Private Practice s03e22 Episode Script
In the Name of Love
- Hey.
- Hey.
So Pete must be happy.
What? Custody of Lucas.
Oh.
Yeah, yeah, I think so.
I mean, I guess.
So he won, right? Yeah.
He won.
- Sam You coming to bed? Yeah, I, uh I'll be in in a minute.
My God.
We were supposed to just have dinner like normal people.
We ate.
I ate.
Cooper.
Do you think? Do you think we should talk about what this means? - You think it means something? - Do you? You want to just do it again? Okay.
- I thought you had the day off today.
- Uh, yeah, uh Maya's got a history exam tomorrow.
Doing her ultrasound.
- You're so sweet.
- I just got some really good news.
Oh, God.
Oh, no.
- What? - The bitch is back.
The woman who threw the cup of coffee at my head? She's here? She's waiting for me in my office with her husband right now.
Oh, God.
Why they even bother to do marriage counseling again after last year? You know she calls that poor sweet man "the weasel"? Violet, she threw a coffee cup at my head.
I have a scar.
She's got anger issues.
You know, I mean, deep, unresolved anger issues.
Oh.
- Look at you.
- I know.
Crazy, huh? Your mom's on her way up.
You ready? - You were gonna tell me something? - I'll tell you later.
Are you still, uh, not talking to me? Okay.
I had sex with Charlotte.
It was supposed to be dinner, but it became dinner with sex.
I don't know what to do.
I had to do it, Violet.
I couldn't lie on a stand.
Come on, really? I need to talk to you.
Talk to somebody else.
Uh, hello? Dr.
Turner.
It is so good to see you.
Oh.
Heh.
It's good to see you too, Claire.
- Um There you go.
- She's happy.
- Yes, I can see that.
- No, I mean, really happy.
- Irwin thinks I have dementia.
Sweetie, I don't think that.
It's just you're usually not a happy person and you changed, just overnight.
- Something's wrong.
Oh, just say it, Irwin.
Come on, say it.
I was a bitch.
Right, Dr.
Turner? It's okay.
I was a huge bitch, right? Ha, ha.
But I am not anymore.
I'm feeling better.
- And I'm doing charity work.
- That's wonderful.
She gave away all of our money to a church.
- They need it.
- And now she's Well, we're having a lot of sex now.
- You'd think he'd be thrilled.
- I am.
I am.
It's not her.
You know my wife.
Well, Claire, how would you explain this transformation? I can feel him in my soul inside me.
God.
I have found God.
I have been touched by the hand of God.
Stop staring at me like I'm about to keel over.
I'm fine.
I just wish you wouldn't be so stubborn.
You need to be resting.
I'll rest later.
- Hey, guys.
Pete.
William, good to see you.
How you feeling? Oh, let's just say I'm glad to be home.
Uh, if you'll excuse me, I have some work to do in my office.
Okay.
The flight from Switzerland really took a lot out of him.
Is there anything I can do? Uh, I'm consulting with some ALS specialists, see if there's something else that we can try.
He has to keep fighting.
I can't let him give up.
Not now.
Well, that's what you want.
What about what he wants? I think he's come back to die.
Nurse to third floor cath lab.
Nurse to third floor cath lab.
Thank you.
Hello.
I'm Dr.
Montgomery.
Hi, I'm George Walters, this is my daughter, Kim.
Hi, Kim.
The ER doctor says you're having a lot of back pain? It started a few days ago.
It says here you're at 30 weeks.
You haven't had any prenatal care? We live on a farm.
It's difficult for us to get into the city.
Okay.
Uh, let's take a look here.
Is my baby okay? She's the appropriate size for her dates.
It's a she? - It's a girl? - Oh, yes, I'm Sorry, l I'd appreciate it if you can make this quick as possible.
I'd like to take my daughter home.
Okay.
- Weird how? - I don't know.
Just weird.
You'll see.
Hi, I'm Dr.
Bennett.
Cardiothoracic specialist.
I'd like to speak with you about your scans.
If you'd like, your father can wait in the lounge.
I'm fine here.
Okay.
Well, what you have is an aortic aneurysm.
It's an abnormal widening of the large artery in your abdomen.
We're going to need to do surgery.
We're hoping to avoid it until the baby's further along.
But we will need to keep you here under observation.
- How long? I don't know.
Uh, we've ordered some repeat ultrasounds and we're going to need to review your family medical history.
Mother, father, siblings.
My mother's dead.
- Why do you need all that? - It's standard.
The medical history helps point us in the right direction when we evaluate.
You and I can talk further while your daughter's undergoing the tests.
No.
I'm going with her.
Didn't your mother teach you it's not polite to stare? Gabriel.
I know you're upset with the way we left things.
But William needed me.
Hey, I get it.
Any woman in your position would've made the same choice.
In this corner, angry, sarcastic guy in a wheelchair who, obviously a dynamo in bed, can't exactly sweep you off your feet.
And in this corner, you got old moneybags, who if you marry real quick Well, let's just say you'd make for an extremely attractive, not to mention wealthy widow.
I want you to try the ALS protocol on William.
The one that still needs FDA approval? The one that would be completely delegitimized if we use it? Yes.
Will you do it? Wow.
Amazing.
Little Miss Moral Compass is willing to blow off everything she believes in.
Gabriel, I'm asking you to think about it.
Okay? Just think about it.
Hey.
So, uh, based on Kim's repeat scan, I recommend surgery.
Now.
Oh, but the fetus is only 30 weeks.
It's too risky.
Yeah, well, blowing the aneurysm could be riskier.
Kim tested positive for the gene associated with Fibrillin? That explains the aneurysm.
But it's an autosomal dominant disease.
I mean, it's inherited from the father.
Is she adopted? Well, George never mentioned it in his family history.
He doesn't have the disease.
He's not her father.
He can't be.
Then who is he? She says she feels God and it changed her.
- Just like that? She changed? - Just like that.
- People don't change.
- Of course they do.
They modify.
They adjust.
But underneath, we are who we are.
That's not true.
I know it's not true.
My entire career is based on helping people become who they can be.
People do change.
I've seen it.
People just get better at covering up their flaws.
- There.
What is that? That is Claire's God.
Don't you guys have your own cereal downstairs? Naomi doesn't let us to buy the kind with marshmallows in it.
Hey, how do you get someone to talk to you that won't talk to you? - Charlotte? - Uh, no, not this time, actually.
We're doing okay.
It's Violet.
She's being, I don't know, mean to me.
