9-1-1: Lone Star (2020) s02e07 Episode Script

Displaced

1 - Gwyn, are you here? - I'm down here.
Take your second right at linens.
If I hit the lost Ark of the Covenant, have I gone too far? Good afternoon.
That must have been some shift you're sleeping off.
Yeah, it was, and now I feel like I have woken up on Christmas morning in the house of a kid who really likes cardboard.
There, there it is.
- There's what? - An edge.
- There's an edge in your voice.
- There's no edge.
There's an edge, and it's making me feel defensive.
How am I making you feel defensive? With your face and your tone.
I have no face.
I have no tone.
I know how you are about clutter.
I do like a smooth surface.
And I did warn you that I would be shipping 16 years of my life down here.
Only 16? It's not too late for me to take my place off the market.
Manhattan real estate's a little depressed now anyway.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, this escalated quickly.
I'm just worried that you're having second thoughts.
You're worried that I'm having second thoughts.
- What about you? - No.
Yes, of course.
I am a Jewish girl from the Upper East Side moving to Texas.
Am I crazy? You've been in Texas for months.
This is different.
Right, right, it's scary leaving your whole world behind to start over.
Is that what we're doing? Starting over? We're picking up where we left off.
We're putting Humpty Dumpty together again.
Did you just call me fat? We've just taken a break between having babies.
Roughly the duration of the Thirty Years' War.
Well, I have no second thoughts, - only one.
- Hm.
Am I supposed to guess? I love you.
Yes, okay, sure, do you love me more than you hate clutter? - Clutter's not even a thing.
- Mm, you sure? I'm sure.
I was hoping that all of this would be delivered during one of your 24-hour shifts.
That way I could have had everything swapped out and done before you even noticed.
There's going to be swapping? Well Some.
You know what? It's fine.
It's fine.
It's all gonna be fine.
We're gonna work everything out.
Everything is a negotiation.
Aw, you do remember I'm a lawyer, right? The Lord giveth, and the Lord taketh away.
And now the Lord has taken Silvio.
Many believe death ends things, but for those who love the Lord it's actually a great beginning.
While we grieve that Silvio is no longer with us in church or at home with his beautiful wife Lydia Father God, we ask That you hear our prayer.
Holy crap! Our party crasher, was he covered in frostbite? First officer on scene thought it was rigor.
Yeah, probably a stowaway.
We're right in the flight path.
Sometimes those guys ride in the wheel well.
Used to get 'em all the time at JFK.
He probably dropped when the landing gear came down.
Oh, Silvio! No respiration.
No pulse, Cap.
I don't need to check the other guy, do I? No, I think we're good.
You'd think that the one place the crazy of this world might let you alone would be your own casket, - but nope.
- I'll call this in to the ME's office.
Hey, guys, let's cover him up before the ME gets here.
Can you imagine the stones it would take to stow away under a plane? People get displaced by corruption, hunger, violence.
- They're desperate.
- Truth.
But how'd he ever think he was gonna survive this? You'd be surprised.
Almost 25% of them do.
Hold up.
Look at his hand.
How'd his glove slip off like that? A 1,500 foot fall could have something to do with it.
Nah, you don't get scratches like these from a fall.
So how'd he get 'em then? I don't know it almost looks like someone was trying to hang onto him.
Someone with a pink fingernail.
He wasn't alone.
No reports of any other bodies falling from the sky so far today, Captain.
Victim's ID said he's from San Pedro Sula, so we need information on every flight from Honduras that landed in the last half hour.
His traveling companion could still be trapped in the wheel well with exposure injuries.
Okay, you can't fly from Honduras into Austin-Bergstrom.
Maybe he crossed into Mexico, got on a flight there? Let's see.
Last flight from Puerto Vallarta touched down two hours ago.
No, timeline doesn't work.
Oh, wait, okay, I do see a cargo plane that just got in from Costa Rica, but before that, it made a stop in Honduras.
Right, what's the information on that? We are getting details from Austin air traffic control as we speak.
I'll let 'em know you're coming, Cap.
Okay, copy that.
Thanks, dispatch.
It's a 757 on the south end of the tarmac.
