SkyMed (2022) s03e07 Episode Script
Altitude
(LEXI): What are you doing? Minimums!
We know it clears at 100 feet.
- Yeah, what if it doesn't?
- We have to get the patient to Winnipeg.
So the whole country's gonna
be watching me bust minimums.
- I'm so sorry, Jay.
- I can't see.
And I may never fly again.
- Stef, what's going on?
- Who's Stef?
I can't help feeling like,
if I can just keep an eye on everyone,
I could stop something
bad from happening.
- No one can do that, Stef.
- You don't need to fight!
(BLUES MUSIC)
Dammit, this one doesn't work either.
Why do these keep dying on me?
Maybe 'cause the whole book's neon.
If those bad boys
don't get a break soon,
they're gonna start
smoking on you, girl.
(CHUCKLES) Here.
I thought you said coffee
wasn't good for studying.
My Australian brother-in-law
was real picky about coffee.
And my flat whites are
Michael-approved, so
He was picky about coffee?
Switched to decaf or something?
(METAL CRASHING)
Hey what's up bro?
How you doing man, you almost
set for the band tonight?
I think some of this gear
got busted on the way up.
Hey, stand by the speaker
and tell me what you hear.
Sure.
(SALSA MUSIC)
That's all treble, no bass, man.
Boys and their bass.
Hey, if there's no bass,
people don't feel it.
If they don't feel it, they don't dance
and if they don't dance (SUCKS TEETH)
they don't get thirsty.
We've never had a problem with
people being thirsty around here.
Oooh, that's what I'm talking about.
A little more bass bro, keep it going.
Deny all you want,
you know you're starting to feel it.
Pretty soon, you're gonna start dancing.
Pretty sure I'm gonna keep studying.
Aw, come on Doc.
I know you got moves.
Remember this?
Whoa!
He's arresting.
Do compressions while
I call an ambulance.
Okay, just pump right?
Push, like right here?
No! Not so low, you'll hit the liver.
I'll do it, you call an ambulance.
45-year-old male, cardiac
arrest following electrocution.
Prep the crash cart, bay two.
We got him.
Busy morning?
I thought you were studying.
Every time I try and
study at the Whisky Hutch,
someone arrests.
(THEME MUSIC)
I could do that myself, you know.
You got your throat
slashed two days ago.
You still have a temperature,
and there's a lot of swelling.
But the IV antibiotics should help soon.
If I do any more laps of the ER,
the wheels are gonna
fall off my IV pole.
It was really brave,
trying to protect Lexi like that,
but it sounds like you've
been doing that a lot lately.
Making risky moves,
trying to protect people.
Did Lexi tell you that?
Look, I had a really
tough time last year
with things from my past
coming up on the job.
And I know you lost
someone close to you.
That's the job.
We deal with this stuff all the time.
Yeah, and it adds up.
Look, no one gets
through this alone, Stef.
Okay?
So if you ever need anyone
to talk to about anything,
I'm here.
Hey sickie!
TJ asked to swap shifts today.
I figured if you were
gonna be stuck in here,
we could at least hang out.
I have to go to my assignment shift.
I got that curry that you like,
and Dutch Blitz so you can kick my ass.
Did you tell Hayley about Mel?
And Dani?
I thought you needed someone to talk to.
I've never been through this
kind of stuff, so I thought
I'm fine, Lex.
Look, I know sometimes
I struggle with control,
but you don't have to worry about me
You said you feel like you
have to keep an eye on everyone,
all the time.
No one can do that, Stef.
That's how you end up in the hospital.
I know you think you can do
this all on your own, but
Please Stef, don't shut me out.
(SOFT MUSIC)
Come here, c'mon.
Hi, yes.
I know patients usually go to Winnipeg
for their fertility screening results,
but we're down a medic up here
so I was really hoping that
Yes, yeah that would be great.
(CHOPPER): As captain, it's my
call. We'll try it once more.
(LEXI): What are you doing? Minimums!
It's all over the chats.
I mean I get it. He
wanted to help that girl,
but would you risk your
career for some stranger?
I'd be more pissed about how
it wound up in a documentary.
Hey, why aren't the medical supplies
for Deep River loaded on 911?
Right away, Cap.
And no phones in the hangar
when you're on the clock.
I don't remember making that rule,
but who knows what you kids have
been up to while I've been gone.
Wheezer. What are you doing here?
Just because I can't see
doesn't mean I can't
keep an eye on things,
including you.
You mind giving us a minute, Teej?
- Sure thing, Cap.
- Thank you.
You saw it?
I don't think there's anyone in the
aviation industry who hasn't seen it.
- Chair.
- Including Aviation Authority.
They're coming to investigate it?
Chopper, you practically
rubbed their noses in it.
Something this public, they're
gonna have to make an example.
Shit!
I'm sorry, Wheezer.
I told Marianne to shred my release.
Look, I get why you did it.
But I do not condone breaking air regs.
And definitely not on camera.
SkyMed cannot afford to have a problem
with Avi Authority right now.
But unfortunately,
I cannot afford to lose
another pilot either, so
(PAGER BEEPING)
Go.
Handle your calls and we will
talk about it when you get back.
Watch your back, Cap. Comin' through.
Ahh! What the hell was that?
What was what, Cap?
Never mind.
Hey Mom, is everything alright?
(NOWAK'S MOTHER): I just spoke
to Reese Hassan's mother.
I had to hear from a stranger
that my son turned down
a Chief Pilot position
at Birch Wing Air?
Yeah, it wasn't a good opportunity.
(NOWAK'S MOTHER): It's bad enough
you chose to become a pilot, Milosz.
You can't even let yourself advance?
I thought you wanted
to go to Air Canada.
I've applied, Mother, but
there's a lot of competition.
(NOWAK'S MOTHER): Lukasz
says you haven't called him.
Your brother got tenure.
There was a lot of
competition for that too.
You need to call and
congratulate him, Milosz.
I have to go, Mom. I
have a page right now.
Ahh!
(EXHALES THROUGH HIS TEETH)
(LEXI): You get in a fist fight
with the patient? What happened?
Shaving accident.
Ah, cut yourself on those cheekbones?
Well at least you got to go with Hayley
and didn't have to chase
raccoons off the runway.
Someone must've dumped
rotten food out there
as a prank or something,
took me half an hour to clear it.
Makes me wish I hadn't
switched shifts with TJ.
I use the barbecue every Sunday
when I make dinner for my landlady.
When I moved up here,
I missed food from home,
so every Sunday I make a chimichurri.
With chilies that my sister sends,
and I make my landlady an asado.
Wow, that's a lucky landlady.
Well, you can't eat a good meal alone.
It spoils the food.
When I tried to light the
damn thing this afternoon, oof.
Knocked me back, like ten feet.
(PHONE RINGING)
Is somebody's cellphone ringing?
- I left mine at home.
- It's not us, we keep 'em off.
(PHONE RINGING)
That's weird.
Put it on speaker.
Hello?
Hello SkyMed 922.
Listen closely.
There is a bomb on the
plane. It is armed.
If you fly below 2,000
feet, the bomb will explode.
If you try to contact the police,
the bomb will explode.
If I do not receive $5,152,014
in the next three hours,
the bomb will explode.
Hang up. Hang up now.