She's being mean to me.
She's never mean to me.
And I said I was sorry.
Well, just, uh, keep on keeping on.
Is that the best you can do? Because I can get that from a bumper sticker.
She's hurt, Cooper.
You can't expect her to come around as soon as you apologize to her.
Because even if she understands your explanation intellectually, she, uh, still has to accept it emotionally.
And that takes time.
- So keep on keeping on? - Exactly.
Okay.
Hey, uh, you want to hear something pretty cool? Something I haven't told anybody else? I got into UCLA medical school.
- Oh, my God! - Oh, okay.
That's fantastic.
Congratulations.
I have no idea how I'd pay for it, but Hey.
Oh, I'm sorry I'm late.
- Hope I didn't miss the fun.
- No, just getting started.
- Hey, Mom.
Hey.
Thanks for having me here.
- Wow, three weeks to go.
- Yeah.
Everything looks great.
- The heart rate is strong.
Yeah.
Yeah? Oh, I remember my last month with you.
I was so nervous.
Kept looking up every possible obstetric complication in the book.
I was driving your dad crazy.
Ha, ha.
It's It can be a little scary, you know? - So do you have any questions? - I'm fine.
- You have a plan? I've got it all worked out.
Totally natural birth.
Dell is doing the delivery here.
I do my squatting exercises in the morning, my relaxation techniques in the afternoon.
That's so I won't need an epidural.
Uh, my bag is packed, and Dink made a mix CD for my birthing music.
I'm so ready.
Ha, ha.
Wow.
Wow, you've just You've thought of everything.
You don't have to worry about me, Mom.
You not being around actually helped.
It gave me a chance to grow up, figure things out on my own.
Thanks for doing the consult, Sheldon.
Ordinarily I'd ask Violet, but things have been weird since the trial.
Sheldon? I know, stopping elevators is your thing, but today, l Ha, ha.
I need to change things up.
Wait.
You need help? - From me? - Well.
Sheldon, you sent me a bill last time.
When I asked for elevator advice, you charged me.
Well, I'm gonna send you a bill and I'm expensive.
I have many board certifications.
Only eight people in the world do what I do.
I can give you a pap smear, operate on your uterus and perform surgery on your baby before and after he's born.
Are you gonna listen to me or not? All right, spill it.
It's about Charlotte.
I've been giving her advice on how to get back together with Cooper, but the thing is I think about her, Addison.
When she's not around, I think about the way she smiles, the way she looks at me.
My God, I spend half my day coming up with lame reasons to go up and visit her.
Do you know how many times I've borrowed stamps from her? I don't even use stamps.
I pay my bills electronically.
Listen to me, Sheldon.
You want her, go get her.
You have to try.
If not, you're gonna spend the rest of your life kicking yourself and wondering why you didn't man up and go for it.
Thank you.
Do you have the test results? Can we go home now? Actually, the results were inconclusive.
We're gonna need her for one more test.
- You can stay here.
- Why? I wanna be with her.
We need her for radiology.
Some x-rays.
You're not allowed in the room.
It's all right, she'll be right back.
I'll be waiting for you here, Kim.
Appreciate it.
God is in a brain tumor? Ha, ha.
I'm sorry, that sounds ridiculous.
It's actually a well-known phenomenon.
The temporal lobe contains the emotional engine of our brains.
It's the center of all of our feelings.
So anything, uh, rage, lust, anger, passion, bliss, anything that stimulates that part of the brain can elicit those feelings.
But they're not real.
They're just misdirected neural impulses.
They're random short circuits.
You're wrong.
They are real.
I can feel it.
It's happiness.
I've never felt it before.
It's like I had this giant weight on my shoulders and now the weight is lifted.
It doesn't just happen.
That's not just chemical reactions in my brain.
And you know what? If it takes a magic bullet in my head to do God's work, then that's his plan.
It's a slow growing tumor.
With surgery, your chance of recovery is excellent.
But without it Wait, you're saying this tumor's gonna kill my wife? Without the surgery, you will die.
I spent three years in intensive therapy with Dr.
Turner and I didn't have a happy bone in my body.
Now I've found God.
He's in me.
If dying is God's plan, then so be it.
- I thought we were going to Radiology.
- Oh, we are.
I just wanted you to consult with one more doctor, Kim, before we do your test.
Hi, Kim.
I'm Dr.
Wallace.
Nothing? Nothing? Did you check with NIH? Yeah, I know.
I knew it was a long shot.
Thank you for trying, Dr.
Klein.
Okay.
What do I have to do, Gabriel? Do I have to beg? Okay, I will beg.
What you're asking is unethical and illegal.
The protocol is not approved.
If I give it to William, it will never be.
And I'm still asking.
No.
If you don't help him, he is going to die.
Well, then I guess he's going to die.
She's rational and oriented.
There's no evidence of delusional thinking.
She's entirely capable of making decisions about her own treatments, so She can't decide.
She thinks she has a personal pipeline to God.
This woman was miserable her entire life until now.
And you are telling her to accept a treatment that would bring all that pain back.
To just live with it.
I may not agree with her decision, but I certainly understand her refusal to let you do that to her.
Why would anyone choose to feel worse? Because without the surgery, she will die.
And Claire understands that.
She believes it's part of God's plan.
If God is not gonna do his job, I guess I'll have to do it for him.
So you don't remember your mother at all? No.
Well, how old were you when she died? I'm not sure.
You keep looking at the door.
Are you afraid your father's gonna come in? Or hoping he'll come in? Do you have plans for your future? Do you wanna go to college or? My dad doesn't think I need it.
The two of you, you're very close.
We have a special relationship.
How so? When's my dad coming back? Soon.
Kim, this abnormality you have, it's a condition you inherit from a father.
Only from a father.
And George doesn't have it.
My dad says doctors don't know what they're talking about half the time.
Well, your father, he seems to know everything.
Of course he does.
He's my dad.
Her answers felt rehearsed, you know, and planned.
And she's been extremely isolated.
She doesn't watch TV or use the Internet.
She can't even remember the last time she left the farm.
- I think we should call the police.
- The police? I'm not 100 percent sure, but I think we may be witnessing a kidnapped girl and her abductor.
What? We're leaving.
Kim, get your stuff, we're going home.
Sheldon, call security.
George, no.
No, this is my family, and we are leaving.
George.
- No.
- George, you're not going anywhere.
- What are you doing? Back in bed.
- Let him go.
- Kim.
I need security, 301 East.
- You're hurting my father.
- I love you.