Colored pattern on the tail fin.
Hey, Judd, make sure these wheels are chocked.
- Make sure nobody starts the damn engines.
- On it, Cap.
Paul, Mateo, you take the front wheel well.
- Marjan, you're with me.
- Yep.
- I'll check this one, Paul.
- All right.
Are you seeing anything in there, Probie? - No, nothing up here.
- All right.
Anything, Cap? I found her! She's unconscious, severely hypothermic.
Medical, we need you under the right wing now.
Pulse is weak.
She's at 79 degrees, Cap.
Wrap her up in a blanket.
Start a line.
Cap, where you going with the saline? Gotta warm it up first.
Cap, her temp is dropping.
It's 78.
She's going into cardiac arrest.
She's too cold.
- I lost her pulse.
- Damn it.
Push two milligrams of epinephrine.
Firefighter, I need you to hold this - and keep squeezing.
- Yep.
- Ah.
- Temp check.
79, but she's in asystole.
Starting compressions.
Anything? Temp's 80, but still no pulse.
Come on.
Come on, girl.
You've come too far to give up now.
Temp's rising to 81.
And you have a pulse.
¿Dónde estoy? Hector.
No, no.
Have you ever talked to soldiers about the people they serve with shoulder to shoulder in the mud, you know, bound by a bond that very few people can understand? That's how I feel about Marlon Blendo.
Marlon Blendo your blender has a name.
- Doesn't yours? - Okay.
Clearly there's a certain depth to this relationship, - so we will go with Marlon.
- You're good with it? Oh, yeah, of course.
I will make up ground in table settings.
Make up ground? Think about it as a business merger.
We're just identifying redundancies and excising the lesser versions.
I don't have redundancies in tableware.
These are my proposed cuts.
You want to excise my acacia wood salad hands? They're larger than an arena foam finger.
They don't go in a dishwasher.
Not practical.
I wasn't aware salad-ware needed to be practical.
Would you like me to step out of the room so you can say goodbye? This is not a merger.
This is a hostile takeover.
Oh, rein it in.
You sound like one of those people on Hoarders, hyperventilating because you're getting rid of an old shoe.
I do not have old shoes.
I do, however, have a set of handcrafted malachite espresso cups that have inexplicably made their way to the top of your potential cut table.
I just felt like they were a little extra.
A little bit extra? What about this ridiculous otter? That is a sloth slow tea infuser.
It's practical.
It's functional.
And she is adorable.
Well, she's gonna be adorable in the window of Goodwill.
You touch her again, you die.
Now who's on an episode of Hoarders? And you haven't even unpacked all of this.
I mean, what even is whoa, a Japanese kintsugi bowl.
Now, this is a beautiful piece.
That is going back in the box.
Why? It's just going to storage.
Why would you want to store that? Who wants something around so fragile? The fragility is the point.
That's why they call it the art of the precious scars.
This is exquisite.
Also it will clash with the rug.
So we're not gonna keep the one thing of yours - that I actually like.
- The one thing? Oh, I'm so sorry for inflicting my terrible taste on you.
It's not terrible.
It's just Not yours.
All right, you know what? You're right.
I'm sorry.
I'm just being stupid.
No, you're being honest and stupid.
But this is how it starts, you know? We both get stubborn.
We get territorial.
And then no one budges an inch, and then what happens? Let's excise.
Or we could just have sex.
That, and you can bring the otter.
It's a sloth.
It's not fair.
Why does Izzy get to keep sleeping? Because Izzy doesn't have a black belt test this week.
Now, let's start with kicking techniques.
Can I at least have breakfast first? Baby, this is the only time Mom has to train you.
Okay? So we've got to make it count.
But I'm tired, and I hate kicking techniques.
All the more reason to work on them.
You know, if I had made you practice more often the last time, then maybe you would have passed.
Now, muevete.
Babe, it's starting to sound a little intense over there.
You know, six months ago, I made a promise to my baby girl that she would be ready this time around.
A promise you made when you were a stay-at-home mom.
Nobody expects you to be a sensei and pull a 56-hour workweek.
Nobody.
You know, it's bad enough that I have to work a shift and miss her big day.
