Grey's Anatomy s21e14 Episode Script
Love in the Ice Age
1
[GREY] The classic experiment
on pain tolerance is
to submerge your hand
in freezing cold water
- Hi!
- and see how long you can take it.
[HUNT] All right, troops.
Let's get our shoes.
We got five minutes, okay?
Hey. Welcome home.
Sorry, it's just I'm
I've been up since 4:00 a.m.
I missed you.
- Listen, um, while I was away
- [LEO MUTTERS]
- No, I'll
- No, I'll go. You get ready, okay?
[GREY] You can try to distract
yourself by counting slowly
or focusing on your breath.
And no one's happy now
Can we make it okay? ♪
- Did you sleep?
- Sure.
Are you okay?
Give me ten minutes.
You can have 15 if you shower.
Hey, uh, I wanted to head in early
and try to get on a good service
before grand rounds.
Molly was discharged last night.
She's already back in California.
So Kwan's broken heart trumps
me trying to get back into our class?
[CHUCKLE] No, but how many
times has he waited for us?
Like sunburn on my skin ♪
You never learn ♪
Kwan, you got 13 minutes!
We've got 13 minutes.
[GREY] But no matter how high you count,
or how deeply you breathe,
that water is still undeniably cold.
I'm gone two days and
everything's trash.
Today is not the day for trash. [GRUNTS]
Oh, I could help
if I was on your service.
[SIGHS] A world-renowned
surgeon is coming here
to see my patient for grand rounds,
I'm buried in paperwork,
and the attendings' lounge
is out of oat creamer.
[CHUCKLES] So I
don't have time for
whatever this is
you're trying to pull.
Well, I-I just don't think I
should be on Altman's service.
You know, not-not until I
get back in her good graces.
Well, how do you think you're gonna
get there if you never work with her?
- Bribery?
- [GRUNTS]
[SIGHS] Oh. [GASPS]
Oh, okay, he's on his way.
[SIGHS]
- Uh, thank you. Mmm.
- [CHUCKLES]
Perfect. Yes, yeah.
Good. Oh, one second.
[SLURPS]
Good morning. Glad you decided to come.
Well, I thought I'd come and
see what all the fuss was about.
[GROANS, CHUCKLES] Here. Right there.
- Late night?
- [SIGHS] It was for Maxine and Gino.
In their room next to mine.
She really cycles through boyfriends.
What happened to Claude?
- Oh, he died.
- I am truly sorry.
[YAWNS] No, he made it to his
100th birthday. That was his goal.
You want one?
I'd rather drink gasoline.
Good morning, everyone.
I would like to introduce Gabby Mims.
- Hello.
- [CHUCKLES]
Uh, four months ago, Gabby was
diagnosed with pancreatic adenocarcinoma
and began neoadjuvant
chemotherapy to shrink the tumor.
But because it encases
several critical blood vessels,
it's considered very high-risk
and doesn't meet the guidelines
for surgical resection.
That is where today's guest comes in.
He is taking on
difficult cases like this
to give patients hope
of cancer remission.
So please join me in welcoming
one of my surgical heroes,
Dr. Joseph Chase.
- Oh, my God.
- You know him?
[BREATHES SHAKILY] He got me
kicked out of my first residency program.
[BREATHES HEAVILY]
No. No, I'm not okay.
No, I can't calm down.
So save your breath.
Fine. But maybe you could
speed up the freaking out.
- Bailey noticed your seat is empty.
- Screw Bailey.
She should name the grand
rounds guests in the emails.
Yeah, you think you could've gotten
away with skipping grand rounds?
I think we can get away with
about 45 seconds. So, go.
[INHALES] He never requested me
on his service,
he looked past me in rounds,
he never remembered my name.
I learned to handle it. But when he
[BREATHES SHAKILY] neglected
a Black patient with
chronic pancreatitis for weeks,
I tried to ignore it,
but when her symptoms worsened
significantly overnight,
I told him I was concerned
she wasn't being seen.
He informed me,
if I was going to make a habit
out of telling him things
he already knew,
I could go be disrespectful
at another program.
Which led to
The scrub room incident.
[EXHALES]
And during my expulsion review,
he called out my "aggressive
behavior" and my
"subpar" surgical skills.
Well, he clearly didn't know you at all.
- Thank you. [SCOFFS]
- Right. Come on. We have to go back in.
I can't watch Bailey fawn over him.
She is who you work for now.
You said he never saw you.
Just get through the lecture, lay low,
and then you never
have to see him again.
- Okay?
- Okay.
Just give me Just give
me another minute. [SNIFFS]
- [CHASE] portion of the IVC.
- [BREATHES HEAVILY]
I'll start by placing a mesocaval shunt,
connecting the IVC past
the location of the tumor
and rerouting the
small intestine outflow.
And that's before I begin
the periarterial divestment,
during which I will resect
the cancerous tissue
surrounding the vessels,
one of which is
The superior mesenteric artery.
- Good. And it is significant because?
- It supplies oxygenated blood
to the pancreatic head, small
intestines and parts of the colon.
Your residents are quick
on the draw, Dr. Bailey.
[WEBBER CLEARS THROAT]
Uh, Dr. Chase,
surgical guidelines classify
these tumors as inoperable.
How can you ignore the recommendations?
Well, I don't think all patients fall
under the same criteria for resection.
We may find
that some actually benefit.
By experimenting on them?
Why don't I let
our patient answer that one?
I want to live.
Following the guidelines might
give me a few months, maybe a year.
Dr. Chase's surgery could
give me much longer.
And his success rate is stellar.
- He's planning to publish
- Soon.
And I wanted to include Gabby,
and you and your resident.
Who have you chosen to assist?
Uh, Griffith.
Hi, uh, you're scrubbing in.
Uh, and as for everyone else,
thank you, you're dismissed.
Okay, you got this.
You're Simone Griffith.
You take your excellence and
you shove it down his throat.
Uh, this is Dr. Griffith, one of our
program's shining stars. [CHUCKLES]
Oh, I know Dr. Griffith.
[BAILEY] You do?
Yes, our paths crossed
when I worked in Baltimore.
Good to see you thriving here,
Dr. Griffith.
Shall we go show our patient
back to her room?
Of course.
- [CHUCKLES]
- [CHASE] Mmm.
Morning. How was the conference?
Educational.
I'm sure Hunt's glad to have you back.
You know, I barely survived with
only one toddler. [CHUCKLES]
- I don't know how he managed two
- We have an incoming trauma
and a suspected acute
diverticulitis in bed two.
I'm here to help.
Uh, want me to start her on
broad spectrum antibiotics?
Only if you know something that I don't.
I am waiting on her scans.
Sorry. Just trying
to anticipate what you need.
What I need is for you to get her to CT.
Will do, Chief.
- Hey.
- [SOFTLY] Hey.
Hey, so I thought we could go to
your favorite Italian place tonight.
Look, I don't want
an open marriage.
I almost slept with someone in Oakland,
but I couldn't go through with it.
I am so sorry. But I don't want to
be with anybody else. I only want you.
- Me too.
- [SIGHS]
- Really?
- Yeah.
You know, change was worth a try,
but I only want to be with you too.
- [SIREN WAILING]
- D Did you try?
Rig's outside. You want me
to do the intake or
We've got it.
[PARAMEDIC] Brendon Browning,
25-year-old male, penetrating injury
to the chest from an ice pick,
50 mics of fentanyl en route.
GCS 15, hemodynamically stable.
And I'm in love.
Please don't move.
This ice pick is in a very dangerous area.
Is your partner on their way?
Oh, she's not
Uh, we're not together. Yet.
I just met her this morning.
- Okay, let's get him to trauma 1.
- We got you, Brendon.
- [CLICKS TONGUE]
- What the hell is happening?
Uh, former patient of mine gave
me two tickets to tonight's game
right behind home plate.
- You free?
- What's the catch?
- There's no catch.
- Mmm.
I I have Baxter as my intern
today, you have Kwan.
If I'm gonna make it
to this game on time,
I need somebody who's efficient
and can read their own handwriting.
Uh, an intern for behind home plate?
And an Americano.
[CHUCKLES] Yeah. Done.
I didn't have to give you
the coffee, did I?
[STAMMERS] You'll never know.
[EXHALES]
- Well, you're late.
- Uh, sorry. Grand rounds ran long.
Do you know about this Chase technique?
It's really interesting.
Well, it's a tragic case,
and I hope that works out.
[STAMMERS] Good job on
Ms. Regalski's central line.
You've been practicing.
[CHUCKLES] Well, I'm upping my game.
Trying to change Dr. Fox's mind
about my remediation.
[CHUCKLES] A central
line's not going to do that.
But the practice doesn't hurt.
Oh, I also signed up to help
with admin backlog.
And I'm volunteering
at the clinic on Saturdays.
I told you that wasn't happening.
- Actually, you didn't. You said
- I am now.
Let's finish rounds.
[ALTMAN] There's a small
left hemothorax.
Let's do a FAST exam to make
sure that the heart isn't involved.
