Chicago Med (2015) s08e21 Episode Script

Might Feel Like It's Time for a Change

1
I'm testing to see if I can
give you my kidney.
You went to Sean against my wishes.
It felt like Sean needed to know
how bad you're actually doing.
Hannah's smart, kind, and super cute.
You're still in recovery.
So is Hannah, for that matter.
[CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKING]
I have a bad feeling about the direction
that Jack is taking us.
Since we stopped taking
walk-ins without insurance,
numbers are down.
Heard rumors of you
acting like a cowboy.
That's not what happened today.
Who you trying to convince
with that? Me or you?
I know the tech. I promise you.
It won't let you down.
2.0, guide me to the next lesion.
Calculating. Calculating.
- [MONITOR FLATLINING]
- Richard, can you hear me?
Sometimes, patients don't survive.
But it's the burden we bear.
He's selling seats on a rocket ship,
making up rules only
his rich pals can play by.
It's not right.
Yeah.
So how was your date last night?
God, I wouldn't consider
a guy talking at me
- for 90 minutes straight a date.
- Oh.
I swear, Hannah, he didn't
ask me a single question
- about myself.
- Oh, that sounds awful.
You met him on the apps?
Yeah, but I think after last night,
I'm just gonna delete them all.
No, don't lose hope.
Dean!
Over here.
Cuevas. You bellowed?
- Here it is.
- What is this?
It's a bomb.
It's a renal-friendly snack bar.
Yeah? Does it taste like cardboard?
I'm happy to report that it does not.
I even tried it myself.
Well, you enjoy those
disgusting green smoothies,
so your taste is suspect.
I'll see both of you in the ED.
[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]

So what about your dating life?
- Mm.
- It's been a while
since you've dated, right?
Not since Will?
I mean, who's counting? But yeah.
Actually
wow, I didn't realize
it's been that long.
Well, maybe it's time
to put yourself out there.

[CHUCKLES]
Hi.
Morning.
You look nice.
Thanks.
Big media blitz today with Jack.
This for the IPO launch tomorrow?
2.0's going public, right?
Correct.
And Jack will go from
billionaire to gazillionaire.
More importantly,
it'll expand 2.0's global reach.
Look, I know you're not
Jack's biggest fan, but
I don't like the direction
he's taking Med in.
It's becoming a place
I don't recognize anymore.
Well, maybe that's not such a bad thing.
Jack's tasked me with assessing
the state of the hospital,
and I found numerous examples
of inefficiency.
How are we inefficient, exactly?
Treating patients or turning a profit?
I know you're deeply invested in Med
and that makes it difficult
for you to see the flaws.
I guess I could say
the same for you, Grace.
Jack was your mentor.
You got a lot of respect for the guy.
I know that.
But he's only out for himself.
That's not true.
I guess we're gonna have to
agree to disagree on this one.

Self-portrait?
[CHUCKLES]
No.
My friend Owen drew it for me.
[CLEARS THROAT]
Owen? Natalie Manning's son?
Hang out at the nurses' station,
hear some things.
I bet.
Look, Natalie and I
keep in touch, but
You really don't owe me any explanation.
It's not like we're
anything.
Are we?
Grace, I'm not sure this is gonna work.
Good luck today.
Mrs. Abrams. I am Dr. Asher.
Please, call me Michelle.
I am so sorry my husband
roped you into this.
Oh, I don't mind at all.
I'm happy to help.
It's just my doctor couldn't get me in
- until next week and
- Mm-hmm.
Honey.
Please tell me you did not
just leave surgery.
No. Our part was over,
so I had an underling close.
Dr. Asher, thanks again for doing this.
Yeah.
As if you gave her a choice.
Next time a family member
needs a craniotomy,
I'm your man.
Oh, well, I will hold you to that.
So, Michelle, what's going on?
I'm 99% sure I have a UTI.
I had one about a year ago,
and I'm experiencing the same symptoms
like abdominal pain,
pelvic pressure, and frequent urination.
OK, well, let's get you in a gown.
Excuse me.
We will start by taking a urine sample.
- OK?
- Sounds good.
OK.
Morning, Will.
I thought you were off today.
Jack roped me into speaking
at the IPO press conference.
Tried to get out of it,
but he was conveniently
unavailable to take my calls.
Makes sense he wants you there.
You are the face of the machine.
Ha.
Yeah, well, I'm not exactly
feeling camera ready.
Haven't been sleeping much.
Yeah? What's going on?
I can't stop thinking
about Richard Evans.
I feel you. Been weighing on me too.
Keep trying to piece together
what went wrong.
What do you mean? CT showed
he suffered a stroke.
His echo revealed
a ventricular septal defect.
That's true.
So he must have thrown a clot,
traveled to his brain
through the septal defect.
Deep vein clots are one of
the most common surgical
complications, aren't they?
Yes, they are.
But in those cases, where would
you expect the clot to originate?
His pelvis or his legs.
Richard's CT showed
the clot was in his liver.
Wait, how did he get
a clot in his liver?
That's what I can't seem to figure out.
[SOFT TENSE MUSIC]
What, are you gonna do an autopsy?
No, his wife didn't want it.
But 2.0 records a massive amount
of intraoperative data,
so I'm gonna have
I'm gonna have Grace pull
his files on Richard's surgery,
see if I can find some answers there.
Keep me posted.
Yeah. Will do.