The least I can do is honor my commitment and make sure that she's ready.
Don't worry.
She's got this.
Evie, baby, you know that there is no place on Earth that Mommy would rather be than at your black belt test.
You know that, right? I know, Mama.
You'll be there, T.
I'll be FaceTiming you the whole time.
Okay, but, you know, just remember to hold the camera horizontally this time because You shoot one holiday concert in vertical video Look, I'm just I'm just saying that Izzie was barely in the frame, and she was the - Baby Jesus.
- Yes.
Yes.
Okay.
All right, you know what? Enough chitchat.
Come on, chica.
Combo number two, let's see it.
Whoa! Wow, I've never seen you catch that much air on a roundhouse before.
When the heck did you learn how to do that? We've been practicing.
After school when I'm awake.
Kid almost caught my chin with a hook kick the other day.
I'm telling you, she's got this.
Well, apparently she's got a great trainer.
Okay, so that doesn't go there.
You know what my most favorite thing about being a paramedic is? Less truck to wash.
You're rag work's looking a little streaky there, Mateo.
I'll show you streaky.
- All right, all right.
- Hey, ignore him.
He's just trying to get a rise out of you.
You know what could use a rise is your tire pressure.
How about you go practice CPR on a dummy or something, huh? Just let me know when you're available, Strickland.
I'm a dummy now.
He passed one test, now I'm the dummy? TK, can I see you for a sec? Yeah, what's up? So I know I was out with a bum foot when you started, so first I just want to say I think it's really great - you're riding with us now.
- Aw, thanks.
Me too.
And the fact that you willingly gave up your seat at the cool kid's table to hang out with the geeks, that gets all respect.
I don't know what that means.
Tim had this theory that the firehouse is basically a high school cafeteria.
Firefighters are the jocks.
We're the science nerds with peanut allergies.
I didn't realize there was a class divide at the 126.
Cool kids never do.
So anyway we need to talk about how we stock the bus.
Why, is something wrong? Well, kind of everything.
Nothing is where it's supposed to be.
- I don't think that's right.
- Yeah, it kind of is.
- Tim and I had a system - Oh, right, sorry.
I changed the system.
You changed the system? Yeah, I read this article about clustering high use items to help build response times, and Captain Vega was really into it.
- She was? - Mm-hmm.
Like, I moved the 18-gauge needles - away from the 20s.
- Why? So nobody accidentally grabs the wrong one out in the field.
That's literally never happened.
And now it never will.
Well, it might since I don't know where anything is now.
Oh, right, yeah, I'm sorry.
I mean, we could go back to the old system that you and Tim used.
You said Captain Vega's really into this? I mean, she liked the initiative.
I'm sure I'll get used to it.
Yeah, you know, just live in it for a minute.
I'm sure you'll find your way around, and I am here to help.
Cool.
Cool.
Okay.
Live in it for a minute? Dude.
44C.
What happened to 44B? Um, no offense, but is this your first day? No, I've worked in this hospital six years.
- Why do you ask? - Because you seem a little lost.
Yeah, I usually work in the pediatric ward, but with COVID, they needed more hands, so kind of out of my element at the moment.
You and me both.
One minute, I'm hiking up Turkey Trail.
The next, I'm in the hospital with a hip abductor injury.
- Uh-huh.
- Now I'm staring down six weeks of PT.
My first session, which started ten minutes ago Again, I am so sorry about this.
It's okay.
No rush.
I hear these sessions are pure torture.
Oh, don't think about it like that.
Like I tell my kids in Pediatrics, they can't make anything hurt here more than you can in your own mind.
- Hey, 44.
- Oh.
All right, let the fun begin.
What are you doing? No! Oh, ah, oh! Oh, no! Oh, God.
Oh, my God.
Oh, no, no! Oh! He's in bad shape.
What about the patient inside the machine? She's responsive.
She's spooked, but she's fine.
Ooh.
Hey, y'all can't just turn that damn thing off? It's a 7T magnet, strongest on the market.
You can't just turn it off.
- The magnet has to be quenched.
- How? There should be a safety button in there that will overheat the magnet and kill it.