Okay, so where do you Whoa.
Stabbing?
He was holding an ice pick
and he slipped.
So, he stabbed himself?
They say people do stupid
things when they're in love,
but I didn't get it until today.
He also met the love of his life today.
Ah, neat. Another one of those.
I was working the bar at a corporate
brunch event. It's not my scene.
But then I looked up, and there she was.
[CHUCKLES] The girl of my dreams.
FAST exam is negative.
Talking with her was
the best 17 minutes of my life.
How much ground could you
possibly cover in 17 minutes?
Her trip to Japan, her foster
kittens, her bug collection.
Enough to know that she's perfect.
Mrs. Grandy's CT confirms acute diver
- Wow. Uh, screwdriver?
- Ice pick.
He fell in love
and slipped onto it.
Warren, focus. Admit Mrs. Grandy,
get her on antibiotics,
and meet us in CT.
All right. It looks
like it only hit the lung.
Yeah, but I don't like
how close it is to the heart.
[ALTMAN] Millin, get us a CT.
I'll let them know we're on our way.
Jack Moss, 36, sustained a
tib-fib fracture over a year ago
due to a motorbike accident.
It resulted in malunion,
here for a corrective osteotomy
to realign the bones.
At least I got to see
the desert outside Marrakech
before skidding
into a textile market.
Says you were scheduled for a
surgery six months ago. Did you forget?
My tourist visa came through,
and I went to Tanzania instead.
Must be nice.
And how's the pain?
- Barely feel it.
- All right. [EXHALES SHARPLY]
You barely feel any pain?
I mean, I feel it when I walk, like,
more than a hundred feet.
Can you fix it?
[CLEARS THROAT]
You know, Jack, just at first glance,
we may be looking at an amputation.
What? Uh, no, no, no, no. I have
another tour next month in Munich.
And then after that,
it's Prague.
Uh. I'll tell you what, we'll get a new
round of tests. CT, MRI, everything.
And we'll take it from there.
- Kwan?
- You got it.
- Okay.
- [CHATTERING]
Oh, here he is. I'm gonna ask him.
- I already told you
- Something I can settle for you?
You've done this experimental
surgery enough times
to know that my baby girl
will be okay, right?
[SIGHS] You have to stop
calling me that. I'm 38.
And I'm not okay. I have cancer.
If I don't do this,
I may never get to see Chicago.
The musical or the city?
The new library on South Chicago.
That's what our team calls it.
I'm an architect.
It's been my life for four years.
I want to see it finished.
I want to see kids light up
at all the books
and old people play chess
in the community room.
I thought you wanted
to spend more time with me.
You'll be one of the people
playing chess.
[STAMMERS]
Promise me she'll be okay.
Well, I'd be lying. Nobody can
guarantee that with 100% certainty.
Here's what I can say.
When I walk into that operating room,
I'm gonna pour everything
I've learned
from decades of practice and research
into curing your daughter's cancer.
And I won't stop until I've
done everything I can for her.
[GABBY] He knows what he's doing, Mom.
I know the odds. I want this.
Good.
Dr. Griffith, will you prep
Ms. Mims for surgery?
Of course.
- We'll see you soon, Gabby.
- [CHUCKLES]
- Here you go.
- Thank you.
[ALTMAN] Was it the night that I left?
- When your mom was watching the kids?
- Teddy
Owen, did you have someone
over at our house?
- [SIGHS] We agreed on rules. No details.
- So that's a yes.
I did not bring anyone
into our home.
Anyone? [CHUCKLES]
Were there multiple people?
- No. Why are you accusing me?
- [SIGHS]
We opened our marriage, Teddy.
And you also were with someone else.
- How's our young Romeo?
- Great.
I know these odds. He is way
more into her than she is into him.
- They say every pot has its lid.
- Some pots have many lids.
- Says the kettle.
- You're mixing metaphors.
- No, I'm not. [EXHALES]
- Scans. Scans are up.
Well, it's hard to see
with all of this artifact,
but it looks like the ice pick is
penetrating the descending aortic arch.
You see that?
There is a contained hematoma
that has formed around the entry site.
How is he not bleeding out?
The ice pick is essentially
plugging the hole.
So if we move him, and it moves
He could bleed out and die.
So how do we get him to the OR?
Hmm. Hi.
How's Chase? Did he cure
metastatic lung cancer too?
[STAMMERS]
Do you two have history?
Never met him until today.
But I do have history with you.
Now, you asked me to do a consult
on Gabby Mims two months ago,
and clearly, you didn't
trust my opinion.
[STAMMERS] I was looking for options.
Chase had one.
No, he's breaking new ground.
He's resecting a tumor from a place
where multiple studies have determined
that the risks outweigh the benefit.
[CLEARS THROAT] I take it you don't
approve of his technique.
Yeah. His so-called technique is
the same as resecting any other
tumor, just with more arrogance.
And, frankly, I'm surprised you
allowed him to use it on Gabby.
I guess she was a good lure.
You think [CHUCKLES]
I used Gabby as surgical bait?
People go to great lengths
to meet their heroes.
I know you've admired him
from afar for years.
[SMACKS LIPS] Um, Dr. Chase's methods
could be the future
of pancreatic surgery.
We can get on board or we
can bury our heads in the sand
and watch our patients die.
You do what you want. I prefer
to keep my head above ground.
So if we roll over a paper clip,
or someone runs into me, I'll die?
It's not that simple. First,
you would start to bleed,
then we would get you into
surgery as soon as possible.
- Oh, God. [BREATHES HEAVILY]
- We will be very careful.
- I don't know. [STAMMERS]
[MILLIN] Well, you rode in an ambulance,
and then in an elevator and on a gurney.
Like, those are pretty good
odds, and I'm usually a downer.
There's no reason to think that
we can't get you to the OR safely.
Yeah, and then you can go be
happy with what's her [STAMMERS]
- What is her name?
- I don't know.
Why didn't I ask? I-I should have asked.
It was 17 minutes! [WINCES]
Hey, Brendon, we need
you to calm down, okay?
And we need you to trust us, okay?
Can you do that?
- Okay.
- Okay.
It's all right. It's okay.
All right, everybody,
move out of the way!
Let's move on my count, okay?
I'll set the pace. One, two, three.
Okay. All right. We got you.
[EXHALES SHARPLY]
Your pre-op labs are all good.
You're cleared for surgery.
[CHUCKLES]
I can't believe it's
finally happening.
So, what do you think of Dr. Chase?
Is he as good as everyone says?
He's excellent. I've actually
watched him operate before.
I once saw him treat a very
complicated mesothelioma with HIPEC,
combination of surgery and hot
chemotherapy in the abdomen.
The patient is okay?
Posted a photo with his new
grandson a few weeks ago.
[CHUCKLES, SIGHS]
- I have to do this, Mom.
- [BREATHES SHARPLY]
It's my only chance.
Last time I was in a hospital bed,
I was holding my new
baby girl in my arms.
I didn't want to let go of you then,
and I don't want to let go now.
What if this the last time [SOBS]
You've been the best mama
I could ever have.
You gave me the courage
to think big, dream big
- believe big.
- Believe big.
- [SNIFFLES]
- That's why I'm not afraid to do this.
- I love you.
- [EXHALES]
I love you more, baby girl.
[BAILEY] Who's ready for surgery?
Okay.
Now I'm ready.
- Let's do this.
- [BAILEY] All righty.
Hey. Uh, so I dropped off
Ms. Schiller's labs
and I submitted Mr. Bohigian's
discharge paperwork.
Oh. Good. When I finish with the
scans, you can update the charts.
[STAMMERS] Uh, Chase's surgery
is about to start.
Are you scrubbing in?
No, I-I just assumed we'd watch.
I'm not interested in that.
Well, he could make
history today. [CHUCKLES]
And you can learn a lot
by watching good surgeons, right?
- Come with me.
- To the gallery?
Better.
Sorry. [EXHALES SHARPLY]
Jack saw a scenic photo in radiology
and refused to go back
to his room
until I could figure out
if it was Banff National Park.
- Was it?
- [SLURPS]
Oh, he thinks it is. [EXHALES]
- Okay, what do you see?
- Well, a bone that's completely healed
but at an angle.
Oh, he's lucky if he gets
five feet, let alone a hundred.
Yeah, you can see
the vessel is kinked here
in the area of the bone deformity.
He only has one vessel running
off to the foot, barely
keeping it alive. Damn.
Hope he took lots of pictures
in the Serengeti.
He's not going anywhere besides PT.
It's an amputation, right?
Ooh, could I do it?
I always wanted to do one.
[STAMMERS] Go check on
my arthroplasty from last night.
Millin got to do one her first day.
- Interns perform them all the time
- Not hyped-up ones.
Put that crap away.
I'm already overloaded with patients.
I don't have time to resuscitate you.
Now go do what I asked.
[ALTMAN] You're going too fast.
Listen, if you have a problem
with my pace, then you lead.
- Is everything okay?
- [HUNT] You're doing great.
Almost at the elevator.
- Whoa, whoa!