What's up?
One second. [KEYBOARD CLACKING]
[COMPUTER BUZZES]
Grace, talk to me.
The data from Richard Evans'
surgery, it's missing.
What do you mean missing?
It's not on the server.
I don't know where it could be.
There must be a backup.
I tried the backup server.
It's not there either.
Has this happened before?
Data just disappearing?
No. Never.

Wow.
Somebody looked pretty happy
for having just
gotten off the night shift.
I get the appraisal back
on my new home today.
If it appraises for what I expect,
I remove my final contingency.
- Wow. Big day.
- Yeah.
So you've given notice
to your landlord and everything?
Oh, yes. I think
he's more excited than me.
Day after I move out,
he has a contractor coming in
to start renovations.
Anything I can do to help with the move?
I will be packing all day and night.
Company would be nice
when you get off work.
I can do you one better.
Me and wine, plus pizza.
[GASPS]
You know the way to my heart.
- I do, don't I?
- Yeah.
See you later.
All right. Let's get you guys home.
Let's go, guys. [CHUCKLES]
OK, and you'll wanna change
the bandage every day
and apply this ointment at night.
Just generally overall stay off
the foot as much as possible.
I'll try.
Now Penny, if the wound
turns red or develops pus
or you start running a fever,
I want you to come back.
Just say you're having
chest pain so you don't have
any trouble checking in
without insurance.
Right. Got it.
I really appreciate your help.
Because of my immigration status,
I'm careful about where I give my name,
and I always come to Med
'cause I know it's safe.
It still is.
We just got some new policies
to contend with.
Well, thanks again.
Come on, boys. Let's go.
Bye, guys.
[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]
How long do you think you'll
be able to get away with this?
With what?
Another patient
complaining of chest pain?
It's the only way to get
around Dayton's new policy.
I'm not mocking you.
I'm applauding your creativity.
I'm just as fed up as you are.
But unfortunately,
it's not a long-term solution.
I know.
Yeah.

Dr. Asher.
So, Michelle,
I got your lab results back,
and it turns out you do not have a UTI.
You're kidding.
I thought for sure.
Well, sometimes symptoms of a UTI
can mimic those of pregnancy.
What? Are are you saying
Yes.
Michelle, you are pregnant.
No. No. That
[CLEARS THROAT] That's a mistake.
I I had a vasectomy seven years ago.
Oh, well, we can absolutely
run a beta to confirm.
I was also about to do an ultrasound
and a pelvic exam as well.
Well, there's just
There's no way this is possible.
Well, recanalization can
happen after a vasectomy.
Right. Not seven years later.
If it's gonna happen,
it usually happens in year one.
Sam.
Stop debating whether it's possible
and let's just get the ultrasound
so we can confirm I'm actually pregnant.
Right, right, right. Yeah.
Yeah. OK.
Do you mind lifting your gown a little?
Great.
[SOFT MUSIC]
So this will feel a little cold.
- You ready?
- Mm-hmm.

Oh, wow.
Do you wanna hear the heartbeat?
Yeah.

[DEVICE BEEPS]
[HEARTBEAT THUMPING]
[CHUCKLES]
I'm gonna sue my urologist.
Told me he never had a vasectomy fail.
Seriously?
That's all you have to say?
[SOFT TENSE MUSIC]
I am going to give you guys a minute.
Michelle, I will be back
for your pelvic exam in a bit.
Yeah.