Was that a joke?
Nothing looks tampered with,
I didn't see anything on the walkaround.
- Everything looked normal.
- It's probably a prank.
People do stupid crap
like this sometimes.
Go help Hayley check the cabin.
(TENSE MUSIC)
Uh, you guys!
What? What is it?
There is a bomb on the plane.
It's a bomb. A real one?
This isn't a timer, it looks
like a digital altimeter.
Our cabin altitude is 2,800 feet, right?
Affirmative.
But we're way higher than
2,800 feet, aren't we?
There's the plane altitude
and the cabin altitude.
We keep the cabin altitude
lower so we can breathe.
That's what this is reading.
So why does it matter
if it's only meeting
the pressure inside the plane?
Because, the altitude inside the cabin
can never be higher
than the plane itself,
so when go lower than
2,000 feet to land,
the pressure inside the cabin will too.
Climbing the cabin.
This thing's definitely working, Nowak.
(PHONE RINGING)
Hello?
Guess you found it, huh?
It is armed, so don't
hang up on me again.
Please, we have a patient on board.
If you fly below 2,000
feet, the bomb will explode.
If you contact the
police, it will explode.
If I do not receive $5,152,014
in the next three
hours, it will explode.
How are we supposed to
do that? We can't land.
But SkyMed are heroes, aren't they?
Documentary stars saving lives on TV?
You'll figure it out.
Can we fly for three hours?
If we have to.
How the hell did it even get in here?
We can't worry about that now,
we need to get a message to Wheezer.
And what if he's monitoring the radio?
We have to assume he is.
We'll use 922's sat phone.
We need to divert, we'll
go north over empty bush
so no one else gets hurt.
What does he mean, so
no one else gets hurt?
Oh God, in case we explode!
It's just, it's just a precaution.
I can't do this. I can't
be on this plane right now.
Hey, hey, hey Guillermo,
Guillermo, I need you to calm down.
Hey, look at me, look at me.
Do you see me? And you
see the pilots up there?
Yeah. Do you see how calm we are?
Okay, I need you to
remain calm too, alright?
Okay, um.
This chimichurri sauce,
how many chilies do you put in it?
I like two,
but when I make it for my
land for my landlady,
I only use one.
Wheezer? We have a problem.
You grounded the fleet for
full inspection of all aircraft,
pending Aviation
Authority's investigation?
What the hell, Wheezer?
You wanna go ahead
and suspend my license
too before they get here?
Sharkie, could you give us a minute?
TJ, I need you to grab
Chopper by the collar
and drag him somewhere private.
You got it, Cap. Sorry, Chops.
Right this way, gentlemen.
Just a few more steps.
- Alright, easy, easy.
- Alright, alright.
- Are we alone?
- Firm, Cap.
Good. We have bigger problems
than Aviation Authority.
I had 922 text this to me
before they left service range.
Is that a bomb?
I didn't recall the fleet
because of you, Chopper.
I grounded it so I
could search the planes,
and see if any others
have been targeted.
Who's on 922 today?
Hayley, their patient, Nowak.
Lexi, shit.
We swapped shifts,
it was supposed to
be me on 922, not her.
This guy, he has been
very specific, no cops.
So we gotta keep this quiet,
off radio, need-to-know only.
He's demanding five million.
Does SkyMed even have that?
We would have to sell all of our planes,
and we cannot do that in three hours.
Corporate is on it,
but we need to bring our team home,
and I need you to figure out
a way how to disarm that thing.
(BOMBER): Why did SkyMed
ground all its planes?
Did you call the cops?
No one called the cops,
we had to tell our Chief
Pilot to ask for your money.
Fine. But stay on speaker.
Her name's Mila.
My landlady.
- The one chili?
- Hm.
She knit these.
She's always knitting.
(COUGHS)
Easy, Guillermo.
How long have you lived with Mila?
Five years.
Her husband died right
before I moved up here.
She had to rent out
a room for the money.
(CHUCKLES) I fell in love, instantly.
But she was grieving.
I've loved her for five years
and I never told her.
What if I don't get to?
(LOUD GASPING)
Decreased lung sounds, right side.
He needs a decompression.
What is it, what's happening?
When the barbecue exploded,
the force must've given
him a closed pneumo.
(PAINED GRUNTS)
(LEXI): Is that supposed to happen?
He's got a bleed, he needs an ER.
Hey, are you listening?
Our patient needs help.
Isn't that your job?
Aren't you the heroes who save people?
Not like this!
He's got a hemothorax,
he needs a chest tube.
We need to get him to the hospital.
You need to disarm the
bomb so we can land.
- Why can't you do it?
- A chest tube?
Only doctors do those in
hospitals, not on airplanes.
(GASPING)
Okay, look. If-if you won't let us land,
then I need to make a call to
someone to talk me through this.
No. No calling for help.
Please. I can't do this alone, okay?
If he doesn't get a
chest tube, he'll die.
Put it on speaker.
And don't try anything.
I'll be listening.
You will need a scalpel,
a hemostat, a tube
and something to drain into.
There's tubing in the
tonsil tip catheter,
and a scalpel in the OB kit.
This is a very painful
procedure, Hayley,
and you've got a conscious patient.
(GASPING):
I don't care. I'm dying anyway,
either I suffocate
or he blows us all up.
Please.
Okay. We're ready.
Okay, the tube needs to go
into the fifth intercostal space,
where the nipple line and
the anterior auxiliary meet.
Okay, I got it.
You'll need to make
an incision big enough
to fit the tube, so
approximately three centimetres.
(HEAVY BREATHING)
I'm sorry. This will help.
(GASPING) Just do it.
(BREATHING HEAVILY)
(PAINED GRUNTS)
Okay, I made the incision.
Now stick your finger in,
make sure you can feel the rib.
(PAINED GRUNTS)
Okay, I can feel it.
Good. Now comes the painful part.
Use your hemostat to poke
and spread the incision, okay?
Poke and spread, and go deeper
until you get to the pleura.
(SCREAMS)
Once you get to the pleura,
you'll have to poke through.
But this takes a lot of pressure, okay.
So once you poke
through, you have to stop
or you'll puncture the lung, so go slow.
(SCREAMS)
(BOMBER): What's going
on? What's happening?
A chest tube, without a
hospital or pain medication.
If you disarm the bomb, we
can take him to a hospital.
We don't need to do it like this.
(CRYSTAL): Are you through the pleura?
Just keep pushing until you hear a pop.
Ugh! Okay. Okay, I'm through.
(CRYSTAL): Now you can place the
tube so the fluids can drain.
Okay I got it, it's draining.
(CRYSTAL): Listen, I don't know
who you are on that other phone,
or why you're doing this,
but Nowak's right. This
patient needs a hospital.
So if you can disarm the
bomb so that 922 can land
There's a bomb on 922?
There's a bomb on Lexi's plane?
How's our fuel?
Not great.
(BOMBER): Is SkyMed
getting my money or not?
We're working on it,
these things take time
and most aviation companies
are functionally broke.
Not my problem. I want my money.
And I want to get our
patient to a hospital.
His name's Guillermo,
he's a really good dude.
And the nurse helping him
back there, her name is Hayley.
She's about a month away
from a one year sobriety chip,
she's been working really hard at it.
