Grey's Anatomy s14e16 Episode Script

Caught Somewhere in Time

1 MEREDITH: The first surgeons were vivisectionists.
- Yeah - When they opened a body, they had no intention of closing it.
One, two, three, yeah [BOTH BREATHING HEAVILY.]
They just wanted to see what was inside.
Phenomenal job.
Yeah.
Hats off to you, too.
And what they found was a world of possibility You know, this no-strings-attached thing it is like hidden treasure.
All of the fun, none of the emotional baggage.
We should write a book.
- We would make millions.
- [LAUGHS.]
- Mmm, mmm, mmm.
Oh.
- [WATCH VIBRATES.]
Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh Oh, shoot.
[SIGHS.]
I gotta go.
Give 'em what they want It's Intern Trauma Certification Day today.
Okay.
the possibility to heal [EXHALES HEAVILY.]
to reverse the damage Yeah, yeah, yeah to turn back time.
- Yeah, yeah, yeah - You sure this is cool? You know, me leaving in a hurry? I just I don't want to be a Stop.
No feelings.
I'm good.
And it'll stay good? - Yeah, yeah, yeah - I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I just keep waiting for the other shoe.
What do you mean, the other shoe? You know, like you saying you wanted to have kids and then you don't want to have kids.
That was more like a boot than a shoe.
Actually, it was more like an ass kicking.
- [BOTH CHUCKLE.]
- Give 'em what they want Well, I'll see you tonight.
- Give 'em what they need - Or not.
No strings.
No shoes.
We can start work on that book.
Yeah, yeah, yeah [BIRDS CHIRPING.]
ARIZONA: Hey, Sofia? Sofia! I've got three fluffy pancakes patiently waiting for you.
What Hey, why aren't you dressed? - I put out your red shoes.
- I don't want my red shoes.
Okay, well, at this point, I'll settle for any shoes at all, so let's just put on let's put on shoes.
[CHUCKLES.]
What's wrong? Hey.
What? What, are you sick? Does your tummy hurt? - No.
- Okay, great.
Then let's get up and get dressed, okay? 'Cause I have a huge day at work, and you have school.
So, what do you want first? You want the shirt? You want pants? You want Hey.
Whoa.
Hey.
What's the matter? You can tell me.
[CRYING.]
I want to go to New York.
With my friends and my other teacher who lets us draw in our notebooks.
- And - And you miss your mommy, too.
[SIGHS.]
Sweetheart, hey, why don't you come to work with me today? Okay? All right, come on.
All right.
[SIREN WAILING.]
[INDISTINCT CONVERSATIONS.]
You paged.
I paged.
Do you need help looking for something? You know what? I did.
But I think I see it now.
Mmm.
Does this door have a lock? Mnh-mnh.
I don't think so.
Maybe we should find a room with a door with a lock.
I don't have time for that.
I got a vagina to build.
- My vaginoplasty for the contest.
- Right.
That surgery's today with my mom and Richard.
Wow.
Some families do puzzles.
It's okay.
Tonight.
Tonight I say we cancel the reservation and have dinner at my place.
I got a lot of doors and a lot of locks.
- That sounds perfect.
- Oh, good.
- Yes.
- [LAUGHS.]
Hey! - Hey.
- Hey.
Hello.
[CLEARS THROAT.]
- We should - Uh Yep.
Um, good luck with your vagina.
Don't I'm just gonna Excuse me.
[INDISTINCT CONVERSATIONS.]
What are you doing? All this stuff has to get cleared out.
That centrifuge that we stole from oncology that should go back.
And do you and Alex want a mouse? No.
No, no, no, no, no.
The mouse stays.
I have news.
I have great news.
Oh.
You got engaged, right? Congratulations.
No.
No, no, no, it's I mean, yes.
Thank you.
But No, no, no, no.
[STAMMERS.]
I was up all night.
I found seven polymers that could replace the one that hag Marie Cerone stole from us.
And I know she's your aunt or whatever, but she's still a hag.
Jo, let it go.
We're outsmarted, outgunned, outfunded.
Even if we won the stupid contest, she's way ahead of us.
No.
Okay, if you could just look at any of these Hey, you, where are all the interns? Trauma Certification with Hunt.
Ugh.
I have a massive crush injury being helicoptered in from Spokane and no one to teach about massive crush injuries.
- Take her, please.
- No! Yeah, you'll do.
With me.
[TELEPHONE RINGING.]
Meh! [DOOR CLOSES.]
- [GRUNTS.]
- WOMAN ON PA: Dr.
Boraff to the cap lab.
Dr.
Boraff to the cap lab.
Ah, good for you.
I always said you should find more friends.
[LAUGHS.]
Uh, these are for I know.