- Hey! No running!
Okay.
So, um, tell us more about the
woman you met. What does she do?
She's a graphic designer, I think.
I don't know her name
or what she does.
When you get out of here,
you'll get a second chance.
But what if I die?
[ALTMAN] Hey, Millin. Why don't you
get out your phone?
- We're gonna find her.
- Find her how?
You're the millennial. You tell me.
[MILLIN] This never goes well for me.
Can you think of anything unique?
A A blue streak in her hair?
[INHALES] Uh, big glasses?
She has hazel eyes. I think she
has a small dimple when she smiles?
Okay, everyone. Nice and slow.
Easy. Okay.
You ready for tonight?
Yeah, last night, Boston was down.
They put in Taft as a designated hitter.
Steps up to the plate
with the bases loaded
and hits a genius triple
to left center. [LAUGHS]
Unstoppable.
I'm, uh, taking Baxter back.
I've got a sensitive case,
and something's up with Kwan.
Um, does tonight's seat go with Baxter?
- Nope.
- All right. Take whoever you want.
I do need to see if I can
switch the seats to tomorrow.
Oh. No, no, no.
I got a a late CABG tomorrow night.
So [SNICKERS]
put that phone away, please.
My patient's got a severe tib-fib
malunion with vascular damage
and critical limb ischemia.
I've-I've either gotta amputate or
bring in a genius designated hitter.
Is he a candidate
for a fem-tib bypass?
He's got anatomy distorted
below the knee. No.
No, it won't work.
When I say "severe," I mean I've never
seen a leg like this
in my entire career.
I can bypass anything. [CHUCKLES]
Even this?
- Damn it.
- Yeah.
- Not everybody's unstoppable.
- No, I can do it.
Which means I won't be sitting
behind home plate tonight. [HUFFS]
What if I never find her?
- Seattle's not that big.
- But it's that not small, either.
And you're young.
You'll meet somebody else.
- Uh, maybe you dodged a bullet.
- Every nightmare I ever dated
- made a great first impression.
- Or she's the love of your life.
I-I'm sorry. Does nobody else
find this a little bit creepy?
I'm sure you're great,
but stalking is not
- Have you ever been in love?
- This feels inappropriate.
When you're in love, you don't give up.
- Keep looking.
- Okay.
- [ELEVATOR BELL DINGS]
- Here we go. [GRUNTS]
[WARREN] Careful.
[ALTMAN] Easy. [SUCKS TEETH]
All right, let's turn.
[ALTMAN] Doing great.
Brendon, does she have
a mole on her neck?
- On her right side. Did you find her?
- [MILLIN] I think so.
You were right about the bugs.
"Elena Ginsburg, member of the
Greater Seattle Entomology Club"?
What's entomology?
Oh, my God. That's her.
- [GASPS] No, no!
- Brendon, don't move!
- [MONITOR BEEPS]
- Okay, run. Let's go! Let's go!
[HUNT] Hey. We need to get him
on the OR table right now.
- We need to get in there.
- [ALTMAN] Gown and glove.
[HUNT] Okay, on my count.
Ready? One, two, three.
- [ALTMAN] Betadine.
- [MILLIN] Yeah, I'm on it.
[HUNT] The ice pick in his aorta moved.
We got him here in less than a minute.
We can save him.
[ALTMAN] Let's go. Let's go!
All right, we're removing the ice pick.
- Scalpel.
- How can I help?
[ALTMAN] You can give us some space.
Come on, Brendon.
You made it this far. Stay with me.
That's not it.
Yeah, maybe I should get back to rounds.
Uh, Mr. Vizcaino's wound vac's
not gonna check itself.
Uh, we just checked it. [GRUNTS]
You know, you made a very good point.
I did?
Yeah. There is a value to
watching great surgical cases.
All right. Ah. Found it.
- What is that?
- This, son, is a videotape.
Yeah, I kn-know that.
What's on it?
Surgeries.
Look, I'm talking Whipples
and Roux-en-Ys and Puestows.
Procedures that require real skill,
not that surgical cowboy nonsense.
You wanna watch and learn,
you watch this. [CHUCKLES]
How?
I'm almost finished
with the first shunt.
Suction. But careful, too aggressive
a move could spell disaster.
- This okay?
- It's fine.
Dr. Griffith recently did a
solo surgery. First in her class.
- Wow, congratulations.
- [BAILEY CHUCKLES]
- Ever seen a mesocaval shunt before?
- [GRIFFITH] No, sir.
Congratulations again. You're
about to see one completed.
Oh. Careful with this margin.
- I see it.
- Mmm.
And why do we need the shunt?
[BAILEY] To bypass the SMV and
provide outflow from the intestine
while you resect the tumor
- That was meant for Griffith.
- [LAUGHS] Yeah. But correct.
You must have been
one outstanding student.
I like to think I still am.
It helps to have amazing teachers.
[CHUCKLES] Okay. Shunt is done.
Moving on to the periarterial
divestment on the SMA.
[CHASE CHUCKLES]
Just like we planned before,
I'll start with the osteotomy.
- [CLEARS THROAT]
- Can I help you, Dr. Kwan?
- I'm on Dr. Ndugu's service now.
- Um, fine. Just stand over there.
I will re-break the bones in your leg,
and I will realign them
with plates and screws.
That's when I'll go in
and attempt the bypass
- to improve blood flow to the leg.
- Okay, great. Let's do it.
I wanna keep my legs
so I can keep traveling.
Jack, we won't perform the surgery
unless you agree to stop
traveling while you properly heal.
- Okay, well, how long will that take?
- Months. If today goes well.
How long does recovery
from an amputation take?
- Months.
- And if I do nothing?
Without urgent intervention,
the wound on your leg could
become infected,
which could lead to sepsis.
[SIGHS]
Okay.
I want the surgery.
We'll see you in the OR.
Babcock. Fortunately,
the tissue's not friable,
so it peels right off the
vessel with sharp dissection.
[BAILEY] Look at that.
Fundamentally, it's no different
than resecting any other tumor.
- There's some bleeding.
- [BAILEY] Where?
- Then suction.
- [SUCTION TOOL SUCKS]
[BAILEY] Uh, did the tumor
invade the SMA?
It's possible. Yep.
The tumor definitely breached
the arterial wall. Clamp.
[CHASE] We need 4-0 prolene.
And more suction.
Okay, I'll suture the SMA,
and then we'll close.
[BAILEY] Close? W-We haven't finished.
If we continue with the procedure,
we're putting her in greater danger.
[GRIFFITH] What about blood
supply to the small bowel?
Tell your intern that's out of
scope for this procedure.
I am officially done here.
[BAILEY] You have successfully completed
all your other cases. Why stop now?
Dr. Chase? Okay, if you stop,
will Gabby be a part of your study?
I'm kind of in the middle of
something if you haven't noticed
- [BAILEY] Dr. Chase.
- Of course not.
Her procedure was incomplete.
So that's how you do it.
[BAILEY] I thought it was
unparalleled expertise and steady hands.
But it's cutting and running
before there are consequences,
at least, for you.
Dr. Bailey, her small bowel's
becoming dusky.
[STAMMERS] Okay.
Uh, if we stop, she will die.
I told you, I'm done here.
You're damn right you are.
No. [STAMMERS] I will finish.
Your patient is no longer a
candidate for this procedure
Then by all means, don't let me keep you.
There's the door. Use it!
[GRUNTS] I need a stool, please. [SIGHS]
- [NURSE] Right away, doctor.
- What do we do now?
Uh, I don't know, but we sure
as hell aren't closing.
[LINCOLN] Just have to
put in a few more,
and if the alignment's
in check, it's all you.
[NDUGU] When was
the original fracture?
Eighteen months ago.
He was treated abroad, but he
started weight-bearing way too soon.
Nearly lost his leg today, but, hey,
I bet the beer was
damn tasty after seeing
the Great Migration in the Serengeti.
[NDUGU] What? That's
why he risked amputation?
He didn't wanna cancel a trip?
- [KWAN] That's what he said.
- [LINCOLN] He lied to you. Drill.
[SIGHS] Jack's brother was
an extreme adventurer.
He booked a trip around the world.
Motorcycle tours mostly.
He died unexpectedly two years ago.
Jack quit his job, and he's been
spreading his brother's ashes
in every country his brother
wanted to see before he died.
He could have avoided all this
if he let himself heal physically, but
spreading his brother's ashes
probably healed something, too.
Done. Ndugu, you're up.
[NDUGU] All right. Let's hope I didn't
make you do all that
work for nothing, huh?
[NDUGU STAMMERS] Potts scissors, please.
Okay, watch this now. I'm going to
Oh, come on here. Come on.
You know, they have places
that convert these old tapes.
Oh, to DVDs?
Ah, here we go. All right.
Now I'm going to dissect the
lateral peritoneal attachments.
- The Kocher maneuver.
- Exactly. Here's the incision
Uh, are you using your finger
to open up the duodenum?
Yeah. Simple and effective.
See? That's how I was taught.
- Huh.
