Grey's Anatomy s19e05 Episode Script

When I Get to the Border

When researchers
studied the way surgeons
make decisions in the OR,
they found newer surgeons
tend to rely on the standard
operating procedures
they learned in school.
I don't like this one.
You haven't even seen it.
Keep an open mind.
I did that in New York
and New Hampshire.
Brookline STEAM has one of the best
science programs in the country.
And, you know, Harvard Medical School
is just right down the street.
I want to stay in Seattle.
It was so much better there.
You said the kids at SEATAC
Science were snobby.
It wasn't that bad.
Are you feeling worried?
Do you need to take some deep breaths?
No, I just want to go home.
This isn't a punishment.
You are an extremely gifted child.
You are going to do great in a school
where other kids are as gifted as you.
And we can check out the aquarium after.
Zola, we're in Boston.
You're signed up to shadow.
Let's just check it out
so you can make an informed decision.
To make sure I hate it.
If you hate it, you never
have to come back here again.
Okay?
Let's go.
It makes sense.
Newer surgeons have limited
experience to fall back on.
But seasoned surgeons
are more intuitive.
Uh-huh.
They mine from years of practice
to make quick and effective decisions.
What about in your brown jacket?
Go look.
And put your dad on.
Instead of looking for
his lucky baseball card,
Henry could be using this time
to actually study for his math test.
Hey.
Oh, good. Crisis averted.
Okay, babe, I'll see you tomorrow.
I love you. Bye.
Sorry about that.
I'm all too familiar
with the "Mom, I can't find it"
emergencies.
Was it in the brown jacket?
Of course it was in the brown jacket.
We know where everything is.
It's our mom superpower.
I mean, you'd think they'd be more
impressed that we're doctors.
Please. Tuck couldn't care less.
But Cynthia is thrilled we're coming.
Yeah, how do you know her,
again, med school?
Oh, no, college. She was
my first-year roommate.
Grew up in Chicago.
I thought she was very cosmopolitan.
How'd she wind up
running a clinic in Pullman?
Uh, her husband got a job
teaching music at the university.
Oh. She likes it?
Well, Pullman, Washington,
is no Chicago,
but she loves running the clinic.
And she loves having a couple of doctors
coming to volunteer even more.
Patients from Idaho have
been flooding the place
ever since the state
restricted abortion.
Okay, should be coming up here.
The more experience we have,
the less likely we are
to be thrown when
we encounter complications.
We can shift gears more
easily when it's needed.
Oh, come on!
Whoa.
Babies don't choose abortion!
You're stopping a beating heart!
Hey, you're terminating lives,
and you know it.
- Just keep moving.
- You're killing babies.
You're a baby killer
'cause abortion is murder!
And you took an oath to do no harm!
You took an oath!
Hey. How was the bus?
Fine, but I took it for a reason.
I know. I can't say good morning?
You did, right after you woke me up
to make lunches for Ellis and Bailey.
Hey, I really appreciate you
helping out while Meredith is out.
I worked three 16-hour days in a row.
I'd just fallen asleep.
C-Can we not talk about this here?
Oh, I have an epidural hematoma.
Can you take him to daycare?
No, I have rounds.
I have an emergency.
I would ask any trusted
intern to do this,
and I assure you, they
would be more than happy
to help the chief of neuro.
I will let them know that you're coming.
Okay, bye, baby.
Uh
Uh, where's So, where's daycare?
Okay.
Oh, it's so good to see you.
So, how long has this clinic been open?
45 years.
Last year, we provided
more than 2,000 patients
with birth control, prenatal care,
abortion care, STD testing,
cancer screening, pizza parties.
Hm?
Come on. Look outside, guys.
Let me at least crack a joke.
Well, it seems like
there's plenty of demand.
Yeah, we added a construction
trailer when Roe was overturned,
and I moved our staff
offices and break room
so we could convert more space
for these exam rooms.
- Smart.
- Okay.
Cynthia also somehow fit
a full-size couch
in our dorm room, and a mini fridge.
Yeah, well, I can figure out space,
but without volunteers like you,
coming from Seattle and
Spokane, I'd be sunk.
Alright. Put us to work.
Okay, these are the patients
who are ready to be seen.
These are the patients
who have not been seen.
It's a low-tech operation,
but somehow it gets the job done.
- Okay.
- Okay.
Have fun!