Dr. Charles?
Dr. Nellie Cuevas. What's up?
David Sullivan's back.
Really?
I was just talking to his mom,
like, last week.
She said that he's doing really well
on his ECT maintenance regimen.
They might have even just
lowered his risperidone.
I mean, how does he seem?
I haven't spoken to him.
I thought it would be better
if you did the intake.
Why is that?
Well, the last few times
he's been in the ED,
my presence has only agitated him
and tightened his paranoia.
Just for the record,
that's probably got a lot less
to do with you
than the paranoid delusions
he was experiencing.
I just don't wanna risk upsetting him
right off the bat,
but he looks calm right now.
So if you wouldn't mind?
- Give me two minutes.
- Ok, thanks.
Oh, good.
Dr. Charles, I was hoping
you'd be here today.
So your mom said you decided
on U of Illinois?
Dude, that's a great school.
Congratulations.
Thanks.
But I'm not sure it's gonna work out
That I'll be able to go.
How come?
Dr. Charles, you can't
tell my parents this.
OK. They don't know you're here?
I just didn't want them to worry.
All right.
But I've been hearing voices again.
OK. Well, what are they saying?
That a diploma doesn't matter
if I'm still crazy.
You know, that I should stay
in my room all the time.
That if I go places,
I'll just embarrass myself.
Places like what? What kind of places?
College.
Graduation.
Prom this weekend.
You're going to prom? That's fantastic.
Yeah.
With this girl Amber and her friends.
But I have to back out.
Because of the voices?
Yeah. They're saying it's gonna be
the worst night of my life,
that I'm gonna make a fool of myself,
and Amber won't even wanna
talk to me when it's all over.
Huh.
Buddy, can I ask you,
what exactly do these voices sound like?
Can you get specific for me?
What what do you mean?
Well, in the past,
you've often described
the voices as loud,
aggressive, abrasive
Like, scary, even.
Do these voices
Do they sound like that?
No.
No, they don't really have
a sound, but they're there.
I know they're there.
Huh.
Listen, pull up my schedule.
Cancel the 4 o'clock today.
Sharon, you're going
the wrong direction.
Good morning, Jack.
Yeah, the IPO conference
is in the amphitheater.
I'm aware.
Did you forget
you're making a statement?
I did not, but after
giving it more thought,
I decided that it would be inappropriate
for me to speak on behalf
of the hospital.
And why is that?
Well, because 2.0
hitting the stock exchange
benefits Dayton Corporation
and not Chicago Med.
Well, 2.0 put Med on the map.
Made it a destination hospital.
Well, I'm of a different opinion,
and the bottom line, Jack
Hocking your wares
is not in my job description.
[SOFT TENSE MUSIC]
Hey, Grace.
Any luck getting the data back?
Not yet. I'm working on it.
[CLEARS THROAT]

[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
Got a bit of a surprise plan,
so just roll with it
and we'll touch base later. OK?
- Jack
- Hi, everyone.
So, um,
I'm gonna keep this short and sweet
because I'm gonna be asking all of you,
well, to come back in about 24 hours.
Tomorrow, we are gonna be
inviting the general public
to invest in the future of OR 2.0,
and I want them to see exactly
what they're investing in.
So I am very excited
to announce that tomorrow
we will be live streaming
a surgery on the 2.0
for the entire world to watch.
- Who's the patient?
- That's a great question.
I'm gonna put my life in its hands
and in the very capable hands
of Dr. Marcel here,
who I'm sure you're all quite
familiar with at this point.
So let's open this up to some questions.
[REPORTERS CHATTERING]
What the hell was that?
Oh, listen, I'm [CHUCKLES]
I'm sorry I didn't give you
more of a heads up.
Had this idea last night.
I just had to go with it.
What surgery am I performing
on you anyway?
It's nothing.
It's a redo ventral hernia repair,
something I've been meaning
to do for a while.
Total softball surgery.
This way, you can focus
on highlighting
the bells and whistles of 2.0.
Yeah, well, speaking of 2.0,
we got a problem.
What do you mean?
It deleted a surgery's worth of data.
What surgery?
A patient by the name of Richard Evans.
Right.
Yeah, the gentleman with
the pancreatic cancer
spread to his liver, right?
Yeah. How'd you know that?
It's 2.0's first recorded fatality.
Of course I know. Dr. Song briefed me.
Yeah, well, the data's gone.
I'm trying to figure out
what caused Mr. Evans' death.
Look, his liver was riddled with
lesions. He was a ticking time bomb.
Never gonna survive long term.
Yes, but I was trying
to buy him more time
Just leave it alone, Crockett.
What does that mean?
Nothing.
Nothing, look, it's
Let it go, all right?
- It's a fool's errand.
- Where's the data, Jack?
[TENSE MUSIC]
Jack?
I'm trying to protect you here, man.
What do you mean protect me?
You made a mistake.