You're going to hurt him.
- We're family.
- You have to get back into bed.
Sam.
Sam, a little help here.
- She's unconscious.
Okay.
She's bottoming out.
Call the OR.
We got a triple-A who's bleeding out.
Okay.
Are we gonna talk about this? I guess we're not gonna talk about this.
- There's gotta be something else.
- Naomi, we've been through this.
Whatever time I have left, I wanna spend it with you.
- L - Enjoying each other.
Not chasing some impossible cure.
There's nothing left to do.
You can't leave.
What? I've made my decision.
Irwin and I are going home.
- But you - Please, don't try to convince me.
I'm happy.
I'm finally happy and I don't wanna go back.
- Look, I understand how you feel.
- No, you couldn't possibly.
My father was murdered.
My brother and I were there when it happened.
I was just a kid at the time.
Yeah.
But the bottom fell out, of my whole world.
I was There was a dark place and I was in it.
Until one day, this friend gave me a pill and I took it and all of a sudden I felt okay.
Better than okay.
I felt good.
And so I kept taking them and I felt great.
And when people would try to get me to stop and tell me that it wasn't real, I would just laugh.
Because it was real.
How I felt, it was better.
It was better than being miserable.
But it almost killed me.
I was dead for three minutes.
And let me tell you, when you are lying on a stretcher, gasping for what you think are your last breaths you don't think that dying happy is better than living sad.
Dying sucks.
It hurts in a way that I can't describe to you.
And, no, I don't believe that people can change.
I don't believe that you'll change.
But maybe I'm wrong.
And, hell, maybe you will wake up from that surgery and you will be happy.
But if you're dead, if you are rotting in the ground from some tumor that ate your brain, you don't get a chance to find that out.
And one more thing and then I will go, I'm I'm not a religious person.
I don't believe in God.
But if I did, I wouldn't believe in a God that wanted you to die the horrible, painful death that you will experience from a giant tumor that will take away your ability to speak and see and go to the bathroom and breathe on your own.
That can't be God.
- Okay.
- Wait, wait.
Claire.
No, no, it's too dangerous.
And God is telling you.
See, maybe she's right.
Maybe this is what God wants, all right? I'll do it.
I'll do the surgery.
You're losing her, Sam.
- All right.
Hang another four units on the infuser.
Suction.
She's bleeding out.
Cross-clamp the aorta.
Too much blood in the field.
I can't see.
Give me your hand.
Give me your hand.
Okay, you feel that? Right there, you feel it? No.
All right, move closer.
Okay, now push down.
Right there.
Don't stop.
Okay, more suction.
All right.
Two centimeters to the left.
Got it.
There we go.
DeBakey clamp.
Pressure's coming up.
Good.
Okay.
So Claire's in Pre-Op.
She said I'd find you here.
And you know Dr.
Shepherd is an excellent surgeon.
- It'll be okay.
- No, it won't.
I mean, you were there.
You were in therapy with us.
Yeah, I know.
It was hell living with her.
You know, suddenly, I find the woman I've always dreamed of and then in a few hours, she might be gone.
I'm not sure I have it in me to love the old Claire anymore.
See, I love her the way she is now, with that damn tumor in her head.
I don't know what's gonna happen after the surgery.
But we've seen Claire for who she can be.
And I do believe the joy she feels now comes from a deeper place than a lesion in her head.
Somewhere inside of her, that part must exist.
Do you really believe that? You may be smart and insightful and some kind of super shrink, I know Cooper, I shouldn't have listened.
- Charlotte.
- He is who he is.
He's funny, neurotic in that way my mama warned me wouldn't be cute after a while, a freak between the sheets.
But he's not any more than that and he isn't gonna be.
Well, I will be more to you.
I will be.
You're right, you should expect more.
And from the man in your life, you should expect everything.
Trust and emotional support and intellectual stimulation.
And you should expect that he'll be there for you, unconditionally, no matter what you do, no matter what life brings you.
And sex too.
Great sex.
Plus a great recipe for haggis.
I mean, you should get everything.
And I'll give you everything.
The whole package, right down to the picket fence.
I'll give it to you.
Sheldon Wallace.
I'm throwing my hat in the ring.
Have dinner with me.
Tonight.
You were great.
I was great.
Yeah, we did good.
Good? We saved two lives today.
Two for the price of one.
I mean, how often do you get to say that? I mean, can you imagine dropping that at a dinner party? - Ha, ha.
- "We saved two lives today.
" I mean, who's gonna top that? - Ha, ha.
- Yeah.
We're always good together.
When it's just us, we're great together.
But we live in the real world and it's taken me a while, but I'm okay with it.
We'll be friends.
We'll be neighbors.
But we can never be more than that.
Naomi told me that you're refusing to give William your ALS protocol.
Protecting my research.
One day, when this drug is approved by the FDA and saving thousands of lives, Naomi will realize it was more important than the life of just one man.
Really? That's your reason? Because if it is, that's good.
If you're saying no because you wanna get Naomi? Mind your own business.
Does she know that you're in love with her? - Oh, screw you.
- You're pathetic.
Coming from the guy who dragged Violet through a trial? I didn't drag Violet, she dragged me.
Turned her friends against her and keeping her away from her child.
You're gonna call me pathetic? Go on, hit me.
You think I can't take a punch to the face? - You're not worth it.
- And you know what? I am so sick of being the guy in the chair.
The guy in the chair never gets the girl.
And this time, I am getting the girl.
So screw the chair.
Come on, hit me.
Who's the bigger man now, Pete? Come on, hit me.
You're letting William die so you can have Naomi.
The chair is not what makes you the smaller man.
- Get out.
- Not until you listen.
Okay, then I'll get out.
Okay, when you sent Sam into my office the first weeks that we worked here to fake fire me for looking at adult websites on my computer, I forgave you.
Oh, Cooper, you can't When you told Annie Mersel, who I loved, that I wasn't the marrying kind because you couldn't picture us together in 20 years, I forgave you.
Cooper.
Puking in my new car, in my bed, or using the 1910 silver dollar my grandfather gave me for my bar mitzvah to pay the pizza guy.
But that's what friends do.
They screw up and sometimes they hurt each other, and you forgive them.
That's what friendship is.
That's what love is.
I'm going to leave you now.
But I leave you with this.
You once told a woman I had just started dating that I have a very small nightstick.
Which was unforgivable, and also a lie.
And I let it slide.
What? What happened? Your aneurysm ruptured, but we were able to repair it.