- [PHONE BUZZES]
It's Bailey. It's a 9-1-1.
I can't believe I fell
for that man's snake oil.
Did you have any idea
when you were in Baltimore?
Where's Chase?
- Uh, you were right. Don't gloat.
- About what?
Gabby's tumor grew
through the wall of the SMA.
- Chase transected it while resecting.
- Then decided to take a break?
- [BAILEY SIGHS]
- Dr. Bailey asked him to leave
after figuring out he's been selective
about the patients in his study.
[WEBBER GROANS]
Well, the artery is shot. He did
a nice job on the shunt, though.
Adams, see how he rerouted
the SMV to the IVC?
[BAILEY] Hey, look, I know
this is a teachable moment,
but every minute that goes by increases
the chances of Gabby's bowel necrosing.
And as much as I appreciate the
genius of Chase's
rerouting, we need to
[WEBBER] What are you thinking?
[BAILEY] What if we used a saphenous
vein graft to reconstruct the SMA?
W-We could restore the blood
supply and remove the invaded vessel.
[WEBBER] And the whole tumor with it.
[BAILEY] You think that's too risky?
Only if you don't have enough
hands. Adams, we're scrubbing in.
- [BAILEY] Okay.
- [GRIFFITH] Okay. Okay.
[BAILEY] We got a plan.
We got a plan.
[MONITOR BLARING]
[HUNT] There's too much bleeding.
Can you see where it's coming from?
How many units has he had?
[MILLIN] Four units.
Black and blue, far away ♪
[ALTMAN] His heart won't restart.
Warren, get over here.
Take over compressions.
[ALTMAN] Come on, Brendon. Come on.
[ALTMAN] All right, stop compressions.
Let me in there.
All right, charge to 40. Clear.
Charge again. Clear.
[HUNT] It's been too long.
[ALTMAN] He didn't give up.
We can't either.
All right. Charge to 50. Clear.
- [HUNT] Teddy.
- [ALTMAN] Come on.
- Damn it. Let me in there.
- [HUNT] Teddy.
Come on.
Teddy.
Teddy! It's over.
You've done all you can.
[STEADY BEEP]
[SNIFFLES, SIGHS]
Time of death, 19:24.
[KNOCK ON DOOR]
- I spoke to Brendon's parents.
- It shouldn't have gone like this.
I, uh I have a lot of paperwork
to get through. You should just go.
Teddy. Teddy, we need
to talk about this.
Now is not a good time.
[SCOFFS]
So, you're happy to work on our marriage
when it means sleeping
with Cass Beckman,
but when I wanna have
a difficult conversation
Oh. I'm sorry, who slept
with someone else? Not me.
What did you think was gonna
happen when we opened our marriage?
I'm gonna be late. Um
Don't wait up for me.
[SIGHS]
She's going to be okay, right?
She needs a lot of rest,
but she's doing very well.
Thank you. [SIGHS]
You hear that, baby girl?
You're gonna be okay.
Thank you so much.
Dr. Chase go back to DC?
Uh, I don't know. He was not
able to complete the surgery.
But we had other surgeons
step in and help,
and we resected the tumor.
You got it all?
- No more tumor?
- We did.
I can't believe it.
Dr. Chase taught you his technique?
Dr. Bailey developed her own.
That's what saved Gabby.
I, uh I'm so grateful.
Thank you for taking care
of my baby girl.
You're gonna keep calling
me that, a-aren't you?
[CRIES] Forever and ever.
Oh, my God.
Uh, we'll give you some time.
- Griffith.
- Hmm?
Uh, he must have been
terrible to work for.
I ended up in the right place.
Excellent work today.
[ULTRASOUND NOISE]
I can't see the future ♪
[SIGHS] Is it still there? My leg?
Dr. Lincoln and Dr. Ndugu
will be in soon,
but they were able to realign your
bone and reestablish blood flow.
It was pretty amazing.
[SIGHS]
You probably think I'm an idiot.
I
think that you were in pain
and taking the time to heal.
It sucks, but
Especially after losing someone.
And now I'm stuck in a bed.
About that.
These are VR goggles.
We keep a few of them in our skills lab.
They help us practice procedures.
But I was able to download a program
that allows you to visit spots
across the globe.
Uh, virtually, that is.
I thought it would help distract
you from being stuck here.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
Dr. Lincoln?
I am sorry about today.
[STAMMERS] It's no excuse but,
I've been going through
something in my personal life.
I'm impressed
you even have a personal life.
When I was an intern,
there was a 32-day stretch
where I didn't see the sunlight.
It's probably for the best.
And I'll get a life
when I'm an attending.
Hey. What is this? Why are
you still in your scrubs?
We can still make it by the third
inning if we hurry, but we gotta go.
You didn't take
another surgery, did you?
We're still going, right?
Hey, Chief, your post-op notes are done,
and I'll check in the ER
for any consults before I go.
No need to announce it.
Just get it done.
Okay.
Hey, Chief. [STAMMERS]
I'm sorry I screwed up
during the heat dome, all right?
I wish I could go back in time
and do it better, but I can't.
All I can do is play by the rules today.
And I am trying really hard.
But if that's not good enough,
just just call it.
Good night.
- I know it's complicated
- Is that Seattle Grace?
It's Midvale General,
Adele's favorite soap.
It appears she taped over
my esophagectomy. [GRUNTS]
Uh, that's disappointing. I'm sorry.
Not as sorry as Dr. Lehane's gonna be
when he finds out his wife's pregnant
with his brother's baby. [LAUGHS]
When I first read Chase's work,
[CHUCKLES] I thought
it was too good to be true.
And I still fell for it.
Yeah. People like Chase prey
on our optimism and hope.
The indictment's on him, not you.
But I brought him here.
[INHALES SHARPLY]
I misled our residents into believing
that these tumors could be resected.
- And apparently they can.
- [SIGHS]
You were able to do it.
- We were.
- [SCOFFS]
[SIGHS]
Dr. Chase.
Griffith. You need something?
Oh. I can't change Baltimore's
decision to terminate you,
so don't bother asking.
I'm not. I'm glad I'm here.
I wasn't at first.
I spent a lot of time wondering
what I could've done
to make you see
what a good surgeon I could be.
But today I realized
it wouldn't have mattered.
You don't care about teaching.
You don't care about your patients.
You only care about you.
Maybe that gets you published,
wins you awards.
But it does not make you
a good doctor.
[SCOFFS] Well, that's [SIGHS]
a lot of opinions from an intern
who's only done one surgery
on their own.
Here's what you could've done
to impress me.
You could've been more specific
in your post-op notes.
"Better" doesn't really tell me
anything useful.
Could've been more assertive
with your patients,
and there was too much slack
in your sliding half-knots.
Still is, from what
I saw in there today.
Stands to reason, I suppose,
given your mentor who's really
no great shakes herself.
Good luck, Dr. Griffith. You need it.
[GREY] When you're in pain, you
can grin and bear it all you want.
You can try
to pretend it's not there.
Have you seen this map?
We're right behind home plate.
Yeah, yeah.
We get a concession server? [CHUCKLES]
[SIGHS] Lincoln was right.
I did need a night out.
Glad he could help you out.
I love baseball. You love baseball?
Wait, are you for Seattle or Boston?
When we get there,
just pretend it's the OR.
Okay? Hey, don't talk.
Okay? Don't talk.
See the light, see the light
that breaks through ♪
[GREY] But there's no glory
in suffering.
He said my sliding half-knots
were sloppy.
His shirt and tie didn't match.
- He insulted Bailey.
- No!
Karma will get him.
- Or a malpractice attorney.
- Mmm.
Hey, how was your day?
Actually, uh, pretty great.
Dr. Webber said he's
gonna talk to Dr. Fox
about letting me back into our class
Nope, keep your good news to yourself.
- We're moping.
- Yeah, this is Mopetown.
Population, two. I'm the mayor.
She's the comptroller.
[GRIFFITH]
What's a comptroller?
- I don't know. I don't care.
- [CHUCKLES]
I thought you'd be happy
for me. [CHUCKLES]
- I am. It's just been a long day.
- Yeah, so get on board or get out.
I'm pretty beat.
I'll see you upstairs?
Okay.
Okay, will you come with me
to, like, a bug society meeting,
so I can tell this girl
that my patient died?
No. That's not what a comptroller does.
- What?
- Yeah.
- [GREY] There's no reward.
- Sorry.
It doesn't make you wiser. Or stronger.
[DOOR OPENS, CLOSES]
It doesn't make you immune.
Here we are, here we are
I'm with you ♪
There's a beautiful dawn
In the breakthrough ♪
[SIGHS]
There's a beautiful dawn
In the breakthrough ♪
Did you even hesitate?
When you slept with someone else?
- Of course I did.
- Hmm.
I love you. Teddy, only you.
- That night meant nothing.
- [CRIES]
Here we are, here we are
I'm with you ♪
Hey.
Teddy, come here.
[SHUSHES] It's gonna be okay.
[GREY] Sometimes it makes
the pain even worse.
