The Pitt (2025) s01e15 Episode Script
9:00 P.M.
1
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
- Robby!
- Whoa, whoa, whoa.
What's going on here?
I disabled my ankle monitor
because it was going off
and fucking with our ability
to help patients
during the mass casualty.
Tell that to your judge.
This is my resident. I need her.
Call Gloria.
Can you at least wait a second
to speak to our chief medical officer?
No, but they can call the Department
if they have any questions.
We just came through the
worst mass casualty incident
in this city's history, and you two are
fucking around with this?
Are you serious?
You don't have anything better to do?
[INDISTINCT RADIO CHATTER]
Officer Harrelson, can you please.
Is there a problem here?
She disabled her ankle monitor.
It was malfunctioning.
She's in a custody battle
with a restraining order
and is considered a flight risk.
That is bullshit.
It was interfering with
our ability to treat patients.
I'm not sure we could have
saved Officer Stefano
if she hadn't disabled the damn thing.
Is that true?
They saved Stefano's life.
They saved a lot of lives.
Take care of this
first thing tomorrow morning?
I swear.
Take the cuffs off.
[CHUCKLES] Thank you.
- Thank you.
- Thank you.
For everything you did here tonight.
- Do I even want to know?
- Probably not.
Good.
What's your status down here?
We have had 112 mass casualty patients
come through here
in the last three hours.
Only six people that we couldn't save.
They are still in our
makeshift morgue in Pedes.
71 people went upstairs.
Last I heard, surgery had stabilized
the 39 most critical red zone,
32 pink zone patients.
We also had 24 yellow zone patients,
many of whom are getting
orthopedic surgery as we speak.
The police are still interviewing
everybody else that's still down here.
We discharged eight people,
and I don't know the status
of the green zone patients
because I wasn't there.
You'll have to check
with Family Medicine.
Impressive.
I need you and Abbot
to turn your patients over
to the night shift now, and then
[PHONE RINGS] Oh, sorry.
Hello?
What? No.
We need to be back up and running now.
Tell security to open
the ER doors for walk-ins.
If you've got a triage nurse
and registration clerks,
you should already be open.
[MONITOR BEEPING STEADILY]
You ready to give
this measles kid to Dr. Shen
- and go home?
- Oh, no. I'm I'm OK.
- Are you sure?
- Yeah.
It's just we've repeatedly tried
to explain the importance
and low risk of the spinal tap,
and the parents are
they're risking their son's life.
Hopefully, they'll come around.
And if they don't?
We do the best that we can.
Some things are out of our control.
Dr. Shen, how are we
progressing in here?
No improvement
in the patient or his family.
Where is your wife
and daughter, Mr. Edwards?
My wife took Georgia to the bathroom.
OK.
Well, your son, Flynn,
is critically ill,
and the longer that we wait,
the worse this could get.
Without the spinal tap,
we don't know
the best treatment to give him
to give him the best chance of recovery.
What's going on?
We were discussing the options
for treating your son.
He already looks better.
He is not.
And by refusing the spinal tap,
we don't know how to help him.
The steroids could kill him
if it's just pneumonia.
The steroids could save him
if it's ADEM,
and the longer that we wait,
the greater the risk of him dying.
- Flynn might die?
- No, honey.
He's just got a worse version
of what you had.
[SIGHS]
I'll keep him intubated, hydrated,
and pumping the antibiotics.
I'll let you know if anything changes.
Mr. Edwards, may I speak
with you outside please?
Go. I've heard enough.
Tell me about your son.
He's a great kid. He's kind.
He's very good to his little sister.
- You two close?
- Yeah.
Not like my old man.
- Samira, finish up.
- He was not around very much.
He didn't really care
what we were doing.
Does Flynn play any sports?
Baseball, soccer, basketball.
David?
My wife doesn't want him
playing football,
or he'd be doing that too.
Do you get to many games?
I do my best.
Vic identification.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
[DOOR CLICKS]
What the hell is this?
These are the people
from the PittFest shooting
that we couldn't save today.
We couldn't save them,
but we can still save your son.
You're an asshole.
Yeah.
I'm an asshole
who's trying to save your son's life.
We still need charts for two patients
in North, three in South.
All right, we're on it.
Just give us a hot minute.
Hey, Lee Ann, can you check out
the ones she's talking about?
Code Tan, basement receiving.
- Code Tan, basement receiving.
- What's a Code Tan?
Illness or injury in
a public area of the hospital.
Usually a fainting or a fall.
Hey, Gloria wants day shift
to get out of here,
sooner rather than later, so wrap it up.
Gotcha.
Repeat labs back on our blue man, Max.
Running through agents
that cause methemoglobinemia,
mainly drugs and toxins.
Yeah, drugs like topical
anesthetics from the dentist,
antibiotics to treat malaria, leprosy.
Yeah, I can see
if he's taking any of those.
Also ask about industrial toxins.
Aniline dyes, benzene.
There's also food additives,
nitrates, nitrites.
Some of those are available
online as suicide kits.
You think he may have tried
to hurt himself?
Maybe, or he was poisoned.
I had a guy today whose wife was spiking
- his coffee with progesterone.
- Jesus.
And I thought the crazies
were for the night shift.
She wasn't crazy, just desperate.
Help. Police!
Officer.
I'm being held here against my will.
What else do we know about him?
[SIGHS] Nothing, really.
He was too groggy to talk,
but I can give it another shot.
- Go for it, Sherlock.
- Will do.
Last pink patient going upstairs.
- You two hanging in?
- Oh, yeah.
OK, start wrapping it up,
and then hand off
what you have left to the night shift.
- Can we talk?
- Go home.
- I don't want to tell you again.
- You needed me here.
Do you have any idea
how much trouble you're in?
Only if you report me.
I'm gonna pretend that I didn't
Robby! Pelvic crush injury.
Don't even think about it.
Thought we were closed to trauma.
This is the Code Tan.
He got pinned behind a truck backing up
with replacement supplies.
Pulse is weak and thready, tachy at
Grab me some monitor leads please.
100% non-rebreather.
Let's draw up 120 of ketamine,
100 of rock,
and page trauma surgery please.
The hell did this guy come from?
- Our loading dock.
- Oh, my God.
OK, I got the EFAST. Grab a binder.
- Obvious pelvic fracture.
- I'm in a lot of pain!
You taking any medications?
Crestor. [GROANS]
- Any drug allergies?
- No.
- Am I gonna be OK?
- Absolutely.
- We got you, Hector.
- BP 68 over 42, pulse 130.
I got a 14 gauge in the left AC.
Whole blood massive
transfusion protocol.
Uh, we got whole blood coming in
from Erie and Youngstown.
I'm not sure it's here yet.
Let's go one-to-one-to-one, red cells,
platelets, and plasma. We've got that.
Let's place an IJ
after the intubation please.
- On it.
- OK, EFAST negative.
It's all retroperitoneal.
No blood at the meatus.
Pass a Foley.
Hector, you crushed
all the bones in your pelvis,
and you've got some internal bleeding.
We need to sedate you to treat you.
Hurts a lot!
When you wake up, you're not
gonna be able to talk.
You're going to have a
breathing tube in your throat.
Can I speak to my wife first?
Afraid we have to move now, Hector.
First unit of packed cells
in the infuser.
[MONITOR BEEPING RAPIDLY]
What have we here?
It looks like two old white
guys poached our patient.
Oh, I know you're not talking about us.
Well, I know he's not talking about me.
Crushed pelvis, hemorrhagic shock.
MTP, pelvic binder.
I'm doing an intubation,
about to place an IJ.
You need us?
We got this for now. Hold down the fort.
Get caught up
on the day shift's remaining
PittFest patients, and we'll
get this guy stabilized.
How are you feeling, Max?
Yeah, I'm all right.
So, we are treating you
for methemoglobinemia.
Um, have you taken anything
or eaten anything
out of the ordinary lately?
No, just some unhealthy
food truck choices.
- [CHUCKLES]
- OK.
Do you work around toxic chemicals?
No, I'm a graphic designer.
[SIGHS]
Have you had dental work done lately?
- Used topical pain relievers?
- Nope.
Do you know anyone with leprosy?
Leprosy?
Yeah, I don't know anyone with leprosy.
Well, something that you ingested
or came into contact with
made you really sick,
and you could have died.
So we need to figure out what caused it
- so it doesn't happen again.
- It won't.
Um, is there anything else
going on in your life
that you want to talk about?
Anything causing you
undue stress or worry?
No.
I think I just need a little rest.
All right.
Well, I will be back.
This has to be the slowest
elevator in the world.
[CHUCKLES]
Are you in a hurry
to get back down there?
There's still a backlog
of cases to check on.
Our shift was over hours ago.
You don't want to go home and sleep?
I hope this didn't turn you off
of practicing emergency medicine.
I'm pretty sure today
turned me off of practicing
all forms of medicine.
Everything will be
a cakewalk after today.
- I promise.
- [ELEVATOR DINGS]
Come on, let's go find a good case.
Yeah.
I'll be right there.
Sorry.
Central line is in.
Let's hook up the rapid
infuser over to the IJ,
and then we can shoot the film.
Clear for X-ray.
[MONITOR BEEPING RAPIDLY]
Shooting.
[DEVICE BUZZES] Clear.
Oh, that ain't good.
What have you got?
Widened symphysis pubis anteriorly.
Distorted sacroiliac posteriorly.
Guy's bleeding like a stuck pig.
I got Dr. Walsh
on speakerphone from the OR.
Hey, guys. What's up?
We've got an unstable
pelvic ring fracture,
systolic of 68, EFAST negative.
I thought we were closed to trauma.
Hospital worker
versus reversing supply truck.