- If that couch could talk
- Hey, hey.
Is this where the family
reunion is happening?
And by "family", I mean my #workfamily.
- You want a photo? Let's get one.
- I don't, actually.
Good morning, Tom.
I see you haven't changed.
Well, you might want to
stop by ophthalmology,
seventh floor, east wing,
because I've toned
the glutes and the abs.
- Wow.
- No, Bostonians are noticing.
I haven't heard that.
Catherine, you look radiant as ever.
Shall we?
Where are you two going?
We got a little project.
You want to elaborate?
Oh, it's not your business.
Well, I run the foundation,
so actually it is.
I'll loop you in when the time is right.
Come on.
Should I text you to tell you I'm here?
Oh! Hey.
- Hi.
- Hey. What's going on?
Tell me everything.
Can we go up to your office
so that I can have
my nervous breakdown in private?
Okay, Jessica, uh, do you
have enough prenatal vitamins?
They're still free.
- I could use more.
- Okay.
Okay, come back in two weeks, yeah?
Um, great.
I made all my appointments weeks ago.
It's too hard to get in here otherwise.
Alright, take good care.
I loved my "measure and
listen" appointments
when I was pregnant with Tuck.
My favorite part about being an OB.
- Mm-hmm.
- So, what have you had so far?
Um, I did consults with six women
who wanted medication abortions.
- I gave pills to five.
- Did someone need a D&C?
They changed their mind.
- We are making progress.
- Mm.
Progress is neither swift nor easy.
Marie Curie.
First woman to win the Nobel Prize.
- Think she knew what she was talking about.
- Mm.
Dad-o.
Uh, yeah, yeah, yeah, I got him,
I got him, I got him.
He's in there somewhere.
- Dad-o.
- Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm looking for him,
I'm looking for him.
Ah, here's Dad-o, here's Dad-o.
Aw, damn it.
C-Crap.
I mean, u-uh uh, whatever, whatever.
Sorry.
You getting out?
No. You?
Going down.
- Wow.
- He's Lincoln's.
And Shepherd's. We know what's up.
I'm just dropping him off at daycare.
Shepherd had an emergency
and needed a favor.
Wonder what other kinds
of favors he does for her.
What's that?
You going to the lunch-and-learn today?
Dad-o.
Oh, my God, he just called you Dad.
No, no, no.
It's h-his Dino.
He He He can't say "Dino".
- Alright.
- Isn't the daycare two floors up?
Uh, stairs are good exercise.
I miss paper.
Same.
Except, at least with e-records,
I can read my own notes.
I've got a 39-year-old with a
cesarean-scar ectopic pregnancy.
C-section scar?
Yes, the fetus can attach
to the scar on the uterine wall.
Her OB found it
on an ultrasound this morning.
He wouldn't remove it. They're in Idaho.
It's a life-threatening case,
so there should be an exception.
There's cardiac activity.
He didn't want to take the risk.
The law is confusing.
Nobody wants to be the first one
to lose their license
or be charged with a felony.
Alright. I'll see her. Which room?
Across the border in Moscow.
She called from the OB's parking lot.
Also, her car won't start.
You wanted to help.
I'll get the keys.
What do you mean "panic attacks"?
You know, she gets dizzy,
her body shakes,
she has trouble breathing.
How often is this happening?
Often enough.
I mean, her grades are slipping.
She can't relate to her friends.
Because she's scared of Alzheimer's?
I-I mean, she's very bright,
and she's under-stimulated
at school, and her mind
goes in 17 different
directions at one time.
And she's very aware that Ellis
died of early-onset Alzheimer's.
And so of course her mind goes there.
She's afraid that I will get it,
that Maggie will get it.
Alright. So, how you handling it all?
Therapy or
We go to therapy once a week.
But it's not enough.
I mean, she has severe anxiety,
and I completely missed it.
She was always my cheerful child.
I never had to worry about her.
Right. So you didn't.
I just want to help her.
I just want to comfort her.
I don't know what to do.
I am so exhausted.
I stay up every night, just reading
pages and pages and pages
about Alzheimer's, thinking,
"Oh, if I cure Alzheimer's,
I can help Zola".
Ridiculous.
Makes absolutely no sense.
It's ridiculous, I know, but
I just feel powerless and
I hate that feeling.
What if it wasn't ridiculous?
What?
What if you try to cure Alzheimer's?
Henry.
