Grey's Anatomy s13e10 Episode Script

You Can Look (But You'd Better Not Touch)

1 Previously on "Grey's Anatomy" - Look at that hand.
- This is assault.
A pediatric surgeon walking around this hospital.
Do you realize what happens if you're convicted of a felony?! Mer, the trial's tomorrow.
It could be our last chance for like 8, 10 years.
Jo Wilson isn't my real name.
That's why I couldn't marry you.
It might all come out in court tomorrow.
You pick the bad guy the guy who hurts you or hurts other people.
Bailey: Karev, what are you about to do? I'm going to the district attorney's tonight, and I'm gonna take the plea.
It's just us now.
There were five of us, and it can't be just me.
Woman: Mr.
Karev? He'll see you now.
Meredith: Back in the day, physicians made house calls.
We can still turn around.
Bailey, no, we can't.
So if you chopped off your finger or woke up with a touch of cholera We've all had a long day.
I have to see this patient, and this was the window of time that we were offered.
Wilson? Are you sure you're good? you could order up a doctor like delivery pizza.
Ew! Um, you know, I don't want to talk about it.
A respected member of the community at your service.
The ultimate personal touch.
I mean, with everything that's happening with Karev.
There's nothing that I can do about it.
Whatever happens at the trial tomorrow happens, so I just I want to do this tonight.
God, this is so gross! Okay.
Okay.
Well.
Wilson's right.
Tonight's gonna be hard enough already.
Let's focus on this.
Look.
Oh.
Now, that's [Chuckling.]
A crime against God.
Oh! This one has feet.
Wilson! What?! It's not a baby.
It's a mass of skin and cells, like a tumor.
Wilson, stop talking about symptoms and start talking patient.
Kristen Rochester, 16, 31 weeks pregnant, preliminary ultrasound shows likely TRAPS Syndrome.
Yeah, hard to say for sure since their ultrasound machine is junk.
It's outdated, is all.
It's junk.
Well, you know what's not junk? Our portable ultrasound, which we have.
It's in the bag, right? Mm-hmm.
Along with the fetal ablation machine.
Easier to handle in our not-junky hospital.
Well, it's not possible for us to transport this patient, and you and you know it.
Doesn't mean I have to like it.
[Sighs.]
You have somewhere to be? I don't want to spend any more time here than we have to.
We do this fast, then get the hell out.
She's just another patient.
No, she's not.
- No, she's not.
God, can you imagine? - No.
I mean, but really, to be pregnant and I cannot imagine.
Bailey.
I would never put myself in a position to be in here.
Nobody intends to be here.
I'm just saying you get hungry and desperate or broke and desperate, and stuff happens.
Stuff does not just happen to you.
You happen to stuff.
[Elevator bell dings.]
[Sighs.]
It's gonna be fine.
- Arizona: Hi.
How you doing today? - Name.
Dr.
Robbins.
Uh, this is Inmate name.
Oh, um, Kristen Rochester.
Bag.
Yeah, this is all medical equipment.
Stand back against the wall.
Bailey: Now what? In "Orange," they strip-search.
I am not getting strip-searched.
Arizona Bailey, you are not getting strip-searched.
Sir Against the wall.
[Elevator bell dings.]
[Doors open.]
Sorry.
Sorry.
Thanks for coming.
Amanda Joseph, Kristen's attorney.
Let's go get popped through.
"Popped through"? I represent inmate Kristen Rochester, and I'm accompanying these doctors to deliver courtordered medical care.
Let us through.
Now.
[Scoffs.]
Personal effects, cellphones, keys, weapons.
Who brings weapons to a prison? [Keys jingle.]
So many people.
Arms out.
Um, I-I have a prosthetic leg.
I'm gonna raise your pants leg.
Oh, come on, is that really necess ary? Visitors pass.
Keep them on you at all times.
You will not be able to exit without them.
What?! Hold the badge up to your face, look at that camera.
Four visitors clear for Eldredge.
[Buzzer.]
We should get immediate access to Kristen, but you never know.
Badges up.
Bailey: "Never know"? Why? Because Dr.
Eldredge is already pissed you're here.
You're doing fancy, expensive surgery.
Special treatment gets the others all riled up, you know.
Eldredge pushes you, you push back.
Arizona: Not literal pushing, correct? Oh, I got this.