The problem is, we can't access the button.
It's on the front of the machine.
Which I'm assuming is somewhere behind that gurney.
Okay, tell your staff to step away please.
All right, gang, we're gonna have to get in there and get to that button.
Anybody who's got metal rods, steel in their body raise their hand.
They just put a plate in my foot.
- Okay, you're out.
- Screw in my wrist.
- Roller derby fall.
- Pin in my elbow.
- Motorcycle crash.
- I got a few screws in my knees from an illegal chop block junior year.
That was a career ender.
Well, the NFL's loss is our gain.
Probie? Clean as a whistle, Cap.
All right, you're coming with me.
- Cap, you're good to go? - Still all my original parts.
And TK, you got any metal in your body - I need to know about? - No, sir.
All right, okay, let's get the wooden mallets.
Get the rubber pressure bags, and we're gonna cover up all these electrical fittings.
Wait, what about the metal in our uniforms? I was just getting to that.
- Help me! Help me.
- We're gonna get you down, but I need you to save your strength.
Now that's what I call traveling light.
At least they're wearing masks? ABCs.
His airways are clear, but I'm hearing a stridor.
Possible pneumothorax.
Cap, toss me the ah, nice.
Did you see that no-look pass? It's like D-Wade and LeBron.
Yeah, they're quite the duo.
It's crushing his lungs! All right, place the bag.
In! All right, Marjan, inflate! Filling her up, Cap.
Mateo, go help them with the gurney.
Okay, that's good! I can get my hand in to the quench.
Listen, when I do this, make sure he doesn't fall.
- All right, here we go! - Quench that fool! Three, two, one.
Oh! Nice and easy.
Devon, can you hear me? - Bilateral chest rise.
- What does that mean? It means your lungs didn't collapse.
Why does it hurt so much? Because you cracked some ribs.
But I'm gonna be okay? You might need an MRI to be sure.
Probably just not here.
Captain Strand, will you guys travel him to the ER? You bet.
Come on, guys.
Ready? Nice and easy on three.
- One, two, three.
- Hello? Can somebody please get me out of here? Sure thing, Miss.
Go ahead, I got you.
Nice and easy.
Watch your head.
Slowly, okay, step down.
Right there.
Uh ma'am, don't move.
- Cap! - What is it? Hey, no, no, no, no, no.
No, please Nancy, get a LifePak and a med kit in here now.
I think it got her carotid.
She's aspirating blood.
TK, I need you to hold this wound.
- With what? - With your thumb.
The shard must have sliced her trachea.
- She can't breathe.
- I got the kit.
All right, I need the scalpel and the tracheostomy tube.
I'm gonna give you a tracheotomy so you can breathe.
She's going into respiratory arrest.
Hold her still.
Breathe for me, girl.
Respiration's back.
She's stabilizing.
That's it.
That's it.
Good fight.
There's some of the best doctors in the world here, and you're gonna be just fine.
All right, let's get a gurney in here now.
Let the OR know that we're coming.
- Good work, TK.
- Thanks.
Oh.
The stupid machine bust again? Oh, no, no, this thing's like an Italian sports car.
Hey, do you think this is extra? I would never say that anything's extra in that particular context.
Why? Oh, it's just that Gwyn is moving in permanently and we're trying to free up some space at the house, and these things are on the bubble.
So what made you decide to finally pull the trigger? Not that you need a reason, but Why you giving me that hillbilly grin? - Hm? - Did Tommy tell you? Tell me what, Cap? That we're pregnant.
Hell no, no, Tommy can keep a secret.
Then it was TK, that little squealer.
I'm gonna put him on bathroom duty for a month.
Well, you ain't his captain no more, and besides, I ain't saying who said.
But congrats, Cap! I'm fired up.
We're gonna have a new little Texan running around.
Yeah, I appreciate that.
We're excited.
So how come you look like you just ate some bad jerky? 'Cause I just wish that she wasn't using this as an excuse to purge my kitchenware and half my bedroom suite, and I realize how ridiculous that sounds.
It don't sound ridiculous.
Your style's a big part of who you are.
Matter of fact, I never met anybody with more.
Thank you very much.