Baseball emoji, smiley face, sunflower.
I'm going to interpret
that as affection.
Wait 'til he's a teenager
and you just get letters
- B-R-B
- Mm.
I-D-K, and the enigmatic K-K.
Why the two K's?
Tuck claims it's more respectful.
But, you know, what do I know?
I'm just his chauffeur.
Speaking of which,
I-I can take over driving.
I like to drive.
It's 20 minutes to Moscow.
Never thought I'd have
to drive across state lines
to pick up a patient.
- Hm.
- Feels like we're on the lam.
The medical Thelma and Louise.
Didn't they drive off a cliff?
Bonnie and Clyde.
Shot to death.
Bailey and Addison?
American heroes.
Is it okay if Kyle
picks her up after five?
I really appreciate it.
No, no, no, no.
I'll be fine.
Yeah. You're doing plenty.
Oh, uh, they're here.
- I gotta go.
- Susan?
- Dr. Montgomery?
- Yes. That's me.
Thanks so much for the ride.
I didn't realize the clinic was
such a full-service operation.
Well, Dr. Bailey is also a surgeon.
Yeah, this is just our side hustle.
- Water?
- Ah, yes. Thank you.
Seat belts.
Are you sure no one needs
an assist in the O.R.?
Or pit?
The square knot is the
foundation for all knots.
15 minutes a day
is a good investment in time.
Damn it. Too loose. Ahhhh.
Yeah, your guy's still bleeding.
Oh, I hope that's not his face.
- Or his liver.
- Or his heart.
9-1-1.
- Oh, God forbid it's someone who needs stitches.
- Something good?
- I-I don't know yet.
- The pit?
Uh, yeah, something like that.
You sure your son
hasn't got us figured out?
- Did he seem suspicious of you?
- How could he not be?
I'm a Greek sculptor's dream,
and you're only human.
- Oh, please.
- No.
Sneaking around with the boss's mom
is not gonna help my performance review.
This is between you and me.
Don't let Jackson
get all up in your head.
Oh, so, what you're saying is
we're gonna have to kill him.
Be serious, Tom.
Okay, fine. I'll kill him myself.
But you you got to deal
with your husband.
Tom, could you just please
tell me about my scans?
It's not the news we wanted.
So, the tumor is bigger?
Two millimeters.
Two millimeters? That's nothing.
It's not "nothing". It's growing.
- How you feeling?
- The same.
Mostly well. Occasional pain.
Two millimeters isn't
worth this conversation.
Catherine, two months ago, we did a scan
and we noted your tumor had grown.
And?
And you said if it grew further,
you'd consider more treatment.
- I know what I said.
- And it grew.
Two millimeters.
Your son thinks you're
still in remission.
- It's two millimeters!
- It's not remission.
You need more treatment.
And you need to talk
to your husband and your son
and let them know what's going on.
And you need to remember that
my name is on this building.
So I'll be the one
to decide what I need.
I-I got a text about Scout Lincoln.
Something about an accident? Is he okay?
He's fine. He's just wet.
Oh.
We used his backup clothes last week,
- and we never got new ones.
- Okay
We tried his parents,
but they're both in surgery.
We had your information
from this morning.
What? So I'm supposed to
A few parents have found
clothes at the gift shop.
I'm sure you don't want him
to be uncomfortable.
Tina's bringing Emily home with Colette,
so you can pick her up there after work.
I canceled the piano lesson,
and can you pick up fruit snacks
and Pirate's Booty?
It's our week to bring
the snacks to soccer.
Martha said she'll come
get me when I'm done.
I'll be fine.
Love you, too. Bye.
What'd I do with my keys?
I had them when you picked me up, right?
I'm sorry. I don't remember.
Don't be.
I'm usually ready for anything,
but ectopic pregnancy
wasn't on my calendar.
It kinda threw me.
Totally understandable.
Bracelets.
My daughter makes them.
Take one. Heck
- Take two, please.
- Aww!
She's made enough for everyone
this side of the Mississippi.
But it keeps her busy when I'm
trying to get ready for work.
We get it. We have kids.
How old's your daughter?
- Five.
- Aww.
She turns six next week.
- Ooh, sweet.
- Ahh.
She only asked for, um, one present
a sister.
She's been calling the baby Sundae
'cause she loves ice cream.
I can still get pregnant
after this, right?
It's hard for me to know without
doing further imaging tests.