There's a beautiful dawn
In the breakthrough ♪
[GREY] The classic experiment
on pain tolerance is
to submerge your hand
in freezing cold water
- Hi!
- and see how long you can take it.
[HUNT] All right, troops.
Let's get our shoes.
We got five minutes, okay?
Hey. Welcome home.
Sorry, it's just I'm
I've been up since 4:00 a.m.
I missed you.
- Listen, um, while I was away
- [LEO MUTTERS]
- No, I'll
- No, I'll go. You get ready, okay?
[GREY] You can try to distract
yourself by counting slowly
or focusing on your breath.
And no one's happy now
Can we make it okay? ♪
- Did you sleep?
- Sure.
Are you okay?
Give me ten minutes.
You can have 15 if you shower.
Hey, uh, I wanted to head in early
and try to get on a good service
before grand rounds.
Molly was discharged last night.
She's already back in California.
So Kwan's broken heart trumps
me trying to get back into our class?
[CHUCKLE] No, but how many
times has he waited for us?
Like sunburn on my skin ♪
You never learn ♪
Kwan, you got 13 minutes!
We've got 13 minutes.
[GREY] But no matter how high you count,
or how deeply you breathe,
that water is still undeniably cold.
I'm gone two days and
everything's trash.
Today is not the day for trash. [GRUNTS]
Oh, I could help
if I was on your service.
[SIGHS] A world-renowned
surgeon is coming here
to see my patient for grand rounds,
I'm buried in paperwork,
and the attendings' lounge
is out of oat creamer.
[CHUCKLES] So I
don't have time for
whatever this is
you're trying to pull.
Well, I-I just don't think I
should be on Altman's service.
You know, not-not until I
get back in her good graces.
Well, how do you think you're gonna
get there if you never work with her?
- Bribery?
- [GRUNTS]
[SIGHS] Oh. [GASPS]
Oh, okay, he's on his way.
[SIGHS]
- Uh, thank you. Mmm.
- [CHUCKLES]
Perfect. Yes, yeah.
Good. Oh, one second.
[SLURPS]
Good morning. Glad you decided to come.
Well, I thought I'd come and
see what all the fuss was about.
[GROANS, CHUCKLES] Here. Right there.
- Late night?
- [SIGHS] It was for Maxine and Gino.
In their room next to mine.
She really cycles through boyfriends.
What happened to Claude?
- Oh, he died.
- I am truly sorry.
[YAWNS] No, he made it to his
100th birthday. That was his goal.
You want one?
I'd rather drink gasoline.
Good morning, everyone.
I would like to introduce Gabby Mims.
- Hello.
- [CHUCKLES]
Uh, four months ago, Gabby was
diagnosed with pancreatic adenocarcinoma
and began neoadjuvant
chemotherapy to shrink the tumor.
But because it encases
several critical blood vessels,
it's considered very high-risk
and doesn't meet the guidelines
for surgical resection.
That is where today's guest comes in.
He is taking on
difficult cases like this
to give patients hope
of cancer remission.
So please join me in welcoming
one of my surgical heroes,
Dr. Joseph Chase.
- Oh, my God.
- You know him?
[BREATHES SHAKILY] He got me
kicked out of my first residency program.
[BREATHES HEAVILY]
No. No, I'm not okay.
No, I can't calm down.
So save your breath.
Fine. But maybe you could
speed up the freaking out.
- Bailey noticed your seat is empty.
- Screw Bailey.
She should name the grand
rounds guests in the emails.
Yeah, you think you could've gotten
away with skipping grand rounds?
I think we can get away with
about 45 seconds. So, go.
[INHALES] He never requested me
on his service,
he looked past me in rounds,
he never remembered my name.
I learned to handle it. But when he
[BREATHES SHAKILY] neglected
a Black patient with
chronic pancreatitis for weeks,
I tried to ignore it,
but when her symptoms worsened
significantly overnight,
I told him I was concerned
she wasn't being seen.
He informed me,
if I was going to make a habit
out of telling him things
he already knew,
I could go be disrespectful
at another program.
Which led to
The scrub room incident.
[EXHALES]
And during my expulsion review,
he called out my "aggressive
behavior" and my
"subpar" surgical skills.
Well, he clearly didn't know you at all.
- Thank you. [SCOFFS]
- Right. Come on. We have to go back in.
I can't watch Bailey fawn over him.
She is who you work for now.
You said he never saw you.
Just get through the lecture, lay low,
and then you never
have to see him again.
- Okay?
- Okay.
Just give me Just give
me another minute. [SNIFFS]
- [CHASE] portion of the IVC.
- [BREATHES HEAVILY]
I'll start by placing a mesocaval shunt,
connecting the IVC past
the location of the tumor
and rerouting the
small intestine outflow.
And that's before I begin
the periarterial divestment,
during which I will resect
the cancerous tissue
surrounding the vessels,
one of which is
The superior mesenteric artery.
- Good. And it is significant because?
- It supplies oxygenated blood
to the pancreatic head, small
intestines and parts of the colon.
Your residents are quick
on the draw, Dr. Bailey.
[WEBBER CLEARS THROAT]
Uh, Dr. Chase,
surgical guidelines classify
these tumors as inoperable.
How can you ignore the recommendations?
Well, I don't think all patients fall
under the same criteria for resection.
We may find
that some actually benefit.
By experimenting on them?
Why don't I let
our patient answer that one?
I want to live.
Following the guidelines might
give me a few months, maybe a year.
Dr. Chase's surgery could
give me much longer.
And his success rate is stellar.
- He's planning to publish
- Soon.
And I wanted to include Gabby,
and you and your resident.
Who have you chosen to assist?
Uh, Griffith.
Hi, uh, you're scrubbing in.
Uh, and as for everyone else,
thank you, you're dismissed.
Okay, you got this.
You're Simone Griffith.
You take your excellence and
you shove it down his throat.
Uh, this is Dr. Griffith, one of our
program's shining stars. [CHUCKLES]
Oh, I know Dr. Griffith.
[BAILEY] You do?
Yes, our paths crossed
when I worked in Baltimore.
Good to see you thriving here,
Dr. Griffith.
Shall we go show our patient
back to her room?
Of course.
- [CHUCKLES]
- [CHASE] Mmm.
Morning. How was the conference?
Educational.
I'm sure Hunt's glad to have you back.
You know, I barely survived with
only one toddler. [CHUCKLES]
- I don't know how he managed two
- We have an incoming trauma
and a suspected acute
diverticulitis in bed two.
I'm here to help.
Uh, want me to start her on
broad spectrum antibiotics?
Only if you know something that I don't.
I am waiting on her scans.
Sorry. Just trying
to anticipate what you need.
What I need is for you to get her to CT.
Will do, Chief.
- Hey.
- [SOFTLY] Hey.
Hey, so I thought we could go to
your favorite Italian place tonight.
Look, I don't want
an open marriage.
I almost slept with someone in Oakland,
but I couldn't go through with it.
I am so sorry. But I don't want to
be with anybody else. I only want you.
- Me too.
- [SIGHS]
- Really?
- Yeah.
You know, change was worth a try,
but I only want to be with you too.
- [SIREN WAILING]
- D Did you try?
Rig's outside. You want me
to do the intake or
We've got it.
[PARAMEDIC] Brendon Browning,
25-year-old male, penetrating injury
to the chest from an ice pick,
50 mics of fentanyl en route.
GCS 15, hemodynamically stable.
And I'm in love.
Please don't move.
This ice pick is in a very dangerous area.
Is your partner on their way?
Oh, she's not
Uh, we're not together. Yet.
I just met her this morning.
- Okay, let's get him to trauma 1.
- We got you, Brendon.
- [CLICKS TONGUE]
- What the hell is happening?
Uh, former patient of mine gave
me two tickets to tonight's game
right behind home plate.
- You free?
- What's the catch?
- There's no catch.
- Mmm.
I I have Baxter as my intern
today, you have Kwan.
If I'm gonna make it
to this game on time,
I need somebody who's efficient
and can read their own handwriting.
Uh, an intern for behind home plate?
And an Americano.
[CHUCKLES] Yeah. Done.
I didn't have to give you
the coffee, did I?
[STAMMERS] You'll never know.
[EXHALES]
- Well, you're late.
- Uh, sorry. Grand rounds ran long.
Do you know about this Chase technique?
It's really interesting.
Well, it's a tragic case,
and I hope that works out.
[STAMMERS] Good job on
Ms. Regalski's central line.
You've been practicing.
[CHUCKLES] Well, I'm upping my game.
Trying to change Dr. Fox's mind
about my remediation.
[CHUCKLES] A central
line's not going to do that.
But the practice doesn't hurt.
Oh, I also signed up to help
with admin backlog.
And I'm volunteering
at the clinic on Saturdays.
I told you that wasn't happening.
- Actually, you didn't. You said
- I am now.
Let's finish rounds.
[ALTMAN] There's a small
left hemothorax.
Let's do a FAST exam to make
sure that the heart isn't involved.
Okay, so where do you Whoa.
Stabbing?