Hey, there.
Did Sam have to go back upstairs?
No. He's taking a walk.
Figured we could both use a breather.
- Yeah.
- Mm-hmm.
All right, well, let's take
a quick look inside, OK?
You're gonna feel some pressure, but
it won't last long, I promise. OK?
- All right. You ready?
- Mm-hmm.
No unusual discharge.
Everything's looking good.
Almost to the cervix.
Dr. Asher?
Is everything OK?
So, Michelle,
what I'm seeing is what we
call cervical insufficiency.
In other words, your cervix
is starting to open prematurely.
Am I gonna lose the baby?
In order to prevent a miscarriage,
I'd recommend a cerclage.
It's a minimally invasive procedure
where we stitch the cervix closed.
It takes about an hour.
[EXHALES]
How soon can I have the operation?
I would like to do it today,
if that's OK with you.
When the cervix starts opening,
the condition can progress
pretty quickly.
Yes.
- Yes. Absolutely.
- OK.
- Can you check if an OR's open?
- Of course.
Thank you. All right.
Ah.
Hey. Mark, you're glowing.
Listen, I really should
talk to Sean first.
That's the protocol.
But I called and got his voicemail.
Yeah. Well, he's working today.
What's going on?
Just got all of his test results back.
Uh-huh?
He's a donor match for you, Dean.
Really?
Wow.
Well, that's
- Fantastic?
- Hey. [CHUCKLES]
I already checked with transplant.
They think we can get you and Sean
in for surgery next month,
maybe even earlier.
So let the powers that be
know that you're
gonna need some time off.
- Will do.
- Congrats.
- [CHUCKLES]
- Happy for you, my friend.
Hey, thanks. Thanks.
[SOFT MUSIC]

[SIGHS]
Hey. Maggie, you're early.
I thought I thought
we were doing lunch at 1:00.
Yeah, about that. Um, can we rain check?
Of course. Is everything OK in the ED?
Yeah, um,
that recruiter I've been
working with, she called.
I have a job interview.
Oh.
Wow. [CHUCKLES]
That was fast.
And and this is a job you'd want?
Well, I thought I'd at least
hear what they have to say.
It's a new hospital
opening up in Hyde Park.
Yeah. Um, Midwest Advocate.
Yeah, apparently they're
looking for a charge nurse.
I see.
I wouldn't normally schedule
an interview during work hours
Maggie, you don't have to
And I don't want you to think that
I don't. I don't.
[CHUCKLES]
Good luck.
Yeah. Thanks.

Learn what you need to learn
about this and please move on.
I haven't lost any confidence
in your surgical skill.
I still want you
as my surgeon tomorrow
[NUMBER PAD BEEPING]
[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]
[SIGHS]
And as a key partner in 2.0's future.

Don't blow up your career over this.
We can still do a lot
of great work together.