And you know this other pilot
right here next to me, her name's Lexi.
She's been my best
friend since we were 15.
See, we're all just people
up here, man, just like you
and I don't think you wanna do this.
I don't think you
wanna hurt four people.
I'm not killing them, SkyMed is.
(CALL HANGS UP)
Dammit.
(STEF): I have to help Lexi.
Your sutures aren't healed
and you need antibiotics.
Even if you didn't, there's
nothing you can do right now.
Wheezer's working on it.
You don't know what it's like
to lose someone like this, okay?
To lose the person that you love.
(SOFT MUSIC)
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry, Crystal, I know you know.
You've probably replayed that night
over and over in your head too.
But Crystal,
if you thought there was
anything you could've done,
any way you could've
changed the outcome
I know you love Lexi.
But I love Hayley.
And she is on that plane too.
So we have to keep it together.
(NOWAK): Come on, Chopper.
Give us some good news.
I don't know a lot about bombs,
but I do think this one
can be disarmed remotely.
Which means the bomber
probably intends to disarm
it when he gets his money.
If he can disarm it remotely,
maybe we don't need to
find five million dollars,
we just need to find him,
and make him disarm it.
What do we know about him?
(NOWAK): Not much.
I still can't even figure out
how he got the bomb on 922.
The hangar's secure,
I didn't see anything
in the pre-flight this morning.
The only time the plane was
left alone was in Windy Lake.
When I was clearing the runway.
I thought someone put food out
to attract animals as a prank
but, what if it was a distraction
for the bomber to get on the plane?
If he planted the bomb in Windy Lake,
maybe that's where he's from, too.
(WHEEZER): This has to be personal.
He's asking for $5,152,14.
If this was just about
money, why wouldn't he target
a bigger airline, or a business
that actually makes money?
(NOWAK): I think it is personal.
He talked about seeing
the documentary on TV,
how it made him mad to see
SkyMed portrayed as heroes.
(CHOPPER): That is such a weird number.
He's asking for five million dollars,
why ask for another 14,
it has to be significant.
Wait, what if it's a date?
What if it's five, one five,
2014?
May 15th, 2014.
Looks like SkyMed
responded to three calls
in Windy Lake on May 15th, 2014.
Routine dialysis, broken
arm and a teenage boy
with minor injuries
from a football game,
pronounced DOA at TCH.
That doesn't sound right,
he went from healthy to dead
in the time it took to fly to Thompson?
(WHEEZER): Wait, a football player?
Yeah, I remember that call, I was in FO,
I was flying with Janine.
She used to be a flight nurse,
but she quit right after that.
You know, a lot of star
players would be pissed
at a nurse for making him
miss the rest of the game
to get a concussion checked,
but Jayden was such a nice kid.
The hum hit was to his abdomen,
but he hit his head on the way down,
and you have to be
careful with that stuff.
His dad was the coach,
he wanted to come with us.
But I was just so sure
that I was just being overcautious.
I told Coach to stay
behind with the other kids.
But once we got in the air,
it all just happened so fast.
He went into organ failure.
And there was nothing I could do.
Nothing but push fluids.
And hold his hand.
I couldn't handle the
thought of something like that
ever happening again
and at least in a hospital,
you're not alone.
Amantadine is usually a safe
anti-viral to fight the flu.
The coroner's report found that
the hit to Jayden's
abdomen injured his kidneys,
and amantadine released into his body.
I didn't know he'd taken it.
There's no antidote for
amantadine, even in a hospital.
There wouldn't have been
anything anyone could've done.
Those three hours with
him on the plane, I
I can't think of anything worse
than knowing there's nothing
you can do for someone.
Crys, I know you know what
it feels like to lose someone.
But you didn't have to watch him die.
I-I can't do that again.
We know what happened to Jayden,
and we know who you are.
You're a football
coach. Chemistry teacher.
Jayden was your son.
I can't imagine how awful that was.
(BOMBER): My son was totally healthy
when he got on your plane.
And SkyMed killed him.
Why won't you just admit it?
SkyMed killed my son.
Listen, I know you're angry.
You have every right to be.
But letting your anger control
all your decisions hurts you.
I know you're not a bad person.
You were worried about what
happened to our patient.
But you know how hard
we worked to help him,
our crew would have done
the same thing for Jayden.
We want to help people, Coach,
we don't wanna hurt them.
I don't think you wanna
hurt anybody either,
but you have to let your anger go.
It has to be SkyMed's fault.
Because if it wasn't, then
that means it was my fault.
I'm the one who gave him amantadine.
Jayden thought he was getting sick,
but it was a big game,
there was a scout coming.
I just wanted for him
to be able to play.
If SkyMed really didn't
do anything wrong,
then Jayden really did die
of amantadine poisoning
and it really was my fault!
(VOICE BREAKS)
Or maybe it was an awful accident.
Maybe you were a really good dad
who was trying to help
his son follow his dreams.
And I bet that meant the world to him.
But Coach, please.
You don't want to let Jayden down now.
I don't think you're doing this
'cause you want to hurt people,
I think you're doing this
'cause you want your son back.
(SNIFFLES)
And I wish I could give
that to you, but Coach,
doing this isn't going
to bring Jayden back.
I miss him so much.
(SOBBING)
Everyone says Jayden
was a really good kid.
You must've taught him that.
And he wouldn't want this.
You didn't let your son
down, but please Coach,
don't let him down now.
The light should be green now.
It's still red.
It must be out of range.
You can disarm it manually if
you cut the top green wire.
You have control.
(TENSE MUSIC)
Coach, I cut the wire,
the light's still red.
No, it should be disarmed.
Are you sure you cut the right wire?
I cut the top green wire.
Oh God, I can't disarm it.
We need to start thinking
about places to land.
Nowak, we can't.
We can't go below 2,000 feet.
We don't have much time before
the plane is going down anyways.
I'd rather be the one
making choices when it does.
(GUILLERMO): Why didn't I tell her?
I had five years.
Even if she rejected me,
at least I would've told her.
At least Mila would know how I felt.
It still has some charge.
Call her.
Tell her now.
(SOFT MUSIC)
Hi. Mila.
It's me.
No, no you don't have
to come to the hospital,
I'm not there yet.
I
I don't know when I'll get there.
Look, this doesn't
have to change things,
and you don't have to say anything.
But, I just want you to hear it,
in case I
in case I don't get a
chance to tell you later.
I love you, Mila.
I've loved you since we met.
And
I just want you to know that.
You do?
(CHUCKLES)
Hey. You okay?
Lexi and I switched shifts.
She's up there on 922
(SIGHS) because of me.
TJ, this isn't your fault.
You asked about my
brother-in-law, Michael.
He died.
We met flying charters for the UN.
He was my FO.
Michael was,
(SIGHS) he was the best.
Exactly who you'd want
your sister to marry.
But he was inexperienced
and some of the places we flew into
It was a lot of unrest.
One airstrip,
the country name was
changing day by day.
But one day,
we're already in the air and
We get word our risk assessment
coming into that airport
is now severe.
We know they'll shoot at you.
We feel confident they
won't take you down.
I said no,
I wouldn't risk my crew.
The charter company was pissed,
but they weren't there.
They were safe over here,
pressuring us to get the
job done at all costs.
That's why I decided to get out.