But it is possible.
Ohh!
Dr. Montgomery?
This is bad, right?
Ahh! Ahh! Ah!
IDH inhibitors, CDK inhibitors,
immune checkpoint inhibitors
Please. I'm not one for inhibition.
And historically I've
been grateful for that.
But these trials have really
I've already done one of these.
- And it helped.
- It helped.
But it made me feel like absolute hell.
I said I would consider more treatment.
I did. It's not what I want.
Okay, so don't do it for you,
hmm? Do it for me.
If you think about it,
you really owe me one.
I'm getting help, if that
makes you feel any better.
- Mm?
- I met a medicine man in Bali.
I met a shaman in Peru.
I learned all about energy
medicine and frequency medicine,
medicines that don't make me
feel like I'm suffering.
T-That's because they don't work.
According to you.
I have an acupuncturist
who's done more for my pain
than any pill you ever prescribed.
And studies show that
Reiki will reduce pain
and it can improve post-op recovery.
- Catherine, please
- Tom, Tom, Tom.
I know you mean well.
And you've been carrying my secret.
But this is my cancer.
Mm.
This is my choice.
Ah. Got it.
This group of neuroscientists
from Brussels
they applied for a grant
to expand their research
on the connection
between Alzheimer's and
Gut microbial composition.
I've read studies on it.
There are also some
that link gut integrity
with brain plaque production
and neuro-inflammation.
I-I saw this all in
the Parkinson's research.
Of course.
You already know more than the
group who applied for the grant.
It's your areas of specialty
gut and brain.
Yeah. It's all theoretical.
Like you didn't just do
a record-breaking study
on Parkinson's based
on something that was
initially theoretical?
Come on. You should do this.
We could help fund it.
And we got facilities, equipment, tech.
We have this amazing partnership
with MIT's brain science program.
They could be a resource.
You should just fund
the people from Brussels.
They're not you!
Meredith Grey studying the
disease that killed her mother?
That's a story that would get funding,
and funding is what cures diseases.
This is exciting.
What's What's going on?
Where'd you go?
Zola was miserable this morning.
And I could never move to Boston
if she didn't want to.
I mean, she's been through so much.
So much trauma.
She lost her birth family,
her birth country,
her father died, I almost died.
You know, all of that stuff is
is just now coming to the surface.
I really need to focus on her.
Okay. I hear you.
I love you both.
Not exactly gonna give up
on this entirely, okay?
Not just yet.
When did you become so relentless?
When I took this job.
9-1-1. What's your emergency?
Yes, this is Dr. Miranda Bailey.
I have a 39-year-old female
with a ruptured ectopic pregnancy
on a cesarean scar.
She's alert and oriented,
but hemorrhaging.
Pulse is weak. Abdomen
is rigid and distended.
We are in a blue Grey-Sloan
van on Highway 270.
Can you send an ambulance?
- On its way.
- Thank you.
How's it going back there?
We're okay.
Doing okay, Susan.
What are you looking for?
Uterine balloon tamponade?
Not gonna find one in there.
My OB just said I was okay.
Well, it's difficult to predict
if or when an ectopic pregnancy
will rupture, Susan.
This looks like a lot of blood.
Is Is this a lot of blood?
The pregnancy invaded the muscle layers
and likely tore open
the uterine incision,
which is why we have to Ha!
- What is that?
- A Foley catheter.
If I insert this into
your vagina and inflate it,
the pressure against your uterus
will slow the bleeding.
- Is that okay?
- Is it safe?
It's safer than letting
you keep bleeding.
Y-Yeah. Okay, do it.
Just ohh! make it stop.
Okay. I'm inserting it.
- Okay.
- Try to hold still.
Bailey, no sudden moves.
Could I have prevented this
if I didn't get the C-section?
- You didn't do anything wrong.
- C-sections are safe.
This kind of ectopic pregnancy
is extremely rare.
- You doing okay?
- Uh-huh.
Okay, I'm gonna inflate the balloon now.
You're gonna feel
a little bit of pressure.
Hold still. You got it.
Okay.
That should buy us a little bit of time.
And how much time?
It's okay.
- Do you want a bag?
- No, I'm good.
Oh, good luck with that.
I asked Schmitt for a day off.
He looked at me like I killed his dog.
- Uh, a bag, bag I need a bag.
- Oh, hey, Skywalker!
Hey. W-What are you, uh, doing here?