So, speaking of dummies, you know that thing you said earlier about wanting and then not wanting kids? You realize I had a brain tumor at the time, right? Yeah, okay.
That's true, but you can't blame everything on the tumor.
No, I sort of can because of the massive, heaping ball that was pressed on my cerebrum.
Okay, I thought you said we were cool.
Oh, I'm cool.
No.
I am the coolest.
But, you know, even with the tumor, I still never cheated on anyone.
- Whoa.
Wait.
- Good luck with your show.
- [SIGHS.]
- Hey.
Please let me run this thing with you.
Or Or I could run it for you.
Without you.
Just Just please let me run it.
DeLuca's on board to help.
We're good.
I said please! Fine.
Breezeway in 10 minutes.
Okay.
Wow.
And it turns out this woman had an ax to grind with Ellis Grey.
So, Dr.
Grey's dropping out of the contest? She's not giving us her patent, so Dr.
Grey is just quitting.
- It sucks.
- It does.
But it does improve the odds for my "AnalGlide.
" - Hmm? - I'm trying out names for my colonoscopy device.
Anal No? Mnh.
Mnh.
Hello.
I'm Chief Miranda Bailey.
This is Dr.
Jo Wilson.
Please, uh, present.
Marjorie Kersey.
66.
Sustained blunt trauma to the abdomen and chest four days ago when a 22-foot test apparatus Electromagnet.
Big-ass electromagnet.
fell onto her.
Hospitalized at a community center, where her clinical course was complicated by rhabdo and acute kidney injury, all resolving, but - Marge Kersey? - Mm-hmm.
has recurrent abdominal pain.
Transferred here for consultation.
"Bargin' Marge" Kersey? The astronaut? - Okay.
Here we go.
- Oh, my God.
This woman has clocked over 1,000 hours in space.
- In space! - Oh, my Lord, we have a nerd! Oh, I'm a huge fan.
But y-you won the Fundamental Physics Prize twice.
I know, hon.
I was there.
[LAUGHS.]
Oh, is that like the Nobel Prize? [CHUCKLING.]
Ahh! The Nobel Prize wishes.
Oh, Dr.
Kersey, well, it is an honor to meet you and a privilege to treat you.
Are you rhyming on purpose? I What? No.
I I've followed you since I was a little girl.
You are a trailblazer.
Oh, my gosh, thank you, hon.
I hope you're prepared to blaze a trail through my intestine or whatnot.
[LAUGHING.]
Of course.
Hey, um, what were you working on, if I can ask? - Can you say? - I can say.
Um, it's a temporal variance spectrometer.
It'll detect time-space changes in the Higgs boson field and will eventually control it.
It sounds like Are you building a time machine? Wow.
You really are a nerd.
I'm impressed.
A-A time machine? Are you serious? You're building a time machine for for NASA.
Oh, no, I parted ways with NASA years ago.
I'm building it for me, so I can travel to the future.
[LAUGHING.]
Yeah! - So cool.
- Uh-huh.
So, your temporal variance spectrometer, what, creates a wormhole? No, no, that's a guy in South Africa.
He wants to send little "beep-boop" signals through time dilation.
I want to send people.
Sending people through time? That seems, uh Bananas? Yeah.
Apparently, NASA thought so, too.
Stop.
Uh, hey, uh, why do you have me set up for a head CT, anyway? You looking for a tumor? Yeah, uh Okay.
No.
Hold still.
Just covering our bases.
It's fine.
You're not the first ones who've looked at me like I'm bat-crap crazy.
- You won't be the last.
- See? I told you.
- Shh! - I'm not the only one.
[GRUNTS.]
You're fine.
Big day, Mother.
You ready? Anything, uh, bothering you? I haven't said a word.
You don't have to.
Your face did.
My face isn't saying anything.
Richard, is my face saying something? It's like reading Hemingway, dear.
[ELEVATOR DINGS.]
Ahh.
[SIGHS.]
Good morning.
- Mwah! - Good morning, doctors.
- Ah, good morning.
- Morning.
You opening a flower shop? Yeah.
They're from my boyfriend.
He thinks he's hilarious.
Sent me a book of Georgia O'Keefe prints, too.
[CHUCKLES.]
I never dreamed this day would come.
And I certainly never dreamed that a mother and son would build my vagina.
And father.
Stepfather, about a about a year and a half.
- So no offense.
- Mm.
Uh, none taken.
Well, family is family is family.
Like the saying goes.
That's not a saying, but okay.
- Not to you, it's not.
- No one's ever said it.
- [CHUCKLES.]
- [CLEARS THROAT.]
Is everything okay? - Yes.
- Mm-hmm.
Oh, yeah.
Because part of me feels like a little kid on Christmas morning.
But the other part is a world-class physician who knows you're dealing with the most sensitive organ in the body.