But Michael wanted to stay.
So I recommended that he
go for captain in my place.
A week later, he got pressured
into flying into that same airport.
It was my fault.
And now Lexi is my fault, too.
(SOBBING)
(SOBBING)
(SOFT RHYTHMIC MUSIC)
I'm sorry I sorry.
Hey Tris,
I was really hoping I'd
get to talk to you but,
you're probably at Sick Kids right now.
I know you don't do voicemails, but
I really hope you listen to this one.
I love you so much, Tristan.
I'm so grateful that you
gave us a second chance.
People don't always get those.
But you make me my best me, Tris.
You make me wanna be my best me.
I hope you know I love you.
Always.
Do you want to call Stef?
There should be enough
battery for both of us.
You go first.
Hey. I just wanted to hear your voice.
(WHEEZER): So what do you wanna hear?
How's uh How's the new
season of "Love Is Blind?"
I didn't watch it, actually.
Didn't feel the same without you.
I didn't either.
I think I just liked
watching it with you.
Well, I guess we'll have to
watch it when you get back.
Yeah, I guess we will.
Um, this thing's almost out of charge,
so I'll talk to you later?
Yeah. Yeah, we'll talk later.
Oh shit. Ahh!
God dammit!
(GRUNTING)
God!
(PANTING)
Is someone there?
Sorry. Wheezer, are you okay?
What kind of Chief Pilot am
I if I can't help my people?
My crew, they need me and I can't see.
The people that I care
about, the people that I
(QUIET SOB)
I can't do anything, man.
I can't even see what's happening.
But Wheezer, from where I'm standing,
you're not letting anyone down.
You're fighting.
You're giving everything
to protect this crew.
I'd give
I would give anything man,
to be the one stuck up
there instead of them.
Maybe we need to get closer.
(PHONE RINGING)
Alright, Wheezer and I
are in 911, we thought
it would help to see everything
that you have to work with.
It made me think of your patient,
and how you had to relieve
the pressure in his chest.
I think we need to relieve
the pressure on the bomb too.
- How?
- What if we dump the cabin?
Then raise the cabin's altitude
and make the bomb think we're higher.
At 20,000 feet, but once you land,
the bomb, it'll realize that
you're at the same
altitude as the plane.
(CHOPPER): Right. So we need
to make the bomb and the plane
think different things.
Hayley, you have anything
up there with suction,
anything that's vacuum-y?
Uh, the tonsil tip catheter?
Yeah, we use that to suction blood.
You'll need an airtight container too,
something that'll fit over
the bomb and the altimeter.
(HAYLEY): All my medical
equipment is too small.
What about a storage bin?
Would that work?
(CHOPPER): That'll have to do.
You're gonna have to put it
over the bomb and the altimeter.
This looks like it'll just fit.
Seal it, as airtight as possible.
There's duct tape in
the bulkhead, use that.
And make sure to seal in the suction end
of the catheter in, too.
Chopper,
you don't think putting
something over the bomb
will make it go off, do you?
It shouldn't.
Just go slow, be careful.
Don't touch any of the wires.
(SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC)
And once it's airtight,
turn on the suction.
You're gonna suck the air
out to decrease the pressure,
to make the bomb think that it's higher.
Okay. Ready, turning on suction.
It's working! The bomb
thinks it's higher.
Thank God!
- (SIGHS)
- Okay, keep the suction going.
Get it as high as you can.
Chopper. It's not going up anymore.
How high did you get?
(LEXI): We gained 1,000 feet.
If they land at sea level,
the bomb will think it's at 1,000 feet,
but it's set to blow at 2,000.
It didn't work. We
didn't get it far enough.
We just need to find a higher runway
to keep the cabin up, right?
But if we need something
that's at least 1,000 feet
above sea level, where are we
gonna find that in Manitoba?
Brandon and Flin Flon
are both 1,200 feet.
We're almost out of fuel.
We're never gonna make those,
I need something closer.
Lynn Lake. Lynn Lake is 1,100
feet, you can just squeeze in.
It'll be tight.
Hang on, Guillermo,
we're almost there.
It's holding at 2,300 feet.
(NOWAK): Beginning our approach.
Shit.
There's a leak in the container.
- (LEXI): Hayley, is it holding?
- It's still leaking.
Get ready to help Hayley
offload the patient
as soon as we touch down, I'll land.
What about you?
Nowak, if you stay behind to land
Nowak, you can't, please.
Don't worry. 922 and I have
been through a lot together.
She's not gonna let me down now.
Okay, come on. Easy.
- Hurry, hurry, hurry.
- (GRUNTS)
(SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC)
(HISSING)
Go, go, go, go!
(ALL GROANING)
(GRAVE MUSIC)
I remember your son, Coach Forrester.
I do not for a second condone
what you did, but I'm
very sorry for your loss.
Thank you.
(WHEEZER): Thanks, Officers.
Whoa, whoa.
Sharkie, we gotta talk
about workplace harassment.
No, you jerk. It's me.
Of course I knew it was you, Hayley.
I'd always know it was you.
(PANTING) Stef! I didn't call you.
Everyone else called someone
to say goodbye but I realized,
I don't want to say goodbye.
I didn't call you because
I needed to come home to you, Stef!
(SOBBING)
I'm okay. I'm okay.
- I can't watch you die, Lex.
- No, I'm okay.
I've been so worried
about caring too much about patients,
but Lex, the person I
care most about is you.
And I can't,
I just can't be stuck on the ground,
while you're in danger and
there's nothing I can do.
I know you're dealing with stuff,
but this is why you need help.
I need you to not be
in danger all the time.
You're in danger all the time, too!
But I can handle myself, Lexi.
Are you saying I can't handle myself?
I can't watch you do this job anymore.
Are you asking me to quit?
Stef, I love you.
And I would do anything to help you
but, I can't do that.
I know you're going through stuff,
but I don't know if
I can be with someone
who doesn't believe in me.
Lex.
Lex.
(DRAMATIC MUSIC CRESCENDOS)
(SOBBING)
(LUKASZ): Mom called,
they're pretty upset you
turned down that promotion.
I forgive you.
- For what?
- For all of it.
For the car accident.
For making me take the blame,
for lying about it all those years.
I forgive you.
I didn't ask for your forgiveness.
It's not for you. It's for me.
I forgive you.
I wanted to wait till I could
see you before I said it,
but after
When I thought that I might
not get another chance.
I wanted to tell you that I
(SOBS)
Are you crying?
I went to Winnipeg for an egg retrieval.
I had to because having the BRCA1 gene
puts me at a higher
risk for ovarian cancer.
And,
today before I got on the plane,
I found out that my eggs
have the BRCA1 gene, too.
I always felt like there was this bomb,
waiting to go off inside of me.
But now I can't have a family,
unless I want to give
them the bomb, too?
And we've never talked
about it, I don't
I don't know whether you
want to have more kids or not.
But I know I do.
Because I want I want a family.
I lost my mom.
I lost that connection.
I lost my home.
I don't know if I'll ever feel complete.
If I'll ever feel whole,
until Until I'm a mom, too.
But the BRCA1, it's this thing,
it's this bomb
that's just never, ever gonna go away.
And just when I think I figured
it out, how to live with it,
how to move on,
it just
blows up in my face all over again.