[MONITOR BEEPING]
What are you doing?
Yeah, that's my wife on the table.
Yeah, I understand,
but you're a neurosurgeon.
I'm sorry to be blunt,
but you have nothing to offer
when it comes to performing a cerclage.
You expect me to sit
in the waiting room?
[SIGHS]
Fine.
You can stay, but no backseat driving.
I mean it.
Understood.
Unlike your colleagues in the ED,
I can follow directions.
OK.
So I'm not hearing voices?
I think what you're actually
hearing is your own voice
You know, your own thoughts.
We all have this ongoing
inner dialogue, right?
It helps us navigate and
process the world around us.
How do I make it stop?
Well, I think rather than
trying to silence it,
you can learn a whole lot
by actually engaging with it,
you know?
And that's something that I
wanted to explore today, and, uh,
I actually asked Dr. Cuevas
if she would help us with that.
You remember Dr. Cuevas.
- Hi, David.
- Hey.
Anyway, I thought it might
help to kind of actually
talk through the scenarios
that are making you anxious.
You know, for instance,
senior prom, right?
When you think about prom, what
is the first big snag you hit?
Probably the drive there.
Just me and Amber alone.
Dr. Cuevas, you had a really good idea
about how we might go about that.
Uh, yeah. Yeah.
We we can practice the car ride here.
You know, act out what you might say
and what Amber might say back.
Um, actually, David,
how about you sit here?
This can be the driver's seat,
and I will be Amber.
What is it specifically
about the car ride,
about that conversation
that makes you nervous
about what might come up?
Not knowing what to talk about.
What if she asked me why I missed
so much school this year?
Do I have to tell her that
That I'm
Do you have to tell her that
you were diagnosed with schizophrenia?
Is that something you think you might
feel like revealing to her?
Not really.
- No. No, I don't.
- Well, you know what?
That's just fine because it's actually
your private information
and it's your choice.
I would just hope that if it did come up
that it would not be something
that you were,
you know, embarrassed or ashamed about.
Sometimes I am.
Having a disease,
any disease
Lupus, cancer, schizophrenia
That's not something that makes
you less than anyone else.
And, David, I'm also really
confident that over time
you are not gonna feel like
this is something that defines you.
You get to decide
what defines you. Right?
I mean, just like you get to decide
who you wanna share
this information with.
I just
I feel like it's gonna come up,
why I missed so much school.
You know, if you wanna take
the attention off yourself,
you just ask Amber questions.
What kind of questions?
Just about herself.
You know, speaking from experience,
it's actually really nice
when someone shows interest
in learning more about you.
Do you think I could just
spend the whole ride
asking her questions?
I don't think
you're gonna need to, buddy.
I mean, look, I think all
you have to do, I don't know,
just lob in an icebreaker.
Uh, what kind of music
you been listening to?
And that'll start it back and forth
and you're off to the races.
Do you think that'll work?
I do, but I don't know.
You want to try it out?

So, uh [CHUCKLES]
Yeah. What kind of music
do you listen to?
You know, you would actually
be really surprised.
See if you can guess.
Um
East Coast hip-hop?
No, but I will add that to my list.
- Keep guessing.
- West Coast hip-hop?
Yes. Mm-hmm. [LAUGHS]
- I knew it.
- Yeah.
I'm not exactly sure
how long I'll be down.
Probably around eight weeks.
Well, you take as much time as you need.
I'm just so glad your son is a match.
Right.
Well, thank you.
You were hoping he wouldn't be a match.
Here I'm thinking
I'm doing such a good job
- acting excited.
- [LAUGHS]
Even though I agreed to let Sean donate,
a part of me,
a big part of me was hoping,
uh, it wouldn't work out.
Hm. You know, for what it's worth,
you can't always trust cold feet.
You know, that fear when the
theoretical becomes reality
Because more often than not,
it's just trying
to sabotage a good thing.
And this is a good thing, Dean.

Slight change of plans.
Put her in a steep
Trendelenburg position.
Wait, what's wrong?
The amniotic sac membranes
are protruding out
through the cervix.
That wasn't the case when you
examined Michelle earlier.
You said her cervix was shortened
but only slightly dilated.
Yes, at that point it was,
but as I warned Michelle could happen,
her condition has progressed.
I'm going to insert a balloon that
will push the membranes back
into the cervix and then tie it off.
Wait, that's a different procedure
with a much greater risk to Michelle.
If you break her water,
she could become septic.
I'm not going to let that happen.
I've done this a dozen times.
I don't care.
As her husband, I'm her
medical surrogate, right?
Do not even try me right now, Sam.
This is not a surgical decision point
that I would ever consult
the family about.
I am well aware
of Michelle's wishes and
I'm instructing you to stop.
And I am telling you to leave now.
[TENSE MUSIC]

If anything happens to her
The longer Michelle stays
anaesthetized on this table,
the greatest risk to her.
So stop distracting me
and let me finish.