MTP and pelvic binder in place.
- TXA?
- Gave it.
Stable for CT angiogram?
- Uh, not at the moment, no.
- Keep transfusing.
The blood bank is still
waiting on a delivery,
unless you have some upstairs.
He doesn't need surgery.
He needs interventional radiology
to embolize the bleeders.
They don't like unstable patients.
They will tonight.
I'll be down as soon as I finish
this grade 5 liver lac.
- Hodges, wrist shrapnel.
- Check.
- Malloy, leg shrapnel.
- Yup.
Montgomery, abdominal shrapnel.
Uh, no.
This is supposed to be Cheu,
female with a head lac.
Ugh, great. Where the hell did she go?
Dr. King, Whitaker!
There's supposed to be
a female Asian patient
with a head lac in this bed!
Uh, yeah, I don't think that's her.
Right.
Whitaker, I need you to find the patient
that's supposed to be here.
Cheu, elderly female with a head lac.
- Me?
- I saw you caught that rat.
You're the closest thing
we got to a bloodhound.
I mean that as a compliment.
- Hey, is this a good time?
- No, I got a missing patient.
You've seen a woman with
a scalp lac, last name Cheu?
Uh, no, but I need to talk to you.
So talk.
You treat a woman
with a scalp lac named Cheu?
- Doesn't ring a bell.
- You're a lot of help.
Start wrapping up and get out of here.
- Oh, gladly.
- In private.
Ugh! Keep looking.
- I'll be with you in a minute.
- Yeah.
OK.
[INDISTINCT PA ANNOUNCEMENT]
What the hell?
It's not like I'm gonna
sleep tonight anyway.
What have you been hearing?
A lot of screaming and crying.
Got a feeling that's gonna
stick with me for a while.
I mean about me.
[SCOFFS] Doctors.
Always with the me, me, me.
I heard you went home early,
but you came back,
so cutting you some slack this time.
Why? Why'd I go home?
Just figured you were being a pussy.
What did Robby tell you?
Dana.
He said I didn't want to know,
so I didn't ask.
You in trouble, kid?
No, no, it's just a
- just a stupid misunderstanding.
- Then no worries.
Misunderstandings can be sorted out.
Look, everyone's nerves
are frazzled from today.
Just go home, get some rest.
Robby believes something
that's not entirely true.
That's not like Robby.
I need you to have my back on this.
Look, I love you, kid,
but this sounds like
it's between you and Robby
and above my pay grade.
Hell, I'm not even sure
I'm ever coming back
after I walk out
of here tonight fuck!
What are you talking about?
[SIGHS] Just
[SIGHS] Just
I think I'm done.
Just getting too old for this shit.
What?
No, Dana, you can't quit.
It's like the fucking world
is imploding.
Dana, you can't quit.
We need you.
Robby, me, everybody.
I just gotta wrap things up
and get out of here.
I need you to vouch for me.
Robby thinks I'm a fucking drug addict.
Are you?
No.
[SIGHS]
No, what I
what I am is scared, OK?
I'm really fucking
fucking scared of what happens next.
I fucked up, Dana.
I fucked up, and I don't know
what I'm supposed to do.
You're a smart kid.
You'll figure it out. Trust Robby, OK?
He'll do what's best for you.
What's best for me is being a doctor.
[DOOR CREAKS]
Hey, um, no luck finding Mrs. Cheu.
All right, I'm coming.
Shit.
[SIGHS]
- Yes, yes. I told him that.
- How's he doing?
The same.
So he's not getting any worse?
Uh, not at the moment.
Our family physician
is making arrangements
to move him to West Penn.
Will you excuse me for a second?
54 after 3 rounds packed cells,
- FFP, and platelets.
- Not too shabby.
Our measle kid's parents are trying
to move him to West Penn.
Let 'em.
They've been warned multiple times.
I even took the father
into the PittFest morgue
- to drive the point home.
- You what?
Yeah, I doubt any hospital will take him
without a spinal tap.
I'll be there in a minute.
Don't let them move that kid.
OK, great. Thank you.
They can see this guy in 45 minutes
in Interventional Radiology.
That's a long time for this guy.
They're just starting a REBOA.
You did a REBOA
during the mass casualty?
One of his interns did.
- Shut up.
- I was busy.
[LAUGHS] That was ballsy.
Yeah, we can babysit this guy
until IR is ready.
You guys are three hours post-shift.
- Whoo!
- This was supposed to be
my day off.
We got this.
Hasta la vista, vatos.
Hey, hey, hey, have you seen
an elderly woman with a head lac?
Last name Cheu?
No, sorry.
Our shift is over.
Dana asked me to find her,
said I'm the department bloodhound now.
Well, you did catch the rat.
Hey, have you seen a elderly
woman with a head lac?
- Last name Cheu?
- Nope.
OK.
Anything interesting up here?
- Oh, we are off the clock.
- I know.
But it's gonna take a couple more hours
to get caught up on every patient.
Are you feeling OK?
I feel great. [CHUCKLES]
Better than great.
Today was horrific,
but we got through it.
We did some amazing things.
Yeah.
Like, I drilled a burr hole
with an EZ-IO.
[LAUGHS]
Yeah, that was something.
Uh, you should probably go home now.
I'm good.
No, you're running
on an adrenaline high,
and you are going to crash soon.
- Trust me.
- I'd rather be here.
This job can't be your life, Samira.
It's not. [SCOFFS]
What, because I'm not in a relationship
and I don't like socializing after work?
All that other stuff can wait
until I finish my residency
and get to where I want to be
in my career.
Yeah. For sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love my life.
Can you let me in?
[DOOR BUZZES]
Hey.
Can I, um can I talk
to David alone for a sec?
I guess so.
I'll be right outside.
[SIGHS] Can I get you anything, David?
Yeah, get me out of here.
I mean, I can't do that.
They caught the guy that did this.
He's dead.
I'm still locked up.
Yeah.
Look.
Do you know what it's like to be afraid?
I mean, really, truly frightened
for your own physical safety?
I'm pretty sure I got
a taste of that tonight.
Right.
So imagine if you felt that way
every day
from half the people that you meet,
because that's every woman's life.
So when you make a hit list
for girls at your school
- I didn't make a hit list.
- Eliminate, man,
whatever you want to call it,
it's unacceptable.
And it's a form of violence
against women.
How would you feel if your mom
was on somebody's eliminate list?
I know life can be shitty,
and we all do stupid things,
but you're 18.
They're gonna treat you like an adult,
so I suggest you start acting like one.
Look, this is your chance
to turn things around.
Take the help that's offered.
Try and figure out
why you wrote what you did,
and please never, ever
think that way again.
Uh, OK.
I'm gonna take this and this out there.
If anybody needs me,
that is where I will be.
Yep.
[DOOR BUZZES]
What was that all about?
You told me it was my mess
to fix, right?
So that's what I was trying to do.
Did he talk to you?
Not really.
Do you think I made it worse
by bringing the police in on this one?
We may never know.
He's probably gonna be stuck down here
for his entire 72-hour hold.
Well, maybe if he gets
the help he needs, it's worth it.
Go home.
Don't show up tomorrow
before taking care
of the ankle monitor.
I think our blue man, Max,
needs a psych eval.
Based on what?
No health reason for taking anything
that could have caused this.
No exposure to anything
in the workplace.
He didn't ask me to call anyone.
I'm just worried he was
trying to hurt himself.
It's a stretch, new girl.
Well, he's also not asking to go home.
I mean, if this was
a failed suicide attempt,
it makes sense that he's too frightened
or embarrassed to admit to what he did
and too afraid to go home
because of what he might still do.
OK, I'll call Psych,
but find someone to take over for you.
Your shift ended a couple of hours ago.
I'd like to try and get
a little more out of him,
see if I can get him
to confess to something.
I've seen your bedside manner.
OK, that is reserved for assholes.
I don't want this kid
slipping through the cracks.
OK.
Thanks.
Thanks for letting me come back.
I didn't let you come back.
You came back on your own,
and I let you stay.
I figured it was the one time
throwing my career away
was for a greater good.
I I was never high.
I was just treating
my own withdrawal symptoms.
Well, you should have done that
under the care and supervision
of a physician.
With that on my record, I could
I could have
my hospital privileges denied
- whenever I apply for a job.
- No.
No, that's not true anymore.
That's not true anymore.
You could have come to me.
Instead, you could be arrested
on felony charges
for stealing controlled
substances from the hospital.
Robby, I could lose my medical license.
Come on, man.
You never heard of second chances?
Here's your second chance.
30-day inpatient treatment program,
followed by random urine tests,
50 to 60 a year,
followed by mandatory NA meetings
three to four times a week
for the first three years.
- Three years?
- Of a five-year program.
- You need help.
- What about you, man?
What about you? I'm not the only one
who's a little fucked up here, Robby!
Why don't you look in the mirror?
What's that supposed to mean?
I never had a complete meltdown.
No, you just caused them
in other people.
You're blaming me
for what happened to you?
What happened to me?
- What happened to me?
- Yeah.
[LAUGHS] You are so full of shit!
You let me down!
You let everybody down,
especially yourself.
Someone saw you in Pedes.
Who, Whitaker?
No.
A night shift nurse
saw you on the floor,
said it looked like
Looked like what?
Looked like what?
This job will fuck you up if you let it.
- You let it.
- Yeah?
I wasn't the one talking
to cartoon animals in Pedes.
Fuck you!
Doing OK, man?
Why do you keep asking me that?
Oh, I don't know.
You did take the parent of a patient
into our makeshift morgue.
Forget that it's technically
a fucking crime scene.
That's just not cool, man.
Just the two heroes I wanted to see.