(SOBBING)
(THEME MUSIC)
We know it clears at 100 feet.
- Yeah, what if it doesn't?
- We have to get the patient to Winnipeg.
So the whole country's gonna
be watching me bust minimums.
- I'm so sorry, Jay.
- I can't see.
And I may never fly again.
- Stef, what's going on?
- Who's Stef?
I can't help feeling like,
if I can just keep an eye on everyone,
I could stop something
bad from happening.
- No one can do that, Stef.
- You don't need to fight!
(BLUES MUSIC)
Dammit, this one doesn't work either.
Why do these keep dying on me?
Maybe 'cause the whole book's neon.
If those bad boys
don't get a break soon,
they're gonna start
smoking on you, girl.
(CHUCKLES) Here.
I thought you said coffee
wasn't good for studying.
My Australian brother-in-law
was real picky about coffee.
And my flat whites are
Michael-approved, so
He was picky about coffee?
Switched to decaf or something?
(METAL CRASHING)
Hey what's up bro?
How you doing man, you almost
set for the band tonight?
I think some of this gear
got busted on the way up.
Hey, stand by the speaker
and tell me what you hear.
Sure.
(SALSA MUSIC)
That's all treble, no bass, man.
Boys and their bass.
Hey, if there's no bass,
people don't feel it.
If they don't feel it, they don't dance
and if they don't dance (SUCKS TEETH)
they don't get thirsty.
We've never had a problem with
people being thirsty around here.
Oooh, that's what I'm talking about.
A little more bass bro, keep it going.
Deny all you want,
you know you're starting to feel it.
Pretty soon, you're gonna start dancing.
Pretty sure I'm gonna keep studying.
Aw, come on Doc.
I know you got moves.
Remember this?
Whoa!
He's arresting.
Do compressions while
I call an ambulance.
Okay, just pump right?
Push, like right here?
No! Not so low, you'll hit the liver.
I'll do it, you call an ambulance.
45-year-old male, cardiac
arrest following electrocution.
Prep the crash cart, bay two.
We got him.
Busy morning?
I thought you were studying.
Every time I try and
study at the Whisky Hutch,
someone arrests.
(THEME MUSIC)
I could do that myself, you know.
You got your throat
slashed two days ago.
You still have a temperature,
and there's a lot of swelling.
But the IV antibiotics should help soon.
If I do any more laps of the ER,
the wheels are gonna
fall off my IV pole.
It was really brave,
trying to protect Lexi like that,
but it sounds like you've
been doing that a lot lately.
Making risky moves,
trying to protect people.
Did Lexi tell you that?
Look, I had a really
tough time last year
with things from my past
coming up on the job.
And I know you lost
someone close to you.
That's the job.
We deal with this stuff all the time.
Yeah, and it adds up.
Look, no one gets
through this alone, Stef.
Okay?
So if you ever need anyone
to talk to about anything,
I'm here.
Hey sickie!
TJ asked to swap shifts today.
I figured if you were
gonna be stuck in here,
we could at least hang out.
I have to go to my assignment shift.
I got that curry that you like,
and Dutch Blitz so you can kick my ass.
Did you tell Hayley about Mel?
And Dani?
I thought you needed someone to talk to.
I've never been through this
kind of stuff, so I thought
I'm fine, Lex.
Look, I know sometimes
I struggle with control,
but you don't have to worry about me
You said you feel like you
have to keep an eye on everyone,
all the time.
No one can do that, Stef.
That's how you end up in the hospital.
I know you think you can do
this all on your own, but
Please Stef, don't shut me out.
(SOFT MUSIC)
Come here, c'mon.
Hi, yes.
I know patients usually go to Winnipeg
for their fertility screening results,
but we're down a medic up here
so I was really hoping that
Yes, yeah that would be great.
(CHOPPER): As captain, it's my
call. We'll try it once more.
(LEXI): What are you doing? Minimums!
It's all over the chats.
I mean I get it. He
wanted to help that girl,
but would you risk your
career for some stranger?
I'd be more pissed about how
it wound up in a documentary.
Hey, why aren't the medical supplies
for Deep River loaded on 911?
Right away, Cap.
And no phones in the hangar
when you're on the clock.
I don't remember making that rule,
but who knows what you kids have
been up to while I've been gone.
Wheezer. What are you doing here?
Just because I can't see
doesn't mean I can't
keep an eye on things,
including you.
You mind giving us a minute, Teej?
- Sure thing, Cap.
- Thank you.
You saw it?
I don't think there's anyone in the
aviation industry who hasn't seen it.
- Chair.
- Including Aviation Authority.
They're coming to investigate it?
Chopper, you practically
rubbed their noses in it.
Something this public, they're
gonna have to make an example.
Shit!
I'm sorry, Wheezer.
I told Marianne to shred my release.
Look, I get why you did it.
But I do not condone breaking air regs.
And definitely not on camera.
SkyMed cannot afford to have a problem
with Avi Authority right now.
But unfortunately,
I cannot afford to lose
another pilot either, so
(PAGER BEEPING)
Go.
Handle your calls and we will
talk about it when you get back.
Watch your back, Cap. Comin' through.
Ahh! What the hell was that?
What was what, Cap?
Never mind.
Hey Mom, is everything alright?
(NOWAK'S MOTHER): I just spoke
to Reese Hassan's mother.
I had to hear from a stranger
that my son turned down
a Chief Pilot position
at Birch Wing Air?
Yeah, it wasn't a good opportunity.
(NOWAK'S MOTHER): It's bad enough
you chose to become a pilot, Milosz.
You can't even let yourself advance?
I thought you wanted
to go to Air Canada.
I've applied, Mother, but
there's a lot of competition.
(NOWAK'S MOTHER): Lukasz
says you haven't called him.
Your brother got tenure.
There was a lot of
competition for that too.
You need to call and
congratulate him, Milosz.
I have to go, Mom. I
have a page right now.
Ahh!
(EXHALES THROUGH HIS TEETH)
(LEXI): You get in a fist fight
with the patient? What happened?
Shaving accident.
Ah, cut yourself on those cheekbones?
Well at least you got to go with Hayley
and didn't have to chase
raccoons off the runway.
Someone must've dumped
rotten food out there
as a prank or something,
took me half an hour to clear it.
Makes me wish I hadn't
switched shifts with TJ.
I use the barbecue every Sunday
when I make dinner for my landlady.
When I moved up here,
I missed food from home,
so every Sunday I make a chimichurri.
With chilies that my sister sends,
and I make my landlady an asado.
Wow, that's a lucky landlady.
Well, you can't eat a good meal alone.
It spoils the food.
When I tried to light the
damn thing this afternoon, oof.
Knocked me back, like ten feet.
(PHONE RINGING)
Is somebody's cellphone ringing?
- I left mine at home.
- It's not us, we keep 'em off.
(PHONE RINGING)
That's weird.
Put it on speaker.
Hello?
Hello SkyMed 922.
Listen closely.
There is a bomb on the
plane. It is armed.
If you fly below 2,000
feet, the bomb will explode.
If you try to contact the police,
the bomb will explode.
If I do not receive $5,152,014
in the next three hours,
the bomb will explode.
Hang up. Hang up now.
Was that a joke?
Nothing looks tampered with,
I didn't see anything on the walkaround.