- My baby? - She's doing great.
Kim, we spoke with the FBI.
They're trying to track down your biological parents.
- George? He can't hurt you.
We have a police officer stationed at the door.
You are safe here.
No.
You don't understand.
I need to see him.
I love him.
The procedure went well.
I'll probably send Claire home in a few days.
- And the rest? - We'll see.
Where are they? Damn doctors.
I am tired of waiting.
I'm sorry.
I can't.
- Claire.
You lied to me, you bitch.
You pushed me to do this.
Now I have nothing.
Nothing.
You should have let me die happy.
He kidnapped her, assaulted her, and kept her away from her real family, and she still wants to see him? The police said George held her captive for 15 years.
He's been the only person in her life.
Putting clothes on her back and feeding her and making all the decisions in her life.
To her, he is her real family.
It's the only love she knows.
It's just too perverse to comprehend.
Well, all Kim sees is that he took care of her.
Protected her.
Have they located her family? Her parents? Maybe when she sees them No, she's been totally cut off from the world.
And over time, that old love she knew became vague faded memories.
And eventually, in order to survive, his beliefs become her beliefs and his reality becomes her reality.
Is there something you want? I wanna ask you to forgive me.
I mean, not now.
No, I mean, I don't expect you to forgive me right now.
But I ran out on you when I should have leaned in.
I gave you my baby and I ran.
And part of it's not my fault, part of it's what happened to me, but there's this other piece.
And you loved me.
You loved me.
And I should have leaned into that.
I should have let you take care of me, but I didn't because Because I don't know how.
You know, I'm that person.
I'm a shrink, I take care of other people, but And I should have let you take care of me but I didn't.
So when I asked you to share Lucas with me, of course you said no.
I shouldn't have been hurt, I shouldn't have taken you to court.
I lost my happiness and I didn't ask for help.
I didn't lean in.
So how could I possibly expect you to lean into me? To trust me? To believe in me? And so I'm sorry.
And I understand.
You did what you thought was right.
But I hope that someday, you can forgive me.
We could start with overnight visits.
For Lucas.
Until he gets used to it.
Until I get used to it.
If that's okay? I wish I said no to you for the right reasons.
Instead, I said no for the wrong ones.
I'm in love with you.
And even if I work the poor crippled guy angle, I can't compete with a dying man so I said no.
So that he would just die already and be out of the picture.
But the thing is, I'm in love with you, and William dying would hurt you.
And I can't hurt you.
I can't.
If you want something, I wanna give it to you, because you deserve to be happy.
Because even if I hate William, I can't be happy unless you're happy.
- Gabriel - I'm having the protocol prepared.
It'll be here within the hour to administer to William.
I'm so very sorry about your research, and the compromise I'm asking you to make.
I had a choice to make.
I made it and now I gotta live with it.
I hope you can live with yours.
- to Radiology.
Dr.
Fenton to Radiology.
I used to watch cartoons.
I'd get up early on Saturday mornings and sneak into the living room.
I kept the volume low so I wouldn't wake anyone up.
It was the only day my mom and dad got to sleep in.
I forgot about cartoons.
Well, in time, I'm sure there will be lots of things that you'll remember.
He loves me, you know.
But sometimes people confuse other things for love.
Like not wanting to be lonely or afraid or hurt.
We're having a baby together.
I know.
And you're going to love that baby.
But not with George.
Because you don't want your daughter to go through what you went through.
Because you don't want him to do to your daughter what he did to you.
Because that's not love.
What do you want? Just checking up on you.
I thought maybe we could talk.
I wasted three years of my life talking to you.
I'm not wasting any more.
You're unhappy.
I can help you.
I am just so tired of you helping me.
Where has it gotten me? Huh? Look at me.
I'm here alone in a hospital room with a hole in my head.
You don't have to be alone.
You have had a rare experience, Claire.
You got to look through a door to the other side of your soul.
And now you're afraid.
You're afraid that door is closed forever.
But it isn't.
It's there waiting for you.
You just have to find a way to walk through it.
How do you suggest I do that? We can try new things.
Alternative therapies.
And we do it together.
I'm afraid.
I know.
Hey.
- What took you so long? I came as soon as you called.
Where's Dink? Band practice.
He can't hear his cell.
- And Corrine? - San Francisco to visit a sick aunt.
- She left you alone? - My due date's not for three weeks.
She didn't think l - Oh, my God.
That hurts.
- Well, you're definitely in labor.
- Take you to birthing suite.
- Hospital.
- It's not the plan.
- Screw it.
- Maya.
- I'm not waiting here.
I wanna go to the hospital like a normal person, where they have doctors and pain medicine.
So get your keys and let's go now.
Okay.
Laney.
Laney.
Think she'll get over something like that? How could she? I mean, right or wrong, she just lost the only person she loves.
Hey.
Dell.
Wait, hold on.
She wants me to deliver? Okay, how far apart are her contractions? Is that? Is it? Okay, uh, yeah, tell her that we will meet her at the ER.
And, uh And tell her that we love her, Dell.
Ha, ha.
Okay, yeah.
Drive safely.
Bye.
Ha! - So it's, uh, happening.
- Ha, ha! This is happening.
Oh.
- I have to go deliver your grandchild.
- Yes.
Yes, you do.
Ow! Ooh.
We're almost there.
Ow! - Hey.
- Hey.
What's so important? I have macaroni and cheese with sugar on top.
Eggplant Parm, extra spicy, straight from Tana's.
I have pumpkin pie, which is actually incredibly hard to get this time of year.
And I have that sweet sugarcane stuff that we drank in the San Jose airport that we didn't know was alcoholic, but made us incredibly dizzy.
Now.
Talk to me about Charlotte.
You know what? Can we just eat? I saw her leaving with Sheldon.
She was dressed up.
Hmm.
Do you love her? Then go get her.
Now, Cooper.
I mean, go get her now.
Oh.
Oh.
All right.
Okay.
Corinne.
- Naomi will be here soon.
That's good.
Forty-eight-year-old male involved in a head-on collision.
Sustained a deep six-centimeter laceration to the left chest.
Vitals: BP 95/60, pulse 120.
We've got a possible subclavian artery injury.
We could use your help here, Dr.
Bennett.
You're the cardiac surgeon on call? Yeah, I am.
What about Maya? I will be with her the whole time.
You'll be done before she's even close to delivering.
- Okay.
Updates every half hour? - I promise.
All right.
Thank you.
Let's go.
Hey.
What's going on? They're airlifting people from the other car.