We're holding a press conference
in the education auditorium.
Not a chance.
I know you hate this stuff,
but it's important for this department
- and the hospital.
- Trust me, Gloria.
You don't want me speaking
to the press right now.
Or ever.
Look, as much as you ER cowboys
are a pain in my ass,
what you and your department
did here tonight was
nothing short of miraculous.
People need to know that.
- Take the win.
- Need a second round of MTP.
What the fuck?
Systolic's down to 64 over 38.
- He's tachy to 132.
- Pelvic fracture?
Yeah, rechecking for delayed
intra-abdominal bleed.
I thought you said he was stable.
He was, after three units.
And he continued to improve.
Pressure got up to 118 systolic
after the full MTP.
- Systolic at 118?
- It was 90 after three units.
You gave him too much blood
and raised his pressure so high
that it blew apart the developing clots
that was stopping him from bleeding out.
First round of MTP is 6 units red cells,
6 FFP, 6 platelets.
That's what we gave him.
Treat the patient, not the protocol.
Systolic of 90 is ideal.
Robby, you teach your residents
about permissive hypotension?
- Dr. Shen was on this case.
- Shen is a resident.
He is an attending now.
We thought with the long delay
in getting him to IR, that
He might not make it to IR.
You over-transfused,
you popped the clots,
- and now he's exsanguinating.
- OK.
There's no bleeding in the belly.
It's too deep in the pelvis
to see on ultrasound.
Second round of MTP is here.
Blood and plasma on the infuser.
We got him back once.
We'll get him back again.
- 3 grams calcium gluconate.
- Why calcium?
Citrate in the transfusions chelates,
leading to hypercalcemia.
Excellent call, Dr. Ellis.
Hey, I found Mrs. Cheu
in the stairwell smoking.
Oh, good job.
You know, Mrs. Cheu,
tobacco use is not a healthy habit.
I've outlived three husbands.
Yeah, they probably died
of secondhand smoke.
Dr. King, we want you
to do the spinal tap
before Flynn gets any worse.
Great. I will meet you in there.
Dr. Shen, nice of you to join us.
- Systolic's only 68.
- After how many units?
Three units into the second MTP.
Total of nine.
This is not looking good, kids.
I'm I'm sorry
if I gave him too much blood.
- I thought
- Dr. Ellis,
now that Dr. Shen is here,
we have plenty of hands on deck.
Why don't you go check
on your other patients?
Hey, what about REBOA?
The balloon cuts off blood
to the lower half of the body
No, with bilateral crush injuries,
we don't know if we have an
intact artery to thread it in.
We can always crack the chest,
cross-clamp the aorta, and stabilize.
- I got a better idea.
- Yeah?
Preperitoneal packing.
Simple midline incision
below the umbilicus,
pack like hell around
and behind the bladder.
That pressure should stop the bleeding
until we get him upstairs.
Robby.
Preperitoneal packing. Thoughts?
Uh, I've only ever done one
in cadaver lab.
Because it's an OR procedure.
We did them all the time at
the combat support hospitals.
[SIGHS]
All right! What the hell?
Suprapubic prep and drape.
Sterile gowns all around.
Hey, let's go.
Get on the horn to the OR.
We need at least six lap pads
and the biggest
goddamn retractors you got.
Deavers, right angles, whatever.
Saddle up, cowboy. We got this.
Dr. Ellis, where do you need me?
Back here at 7:00 a.m.
to relieve the night shift.
I can work a double.
Samira, you are a great doctor,
but you need to know
when to turn it off.
Go home.
Oh, Dr. Ellis, the parents
of the measles patient
have finally consented to an LP,
but Dr. Shen is tied up with a trauma.
- I can do it.
- We got this. Go.
- You still doing OK?
- I'm fine.
Did you witness any of the shooting?
No.
OK, but, um,
you were found
in one of the parking lots.
Yeah.
What were you doing?
I was just hanging out.
Were you with friends?
No.
You know
you can tell me anything, right?
I'm I'm here to help, if I can.
I had a a good friend who, um,
went through
some really ugly stuff with me.
We were young, and someone older was
taking advantage of our age.
And things got so bad that
my friend took her own life.
There isn't a day that I don't regret
not being able to stop my friend,
but there also isn't a day
that I'm not grateful
I didn't do the same.
Life can be so fucking hard.
But it gets better.
And there are people
who can and want to help you
with whatever you're dealing with.
I just don't want to be here anymore.
[BREATHING SHAKILY]
Then let's have you talk
to a professional
who can help you with those feelings.
So what do you say?
Will you talk to someone?
[MONITOR BEEPING RAPIDLY]
- Here come more lap pads.
- Drop them on the Mayo.
BOTH: Ten blade to me.
I've done a hundred of these.
Just somebody fucking do it.
[SIGHS] All right, fine.
But just down to the linea alba.
I don't want you going down too deep
and slicing the bladder.
Thank you for the safety tip.
Metz.
OK.
Adson forceps.
Once I'm through the fascia,
you're gonna sweep a finger
around the bladder,
open up the space of Retzius.
Named after Anders Retzius,
19th-century Swedish
professor of anatomy.
Seriously?
History of medicine is the closest thing
I have to a hobby.
You might want to leave that
off your dating profile.
All right, three lap pads
on each side of the bladder,
deep as you can.
Deaver retractor.
Named for John Blair Deaver,
Philadelphia surgeon who revolutionized
abdominal surgery in the early 1900s.
- I'm surrounded by med nerds.
- I went to med school at Penn.
I walked by his portrait every day.
Dude did, like, 100,000 surgeries.
Guys, BP is not any better.
Systolic is 72.
One more check of the transverse view.
Perfectly in the midline.
And the longitudinal view?
Right between the vertebra.
Good to go.
- You're up.
- OK.
Is it painful? Will he feel it?
Not at all. He's fully sedated.
Enter bevel up.
Aim for the umbilicus.
Oh, I felt a pop.
That's the supraspinous ligament.
Enter slowly.
The next pop is the ligamentum flavum,
and you're in.
Felt it.
All right.
Removing stylet.
OK, Dad, we're in.
It's gonna take a minute to collect,
but the fluid looks clear.
- That's good, right?
- It's a good sign.
The lab still needs to run some tests,
look under the microscope
to rule out some bad stuff.
What are you doing?
You said she didn't want
to be in the room.
I was getting Georgia something to eat.
OK, wait outside.
Stop what you're doing right now.
No, they're almost done!
I can't believe you went behind my back.
I did what was best
for Flynn, not for you.
Take that needle out of his back!
- No.
- Yes!
Ma'am, I don't want
to have to ask you to leave.
Take it out right now.
Yep, coming out now. All done.
My son is leaving this hospital.
[SIGHS] I'm sorry.
She really is a good mom.
Fifth lap pad in place.
Yep.
- Number six, and we're done.
- OK.
BP 92 over 48.
- That's good enough for me.
- How much blood so far?
Uh, up to five on the second MTP.
No more unless he tanks again.
Sounds good.
Hey, I'll stay with him
until IR's ready.
- OK. By yourself?
- Yeah.
I need to make sure he doesn't
get another drop of blood.
You're not needed in the OR?
Nah, it's ortho surgeries
all night long now.
Hey, is he OK?
Yeah.
He's just tired. I think we all are.
- Holler if you need us.
- I won't.
Why are you still here?
Almost done.
That was the cops.
They arrested Doug Driscoll.
Good.
They want to know
if I want to press charges.
Uh, yes.
I just want to forget
this whole fucking day.
Me too.
But you still have to press charges.
Have you heard anything about me today?
Just, like, any kind of rumors?
Since when do you care about rumors?
- About you or anybody else?
- I don't.
It's just something I heard that
Langdon told me that he heard
from a night shift nurse.
Yeah, well, there's a reason
we stick 'em on the night shift.
- Hey.
- I'm kidding.
You want to tell me what it was?
I'll tell you if I heard something.
No. Never mind.
Can you find the remaining day shifts
so I can do a debrief
before we all go home?
- Yeah.
- Is Jake still here?
Yeah, he and Mom are in North 3 now.
Dr. Robby, I think you need
to look at this kid.
Find Dr. Shen. I'm done.
You're gonna want to see this.
- Trust me.
- I got this.
What am I looking at?
14-year-old girl playing
with her older brother,
takes a fall as her older brother
chases her up the stairs after she stole
a forkful of his takeout.
Told you you'd want to see this one
This has Dr. Shen written all over it.
Don't worry,
we're bringing in our, um
utensils specialist.
We're gonna start you out
with some nasal numbing spray
for the pain.
Do you mind if I take a photo?
For the medical record.
[SOBBING]
[SOBBING]
[BREATHING DEEPLY]
Are you OK?
Yeah.
I think today is finally
catching up to me,
physically and emotionally.
It happens.
How are you two still going?
I'm not.
I don't require much sleep,
and I have a fast metabolism.
[SIGHS]
All right, everybody!
Listen up!
You got it, Cap.
[CLEARS THROAT]
Today should never have happened.
It's impossible to imagine
what would possess somebody
to commit such a horrific act.
It's the worst of humanity,
but it brought out
the best in the rest of us.
We saw our better angels
come to the aid of our patients.
Each of you rose to the occasion.
And I I can't tell you
how proud I am of all of you.
This place will break your heart.
But it is also full of miracles,
and that is a testament
to all of you coming together
and doing what we do best.
Thank you for everything
you did here today.
We saw 112 mass casualty patients
come through here
in the last four hours,
and 106 of them are gonna live.
[VOICE BREAKING] None of us are
gonna forget today
[CLEARS THROAT]
Even if we really, really want to.
[EXHALES] So go home.
Let yourselves cry.