I can handle a pushing.
No one is pushing.
What, you think someone's gonna swipe that thing? Hey, someone could.
Then, all of a sudden, she's walking around outside.
They're locked in cells.
And I'd be trapped on the inside.
No one knows me, no one trusts me.
My record says that I'm in for theft or worse.
So who's gonna listen to me when I'm yelling that there's been some horrible mix-up? Nobody.
Nobody listens.
I never get my hair done.
My teeth go bad.
I die in here.
That can't happen, right? Just don't lose your badge! Guard: Badges.
[Buzzer.]
This way.
- Ms.
Joseph.
- Dr.
Eldredge.
Drs.
Robbins, Bailey, and Wilson are here for Kristen Rochester.
I hope they brought a book.
I don't have time to wait around.
I've got 12 cases today.
I have 26 inmates, and Rochester isn't number one on my list.
If you insist on creating an unreasonable delay and obstructing my client's legal rights, you know I have no recourse but to report you.
Fine.
Rochester for the win.
Follow me.
I have ground rules.
- Guard: Walking.
- [Prisoner growls.]
Totally normal.
Don't engage.
Rochester is a wild one, and I don't have time to stitch you up - if she goes off on you.
- Prisoner: Hey! I've been sitting here for an hour! You should stop banging your head against the wall.
You suck! Rochester isn't allowed to initiate contact.
So we can touch her but she can't touch us? Yeah.
And don't be a hero and tell her anything about her condition.
Tell me.
Bad news sets her off.
"Sets her off"?! If she goes into labor today Arizona: Well, we're hoping that's not gonna happen.
If she goes into labor today, she gets 24 hours with the baby, max.
Then she goes back into gen pop.
24 hours? That's it? But she's the baby's mother.
She's a violent felon with a sentence to serve, and I can't spare the bed.
I don't make the rules.
At least nod so I know you all heard me.
- Okay.
- Yes.
Here we are.
Uh, w-what's K-10? K-10 is for especially dangerous inmates, murderers, validated gang members.
Which is she? That's confidential.
She's a minor.
It means she can't circulate freely with other inmates for their safety.
What about our safety? - She behaves for me.
- We're fine.
Eldredge: Rochester.
Company.
See? Look at her.
She's just another patient.
You know how it goes no touching, no sudden moves.
Hi.
Hi, Kristen.
I'm Dr.
Robbins.
How are you feeling today? The baby's really hungry.
Could I have something to eat? You had your pregnancy snack an hour ago.
No seconds.
You know that.
I'll need written proof of that.
Of course you do.
Please? I'm so hungry.
We really can't give her another snack? There are no extras to give.
Really? You're starving a pregnant mom? That's okay with you? You'll live.
You're gonna be like that? I am.
Okay, then.
Kristen, we're gonna take a look at your baby.
How's that sound? Inmate, away from the door.
[Keys jingle.]
Hi, Kristen.
Good to see you.
We can get you access to supplies.
[Kristen yells.]
[Screaming.]
Guard: Backup in Cell 7! Inmate! - [Bone cracks.]
- Aaaahh! Oh, my God! Hey! No excessive force! I told her I was hungry! [Strained.]
That's a write-up and a white card.
It's totally worth it.
Now you're gonna get me something to eat! "Just another patient"? Listen to me.
Kristen doesn't scare you.
She sure does.
No, she doesn't.
She can smell fear.
If you treat her like an animal in a cage, she will act like one.
She and Eldredge have a rocky history.
You have a clean slate, with me on your side.
Use it.
W-What are they doing? - Is that even legal? - Hey! Kristen: Get off!! You can't shackle a woman in late-term pregnancy! It's policy.
It's illegal.
She hurts me, she gets 24 hours in four-point restraints again.
Do something! I can't allow this.
I can't allow putting civilians at risk with a violent inmate unless she's fully restrained.
She's trying to starve me! Spare me the dramatics.
You ate.
You guys are just gonna stand there, let her treat a pregnant girl like this? She's fully restrained.
I need you to get the sheriff on the phone to discuss this violation immediately.
Sure.
He always returns my calls in a hurry.
I'll be outside.
Go! Get out of my face! Get out!! Uh I'm gonna go check her finger.
It's injured.
Kristen.
We've talked about the yelling how it doesn't help? Yes, ma'am.