Getting snacks.
Apparently the vending machine
is too lowbrow for Dr. Kwan.
- Yogurt-covered pretzels?
- I need brain food.
Cashews and almonds.
Ah, is that what powers that ego?
What are you doing?
- Uh, s-same.
- $32.75.
Wow. That is a lot of snacks.
I, uh Geez.
I forgot my wallet in my locker.
I'll spot you, but I get your next appy.
- Hey, that's my
- Ooh, ooh, ooh.
Wow.
I may be wrong, but I think
these are a little too small.
They're not for me. They're for the
Let me guess.
Daddy Daycare?
- Oh, Schmitt.
- Oh, Schmitt.
It's okay.
I'll let him know that
you have child care issues.
Should I get another bag, or
Yeah, and you were interested in neuro,
and you set that aside for Derek.
Oh, it was a bit more
complicated than that.
Like how hard it was to
choose general surgery
because of Ellis?
I wish I could make
one decision in my life
where people didn't bring Ellis into it.
A couple years ago,
I actually got to spend
some time with my father.
Realized my entire life
he had loomed so large.
He was this mountain of a man.
And I spend some time with him,
I realize he's just some guy.
With wasted potential
and regrets and flaws.
You didn't want to be like him.
The scary part is,
I wasn't that different.
I mean, I was living
in cruise control, you know?
I wasn't fulfilling my potential.
Feeling that similarity
to him was painful.
But it also propelled me forward.
I mean, I'm happier here,
doing something I'm passionate about.
Maybe it's not an accident
that you're up all night
researching Alzheimer's.
Or you're feeling so
much pain about Zola.
Maybe it's all these pieces
of your life coming together.
I kinda think you're having
a breakthrough
rather than a breakdown.
- Relentless.
- No.
I'm just being a friend, alright?
I've seen you push through
so many things before
and ignore them.
I'm just saying that
this might be something
you don't want to push through.
I think you should let it help you grow.
Once upon a time, I did
want to cure Alzheimer's.
- Exactly.
- But what if it fails?
- Oh, it's probably gonna fail.
- Right.
But, I mean, you could
definitely move the needle.
That means something.
Zola sees that her mom
is doing everything she can
to cure Alzheimer's.
I mean, that's pretty amazing.
Do you see an accident?
An ambulance?
No. Nothing.
How much longer will the catheter hold?
Not sure.
Susan?
Susan, stay with me, hey?
Okay? Talk to me.
Tell me, um
Tell me about Emily's birthday party.
It's a spa party.
I don't know where she got the idea.
But her teenaged cousins
are coming to
to paint the kids' nails.
And she she wants a coffee cake.
Like the kind from school.
Ah. I I haven't baked it yet.
I need to be okay.
I need to bake her cake.
I want to see her turn six.
I want to see her lose her front teeth
and learn how to read.
I I want to teach her how to drive
and send her off to prom.
I want to drop her off at college
and miss her every day 'til
she comes home for summer.
I I want to
I want to want to watch
her f-fall in love.
I w I want to see her
start her first real job.
I want to be there for all of it.
Okay?
I'm not ready to go.
I'm not ready to go. I'm not
Susan?
Susan!
- What?
- I can't feel a pulse.
I'm starting CPR.
I'm pulling over.
9-1-1. What's your emergency?
This is Dr. Miranda Bailey calling again
about a patient hemorrhaging
from a ruptured ectopic
pregnancy on Highway 270.
She's coding. We're starting CPR.
We need immediate help!
We dispatched an ambulance, but
there's a significant accident.
Road is stopped in both directions.
Hopefully we'll be there soon.
She's bleeding into her abdomen.
She's in hypovolemic shock.
The compressions won't do anything
without giving her more blood.
If I stop, her heart stops.
She has no pulse.
I'm not stopping.
Addison.
- She's gone.
- No. No.
Addison.
Time of death, 13:34.
That stuff keep you up at night?
Herbal tea. No caffeine.
Ah, I meant consistently lying
to your friends and family.
Tom, I thought we were done
with this conversation.
Well, persistence is part of my charm.
Y-You can't fault me for trying.
My friend's life is at stake.
I spent the last six months
traveling abroad.
And everywhere I went,
all I thought was,
"Thank God I'm not in an oncology ward".
If I stay the course without chemo,
I'll have a few good years left.
I want to spend them living.