I'm fine.
I can walk.
- Hey.
So Pete must be happy.
What? Custody of Lucas.
Oh.
Yeah, yeah, I think so.
I mean, I guess.
So he won, right? Yeah.
He won.
- Sam You coming to bed? Yeah, I, uh I'll be in in a minute.
My God.
We were supposed to just have dinner like normal people.
We ate.
I ate.
Cooper.
Do you think? Do you think we should talk about what this means? - You think it means something? - Do you? You want to just do it again? Okay.
- I thought you had the day off today.
- Uh, yeah, uh Maya's got a history exam tomorrow.
Doing her ultrasound.
- You're so sweet.
- I just got some really good news.
Oh, God.
Oh, no.
- What? - The bitch is back.
The woman who threw the cup of coffee at my head? She's here? She's waiting for me in my office with her husband right now.
Oh, God.
Why they even bother to do marriage counseling again after last year? You know she calls that poor sweet man "the weasel"? Violet, she threw a coffee cup at my head.
I have a scar.
She's got anger issues.
You know, I mean, deep, unresolved anger issues.
Oh.
- Look at you.
- I know.
Crazy, huh? Your mom's on her way up.
You ready? - You were gonna tell me something? - I'll tell you later.
Are you still, uh, not talking to me? Okay.
I had sex with Charlotte.
It was supposed to be dinner, but it became dinner with sex.
I don't know what to do.
I had to do it, Violet.
I couldn't lie on a stand.
Come on, really? I need to talk to you.
Talk to somebody else.
Uh, hello? Dr.
Turner.
It is so good to see you.
Oh.
Heh.
It's good to see you too, Claire.
- Um There you go.
- She's happy.
- Yes, I can see that.
- No, I mean, really happy.
- Irwin thinks I have dementia.
Sweetie, I don't think that.
It's just you're usually not a happy person and you changed, just overnight.
- Something's wrong.
Oh, just say it, Irwin.
Come on, say it.
I was a bitch.
Right, Dr.
Turner? It's okay.
I was a huge bitch, right? Ha, ha.
But I am not anymore.
I'm feeling better.
- And I'm doing charity work.
- That's wonderful.
She gave away all of our money to a church.
- They need it.
- And now she's Well, we're having a lot of sex now.
- You'd think he'd be thrilled.
- I am.
I am.
It's not her.
You know my wife.
Well, Claire, how would you explain this transformation? I can feel him in my soul inside me.
God.
I have found God.
I have been touched by the hand of God.
Stop staring at me like I'm about to keel over.
I'm fine.
I just wish you wouldn't be so stubborn.
You need to be resting.
I'll rest later.
- Hey, guys.
Pete.
William, good to see you.
How you feeling? Oh, let's just say I'm glad to be home.
Uh, if you'll excuse me, I have some work to do in my office.
Okay.
The flight from Switzerland really took a lot out of him.
Is there anything I can do? Uh, I'm consulting with some ALS specialists, see if there's something else that we can try.
He has to keep fighting.
I can't let him give up.
Not now.
Well, that's what you want.
What about what he wants? I think he's come back to die.
Nurse to third floor cath lab.
Nurse to third floor cath lab.
Thank you.
Hello.
I'm Dr.
Montgomery.
Hi, I'm George Walters, this is my daughter, Kim.
Hi, Kim.
The ER doctor says you're having a lot of back pain? It started a few days ago.
It says here you're at 30 weeks.
You haven't had any prenatal care? We live on a farm.
It's difficult for us to get into the city.
Okay.
Uh, let's take a look here.
Is my baby okay? She's the appropriate size for her dates.
It's a she? - It's a girl? - Oh, yes, I'm Sorry, l I'd appreciate it if you can make this quick as possible.
I'd like to take my daughter home.
Okay.
- Weird how? - I don't know.
Just weird.
You'll see.
Hi, I'm Dr.
Bennett.
Cardiothoracic specialist.
I'd like to speak with you about your scans.
If you'd like, your father can wait in the lounge.
I'm fine here.
Okay.
Well, what you have is an aortic aneurysm.
It's an abnormal widening of the large artery in your abdomen.
We're going to need to do surgery.
We're hoping to avoid it until the baby's further along.
But we will need to keep you here under observation.
- How long? I don't know.
Uh, we've ordered some repeat ultrasounds and we're going to need to review your family medical history.
Mother, father, siblings.
My mother's dead.
- Why do you need all that? - It's standard.
The medical history helps point us in the right direction when we evaluate.
You and I can talk further while your daughter's undergoing the tests.
No.
I'm going with her.
Didn't your mother teach you it's not polite to stare? Gabriel.
I know you're upset with the way we left things.
But William needed me.
Hey, I get it.
Any woman in your position would've made the same choice.
In this corner, angry, sarcastic guy in a wheelchair who, obviously a dynamo in bed, can't exactly sweep you off your feet.
And in this corner, you got old moneybags, who if you marry real quick Well, let's just say you'd make for an extremely attractive, not to mention wealthy widow.
I want you to try the ALS protocol on William.
The one that still needs FDA approval? The one that would be completely delegitimized if we use it? Yes.
Will you do it? Wow.
Amazing.
Little Miss Moral Compass is willing to blow off everything she believes in.
Gabriel, I'm asking you to think about it.
Okay? Just think about it.
Hey.
So, uh, based on Kim's repeat scan, I recommend surgery.
Now.
Oh, but the fetus is only 30 weeks.
It's too risky.
Yeah, well, blowing the aneurysm could be riskier.
Kim tested positive for the gene associated with Fibrillin? That explains the aneurysm.
But it's an autosomal dominant disease.
I mean, it's inherited from the father.
Is she adopted? Well, George never mentioned it in his family history.
He doesn't have the disease.
He's not her father.
He can't be.
Then who is he? She says she feels God and it changed her.
- Just like that? She changed? - Just like that.
- People don't change.
- Of course they do.
They modify.
They adjust.
But underneath, we are who we are.
That's not true.
I know it's not true.
My entire career is based on helping people become who they can be.
People do change.
I've seen it.
People just get better at covering up their flaws.
- There.
What is that? That is Claire's God.
Don't you guys have your own cereal downstairs? Naomi doesn't let us to buy the kind with marshmallows in it.
Hey, how do you get someone to talk to you that won't talk to you? - Charlotte? - Uh, no, not this time, actually.
We're doing okay.
It's Violet.
She's being, I don't know, mean to me.
She's being mean to me.
She's never mean to me.