OK.
I need a 30 CC foley and a ring forcep.
Oh, man.
I messed up.
I injured the hepatic vein
going after a nearby lesion.
That's what caused the clot.
Are you sure that's what the data shows?
See for yourself. Clear as day.
It's my fault, Will.
That's why Jack erased it.
He was trying to protect me.
Jack looking out for someone else?
Nah, I don't buy that.
Well, maybe he was
protecting his investment.
Like you said, I'm the face
of the machine, right?
It doesn't look good
when your star surgeon
- makes a fatal error.
- Crockett.
You know anytime you ablate a lesion
there's a risk of injury
to proximal veins.
You can't avoid that.
Mm-hmm.
[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]

Michelle is just fine.
We got the membranes
pushed back into the uterus
without breaking the water.
They'll take her to post-op
in a few minutes
and you should be able
to see her soon after.
And the fetus?
Will Michelle be able to carry to term?
I can't make any promises.
Yeah, yeah. Of course.
The odds are in her favor,
and I'm cautiously optimistic.
Good.
Good, good. Good, good.
Thank you.
[SIGHS]
Um [CLEARS THROAT]
For the record, I do want this baby.
I'll admit that the news surpri
Shocked me.
I'm an empty nester. Um
My daughter, Lucy,
just started graduate school,
and I didn't expect to see diapers again
until I became a grandfather.
I'll bet.
But I love being a father,
and I'm actually quite good at it.
What I'm not so good at historically
is being a good father and
a good partner at the same time.
Trying to parent with my first
wife destroyed our marriage.
You'll be surprised to hear
this, but I can be stubborn.
I've built a great life with Michelle.
I just don't wanna ruin it
by making the same mistakes.

Come here.
So this is just a hunch,
but I'm guessing you lacked
this level of self-awareness
in your first marriage.
My ex-wife would certainly
agree with that assessment.
Look, you're not the
same person anymore, Sam.
And the fact that you can
honestly admit your shortcomings
is a pretty good sign
that you won't repeat them.
Been cruising the Hallmark
aisle in your free time?
Mm.
Um, but your little homily assumes
that human beings are capable
of two things
Learning from their failures and change.
I think we are.

Having trouble finding data
from Richard Evans' surgery?
How did you
Let me save you time.
It's all there.
Where'd you get this?
Jack erased it from the system.
What?
Crockett made a mistake during surgery
and Jack didn't want
a spokesmodel tarnished
- before the IPO launch.
- He wouldn't
It's true.
I'm telling you, Jack cannot be trusted.

[SIGHS]
Dr. Archer?
Yeah?
I'm Harrison Jenkins,
the supervisor down at valet.
Your boy Sean works with us.
Yeah, is everything OK?
Well, first let me say,
Sean's been doing a stand-up job.
He's got a positive attitude.
- He's always on time.
- Sure.
- Everybody loves him.
- Yeah, yeah. No. Thank you.
Thanks. So what's what's
He didn't show up for work today.
No call, nothing.
Tried him, he didn't pick up.
I was wondering if you
heard anything from him.
I just wanna make sure he's OK.
I haven't I haven't heard anything.
I didn't mean
to rat on him or anything
No, no, no. No, no, no.
You did the right thing.
I'm sure there's an explanation,
so thanks for letting me know.
- Yeah. Sure.
- OK.

Oh, there you are.
Oh, hey.
I wanted to see how your interview went.
Oh. It was fine.
Just fine?
Look, Maggie.
[CHUCKLES]
I was caught off guard earlier.
I knew this day was coming,
but I just
I just wasn't ready for it.
And to be honest, neither was I.
And then I was really angry
with Jack because
he's driving away
one of our most valuable people.
But I am so happy for you.
[CHUCKLES] You know, you're always
looking out for everybody else,
and you're finally
looking out for yourself,
and that is a really good thing.

Now you better tell me
how that interview went.
[BOTH CHUCKLE]
It was great.
- Yeah?
- Really great.
They want me to build the ED
from the ground up.
Well, they'll be lucky to have you.
- I don't have the job yet.
- Ah, you will.
They won't find anybody better.
You best believe that.
[BOTH LAUGH]
Girl, they gonna give me
the keys to that ED.
[BOTH LAUGH]
Shh.
Gonna cut you loose in the ED.
[MONITOR BEEPING]
[DOOR CREAKS]
How you feeling, honey?
Not too bad.
I have a little cramping, but
Dr. Asher says that's normal.
Very normal.
Um, this is for you.
Sam, you don't even like baseball.
It was the only father-son
onesie in the gift shop.
[LAUGHS] What if it's a girl?
No, it's not.
Oh, damn it.
I'm so sorry, honey, Michelle.
Wait, what?
I had seen on the ultrasound
that it was a boy
and I was waiting to see
if you both wanted to know.
I forced it out of her,
and then promised not to say anything.
We're having a boy?
- We are. Yeah.
- [LAUGHS]
We're having a boy!
[SWEEPING MUSIC]