[SNIFFS] You'll feel better.
It's just grief leaving the body.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
You want to grab a drink?
Um, yeah. Yes.
- When?
- Now.
Oh, some of us just get a beer
in the park across the street.
- Oh.
- Helps to download
before you go home.
OK. Sure, sure.
OK.
[CELL PHONE RINGING]
Mom!
Hey, buddy. You're still up?
Yeah, me and Grandpa
just started watching
"Planet of the Apes."
What did I tell you about scary movies?
[COMPUTER BEEPS]
[COMPUTER BEEPS]
Sorry.
I need to get past. Sorry.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
Hey, hey, sorry. Excuse me.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
Doc Anderson would have made
the same decision you did.
I could have kept him
for a few more days on ECMO.
You gave him a fighting chance,
and then you used
the limited resources we had
to give that little girl a chance.
- And lost them both.
- Yeah.
But you did your best.
We all did.
Hey.
He would have been proud of you
for what you did
and for everything else since then.
Come here.
You wouldn't let anyone else
blame themselves for this.
Time to give yourself some grace.
See you Monday.
[SINGING INDISTINCTLY]
[WATER TRICKLING]
Yeah ♪
[SINGING INDISTINCTLY]
[FAINT UPBEAT MUSIC PLAYING]
♪
Body makes me ♪
- Nice moves, Raygun.
- Holy shit!
What the hell are you doing up here?
What the hell are you doing up here?
Just one second.
OK. OK.
Uh, I will, on occasion,
after a long shift, crash here.
This was your first day here.
Well, it's my first day
uh, it's my first day
of emergency rotation.
I did internal medicine last month.
Do you actually have a place to live?
Uh, I'm currently between places.
Do you own a car?
[CHUCKLES]
Uh, not at the moment, no, I
I'm actually
Between cars.
Yeah, something like that.
[SIGHS]
OK, so I have a spare room
with its own bathroom.
Sweet.
Oh, for God's sakes.
Do you want the room or not?
OK, that is extremely generous,
but no, I can't afford
to pay you rent right now.
How are you at cleaning
and fixing things?
Grew up on a farm.
I guess I'm pretty handy.
Cleaning, I know how
to muck out a stall.
Just keep to yourself, don't annoy me,
and you can move in.
Wow.
Wow. I I don't know what to say.
Thank you.
Well, you can move in
tonight if you want.
Really?
Yeah, but quick,
before I change my mind.
Yeah, yeah. No, I mean, this is
this is all I really have, so
Oh, God, you're not some, like, nudist
or religious freak, are you?
No.
No, I like to remain
fully dressed at all times,
except bathing. I'm just
- I know Krav Maga.
- Cool.
I don't know who that is,
but he sounds very protective of you.
The chances of this working
are diminishing by the second.
I'm just fucking with you, Whitaker.
You're such a Huckleberry.
Yeah. OK. Uh, hold on!
How are we doing?
Uh, we're doing OK. Right?
I know that this is difficult.
This is gonna hurt for a long time,
and it's OK if you want to blame me.
Just please don't blame yourself.
We've been friends a long time.
I would hate it.
No, we're not friends.
And you're not my father, so fuck off!
Jake.
Robby.
[EXHALES]
Parents of Jake's girlfriend,
Leah, are here.
I put them in the viewing room.
[SOFT TENSE MUSIC]
♪
Hello.
[SOBBING]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
[SOBBING SOFTLY]
[DOOR CREAKS]
- Hey, Becca.
- Hi, Mel!
- You ready to go?
- Yep.
- All right, let's go!
- Let's go.
Oh, wow. It's, uh it's dark out.
Oh, yeah. Sorry about that.
I had to stay a little later
than expected at work.
- Because of your boss?
- Oh, no, no, no.
A bunch of people got hurt
at a music festival.
And you had to help them.
Yeah.
We're supposed to go
to a restaurant on Fridays.
We could still go to a restaurant.
It's not too late?
- Not for us King sisters.
- [GIGGLES]
- What do you want to eat?
- Pizza!
Or spaghetti!
I don't know. I can't decide.
Well, why don't we do both?
- Both?
- Yeah.
We can go out for spaghetti,
and then take a pizza home with us.
- Really?
- Yeah, why not?
Can we still watch a movie?
It is Friday, isn't it?
"Elf"! [LAUGHS]
Yeah. Um, we could do "Elf."
Or we could see a movie
that we've never seen before.
- But "Elf" is so funny!
- Yup.
[SIGHS]
You're in my spot.
Just so you know,
Grubhub will not deliver
to the roof,
but there is a DoorDash guy
uh, Marco who will trek
up here for an extra 10 bucks,
20 if you want beer.
Nice speech down there.
Wish I had given it.
No, you don't.
[CHUCKLES]
No. Fuck no.
But I'm glad somebody did.
Yeah.
I think I finally understand
why I keep coming back now.
It's in our DNA.
It's what we do. We can't help it.
We're the we're the bees
that protect the hive.
Maybe you, not me.
What are you talking about?
You know damn well what I'm talk
I'm talking about.
I broke.
You didn't break.
- You didn't break.
- I shut down.
At the moment
everybody needed me the most,
I wasn't there.
I couldn't do it. I choked.
For what, for 40 seconds?
Three minutes? Ten minutes?
So fucking what? We all have that.
That is what happens
when you're in a war
and nothing makes sense.
We survived as a species
because we learned
how to cooperate and communicate,
so when we're in the middle
of killing each other,
it divides the very logic
of our existence.
Your brain starts to short-circuit.
All you can do is focus on the medicine.
The medicine's the only thing
that saves the patient
and your sanity.
I'm gonna need a drink
if you keep talking.
You get what I'm saying, right?
You rocked that shit down there tonight.
Yeah?
You rocked that shit down there tonight.
We all did.
Now that is a compliment.
Accept the damn compliment for once.
What if we just didn't talk
for a minute?
- I'm just trying to help.
- I know.
- I appreciate you
- Still talking.
Sorry.
[SIGHS]
[GROANS]
- Get that drink now?
- Yeah.
Whoa.
It didn't take long to fill up in here.
Never does.
How long until we run out
of boarding beds?
Probably sunrise.
Mm. Mm-mm.
- She had a seizure.
- Of course she did.
Looking good, Dr. Abbot.
- You too, Myrna.
- Oh, thanks.
[CHUCKLES] Hey, fruitcake.
- Fruitcake.
- Don't ask.
- When are you coming back?
- I don't know.
Grab a couple hours' sleep,
come back around 2:00.
I don't think they're gonna need relief
- until the morning.
- You know me.
I prefer working nights.
You're not sick of working nights yet?
My therapist thinks I find
comfort in the darkness.
Huh.
Could give you his number
if you ever feel like talking to him.
Does it help?
I haven't jumped off the roof, have I?
[SIGHS] Not yet.
[RATS SQUEAKING]
[SCREAMS] Hey! Hey!
Somebody help me!
There are rats in here!
There were rats in my bed!
I don't think
there are any rats in your bed.
- There were two of them.
- OK, sir.
We'll take care of that.
Head trauma. Starting to hallucinate.
Put him in line for a CT.
Hey, hide the hard drugs, kids.
Oh, nice catch.
Oh.
Man. [GROANS]
[SIGHS]
Today was a motherfucker.
Have you ever been
in anything like that before?
Let's hope none of us ever has to again.
No shit.
We probably will.
If not us, others.
Yeah, but we survived
that craziness, right?
To the Pitt crew.
To all the people we saved.
- Here, here.
- And the ones we couldn't.
Is this where
all the cool kids hang out?
Oh, you know it.
Nice of you to join us.
If there ever was a day.
Actually, sorry, I don't drink.
I don't know why I took that.
- She's not old enough.
- I'd say if she's old enough
to put in a chest tube and intubate,
she's old enough to drink a beer.
We won't tell your mom.
Shut up.
But seriously, don't.
Thank you.
You guys do this after every shift?
Not always.
Usually, it's a little more lively.
The Emergency Department
throws wicked parties.
[LAUGHS]
- What's so funny?
- Mm.
I just realized
this is your first shift.
Yeah.
[LAUGHTER]
That was baptism by fire, baby.
I can pretty much guarantee you
the next one will be easier.
I really fucking hope so.
Hey, at least you didn't get pissed on.
- [LAUGHS]
- I will drink to that.
Aww, poor Whitaker.
Where is he?
Yeah, probably quit.
Oh, that kid's tough.
He'll be back.
Just like the rest of us.
[SIREN WAILING]
OK, that's it for me.
Beer for the road?
Yeah, why not?
Good night.
Get some rest.
Tomorrow is another day.
[ROBERT BRADLEY'S BLACKWATER
SURPRISE'S "BABY" PLAYING]
Baby ♪
It's all right ♪
Maybe ♪
You'll stay here tonight ♪
It was champagne,
candlelight, and wine ♪
The girl looked so good ♪
She gave eyesight to the blind ♪
She said, come here, boy ♪
I'm gonna take you higher ♪
For tonight ♪
The stars shine much brighter ♪
And she said, baby ♪
It's all right ♪
Maybe ♪
You can stay here tonight ♪
- Baby ♪
- She said, baby ♪
- It's all right ♪
- You know it's all right ♪
- Maybe ♪
- She said maybe ♪
Stay here tonight ♪
Can I kiss you? ♪
Can I hold you? ♪
Put my arms around you ♪
Thank God I found you ♪
I gotta kiss you, oh ♪
Can I hold you, baby? ♪
Put my arms around you ♪
Thank God I found you ♪
And she said, baby ♪
She said, baby ♪
It's all right ♪
You know it's all right ♪
- Baby ♪
- She said, baby ♪
It's all right ♪
You can stay here tonight ♪
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
- Robby!