And I said I was sorry.
Well, just, uh, keep on keeping on.
Is that the best you can do? Because I can get that from a bumper sticker.
She's hurt, Cooper.
You can't expect her to come around as soon as you apologize to her.
Because even if she understands your explanation intellectually, she, uh, still has to accept it emotionally.
And that takes time.
- So keep on keeping on? - Exactly.
Okay.
Hey, uh, you want to hear something pretty cool? Something I haven't told anybody else? I got into UCLA medical school.
- Oh, my God! - Oh, okay.
That's fantastic.
Congratulations.
I have no idea how I'd pay for it, but Hey.
Oh, I'm sorry I'm late.
- Hope I didn't miss the fun.
- No, just getting started.
- Hey, Mom.
Hey.
Thanks for having me here.
- Wow, three weeks to go.
- Yeah.
Everything looks great.
- The heart rate is strong.
Yeah.
Yeah? Oh, I remember my last month with you.
I was so nervous.
Kept looking up every possible obstetric complication in the book.
I was driving your dad crazy.
Ha, ha.
It's It can be a little scary, you know? - So do you have any questions? - I'm fine.
- You have a plan? I've got it all worked out.
Totally natural birth.
Dell is doing the delivery here.
I do my squatting exercises in the morning, my relaxation techniques in the afternoon.
That's so I won't need an epidural.
Uh, my bag is packed, and Dink made a mix CD for my birthing music.
I'm so ready.
Ha, ha.
Wow.
Wow, you've just You've thought of everything.
You don't have to worry about me, Mom.
You not being around actually helped.
It gave me a chance to grow up, figure things out on my own.
Thanks for doing the consult, Sheldon.
Ordinarily I'd ask Violet, but things have been weird since the trial.
Sheldon? I know, stopping elevators is your thing, but today, l Ha, ha.
I need to change things up.
Wait.
You need help? - From me? - Well.
Sheldon, you sent me a bill last time.
When I asked for elevator advice, you charged me.
Well, I'm gonna send you a bill and I'm expensive.
I have many board certifications.
Only eight people in the world do what I do.
I can give you a pap smear, operate on your uterus and perform surgery on your baby before and after he's born.
Are you gonna listen to me or not? All right, spill it.
It's about Charlotte.
I've been giving her advice on how to get back together with Cooper, but the thing is I think about her, Addison.
When she's not around, I think about the way she smiles, the way she looks at me.
My God, I spend half my day coming up with lame reasons to go up and visit her.
Do you know how many times I've borrowed stamps from her? I don't even use stamps.
I pay my bills electronically.
Listen to me, Sheldon.
You want her, go get her.
You have to try.
If not, you're gonna spend the rest of your life kicking yourself and wondering why you didn't man up and go for it.
Thank you.
Do you have the test results? Can we go home now? Actually, the results were inconclusive.
We're gonna need her for one more test.
- You can stay here.
- Why? I wanna be with her.
We need her for radiology.
Some x-rays.
You're not allowed in the room.
It's all right, she'll be right back.
I'll be waiting for you here, Kim.
Appreciate it.
God is in a brain tumor? Ha, ha.
I'm sorry, that sounds ridiculous.
It's actually a well-known phenomenon.
The temporal lobe contains the emotional engine of our brains.
It's the center of all of our feelings.
So anything, uh, rage, lust, anger, passion, bliss, anything that stimulates that part of the brain can elicit those feelings.
But they're not real.
They're just misdirected neural impulses.
They're random short circuits.
You're wrong.
They are real.
I can feel it.
It's happiness.
I've never felt it before.
It's like I had this giant weight on my shoulders and now the weight is lifted.
It doesn't just happen.
That's not just chemical reactions in my brain.
And you know what? If it takes a magic bullet in my head to do God's work, then that's his plan.
It's a slow growing tumor.
With surgery, your chance of recovery is excellent.
But without it Wait, you're saying this tumor's gonna kill my wife? Without the surgery, you will die.
I spent three years in intensive therapy with Dr.
Turner and I didn't have a happy bone in my body.
Now I've found God.
He's in me.
If dying is God's plan, then so be it.
- I thought we were going to Radiology.
- Oh, we are.
I just wanted you to consult with one more doctor, Kim, before we do your test.
Hi, Kim.
I'm Dr.
Wallace.
Nothing? Nothing? Did you check with NIH? Yeah, I know.
I knew it was a long shot.
Thank you for trying, Dr.
Klein.
Okay.
What do I have to do, Gabriel? Do I have to beg? Okay, I will beg.
What you're asking is unethical and illegal.
The protocol is not approved.
If I give it to William, it will never be.
And I'm still asking.
No.
If you don't help him, he is going to die.
Well, then I guess he's going to die.
She's rational and oriented.
There's no evidence of delusional thinking.
She's entirely capable of making decisions about her own treatments, so She can't decide.
She thinks she has a personal pipeline to God.
This woman was miserable her entire life until now.
And you are telling her to accept a treatment that would bring all that pain back.
To just live with it.
I may not agree with her decision, but I certainly understand her refusal to let you do that to her.
Why would anyone choose to feel worse? Because without the surgery, she will die.
And Claire understands that.
She believes it's part of God's plan.
If God is not gonna do his job, I guess I'll have to do it for him.
So you don't remember your mother at all? No.
Well, how old were you when she died? I'm not sure.
You keep looking at the door.
Are you afraid your father's gonna come in? Or hoping he'll come in? Do you have plans for your future? Do you wanna go to college or? My dad doesn't think I need it.
The two of you, you're very close.
We have a special relationship.
How so? When's my dad coming back? Soon.
Kim, this abnormality you have, it's a condition you inherit from a father.
Only from a father.
And George doesn't have it.
My dad says doctors don't know what they're talking about half the time.
Well, your father, he seems to know everything.
Of course he does.
He's my dad.
Her answers felt rehearsed, you know, and planned.
And she's been extremely isolated.
She doesn't watch TV or use the Internet.
She can't even remember the last time she left the farm.
- I think we should call the police.
- The police? I'm not 100 percent sure, but I think we may be witnessing a kidnapped girl and her abductor.
What? We're leaving.
Kim, get your stuff, we're going home.
Sheldon, call security.
George, no.
No, this is my family, and we are leaving.
George.
- No.
- George, you're not going anywhere.
- What are you doing? Back in bed.
- Let him go.
- Kim.
I need security, 301 East.
- You're hurting my father.
- I love you.
You're going to hurt him.
- We're family.