Are you going to let these doctors help you and your baby? Yes, ma'am.
[Buzzer.]
Uh, you could use a s-second set of hands.
You spook easy.
Oh, it's dislocated.
Could be broken.
We should get an X-ray to make sure.
- [Bone snaps.]
- O kay.
Uh, can I help? You got a splint? I don't want to waste one.
Just buddy-tape it.
Buddy-tape it? Tape the broken finger to the uninjured finger.
I know what it is, and it isn't sufficient.
Are you trying to act tough here? Is that what this is? Because you and I are on the same side here.
I'm just trying to help.
Your help has already buried me in paperwork and broken my finger.
You know what? You should probably get back to your VIP patient.
I'll tape it myself.
Do you need me to hold your hand? [Scoffs.]
[Monitor beeping.]
I don't bite.
I mean, I have.
But can't right now.
Okay.
We're all set.
Okay, Mama, you ready to take a look at this baby? Does she always talk like that? - Yep.
- Like what? Like unicorns and rainbows are about to shoot out of your ass.
[Chuckles nervously.]
Okay.
- All right, let's - Hey, hey, hey! No sudden moves! That wasn't a sudden move.
You can't just put hands on me like that! How 'bout a little heads-up?! Got it.
Okay.
The next thing you'll feel is some cool gel.
Heads up.
And then this wand on your belly.
[Monitor warbling.]
I don't think she likes your thing.
She keeps kicking.
She's definitely on the move.
There's her fingers and toes.
Oh, good.
I don't want her to be a freak.
[Chuckles.]
And there's our problem.
Ugh.
I don't even want to see that.
I can't believe that monster thing is in there with my baby.
It's like a Acardiac twin.
Yeah, I know.
I made a guard Google it and show it to me.
The way it's sucking my baby's blood just reminds me of, like, a A vampire? Yeah.
Yeah, it's so gross.
So, do you have any questions? Yeah how soon can we start? Uh, as soon as we get the baby into position, we're good to go.
Then let's get going.
As soon as I go into labor, I get my mom here.
Right? Yes when you go into labor.
Yeah.
I know.
Just call her now, 'cause as soon as you guys give me the medicine or whatever to start labor, she should already be here.
Kristen, that's not what's happening.
It's the law! I get my mom when I'm in labor! To hold my hand and crap! Right? Yes, that is the rule, but I I thought Dr.
Eldredge explained this to you.
Dr.
Evil? Is that a joke? The baby's not coming today.
What? Today we're just gonna cut the connection between the mass and the baby so that your baby's heart doesn't have to work double time anymore.
But Dr.
Evil said it wasn't surgery.
Yeah, it's a procedure.
You'll be awake the whole time.
Well, that doesn't make any sense.
We use a probe to go into your belly through a tiny incision.
You want to poke my belly with a gigantic probe thing? No! No, no, no, no, no, no, no! I want my baby! I want to deliver my baby! Why didn't you tell me this? Kristen, I'm not a doctor.
I told you everything I knew.
Nothing has changed.
This is the safest, best way for us to get to our goal.
But I Kristen.
What is our goal? To have a healthy baby so that my mom can adopt her and I can see her all the time when they visit.
You're sure? No baby today? There's there's still a chance, right? Very slim chance.
Hey.
You know, I saw this movie once where this girl got to keep her baby in prison.
They gave her a crib and diapers and everything all in her cell.
And her mom just dropped the baby off every morning, like daycare.
[Chuckles.]
What? Oh, nothing.
What? It's just a movie.
[Scoffs.]
Yeah, obviously, I know that.
Do you think I'm stupid? Nobody thinks you're stupid.
Oh, s does! [Voice breaking.]
Don't you? Speak! I think that's a movie.
And you're in a maximum-security prison.
I know that! I live here! Don't you get that?! Inmate, settle down! She's okay.
Right, Kristen? Yeah.
I'm fine.
You know, things don't always happen the way they do in movies.
I know that.
Ms.
Joseph? We have a call for you.
I'll be right back.
I still get to be her mom, even if I don't see her all the time.
And she'll know I'm her mom because there's this, like, touch thing and this smell thing when she's born.
That's what they say.
She'll know I'm her mom forever.
No matter what.
[Footsteps approach.]
Doctors? Okay, so, I have to go.