I can't afford any distractions.
Michelle, I hear you.
Let me assure you that my mind is not anywhere but right here, in this surgery.
Shall we do this? [BREATHES DEEPLY.]
Yes.
[LAUGHING.]
Let's do this.
Yeah.
Oh, all right, bring it in.
Nice.
[BOTH LAUGHING.]
- Ohh.
- Hey.
Oh, wow, this is where the party is.
Dr.
Robbins.
Who is the new intern? This is my daughter, Sofia.
And this must be the infamous Noah.
It sure is.
Noah, honey, say hi.
- Hi.
- Hi.
Liz, when did the pain start and where? I was on my way to his school.
It's here in my lower back.
Is it stabbing or shooting? - No.
More like pressure.
- All right.
Um, hey, Noah, can you come over here and sit on the chairs while I give your mom an exam? - Want to see my robot monster? - 'Kay.
[BOTH LAUGHING.]
He's a full-blown prodigy, and I'm definitely not biased.
Well, it has been a while since I've heard Sofia laugh like that.
Noah seems to laugh a lot.
Yeah, he's always been a happy kid.
Good.
All righty.
Let's see - Okay.
- what we got going on.
You're gonna feel a little bit of pressure.
Okay.
[HEARTBEAT.]
You said I could carry to term.
Liz, you have Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, so I said that we would try to get you to term.
But I'm a I'm a little worried that you have an incompetent cervix.
Well, that sounds rude.
Well [CHUCKLES.]
your uterus is putting pressure on your cervix, causing it to open.
And then your amniotic sac is bulging through.
And the monitor shows that you might be having contractions, so let's admit you and let's try and stop them.
Contractions? But she's only 23 weeks.
Right.
That's why I'm gonna do everything I can to make sure that she stays exactly where she is.
[CHUCKLES.]
Hey, should I start freaking out now? No, because that would be neither helpful nor necessary.
Hey, Noah, can you come, um, hang out with your mom for a second? [LAUGHING.]
Hey, honey.
Um, okay, uh, I will see you soon.
- Okay.
- All right.
Yeah.
See you.
Oh, hey.
Hey.
There you are.
What are you doing? Packing it in.
You okay? No.
Something happened.
What's wrong? [GROANS.]
Are you quitting the contest, too? Uh, no.
I was making out with Jackson, and we got caught by his mother and my and Richard.
I mean, we're all fine.
We're all adults.
And Richard isn't even really my dad, but I suddenly feel like he is my father.
And I I feel like I felt when I was 15, and when I was 15, I was 12.
[SIGHS.]
- Jackson? Oh, crap, I didn't tell you about that.
Wait a second.
You're dropping out of the contest? Marie Cerone wanted me to rename the Grey Method the Grey-Cerone Method and That's crazy.
Yeah.
I couldn't do it.
That would kill Ellis.
And I've already watched her die once, so Uh, well, you can't let her take this away from you.
I won't let you.
No, Maggie.
Stop.
It's fine.
Listen, you've never had your hopes and dreams crushed by our mother, but for me it was an annual occurrence, so, really.
- I'm pissed, but I'll get over it.
- [PAGER BEEPS.]
Ugh.
I got to go.
Consult.
But Jackson You're You're Jackson? Oh, yes, I'm seeing Jackson, and it's wonderful.
We haven't had sex yet, but I hope we will tonight, so Oh, I won't need a ride home.
Okay, bye.
Wow.
Okay.
Welcome to Trauma Certification.
Moments ago, a Cessna has crashed into a Greyhound bus.
The EVAC helicopter is on its way.
Yeah, yeah, maybe somewhere else.
No, not here.
What happened here is that the EVAC helicopter also crashed and is up in flames right now.
All right, people are dying.
It is your job to their lives.
What are the rules? This is real life, Bloodbank.
In a harsh and uncaring world, the only rule is there are no rules.
People are bleeding! People are dying! Go! Go! Go! Why aren't you moving? Let's go.
Hustle.
Grab a body.
Work on your patient.
Get to work.
I want to see hustle.
There's air in the biliary system.
Wilson, thoughts? Probably a fistula from the liver to the duodenum.
We'll have to ligate.
Good.
Uh, do we need to open the chest? No.
I can treat the abscess by infusing TPA and DNase through the chest tube while you're in there.
Well, her brain scan is clear.
And it's a sexy brain.
She's 66? Oh, well, if you believe her, then she's 166 'cause she's a time-traveler.
Time travel? Like wormholes? Exactly! - What are we looking at here? - Oh, wait.
"Wormhole" - that's a great name for your device! - [STAMMERS.]
Bailey is looking for names for her colon thingy.
No, I'm not.
"Ass Gasket" that's a good one.
God, if I could go back in time.
No, you can't.