- Whoa, whoa, whoa.
What's going on here?
I disabled my ankle monitor
because it was going off
and fucking with our ability
to help patients
during the mass casualty.
Tell that to your judge.
This is my resident. I need her.
Call Gloria.
Can you at least wait a second
to speak to our chief medical officer?
No, but they can call the Department
if they have any questions.
We just came through the
worst mass casualty incident
in this city's history, and you two are
fucking around with this?
Are you serious?
You don't have anything better to do?
[INDISTINCT RADIO CHATTER]
Officer Harrelson, can you please.
Is there a problem here?
She disabled her ankle monitor.
It was malfunctioning.
She's in a custody battle
with a restraining order
and is considered a flight risk.
That is bullshit.
It was interfering with
our ability to treat patients.
I'm not sure we could have
saved Officer Stefano
if she hadn't disabled the damn thing.
Is that true?
They saved Stefano's life.
They saved a lot of lives.
Take care of this
first thing tomorrow morning?
I swear.
Take the cuffs off.
[CHUCKLES] Thank you.
- Thank you.
- Thank you.
For everything you did here tonight.
- Do I even want to know?
- Probably not.
Good.
What's your status down here?
We have had 112 mass casualty patients
come through here
in the last three hours.
Only six people that we couldn't save.
They are still in our
makeshift morgue in Pedes.
71 people went upstairs.
Last I heard, surgery had stabilized
the 39 most critical red zone,
32 pink zone patients.
We also had 24 yellow zone patients,
many of whom are getting
orthopedic surgery as we speak.
The police are still interviewing
everybody else that's still down here.
We discharged eight people,
and I don't know the status
of the green zone patients
because I wasn't there.
You'll have to check
with Family Medicine.
Impressive.
I need you and Abbot
to turn your patients over
to the night shift now, and then
[PHONE RINGS] Oh, sorry.
Hello?
What? No.
We need to be back up and running now.
Tell security to open
the ER doors for walk-ins.
If you've got a triage nurse
and registration clerks,
you should already be open.
[MONITOR BEEPING STEADILY]
You ready to give
this measles kid to Dr. Shen
- and go home?
- Oh, no. I'm I'm OK.
- Are you sure?
- Yeah.
It's just we've repeatedly tried
to explain the importance
and low risk of the spinal tap,
and the parents are
they're risking their son's life.
Hopefully, they'll come around.
And if they don't?
We do the best that we can.
Some things are out of our control.
Dr. Shen, how are we
progressing in here?
No improvement
in the patient or his family.
Where is your wife
and daughter, Mr. Edwards?
My wife took Georgia to the bathroom.
OK.
Well, your son, Flynn,
is critically ill,
and the longer that we wait,
the worse this could get.
Without the spinal tap,
we don't know
the best treatment to give him
to give him the best chance of recovery.
What's going on?
We were discussing the options
for treating your son.
He already looks better.
He is not.
And by refusing the spinal tap,
we don't know how to help him.
The steroids could kill him
if it's just pneumonia.
The steroids could save him
if it's ADEM,
and the longer that we wait,
the greater the risk of him dying.
- Flynn might die?
- No, honey.
He's just got a worse version
of what you had.
[SIGHS]
I'll keep him intubated, hydrated,
and pumping the antibiotics.
I'll let you know if anything changes.
Mr. Edwards, may I speak
with you outside please?
Go. I've heard enough.
Tell me about your son.
He's a great kid. He's kind.
He's very good to his little sister.
- You two close?
- Yeah.
Not like my old man.
- Samira, finish up.
- He was not around very much.
He didn't really care
what we were doing.
Does Flynn play any sports?
Baseball, soccer, basketball.
David?
My wife doesn't want him
playing football,
or he'd be doing that too.
Do you get to many games?
I do my best.
Vic identification.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
[DOOR CLICKS]
What the hell is this?
These are the people
from the PittFest shooting
that we couldn't save today.
We couldn't save them,
but we can still save your son.
You're an asshole.
Yeah.
I'm an asshole
who's trying to save your son's life.
We still need charts for two patients
in North, three in South.
All right, we're on it.
Just give us a hot minute.
Hey, Lee Ann, can you check out
the ones she's talking about?
Code Tan, basement receiving.
- Code Tan, basement receiving.
- What's a Code Tan?
Illness or injury in
a public area of the hospital.
Usually a fainting or a fall.
Hey, Gloria wants day shift
to get out of here,
sooner rather than later, so wrap it up.
Gotcha.
Repeat labs back on our blue man, Max.
Running through agents
that cause methemoglobinemia,
mainly drugs and toxins.
Yeah, drugs like topical
anesthetics from the dentist,
antibiotics to treat malaria, leprosy.
Yeah, I can see
if he's taking any of those.
Also ask about industrial toxins.
Aniline dyes, benzene.
There's also food additives,
nitrates, nitrites.
Some of those are available
online as suicide kits.
You think he may have tried
to hurt himself?
Maybe, or he was poisoned.
I had a guy today whose wife was spiking
- his coffee with progesterone.
- Jesus.
And I thought the crazies
were for the night shift.
She wasn't crazy, just desperate.
Help. Police!
Officer.
I'm being held here against my will.
What else do we know about him?
[SIGHS] Nothing, really.
He was too groggy to talk,
but I can give it another shot.
- Go for it, Sherlock.
- Will do.
Last pink patient going upstairs.
- You two hanging in?
- Oh, yeah.
OK, start wrapping it up,
and then hand off
what you have left to the night shift.
- Can we talk?
- Go home.
- I don't want to tell you again.
- You needed me here.
Do you have any idea
how much trouble you're in?
Only if you report me.
I'm gonna pretend that I didn't
Robby! Pelvic crush injury.
Don't even think about it.
Thought we were closed to trauma.
This is the Code Tan.
He got pinned behind a truck backing up
with replacement supplies.
Pulse is weak and thready, tachy at
Grab me some monitor leads please.
100% non-rebreather.
Let's draw up 120 of ketamine,
100 of rock,
and page trauma surgery please.
The hell did this guy come from?
- Our loading dock.
- Oh, my God.
OK, I got the EFAST. Grab a binder.
- Obvious pelvic fracture.
- I'm in a lot of pain!
You taking any medications?
Crestor. [GROANS]
- Any drug allergies?
- No.
- Am I gonna be OK?
- Absolutely.
- We got you, Hector.
- BP 68 over 42, pulse 130.
I got a 14 gauge in the left AC.
Whole blood massive
transfusion protocol.
Uh, we got whole blood coming in
from Erie and Youngstown.
I'm not sure it's here yet.
Let's go one-to-one-to-one, red cells,
platelets, and plasma. We've got that.
Let's place an IJ
after the intubation please.
- On it.
- OK, EFAST negative.
It's all retroperitoneal.
No blood at the meatus.
Pass a Foley.
Hector, you crushed
all the bones in your pelvis,
and you've got some internal bleeding.
We need to sedate you to treat you.
Hurts a lot!
When you wake up, you're not
gonna be able to talk.
You're going to have a
breathing tube in your throat.
Can I speak to my wife first?
Afraid we have to move now, Hector.
First unit of packed cells
in the infuser.
[MONITOR BEEPING RAPIDLY]
What have we here?
It looks like two old white
guys poached our patient.
Oh, I know you're not talking about us.
Well, I know he's not talking about me.
Crushed pelvis, hemorrhagic shock.
MTP, pelvic binder.
I'm doing an intubation,
about to place an IJ.
You need us?
We got this for now. Hold down the fort.
Get caught up
on the day shift's remaining
PittFest patients, and we'll
get this guy stabilized.
How are you feeling, Max?
Yeah, I'm all right.
So, we are treating you
for methemoglobinemia.
Um, have you taken anything
or eaten anything
out of the ordinary lately?
No, just some unhealthy
food truck choices.
- [CHUCKLES]
- OK.
Do you work around toxic chemicals?
No, I'm a graphic designer.
[SIGHS]
Have you had dental work done lately?
- Used topical pain relievers?
- Nope.
Do you know anyone with leprosy?
Leprosy?
Yeah, I don't know anyone with leprosy.
Well, something that you ingested
or came into contact with
made you really sick,
and you could have died.
So we need to figure out what caused it
- so it doesn't happen again.
- It won't.
Um, is there anything else
going on in your life
that you want to talk about?
Anything causing you
undue stress or worry?
No.
I think I just need a little rest.
All right.
Well, I will be back.
This has to be the slowest
elevator in the world.
[CHUCKLES]
Are you in a hurry
to get back down there?
There's still a backlog
of cases to check on.
Our shift was over hours ago.
You don't want to go home and sleep?
I hope this didn't turn you off
of practicing emergency medicine.
I'm pretty sure today
turned me off of practicing
all forms of medicine.
Everything will be
a cakewalk after today.
- I promise.
- [ELEVATOR DINGS]
Come on, let's go find a good case.
Yeah.
I'll be right there.
Sorry.
Central line is in.
Let's hook up the rapid
infuser over to the IJ,
and then we can shoot the film.
Clear for X-ray.
[MONITOR BEEPING RAPIDLY]
Shooting.
[DEVICE BUZZES] Clear.
Oh, that ain't good.
What have you got?
Widened symphysis pubis anteriorly.
Distorted sacroiliac posteriorly.
Guy's bleeding like a stuck pig.
I got Dr. Walsh
on speakerphone from the OR.
Hey, guys. What's up?
We've got an unstable
pelvic ring fracture,
systolic of 68, EFAST negative.
I thought we were closed to trauma.
Hospital worker
versus reversing supply truck.
MTP and pelvic binder in place.