- What?! - Why? Just downstairs.
A little emergency with another client needs my attention.
Uh, how about focusing your attention on keeping your K-10 client from killing us? She's not gonna kill us.
Oh, she'll just break our fingers.
One of my clients pulled a knife on a doctor in the E.
R.
Okay? I have to go now.
- I'll be right downstairs.
- N But - You'll be fine.
- Wha [Sighs.]
Hey.
That lawyer is the one person that girl listens to.
She's the K-10 whisperer.
Baby's position is blocking our access to the acardiac twin's vessels.
And now she's just abandoned us.
So, Wilson, what do we do? - We externally rotate the baby.
- Yep.
Wait, you want to lay hands on the violent criminal? Push her around and just cross our fingers that she doesn't push back? - No! - We have to.
She's calmer now.
Because the lawyer calmed her.
And now the lawyer is gone.
- [Sighs.]
- She seems so hopeful.
Sure about turning her prison cell into a nursery.
But there are prison nursery programs where they teach you parenting, - [Scoffs.]
- let you spend time with your baby.
Maybe she'd get into one.
Uh, she is shackled to her bed right now because she attacks people who bother her.
You think a crying baby isn't gonna bother her? - Who a you? - What? I mean, how did I not know that you felt this way? I mean, what did prison ever do to you? Okay, we're gonna push on your belly to move the baby around so we can get access to the acardiac twin.
Will it hurt? A little.
I'm sorry.
You'll Not me, Stupid.
Will it hurt the baby? No.
No, she won't feel a thing.
Okay, Wilson, take the wand.
You're gonna feel my hands on your belly and then a lot of pressure.
Okay? Here we go.
[Monitor beeping.]
Ow, ow, ow, ow, ow! Can you show me the umbilical cord? [Monitor warbling.]
[Whimpers.]
Mm, it's still covered.
This baby does not want to move.
All right.
More pressure, okay? Ow! Ow! Stop! Stop it! Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Can can you at least take these cuffs off? I'm so sorry.
That's It's not up to me.
I went to court to get you here.
And you are freaking useless! Let's try it again.
[Groans.]
God! What the hell?! So what's your adoption plan? - [Exhales sharply.]
- With your mom? I'm not gonna talk to you about that.
I don't have to t More pressure.
More pressure.
All right.
So, then, how about I tell you something about me? My daughter lives across the country, so she's not always with me.
Is she making that up? No.
It's true.
You ready for more? Robbins.
They want you downstairs.
I'm kind of in the middle of something.
Is it urgent? I don't know.
Ask her yourself.
Ask who? Amanda? I don't take messages.
[Sighs.]
Such a bitch.
All right, Wilson, continue with the cephalic version? Yes.
Absolutely.
Thank you [chuckling.]
Dr.
Robbins.
[Mockingly.]
"Thank you, Dr.
Robbins.
" You have to kiss her ass, huh? [Inhales deeply, exhales.]
Prisoner: Hey! Are you a doctor? I need help.
Yes, you! Help! [Exhales deeply.]
Well, hell.
Uh, what seems to be the problem? It's been oozing for days.
And then there was this smell.
Is that normal? No.
That's definitely not normal.
Uh I'm Lee.
But everybody calls me Needles.
Okay, then.
[Exhales sharply.]
Oh.
[Groans softly.]
[Clears throat.]
You know, I once helped a guy I liked rob a convenience store.
You're a doctor.
Yeah, now.
But before, I had a bunch of crappy foster parents.
"Stars, they're just like us.
" What? You're trying to act like we're the same, you and me, but we're not.
Hmm.
I also used to live in my car.
Which was stolen.
I get how life can screw you over sometimes.
No.
You don't get it.
At all.
I grew up on Bainbridge Island with a mom who bakes casseroles.
I went to an all-girls' private school.
What was that like? Too many blazers, not enough boys.
Mm.
Okay, more pressure.
Well, the casserole part doesn't sound bad.
Mm.
First place at the block party three years running.
[Chuckles.]
Fanciest swing set on the block, huge room with a TV.
It was a good setup.
Yeah.
It was a really good swing set.
And in the summer, my mom would take me to this soft-serve place on the beach.
We'd do cartwheels until it was dark and we were freezing and sandy.
'Cause in front of the other prep-school moms, she wore pearls, but [Chuckles.]
at the beach she didn't even wear makeup.