Time doesn't go backwards.
Read your Einstein, Einstein.
The men I would not have slept with.
- And the one woman I would have.
- "Crack Jack"? MAGGIE: I would go back and undo this morning.
Well, I would I would kill Hitler and end slavery, and then I would go straight to this morning.
Oh, no, wait.
I would go back and see what happened between Ellis Grey and Marie Cerone.
"Fanny Spanner.
" - Karev, stop.
- [LIGHT LAUGHTER.]
Hey, your patient's hypotensive, hypoxic, and tachycardic.
What did you do? So, we did bilateral chest tubes first.
There was no improvement, so we checked for a JVD, muffled heart sounds, and pulsus paradoxus.
Good.
Your patient's gonna survive - and fight for another five minutes.
- [SIREN WAILING.]
Schmitt, your patient just aspirated in his own blood.
Dead.
Hellmouth, your patient's pregnant.
He's a dude with a beard.
She's a bearded lady and she's a mom and her baby's just gone into fetal distress.
What do you do? Uh, I-I cut the No, I use that Too late.
Both dead.
- Kepner, Kepner.
- What? They're not gonna learn anything if you keep killing their patients.
[CHUCKLES.]
Pow! Piece of shrapnel from the plane wing just fell out of the sky and into your boyfriend's body.
What now, Bello? DELUCA: T-The plane wing hit me? Oh, yeah! Another plane is crashing.
- Who saw that coming? - C-Can she do that to a doctor? It feels like cheating.
You're hurt and bleeding, DeLuca.
Get down.
Ahh.
I said hurt and bleeding, not hot and bothered.
Aaaaaah! All right, - what are you gonna do, Bello? Is she cheating? Uh, Kepner, you got this? - I need to step out for a few secs.
- Yep.
Whoa, whoa, wait.
Y-You're leaving us? - Oh, yeah.
Yeah, I am.
- Hey, you can't talk.
You're bleeding from your femoral artery.
What's it gonna be him or the patient, huh? Don't let lust cloud your judgment.
What's it gonna be? Hey, more pain! - Aaaaah! - More! Aaaaaaaaaaah! Aaaaaaaaaaah! There you go.
- Aaaaaaaaaaah! - There you go.
First I have to ask Dr.
Shepherd and Dr.
Karev some important questions, okay? - How's it going, rugrat? - Hey, Dr.
Alex.
I have a patient whose son laughs all the time.
Is that bad? Because then I've been doing this all wrong.
No, - I-I had a case back in peds.
It's It's uncontrollable laughing.
It sounds sort of hollow, peculiar.
- You're thinking H.
H.
? - Gelastic seizures? - What's a seizure? - Oh, it's when It's when something's hurt inside your brain.
Is Noah sick? I thought his mommy was sick.
Hey, you got a sec? Yeah.
- Um, so, can you see him today? - Now? Okay.
- I'm not a cheater.
- I never said you were.
You implied it.
I mean, I have cheated, but that doesn't make me a "cheater.
" Ah, tomato, "tomahto," potato, adulterer.
Listen, you were the one who told me to go to Teddy.
And you listened.
- What was I supposed to say? - "Hey, Amelia.
That sounds crazy.
Hey, Amelia.
Teddy and I aren't like that.
Hey, Amelia.
I'm gonna be a good husband and not cheat on you with this woman I have history with.
" You had options because you, unlike me, did not have a brain tumor.
Okay, that is not fair.
Isn't it? Okay.
Teddy is my She's Teddy.
She knows me.
And she's always been there for me if I've needed her.
And tumor or not, you weren't.
So I didn't feel like I was cheating on you.
When you told me to go to her, it felt right.
And I'm sorry if that hurts, but it is the truth.
Wow.
Our marriage didn't stand a chance.
- What? - Teddy.
She's your tumor.
What? The Party is now - the world's worst hangover.
I, um I pre-oxygenated the patient, rapid-sequenced him.
And then I inserted an ET tube, and then I checked the position with a CO2 indicator.
I right, Hellmouth's team is winning.
- The rest of you are losers.
- Hey! Kepner, is the hose really necessary? Oh, you know what? Whining doesn't save dying people.
Speaking of dying people, your boyfriend's bleeding out, Bello.
Okay, I apply a tourniquet onto his No, no, no.
ABCs, remember? No.
You're bleeding out.
You can't help me.
Well, I don't want to die.
[SPEAKING ITALIAN.]
You don't think I understand you? Spanish is pretty close to Italian.
[SPEAKING SPANISH.]
Kepner, what are you doing? APRIL: What? Oh.
I got rained on when I did my Trauma Cert.
Yeah, because it was raining.
[SPEAKING FRENCH.]
I don't like this game.
I don't like this game! You're breaking them, Kepner.