If the cancer gets more aggressive,
if there's some promising new option,
maybe I'll change my mind.
But if I'm gonna be stuck in a hospital,
I want it to be as a doctor,
not as a patient.
At some point,
everyone's gonna know you lied, hmm?
How How about we just
let Jackson in on it
- No.
- Okay, Richard?
Tom, this conversation with you
is exhausting enough.
I'm not gonna have it with anyone else.
I am lying to protect my privacy
and to protect my peace.
I'm happy with this decision.
- You know what? I'm not even gonna ask.
- Oh.
Nothing to know.
How about if you're ready to go?
Can I ask that?
- What, you you cutting out early?
- Harriet has ballet.
I told her she could just wait
for the recital, but
Wait? Child, please.
I'm here. Let's go.
I don't want to miss anything.
Dr. Kwan, have you seen Adams?
Uh, last I saw him,
he was at the gift shop
buying clothes for your son.
Don't worry. Your secret's safe.
Oh. You know?
About you two? It's pretty obvious.
- Is it?
- Yeah, when you see you together.
You know, it might be less obvious
if you gave the rest of us
some more neuro cases.
Do you have a special interest
in neuro, Dr. Kwan?
I have a special interest in gaining
as much experience as I can
before I declare an area
of special interest.
I also have steady hands.
And many skills in other areas
if your interests are expansive.
You think I'm playing favorites
with Lucas because he's
Dr. Shepherd, I need a consult.
Is there supposed to be a patient?
- I got to tell you something.
- Okay.
Oh, hey, I'm glad you finally told
the other interns about us, by the way.
They think we're together.
Together like dating?
M-More like sleeping together.
What? H-How?
W-Why? W-Why?
- Why?
- I-I don't know.
They assume things.
W Did you tell them
that they're wrong?
Lucas! You have to tell them!
Oh, my God!
Kwan was just offering me sexual favors
in exchange for surgeries! Wh
I might throw up.
Oh, b-but I just
No, no, no. There's no "but".
You have no idea how fast
rumors spread around here.
I don't want people thinking
that I am dating my nephew.
Just sleeping together.
Stop saying that!
Just Ugh!
Fix it!
How long has it been going?
32 seconds.
Maybe we'll get to a minute!
- Hey.
- Hi.
- This looks so cool.
- It's a gyroscope.
The spinning wheel is creating
angular momentum,
and it's going so fast.
When you apply force,
it changes momentum
in multiple directions, not just linear.
That's what keeps it upright.
It's physics.
It certainly is.
Sonata.
My mom's here. We've gotta go.
Bye, Zola. Hope we see you again.
- Bye, Matisse. Bye, Sonata.
- Bye-bye.
They seem so nice.
- How was it?
- Eh, it was okay.
Just okay, huh?
Can we go to the aquarium now?
Yes. Are you hungry?
Excuse me. They said you're her doctors.
Uh, we treated her today.
I'm looking for records, scans,
anything that might help
with the report.
Well, you're gonna have
to talk to her OB in Idaho.
And while you're at it,
you might want to ask him
why he refused to treat her.
He was following the law.
Just like this gentleman is doing.
Right. No. You're right.
It's the lawmakers.
They should actually be
made to come out here.
Yeah.
Have a look at the carnage
they've caused,
take a look at all the blood.
I mean, how are we
supposed to be doctors?
How are we supposed to treat patients?
We're hamstrung by laws
that are written by people
that are so far away from this.
I have a medical degree.
I have decades of experience
treating pregnancies.
What What experience do they have?
Why do they get to decide?
No. It's wrong!
And it's infuriating!
I am infuriated, okay?!
Women's lives are on the line!
And our hands
that are trained to help them
our hands are tied.
It's
They want us to stick
around a little longer.
In case we need to answer
more questions.
We've answered everything. Twice.
I know.
But they're about to tell
a husband he's lost his wife.
And then he's gonna need to tell
his child she's lost her mom.
I would like to be here for that.
If this is the future, it's bleak.
You know, I've always supported
the right to choose.
But I just, you know, personally,
I believed it wasn't
the choice for me.
But then I got pregnant.
A girl.
Then I miscarried.
Oh, Miranda. I'm so sorry.
And to add insult to injury,
the miscarriage was incomplete.
So I needed a procedure
to prevent infection.
Now, I did not choose an abortion.
But I've had a D&C.