That's my favorite.
Anyway, my baby will get the casseroles, the swing set, the big room, the cartwheels on the beach all of it.
Sounds really nice.
Do you want to know what I'm gonna name her? Sure.
Ellie.
Ellie? I love that.
If you tell anyone I said all that crap, I'll kill you.
[Man talking on P.
A.
.]
Hey, I just I&D'd an abscess without packing it or using antibiotics.
Oh, good.
You're treating my patients at random.
I know this place looks like a shanty town to you, but we do actually keep records here, charts.
Hey, you know what you don't keep? Basic gauze! See, if you put a little aside each day, you'd build a surplus.
Maybe stay in your own lane, Dr.
Bailey.
Uh, that's Chief Bailey.
And I've been asked to drive in yours today.
And you're used to driving a luxury vehicle with cruise control.
A little trickier when you're at the wheel of an '86 Datsun with the engine on fire.
You know what? If I were you, I'd take a look at how I allocate my resources, is all.
Come here.
You'll love this.
Two inmates just beat the hell out of each other.
I've got one eyelid lac and a human bite to the hand.
What do you need? Lidocaine.
Lidocaine great.
I have 14 vials for these two inmates.
Oh, and I also have to do a digital block, a wound closure, and drain an abscess, so who gets the lidocaine? - I - Here's another fun one.
Seven protein shakes for eight pregnant inmates.
That's almost enough for every woman to get one every other day.
[Exhales sharply.]
How's that possible? A dozen women need sanitary napkins.
Good news I got 35 for the whole week.
So who gets and who doesn't? Go ahead.
Choose.
I see.
Seriously make a decision, Chief.
I understand.
I get it.
I don't allocate my resources.
The state does.
And when the state decides between cutting the school budgets or the prisons, guess which one they pick.
So then I get to pick.
From this.
[Woman talking on TV.]
In here.
Hi.
I'm Dr.
Robbins.
You're the doctor.
I'm Emily Rochester.
Yeah, you're Kristen's mom.
Kristen's doing fine.
We're prepping her for the procedure, which means You haven't started yet.
No.
You're just in time.
Is Is there anything you want me to tell her? No.
You can't tell her that I'm here.
OH, I'm sure that she'd be happy to know her mom is he No.
I'm here for the baby.
I-I don't understand.
The mother is never gonna bring the baby to visit? Can she even do that? If she's legally adopting her after the baby's born and she signs the papers, she can do whatever she wants.
[Scoffs.]
I hate people.
Okay, so, do we tell Kristen? 'Cause it'll kill her.
- We have to.
- No.
We do not.
It's not our place, and it's not our business.
[Buzzer.]
So she's just gonna give birth to that baby and then never see her again? [Groans.]
We don't tell.
If my mother was abandoning me, I would want to know what was happening.
She's in agony as it is.
Telling her is only gonna make it worse.
We do not hurt her more not right now.
[Monitor beeping, warbling.]
That's the probe? Arizona: Yeah.
Maybe you look the other way.
Once we start, you have to stay very still.
No moving.
You got it? Okay, you're gonna feel a little bit of pressure.
And we are in the amniotic cavity.
Okay, now we're in the abdomen of the acardiac twin.
And coagulating intra-abdominal vessels.
What happens to the tumor baby thing? You just suck it out or something? Wilson? Uh, the mass is harmless, so it actually stays in the belly until delivery.
- Oh, nasty! - [Chuckles.]
The baby's tired from pumping blood for two.
She'll feel much better soon.
I don't think I'm gonna tell her about her vampire sister.
I mean, not until she's older.
You know, my mom never told me anything juicy.
I hated being kept in the dark.
What's wrong? What? Nothing.
No, it's not nothing.
You made a face.
- Did you mess her up?! - Okay, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Remember? We're not moving.
No, don't talk down to me with that "we" crap! There is nothing to be upset about, Kristen.
Yes, there is.
I can tell.
You're lying to me.
Is she lying to me? No, Kristen.
your baby's totally fine.
Rochester, calm down.
They're trying to help you.
Now you're lying to me?! No, I'm not.
There, there! I got it! Get this stuff out of me! Okay, we're done.
Probe is almost out.
Ow, ow, ow, ow, ow! What did you do?! Nothing.