- Everything looked normal.
- It's probably a prank.
People do stupid crap
like this sometimes.
Go help Hayley check the cabin.
(TENSE MUSIC)
Uh, you guys!
What? What is it?
There is a bomb on the plane.
It's a bomb. A real one?
This isn't a timer, it looks
like a digital altimeter.
Our cabin altitude is 2,800 feet, right?
Affirmative.
But we're way higher than
2,800 feet, aren't we?
There's the plane altitude
and the cabin altitude.
We keep the cabin altitude
lower so we can breathe.
That's what this is reading.
So why does it matter
if it's only meeting
the pressure inside the plane?
Because, the altitude inside the cabin
can never be higher
than the plane itself,
so when go lower than
2,000 feet to land,
the pressure inside the cabin will too.
Climbing the cabin.
This thing's definitely working, Nowak.
(PHONE RINGING)
Hello?
Guess you found it, huh?
It is armed, so don't
hang up on me again.
Please, we have a patient on board.
If you fly below 2,000
feet, the bomb will explode.
If you contact the
police, it will explode.
If I do not receive $5,152,014
in the next three
hours, it will explode.
How are we supposed to
do that? We can't land.
But SkyMed are heroes, aren't they?
Documentary stars saving lives on TV?
You'll figure it out.
Can we fly for three hours?
If we have to.
How the hell did it even get in here?
We can't worry about that now,
we need to get a message to Wheezer.
And what if he's monitoring the radio?
We have to assume he is.
We'll use 922's sat phone.
We need to divert, we'll
go north over empty bush
so no one else gets hurt.
What does he mean, so
no one else gets hurt?
Oh God, in case we explode!
It's just, it's just a precaution.
I can't do this. I can't
be on this plane right now.
Hey, hey, hey Guillermo,
Guillermo, I need you to calm down.
Hey, look at me, look at me.
Do you see me? And you
see the pilots up there?
Yeah. Do you see how calm we are?
Okay, I need you to
remain calm too, alright?
Okay, um.
This chimichurri sauce,
how many chilies do you put in it?
I like two,
but when I make it for my
land for my landlady,
I only use one.
Wheezer? We have a problem.
You grounded the fleet for
full inspection of all aircraft,
pending Aviation
Authority's investigation?
What the hell, Wheezer?
You wanna go ahead
and suspend my license
too before they get here?
Sharkie, could you give us a minute?
TJ, I need you to grab
Chopper by the collar
and drag him somewhere private.
You got it, Cap. Sorry, Chops.
Right this way, gentlemen.
Just a few more steps.
- Alright, easy, easy.
- Alright, alright.
- Are we alone?
- Firm, Cap.
Good. We have bigger problems
than Aviation Authority.
I had 922 text this to me
before they left service range.
Is that a bomb?
I didn't recall the fleet
because of you, Chopper.
I grounded it so I
could search the planes,
and see if any others
have been targeted.
Who's on 922 today?
Hayley, their patient, Nowak.
Lexi, shit.
We swapped shifts,
it was supposed to
be me on 922, not her.
This guy, he has been
very specific, no cops.
So we gotta keep this quiet,
off radio, need-to-know only.
He's demanding five million.
Does SkyMed even have that?
We would have to sell all of our planes,
and we cannot do that in three hours.
Corporate is on it,
but we need to bring our team home,
and I need you to figure out
a way how to disarm that thing.
(BOMBER): Why did SkyMed
ground all its planes?
Did you call the cops?
No one called the cops,
we had to tell our Chief
Pilot to ask for your money.
Fine. But stay on speaker.
Her name's Mila.
My landlady.
- The one chili?
- Hm.
She knit these.
She's always knitting.
(COUGHS)
Easy, Guillermo.
How long have you lived with Mila?
Five years.
Her husband died right
before I moved up here.
She had to rent out
a room for the money.
(CHUCKLES) I fell in love, instantly.
But she was grieving.
I've loved her for five years
and I never told her.
What if I don't get to?
(LOUD GASPING)
Decreased lung sounds, right side.
He needs a decompression.
What is it, what's happening?
When the barbecue exploded,
the force must've given
him a closed pneumo.
(PAINED GRUNTS)
(LEXI): Is that supposed to happen?
He's got a bleed, he needs an ER.
Hey, are you listening?
Our patient needs help.
Isn't that your job?
Aren't you the heroes who save people?
Not like this!
He's got a hemothorax,
he needs a chest tube.
We need to get him to the hospital.
You need to disarm the
bomb so we can land.
- Why can't you do it?
- A chest tube?
Only doctors do those in
hospitals, not on airplanes.
(GASPING)
Okay, look. If-if you won't let us land,
then I need to make a call to
someone to talk me through this.
No. No calling for help.
Please. I can't do this alone, okay?
If he doesn't get a
chest tube, he'll die.
Put it on speaker.
And don't try anything.
I'll be listening.
You will need a scalpel,
a hemostat, a tube
and something to drain into.
There's tubing in the
tonsil tip catheter,
and a scalpel in the OB kit.
This is a very painful
procedure, Hayley,
and you've got a conscious patient.
(GASPING):
I don't care. I'm dying anyway,
either I suffocate
or he blows us all up.
Please.
Okay. We're ready.
Okay, the tube needs to go
into the fifth intercostal space,
where the nipple line and
the anterior auxiliary meet.
Okay, I got it.
You'll need to make
an incision big enough
to fit the tube, so
approximately three centimetres.
(HEAVY BREATHING)
I'm sorry. This will help.
(GASPING) Just do it.
(BREATHING HEAVILY)
(PAINED GRUNTS)
Okay, I made the incision.
Now stick your finger in,
make sure you can feel the rib.
(PAINED GRUNTS)
Okay, I can feel it.
Good. Now comes the painful part.
Use your hemostat to poke
and spread the incision, okay?
Poke and spread, and go deeper
until you get to the pleura.
(SCREAMS)
Once you get to the pleura,
you'll have to poke through.
But this takes a lot of pressure, okay.
So once you poke
through, you have to stop
or you'll puncture the lung, so go slow.
(SCREAMS)
(BOMBER): What's going
on? What's happening?
A chest tube, without a
hospital or pain medication.
If you disarm the bomb, we
can take him to a hospital.
We don't need to do it like this.
(CRYSTAL): Are you through the pleura?
Just keep pushing until you hear a pop.
Ugh! Okay. Okay, I'm through.
(CRYSTAL): Now you can place the
tube so the fluids can drain.
Okay I got it, it's draining.
(CRYSTAL): Listen, I don't know
who you are on that other phone,
or why you're doing this,
but Nowak's right. This
patient needs a hospital.
So if you can disarm the
bomb so that 922 can land
There's a bomb on 922?
There's a bomb on Lexi's plane?
How's our fuel?
Not great.
(BOMBER): Is SkyMed
getting my money or not?
We're working on it,
these things take time
and most aviation companies
are functionally broke.
Not my problem. I want my money.
And I want to get our
patient to a hospital.
His name's Guillermo,
he's a really good dude.
And the nurse helping him
back there, her name is Hayley.
She's about a month away
from a one year sobriety chip,
she's been working really hard at it.
And you know this other pilot
right here next to me, her name's Lexi.