It is the same procedure.
And I'm worried doctors
are afraid to use it.
I'm I'm worried the next generation
won't get enough training on it.
I'm I'm worried that is our future.
I want to offer it at Grey-Sloan.
Train anyone who wants it. I-I
I want to prepare health care
professionals to help.
- That's an excellent plan.
- Yeah, I know.
And it won't be nearly enough.
You take care of business?
No. I, um
Lucas. It's your mess. Clean it up.
W My mess?
D-Do you know why all the
interns think we're a couple?
Y-Y-You follow me into on-call rooms.
You hover over me
with apartment listings.
You got me on Daddy Daycare with Scout.
I asked you for help with one thing
don't blow my cover at work.
And you've refused to do it.
So
that makes it okay to tell people
that we're sleeping together?
I didn't tell anybody anything.
It is not my job to correct
people's misconceptions.
Yes, it is. You are an intern.
I am an attending.
There are rules about
these things for a reason.
We're not actually together!
They don't know that.
You know, all my life,
everyone's always assumed
I only get anywhere because
of my family connections.
And all my life,
I've been my family's
biggest disappointment.
I hav I haven't lived up
to anybody's expectations as a Shepherd.
So I thought I'd see what
happens when I'm not one.
But now, thanks to your
lack of discretion,
everyone believes we're connected,
just in a-a different way
a way that is admittedly disturbing,
but for this particular purpose,
better.
You have three days.
And then if you haven't
told them, I will.
So, when does the clinic open?
A couple of days.
I'm already thinking of how to expand.
I want to do more, too.
I, uh
I have to do more.
You will. From L.A.
No. No.
I want to I want to go
to places where people need me.
Places like Pullman, you know?
I mean, I can't just sit.
I have a unique set of skills.
I know I can make a difference.
I
Guess I just need to look at a map.
Southern Illinois.
It's right near Missouri, Arkansas,
Tennessee, Kentucky, Mississippi
All states that have abortion bans.
They're expecting up to 14,000 women
to cross state lines for care.
Yeah? How do you know that?
'Cause I thought about doing it, too.
But I got the baby girl
who recently lost her father.
So, she needs me at home.
But you, though, you you go.
You go and give more
women access to care.
I just
Susan. It's just
Wh N Okay. Stop.
You know you did everything
you could for her
under the circumstances.
No, you, y
You needed the right tools,
the right supplies.
You needed an ultrasound.
You needed
What?
The PRT.
Huh?
No. Okay. So, my husband
he he convinced the fire department
that he needed this O.R.
on wheels, but it
Okay, the city sidelined it.
So we helped fund it, and now it
it just sits in the motor
pool collecting dust.
Oh, I can think of
a much better use for it.
You said you liked driving.
Come on.
With enough practice,
surgeons learn how and when
to pivot from standard
operating procedures.
Well, do you like it, the lobster roll?
Mm-hmm.
Did you know lobsters
can be yellow or blue?
It just depends
on their pigment protein.
Mm.
Did you learn that at the aquarium?
- Brookline STEAM has a marine science lab.
- Right.
Experience gives us more context to know
when we need a different approach.
It gives us more options
to help our patients.
I saw you laughing.
I saw you making friends.
Why don't you like it there?
What if we move and I
still have panic attacks?
Or I fail school?
You will not fail.
And we are going to
continue the therapy.
We'll have left Seattle for nothing.
And you'll have given up your job.
Zola, let me worry about that.
That's my job.
You run a hospital.
People depend on you.
What if I told you Uncle
Jackson offered me a job
here in Boston,
working on a cure for Alzheimer's?
What if
What if I decide I don't
want to be a doctor?
That's completely fine.
Really? You wouldn't be disappointed?
Not at all.
You are so intelligent and so creative.
You are going to make your mark
no matter what you do.
You think so?
I know so.
You have always been and
will always be extraordinary.
So, is it Brookline STEAM?
Mom
I love it here.
I want to sign up for robotics team.
They do this competition at MIT,
and last year they won first place.
And I want to be in the orchestra.
Can I please take cello
lessons when we move?
You can.
You can take cello lessons when we move.
One-size-fits-all solutions
don't always work.
Every patient is different.
Just like every person is different.
We each have various factors to consider
when facing life's big decisions.
So we gather the facts.
We analyze the options.
And we use our knowledge
and experience
to make the choices
that are right for us.
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