He was holding an ice pick
and he slipped.
So, he stabbed himself?
They say people do stupid
things when they're in love,
but I didn't get it until today.
He also met the love of his life today.
Ah, neat. Another one of those.
I was working the bar at a corporate
brunch event. It's not my scene.
But then I looked up, and there she was.
[CHUCKLES] The girl of my dreams.
FAST exam is negative.
Talking with her was
the best 17 minutes of my life.
How much ground could you
possibly cover in 17 minutes?
Her trip to Japan, her foster
kittens, her bug collection.
Enough to know that she's perfect.
Mrs. Grandy's CT confirms acute diver
- Wow. Uh, screwdriver?
- Ice pick.
He fell in love
and slipped onto it.
Warren, focus. Admit Mrs. Grandy,
get her on antibiotics,
and meet us in CT.
All right. It looks
like it only hit the lung.
Yeah, but I don't like
how close it is to the heart.
[ALTMAN] Millin, get us a CT.
I'll let them know we're on our way.
Jack Moss, 36, sustained a
tib-fib fracture over a year ago
due to a motorbike accident.
It resulted in malunion,
here for a corrective osteotomy
to realign the bones.
At least I got to see
the desert outside Marrakech
before skidding
into a textile market.
Says you were scheduled for a
surgery six months ago. Did you forget?
My tourist visa came through,
and I went to Tanzania instead.
Must be nice.
And how's the pain?
- Barely feel it.
- All right. [EXHALES SHARPLY]
You barely feel any pain?
I mean, I feel it when I walk, like,
more than a hundred feet.
Can you fix it?
[CLEARS THROAT]
You know, Jack, just at first glance,
we may be looking at an amputation.
What? Uh, no, no, no, no. I have
another tour next month in Munich.
And then after that,
it's Prague.
Uh. I'll tell you what, we'll get a new
round of tests. CT, MRI, everything.
And we'll take it from there.
- Kwan?
- You got it.
- Okay.
- [CHATTERING]
Oh, here he is. I'm gonna ask him.
- I already told you
- Something I can settle for you?
You've done this experimental
surgery enough times
to know that my baby girl
will be okay, right?
[SIGHS] You have to stop
calling me that. I'm 38.
And I'm not okay. I have cancer.
If I don't do this,
I may never get to see Chicago.
The musical or the city?
The new library on South Chicago.
That's what our team calls it.
I'm an architect.
It's been my life for four years.
I want to see it finished.
I want to see kids light up
at all the books
and old people play chess
in the community room.
I thought you wanted
to spend more time with me.
You'll be one of the people
playing chess.
[STAMMERS]
Promise me she'll be okay.
Well, I'd be lying. Nobody can
guarantee that with 100% certainty.
Here's what I can say.
When I walk into that operating room,
I'm gonna pour everything
I've learned
from decades of practice and research
into curing your daughter's cancer.
And I won't stop until I've
done everything I can for her.
[GABBY] He knows what he's doing, Mom.
I know the odds. I want this.
Good.
Dr. Griffith, will you prep
Ms. Mims for surgery?
Of course.
- We'll see you soon, Gabby.
- [CHUCKLES]
- Here you go.
- Thank you.
[ALTMAN] Was it the night that I left?
- When your mom was watching the kids?
- Teddy
Owen, did you have someone
over at our house?
- [SIGHS] We agreed on rules. No details.
- So that's a yes.
I did not bring anyone
into our home.
Anyone? [CHUCKLES]
Were there multiple people?
- No. Why are you accusing me?
- [SIGHS]
We opened our marriage, Teddy.
And you also were with someone else.
- How's our young Romeo?
- Great.
I know these odds. He is way
more into her than she is into him.
- They say every pot has its lid.
- Some pots have many lids.
- Says the kettle.
- You're mixing metaphors.
- No, I'm not. [EXHALES]
- Scans. Scans are up.
Well, it's hard to see
with all of this artifact,
but it looks like the ice pick is
penetrating the descending aortic arch.
You see that?
There is a contained hematoma
that has formed around the entry site.
How is he not bleeding out?
The ice pick is essentially
plugging the hole.
So if we move him, and it moves
He could bleed out and die.
So how do we get him to the OR?
Hmm. Hi.
How's Chase? Did he cure
metastatic lung cancer too?
[STAMMERS]
Do you two have history?
Never met him until today.
But I do have history with you.
Now, you asked me to do a consult
on Gabby Mims two months ago,
and clearly, you didn't
trust my opinion.
[STAMMERS] I was looking for options.
Chase had one.
No, he's breaking new ground.
He's resecting a tumor from a place
where multiple studies have determined
that the risks outweigh the benefit.
[CLEARS THROAT] I take it you don't
approve of his technique.
Yeah. His so-called technique is
the same as resecting any other
tumor, just with more arrogance.
And, frankly, I'm surprised you
allowed him to use it on Gabby.
I guess she was a good lure.
You think [CHUCKLES]
I used Gabby as surgical bait?
People go to great lengths
to meet their heroes.
I know you've admired him
from afar for years.
[SMACKS LIPS] Um, Dr. Chase's methods
could be the future
of pancreatic surgery.
We can get on board or we
can bury our heads in the sand
and watch our patients die.
You do what you want. I prefer
to keep my head above ground.
So if we roll over a paper clip,
or someone runs into me, I'll die?
It's not that simple. First,
you would start to bleed,
then we would get you into
surgery as soon as possible.
- Oh, God. [BREATHES HEAVILY]
- We will be very careful.
- I don't know. [STAMMERS]
[MILLIN] Well, you rode in an ambulance,
and then in an elevator and on a gurney.
Like, those are pretty good
odds, and I'm usually a downer.
There's no reason to think that
we can't get you to the OR safely.
Yeah, and then you can go be
happy with what's her [STAMMERS]
- What is her name?
- I don't know.
Why didn't I ask? I-I should have asked.
It was 17 minutes! [WINCES]
Hey, Brendon, we need
you to calm down, okay?
And we need you to trust us, okay?
Can you do that?
- Okay.
- Okay.
It's all right. It's okay.
All right, everybody,
move out of the way!
Let's move on my count, okay?
I'll set the pace. One, two, three.
Okay. All right. We got you.
[EXHALES SHARPLY]
Your pre-op labs are all good.
You're cleared for surgery.
[CHUCKLES]
I can't believe it's
finally happening.
So, what do you think of Dr. Chase?
Is he as good as everyone says?
He's excellent. I've actually
watched him operate before.
I once saw him treat a very
complicated mesothelioma with HIPEC,
combination of surgery and hot
chemotherapy in the abdomen.
The patient is okay?
Posted a photo with his new
grandson a few weeks ago.
[CHUCKLES, SIGHS]
- I have to do this, Mom.
- [BREATHES SHARPLY]
It's my only chance.
Last time I was in a hospital bed,
I was holding my new
baby girl in my arms.
I didn't want to let go of you then,
and I don't want to let go now.
What if this the last time [SOBS]
You've been the best mama
I could ever have.
You gave me the courage
to think big, dream big
- believe big.
- Believe big.
- [SNIFFLES]
- That's why I'm not afraid to do this.
- I love you.
- [EXHALES]
I love you more, baby girl.
[BAILEY] Who's ready for surgery?
Okay.
Now I'm ready.
- Let's do this.
- [BAILEY] All righty.
Hey. Uh, so I dropped off
Ms. Schiller's labs
and I submitted Mr. Bohigian's
discharge paperwork.
Oh. Good. When I finish with the
scans, you can update the charts.
[STAMMERS] Uh, Chase's surgery
is about to start.
Are you scrubbing in?
No, I-I just assumed we'd watch.
I'm not interested in that.
Well, he could make
history today. [CHUCKLES]
And you can learn a lot
by watching good surgeons, right?
- Come with me.
- To the gallery?
Better.
Sorry. [EXHALES SHARPLY]
Jack saw a scenic photo in radiology
and refused to go back
to his room
until I could figure out
if it was Banff National Park.
- Was it?
- [SLURPS]
Oh, he thinks it is. [EXHALES]
- Okay, what do you see?
- Well, a bone that's completely healed
but at an angle.
Oh, he's lucky if he gets
five feet, let alone a hundred.
Yeah, you can see
the vessel is kinked here
in the area of the bone deformity.
He only has one vessel running
off to the foot, barely
keeping it alive. Damn.
Hope he took lots of pictures
in the Serengeti.
He's not going anywhere besides PT.
It's an amputation, right?
Ooh, could I do it?
I always wanted to do one.
[STAMMERS] Go check on
my arthroplasty from last night.
Millin got to do one her first day.
- Interns perform them all the time
- Not hyped-up ones.
Put that crap away.
I'm already overloaded with patients.
I don't have time to resuscitate you.
Now go do what I asked.
[ALTMAN] You're going too fast.
Listen, if you have a problem
with my pace, then you lead.
- Is everything okay?
- [HUNT] You're doing great.
Almost at the elevator.
- Whoa, whoa!
- Hey! No running!
Okay.