- TXA?
- Gave it.
Stable for CT angiogram?
- Uh, not at the moment, no.
- Keep transfusing.
The blood bank is still
waiting on a delivery,
unless you have some upstairs.
He doesn't need surgery.
He needs interventional radiology
to embolize the bleeders.
They don't like unstable patients.
They will tonight.
I'll be down as soon as I finish
this grade 5 liver lac.
- Hodges, wrist shrapnel.
- Check.
- Malloy, leg shrapnel.
- Yup.
Montgomery, abdominal shrapnel.
Uh, no.
This is supposed to be Cheu,
female with a head lac.
Ugh, great. Where the hell did she go?
Dr. King, Whitaker!
There's supposed to be
a female Asian patient
with a head lac in this bed!
Uh, yeah, I don't think that's her.
Right.
Whitaker, I need you to find the patient
that's supposed to be here.
Cheu, elderly female with a head lac.
- Me?
- I saw you caught that rat.
You're the closest thing
we got to a bloodhound.
I mean that as a compliment.
- Hey, is this a good time?
- No, I got a missing patient.
You've seen a woman with
a scalp lac, last name Cheu?
Uh, no, but I need to talk to you.
So talk.
You treat a woman
with a scalp lac named Cheu?
- Doesn't ring a bell.
- You're a lot of help.
Start wrapping up and get out of here.
- Oh, gladly.
- In private.
Ugh! Keep looking.
- I'll be with you in a minute.
- Yeah.
OK.
[INDISTINCT PA ANNOUNCEMENT]
What the hell?
It's not like I'm gonna
sleep tonight anyway.
What have you been hearing?
A lot of screaming and crying.
Got a feeling that's gonna
stick with me for a while.
I mean about me.
[SCOFFS] Doctors.
Always with the me, me, me.
I heard you went home early,
but you came back,
so cutting you some slack this time.
Why? Why'd I go home?
Just figured you were being a pussy.
What did Robby tell you?
Dana.
He said I didn't want to know,
so I didn't ask.
You in trouble, kid?
No, no, it's just a
- just a stupid misunderstanding.
- Then no worries.
Misunderstandings can be sorted out.
Look, everyone's nerves
are frazzled from today.
Just go home, get some rest.
Robby believes something
that's not entirely true.
That's not like Robby.
I need you to have my back on this.
Look, I love you, kid,
but this sounds like
it's between you and Robby
and above my pay grade.
Hell, I'm not even sure
I'm ever coming back
after I walk out
of here tonight fuck!
What are you talking about?
[SIGHS] Just
[SIGHS] Just
I think I'm done.
Just getting too old for this shit.
What?
No, Dana, you can't quit.
It's like the fucking world
is imploding.
Dana, you can't quit.
We need you.
Robby, me, everybody.
I just gotta wrap things up
and get out of here.
I need you to vouch for me.
Robby thinks I'm a fucking drug addict.
Are you?
No.
[SIGHS]
No, what I
what I am is scared, OK?
I'm really fucking
fucking scared of what happens next.
I fucked up, Dana.
I fucked up, and I don't know
what I'm supposed to do.
You're a smart kid.
You'll figure it out. Trust Robby, OK?
He'll do what's best for you.
What's best for me is being a doctor.
[DOOR CREAKS]
Hey, um, no luck finding Mrs. Cheu.
All right, I'm coming.
Shit.
[SIGHS]
- Yes, yes. I told him that.
- How's he doing?
The same.
So he's not getting any worse?
Uh, not at the moment.
Our family physician
is making arrangements
to move him to West Penn.
Will you excuse me for a second?
54 after 3 rounds packed cells,
- FFP, and platelets.
- Not too shabby.
Our measle kid's parents are trying
to move him to West Penn.
Let 'em.
They've been warned multiple times.
I even took the father
into the PittFest morgue
- to drive the point home.
- You what?
Yeah, I doubt any hospital will take him
without a spinal tap.
I'll be there in a minute.
Don't let them move that kid.
OK, great. Thank you.
They can see this guy in 45 minutes
in Interventional Radiology.
That's a long time for this guy.
They're just starting a REBOA.
You did a REBOA
during the mass casualty?
One of his interns did.
- Shut up.
- I was busy.
[LAUGHS] That was ballsy.
Yeah, we can babysit this guy
until IR is ready.
You guys are three hours post-shift.
- Whoo!
- This was supposed to be
my day off.
We got this.
Hasta la vista, vatos.
Hey, hey, hey, have you seen
an elderly woman with a head lac?
Last name Cheu?
No, sorry.
Our shift is over.
Dana asked me to find her,
said I'm the department bloodhound now.
Well, you did catch the rat.
Hey, have you seen a elderly
woman with a head lac?
- Last name Cheu?
- Nope.
OK.
Anything interesting up here?
- Oh, we are off the clock.
- I know.
But it's gonna take a couple more hours
to get caught up on every patient.
Are you feeling OK?
I feel great. [CHUCKLES]
Better than great.
Today was horrific,
but we got through it.
We did some amazing things.
Yeah.
Like, I drilled a burr hole
with an EZ-IO.
[LAUGHS]
Yeah, that was something.
Uh, you should probably go home now.
I'm good.
No, you're running
on an adrenaline high,
and you are going to crash soon.
- Trust me.
- I'd rather be here.
This job can't be your life, Samira.
It's not. [SCOFFS]
What, because I'm not in a relationship
and I don't like socializing after work?
All that other stuff can wait
until I finish my residency
and get to where I want to be
in my career.
Yeah. For sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love my life.
Can you let me in?
[DOOR BUZZES]
Hey.
Can I, um can I talk
to David alone for a sec?
I guess so.
I'll be right outside.
[SIGHS] Can I get you anything, David?
Yeah, get me out of here.
I mean, I can't do that.
They caught the guy that did this.
He's dead.
I'm still locked up.
Yeah.
Look.
Do you know what it's like to be afraid?
I mean, really, truly frightened
for your own physical safety?
I'm pretty sure I got
a taste of that tonight.
Right.
So imagine if you felt that way
every day
from half the people that you meet,
because that's every woman's life.
So when you make a hit list
for girls at your school
- I didn't make a hit list.
- Eliminate, man,
whatever you want to call it,
it's unacceptable.
And it's a form of violence
against women.
How would you feel if your mom
was on somebody's eliminate list?
I know life can be shitty,
and we all do stupid things,
but you're 18.
They're gonna treat you like an adult,
so I suggest you start acting like one.
Look, this is your chance
to turn things around.
Take the help that's offered.
Try and figure out
why you wrote what you did,
and please never, ever
think that way again.
Uh, OK.
I'm gonna take this and this out there.
If anybody needs me,
that is where I will be.
Yep.
[DOOR BUZZES]
What was that all about?
You told me it was my mess
to fix, right?
So that's what I was trying to do.
Did he talk to you?
Not really.
Do you think I made it worse
by bringing the police in on this one?
We may never know.
He's probably gonna be stuck down here
for his entire 72-hour hold.
Well, maybe if he gets
the help he needs, it's worth it.
Go home.
Don't show up tomorrow
before taking care
of the ankle monitor.
I think our blue man, Max,
needs a psych eval.
Based on what?
No health reason for taking anything
that could have caused this.
No exposure to anything
in the workplace.
He didn't ask me to call anyone.
I'm just worried he was
trying to hurt himself.
It's a stretch, new girl.
Well, he's also not asking to go home.
I mean, if this was
a failed suicide attempt,
it makes sense that he's too frightened
or embarrassed to admit to what he did
and too afraid to go home
because of what he might still do.
OK, I'll call Psych,
but find someone to take over for you.
Your shift ended a couple of hours ago.
I'd like to try and get
a little more out of him,
see if I can get him
to confess to something.
I've seen your bedside manner.
OK, that is reserved for assholes.
I don't want this kid
slipping through the cracks.
OK.
Thanks.
Thanks for letting me come back.
I didn't let you come back.
You came back on your own,
and I let you stay.
I figured it was the one time
throwing my career away
was for a greater good.
I I was never high.
I was just treating
my own withdrawal symptoms.
Well, you should have done that
under the care and supervision
of a physician.
With that on my record, I could
I could have
my hospital privileges denied
- whenever I apply for a job.
- No.
No, that's not true anymore.
That's not true anymore.
You could have come to me.
Instead, you could be arrested
on felony charges
for stealing controlled
substances from the hospital.
Robby, I could lose my medical license.
Come on, man.
You never heard of second chances?
Here's your second chance.
30-day inpatient treatment program,
followed by random urine tests,
50 to 60 a year,
followed by mandatory NA meetings
three to four times a week
for the first three years.
- Three years?
- Of a five-year program.
- You need help.
- What about you, man?
What about you? I'm not the only one
who's a little fucked up here, Robby!
Why don't you look in the mirror?
What's that supposed to mean?
I never had a complete meltdown.
No, you just caused them
in other people.
You're blaming me
for what happened to you?
What happened to me?
- What happened to me?
- Yeah.
[LAUGHS] You are so full of shit!
You let me down!
You let everybody down,
especially yourself.
Someone saw you in Pedes.
Who, Whitaker?
No.
A night shift nurse
saw you on the floor,
said it looked like
Looked like what?
Looked like what?
This job will fuck you up if you let it.
- You let it.
- Yeah?
I wasn't the one talking
to cartoon animals in Pedes.
Fuck you!
Doing OK, man?
Why do you keep asking me that?
Oh, I don't know.
You did take the parent of a patient
into our makeshift morgue.
Forget that it's technically
a fucking crime scene.
That's just not cool, man.
Just the two heroes I wanted to see.
We're holding a press conference
in the education auditorium.
Not a chance.