She's been my best
friend since we were 15.
See, we're all just people
up here, man, just like you
and I don't think you wanna do this.
I don't think you
wanna hurt four people.
I'm not killing them, SkyMed is.
(CALL HANGS UP)
Dammit.
(STEF): I have to help Lexi.
Your sutures aren't healed
and you need antibiotics.
Even if you didn't, there's
nothing you can do right now.
Wheezer's working on it.
You don't know what it's like
to lose someone like this, okay?
To lose the person that you love.
(SOFT MUSIC)
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry, Crystal, I know you know.
You've probably replayed that night
over and over in your head too.
But Crystal,
if you thought there was
anything you could've done,
any way you could've
changed the outcome
I know you love Lexi.
But I love Hayley.
And she is on that plane too.
So we have to keep it together.
(NOWAK): Come on, Chopper.
Give us some good news.
I don't know a lot about bombs,
but I do think this one
can be disarmed remotely.
Which means the bomber
probably intends to disarm
it when he gets his money.
If he can disarm it remotely,
maybe we don't need to
find five million dollars,
we just need to find him,
and make him disarm it.
What do we know about him?
(NOWAK): Not much.
I still can't even figure out
how he got the bomb on 922.
The hangar's secure,
I didn't see anything
in the pre-flight this morning.
The only time the plane was
left alone was in Windy Lake.
When I was clearing the runway.
I thought someone put food out
to attract animals as a prank
but, what if it was a distraction
for the bomber to get on the plane?
If he planted the bomb in Windy Lake,
maybe that's where he's from, too.
(WHEEZER): This has to be personal.
He's asking for $5,152,14.
If this was just about
money, why wouldn't he target
a bigger airline, or a business
that actually makes money?
(NOWAK): I think it is personal.
He talked about seeing
the documentary on TV,
how it made him mad to see
SkyMed portrayed as heroes.
(CHOPPER): That is such a weird number.
He's asking for five million dollars,
why ask for another 14,
it has to be significant.
Wait, what if it's a date?
What if it's five, one five,
2014?
May 15th, 2014.
Looks like SkyMed
responded to three calls
in Windy Lake on May 15th, 2014.
Routine dialysis, broken
arm and a teenage boy
with minor injuries
from a football game,
pronounced DOA at TCH.
That doesn't sound right,
he went from healthy to dead
in the time it took to fly to Thompson?
(WHEEZER): Wait, a football player?
Yeah, I remember that call, I was in FO,
I was flying with Janine.
She used to be a flight nurse,
but she quit right after that.
You know, a lot of star
players would be pissed
at a nurse for making him
miss the rest of the game
to get a concussion checked,
but Jayden was such a nice kid.
The hum hit was to his abdomen,
but he hit his head on the way down,
and you have to be
careful with that stuff.
His dad was the coach,
he wanted to come with us.
But I was just so sure
that I was just being overcautious.
I told Coach to stay
behind with the other kids.
But once we got in the air,
it all just happened so fast.
He went into organ failure.
And there was nothing I could do.
Nothing but push fluids.
And hold his hand.
I couldn't handle the
thought of something like that
ever happening again
and at least in a hospital,
you're not alone.
Amantadine is usually a safe
anti-viral to fight the flu.
The coroner's report found that
the hit to Jayden's
abdomen injured his kidneys,
and amantadine released into his body.
I didn't know he'd taken it.
There's no antidote for
amantadine, even in a hospital.
There wouldn't have been
anything anyone could've done.
Those three hours with
him on the plane, I
I can't think of anything worse
than knowing there's nothing
you can do for someone.
Crys, I know you know what
it feels like to lose someone.
But you didn't have to watch him die.
I-I can't do that again.
We know what happened to Jayden,
and we know who you are.
You're a football
coach. Chemistry teacher.
Jayden was your son.
I can't imagine how awful that was.
(BOMBER): My son was totally healthy
when he got on your plane.
And SkyMed killed him.
Why won't you just admit it?
SkyMed killed my son.
Listen, I know you're angry.
You have every right to be.
But letting your anger control
all your decisions hurts you.
I know you're not a bad person.
You were worried about what
happened to our patient.
But you know how hard
we worked to help him,
our crew would have done
the same thing for Jayden.
We want to help people, Coach,
we don't wanna hurt them.
I don't think you wanna
hurt anybody either,
but you have to let your anger go.
It has to be SkyMed's fault.
Because if it wasn't, then
that means it was my fault.
I'm the one who gave him amantadine.
Jayden thought he was getting sick,
but it was a big game,
there was a scout coming.
I just wanted for him
to be able to play.
If SkyMed really didn't
do anything wrong,
then Jayden really did die
of amantadine poisoning
and it really was my fault!
(VOICE BREAKS)
Or maybe it was an awful accident.
Maybe you were a really good dad
who was trying to help
his son follow his dreams.
And I bet that meant the world to him.
But Coach, please.
You don't want to let Jayden down now.
I don't think you're doing this
'cause you want to hurt people,
I think you're doing this
'cause you want your son back.
(SNIFFLES)
And I wish I could give
that to you, but Coach,
doing this isn't going
to bring Jayden back.
I miss him so much.
(SOBBING)
Everyone says Jayden
was a really good kid.
You must've taught him that.
And he wouldn't want this.
You didn't let your son
down, but please Coach,
don't let him down now.
The light should be green now.
It's still red.
It must be out of range.
You can disarm it manually if
you cut the top green wire.
You have control.
(TENSE MUSIC)
Coach, I cut the wire,
the light's still red.
No, it should be disarmed.
Are you sure you cut the right wire?
I cut the top green wire.
Oh God, I can't disarm it.
We need to start thinking
about places to land.
Nowak, we can't.
We can't go below 2,000 feet.
We don't have much time before
the plane is going down anyways.
I'd rather be the one
making choices when it does.
(GUILLERMO): Why didn't I tell her?
I had five years.
Even if she rejected me,
at least I would've told her.
At least Mila would know how I felt.
It still has some charge.
Call her.
Tell her now.
(SOFT MUSIC)
Hi. Mila.
It's me.
No, no you don't have
to come to the hospital,
I'm not there yet.
I
I don't know when I'll get there.
Look, this doesn't
have to change things,
and you don't have to say anything.
But, I just want you to hear it,
in case I
in case I don't get a
chance to tell you later.
I love you, Mila.
I've loved you since we met.
And
I just want you to know that.
You do?
(CHUCKLES)
Hey. You okay?
Lexi and I switched shifts.
She's up there on 922
(SIGHS) because of me.
TJ, this isn't your fault.
You asked about my
brother-in-law, Michael.
He died.
We met flying charters for the UN.
He was my FO.
Michael was,
(SIGHS) he was the best.
Exactly who you'd want
your sister to marry.
But he was inexperienced
and some of the places we flew into
It was a lot of unrest.
One airstrip,
the country name was
changing day by day.
But one day,
we're already in the air and
We get word our risk assessment
coming into that airport
is now severe.
We know they'll shoot at you.
We feel confident they
won't take you down.
I said no,
I wouldn't risk my crew.
The charter company was pissed,
but they weren't there.
They were safe over here,
pressuring us to get the
job done at all costs.
That's why I decided to get out.
But Michael wanted to stay.