So, um, tell us more about the
woman you met. What does she do?
She's a graphic designer, I think.
I don't know her name
or what she does.
When you get out of here,
you'll get a second chance.
But what if I die?
[ALTMAN] Hey, Millin. Why don't you
get out your phone?
- We're gonna find her.
- Find her how?
You're the millennial. You tell me.
[MILLIN] This never goes well for me.
Can you think of anything unique?
A A blue streak in her hair?
[INHALES] Uh, big glasses?
She has hazel eyes. I think she
has a small dimple when she smiles?
Okay, everyone. Nice and slow.
Easy. Okay.
You ready for tonight?
Yeah, last night, Boston was down.
They put in Taft as a designated hitter.
Steps up to the plate
with the bases loaded
and hits a genius triple
to left center. [LAUGHS]
Unstoppable.
I'm, uh, taking Baxter back.
I've got a sensitive case,
and something's up with Kwan.
Um, does tonight's seat go with Baxter?
- Nope.
- All right. Take whoever you want.
I do need to see if I can
switch the seats to tomorrow.
Oh. No, no, no.
I got a a late CABG tomorrow night.
So [SNICKERS]
put that phone away, please.
My patient's got a severe tib-fib
malunion with vascular damage
and critical limb ischemia.
I've-I've either gotta amputate or
bring in a genius designated hitter.
Is he a candidate
for a fem-tib bypass?
He's got anatomy distorted
below the knee. No.
No, it won't work.
When I say "severe," I mean I've never
seen a leg like this
in my entire career.
I can bypass anything. [CHUCKLES]
Even this?
- Damn it.
- Yeah.
- Not everybody's unstoppable.
- No, I can do it.
Which means I won't be sitting
behind home plate tonight. [HUFFS]
What if I never find her?
- Seattle's not that big.
- But it's that not small, either.
And you're young.
You'll meet somebody else.
- Uh, maybe you dodged a bullet.
- Every nightmare I ever dated
- made a great first impression.
- Or she's the love of your life.
I-I'm sorry. Does nobody else
find this a little bit creepy?
I'm sure you're great,
but stalking is not
- Have you ever been in love?
- This feels inappropriate.
When you're in love, you don't give up.
- Keep looking.
- Okay.
- [ELEVATOR BELL DINGS]
- Here we go. [GRUNTS]
[WARREN] Careful.
[ALTMAN] Easy. [SUCKS TEETH]
All right, let's turn.
[ALTMAN] Doing great.
Brendon, does she have
a mole on her neck?
- On her right side. Did you find her?
- [MILLIN] I think so.
You were right about the bugs.
"Elena Ginsburg, member of the
Greater Seattle Entomology Club"?
What's entomology?
Oh, my God. That's her.
- [GASPS] No, no!
- Brendon, don't move!
- [MONITOR BEEPS]
- Okay, run. Let's go! Let's go!
[HUNT] Hey. We need to get him
on the OR table right now.
- We need to get in there.
- [ALTMAN] Gown and glove.
[HUNT] Okay, on my count.
Ready? One, two, three.
- [ALTMAN] Betadine.
- [MILLIN] Yeah, I'm on it.
[HUNT] The ice pick in his aorta moved.
We got him here in less than a minute.
We can save him.
[ALTMAN] Let's go. Let's go!
All right, we're removing the ice pick.
- Scalpel.
- How can I help?
[ALTMAN] You can give us some space.
Come on, Brendon.
You made it this far. Stay with me.
That's not it.
Yeah, maybe I should get back to rounds.
Uh, Mr. Vizcaino's wound vac's
not gonna check itself.
Uh, we just checked it. [GRUNTS]
You know, you made a very good point.
I did?
Yeah. There is a value to
watching great surgical cases.
All right. Ah. Found it.
- What is that?
- This, son, is a videotape.
Yeah, I kn-know that.
What's on it?
Surgeries.
Look, I'm talking Whipples
and Roux-en-Ys and Puestows.
Procedures that require real skill,
not that surgical cowboy nonsense.
You wanna watch and learn,
you watch this. [CHUCKLES]
How?
I'm almost finished
with the first shunt.
Suction. But careful, too aggressive
a move could spell disaster.
- This okay?
- It's fine.
Dr. Griffith recently did a
solo surgery. First in her class.
- Wow, congratulations.
- [BAILEY CHUCKLES]
- Ever seen a mesocaval shunt before?
- [GRIFFITH] No, sir.
Congratulations again. You're
about to see one completed.
Oh. Careful with this margin.
- I see it.
- Mmm.
And why do we need the shunt?
[BAILEY] To bypass the SMV and
provide outflow from the intestine
while you resect the tumor
- That was meant for Griffith.
- [LAUGHS] Yeah. But correct.
You must have been
one outstanding student.
I like to think I still am.
It helps to have amazing teachers.
[CHUCKLES] Okay. Shunt is done.
Moving on to the periarterial
divestment on the SMA.
[CHASE CHUCKLES]
Just like we planned before,
I'll start with the osteotomy.
- [CLEARS THROAT]
- Can I help you, Dr. Kwan?
- I'm on Dr. Ndugu's service now.
- Um, fine. Just stand over there.
I will re-break the bones in your leg,
and I will realign them
with plates and screws.
That's when I'll go in
and attempt the bypass
- to improve blood flow to the leg.
- Okay, great. Let's do it.
I wanna keep my legs
so I can keep traveling.
Jack, we won't perform the surgery
unless you agree to stop
traveling while you properly heal.
- Okay, well, how long will that take?
- Months. If today goes well.
How long does recovery
from an amputation take?
- Months.
- And if I do nothing?
Without urgent intervention,
the wound on your leg could
become infected,
which could lead to sepsis.
[SIGHS]
Okay.
I want the surgery.
We'll see you in the OR.
Babcock. Fortunately,
the tissue's not friable,
so it peels right off the
vessel with sharp dissection.
[BAILEY] Look at that.
Fundamentally, it's no different
than resecting any other tumor.
- There's some bleeding.
- [BAILEY] Where?
- Then suction.
- [SUCTION TOOL SUCKS]
[BAILEY] Uh, did the tumor
invade the SMA?
It's possible. Yep.
The tumor definitely breached
the arterial wall. Clamp.
[CHASE] We need 4-0 prolene.
And more suction.
Okay, I'll suture the SMA,
and then we'll close.
[BAILEY] Close? W-We haven't finished.
If we continue with the procedure,
we're putting her in greater danger.
[GRIFFITH] What about blood
supply to the small bowel?
Tell your intern that's out of
scope for this procedure.
I am officially done here.
[BAILEY] You have successfully completed
all your other cases. Why stop now?
Dr. Chase? Okay, if you stop,
will Gabby be a part of your study?
I'm kind of in the middle of
something if you haven't noticed
- [BAILEY] Dr. Chase.
- Of course not.
Her procedure was incomplete.
So that's how you do it.
[BAILEY] I thought it was
unparalleled expertise and steady hands.
But it's cutting and running
before there are consequences,
at least, for you.
Dr. Bailey, her small bowel's
becoming dusky.
[STAMMERS] Okay.
Uh, if we stop, she will die.
I told you, I'm done here.
You're damn right you are.
No. [STAMMERS] I will finish.
Your patient is no longer a
candidate for this procedure
Then by all means, don't let me keep you.
There's the door. Use it!
[GRUNTS] I need a stool, please. [SIGHS]
- [NURSE] Right away, doctor.
- What do we do now?
Uh, I don't know, but we sure
as hell aren't closing.
[LINCOLN] Just have to
put in a few more,
and if the alignment's
in check, it's all you.
[NDUGU] When was
the original fracture?
Eighteen months ago.
He was treated abroad, but he
started weight-bearing way too soon.
Nearly lost his leg today, but, hey,
I bet the beer was
damn tasty after seeing
the Great Migration in the Serengeti.
[NDUGU] What? That's
why he risked amputation?
He didn't wanna cancel a trip?
- [KWAN] That's what he said.
- [LINCOLN] He lied to you. Drill.
[SIGHS] Jack's brother was
an extreme adventurer.
He booked a trip around the world.
Motorcycle tours mostly.
He died unexpectedly two years ago.
Jack quit his job, and he's been
spreading his brother's ashes
in every country his brother
wanted to see before he died.
He could have avoided all this
if he let himself heal physically, but
spreading his brother's ashes
probably healed something, too.
Done. Ndugu, you're up.
[NDUGU] All right. Let's hope I didn't
make you do all that
work for nothing, huh?
[NDUGU STAMMERS] Potts scissors, please.
Okay, watch this now. I'm going to
Oh, come on here. Come on.
You know, they have places
that convert these old tapes.
Oh, to DVDs?
Ah, here we go. All right.
Now I'm going to dissect the
lateral peritoneal attachments.
- The Kocher maneuver.
- Exactly. Here's the incision
Uh, are you using your finger
to open up the duodenum?
Yeah. Simple and effective.
See? That's how I was taught.
- Huh.
- [PHONE BUZZES]
It's Bailey. It's a 9-1-1.
