkly old ass on the way out.
" - [CLEARS THROAT.]
- Hi.
Oh.
Hello.
- How are you? - ALL: Hello.
Good-bye, Iggy.
- Huh? - Leave.
Yes, I'm sorry.
Bye.
Um, I'll be back in ten.
I just need to fire a few people.
[GIGGLES.]
You know you can't, uh, fire me, right? I was referring to Iggy.
Yeah, you can't fire him either.
Yes, I know, Max.
But it makes me look in charge, and right now I could use a little bit of that.
How are things with you and Bloom? Fine.
Um, h-how are you feeling? Good, yeah.
Aside from Iggy starting an international rumor that we traffic in ageism, pretty [CLICKS TONGUE.]
Good.
- Your nausea? - Chemo tried to slow this man down, - but you know what? - It failed? No, it succeeded, big-time.
But, uh, the drugs you gave me are helping.
Good.
Well, it sounds like you're in the right frame of mind to start radiation.
Aren't you glad you swung by? [SIGHS.]
So glad.
[DRAWN OUT.]
Okay.
Everyone just act normal, like you belong here.
Like we're doctors in a hospital? MRI lab is down this way.
How are we gonna get in? You might have to schedule us again.
I'm starting to miss the real Dr.
Merritt.
- How are you doing, Maren? - Nervous.
[SIGHS.]
I haven't let myself be hopeful in a very, very long time.
I know this whole process has been rather unorthodox, but I made you a promise, and promise I will keep.
Dr.
Kapoor, what are you doing here? [CHUCKLES.]
Funny story, actually.
Dr.
Carlebach was one of my best interns back in the day.
And now he's this big-time neurologist here in University.
[LAUGHS.]
Yeah, Dr.
Kapoor tried to recruit me to New Amsterdam.
I wanted to go I really did, Vijay but my med school loans were out of control.
I had to go private.
- It's nice to meet you.
- Likewise.
I got to admit, I still miss my days at The Dam.
Making the most out of nothing, thinking outside the box.
Always such an adventure.
[INDISTINCT ANNOUNCEMENTS OVER PA.]
Funny you should say that, Dr.
Carlebach.
[SIGHS.]
[DRAMATIC MUSIC.]
[MRI MACHINE WHIRRING.]
[THROUGH SPEAKER.]
Initiating sonication pulse.
And going again.
[THROUGH SPEAKER.]
Mrs.
Thompson, we're using high-intensity focused ultrasound to pinpoint the tumor at the base of your brain.
[THROUGH SPEAKER.]
Oh, okay.
Maren, how are you feeling? [MUTTERS.]
Honestly, I don't know.
I thought I was doing this so that I could see my daughter's face, but [SIGHS.]
I don't think I am.
I think I wanted her to see mine.
I want I want her to see me seeing her, being [SIGHS.]
Proud and growing up and falling down, being scared.
I want her to know all her life that she's seen.
[HOPEFUL MUSIC.]
The tumor is responding.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER, SIREN WAILING.]
Hey.
Is, uh, this seat taken? You know, we're, uh, doing everything we can for Miguel and the others.
Thank you.
What's that? A santo.
After Maria, our house was just mud and water and the trunk of a huge tree where my bedroom once stood.
I went to a santero in town and asked him to carve this from the wood of that tree.
- As a reminder? - No, no.
There are many a santo on the island.
This one is Anima Sola the Lonely Soul.
She is in Purgatory, bound to the flames forever.
And I pray to her for strength and patience and redemption.
Why redemption? I, um I liked to drink too much.
And I could not stop.
And I would be dead if not for her.
She helps me to say no.
She reminds me to always think of tomorrow.
She keeps me alive.
And yet you work on a vineyard [CHUCKLES.]
Surrounded by temptation every day.
Miguel helps me with that.
Never lets the others tempt me with the angel's share.
"Angel's share"? In the barrels, the top layer of wine? It evaporates.
They call that the angel's share.
I like that.
So do all my friends, believe me, and all the other workers.
At the end of a shift, they would dip into the crush and drink.
After the way they treated us, they felt like they deserved a little taste.
[SOMBER MUSIC.]
Well, I'm sure the angels would agree.
[PAGER VIBRATING.]
[TENSE MUSIC.]
Blood pressure 60 over palp.
- Then he's fading fast.
- Add Dobutamine.
Ten micrograms per minute.
It's odd that his heart rate is 78.
It should be 178.
The antivirals aren't working.
Mariana! Mariana, hang a bag of streptomycin! Wait, no, no, no, no, no! The hantavirus is affecting his heart! He needs a pacing wire.
No, He needs streptomycin, okay? I-I don't have time to explain.
Do you trust me or not? I am setting up a pacing wire.