- You have to get back into bed.
Sam.
Sam, a little help here.
- She's unconscious.
Okay.
She's bottoming out.
Call the OR.
We got a triple-A who's bleeding out.
Okay.
Are we gonna talk about this? I guess we're not gonna talk about this.
- There's gotta be something else.
- Naomi, we've been through this.
Whatever time I have left, I wanna spend it with you.
- L - Enjoying each other.
Not chasing some impossible cure.
There's nothing left to do.
You can't leave.
What? I've made my decision.
Irwin and I are going home.
- But you - Please, don't try to convince me.
I'm happy.
I'm finally happy and I don't wanna go back.
- Look, I understand how you feel.
- No, you couldn't possibly.
My father was murdered.
My brother and I were there when it happened.
I was just a kid at the time.
Yeah.
But the bottom fell out, of my whole world.
I was There was a dark place and I was in it.
Until one day, this friend gave me a pill and I took it and all of a sudden I felt okay.
Better than okay.
I felt good.
And so I kept taking them and I felt great.
And when people would try to get me to stop and tell me that it wasn't real, I would just laugh.
Because it was real.
How I felt, it was better.
It was better than being miserable.
But it almost killed me.
I was dead for three minutes.
And let me tell you, when you are lying on a stretcher, gasping for what you think are your last breaths you don't think that dying happy is better than living sad.
Dying sucks.
It hurts in a way that I can't describe to you.
And, no, I don't believe that people can change.
I don't believe that you'll change.
But maybe I'm wrong.
And, hell, maybe you will wake up from that surgery and you will be happy.
But if you're dead, if you are rotting in the ground from some tumor that ate your brain, you don't get a chance to find that out.
And one more thing and then I will go, I'm I'm not a religious person.
I don't believe in God.
But if I did, I wouldn't believe in a God that wanted you to die the horrible, painful death that you will experience from a giant tumor that will take away your ability to speak and see and go to the bathroom and breathe on your own.
That can't be God.
- Okay.
- Wait, wait.
Claire.
No, no, it's too dangerous.
And God is telling you.
See, maybe she's right.
Maybe this is what God wants, all right? I'll do it.
I'll do the surgery.
You're losing her, Sam.
- All right.
Hang another four units on the infuser.
Suction.
She's bleeding out.
Cross-clamp the aorta.
Too much blood in the field.
I can't see.
Give me your hand.
Give me your hand.
Okay, you feel that? Right there, you feel it? No.
All right, move closer.
Okay, now push down.
Right there.
Don't stop.
Okay, more suction.
All right.
Two centimeters to the left.
Got it.
There we go.
DeBakey clamp.
Pressure's coming up.
Good.
Okay.
So Claire's in Pre-Op.
She said I'd find you here.
And you know Dr.
Shepherd is an excellent surgeon.
- It'll be okay.
- No, it won't.
I mean, you were there.
You were in therapy with us.
Yeah, I know.
It was hell living with her.
You know, suddenly, I find the woman I've always dreamed of and then in a few hours, she might be gone.
I'm not sure I have it in me to love the old Claire anymore.
See, I love her the way she is now, with that damn tumor in her head.
I don't know what's gonna happen after the surgery.
But we've seen Claire for who she can be.
And I do believe the joy she feels now comes from a deeper place than a lesion in her head.
Somewhere inside of her, that part must exist.
Do you really believe that? You may be smart and insightful and some kind of super shrink, I know Cooper, I shouldn't have listened.
- Charlotte.
- He is who he is.
He's funny, neurotic in that way my mama warned me wouldn't be cute after a while, a freak between the sheets.
But he's not any more than that and he isn't gonna be.
Well, I will be more to you.
I will be.
You're right, you should expect more.
And from the man in your life, you should expect everything.
Trust and emotional support and intellectual stimulation.
And you should expect that he'll be there for you, unconditionally, no matter what you do, no matter what life brings you.
And sex too.
Great sex.
Plus a great recipe for haggis.
I mean, you should get everything.
And I'll give you everything.
The whole package, right down to the picket fence.
I'll give it to you.
Sheldon Wallace.
I'm throwing my hat in the ring.
Have dinner with me.
Tonight.
You were great.
I was great.
Yeah, we did good.
Good? We saved two lives today.
Two for the price of one.
I mean, how often do you get to say that? I mean, can you imagine dropping that at a dinner party? - Ha, ha.
- "We saved two lives today.
" I mean, who's gonna top that? - Ha, ha.
- Yeah.
We're always good together.
When it's just us, we're great together.
But we live in the real world and it's taken me a while, but I'm okay with it.
We'll be friends.
We'll be neighbors.
But we can never be more than that.
Naomi told me that you're refusing to give William your ALS protocol.
Protecting my research.
One day, when this drug is approved by the FDA and saving thousands of lives, Naomi will realize it was more important than the life of just one man.
Really? That's your reason? Because if it is, that's good.
If you're saying no because you wanna get Naomi? Mind your own business.
Does she know that you're in love with her? - Oh, screw you.
- You're pathetic.
Coming from the guy who dragged Violet through a trial? I didn't drag Violet, she dragged me.
Turned her friends against her and keeping her away from her child.
You're gonna call me pathetic? Go on, hit me.
You think I can't take a punch to the face? - You're not worth it.
- And you know what? I am so sick of being the guy in the chair.
The guy in the chair never gets the girl.
And this time, I am getting the girl.
So screw the chair.
Come on, hit me.
Who's the bigger man now, Pete? Come on, hit me.
You're letting William die so you can have Naomi.
The chair is not what makes you the smaller man.
- Get out.
- Not until you listen.
Okay, then I'll get out.
Okay, when you sent Sam into my office the first weeks that we worked here to fake fire me for looking at adult websites on my computer, I forgave you.
Oh, Cooper, you can't When you told Annie Mersel, who I loved, that I wasn't the marrying kind because you couldn't picture us together in 20 years, I forgave you.
Cooper.
Puking in my new car, in my bed, or using the 1910 silver dollar my grandfather gave me for my bar mitzvah to pay the pizza guy.
But that's what friends do.
They screw up and sometimes they hurt each other, and you forgive them.
That's what friendship is.
That's what love is.
I'm going to leave you now.
But I leave you with this.
You once told a woman I had just started dating that I have a very small nightstick.
Which was unforgivable, and also a lie.
And I let it slide.
What? What happened? Your aneurysm ruptured, but we were able to repair it.
- My baby? - She's doing great.