I'm serious I never seen a grown man get so excited about showerheads and juicers and cheese graters.
I never have gotten excited about a cheese grater.
Mm, but in all the time I've known you, nothing's put a bigger smile on your face than Gwyn.
Yeah.
She does do that, doesn't she? Yeah, she's got you looking like a lovesick, middle-aged teenager.
And granted I'm not speaking from experience, but I imagine the day that that baby comes the smile will just get bigger whether you've got your, uh, tiny coffee cups or not.
So you do think it's extra? We'll see you, Cap.
Seriously? Perfect, this is just perfect.
What's the trouble, Cap? The house Wi-Fi is down, and Evie's black belt test starts in 15 minutes, and Charles is going to FaceTime me, but I damn it.
Can't believe I'm gonna miss this.
You won't.
Use my hotspot, Cap.
It's 5G.
I'm FancyNancy14.
Password Buster, with a big B.
Nancy, you you are a lifesaver.
Kind of in the job description.
Didn't know your girls do karate.
Tae Kwon Do, and just one of them does.
Izzy's my ballerina.
Black belt test, that's a pretty big deal.
The biggest she's been working towards this half her life.
So you should totally be there.
- Way to rub it in.
- Why can't she? Where is it, the dojo? Dojang, and it's way across town on Kenneth and Godwin.
And in case you haven't noticed, we're at work, so No, this is work, so we take work with us.
I mean, Kenneth and Godwin, that's in our service zone.
Technically that's true.
I mean, if we were parked in front of a taco stand in our zone having lunch, and we got a call We'd take that call.
So we do the same thing here.
In 15 minutes, we can totally make it.
Strand, you're driving.
Let's do this.
Told you we should have taken Channel.
So you keep saying.
You know, it was a lovely thought, TK.
Nancy, what was your hotspot's password again? Hey, why is everybody giving up the ghost on this already? Because this is the light from hell.
I get stuck here in the morning.
I can practically get through a whole This American Life.
But what if we didn't have to be stuck? What do you mean? You can't do that.
Can't I though? That wasn't the siren I just heard, was it, Strand? Two words, Cap plausible deniability.
Don't fidget.
Sit up straight.
Very good.
Gotta hand it to you, Strand.
You move fast.
Lights and sirens help.
Wasn't talking about your driving.
Hi.
Surprise.
Didn't expect to see you here.
Well, when I make a promise, I like to keep it.
Evie doesn't think that you're breaking a promise.
She knows that you have to work.
Well, we're still working.
We just we're in our service zone, so if I get a call, I'll take it.
In the middle of her black belt test? She doesn't want me to be here, right? She's just feeling the pressure, that's all.
From me.
She doesn't want to let you down again.
Babe.
Hey, hey, I will FaceTime just like we said.
Right, yes, okay, but horizontally, right? Yes, yes, yes.
You got it.
Okay.
Okay.
Everybody stand up! Yes, ma'am! That was quick.
- Does she look - Not good.
What do you think happened? Do you want to ask? Cap? Just drive.
It was the ride back that was the worst crushing silence.
I was praying for a call a minor fender bender or a choking victim anything to lighten up the mood.
I think you're being a little hard on yourself.
Did I make a really big mistake by becoming a paramedic? You know, maybe I should've stayed a firefighter.
You know, at least over there, nobody hates my guts.
Nobody hates your guts, TK.
That's not true.
Nancy hates my guts.
Babe, she lost her partner.
Getting a new one has to be tough for her.
Yeah, I get that.
I do.
It's just that doesn't give her a right to rip into me.
What'd she say? She said that I sat at the cool kid's table.
- The cool kid's table? - Not my words, hers.
And Tim had this theory that, you know, firefighters were the jocks that can do whatever they want, and paramedics were the science geeks, and life is high school or whatever.
Life is high school.
Yeah, but not at the firehouse.
We're all part of the same team, and we're all part of the same family.
- You sure about that? - Yes.
Hm.
"Hm"? What was that "hm"? Since you guys started doing the 126 hangs over here, how many times have you invited Nancy or Tim? Yeah, well, that doesn't you know, we're God, we've been such jerks.