Look, they're losing their minds.
Hey, keep up those compressions, Bloodbank! You're losing her! [CELLPHONE VIBRATING AND RINGING.]
Damn it.
I got to go the ICU.
This was getting so fun.
Hey, make sure he doesn't stop compressions.
There's no crying in Trauma Cert! Here you go.
- [GASPS, SIGHS.]
- It's okay.
It's okay.
Just Just breathe.
Just breathe.
She's gone.
She's gone.
- [CRYING.]
- [SIREN WAILING.]
It's okay.
Just Just breathe it out.
Then Dr.
Webber will use a laparoscope to extract a piece of the peritoneum.
RICHARD: Minimally invasive, minimal scarring.
Thanks for letting me know.
- Thanks for not hiding it from me - Mom, come on.
like you've been hiding Maggie Pierce.
- Yeah, I get it.
Uh, let's talk about this later.
- Over pie.
- You know what? Yes, I am seeing Maggie Pierce.
- And, no, it's none of your business.
- None of my business? My love life isn't any of your concern, no.
It never was and never will be.
- What about your wife April? - Guys - You all work together all the time.
- Ex-wife.
Of all the places on earth for you to dip your wick, - you chose - Out of line, all right? - Come on.
Oh, child, please.
- Guys! - What? - What? [STAMMERS.]
Oh, now look what you did.
- What I did? - Yeah.
You just did.
Michelle, stop.
Michelle, it's not what it looks like, all right? It isn't? 'Cause it looks like my doctors don't have their heads in the game.
My mother's upset about a personal matter.
- It's nothing, really.
- It's not nothing.
- Mom, come on.
- No.
Whatever happens in there, I'm gonna leave here, for better or worse, with my life and body permanently altered.
And I would rather it not be for the worse.
So, whatever this "nothing" is figure it out because you're not cutting into me until I have your full attention.
So, as your liver was healing, a fistula developed, uh, sort of an accidental bridge between the liver and the small bowel.
- Sounds like a design flaw.
- It is.
We'll have to go in and dissect it out.
Mm.
Almost poetic, right? I'm searching for ways to make time bridges in space, and one forms inside me.
Too bad I hate poetry.
See, I-I respect what you're doing, but I worry about you being out there all alone, working with all that heavy equipment - On a lunatic's errand.
- No Yeah.
I get it.
I may never crack it.
But I never want to be a person who says, "No.
" Like, you say, "No," and you stop the future cold.
All you have is your past, your mistakes, your regrets.
But you say, "Maybe," and the whole world opens up.
The past is gone, and there are a million futures you can have.
- [GASPING.]
- Okay, Liz, I need you to take deep breaths, okay? Deep breaths slowly, slowly.
[BREATHES DEEPLY.]
- She's scared, Mommy.
- I know, honey.
I know.
I know you're scared.
I know you're It's just his laugh.
It's just a laugh.
This is so stupid.
I shouldn't have let them take him.
It's just an MRI.
There's no radiation.
He's not gonna get hurt, and it's better to be safe than sorry, right? You couldn't wait? You couldn't wait till I'm not t-till my baby's not [VOICE BREAKING.]
to tell me that my son's laughter might be Liz, I really couldn't wait, okay? I'm I am so sorry, but Noah's laughs if they are seizures, every time that they happen, they are doing damage to his brain, and I need those doctors to do everything that they can to make them stop them immediately.
Sweetie, I'm sorry I'm such a crybaby.
This must be pretty scary for you, huh? All this grown-up stuff.
I just hope that Noah's okay.
[SCREAMING.]
Okay, hold on.
Hold on.
Hold on.
I know I know that it's really hard.
I know that it's really hard, but if you move, you could rupture the amniotic sac.
And if it ruptures, - then I can't help your baby.
- Okay.
- Mommy.
- Stay still.
I know, honey.
You know what, Ella, can you please take her? Ella, I need you to take Sofia.
Hey, book an O.
R.
and get me some orderlies, okay? Mommy, I want to stay with you.
Sofia, I need you to get out of here now! - All right, Liz - Yeah? I'm gonna lower your head, and we're gonna take you to the O.
R.
W-Wait.
O.
R.
? I need to see Noah first.
We don't have time.
[CRYING.]
It's gonna be okay, okay? We got to move.
We got to move.
Let's go! [LAUGHING.]
[LAUGHS.]
- Stop it.
If we can't get him to stay still, we can't get a good scan.
Hey, Noah, what's orange and sounds like a parrot? A carrot! [LAUGHS.]
You are zero help.
Noah, how do you get a tissue to dance? You put a little boogie in it.
[LAUGHS.]
[CHUCKLES.]
I'm just trying to hear his real laugh.
[CHUCKLES.]
Okay, Noah, you and Dr.