Please, just stay still.
I'm bleeding.
I'm bleeding.
I feel it.
I can feel it.
I'm bleeding all over.
- It's not blood.
- What?! Okay, all right.
Hold pressure.
All right, I'm gonna examine you now, okay? Okay, we need a little privacy.
That's strictly against protocol.
- Can we at least shut the door? - No.
I am about to examine her with her legs open.
The least you could do is back the hell up.
Thanks.
All right, deep breath.
Okay.
All right, you're gonna feel my hands.
All right, I see pooling, so it's definitely amniotic fluid.
And she's having some contractions.
Okay, I need oxygen, suction, and an infant warmer, Eldredge.
Did you hurt my baby? - No, no, no.
Hang in a minute, Kristen.
- What's going on?! Everything is okay.
Nothing is wrong.
Your water broke, and you're in pre-term labor.
She's in labor already? Isn't it too early? Well, she's 31 weeks, which isn't completely to term, but it's it's far enough along for survival.
I don't even have a crib yet.
Kristen's allowed to have you in the room with her for the labor.
Did you tell her that I'm here? No.
But she's been asking for you.
And if you could just come with me to see her I'm fine where I am.
She needs her mom.
She's having a baby.
I said that I'm fine where I am.
She's your daughter.
Do you have a daughter? I do.
Well keep an eye on her.
Pay attention.
I don't know what for, because Kristen was perfect.
She was beautiful.
I never could have imagined.
Just pay attention.
She's someone that I don't even recognize now.
The baby is better off never knowing her in the first place.
[Screams.]
Oh, God! They're five minutes apart.
I hate this! It hurts! I know.
I know.
I know.
But you know what? You're doing great.
No, it's not that! It's the cuffs! [Handcuffs clank.]
[Breathing heavily.]
Did Amanda call my mom? Is she on her way? I'm not aware of that.
You are keeping her from me! No, I'm not.
I have the right.
She has the right to be here.
Call Amanda.
I want Amanda! Ms.
Joseph is unavailable.
[Breathing shakily.]
Why are you letting her do this?! No one ever tells me anything! Her pulse is skyrocketing.
Okay, you need to calm down, okay, honey? Don't call me stupid freaking pet names! [Screams.]
I know you know.
Where is my mom? Tell me! Rochester.
Settle down.
Okay, listen, we need to get your pulse rate down, okay? So just take a couple of deep breaths with me, okay, Kristen? Take a deep breath.
Why won't you just tell me?! She's downstairs.
- Wilson! - Wilson.
Sorry.
She doesn't want to be lied to, right? What? I'm so sorry, Kristen.
Your mom's here, but she won't see you.
Oww! [Crying, breathing heavily.]
I want to know why.
I don't know the answer.
I wish I did.
Tell me again what did she say exactly? I've told you everything that I know.
Liar! You're all liars.
Bring me my mom! I wish we were lying, but we're not.
She won't come.
No.
No.
Liar.
Nobody's mom doesn't come when they're having a baby.
[Crying.]
I need her here.
I want my mom.
Mommy! - Okay.
- Oh! Kristen, Kristen, I'm sorry, but it's time to push again.
No.
I'm not gonna do this, I won't.
Honey, it's gonna happen whether you want it to or not.
No, I can't.
I can't do it alone.
You're not.
Get off! Shh, shh, shh, shh.
I'm holding your hand.
You're not alone.
Now push.
[Grunts painfully.]
Okay, great.
Good, good, good, good, good.
Great job.
Great job, Kristen.
Good, good, good, good, good.
[Sighs.]
[Crying.]
I want my mommy! Shh.
I know, I know, I know, I know.
Just tell her just tell her tell her I'm sorry.
Tell her I'm so sorry.
Tell her tell her I wish I could take it back.
Tell her that, and and maybe she'll come.
Please? We're here with you.
Yeah, we got you.
We're here, Kristen.
I hate this.
I hate you! Get away from me! Squeeze all you want.
You're pissed off.
You're hurt.
You're tired.
You deserve to be.
Put it all on me.
Aaaaaaah! Good, good, good just like that.
Here we go another push.
I need a big push, Kristen.
Push, push.
All right, give me that pain.
We're here with you, Kristen.
We got you.
Come on.
Keep on pushing, keep on pushing, keep on pushing! Yes! Yes, yes! Good job.