How did I not see it? It's not your fault.
The cool kids rarely do.
I've been taking Evie to that dojang since she was four years old five days a week - Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
- Rain or shine.
I was a full-on Tae Kwon Do mom.
Oh, Gracie, I was the one that was scaring those monsters out from under the bed.
It was me those babies would run to after they had a bad dream or good grades, and Today when Evie needed somebody the most, she didn't ask for me.
Mm-mmm, no, she asked for her daddy.
Well, the important thing here, Tommy, is that my god-baby finally got her black belt.
And I know you proud.
I see it all over your face.
It just makes it hurt more.
And what does that say about me, hm? All of this is natural.
Charles is the one that's been spending the most time with those girls.
That's all.
I know.
When I when I went back to work, I was worried.
I was worried he was gonna be overwhelmed taking care of those babies, and I prayed.
I prayed every night that he was gonna do well.
Well, look at God, Tommy.
He answered your prayers.
Charles is doing well.
Yeah, I wish he wasn't doing so damn well.
Owen? In here! That is my couch.
And your chairs and your end tables.
Merger complete.
Where is your stuff? In the back of Judd's pickup truck.
Welcome home.
- You put the bowl out.
- Yeah.
I switched out one of your rugs, and now look no clashing.
Owen, we need to talk.
You should probably sit on my couch.
- Is everything okay? - Uh, yeah.
I saw Dr.
Evans today.
Is the baby all right? It's a routine visit.
The baby is fine.
Remember how he was telling us that there is a danger zone up till about the 14th week? Yeah, and we passed that threshold two weeks ago.
Actually, as it turns out, we are four weeks passed it.
Dr.
Evans says the baby's femur length is much longer than he expected.
Yeah, the men in my family are known for their prodigious femurs.
Yes, it's just that we thought we were 16 weeks pregnant.
We're not.
We are 18 weeks.
Good, then we're even farther past the danger zone.
We are past that danger zone.
What are you talking about? So remember about 18 weeks ago, the weekend Enzo came through town? Oh, my God.
Are you telling me that, on that weekend, you and Enzo I'm just saying that the math in terms of the paternity of this baby has become problematic.
Problematic.
We were quarantining.
Doesn't sound like you two were doing a very good job of social distancing.
Enzo had the virus.
He has antibodies.
Oh, so you just asked him to inoculate you.
- That's gross.
- I mean, Gwyn, really? - Rebound guy? - You know what? I really hate when you call him that.
He's the one who swooped in three weeks after you were divorced.
He'll always be rebound guy.
And we were together for 15 years after that.
That's way longer than you and I were even married.
All those 15 years, he was rebound guy except for that brief moment when he was turtleneck guy.
You told me this was over when you left New York.
It was.
It is.
Doesn't sound like it.
It was one time.
The bowl.
He bought it for you, didn't he? And that's why you didn't want it out - Guilt.
- Not guilt.
Just bad memories.
You want to smash it, go ahead.
I've got no problem with that.
No, it's too beautiful of a thing.
So you're telling me that, based on the math, this may be Enzo's baby? Based on the math, it's one possibility.
One possibility? How many people did you cheat with? Oh, let's be clear about one thing.
There was no cheating here.
18 weeks ago, you and I were just having fun, remember? Those are your words, and I was perfectly fine with that.
My bags were packed, Owen.
I was ready to leave.
And I convinced you to stay.
No, you're right.
You're right.
You're right.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry for what I just said.
Well, I'm sorry that I didn't mention it to you earlier.
Honestly, it just didn't occur to me until the math changed.
I had kind of forgotten about it.
Well, I'm glad he didn't leave that much of an impression.
And I'm not saying it is his baby.
It probably isn't.
I mean, the odds are really in your favor.
Never tell me the odds.
All right, so what do we do? Not we, you.
I need you to spit in this cup.
Ah, she lives.
The girls up? - They're still sleeping.
- Mm.
- How you feeling? - Like death on high heat.
Hmm.
Grace and I, we lost count.
Mm.
What is all this? Ah, it's the perfect hangover special.
I have cream cheese blueberry pancakes along with five-spice turkey bacon omelets along with a little Hair of the dog that bit you.