So I recommended that he
go for captain in my place.
A week later, he got pressured
into flying into that same airport.
It was my fault.
And now Lexi is my fault, too.
(SOBBING)
(SOBBING)
(SOFT RHYTHMIC MUSIC)
I'm sorry I sorry.
Hey Tris,
I was really hoping I'd
get to talk to you but,
you're probably at Sick Kids right now.
I know you don't do voicemails, but
I really hope you listen to this one.
I love you so much, Tristan.
I'm so grateful that you
gave us a second chance.
People don't always get those.
But you make me my best me, Tris.
You make me wanna be my best me.
I hope you know I love you.
Always.
Do you want to call Stef?
There should be enough
battery for both of us.
You go first.
Hey. I just wanted to hear your voice.
(WHEEZER): So what do you wanna hear?
How's uh How's the new
season of "Love Is Blind?"
I didn't watch it, actually.
Didn't feel the same without you.
I didn't either.
I think I just liked
watching it with you.
Well, I guess we'll have to
watch it when you get back.
Yeah, I guess we will.
Um, this thing's almost out of charge,
so I'll talk to you later?
Yeah. Yeah, we'll talk later.
Oh shit. Ahh!
God dammit!
(GRUNTING)
God!
(PANTING)
Is someone there?
Sorry. Wheezer, are you okay?
What kind of Chief Pilot am
I if I can't help my people?
My crew, they need me and I can't see.
The people that I care
about, the people that I
(QUIET SOB)
I can't do anything, man.
I can't even see what's happening.
But Wheezer, from where I'm standing,
you're not letting anyone down.
You're fighting.
You're giving everything
to protect this crew.
I'd give
I would give anything man,
to be the one stuck up
there instead of them.
Maybe we need to get closer.
(PHONE RINGING)
Alright, Wheezer and I
are in 911, we thought
it would help to see everything
that you have to work with.
It made me think of your patient,
and how you had to relieve
the pressure in his chest.
I think we need to relieve
the pressure on the bomb too.
- How?
- What if we dump the cabin?
Then raise the cabin's altitude
and make the bomb think we're higher.
At 20,000 feet, but once you land,
the bomb, it'll realize that
you're at the same
altitude as the plane.
(CHOPPER): Right. So we need
to make the bomb and the plane
think different things.
Hayley, you have anything
up there with suction,
anything that's vacuum-y?
Uh, the tonsil tip catheter?
Yeah, we use that to suction blood.
You'll need an airtight container too,
something that'll fit over
the bomb and the altimeter.
(HAYLEY): All my medical
equipment is too small.
What about a storage bin?
Would that work?
(CHOPPER): That'll have to do.
You're gonna have to put it
over the bomb and the altimeter.
This looks like it'll just fit.
Seal it, as airtight as possible.
There's duct tape in
the bulkhead, use that.
And make sure to seal in the suction end
of the catheter in, too.
Chopper,
you don't think putting
something over the bomb
will make it go off, do you?
It shouldn't.
Just go slow, be careful.
Don't touch any of the wires.
(SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC)
And once it's airtight,
turn on the suction.
You're gonna suck the air
out to decrease the pressure,
to make the bomb think that it's higher.
Okay. Ready, turning on suction.
It's working! The bomb
thinks it's higher.
Thank God!
- (SIGHS)
- Okay, keep the suction going.
Get it as high as you can.
Chopper. It's not going up anymore.
How high did you get?
(LEXI): We gained 1,000 feet.
If they land at sea level,
the bomb will think it's at 1,000 feet,
but it's set to blow at 2,000.
It didn't work. We
didn't get it far enough.
We just need to find a higher runway
to keep the cabin up, right?
But if we need something
that's at least 1,000 feet
above sea level, where are we
gonna find that in Manitoba?
Brandon and Flin Flon
are both 1,200 feet.
We're almost out of fuel.
We're never gonna make those,
I need something closer.
Lynn Lake. Lynn Lake is 1,100
feet, you can just squeeze in.
It'll be tight.
Hang on, Guillermo,
we're almost there.
It's holding at 2,300 feet.
(NOWAK): Beginning our approach.
Shit.
There's a leak in the container.
- (LEXI): Hayley, is it holding?
- It's still leaking.
Get ready to help Hayley
offload the patient
as soon as we touch down, I'll land.
What about you?
Nowak, if you stay behind to land
Nowak, you can't, please.
Don't worry. 922 and I have
been through a lot together.
She's not gonna let me down now.
Okay, come on. Easy.
- Hurry, hurry, hurry.
- (GRUNTS)
(SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC)
(HISSING)
Go, go, go, go!
(ALL GROANING)
(GRAVE MUSIC)
I remember your son, Coach Forrester.
I do not for a second condone
what you did, but I'm
very sorry for your loss.
Thank you.
(WHEEZER): Thanks, Officers.
Whoa, whoa.
Sharkie, we gotta talk
about workplace harassment.
No, you jerk. It's me.
Of course I knew it was you, Hayley.
I'd always know it was you.
(PANTING) Stef! I didn't call you.
Everyone else called someone
to say goodbye but I realized,
I don't want to say goodbye.
I didn't call you because
I needed to come home to you, Stef!
(SOBBING)
I'm okay. I'm okay.
- I can't watch you die, Lex.
- No, I'm okay.
I've been so worried
about caring too much about patients,
but Lex, the person I
care most about is you.
And I can't,
I just can't be stuck on the ground,
while you're in danger and
there's nothing I can do.
I know you're dealing with stuff,
but this is why you need help.
I need you to not be
in danger all the time.
You're in danger all the time, too!
But I can handle myself, Lexi.
Are you saying I can't handle myself?
I can't watch you do this job anymore.
Are you asking me to quit?
Stef, I love you.
And I would do anything to help you
but, I can't do that.
I know you're going through stuff,
but I don't know if
I can be with someone
who doesn't believe in me.
Lex.
Lex.
(DRAMATIC MUSIC CRESCENDOS)
(SOBBING)
(LUKASZ): Mom called,
they're pretty upset you
turned down that promotion.
I forgive you.
- For what?
- For all of it.
For the car accident.
For making me take the blame,
for lying about it all those years.
I forgive you.
I didn't ask for your forgiveness.
It's not for you. It's for me.
I forgive you.
I wanted to wait till I could
see you before I said it,
but after
When I thought that I might
not get another chance.
I wanted to tell you that I
(SOBS)
Are you crying?
I went to Winnipeg for an egg retrieval.
I had to because having the BRCA1 gene
puts me at a higher
risk for ovarian cancer.
And,
today before I got on the plane,
I found out that my eggs
have the BRCA1 gene, too.
I always felt like there was this bomb,
waiting to go off inside of me.
But now I can't have a family,
unless I want to give
them the bomb, too?
And we've never talked
about it, I don't
I don't know whether you
want to have more kids or not.
But I know I do.
Because I want I want a family.
I lost my mom.
I lost that connection.
I lost my home.
I don't know if I'll ever feel complete.
If I'll ever feel whole,
until Until I'm a mom, too.
But the BRCA1, it's this thing,
it's this bomb
that's just never, ever gonna go away.
And just when I think I figured
it out, how to live with it,
how to move on,
it just
blows up in my face all over again.
(SOBBING)
(THEME MUSIC)