Karev are gonna play a game called Statue.
Whichever one of you moves first loses.
Okay, Statue game.
Ready? One, two, three.
[COMPUTER BEEPING.]
[KEYS CLACKING.]
They're seizures, right? Yeah.
Yeah, they are.
[LAUGHING.]
Did I win? I don't know what was wrong with that lawyer woman.
She was accomplished, and she was attractive.
So is Maggie, Mom.
This is not a contest.
Oh, really? What is it? Don't look at me.
I can't answer that for you.
Why not? I don't understand why you're not more upset over this mess.
Oh, I'm plenty upset.
- Thank you.
- You are? Not with them, Catherine.
With you.
Excuse me? Nothing's ever good enough for your child.
I get it, that you have strong feelings about who Jackson dates.
Any parent would.
This is not about Maggie.
No, it's not about Maggie because she's brilliant.
She's skilled, and she's kind.
And any mother in her right mind would be elated that she'd deign to date their son.
- Damn! - Don't "damn" me.
You have my blessing, son, but if I hear that you've hurt Maggie in any way, I'm gonna come after you.
Damn.
Now, you two let me know if we're doing this groundbreaking surgery today or not.
In the meantime, I got patients.
[DOOR OPENS.]
[INDISTINCT CONVERSATIONS.]
- [DOOR CLOSES.]
- [SIGHS HEAVILY.]
[TELEPHONE RINGS.]
[INDISTINCT CONVERSATIONS.]
Michelle.
Michelle, we want to apologize.
Michelle, we were out of line earlier.
CATHERINE: We've settled our differences.
We're ready to get back to work if you'll have us.
That's a load of crap.
What's it about? - No.
- [SIGHS.]
It's about a woman he's seeing.
No, that's not Michelle's concern.
It's not even yours.
Is he dating garbage? No.
She's brilliant.
She's lovely.
She's - And Mom thinks she's my stepsister.
- Oh.
- But it's not like - we grew up together, okay? We're Didn't even meet until we were adults.
It's It's not that.
That's not even the main thing.
It's not about her.
Great.
So it's about me.
It's about Richard.
When your father left, I just closed off a part of my heart, slammed the door, nailed shut until Richard Webber came along and shook me like I didn't know I could shake.
And when I saw you and Maggie today, I [SIGHS.]
All I could think was, "Richard is gonna take her side, like I would take yours," like he just did.
Then what if we can't reconcile that? Jackson, I want you to have love.
I just don't want it to cost me mine.
Richard's not my father, Mom.
I know.
He's my husband.
No.
I'm saying you should give him a little more credit than that.
I've met my father.
Richard ain't him.
He's a lot better than that.
Okay.
Good.
Now hug it out.
Come on.
[BOTH SIGH.]
It's a shortcut between two points in space.
You enter the wormhole, space folds like a taco, and then you come out the other side.
And the other side is the past? No, you can't travel to the past, but "Yester-me" can come meet "now-me," but "future-me" can't go back.
- Okay, now-me has a headache.
- [CHUCKLES.]
Now-me wishes I could talk to future-me about tonight.
Clamp.
What's happening tonight? Oh, uh, n-n Uh, nothing.
Funny story.
When I was little, I used to wish I could go back in time and meet my birth mother.
- Not me.
- Really? Never? Well, you were put up for adoption.
I was left outside a firehouse.
- Fair enough.
- I'd meet your mom, though.
Ellis Grey was this world-renowned, award-winning surgeon and [GASPS.]
Wait.
What if Cerone was an Ellis stalker? Like Like Like a groupie, like "Single White Female"? - [MONITOR BEEPING RAPIDLY.]
- Oh, no, no, no, no.
There's blood in her N.
G.
tube.
She's actively bleeding.
From where? A ruptured vessel? Or an ulcer or varices.
Oh, man.
[SIGHS.]
Okay, I'm gonna need to scope her.
Bring in the C-arm for an angio and order 10 units! [BEEPING CONTINUES.]
RICHARD: Okay, the peritoneum is ready.
[HEART MONITOR BEEPING.]
This tissue looks perfect.
JACKSON: Need a six-oh on a driver, please.
That was beautiful work, dear.
Thank you.
[BEEPING CONTINUES.]
You know, I really like her, Mom.
I know.
I like her, too.
And I want it to work between us.
But if it does all go to hell with me and Maggie, then you do have my blessing to take her side.
Deal? Deal.
[AIR HISSING.]
[MONITORS BEEPING.]
MAGGIE: So much bleeding.
I-I can't find the source.
Okay, Bokhee, contrast.
Good, good, good.
Oh, where are you? Where are you? I wish I could go back in time to before this happened.
- You can't go backwards - I know.
I know.
There it is.
There it is.