Kim, we spoke with the FBI.
They're trying to track down your biological parents.
- George? He can't hurt you.
We have a police officer stationed at the door.
You are safe here.
No.
You don't understand.
I need to see him.
I love him.
The procedure went well.
I'll probably send Claire home in a few days.
- And the rest? - We'll see.
Where are they? Damn doctors.
I am tired of waiting.
I'm sorry.
I can't.
- Claire.
You lied to me, you bitch.
You pushed me to do this.
Now I have nothing.
Nothing.
You should have let me die happy.
He kidnapped her, assaulted her, and kept her away from her real family, and she still wants to see him? The police said George held her captive for 15 years.
He's been the only person in her life.
Putting clothes on her back and feeding her and making all the decisions in her life.
To her, he is her real family.
It's the only love she knows.
It's just too perverse to comprehend.
Well, all Kim sees is that he took care of her.
Protected her.
Have they located her family? Her parents? Maybe when she sees them No, she's been totally cut off from the world.
And over time, that old love she knew became vague faded memories.
And eventually, in order to survive, his beliefs become her beliefs and his reality becomes her reality.
Is there something you want? I wanna ask you to forgive me.
I mean, not now.
No, I mean, I don't expect you to forgive me right now.
But I ran out on you when I should have leaned in.
I gave you my baby and I ran.
And part of it's not my fault, part of it's what happened to me, but there's this other piece.
And you loved me.
You loved me.
And I should have leaned into that.
I should have let you take care of me, but I didn't because Because I don't know how.
You know, I'm that person.
I'm a shrink, I take care of other people, but And I should have let you take care of me but I didn't.
So when I asked you to share Lucas with me, of course you said no.
I shouldn't have been hurt, I shouldn't have taken you to court.
I lost my happiness and I didn't ask for help.
I didn't lean in.
So how could I possibly expect you to lean into me? To trust me? To believe in me? And so I'm sorry.
And I understand.
You did what you thought was right.
But I hope that someday, you can forgive me.
We could start with overnight visits.
For Lucas.
Until he gets used to it.
Until I get used to it.
If that's okay? I wish I said no to you for the right reasons.
Instead, I said no for the wrong ones.
I'm in love with you.
And even if I work the poor crippled guy angle, I can't compete with a dying man so I said no.
So that he would just die already and be out of the picture.
But the thing is, I'm in love with you, and William dying would hurt you.
And I can't hurt you.
I can't.
If you want something, I wanna give it to you, because you deserve to be happy.
Because even if I hate William, I can't be happy unless you're happy.
- Gabriel - I'm having the protocol prepared.
It'll be here within the hour to administer to William.
I'm so very sorry about your research, and the compromise I'm asking you to make.
I had a choice to make.
I made it and now I gotta live with it.
I hope you can live with yours.
- to Radiology.
Dr.
Fenton to Radiology.
I used to watch cartoons.
I'd get up early on Saturday mornings and sneak into the living room.
I kept the volume low so I wouldn't wake anyone up.
It was the only day my mom and dad got to sleep in.
I forgot about cartoons.
Well, in time, I'm sure there will be lots of things that you'll remember.
He loves me, you know.
But sometimes people confuse other things for love.
Like not wanting to be lonely or afraid or hurt.
We're having a baby together.
I know.
And you're going to love that baby.
But not with George.
Because you don't want your daughter to go through what you went through.
Because you don't want him to do to your daughter what he did to you.
Because that's not love.
What do you want? Just checking up on you.
I thought maybe we could talk.
I wasted three years of my life talking to you.
I'm not wasting any more.
You're unhappy.
I can help you.
I am just so tired of you helping me.
Where has it gotten me? Huh? Look at me.
I'm here alone in a hospital room with a hole in my head.
You don't have to be alone.
You have had a rare experience, Claire.
You got to look through a door to the other side of your soul.
And now you're afraid.
You're afraid that door is closed forever.
But it isn't.
It's there waiting for you.
You just have to find a way to walk through it.
How do you suggest I do that? We can try new things.
Alternative therapies.
And we do it together.
I'm afraid.
I know.
Hey.
- What took you so long? I came as soon as you called.
Where's Dink? Band practice.
He can't hear his cell.
- And Corrine? - San Francisco to visit a sick aunt.
- She left you alone? - My due date's not for three weeks.
She didn't think l - Oh, my God.
That hurts.
- Well, you're definitely in labor.
- Take you to birthing suite.
- Hospital.
- It's not the plan.
- Screw it.
- Maya.
- I'm not waiting here.
I wanna go to the hospital like a normal person, where they have doctors and pain medicine.
So get your keys and let's go now.
Okay.
Laney.
Laney.
Think she'll get over something like that? How could she? I mean, right or wrong, she just lost the only person she loves.
Hey.
Dell.
Wait, hold on.
She wants me to deliver? Okay, how far apart are her contractions? Is that? Is it? Okay, uh, yeah, tell her that we will meet her at the ER.
And, uh And tell her that we love her, Dell.
Ha, ha.
Okay, yeah.
Drive safely.
Bye.
Ha! - So it's, uh, happening.
- Ha, ha! This is happening.
Oh.
- I have to go deliver your grandchild.
- Yes.
Yes, you do.
Ow! Ooh.
We're almost there.
Ow! - Hey.
- Hey.
What's so important? I have macaroni and cheese with sugar on top.
Eggplant Parm, extra spicy, straight from Tana's.
I have pumpkin pie, which is actually incredibly hard to get this time of year.
And I have that sweet sugarcane stuff that we drank in the San Jose airport that we didn't know was alcoholic, but made us incredibly dizzy.
Now.
Talk to me about Charlotte.
You know what? Can we just eat? I saw her leaving with Sheldon.
She was dressed up.
Hmm.
Do you love her? Then go get her.
Now, Cooper.
I mean, go get her now.
Oh.
Oh.
All right.
Okay.
Corinne.
- Naomi will be here soon.
That's good.
Forty-eight-year-old male involved in a head-on collision.
Sustained a deep six-centimeter laceration to the left chest.
Vitals: BP 95/60, pulse 120.
We've got a possible subclavian artery injury.
We could use your help here, Dr.
Bennett.
You're the cardiac surgeon on call? Yeah, I am.
What about Maya? I will be with her the whole time.
You'll be done before she's even close to delivering.
- Okay.
Updates every half hour? - I promise.
All right.
Thank you.
Let's go.
Hey.
What's going on? They're airlifting people from the other car.
I'm fine.
I can walk.