I know you hate this stuff,
but it's important for this department
- and the hospital.
- Trust me, Gloria.
You don't want me speaking
to the press right now.
Or ever.
Look, as much as you ER cowboys
are a pain in my ass,
what you and your department
did here tonight was
nothing short of miraculous.
People need to know that.
- Take the win.
- Need a second round of MTP.
What the fuck?
Systolic's down to 64 over 38.
- He's tachy to 132.
- Pelvic fracture?
Yeah, rechecking for delayed
intra-abdominal bleed.
I thought you said he was stable.
He was, after three units.
And he continued to improve.
Pressure got up to 118 systolic
after the full MTP.
- Systolic at 118?
- It was 90 after three units.
You gave him too much blood
and raised his pressure so high
that it blew apart the developing clots
that was stopping him from bleeding out.
First round of MTP is 6 units red cells,
6 FFP, 6 platelets.
That's what we gave him.
Treat the patient, not the protocol.
Systolic of 90 is ideal.
Robby, you teach your residents
about permissive hypotension?
- Dr. Shen was on this case.
- Shen is a resident.
He is an attending now.
We thought with the long delay
in getting him to IR, that
He might not make it to IR.
You over-transfused,
you popped the clots,
- and now he's exsanguinating.
- OK.
There's no bleeding in the belly.
It's too deep in the pelvis
to see on ultrasound.
Second round of MTP is here.
Blood and plasma on the infuser.
We got him back once.
We'll get him back again.
- 3 grams calcium gluconate.
- Why calcium?
Citrate in the transfusions chelates,
leading to hypercalcemia.
Excellent call, Dr. Ellis.
Hey, I found Mrs. Cheu
in the stairwell smoking.
Oh, good job.
You know, Mrs. Cheu,
tobacco use is not a healthy habit.
I've outlived three husbands.
Yeah, they probably died
of secondhand smoke.
Dr. King, we want you
to do the spinal tap
before Flynn gets any worse.
Great. I will meet you in there.
Dr. Shen, nice of you to join us.
- Systolic's only 68.
- After how many units?
Three units into the second MTP.
Total of nine.
This is not looking good, kids.
I'm I'm sorry
if I gave him too much blood.
- I thought
- Dr. Ellis,
now that Dr. Shen is here,
we have plenty of hands on deck.
Why don't you go check
on your other patients?
Hey, what about REBOA?
The balloon cuts off blood
to the lower half of the body
No, with bilateral crush injuries,
we don't know if we have an
intact artery to thread it in.
We can always crack the chest,
cross-clamp the aorta, and stabilize.
- I got a better idea.
- Yeah?
Preperitoneal packing.
Simple midline incision
below the umbilicus,
pack like hell around
and behind the bladder.
That pressure should stop the bleeding
until we get him upstairs.
Robby.
Preperitoneal packing. Thoughts?
Uh, I've only ever done one
in cadaver lab.
Because it's an OR procedure.
We did them all the time at
the combat support hospitals.
[SIGHS]
All right! What the hell?
Suprapubic prep and drape.
Sterile gowns all around.
Hey, let's go.
Get on the horn to the OR.
We need at least six lap pads
and the biggest
goddamn retractors you got.
Deavers, right angles, whatever.
Saddle up, cowboy. We got this.
Dr. Ellis, where do you need me?
Back here at 7:00 a.m.
to relieve the night shift.
I can work a double.
Samira, you are a great doctor,
but you need to know
when to turn it off.
Go home.
Oh, Dr. Ellis, the parents
of the measles patient
have finally consented to an LP,
but Dr. Shen is tied up with a trauma.
- I can do it.
- We got this. Go.
- You still doing OK?
- I'm fine.
Did you witness any of the shooting?
No.
OK, but, um,
you were found
in one of the parking lots.
Yeah.
What were you doing?
I was just hanging out.
Were you with friends?
No.
You know
you can tell me anything, right?
I'm I'm here to help, if I can.
I had a a good friend who, um,
went through
some really ugly stuff with me.
We were young, and someone older was
taking advantage of our age.
And things got so bad that
my friend took her own life.
There isn't a day that I don't regret
not being able to stop my friend,
but there also isn't a day
that I'm not grateful
I didn't do the same.
Life can be so fucking hard.
But it gets better.
And there are people
who can and want to help you
with whatever you're dealing with.
I just don't want to be here anymore.
[BREATHING SHAKILY]
Then let's have you talk
to a professional
who can help you with those feelings.
So what do you say?
Will you talk to someone?
[MONITOR BEEPING RAPIDLY]
- Here come more lap pads.
- Drop them on the Mayo.
BOTH: Ten blade to me.
I've done a hundred of these.
Just somebody fucking do it.
[SIGHS] All right, fine.
But just down to the linea alba.
I don't want you going down too deep
and slicing the bladder.
Thank you for the safety tip.
Metz.
OK.
Adson forceps.
Once I'm through the fascia,
you're gonna sweep a finger
around the bladder,
open up the space of Retzius.
Named after Anders Retzius,
19th-century Swedish
professor of anatomy.
Seriously?
History of medicine is the closest thing
I have to a hobby.
You might want to leave that
off your dating profile.
All right, three lap pads
on each side of the bladder,
deep as you can.
Deaver retractor.
Named for John Blair Deaver,
Philadelphia surgeon who revolutionized
abdominal surgery in the early 1900s.
- I'm surrounded by med nerds.
- I went to med school at Penn.
I walked by his portrait every day.
Dude did, like, 100,000 surgeries.
Guys, BP is not any better.
Systolic is 72.
One more check of the transverse view.
Perfectly in the midline.
And the longitudinal view?
Right between the vertebra.
Good to go.
- You're up.
- OK.
Is it painful? Will he feel it?
Not at all. He's fully sedated.
Enter bevel up.
Aim for the umbilicus.
Oh, I felt a pop.
That's the supraspinous ligament.
Enter slowly.
The next pop is the ligamentum flavum,
and you're in.
Felt it.
All right.
Removing stylet.
OK, Dad, we're in.
It's gonna take a minute to collect,
but the fluid looks clear.
- That's good, right?
- It's a good sign.
The lab still needs to run some tests,
look under the microscope
to rule out some bad stuff.
What are you doing?
You said she didn't want
to be in the room.
I was getting Georgia something to eat.
OK, wait outside.
Stop what you're doing right now.
No, they're almost done!
I can't believe you went behind my back.
I did what was best
for Flynn, not for you.
Take that needle out of his back!
- No.
- Yes!
Ma'am, I don't want
to have to ask you to leave.
Take it out right now.
Yep, coming out now. All done.
My son is leaving this hospital.
[SIGHS] I'm sorry.
She really is a good mom.
Fifth lap pad in place.
Yep.
- Number six, and we're done.
- OK.
BP 92 over 48.
- That's good enough for me.
- How much blood so far?
Uh, up to five on the second MTP.
No more unless he tanks again.
Sounds good.
Hey, I'll stay with him
until IR's ready.
- OK. By yourself?
- Yeah.
I need to make sure he doesn't
get another drop of blood.
You're not needed in the OR?
Nah, it's ortho surgeries
all night long now.
Hey, is he OK?
Yeah.
He's just tired. I think we all are.
- Holler if you need us.
- I won't.
Why are you still here?
Almost done.
That was the cops.
They arrested Doug Driscoll.
Good.
They want to know
if I want to press charges.
Uh, yes.
I just want to forget
this whole fucking day.
Me too.
But you still have to press charges.
Have you heard anything about me today?
Just, like, any kind of rumors?
Since when do you care about rumors?
- About you or anybody else?
- I don't.
It's just something I heard that
Langdon told me that he heard
from a night shift nurse.
Yeah, well, there's a reason
we stick 'em on the night shift.
- Hey.
- I'm kidding.
You want to tell me what it was?
I'll tell you if I heard something.
No. Never mind.
Can you find the remaining day shifts
so I can do a debrief
before we all go home?
- Yeah.
- Is Jake still here?
Yeah, he and Mom are in North 3 now.
Dr. Robby, I think you need
to look at this kid.
Find Dr. Shen. I'm done.
You're gonna want to see this.
- Trust me.
- I got this.
What am I looking at?
14-year-old girl playing
with her older brother,
takes a fall as her older brother
chases her up the stairs after she stole
a forkful of his takeout.
Told you you'd want to see this one
This has Dr. Shen written all over it.
Don't worry,
we're bringing in our, um
utensils specialist.
We're gonna start you out
with some nasal numbing spray
for the pain.
Do you mind if I take a photo?
For the medical record.
[SOBBING]
[SOBBING]
[BREATHING DEEPLY]
Are you OK?
Yeah.
I think today is finally
catching up to me,
physically and emotionally.
It happens.
How are you two still going?
I'm not.
I don't require much sleep,
and I have a fast metabolism.
[SIGHS]
All right, everybody!
Listen up!
You got it, Cap.
[CLEARS THROAT]
Today should never have happened.
It's impossible to imagine
what would possess somebody
to commit such a horrific act.
It's the worst of humanity,
but it brought out
the best in the rest of us.
We saw our better angels
come to the aid of our patients.
Each of you rose to the occasion.
And I I can't tell you
how proud I am of all of you.
This place will break your heart.
But it is also full of miracles,
and that is a testament
to all of you coming together
and doing what we do best.
Thank you for everything
you did here today.
We saw 112 mass casualty patients
come through here
in the last four hours,
and 106 of them are gonna live.
[VOICE BREAKING] None of us are
gonna forget today
[CLEARS THROAT]
Even if we really, really want to.
[EXHALES] So go home.
Let yourselves cry.
[SNIFFS] You'll feel better.