See it? Ah, yes, I will advance the catheter and try to embolize the bleed.
I think Cerone was telling the truth about Ellis.
We can't know for sure.
There's proof.
I'm the proof.
Ellis didn't leave me outside a firehouse, but she did keep me a secret.
She lied to Richard.
She lied to Meredith.
If she's capable of doing that to the people she loves the most, you don't think she's capable of screwing over a friend? [HEART MONITOR BEEPING RAPIDLY.]
Oh, damn it.
Her B.
P.
's bottoming out.
Okay, I can't isolate this bleeder.
Pierce? No, there is still too much blood.
Okay, Wilson, you have to help me out here.
Get in there and open up her stomach.
Okay.
10 blade.
Come on, Marge.
You want to see the future.
Help me understand your logic, please.
Owen, our marriage is over.
There's no point in just hashing it Amelia.
Okay.
Fine.
You see this tumor? Officially, it's benign.
No cancer.
But if we leave it in, it's gonna kill this kid, anyway.
So, really, "benign" is neither here nor there.
- I don't how this is - Mm-hmm.
Okay.
So, you were never with Teddy.
You never played it out.
She was your friend.
She was your person.
Benign.
But always there, quietly growing.
So, when you marry other women and she's still there She's not benign.
[SCOFFS.]
She rejected me.
Because you were married, dummy.
And she's not as flawed as we are.
Wait.
You are single now.
You're free.
And you can't get it together to tell her how you feel? What is stopping you? Well, I kind of feel like all we talk about since our "no feelings" rule is, uh, feelings.
[CHUCKLES.]
[CHUCKLES.]
Maybe it started when we were breaking up.
Maybe that's why I didn't notice.
- What? - The baby's dad.
This baby's dad.
Mike.
We were gonna get married.
Noah was so happy to have a dad.
He was so excited to be a big brother.
But, uh, Mike would always call Noah "your son" and this one "our baby," like Noah was just some piece of furniture that I moved into his house.
"Our baby will be raised like this," and, "Your son should know better than that.
" I loved him.
But I knew that if I stayed, I would have a husband, but Noah would never have a dad.
So I left him.
And I cried every day for months.
[VOICE BREAKING.]
And maybe that's why I didn't notice when Noah's laugh changed.
- Liz - I just want to go back and notice.
[CRYING.]
Oh, God.
DAHLIA: Checked back for wound, placed pelvic binder, transfused two units, and ruled out intra-abdominal bleeding.
She should be stable now.
Nice work, guys.
I'm back! I'm here! [ALL SIGHING, MURMURING.]
Dr.
Kepner, our patient with the facial trauma survived.
How do you know that? CASEY: Oh, we tried nasal intubation, but that was impossible in the weather conditions, so we criked him, and it worked.
We established an airway.
APRIL: Who says? Um I say? [SIGHS.]
All right, well, I guess I'll have to give it to you since I was just paged on a freaking goose chase.
No fair.
He's the one who paged you.
What? I realized that the thing that was most endangering our patients was you.
I figured, if I took you out of the equation, I neutralized the threat.
[LAUGHS.]
You tried to cheat the system.
DELUCA: No offense, Dr.
Kepner, but you did something similar in your Cert.
The ambulance story is legendary.
No, I mean, I-I know.
That's why it's funny because because three months after I cheated to get my Trauma Cert, a car-crash victim came in to this E.
R.
, and guess what.
I-I couldn't save him.
[LAUGHS.]
Oh, my God.
He died right in front of me.
[LAUGHS.]
Dr.
Kepner, do we need to pause the exercise? No, no, no, no, no, you can't pause because in real life, the trauma doesn't just stop! God doesn't work that way.
Because you can do every single thing right, and still, people die.
Like, look, look.
This guy right here this guy he was just, you know, living his life, right? He was applying to colleges, and then one day bam! shot in the neck.
And then he's dead because, guys, there are no rules.
Okay, Dr.
Kepner, I-I-I think that's enough.
And this? This woman This woman was about to become a mom.
Her husband was so happy.
They both were.
And one second, she was fine, and then the next, we couldn't [EXHALES HEAVILY.]
We couldn't save her.
We couldn't save her.
- We couldn't - [SIREN WAILING.]
Come on.
Come on.
Come on! Come on! Dr.
Kepner, Dr.
Kepner.
Hey.
Are you okay? We're do We're done.
We're done.
- Sorry.
- [SIGHS.]
She was a woman before her time.
She was bat-crap crazy.
And she was a genius.
It's a thin line the real trailblazers straddle.
[SIGHS.]
And who knows? Ol' Bargin' Marge might've done it one day, discovered time travel.
An engineer decided to walk in front of a radar magnetron one day, melted the candy bar in his pocket, and discovered the microwave.