You got this, all right? Okay, good.
Okay, take a breath.
Take a breath.
Great.
That was perfect.
Can we undo two of these restraints? It's too risky.
They're cutting off her blood supply.
She still has good blood flow.
They're not cyanotic.
She's having a baby! Do you think that she needs this to hurt more? If this was illegal before, it has to be 10 times more illegal now that she's in labor.
Rochester's K-10.
She's combative, unpredictable.
Well, can't we call someone? I tried the sheriff.
There has to be someone else.
Me.
I'm someone else.
So it's up to you? Ow, ow, ow! Come on, Dr.
Eldredge! You get to say yes here! Say yes! Hall, unhook them.
After what she did this morning? You'll stay close by.
Unhook her restraints.
Hall, get them off of her right now! [Gasps.]
[Breathes heavily.]
Okay, good job.
Here, here.
Good.
[Gasps.]
[Screams.]
Arizona: We are so close, Kristen! We are so close! You're doing so well.
Baby's head is out! Suction! Okay, you're almost there.
One more push.
No, I can't.
I can't.
Give us one more push, and it'll all be over.
Okay.
[Screams.]
Okay! Yes! Just tell me she's okay.
Just Just tell me I didn't mess her up.
Please.
No, she's perfect.
[Sighs.]
You should be so proud of yourself.
Good job, Kristen.
I am.
[Baby fussing.]
Take her away.
I don't want to see her.
No, Kristen, that's not what you want.
Yes, it is.
I'm not her mom.
I don't get to be her mom at all.
I'm no one.
Just take her away.
No, Kristen, she's so beautiful.
Just look just for a moment.
No.
[Baby crying.]
I want to hold her.
Okay.
Okay.
[Voice breaking.]
I want you to be good.
Okay? Listen to your grandma.
Don't be like me.
[Sniffles.]
I love you, Ellie.
Be good.
Please.
I'm your mama.
Remember me.
Okay? [Breathes shakily.]
Okay.
I'm ready.
You sure? Please take her.
I was 22 That I was 22 [Door opens.]
Come here.
I wish I was older when I was young She'll be okay.
She'll play on your nice swing set, in your big room.
She'll grow up doing cartwheels on the beach.
[Whimpers, cries.]
She's gonna miss you every day.
But she'll be okay.
That I found out faster I never thought it was me they're after What happens to Kristen now? She'll recover here a few days, then go back into gen pop.
For how long? The rest of her sentence 20 years to life.
That's longer than she's been alive.
You want to know what she did to end up in here? No.
I really don't.
We're keeping Ellie for Hannah.
Her name is Hannah.
Please call her Hannah.
Uh, the baby will be kept in the hospital's NICU for observation for as long as she needs.
And then she can come home? [Exhales sharply.]
And then she can go with you.
Uh, any other questions? No.
Was there something else? If this one makes a mistake, will you leave her, too? Excuse me? And I was dreaming Whoa, ohhhh [Buzzer.]
If you're ever looking for a new job, please come see me first.
Yeah, well, same goes for you.
That I was 22 [Buzzer.]
[Sighs.]
Maybe it won't be so bad.
Maybe she'll be okay.
Yeah, maybe.
No.
She won't be okay.
There's a reason doctors prefer to see a patient in person, face-to-face.
You were right.
Stuff does happen to people.
I don't want to be right.
Karev he came to see me last night.
He told me I don't want to be right.
It's the laying on of hands.
Human touch, that spark of connection.
Just l-listen to me.
Karev - I don't want to be right.
- W-Wilson For God's sake, I don't want to be right! [Voice breaking.]
I want there to be something good.
I want the world to be good.
For once, I want to see sun and happy.
For once, I want to be wrong.
So just stop talking.
[Sighs.]
We lay hands on each other so we feel like we're all in this together.
Say it.
Alex went to the D.
A.
and took a plea bargain.
He's going to prison.
What?! When? Last night before we left.
We connect with each other.
Because if we didn't Stop the car.
Stop the car.
I'm gonna be sick.
[Vomiting.]
[Coughing.]
[Car door closes.]
Let's go.
[Seat belt clicks.]
You okay? Drive the car.
Drive the damn car! we would all feel so, so alone.
[Sighs.]

Previous EpisodeNext Episode