It's just grief leaving the body.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
You want to grab a drink?
Um, yeah. Yes.
- When?
- Now.
Oh, some of us just get a beer
in the park across the street.
- Oh.
- Helps to download
before you go home.
OK. Sure, sure.
OK.
[CELL PHONE RINGING]
Mom!
Hey, buddy. You're still up?
Yeah, me and Grandpa
just started watching
"Planet of the Apes."
What did I tell you about scary movies?
[COMPUTER BEEPS]
[COMPUTER BEEPS]
Sorry.
I need to get past. Sorry.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
Hey, hey, sorry. Excuse me.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
Doc Anderson would have made
the same decision you did.
I could have kept him
for a few more days on ECMO.
You gave him a fighting chance,
and then you used
the limited resources we had
to give that little girl a chance.
- And lost them both.
- Yeah.
But you did your best.
We all did.
Hey.
He would have been proud of you
for what you did
and for everything else since then.
Come here.
You wouldn't let anyone else
blame themselves for this.
Time to give yourself some grace.
See you Monday.
[SINGING INDISTINCTLY]
[WATER TRICKLING]
Yeah ♪
[SINGING INDISTINCTLY]
[FAINT UPBEAT MUSIC PLAYING]
♪
Body makes me ♪
- Nice moves, Raygun.
- Holy shit!
What the hell are you doing up here?
What the hell are you doing up here?
Just one second.
OK. OK.
Uh, I will, on occasion,
after a long shift, crash here.
This was your first day here.
Well, it's my first day
uh, it's my first day
of emergency rotation.
I did internal medicine last month.
Do you actually have a place to live?
Uh, I'm currently between places.
Do you own a car?
[CHUCKLES]
Uh, not at the moment, no, I
I'm actually
Between cars.
Yeah, something like that.
[SIGHS]
OK, so I have a spare room
with its own bathroom.
Sweet.
Oh, for God's sakes.
Do you want the room or not?
OK, that is extremely generous,
but no, I can't afford
to pay you rent right now.
How are you at cleaning
and fixing things?
Grew up on a farm.
I guess I'm pretty handy.
Cleaning, I know how
to muck out a stall.
Just keep to yourself, don't annoy me,
and you can move in.
Wow.
Wow. I I don't know what to say.
Thank you.
Well, you can move in
tonight if you want.
Really?
Yeah, but quick,
before I change my mind.
Yeah, yeah. No, I mean, this is
this is all I really have, so
Oh, God, you're not some, like, nudist
or religious freak, are you?
No.
No, I like to remain
fully dressed at all times,
except bathing. I'm just
- I know Krav Maga.
- Cool.
I don't know who that is,
but he sounds very protective of you.
The chances of this working
are diminishing by the second.
I'm just fucking with you, Whitaker.
You're such a Huckleberry.
Yeah. OK. Uh, hold on!
How are we doing?
Uh, we're doing OK. Right?
I know that this is difficult.
This is gonna hurt for a long time,
and it's OK if you want to blame me.
Just please don't blame yourself.
We've been friends a long time.
I would hate it.
No, we're not friends.
And you're not my father, so fuck off!
Jake.
Robby.
[EXHALES]
Parents of Jake's girlfriend,
Leah, are here.
I put them in the viewing room.
[SOFT TENSE MUSIC]
♪
Hello.
[SOBBING]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
[SOBBING SOFTLY]
[DOOR CREAKS]
- Hey, Becca.
- Hi, Mel!
- You ready to go?
- Yep.
- All right, let's go!
- Let's go.
Oh, wow. It's, uh it's dark out.
Oh, yeah. Sorry about that.
I had to stay a little later
than expected at work.
- Because of your boss?
- Oh, no, no, no.
A bunch of people got hurt
at a music festival.
And you had to help them.
Yeah.
We're supposed to go
to a restaurant on Fridays.
We could still go to a restaurant.
It's not too late?
- Not for us King sisters.
- [GIGGLES]
- What do you want to eat?
- Pizza!
Or spaghetti!
I don't know. I can't decide.
Well, why don't we do both?
- Both?
- Yeah.
We can go out for spaghetti,
and then take a pizza home with us.
- Really?
- Yeah, why not?
Can we still watch a movie?
It is Friday, isn't it?
"Elf"! [LAUGHS]
Yeah. Um, we could do "Elf."
Or we could see a movie
that we've never seen before.
- But "Elf" is so funny!
- Yup.
[SIGHS]
You're in my spot.
Just so you know,
Grubhub will not deliver
to the roof,
but there is a DoorDash guy
uh, Marco who will trek
up here for an extra 10 bucks,
20 if you want beer.
Nice speech down there.
Wish I had given it.
No, you don't.
[CHUCKLES]
No. Fuck no.
But I'm glad somebody did.
Yeah.
I think I finally understand
why I keep coming back now.
It's in our DNA.
It's what we do. We can't help it.
We're the we're the bees
that protect the hive.
Maybe you, not me.
What are you talking about?
You know damn well what I'm talk
I'm talking about.
I broke.
You didn't break.
- You didn't break.
- I shut down.
At the moment
everybody needed me the most,
I wasn't there.
I couldn't do it. I choked.
For what, for 40 seconds?
Three minutes? Ten minutes?
So fucking what? We all have that.
That is what happens
when you're in a war
and nothing makes sense.
We survived as a species
because we learned
how to cooperate and communicate,
so when we're in the middle
of killing each other,
it divides the very logic
of our existence.
Your brain starts to short-circuit.
All you can do is focus on the medicine.
The medicine's the only thing
that saves the patient
and your sanity.
I'm gonna need a drink
if you keep talking.
You get what I'm saying, right?
You rocked that shit down there tonight.
Yeah?
You rocked that shit down there tonight.
We all did.
Now that is a compliment.
Accept the damn compliment for once.
What if we just didn't talk
for a minute?
- I'm just trying to help.
- I know.
- I appreciate you
- Still talking.
Sorry.
[SIGHS]
[GROANS]
- Get that drink now?
- Yeah.
Whoa.
It didn't take long to fill up in here.
Never does.
How long until we run out
of boarding beds?
Probably sunrise.
Mm. Mm-mm.
- She had a seizure.
- Of course she did.
Looking good, Dr. Abbot.
- You too, Myrna.
- Oh, thanks.
[CHUCKLES] Hey, fruitcake.
- Fruitcake.
- Don't ask.
- When are you coming back?
- I don't know.
Grab a couple hours' sleep,
come back around 2:00.
I don't think they're gonna need relief
- until the morning.
- You know me.
I prefer working nights.
You're not sick of working nights yet?
My therapist thinks I find
comfort in the darkness.
Huh.
Could give you his number
if you ever feel like talking to him.
Does it help?
I haven't jumped off the roof, have I?
[SIGHS] Not yet.
[RATS SQUEAKING]
[SCREAMS] Hey! Hey!
Somebody help me!
There are rats in here!
There were rats in my bed!
I don't think
there are any rats in your bed.
- There were two of them.
- OK, sir.
We'll take care of that.
Head trauma. Starting to hallucinate.
Put him in line for a CT.
Hey, hide the hard drugs, kids.
Oh, nice catch.
Oh.
Man. [GROANS]
[SIGHS]
Today was a motherfucker.
Have you ever been
in anything like that before?
Let's hope none of us ever has to again.
No shit.
We probably will.
If not us, others.
Yeah, but we survived
that craziness, right?
To the Pitt crew.
To all the people we saved.
- Here, here.
- And the ones we couldn't.
Is this where
all the cool kids hang out?
Oh, you know it.
Nice of you to join us.
If there ever was a day.
Actually, sorry, I don't drink.
I don't know why I took that.
- She's not old enough.
- I'd say if she's old enough
to put in a chest tube and intubate,
she's old enough to drink a beer.
We won't tell your mom.
Shut up.
But seriously, don't.
Thank you.
You guys do this after every shift?
Not always.
Usually, it's a little more lively.
The Emergency Department
throws wicked parties.
[LAUGHS]
- What's so funny?
- Mm.
I just realized
this is your first shift.
Yeah.
[LAUGHTER]
That was baptism by fire, baby.
I can pretty much guarantee you
the next one will be easier.
I really fucking hope so.
Hey, at least you didn't get pissed on.
- [LAUGHS]
- I will drink to that.
Aww, poor Whitaker.
Where is he?
Yeah, probably quit.
Oh, that kid's tough.
He'll be back.
Just like the rest of us.
[SIREN WAILING]
OK, that's it for me.
Beer for the road?
Yeah, why not?
Good night.
Get some rest.
Tomorrow is another day.
[ROBERT BRADLEY'S BLACKWATER
SURPRISE'S "BABY" PLAYING]
Baby ♪
It's all right ♪
Maybe ♪
You'll stay here tonight ♪
It was champagne,
candlelight, and wine ♪
The girl looked so good ♪
She gave eyesight to the blind ♪
She said, come here, boy ♪
I'm gonna take you higher ♪
For tonight ♪
The stars shine much brighter ♪
And she said, baby ♪
It's all right ♪
Maybe ♪
You can stay here tonight ♪
- Baby ♪
- She said, baby ♪
- It's all right ♪
- You know it's all right ♪
- Maybe ♪
- She said maybe ♪
Stay here tonight ♪
Can I kiss you? ♪
Can I hold you? ♪
Put my arms around you ♪
Thank God I found you ♪
I gotta kiss you, oh ♪
Can I hold you, baby? ♪
Put my arms around you ♪
Thank God I found you ♪
And she said, baby ♪
She said, baby ♪
It's all right ♪
You know it's all right ♪
- Baby ♪
- She said, baby ♪
It's all right ♪
You can stay here tonight ♪