People thought he was crazy for suggesting they use it to heat food.
No, at the very least, she pushed back.
She took the first step, and she said, "Maybe.
" Maybe you should name your device "the Bargin' Marge.
" Now, that would be disrespectful.
It goes in people's rectums, Wilson.
Right.
Sorry.
"The Trailblazer.
" Perfect.
I see our footprints in the sand I feel hairs raise on the back of my hand Take me northbound, back to home Where I know You feel like you're alone And you feel like something's wrong Hey.
I feel like I won't know Hey.
You all right? - No, I - April, hold on.
Hold on.
Let me Come here for a second.
So keep me in mind - What? - What is going on? - Keep me in mind - April.
April, every time I see you, you look like you're spinning out.
- Ohh - Okay? Every time I try to talk to you, - you slam the door in my face.
- I'm - Keep me in mind - When? Huh? When did you decide that we're not friends anymore, that you can't talk to me? When did you decide that I'm not here for you? [SIGHS.]
[SIGHS.]
I'm sorry.
What can I do? Oh.
Whoa, April.
April, no, no, no.
You said you wanted to help.
April, look, you can't fix what you can't face, all right? - Please.
- Fine! Just talk to me.
Can you take Harriet tonight? That would really help.
Thanks.
[DOOR SLAMS.]
You're being a wormhole.
What? You're being a wormhole for your mother.
What are you talking about? Ellis did something 30 years ago, and it's messing with everything we've built today - because you're letting it.
- Jo, you didn't know my mother, but she doesn't need my help to mess with me.
Yes, she does.
She does because she's gone and you're still here.
Your mother was a trailblazer, Meredith.
If she was here, she wouldn't want you to sit back and polish her legacy.
She would want you to try the crazy thing.
She would want you to try everything.
- [SIGHS.]
- I'm saying, don't let something that your mother did in the past wipe out your chance to change the future.
Okay.
"Okay," what? [PAPERS RUSTLING.]
Let's get to work.
Really? You called me a wormhole.
[CHUCKLES.]
I did.
I'm sorry.
Should I be sorry? Let's just get to work.
Okay, this is, uh [CLEARS THROAT.]
[DOOR OPENS.]
Hey.
Oh, sorry.
Oh.
Oh, hey, how did it go today with your mom and Richard? Were they awful? They were great.
I mean, eventually.
Oh.
Wow.
Okay.
Obstacle number one not such an obstacle.
- Mm.
- So, you ready for dinner? - Um - Oh.
You have company.
I do, yeah.
Uh, April is, uh Sorry.
Oh, no, no.
No.
I get it.
Yeah, no, she's just going through something big, so Well, no.
We have plenty of time.
You know, the longer we wait to eat The hungrier you'll be.
[SIGHS.]
[NOAH LAUGHING.]
I-It's inoperable? It's too close to his brainstem.
I can't get to it with a scalpel.
But this project that we're working on the ultrasound he could be a candidate.
I thought that you hadn't done human trials.
We don't We haven't yet.
I barely kept a 23-week-old baby in her today, and you want me to go in there and ask her if her 8-year-old can be your guinea pig? I'm sorry.
That's your plan?! We don't have any other course of treatment.
And he's seizing every three minutes.
This is his only shot.
[SLEEPING AT LAST'S "THREE" PLAYS.]
Do you want to come in with us to talk to her? No! No.
Damn it.
Maybe I've done enough [NOAH LAUGHING.]
And your golden child grew up - Maybe this trophy isn't real love - Yeah, okay.
MEREDITH: When the worst of our fears are realized And with or without it - Hi.
- I'm good enough [LAUGHING.]
[CHUCKLES.]
Maybe I've done enough Finally catching up For the first time I see an image of my brokenness Utterly worthy of love [DUMMY CLATTERS.]
Maybe I've done enough [CRYING.]
when everything we've counted on has disappeared And I finally see myself something still drives us to try to fix the past Airport.
International terminal, please.
or to find our future Okay.
Come on.
Now I only want what's real All right.
You good? - Mm-hmm.
- To let my heart feel what it feels when the only thing that really needs our attention is the present [SIGHS.]
Gold, silver, or bronze - Mommy? - Hmm? Hold no value here Are you crying because Noah has a tumor? No.
No.
Um No, I'm crying 'cause I'm lucky.
I am so lucky to have a beautiful, smart, healthy little girl.
I set aside the highlight reel And sometimes I get so busy that I forget how lucky I am.
And leave my greatest failures on display You know what? How about tomorrow I take the day off? With an asterisk You and I can go find an adventure, just the two of us, okay? - Yeah? - Worthy of love anyway - Yeah? Yeah? - [LAUGHS.]
and its infinite possibilities.
Ooh, I love you.
All right, sweet dreams.

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