I can't believe I fell
for that man's snake oil.
Did you have any idea
when you were in Baltimore?
Where's Chase?
- Uh, you were right. Don't gloat.
- About what?
Gabby's tumor grew
through the wall of the SMA.
- Chase transected it while resecting.
- Then decided to take a break?
- [BAILEY SIGHS]
- Dr. Bailey asked him to leave
after figuring out he's been selective
about the patients in his study.
[WEBBER GROANS]
Well, the artery is shot. He did
a nice job on the shunt, though.
Adams, see how he rerouted
the SMV to the IVC?
[BAILEY] Hey, look, I know
this is a teachable moment,
but every minute that goes by increases
the chances of Gabby's bowel necrosing.
And as much as I appreciate the
genius of Chase's
rerouting, we need to
[WEBBER] What are you thinking?
[BAILEY] What if we used a saphenous
vein graft to reconstruct the SMA?
W-We could restore the blood
supply and remove the invaded vessel.
[WEBBER] And the whole tumor with it.
[BAILEY] You think that's too risky?
Only if you don't have enough
hands. Adams, we're scrubbing in.
- [BAILEY] Okay.
- [GRIFFITH] Okay. Okay.
[BAILEY] We got a plan.
We got a plan.
[MONITOR BLARING]
[HUNT] There's too much bleeding.
Can you see where it's coming from?
How many units has he had?
[MILLIN] Four units.
Black and blue, far away ♪
[ALTMAN] His heart won't restart.
Warren, get over here.
Take over compressions.
[ALTMAN] Come on, Brendon. Come on.
[ALTMAN] All right, stop compressions.
Let me in there.
All right, charge to 40. Clear.
Charge again. Clear.
[HUNT] It's been too long.
[ALTMAN] He didn't give up.
We can't either.
All right. Charge to 50. Clear.
- [HUNT] Teddy.
- [ALTMAN] Come on.
- Damn it. Let me in there.
- [HUNT] Teddy.
Come on.
Teddy.
Teddy! It's over.
You've done all you can.
[STEADY BEEP]
[SNIFFLES, SIGHS]
Time of death, 19:24.
[KNOCK ON DOOR]
- I spoke to Brendon's parents.
- It shouldn't have gone like this.
I, uh I have a lot of paperwork
to get through. You should just go.
Teddy. Teddy, we need
to talk about this.
Now is not a good time.
[SCOFFS]
So, you're happy to work on our marriage
when it means sleeping
with Cass Beckman,
but when I wanna have
a difficult conversation
Oh. I'm sorry, who slept
with someone else? Not me.
What did you think was gonna
happen when we opened our marriage?
I'm gonna be late. Um
Don't wait up for me.
[SIGHS]
She's going to be okay, right?
She needs a lot of rest,
but she's doing very well.
Thank you. [SIGHS]
You hear that, baby girl?
You're gonna be okay.
Thank you so much.
Dr. Chase go back to DC?
Uh, I don't know. He was not
able to complete the surgery.
But we had other surgeons
step in and help,
and we resected the tumor.
You got it all?
- No more tumor?
- We did.
I can't believe it.
Dr. Chase taught you his technique?
Dr. Bailey developed her own.
That's what saved Gabby.
I, uh I'm so grateful.
Thank you for taking care
of my baby girl.
You're gonna keep calling
me that, a-aren't you?
[CRIES] Forever and ever.
Oh, my God.
Uh, we'll give you some time.
- Griffith.
- Hmm?
Uh, he must have been
terrible to work for.
I ended up in the right place.
Excellent work today.
[ULTRASOUND NOISE]
I can't see the future ♪
[SIGHS] Is it still there? My leg?
Dr. Lincoln and Dr. Ndugu
will be in soon,
but they were able to realign your
bone and reestablish blood flow.
It was pretty amazing.
[SIGHS]
You probably think I'm an idiot.
I
think that you were in pain
and taking the time to heal.
It sucks, but
Especially after losing someone.
And now I'm stuck in a bed.
About that.
These are VR goggles.
We keep a few of them in our skills lab.
They help us practice procedures.
But I was able to download a program
that allows you to visit spots
across the globe.
Uh, virtually, that is.
I thought it would help distract
you from being stuck here.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
Dr. Lincoln?
I am sorry about today.
[STAMMERS] It's no excuse but,
I've been going through
something in my personal life.
I'm impressed
you even have a personal life.
When I was an intern,
there was a 32-day stretch
where I didn't see the sunlight.
It's probably for the best.
And I'll get a life
when I'm an attending.
Hey. What is this? Why are
you still in your scrubs?
We can still make it by the third
inning if we hurry, but we gotta go.
You didn't take
another surgery, did you?
We're still going, right?
Hey, Chief, your post-op notes are done,
and I'll check in the ER
for any consults before I go.
No need to announce it.
Just get it done.
Okay.
Hey, Chief. [STAMMERS]
I'm sorry I screwed up
during the heat dome, all right?
I wish I could go back in time
and do it better, but I can't.
All I can do is play by the rules today.
And I am trying really hard.
But if that's not good enough,
just just call it.
Good night.
- I know it's complicated
- Is that Seattle Grace?
It's Midvale General,
Adele's favorite soap.
It appears she taped over
my esophagectomy. [GRUNTS]
Uh, that's disappointing. I'm sorry.
Not as sorry as Dr. Lehane's gonna be
when he finds out his wife's pregnant
with his brother's baby. [LAUGHS]
When I first read Chase's work,
[CHUCKLES] I thought
it was too good to be true.
And I still fell for it.
Yeah. People like Chase prey
on our optimism and hope.
The indictment's on him, not you.
But I brought him here.
[INHALES SHARPLY]
I misled our residents into believing
that these tumors could be resected.
- And apparently they can.
- [SIGHS]
You were able to do it.
- We were.
- [SCOFFS]
[SIGHS]
Dr. Chase.
Griffith. You need something?
Oh. I can't change Baltimore's
decision to terminate you,
so don't bother asking.
I'm not. I'm glad I'm here.
I wasn't at first.
I spent a lot of time wondering
what I could've done
to make you see
what a good surgeon I could be.
But today I realized
it wouldn't have mattered.
You don't care about teaching.
You don't care about your patients.
You only care about you.
Maybe that gets you published,
wins you awards.
But it does not make you
a good doctor.
[SCOFFS] Well, that's [SIGHS]
a lot of opinions from an intern
who's only done one surgery
on their own.
Here's what you could've done
to impress me.
You could've been more specific
in your post-op notes.
"Better" doesn't really tell me
anything useful.
Could've been more assertive
with your patients,
and there was too much slack
in your sliding half-knots.
Still is, from what
I saw in there today.
Stands to reason, I suppose,
given your mentor who's really
no great shakes herself.
Good luck, Dr. Griffith. You need it.
[GREY] When you're in pain, you
can grin and bear it all you want.
You can try
to pretend it's not there.
Have you seen this map?
We're right behind home plate.
Yeah, yeah.
We get a concession server? [CHUCKLES]
[SIGHS] Lincoln was right.
I did need a night out.
Glad he could help you out.
I love baseball. You love baseball?
Wait, are you for Seattle or Boston?
When we get there,
just pretend it's the OR.
Okay? Hey, don't talk.
Okay? Don't talk.
See the light, see the light
that breaks through ♪
[GREY] But there's no glory
in suffering.
He said my sliding half-knots
were sloppy.
His shirt and tie didn't match.
- He insulted Bailey.
- No!
Karma will get him.
- Or a malpractice attorney.
- Mmm.
Hey, how was your day?
Actually, uh, pretty great.
Dr. Webber said he's
gonna talk to Dr. Fox
about letting me back into our class
Nope, keep your good news to yourself.
- We're moping.
- Yeah, this is Mopetown.
Population, two. I'm the mayor.
She's the comptroller.
[GRIFFITH]
What's a comptroller?
- I don't know. I don't care.
- [CHUCKLES]
I thought you'd be happy
for me. [CHUCKLES]
- I am. It's just been a long day.
- Yeah, so get on board or get out.
I'm pretty beat.
I'll see you upstairs?
Okay.
Okay, will you come with me
to, like, a bug society meeting,
so I can tell this girl
that my patient died?
No. That's not what a comptroller does.
- What?
- Yeah.
- [GREY] There's no reward.
- Sorry.
It doesn't make you wiser. Or stronger.
[DOOR OPENS, CLOSES]
It doesn't make you immune.
Here we are, here we are
I'm with you ♪
There's a beautiful dawn
In the breakthrough ♪
[SIGHS]
There's a beautiful dawn
In the breakthrough ♪
Did you even hesitate?
When you slept with someone else?
- Of course I did.
- Hmm.
I love you. Teddy, only you.
- That night meant nothing.
- [CRIES]
Here we are, here we are
I'm with you ♪
Hey.
Teddy, come here.
[SHUSHES] It's gonna be okay.
[GREY] Sometimes it makes
the pain even worse.
There's a beautiful dawn
In the breakthrough ♪