Now.
Hm.
So you're not mad that I stayed out and came home all wasted face last night? I know how tough yesterday was on you.
I'm not about to be mad at you for not being perfect.
Oh, right 'cause that's your job.
What does that mean? It means you don't have to be at a ten all the time, Mr.
Perfect Hangover Omelet.
You know, you're allowed to take a play off every now and then.
Are you mad at me right now? What do you got to be mad at me for? Why don't you just rack that beautiful, un-addled brain of yours, - see what you come up with.
- Look, I'm sorry that I didn't tell you about how Evie was feeling.
Oh, you mean that I had my daughter on the verge of a panic attack? Why wouldn't you tell me that, Charles? - I didn't want to hurt your feelings, T.
- Oh.
I know how much you have on your plate right now.
I tried to drop some hints just to ease up a little bit.
I told you we had it.
Oh, yeah, no, right, and you crushed it.
Mm-hmm, hey, you know, you may be killing this whole stay-at-home thing, but I am still their mother.
You don't get to box me out.
I'm not boxing you out.
Nobody hates that you had to go back to work more than I do, but here we are.
You know what? I will give those girls everything I got even if you resent me for it.
I do not resent Oh, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I I am not myself oh.
There, now who has egg on their face? - All right, it's like that? - Oh, it's like that.
- That? - Babe.
You're okay, you're out of control right now.
What are y'all doing? Why do you have pancake on your head? - Your mother.
- Uh, no.
Food fight! Oh, oh, okay.
She's cheating.
Sausages? Nancy, thank you for coming in.
Sure.
So what's up? We were hoping that you could help us with something? We who's we? Hey, girl.
Hey.
What's this about? This is about family.
You guys all came in on your day off to do this? No place we'd rather be.
But we needed you to finish the job.
But it didn't seem right that anybody but you would fill in the names, so It looks beautiful.
The numbers, are they It's the day of his last call.
The rig will officially have a new name, and Tim will be riding with us on every call.
You guys This is everything.
Just make sure we spelled his name right.
I learned that one the hard way.
Here we go.
This is taking forever.
Hence the term "slow tea infuser".
I was talking about the email, not the otter.
It's a sloth.
- Is your phone on? - Yes, Owen, my phone is on.
- You should check it.
- I don't need to check it.
I have the alerts on.
We will hear it buzz.
Have some tea.
- I don't drink otter urine.
- It's sloth urine.
Really, Owen? Good, your alerts are on.
Good job.
That's the lab.
The results are in.
Are you ready? I am.
Okay.
I am ready to have this baby with you.
I'm ready to have our baby.
I'm ready to raise it with you.
I am ready to start our new life together or restart our old one.
I am ready to do everything that we have talked about.
Delete this email.
Just delete it.
- Just get rid of it? - Yeah.
Just make the whole thing go away? - Why not? - Because, Owen, it won't go away.
It will always be there as a question in the back of your mind.
We decided to try again because we could get back into it this time with our eyes open.
We can't shut them now.
I guess when the baby arrives and it's pretentious and insufferable, we're gonna know who the father is anyway.
To be fair, you could say the same thing about Enzo.
I was saying that about Enzo.
Okay.
We knew this was a possibility, and I meant everything I said, so it doesn't change anything.
Or does it? I don't know.
I really didn't expect this.
It's complicated.
Yeah, it's complicated.
We're complicated.
It's what makes us work.
It's like the Japanese kintsugi bowl more beautiful because of the cracks.
The Japanese kintsugi bowl that Enzo gave me.
Yeah, I hate that thing.
You know what, I'm just gonna grab a couple of things.
What? I just I feel like we need a little bit of space right now, so I'm just gonna get a hotel just for tonight.
We need some time to process.
I don't need time to process.
You heard me.
I processed.
I was like a Cuisinart.
Well, I need some time, Owen.
You still love him? Enzo and I are finished.
That's not even a question.
That's not even the question.
We were together for 15 years, Owen, until quite recently.
You and I have been divorced for 16 years, and I still love you.
Oh.
I get it now.
I'm rebound guy.

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