Lauren, you open this door! Lauren! What are you doing? Don't do this! Call Dr.
Goodwin.
[MACHINE WHIRRING.]
[CELL PHONE VIBRATING.]
[BREATHES DEEPLY.]
- Ready? - [LAUGHS.]
Come here.
Here we go.
[HOPEFUL MUSIC.]
Mommy, will you be able to see me? - Oh, I hope so, honey.
- Almost there.
[CHUCKLES.]
[EXHALES DEEPLY.]
[CHUCKLES.]
What do you see, Mrs.
Thompson? Mommy? [MELANCHOLY MUSIC.]
[SNIFFLES.]
It's okay, baby.
Because in my head and my heart, I see you so clearly, okay? I see you perfectly.
I don't understand.
I thought you said it was gonna work? The tumors were destroyed.
Surgery should have worked.
There must be something we missed.
[INDISTINCT ANNOUNCEMENTS OVER PA.]
[TENSE MUSIC.]
Miguel Arroyo is stable.
Let's, um let's treat the others for oropharyngeal tularemia.
They got it from drinking partially fermented wine right out of the barrels.
That's why Ivan never showed signs of illness.
He's sober.
You know, you and I working together like this It's not gonna work.
You're right.
Oh, hey, how was your radiation treatment? Mm, like a relaxing vacation at Chernobyl.
Right.
Henry, hi.
Um if this is about the exit paperwork, I was about to get to it.
Yeah, good.
Great, okay.
Don't get to it.
Excuse me? Because you're not exiting.
[HOPEFUL MUSIC.]
Can I tell him because of your whole throat thing? Could I stop you if I wanted to? No.
Okay, I am, uh very happy to tell you that we here at New Amsterdam would officially like to offer you the brand-new position of Chair of Telemedicine.
- "Telemedicine"? - Video conferencing.
We can reach our sister hospitals in Latin American, disaster sites, war zones, all around the world.
Yeah, all in need of experienced doctors like you to help guide and consult them through complicated surgeries.
Surgeries that you've done hundreds of times.
I, uh Thank you.
It's your experience that's irreplaceable not your hands.
I just don't see anything.
May I touch your face to perform an examination? Yeah, that's fine.
- Please close your eyes.
- Mm.
I would like to try latanoprost.
That's Uh, what's wrong? Your eyes are harder than they should be.
This indicates glaucoma might have developed.
But there is no way you would have ever known about it.
There's always a catch, right? Please lean your head back for me.
Yeah.
Blink.
[SNIFFS.]
[UPBEAT MUSIC.]
[LAUGHS.]
[GASPS, LAUGHS.]
[LAUGHS.]
[LAUGHING.]
[SNIFFLES.]
Oh, that's a beautiful drawing, baby.
Yeah.
Oh.
Can you see us? Yes, my love, I can see you.
- Can you see me? - I can see you.
You can? [LAUGHS.]
[SIGHS.]
I can see.
It turns out being Dr.
Merritt does have its advantages.
[CRYING SOFTLY.]
Come here.
Oh [ALL LAUGHING.]
I see you.
Retractor.
Hey.
Oh, looks like someone's feeling better.
No, don't thank me.
Thank your brother and his santo.
She told me the answer.
- El Anima Sola? - Yes.
You two are really lucky to have each other.
I, uh don't really get along with my real sister.
But what you two have you're gonna rebuild.
[HOPEFUL MUSIC.]
I know it.
Here.
Please, for you.
- No, I-I can't - Yes, yes, yes.
I insist.
My brother, he will take care of me, and Anima Sola, she will take care of you.
Thank you.
[MELANCHOLY MUSIC.]
[CLEARS THROAT.]
Max? What's wrong? I've, um I've been round and round in my head, but I can't see that there's any other way.
Helen? This is harder than I thought.
I think that I need to report an impaired physician.
No, we already took care of it.
- There's no - Max I'm talking about Bloom.
Babe, is that you? Yep.
[HOPEFUL MUSIC.]
- Hey.
- Hi.
How is the guy who's not about to let cancer slow him down? [LAUGHS.]
Profoundly humbled.
I made dinner.
Steak, baked potato, and broccoli.
Wow.
[CHUCKLES.]
Chemo? Radiation.
- My throat, it's already - Oh, babe.
Helen said that I wouldn't even feel it for four to five days.
Well, you really are special.
- So special.
- [LAUGHS.]
It smells it smells amazing.
[CHUCKLES.]
- Sorry.
- Hey you have nothing to be sorry about.
Maybe you should put me in the return pile.
[CHUCKLES.]
Nope.
[SNIFFLES.]
You are a keeper.
[CHUCKLES.]
[SNIFFLES.]
Stay there.
[CHUCKLES.]