Hey.
You know all those apps
you're about to delete?
Yes.
Which one is the least terrible?
Does this mean you're officially
putting yourself out there?
I'm just
I'm dipping toes in the water.
Historically, romantic relationships
haven't really gone well for me.
I've never been a great partner.
Oh, Hannah, I'm sure
that's not true at all.
Oh, no. No, it's very true.
I've always been unreliable and erratic.
You were dealing with an addiction.
Yeah.
This is the longest I've ever been sober
in my entire adult life.
I wanna believe that I'm not
that same person anymore,
you know, that I can be a great
partner for someone else.
Well, you're certainly a good friend.
- [LAUGHS]
- I can confirm that.
Thank you.
OK.
So all of the dating apps are terrible.
- Ah.
- Let me see your phone
and I'll show you which ones I'm on.
Oh, I left it at the nurse's station,
but I will be back.
OK.

[CLEARS THROAT]
Hey. Did you talk to Sean today?
No, why?
He's not answering his phone,
didn't show up for work.
- Huh.
- Yeah.
Let me know if you hear from him, OK?
Of course.
Hey, try not to think the worst.
Right.

Will, wait.
I need to show you something.
Can you come with me?
Sure.
This is Richard Evans' pre-op CT.
This is his intraoperative CT.
The large lesion near the hepatic vein
that Crockett attempted to ablate?
Yeah?
It's not on Richard's pre-op CT.
What? [KEYBOARD CLACKING]
A lesion doesn't just develop
over a matter of hours.
No, it doesn't.
So that means 2.0 created
the lesion on its own?
I believe so.
[TENSE MUSIC]
Crockett would never have
gone near the hepatic vein
If 2.0 hadn't directed him
to ablate a phantom lesion.
Jack thought he was protecting
Crockett by erasing the data,
but Crockett wasn't responsible
for Richard Evans' death.
2.0 was.

[KNOCKING ON DOOR]
Sausage pizza, extra cheese,
and whatever, you know,
the wine shop said this was.
[WHISPERING] Thank you,
Daniel. Thank you so much.
[WHISPERING] Why you whispering?
Pawel just fell asleep.
- [SNORING SOFTLY]
- Oh.
Everything, uh everything OK?
- What's going on?
- I had to pull out of escrow.
What?
Why? Did the house not appraise?
Pawel is having financial difficulties.
All right, honey.
What's going on? Talk to me. Tell me.
[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]

He has a very large gambling debt.
And so you're gonna
You're gonna pay it off for him?
Well, of course. I have to.
I mean, sweetie, is that
really your responsibility?
Well, he's my brother,
and we are responsible for each other.
Right. OK. OK.
Well, I don't know. Can I, uh
Can I at least help you unpack
some stuff or something?
There's no reason to.
I still have to move out
before the end of the month.
Why?
I talked to the landlord,
and he won't budge.
I still have to honor
the notice I gave him.
Wait, wait. That's ridiculous.
Do you have his number?
Let me give him a call.
No, I don't want you to call him.
It's my responsibility.
OK, but, um, where are you gonna live?
I don't know yet.
I haven't thought that far ahead.
Why don't you come live with me?
What?
You can come live with me.
I mean, I got plenty of room,
that's for sure.
No. No, no, no, no. I can't.
But, honey, why not?
I mean, at least until you,
I don't know,
find another place to stay.
I can take care of myself, Daniel.
I don't need your help.
I just don't have it figured
out right in this moment.
I know you can take care
of yourself, OK?
I'm actually asking you
to do this because I want to.
Oh, really?
Then why didn't you ask me before?
Why are you only asking me now?
Gee, I don't know.
Maybe because you bought a
freakin' house before I could?
Oh, so maybe my house falling through
is not such a terrible thing for you
because you can come in here
and rescue me
like I am some charity case?
Are you serious?
What are you talking about?
I've never thought of you that way.
You know what?
This is not a good night for company.
I think you might be right about that.
"Charity case."

[SIGHS] [DOOR SLAMS]
[SIGHS]

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